Thursday, February 28, 2008

Monk Gets Mowed Down

A Buddhist monk was killed when he was run over by a lawnmower as he cut the grass at his temple .

Ten years previously the Rev Seiji Handa had suffered another accident with a lawnmower, in which he lost three of his fingers. Buddha had all his fingers as he was too fat to mow grass there is a lesson there somewhere.

A witness said she had found the body of Mr Handa after he fell beneath the sharp blades of the tractor-driven mower at the Peace Pagoda in Milton Keynes.

Venita Slater said that moments before his death she had seen him running after the driverless machine as it pulled away from him while he was out mowing lawns in the 12-acre grounds of the peace centre that he had set up nearly 30 years ago. Now he is in pieces on the peace lawn.

The monk had been dragged under the blades as he tried to get into the cab and regain control of the machine, she said. His remains were found on the slope after the vehicle ran over his entire body, killing him instantly.

The jury at the inquest, held in Milton Keynes , was told that Mrs Slater had been walking with her two children last August when she saw Mr Handa in the grounds, running after the mower.
“The tractor was running away and he was chasing it to stop it. I looked up but he had disappeared.

I ran over to see if he was OK, but unfortunately he was not.” Emergency services were called and a crane was used to lift the grass-cutter off his body.

A postmortem examination disclosed that Mr Handa had died of multiple injuries probably caused by a large tractor-driven mower that was on top of him.

The inquest was told that it was not known why Mr Handa had got out of the tractor while it was still moving. It was thought that he slipped on the wet grass when he was trying to leap back in the cab, and that he became caught under the three sets of blades.

Taran Hewitt, of the Health and Safety Executive, said that officials had inspected the diesel vehicle and found that it should not have been in service.

The ratchet on the handbrake was not working and the brakes were not able to hold the tractor steady.The footbrake also did not work and Mr Hewitt said: “The only way you could get the tractor to stay stationary was to turn the engine off and leave it in gear. It should not have been used.

”Mr Handa, who was aged 50, was in charge of maintenance of the tractor and was responsible for cutting the grass in the grounds of the temple and should have been more aware of the implications of karma .

Born in Japan, he had become a Buddhist monk at the age of 21 and was ordained at a peace pagoda in Sri Lanka. He travelled the world, promoting peace and building peace pagodas.

He had arrived in Milton Keynes in the winter of 1978 and built the city’s peace pagoda, helped by nuns and volunteers.The temple was later built next to the pagoda.

The inquest jury returned a verdict of accidental death, the mower will not be charged.
Rodney Corner, the Milton Keynes Coroner, said: “It is not wholly clear what happened. Nobody actually saw what happened.
Blood and other parts of his body were dragged behind the tractor. He had got out of the cab and desperately tried to get back into the cab. We don’t know why perhaps there was a cutter malfunction in some way.

“What must have happened was that he tried to get back in but he slipped. He must have slipped on wet grass. It was just an unfortunate accident which was such a great shame.”

Old Knudsen the lord of common sense said: " I am really cut up about the death of Mr Handa but not as cut up as he was, only an idiot loses fingers while cutting the grass I think that and with the lack of equipment maintenance shows this. I bet he was wearing sandals and robes to do it too, death by stupidity is my verdict, only a monk who has never had a real job would cut wet grass anyway put that in yer pagoda and smoke it."

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents said that 6,500 people in Britain needed hospital treatment last year after being injured by lawnmowers.

3 comments:

Alan said...

There's not many stories can do what this did to me I must admit I was real cut up.

Anonymous said...

Keep Off The Grass!

Brad Stitt said...

Thats karma dude he should have been building schools.