Vibe with Venerables Episodes 23-26. “How the Buddha Dealt with Conflict and How We Can Too” with Bhante Sujato

by | Sep 1, 2025 | Events

Welcome to Episodes 23-26 of the Vibe with Venerables series, where we talk “live” to Buddhist masters together. Full listing of all Vibe with Venerables episodes here.

TL;DR

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Episodes 23-26. How the Buddha Dealt with Conflict and How We Can Too

The Buddha said once, “I do not argue with the world. It is the world which argues with me.”

Just because you are enlightened doesn’t mean nobody will enter into conflict with you.

In this series, Bhante Sujato discusses the strategies and methods employed by the Buddha when faced with obstacles, whether social or religious, or even within his own community.

[About Bhante Sujato below]

Schedule – Vibe with Bhante Sujato

(4 Live Sessions on Zoom)

Every episode is 1-hour long.

🇺🇸 US Timezone — Saturdays

  • Session 1: 1 November 2025
  • Sessions 2-4: 8, 15, 22 November 2025

🌎 Global Timezone — Sundays

  • Sessions 1-4: 2, 9, 16, 23 November 2025
    • Time: 2am London | 10am Singapore | 1pm Sydney

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About the Teacher

Bhante Sujato

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Bhikkhu Sujato was born as Anthony Aidan Best on 4/11/1966 in Perth, Western Australia. He grew up in the pleasant suburbs of Mt Lawley and Attadale alongside his sister Nicola, who was the good child. His mother, Margaret Lorraine Huntsman née Pinder, said “he’ll either be a priest or a poet”, while his father, Anthony Thomas Best, advised him to “never do anything for money”. He attended Aquinas College, a Catholic school, where he decided to become an atheist. At the University of WA he studied philosophy, aiming to learn what he wanted to do with his life. Finding that what he wanted to do was play guitar, he dropped out. His main band was named Martha’s Vineyard, which achieved modest success in the indie circuit. 

A seemingly random encounter with a roadside joey took him to Thailand, where he entered his first meditation retreat at Wat Ram Poeng, Chieng Mai in 1992. Feeling the call to the Buddha’s path, he took full ordination in Wat Pa Nanachat in 1994, where his teachers were Ajahn Pasanno and Ajahn Jayasaro. In 1997 he returned to Perth to study with Ajahn Brahm at Bodhinyana Monastery. 

He spent several years practicing in seclusion in Malaysia and Thailand before establishing Santi Forest Monastery in Bundanoon, NSW, in 2003. There he was instrumental in supporting the establishment of the Theravada bhikkhuni order in Australia and advocating for women’s rights. He continues to teach in Australia and globally, with a special concern for the moral implications of climate change and other forms of environmental destruction. He has published a series of books of original and groundbreaking research on early Buddhism. 

In 2005 he founded SuttaCentral together with Rod Bucknell and John Kelly. In 2015, seeing the need for a complete, accurate, plain English translation of the Pali texts, he undertook the task, spending nearly three years in isolation on the isle of Qi Mei off the coast of the nation of Taiwan. He completed the four main Nikāyas in 2018, and the early books of the Khuddaka Nikāya were complete by 2021. All this work is dedicated to the public domain and is entirely free of copyright encumbrance. 

In 2019 he returned to Sydney where he established Lokanta Vihara (The Monastery at the End of the World).

Donation

This series is freely offered by Buddhism.net.

If you’d like, you may make a donation directly to Bhante Sujato at SuttaCentral here.

We thank you for dāna, the practice of cultivating generosity. 

Upcoming Events

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