he stolen bag did not contain much in
the way of material value. But its sudden absence greatly distressed
the Buddhist monk who had been victimized, and so the police were
summoned to the scene of the crime: a Starbucks at the opulent Trump
Tower on Fifth Avenue.
A police officer in a softball jacket sat down to take the
statement of the tall man in a brown robe, whose decaffeinated
coffee, no milk, was turning cold. Routine questions elicited
complicated answers. For example, the victim's name was Venerable
Kassapa, but Venerable is a term of respect, not a first name.
"I'm a Buddhist monk," the robed man confided. "In case you're
wondering."
"I knew," the police officer said gently. "I've been around."
This is a simple tale that is not so simple, about a monk, a
theft and New-York style redemption.
Venerable Kassapa, 41, is a forest monk in Sri Lanka. He usually
lives alone or with a few other monks in rock-shelter huts, where he
depends on the charity of villagers. He eats one proper meal a day,
does not carry money, and devotes much of his celibate life to
meditation, contemplation and the study of Buddhist texts. People
often bow before him.
He sometimes travels to other countries and often speaks to very
small groups about Buddhism. For the last few weeks he has been in
the New York area, his trip sponsored by the New York Society of
United Sri Lankans.
On Monday afternoon he sat on a stone bench in front of the Plaza
Hotel and recalled how, as a young boy in London, he became
disillusioned with the world. "I wanted to find a way out of
discomfort and uneasiness," he said. "A way out of suffering."
His mother's struggle with an illness may have prompted his
brooding; he is not sure. But he is certain that the factors leading
him to a Buddhist temple at the age of 13 included these: his
mother's interest in transcendental meditation, and his own interest
in a popular television program of the time, "Kung Fu."
When he asked one of the temple's monks whether they taught
martial arts as well as Buddhism, he recalled, the monk laughed.
"Here we don't tend to the body," the monk told the boy. "We tend to
the mind."
At 14, he became a novice monk and moved to Sri Lanka; at 20, he
was ordained. "And I've never, ever, regretted making this move," he
said.
With the sun slipping behind the Plaza, Venerable Kassapa agreed
to take a stroll for a cup of coffee at the Starbucks in Trump
Tower. Walking down Fifth Avenue in his simple cloth robe, a simple
cloth bag clutched in his hand, he was a character out of context: a
six-foot-four study in self-denial, ambling along the boulevard of
acquisition.
"I am a beast out of its habitat," he said.
He passed under the "You're Fired" advertisement that adorns
Trump Tower and moved through the marble lobby, seemingly unaware of
the effect his presence had on others. As an escalator raised him up
to a floor redolent of coffee, he was asked whether he knew the name
of Trump. "I've heard of him," he said. "He's a very wealthy
man."
Venerable Kassapa sat at a small table and accepted a cup of
decaffeinated coffee. Soon he was sharing what he described as his
"vision" for the United States: that this great country, filled with
energy and potential, would one day lead the world into a brave new
era of truth and harmony.
Shortly after suggesting that American power "can be harnessed
for harm or for good," he noticed that his cloth bag was missing
from the chair beside him. He felt no anger when he realized that
the bag had been stolen, he said later. Only shock, because such
things do not happen to contemplative monks.
"This is very bizarre," he kept saying. "Nothing like this has
ever happened to me before."
Security officers were summoned, and then two police officers
from the Midtown North precinct. They glided up the escalator and
walked directly toward the monk. He was easy to pick out.
One officer went off to check garbage cans, while the other
interviewed the monk. Finally, the time came to detail what was in
the bag. No money, of course ("I don't use money," the monk said),
but an eclectic list of items duly recorded by the officer.
Among the articles inside the cloth bag: a white plastic bag, a
cellphone that someone had lent to him for his New York visit, a
bottle of water, some white thread that he gives to people as a
blessing and many pieces of paper. On these were written the names
and telephone numbers of his supporters around the world.
"I would really appreciate it if you could do as much as you
can," the monk said to the officer. But the officer leveled with the
monk. "A lot of times, with nothing of value, they just throw it in
the trash," he said. "It could be in Brooklyn, it could be in the
Bronx."
The officers left Venerable Kassapa to contemplate his loss,
especially the bits of paper bearing the names and phone numbers of
all those friends. "This is a raw lesson in life," he said, the kind
of thing that "I first became a monk to overcome."
He descended the escalator, peered briefly into a garbage can —
just in case — and then paused to study Donald Trump, who was
standing at the elevator bank, talking on a cell phone. "I've never
seen a billionaire before," he said.
Outside, on Fifth Avenue, the forest monk expressed a keen desire
to go to that Manhattan forest called Central Park. "I need a little
bit of a breath of fresh air," he said, and then he was gone.
That could have been the conclusion to the monk's New York tale.
But destiny would not allow it.
Late Monday afternoon, Riccardo Maggiore found a white plastic
bag at the entrance to his hair salon on West 56th Street, just off
Fifth Avenue. Yesterday morning, his wife, Eileen, did some
sleuthing. And before noon, plans were under way to return the
plastic bag — though not the cloth bag — to its owner, a forest
monk.
There wasn't much inside the bag. A cellphone. Some white thread.
And what Ms. Maggiore described as "a million pieces of paper."