Morning,
So today I continue investigating the living Arahats. My research on Mahanuwara Wajirabuddhi Thēro is positive.
My research on Buddhist Schools:
XVI Karmapa Rangdziung Rigpe Dordże: positive. Jhana practice, good teachings, many fruits like telepathy, healing, taking others ilnesses on him etc.
XVII Karmapa version A - Trinlej Taje Dordże: negative. Nothing.
XVII Karmapa version B - Ogjen Trinlej Dordże: not sure. Jhana practice + he was able to put his fist into the solid rock. Maybe he is on the path, but he did not finished yet.
XIV Shamarpa Mipham Chokyi Lodro: negative. He is performing something, but I think he was not on the path.
XIII Dalai Lama - Jhana practice
XIV Dalai Lama - as I stated previously: positive.
XI Panchen Lama ver A - no info, kidnapped by the Chinese.
XI Panchen Lama ver B - Gyaincain Norbu chosen by the Chinese: he is practicing well, but I cannot feel jhana from him. Negative.
I found out the story from other thread in a book: 'Reexamining Jhāna: Towards a Critical Reconstruction of Early Buddhist Soteriology' in the chapter 2.3.2 'the non-buddhist elements in the meditative teachings
of the modern theravādin meditation masters'
A lay disciple once told me how, completely by chance, he had fallen into a deep jhāna
while meditating at home. His wife thought he had died and sent for an ambulance. He
was rushed to hospital in a loud wail of sirens. In the emergency room, no heartbeat
registered on the ECG, and no brain activity was seen by EEG So the doctor on duty
put defirillators on his chest to reactivate his heart. Even though he was being bounced
up and down on the hospital bed through the force ofthe electric shocks, he didn’t feel
a thing. When he emerged from the jhāna in the emergency room, perfectly all right,
he had no knowledge of how he got there, nothing of ambulances and sirens. Nothing
of body-jerking defibrillator (Brahm 2006, 154–155).
Ths account must seem all too familiar to us by now, but contrary to what Ajahn
Brahm writes, it is not jhāna that we are reminded ofhere. The complete inactivity of
the senses, the resemblance to a dead person, the halt in the functioning ofthe most
basic bodily operations are all the features of the highest yogic state of meditation,
the very same state that was introduced by the later Buddhists under the name of
saññāvedayitanirodha. There can be no doubt, that Ajahn Brahm’s jhāna possesses
all the distinct features of yogic meditation.
In some way this quote convinces me that Ajahn Brahm is doing something else than the path to liberation. I think it is not a teacher we should rely on, however he is doing something deep. What is it?
Ajahm Sujato - positive. On the path, but haven't finished yet.
Ajahn Sumedho - positive. Low on the path?
Webu Sayadaw - was stated to be Arahant. Jhana practice.
Thích Nhất Hạnh, zen school. Jhana present. Well advanced on the path; very deep comments on how to advance on path, how to eradicate kilesa, practice jhana etc.
Ajahn Chah - stated to completed the path
Buddhadasa - stated to completed
OSHO - mostly controversial guy, but not to forget his first practice and his first book was about Vipassana. He stated himself he was enlightened. The things he is writing about in his books are very detailed, unique, so at least at the beginning of his 'career' he was meditating good, reaching at least 4 body jhanas plus 5th. He was also lucid dreaming. Deep understanding of the practical aspects.
U Pandita - not sure if he completed the path, but he was well advanced. Jhana present. Long, 20 years of theory and more than 70 years of practice. Former lives recognition.