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Glossary›Karuna Compassion

Glossary

Karuna Compassion

Karuna is the Buddhist concept of active compassion that moves beyond empathy to alleviate suffering in oneself and others through deliberate practice and cultivation.

What is Karuna Compassion?

Karuna is one of the four brahmaviharas (divine abodes) in Buddhist philosophy, referring to compassion as an active quality that seeks to alleviate suffering. Unlike sympathetic pity or passive empathy, karuna represents the intentional movement toward relieving pain in oneself and others. In Mahayana Buddhism, karuna is paired with prajna (wisdom) as one of two essential wings of enlightenment; compassion without wisdom can become sentimental, while wisdom without compassion remains sterile.

The term encompasses both the emotional recognition of suffering and the volitional response to address it. Buddhist texts distinguish karuna from metta (loving-kindness), which wishes beings to be happy, while karuna specifically addresses existing suffering. In Tibetan Buddhism, karuna forms the motivational foundation for bodhicitta—the aspiration to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings.

Origins & Lineage

Karuna appears in the earliest Pali Canon texts, including the Digha Nikaya and Majjhima Nikaya, dating to approximately the 3rd century BCE. The Buddha taught karuna meditation alongside metta, mudita (sympathetic joy), and upekkha (equanimity) as practices for ethical and spiritual development. The Karaniya Metta Sutta references the brahmaviharas collectively, though karuna receives detailed treatment in commentarial literature such as Buddhaghosa’s Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification, 5th century CE).

In Mahayana traditions emerging around the 1st century CE, karuna assumed central importance. The Lotus Sutra portrays the Buddha’s teaching activity as motivated purely by compassion for suffering beings. Shantideva’s Bodhicaryavatara (8th century CE) devotes extensive passages to cultivating karuna through practices like tonglen (taking and sending). Tibetan Buddhist lineages, particularly the Kagyu and Gelug schools, developed systematic karuna meditations that remain widely taught.

Contemporary secular adaptations of karuna practice emerged through the mindfulness movement. Clinicians including Paul Gilbert developed Compassion Focused Therapy in the early 2000s, drawing explicitly on Buddhist karuna concepts while removing religious elements.

How It’s Practiced

Traditional karuna meditation follows a structured progression. Practitioners begin by bringing to mind a person who is suffering—often starting with someone they care about to make the compassionate response more natural. The meditator silently repeats phrases such as “May you be free from suffering” or “May your pain be eased,” coordinating these wishes with the breath and cultivating the felt sense of compassion.

The practice then expands in concentric circles: from loved ones to neutral persons, then to difficult individuals, and finally to all beings without exception. Advanced practitioners work with the recognition that separating “self” from “other” is ultimately illusory, leading to what Tibetan Buddhism calls “great compassion” (mahakaruna) that makes no distinction between one’s own suffering and that of others.

Tonglen, taught particularly in Tibetan Vajrayana traditions, reverses the usual pattern: practitioners visualize breathing in the suffering of others as dark smoke and breathing out relief and happiness as bright light. This counterintuitive practice is said to dissolve ego-clinging and develop genuine bodhicitta.

Karuna also manifests as ethical action. In the Mahayana tradition, the bodhisattva vows commit practitioners to alleviating suffering through direct service, right livelihood, and social engagement.

Karuna Compassion Today

Contemporary seekers encounter karuna through multiple channels. Insight Meditation centers in the Theravada tradition offer brahmaviharas retreats that teach karuna alongside the other three immeasurables. Teachers such as Sharon Salzberg and Jack Kornfield have brought these practices to Western audiences since the 1970s.

Tibetan Buddhist centers worldwide teach tonglen and lojong (mind training) practices centered on karuna. The Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition and Shambhala International maintain active teaching schedules on compassion cultivation. Academic programs like the Compassion Cultivation Training developed at Stanford University (2009) offer eight-week courses blending Buddhist karuna practices with psychological research.

Online platforms now host guided karuna meditations, though teachers emphasize that sustained practice under qualified instruction yields deeper results than sporadic listening. Annual events like the Compassion and Social Justice Retreat integrate karuna meditation with activism.

Common Misconceptions

Karuna is not merely feeling sorry for someone. Pity involves a sense of superiority or separation; karuna recognizes the shared nature of suffering without hierarchy. It also differs from empathy, which can lead to emotional overwhelm or vicarious trauma. Karuna includes equanimity and wisdom that protect practitioners from burnout.

Karuna does not require self-sacrifice or martyrdom. Classical texts emphasize that genuine compassion includes oneself; neglecting one’s own wellbeing undermines the capacity to serve others. The brahmaviharas are taught as universal, extending to all beings including the practitioner.

Finally, karuna is not inherently passive or quietist. While meditation cultivates the inner quality, Buddhist ethics emphasize compassionate action in the world. Engaged Buddhism movements, pioneered by figures like Thich Nhat Hanh, explicitly connect karuna meditation with social justice work.

How to Begin

New practitioners can start with guided karuna meditations available through the Insight Timer app or the UCLA Mindful Awareness Research Center. Sharon Salzberg’s “Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness” provides clear instructions for brahmaviharas practice, including a dedicated karuna section.

Those seeking structured training might explore eight-week Compassion Cultivation Training courses offered at universities and meditation centers, or attend introductory retreats at Insight Meditation Society or Spirit Rock Meditation Center. Tibetan Buddhist centers typically teach karuna within broader curricula on mind training and bodhicitta development.

Daily practice can begin with five minutes of karuna meditation, bringing to mind someone who is suffering and silently offering the wish for their relief. Consistency matters more than duration in developing this quality of heart.

Related terms

metta loving kindnessbrahmaviharastonglenbodhicittamuditacompassion focused therapy
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