Prayers for Ashoka Mukpo (Prayers for all sentient beings)
September 18 Ashoka Mukpo Facebook posting:
“man oh man i have seen some bad things in the last two weeks of my life. how unpredictable and fraught with danger life can be. how in some parts of the world, basic levels of help and assistance that we take for granted completely don’t exist for many people. the raw coldness of deprivation and the potential for true darkness that exists in the human experience. i hope that humanity can figure out how we can take care of each other and our world. simple, soft aspiration for all my brothers and sisters on this earth who suffer the elements and the cold. may we all be free, loved, and tended to…”
We see the hypocrisy/myopia of the West at work, of course – the so-called “developed nations” – “Too little, too late”. “Out of sight, out of mind” – “Yes, but how many Americans, how many Westerners perished?” – Remember Donald Rumsfeld, at the height of the war in Iraq? – ” Well, we don’t do body counts on other people” – Only when it’s “one of ours”, right?
3,879 deaths reported, up to the end of the 5th of October, by the Ministries of Health of Liberia, Guinea, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone In addition, 8,033 “probable, confirmed or suspected”, according to current World Health Organization estimates. And, as they point out, both for statistical and practical reasons, these numbers are unquestionably vastly under-representative of the true nature of the present global epidemic of EVD Ebola Virus Disease) that the “civilized” West is only just now waking up to.
Ashoka Mukpo was diagnosed on October 1st with the Ebola virus. He had been hired as second cameraman in Liberia for NBC’s chief medical editor and correspondent, Dr Nancy Snyderman. He has been working in West Africa on and off as a journalist these past three years, reporting in the field (see, for example, this wise, informed dispatch). He was also (and the reason, self-evidently, we’re pre-empting the usual Round-Up and featuring him here), a tulku raised in part, by Chogyam Trungpa Allen’s Buddhist teacher.
He ultimately decided not to embrace his status as a reincarnated lama, although he remains very much a practicing Buddhist.
Flown in on Monday to special facilities at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, his condition allegedly worsening, the procedure of blood-transfusion from an Ebola survivor (Dr Kent Brantly, who had earlier donated blood to fellow doctor and Ebola survivor, Dr Rick Sacra) was attempted this past Wednesday (along with on-going treatment with the experimental drug, brincidofovir)
(That same day, Thomas Eric Duncan, the first patient diagnosed outside of Africa, died at the Dallas, Texas, hospital, Texas Health Presbyterian, where he was being treated).
Current reports on Mukpo’s condition… Philip Smith, director at the Nebraska unit (quoted yesterday) – he remains “sick but stable” . Notwithstanding the enormity and the severity of the situation, doctors and family remain resolute and hopeful. His brother, David, told the local (Nova Scotia) Halifax Chronicle ,”He’s definitely very tired and in rough shape, but the doctor’s are optimistic..He’s been very weak (but) he is in very good spirits when people talk to him”
A “must-read”, this New York Times article (published yesterday) – “With Ebola’s Arrival at Nebraska Center, It’s No Longer A Drill” (on the Nebraska facility)
Please also go here for a note from his mother (Lady Diana Mukpo) and information how he can be helped with catastrophic health expenses.
Our thoughts go out to Ashoka, to his family, his friends, and, as his mothercompassionately and perceptively remarks, not only Ashoka -“I know Ashoka would like us all to turn our thoughts to the thousands of people in West Africa and across the world who are battling this deadly illness”, she gently reminds us.
Thought and action – please – before it is too late.
October 23 – Very very pleased to report Ashoka’s recovery and return to his parent’s home in Providence, Rhode Island. But, of course, the attention now, on all the many (growing numbers) who were – or are – themselves not so fortunate – not fortunate enough to have access to absolute state-of-the-art health care – or, for that matter, even, to any viable health care or practical assistance, compassionate medical treatment. The Ebola crisis remains a singularly urgent crisis – and epidemics (pandemics) a serious concern