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Glossary›Dana

Glossary

Dana

Dana is the Buddhist practice of generosity—giving freely without expectation of return, cultivating the virtue that loosens greed's grip on the heart.

What is Dana?

Dana (pronounced DAH-nuh) is a Sanskrit and Pali word meaning “generosity” or “giving.” In Buddhist practice, it denotes the inclination to give without expecting any form of repayment from the recipient. Dana is the first of the ten paramis (perfections), one of the seven treasures, and the first of the three grounds for meritorious action in Buddhist teaching. Though it often takes the form of material offerings—food, robes, medicine, money—dana encompasses far more: the gift of teachings (dhamma-dana) is said by the Buddha to surpass all other gifts, and includes those who elucidate the Buddha’s teachings or help support teachers of meditation. Generosity is one of the ten perfections; it is simply the act of giving and may be money, resources, time, attention, energy, or any other thing we have to offer.

Origins & Lineage

Dāna is an ancient practice in Indian traditions, tracing back to Vedic traditions. The Upanishads composed before 500 BCE present some of the earliest discussion of dāna; Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (verse 5.2.3) states that three characteristics of a good, developed person are self-restraint (damah), compassion (daya), and charity (dāna). In Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, dāna is the practice of cultivating generosity.

Within Buddhism specifically, dana is extolled in the Pali Canon as a great virtue and the beginning of the path to liberation; when the Buddha preaches to a newcomer he starts his graduated sermon with an exposition on the virtues of giving (danakatha, Vin.i,15,18). Of the three bases for the performance of meritorious deeds (punnakiriyavatthu), giving is the first, the other two being virtue and mental culture (A.iv,241). The Pali Canon lists 14 items suitable to be given as dana: robes, almsfood, shelter, medicine, plus food, drink, cloth, vehicles, garlands, perfume, unguent, beds, houses, and lamps as requisites for the sick. The Jatakas—tales relating the virtuous actions of Shakyamuni Buddha in previous lifetimes—generally describe how the Buddha faced challenges and responded with superhuman virtue; the Cariyapitakapali, or “Book of Basket of Conduct,” is part of the Pali Canon and contains numerous short Jataka tales.

How It’s Practiced

Dāna as a formal religious act is directed by the Buddhist laity specifically to a monastic or spiritually-developed person. The dana ritual of the Theravada tradition involves exchanges between monks and laypersons, performed independently of other rituals but embedded in virtually all other Buddhist rituals. When the Buddha began teaching, he gave his teachings for free; he was a monk traveling without permanent home, and he generously gave his teachings while laypeople generously provided him with food and shelter. This reciprocal exchange—teaching freely offered, sustenance freely given—established a gift economy that continues in many Buddhist communities.

The Buddha emphasized the joy of giving; dana is not meant to be obligatory or done reluctantly, but performed when the giver is “delighted before, during, and after giving,” and though helping others is an important motivation, the Buddha considered giving for the purpose of attaining Nibbana as the highest motivation. It is helpful to distinguish between the Pāli words for giving (dāna) and generosity (cāga): generosity is an emotion and an intention, while giving is the action that follows.

Dana Today

In modern practice, dāna is often centered around giving donations to Buddhist monastics and other spiritual charities; the heart quality of dāna arises in gratitude when the Dharma is offered freely, and at residential retreats a version of the ancient gift economy is practiced in which teachers offer their time and wisdom freely, receiving dāna in gratitude. From the time of the first residential Vipassana retreats in 1974, Insight Meditation teachers have been committed to offering teachings freely on a dana basis; retreatants pay for retreat expenses but teachers are not compensated from fees—rather, if they wish, retreatants offer donations to teachers and staff, often anonymously. This system has sustained the growth of Western Buddhist centers, though the dana system has no provisions for health insurance, retirement benefits, or paid vacation, and is based on trust rather than institutional security.

In Western Buddhism, the dana system is the exception rather than the rule; Zen Centers have membership dues and charge for retreats, and Tibetan Buddhist teachings are usually offered at a cost, sometimes quite high.

Common Misconceptions

Dana is not merely fundraising with spiritual language attached. The “dana talk”—pressuring retreatants to give to teachers—doesn’t lead to gladness before giving and sounds like a plea for a tip at the end of a meal; efforts to pull on heartstrings to reach purse strings betray a lack of trust, and the way dana is handled for teachers doesn’t escape the fact that it’s payment for services rendered. Authentic dana preserves freedom: both the freedom to give and the freedom not to give.

Dana is also not transactional magic. Some Buddhist texts, acting in collusion with their audiences’ defilements, skewed the culture of dana in the direction of those defilements; if gift-giving guarantees Awakening, it supplants the noble eightfold path with the one-fold path of the gift. Dana is a practice, not a cosmic vending machine.

Finally, dana is not only for the wealthy. It is not necessary to have much to be generous; gifts given from meager resources are considered valuable (appasma dakkhina dinna sahassena samam mita); if a person leads a righteous life giving from limited resources, such generosity is worth more than a thousand sacrifices.

How to Begin

Start with the simplest gesture: give something today without seeking acknowledgment. Dana is not only about donating money or things, not only for the well-off, nor limited to supporting a sangha or teachers; it can include giving of our time, listening with full attention, to a child, neighbor, or friend. Jack Kornfield teaches a practice of acting on every impulse to give, no matter what, during a twenty-four hour period. If that feels overwhelming, try a week. Notice what arises: resistance, fear, joy, spaciousness.

To explore the canonical sources, begin with the Pali Canon, particularly the Anguttara Nikaya’s discussions of dana and the Jataka Tales. Bhikkhu Bodhi’s Dana: The Practice of Giving (Access to Insight, 1995) remains an authoritative collection. For contemporary practice, attend a retreat at centers like Insight Meditation Society (Massachusetts) or Spirit Rock (California), where dana-based teaching is lived, not theorized. The practice itself is the teaching.

Related terms

paramitamettasanghadharmavipassanabodhisattva
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