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Thursday, June 30, 2011

Actor Richard Gere, Drawn by Karma To Borobudur, Planning Temple Movie

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Magelang, Central Java (Indonesia) -- Hollywood star Richard Gere arrived at the eighth century Borobudur Temple on Sunday ahead of a Buddhist ritual today — in a trip that officials said would make the actor Indonesia’s “informal tourism ambassador.”

<< US actor Richard Gere greets Indonesian performers after watching a traditional dance at the Borobudur temple in Magelang in Central Java province on June 26, 2011. (AFP Photo)

Gere, a Buddhist activist, comes to Indonesia fresh from a tour of South Korean temples and is set to take part in a procession and meditation at the Mahayana Buddhist monument.

“I’m happy and amazed to be here,” he said at a press conference at Magelang’s Manohara Hotel. “It’s not just an ordinary journey for me but also a spiritual journey.”

He said his arrival at Borobudur was “karma,” a term for the force generated by a person’s actions which affects future ones.

Gere said he was particularly interested in coming back to make a movie about the discovery of Borobudur in 1814 by Sir Stamford Raffles.

“I won’t make a film like the kind that Julia Roberts made in Bali,” he said, referring to the hit “Eat Pray Love”

“I want to make a film about the history of this temple. I really want to do this.”

Gere had been scheduled to visit the nearby Hindu temple complex of Prambanan, but the plan was scrapped after his flight to Yogyakarta’s Adisucipto Airport was delayed.

Joko Sutono, head of the Prambanan temple’s management, expressed disappointment at the unfortunate turn.

“We had prepared a welcome drink for him and his family,” he said. “We also planned to present them with flowers from Prambanan.”

Purnomo Siswo Prasetyo, Borobudur’s management director, said Gere’s visit was nonetheless expected to boost tourism in the area, home to several other Buddhist and Hindu temples and the ancestral seat of Javanese culture.

Before flying to Yogyakarta with his wife, Carey Lowell, and son, Homer James Jigme Gere, Gere was in Jakarta to meet with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jero Wacik, the culture and tourism minister.

Gere will stay in Magelang and fly out on Tuesday for a family vacation in Bali.

Jero said his visit would be invaluable in raising the profile of the temple, after it had to be closed off for an extended period last year due to ash from the erupting Mount Merapi nearby.

“We were looking for an international figure who could relate closely to Borobudur, and that figure is Richard Gere,” he said, adding that the actor had previously expressed an interest in visiting the monument.

“He’s now become Indonesia’s informal tourism ambassador, for which he’s not being paid at all,” the official added.


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South Korea's religious harmony put to the test

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SEOUL, South Korea --  Many South Koreans concerned about the country's increasing religious polarisation are haunted by a single image - their president on his knees.

<< President Lee Myung-bak and his wife Kim Yoon-ok say prayers kneeling down at a breakfast prayer meeting for the nation held at Coex Samsungdong, Gangnamku, Seoul, on Thursday, Mar 03, 2011

While attending a national prayer breakfast in March, Lee knelt to pray at the urging of Christian leaders.

Footage of the event shocked many in this pluralist country, where about half the population professes no particular faith and the remainder is split between Buddhists, Christians and homegrown creeds.

The main Buddhist Jogye Order called the scene "unforgiveable," and even right-leaning media outlets generally supportive of the conservative leader expressed reservations.

The Joongang Ilbo daily in an editorial urged Lee, a devout Protestant and an elder at Seoul's Somang Church, to keep his beliefs private and avoid provoking public ire.

"(The prayer breakfast) convinced people how dangerous the current situation really is," said Park Gwang-seo, head of the Korea Institute for Religious Freedom, a civic group that works to promote the separation of religion and state.

"We're at a peak as far as the relationship between politics and religion is concerned."

South Korea's constitution stipulates that there is no official religion and bars the country's leaders from elevating one faith above others, but analysts say Lee's outspoken religious beliefs and strong links with the Christian community have opened the administration to charges of bias.

"We have for the first time very high-level conflicts going on, particularly between the Christian community and the Buddhist community," said Hahm Sung Deuk, a professor of political economy at Korea University. "And most of these conflicts can be attributed to President Lee."

ACCUSATIONS OF BIAS

Buddhists, secularists and even some Christians have bristled at cases that they believe point to a rising Christian influence in the operations of government.

These include its failure to pass legislation supporting Islamic bond, or sukuk, issuances, which was strongly opposed by Christian groups, and a reduction in funding for a program that lodges tourists at Buddhist temples.

Many also believe Lee filled key government positions based on recommendations and advice from the Christian community, Hahm says.

Christian groups say they enjoy good relations with the administration, but deny having any direct influence.

"Some people might say the church and state are too friendly, but it's not favourable for the church to participate in politics," said Kim Woon-tei, executive secretary of the Christian Council of Korea (CCK), which claims to represent around 8 million people under 69 protestant denominations.

"We only give our opinions to the state, to show how Christians view politics and the political process."

The Council's opposition to sukuk laws was not based on religion but because the proposals "(did not serve) the well-being of the economy and Korean people," Kim said.

BUDDHISTS FEEL LEFT BEHIND

A sense they are being left behind has mobilised Buddhists, who are increasingly flexing their political muscle, observers say.

"Buddhists think Christians are getting too much support (from the government)... so are organising more clearly to express themselves through political action and as a political movement," said Yoon Yee-heum, an honorary professor of religious studies and Seoul National University.

In late 2010, the Jogye Order cut off relations with the ruling Grand National Party (GNP) over the temple funding row, barring its officials from attending official temple events even throughout the campaign period for April by-elections, when candidates frequently do the rounds of prominent temples and churches.

The dispute appeared to reach a resolution on June 7, when the head of the order announced that despite the government's "religious favouritism", it would normalise ties with the ruling party and endeavour to resolve any issues through "communication and an open approach."

ELECTIONS LOOM

The timing of the peace with the Jogye Order is fortuitous for the GNP as political parties move to galvanise support ahead of the presidential election next year. In an increasingly charged environment some fear religion could play a bigger role in the results.

Kim of the CCK says while the organisation does not officially endorse specific candidates or parties, its membership is largely conservative and some church leaders "may say they are favourable to certain politicians and candidates."

Park of the Korea Institute for Religious Freedom said: "Most priests speak about politics and many people are affected by their opinions."

Others believe the impact of religious groups on the vote will be minimal and that elections could even ease the tensions that have characterised the Lee administration.

"Voters don't care much about candidates' religion itself, but how it relates to their governing," said Korea University's Hahm.

Hahm said the figures generally tipped as presidential candidates, including apparent front-runner Park Geun-hye, are careful to be circumspect about their religious views. Park aides say she professes no specific faith.

"Because of the Lee experience, many candidates will be very careful about the religious issue or selecting people from a particular religious group," he said. "They know the majority of Koreans support the principle of separating religion and politics and will try to get as much support as possible across religious communities."

Yoon warns candidates who ignore the conflicts that have arisen in recent years and turn to religion to win support may further imperil the harmony that has so far characterised relations among Korea's different faiths.

"If politicians do not look at this change, no one knows where the situation will go," he said. "Politicians see religion as a voting matter, so they're ignoring it ... (it is) clearly rising as a social problem."

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Additional reporting by Seongbin Kang, Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Sanjeev Miglani


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Gere meditates at Indonesian Buddhist temple

'He meditated for 20 minutes this morning at the top platform and made a 45-minute tour to admire the details of the temple's reliefs,' temple manager Purnomo Siswo Prasetyo said.

The Pretty Woman star was 'astonished' with the grandeur of the so-called temple mountain, which lies between two volcanoes about 40km north-west of Yogyakarta.

One of the peaks, Merapi, killed more than 320 people last year in its biggest eruption in over a century.

The temple was abandoned with the spread of Islam on Java island in the 14th century, but was 'rediscovered' in 1814 by English trader Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles.

Restored with the help of Unesco in the 1970s, it is now Indonesia's most-visited tourist attraction, drawing about 3.8 million people last year.


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Buddhist nun gangraped in Nepal bus

The victim, a resident of Bhojpur district in eastern Nepal, was travelling by bus when she was attacked by the group, which also included the driver of the bus.

According to reports, when the bus reached Sabhakhola town in Sankhuwasabha district Saturday night, the five men dragged the woman inside the bus.

The attackers included two teens, aged 17 and 18.

The nun was rescued by an ethnic organisation, the Sanghiya Limbuwan Rajya Parishad, whose members also caught the five men and handed them over to police.

The woman was taken to the local health centre. However, its services proved inadequate and she was taken to the B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences in Dharan.

There was no immediate reaction from Nepal's Buddhist organisations.

Nepal is the birthplace of the Buddha, the founder of Buddhism, and many communities still follow the custom of sending one member of the family to a monastery or nunnery to become a monk or a nun.


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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Lama Surya Das Speaks to Danny Fisher about the 2011 Buddhist Teachers Council

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Lama Surya Das Speaks to Danny Fisher about the 2011 Buddhist Teachers Council

For those who use the internet at all to help them track news about the growth and development of Buddhism in America, discussion of the recent Buddhist Teachers Council has been pretty hard to miss in the last couple of weeks. With the gathering being closed and by invitation only, and almost no information provided to the public about the event in advance of it, web chatter about the “Maha Teachers Conference” reached a fever pitch on Twitter and blogs especially. A Huffington Post article and some blogging by conference participants following the meeting offered some details, but also inspired additional questions.


<< Gathering of the largest number of American Buddhist teachers at any one time, recently held at the Garrison Institute. Photo courtesy of Roshi Joan Halifax

One of the conference’s main organizers, Lama Surya Das – the mighty American-born Tibetan Buddhist teacher, founder of the Dzogchen Center in Cambridge, and author of such books as Awakening the Buddha Within and Buddha Standard Time – very graciously and with typical warmth and humor agreed to answer some questions and clarify aspects of the event for curious readers. Here is our Q&A….

The announcement about the conference at the Garrison Institute website really didn't explain much about the purpose of and goals for the gathering. It stated only that about 230 teachers would be present and, among other things, would be considering "the promise and the pitfalls as the Dharma spreads more widely into medicine, science, healing, education, the arts and all aspects of Western culture," "how to preserve and adapt the Dharma in new conditions without losing depth," and passing the torch as it were from "elders to the next generation." Can you tell us a little bit about how this meeting came together, and what outcomes the organizers were hoping for?

This international Buddhist Teachers Council was over two years in the planning, yet we wanted to keep the materials and plans for schedule and topics fairly light, flexible, and open to emergent developments…among those who were actually present…when the time actually came around. Of course the general theme was according to Buddha's injunction that "Followers of the Way should get together regularly in order to help maintain a healthy and flourishing sangha and community."

Thus everyone we could think of was invited who represented the different groups and traditions of Buddhist teaching in the West, regardless of tradition, background, skin color, gender, personal prejudice, etc. Of course, the thousands of Buddhist teachers, translators, and academics etc. in the West could not all be accommodated, so we set out to fill the hosting Garrison Institute on the wooded banks of the Hudson River with 200-240 of the most leading, long term, dedicated, English-speaking and representative teachers spanning the entire spectrum of Buddhism in the West, while consciously including for the first time 45-50 young Dharma teachers (under age 45).

They were all there, or at least represented: from the monks and nuns to the house-holding laypeople, from the true believers to the new Buddhist atheists, from the meditators and yogis to the scholars and academics, from the sutra translators to the mindfulness-only instructors, from the organizationally and institutionally-minded center-and-temple builders to the non-institutional anarchist deconstructionists, from devout Buddhists and devotees to meditation teachers who don’t identify themselves as Buddhist, and so forth -- all flying their flags, banners and emblems in one way or another, whether gross or subtle. Why not?

Yet it heightened my awareness about the absolute necessity of broadening true diversity in our Buddhist groups and community, something more challenging than I'd ever thought it would or should be, and the challenges of holding harmoniously together in one place or coherent framework the various strands and currents of Dharma in the West.

One bright young star, a married Dharma teacher, mother and author, explicitly questioned at a plenary session if it was our group's conscious intent to come out of this large council with the intent to further “The Mindful Society,” as had been mentioned in the original invitational materials. Why not “The Enlightened Society,” “The Awakened Society,” “The Harmonious Society,” “The Peaceful Society,” “The Wise Society,” “The Compassionate Society,” or fill-in-the-blank, she penetratingly asked? Several others, including some European voices, stated their feeling that the large council and its interpersonal process was too mindfulness-tradition oriented and west-coast or even American-style for them.

How much joy and love, wisdom and experience, dedication and commitment and creativity and originality there was in the main gathering room, coming in so many directions and at almost tangible in so many different ways and dimensions. I was very moved much of the time with the feeling of meeting for the first time many true brothers and sisters on the path, especially the young'uns (30's and early forties). I liked and appreciated almost everyone. There was a little status-seeking and posturing and jockeying for position, and raising the banner of their own center, guru or project, but it was fairly minimal, given the outsized personalities present and the unremitting passion we all bring to these things. The second three days with 185 teachers was too busy and fragmented, I felt, and included too much process (about how we were going to spend our time together) and not enough content for me, though there were definitely some historic moments, insights, good laughs, memorable stories to take home and recount, and even some revelations.

Maybe it would have been best to drop the idea that there would be any issue we could really get into deeply, given the time and numbers of diverse people present – and instead just relish the positive qualities of coming together in this way and moving forward together for the benefit of the Dharma and the world, which needs it so much.

Over the years, I've found that one of the definite benefits of these gatherings is to help nurture and nourish people who may be working in isolation. Too many good-hearted  people find themselves in a teaching role without much or even any teacher training, and only practitioner training, or without a living master-teacher to supervise and encourage them further on their own path of enlightenment so that they don’t get stuck or plateu’d, not to mention side-tracked or burnt out, along the Way. Some of us have been discussing for years the need to develop and further refine effective and suitable models for thorough teacher training programs. How lonely it is for so many teachers, challenging, and both isolated and isolating -- especially in our own post-modern and increasingly secular and economically stressed culture. And how dangerous it is to be isolated; too many teachers who have fallen by the wayside are examples. I like to remember the African saying: "If you want to go swiftly, travel alone. If you want to go far, travel together."

Gelek Rinpoche, the Asian elder at the council and spiritual advisor of the Garrison Institute, told us that when the Tibetan refugees first came out of Tibet in 1959, several dozen of the leading Tibetan lamas eventually gathered after some time at Dharmasala with the Dalai Lama and had a council to discuss where they were, what possibilities and potential were available, what to do, and how to survive, preserve their precious heritages both spiritual and cultural, and flourish themselves and with their refugees communities in the new world of India. Lama Gelek mentioned that he sees this kind of council as part of continuing in that important and necessary direction.

All in all it was very collegial, without much politics or hidden agendas, and harmonious. Some good things are already starting to come out of it, like the first nonsectarian gatherings of Vajrayanist teachers in the West, following long behind the  Zen teacher and Vipassana teacher meeting tradition held almost annually over the past two or more decades.
I understand from talking to another participant that the conveners saw this as one in a continuum of meetings that have been happening over the years and have typically been smaller. Is this correct? If not, can you put this into context for us in terms of other ecumenical Buddhist teacher gatherings that have happened? How was this one particularly significant?

This meeting was the latest in a series of ecumenical or trans-sectarian (triyana) conferences begun by some of us with the Dalai Lama in March of 1993, for ten days in Dharamsala, India, principally at my and the Dzogchen Foundation's initiative and leadership. (See the two-hour Mystic Fire video In the Spirit of Free Inquiry from that first groundbreaking conference, including 40 Buddhist meditation teachers from many if not most of the traditions and from around the world, Asian and Western.) This week-long conference with the Dalai Lama was repeated in 1994 and 1996, with a core group and some changing participants, depending on peoples schedules and interests, with the Dalai Lama's keen interest and participation in a circle discussion in his large audience and living room. After that the meetings moved West, and took place at Spirit Rock, at Mt. Madonna Center, at Green Gulch Zen Center, in Boston, at the World Trade Center several months before 9/11, and elsewhere on a fairly ad hoc basis every year or two with many of the same organizers informally aligned with me and soon Jack Kornfield as the informal Western Buddhist Teachers Network, with the Dalai Lama as our senior advisor and nonsectarian Buddhist sponsor. All this work culminated in a large gathering of almost 300 Buddhist teachers with the Dalai Lama, Maha Ghosananda of Cambodia, several Tibetan lamas, Asian Theravadin monks and nuns, and other leaders East and West at Spirit Rock Center in Woodacre, Marin County, CA, for several days in 2001.

At lunch one day during that meeting, the Dalai Lama told us that it was now up to us to keep meeting, and he gave us his blessings and encouragement to continue to do so.
Smaller subgroups of Dharma teachers have continued to meet around the country, beneath the radar, over the years, as wanted and needed, to discuss various matters of mutual interest, including various possible forms of collaboration, current issues, personal issues, and the like. Questions often involving such things as monastic and lay practice today, gender equality, social justice, diversity, hierarchy and democracy, translation and study of traditional texts, balancing study and practice, the changing face of Buddhism and religion in the world today, preservation (authenticity) and adaptation (innovation), breadth and depth, integrating mindfulness and spirituality into daily life, engaged Buddhism, Buddhism's encounter with modernity, the essence of the teaching and study of liberating Dharma, pedagogy, training students, teacher training, and so forth, etc.

This one – which owes much to the efforts of Jim Gimian (publisher of Shambhala Sun) and other Dharma teachers on our ad hoc inviting committee, including Judith Simmer-Brown, Norman Fischer, and some of the staff at Garrison (such as David Rome and Erin Koch) – was deemed as significant for a couple of prominent reasons, by the organizers and a few other interested parties and savvy elder advisors…

1. To gather the pioneers and elders of American Buddhism and Buddhism in America and discuss the present and future of Buddhism here and in the world, and particularly its continuance, legacy, and special qualities for benefiting the world, while many are still alive, perhaps for the last time. (Many have passed away in recent years, including most recently Charlotte Joko Beck Sensei, John Daido Loori Roshi, E. Gene Smith and Ven. Gerard Godet of the Tibetan tradition, and Robert Aitkin Roshi.) Numerous Asian teachers resident in the West have also passed away since the last gathering, in 2001 at Spirit Rock. A great deal of questioning, inquiry, discussion and learning – informational and philosophical both – came out of this aspect of the gathering. One respected pioneer teacher and meditation center founder stated what he thought the absolute bottom line was in terms of authorizing a student to teach and carry on his line. Others discussed what is the very essence of Buddha Dharma, where their personal practice is currently at, and so forth.

2. To discuss in a fairly informal and intimate setting, out of the public eye or the media watch, where we and Buddhism are at – or seem to be at – what it is, how it's unfolding and evolving, and what if any kind of future near and far we can foresee and wish to help shape, for the benefit of one and all. Thus the first three days of pre-council conference, from June 5-8, was comprised of small groups of a few dozen invited teachers, old and young, and the three day council itself (June 8-11) included almost 200 invited teachers.

3. The intent to explore the passing on of the lamp (transmission) and mantle of teaching/mentoring to the next generation teachers, generally and specifically regarding those who might be present and ready, willing and able to uphold our lineage(s) going forward. I must say that the NextGen group of Dharma teachers from around the Western world, mostly Americans, exceeded all expectations and stepped up to the plate in their inimitable, bold and insouciant way. Questions came up including how can the Elders best serve the new generation; how we as Elders can sustain, back and help the younger generation empower themselves while getting out of their way and genuinely serve as midwifes at their delivery; how the new generation of both students and teachers can experience the kind of immersion some of us benefited by being trained in over the early decades of Dharma moving from east to west (Sixties through Nineties), with many of the true pioneering, late, great Buddhist masters present among us at that time.

Can you help us understand why, beyond the simple space issues at the Garrison Institute, it was decided to do this one "out of the public eye or the media watch?" I ask because this seemed to be an issue that rubbed Buddhist bloggers and others the wrong way. Additionally, some of the past gatherings have been open – I was at the New York meeting in 2001 as an audience member, for example. And, of course, with issues of accountability and transparency getting pushed broadly every time a scandal arises in a Buddhist community, I suppose concern might be understandable among students.

This Buddhist (practice) Teachers Council – which was not for academics, scholars, translations per se, unless they were teaching dharma as a practice in the west – was a little different than the public and for-profit “Buddhism in America” conferences that Al Rapaport organized in Boston and in NYC and in LA as well. But, in fact, AP reporter Rachel Zoll, Jaweed Kaleem from The Huffington Post, and Tricycle and Shambhala Sun too were invited and there.

We decided that in order to have honest and open, frank exchanges about certain difficulties and issus, people would feel more safe and free, even in large groups, if a certain amount of confidentiality was provided, like in a support group, rather than a very public meeting or conference gathering with the public and whomever attending.

We thought that Garrison could and should videotape the discussions for our future use and archival purposes and as a record, but the teachers gathered during the first days of the six voted to stop taping for much of it in order to ensure deeper and more candid exchanges.
In his article about the conference that he wrote for The Huffington Post, religion reporter Jaweed Kaleem wrote, "Most attendees at the Maha Council were white, many were men, and the average age skewed toward the 50s." I talked to a few conference participants who felt that this wasn't exactly accurate. Can you share with us your sense of the conference demographics? Who was well represented? Who would you like to see better represented in the future?

These conferences are among the most diverse and representative of any kind of similar gatherings in the world, the western world, and certainly in the Buddhist community. Needless to say, we can continue to strive to do better and be more conscientious regarding gender equality, diversity and inclusiveness, and form and structure as well. Between 4-500 Buddhist teachers of all the various traditions east and west were actually invited to this MahaCouncil or Great Gathering, and approximately 190 actually came, many of whom actively participated on the spot in the emergent nature of the conference’s activities and forms, some of whom have volunteered to help organize further such gatherings.

Jack Kornfield was quoted in Kaleem's piece as saying, "There is still a pretty big divide between temples and teachers whose communities are of immigrants and those who are called convert Buddhists. I don't know how to address this." Would you agree with that assessment, and, if so, did any ideas for addressing this divide in the future emerge from the conference?

This is a tough one, and accurate. Few among us as yet seem to know how to adequately address this division, or even to what extant it is a problem and needs to be addressed. Ethnic immigrant communities are fairly insular in their country of origin and sect practices and activities, for example involving their native languages and priests and monastics in leadership roles, and involving native rites and rituals, faithful followers and devotees, family and lay community participation and orientation, etc. Western Dharma centers, of which there are several thousand in North America alone, are generally more English-language and meditation-oriented, for the most part, led by immigrant teachers and masters lay and monastic as well as authentic homegrown Buddhist teachers trained either in Asia or, more recently, the West. In these Western Dharma centers and Buddhist meditation groups and retreats, mainly populated by converts with Judeo-Christian roots, philosophical study and meditation training is usually emphasized over rituals and beliefs; questioning and discussion often plays a significant role; and students as well as teachers – sometimes, but not always – interact or even study and practice with teachers and kindred spirits from other Dharmic traditions, one of the unique hallmarks of Western Buddhism. Psychotherapy and other modern scientific healing and health modalities are also more prominent and popular among Western Buddhists than the ethnic Buddhists, which also sets the groups apart.

The absence of almost all of the invited notable Asian teachers long active in the West at the conference was somewhat disappointing, and may auger a new era and generation of Western Buddhism. I particularly missed their presence, though the cross-cultural issues are certainly there when we do get together and not everyone agrees they should and can be fruitfully included. However, it seems unfortunate that we don't have their experienced voices, perspectives and traditional concerns heard among our teacher sangha right now, and it may auger ill for both us and them going forward in these turbulent and uncertain times.

Lastly, what was personally beneficial or exciting to you about the conference? What would you want to share about it with others?

I think that perhaps the most beneficial outcome of these conferences, councils and gatherings is the vibrancy of Dharma exploration and development in this new world, and our mutual experiencing of the common ground and convergences we all share, as Dharma practitioners and teachers. Also, we come to further experience and appreciate the differences and divergences through making genuine contact with others we might not otherwise encounter or understand, especially those from other schools, sects and lineage traditions which rarely if ever encountered and new each other in the Old World.

My friends and colleagues often say that many of the most meaningful encounters we have had at these conferences and councils, over the years, occur among individuals and small groups in between the cracks of the various sessions and group activities, panels, and presentations – at meals and on walks, in the bathrooms, etc. I personally love seeing old friends and colleagues, exchanging views and experiences, and catching up with them and where their thought and path is at during this stage of life: what they're doing, struggling with, and accomplishing; and exploring together questions such as: What is the leading edge of our personal practice or our sangha community and its combinations of depth and breadth, traditional and adaptation, outreach and in-reach, in this time and place here in America and Europe. How can I and we best fulfill our bodhisattva vow of altruistic compassion in action in this age and stage of my life? And, where do we go together from here, in this great Dharma Barn-Raising in America the Buddha-Full?

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Rev. Danny Fisher, M.Div., D.B.S. (Cand.), is a professor and Coordinator of the Buddhist Chaplaincy Program at University of the West. Prior to his appointment at UWest, he served on the adjunct faculty for Antioch Education Abroad’s Buddhist Studies in India program. He earned his bachelor’s degree in Religion from Denison University and Master of Divinity from Naropa University, and is currently finishing his doctorate in Buddhist Studies at UWest. Visit his blog: http://dannyfisher.org


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Centre to host Songwriting Competition 2011

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Petaling Jaya, Malaysia -- The the first ever BGF songwriting competition is currently being held with the aim of unearthing new musical talents. Budding musicians are invited to compose an inspirational song with the theme of "Growing People, Inspiring The Future".

Now opened for entries the organiser of the competition, Buddhist Gem Fellowship (BGF) have provided participants with a chance to win cash prizes and get their winning song performed by Buddhist all-star performers on the evening of "Fellowship Of A Thousand Gem Dinner" *.

More importantly, the winning composition shall be recognised as the new theme song for the BGF. Prizes are designated as follows:

Winner: RM500
1st Runner Up:  RM200
2nd Runner Up:  RM100

The organiser have stated that lyrics should be in English. Genre is left to the creativity composer. Lyrics are also not required to include the word "Buddhist Gem Fellowship" or "BGF". The competition is opened to all age groups.

Closing date for submission is July 17, 2011. The winning song will be announced on July 31, 2011 via the BGF website and the winners notified by email. The panel of judges shall comprise a balanced team of qualified musicians, which will include Datuk Dr. Victor Wee, Greg Henderson and Seng Tak Pin among others.

Interested participants can submit their entries for competition to:
bgf_moderator@yahoo.com.

Submissions must either have one of the following attached:

1) an MP3 file OR
2) a video of their song being performed (youtube link)

Participants must provide their name, song title and lyrics in their submission and are advised to keep their own record of song entry with the correct information to avoid any miscommunication.

For further enquiries of the competition, please contact
Bro. Aaron Lee 012-327 6060

or visit the official website at: http://www.facebook.com/BGF.Songwriting

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* The dinner is slated to be held on 21 August 2011, at Sentul Dewan HGH at 6.30pm.


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India, China organise conference on Buddhism

Inaugurating the conference, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar said, "Buddhism defines Asia as a unique space.

Over its long history, it has been the most inclusive, most tolerant and most accommodative way of life when it comes to fostering diversity, solidarity and oneness across Asia".

"This is implicit in the forms of Buddhist architecture. Tales of deliverance by the Buddha have been replicated in arts and sculptures across Asia," he said.

The two day Conference titled ''Buddhism: Mapping Asia''s History and Culture'' was being attended by scholars from India, China, Japan, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam.

Recounting Bihar''s contribution to the religion, Kumar said that it could be called the cradle of Buddhism.

"The term ''Bihar'' itself derives from the Sanskrit word ''Vihara'', which has relations with Buddhist viharas," he said.

About the revival of the famous fourth century Nalanda University, specialising in Buddhist studies, he said it represented the best of the tradition of academic activities.

"Scholars from Nalanda University, such as Bodhidharma took Buddhism to other parts of the world including China, Korea and Japan. Chinese pilgrim, Xuanzang has left detailed accounts of Nalanda," he said.

He said his government was fully committed to the establishment of the Nalanda International University.

"Government of India is making budgetary provisions for the university. Though the university is being established in Bihar, it will have an international status," he said adding that the Nalanda mentor group includes scholars from Singapore, China and Japan.

Many countries including China have shown interest in financing the construction of the university. China has announced a contribution of USD one million for the project.

"Maintaining this university would be a source of great pride and prestige for us," he said.

In his address, Yogeswar Verma, Deputy Director General of Indian Council of Cultural Relations, which sponsored the conference, said, "Buddhism defines Asia and when we talk about Asia, India and China are the two most ancient living civilisations with rich cultural heritage, where Buddhism brought many nations and civilisations together."
"In this context, it is indeed important to delve into and rethink together the thoughts and concepts of this age old philosophy," he said.

India and China simultaneously held a Yoga summit at the Chinese city of Guangzhou. Over a 1000 Yoga enthusiast attended the training sessions being conducted by yoga guru B K S Iyangar.


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Ship sets off on religious cruise to free suffering souls

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Taipei, Taiwan -- A luxury cruise ship departed from Keelung Harbor in northern Taiwan Wednesday on a three-day cruise around the island, with over 1,000 Buddhist monks and nuns on board.

They were all invited to jointly perform a religious ritual on board to free the souls of people who had died in accidents at sea, said Yen Hsiu-hua, chairperson of the Chinese Charity Sailing Foundation that planned the trip.

The monks and nuns will pray for the deceased to rest in peace and be reincarnated in a better world, she said.

They will be joined by 11 others from Japan, who will also pray for the victims in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, she added.

The foundation leased the Star Cruises ship at a cost of nearly NT$20 million (US$693,000) and spent other NT$10 million to cover the Buddhist masters' expenses during the voyage, according to Yen.

The ship will travel clockwise around the island and return to its departure point.


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Richard Gere speaks out on suffering in Tibet

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Seoul, South Korea -- American actor and practicing Tibetan Buddhist Richard Gere spoke out on the sufferings of Tibetans under Chinese occupation in Seoul, Wednesday.

“I think it’s impossible to look at these photographs and not realize the extraordinary suffering of the Tibetan people,” Gere told reporters at a press conference promoting his Tibet-themed photo exhibition at Seoul Arts Center. “I think when you see these photographs you have to be aware of the political situation there to understand the depth where I was coming from in offering this exhibition.”

The exhibition, “Pilgrim,” features a total of 64 photographs of Tibet and India taken by Gere, as well as 24 photos of Tibet by 24 renowned photographers, including Annie Leibovitz, Steve Meisel and Jerry Uelsmann. The exhibition currently on at Seoul Arts Center runs till July 24.

Gere, who is the co-founder of the Tibet House in New York City and a persistent advocate for the Tibetan independence movement, is banned from entering China. The photos on exhibit are from a 1993 trip to China and Tibet, the only time he was able to visit those countries.
Hollywood star and practicing Tibetan Buddhist Richard Gere speaks at a press conference promoting his Tibet-themed photo exhibition at the Seoul Arts Center in Seoul, Wednesday. (Lee Sang-sub/The Korea Herald)

Back in the late 1980s, while travelling in India, Gere came across a wall that had a series of drawings of Tibetan nuns being tortured by the Chinese in Tibet. He took a photograph of the wall at the time.

“And in 1993, during my only visit in Tibet, I was able to encounter three nuns who had been just released from Chinese prison in Tibet,” Gere told reporters. “And they told me exactly the same stories (with the drawings). So I included the picture of them in the montage of these drawings that I’d seen on the wall.”

Gere did not hesitate to openly criticize the Chinese government for their occupation of Tibet.

“The same kind of torture and deaths in Chinese prisons in Tibet is still taking place today,” Gere said. “Of course it’s not only in Tibet. The Chinese communist government does it to their own people in China as well.”

Such political remarks were contrary to what art CDI, the Korean PR company for Gere’s exhibition in Seoul, told the press prior to the conference.

The PR company had requested that Gere not be asked “questions that are too political” as he was feeling "sensitive" about the local press. Gere, who seemed to be unaware of art CDI’s request, volunteered to talk about the political situation in Tibet without a reporter asking him about it.

The Hollywood star arrived in Seoul on Monday along with his wife, actress Carey Lowell and their son, Homer Gere, to promote his exhibition and experience Korea’s traditional Buddhist culture.

On Tuesday Gere met with Ven. Jaseung, the head of the Jogye Order, Korea’s largest Buddhist sect, at Jogye Temple in central Seoul. The practicing Buddhist signed the temple’s guest book with a message that wished “peace and happiness” for all beings in the world.

“I had a very nice time there,” Gere told reporters about his visit to Jogye Order on Wednesday. “The monks and nuns were so lovely and generous to us. We had the most extraordinary meal across the street from the temple. Really, really nice vegetarian meal. The Jogye form of Buddhism was actually the first form of Buddhism that I studied.”

Gere said although he has met a lot of Korean students of the Dalai Lama in the past and is very much interested in taking photos to do with Korean Buddhism, he thinks he still needs more time to explore the country first.

“What I am aware of is that Buddhism first came to Korea in the 6th century,” Gere said. “And there has been a direct continuity of very high-level Buddhism here in Korea since the very beginning. So I’d really like to explore how that has influenced the culture here and how it can affect in a very modern way present day and future.”

Gere is scheduled to visit Donghwa Temple near Daegu and Tongdo Temple near Yangsan City, South Gyeongsang Province, on Thursday. He will be participating in meditation, chanting and other Buddhist practices that are part of the “temple experience” programs at the two temples.

He is scheduled to leave on Saturday.


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Buddhist vigilantes to ‘disrobe’ bogus monks who fleece the public

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MALACCA, Malaysia -- A Buddhist group here has set up its own vigilante corp to stop those portraying themselves as monks from soliciting money from the public.

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The Sangha Sanctity Protection Centre (SSPC) said its “monk police” believed an organised syndicate was behind the culprits who walked in saffron robes through the populated streets of Malacca and preyed on the generosity of the public.

These foreigners hand out amulets which they claim have spiritual powers to bestow prosperity and health to those who make donations.

SSPC vice-chairman Ronald Gan Ying Hoe said its 10-man vigilante group would go out to stop the syndicate, which is known to have fleeced hundreds of people of their money and personal belongings.

“They use scare tactics to solicit donations, especially at hospitals where they target family members of warded patients,” he told The Star.

“Genuine monks do not wear watches or shoes.

“Indeed, they have no earthly asset of any sort,” said Gan, adding that the centre's monk police would be spreading public awareness about the scam and also paste posters around the city to warn prospective victims.

“Monks are strictly forbidden to roam the streets, cheating people of their money or solicit donations and are not supposed to sell items like talismans,” he said.

“We are going to disrobe' these rogues by going to areas that have become popular haunts of these con artists,” he said.

He added that a probe by the centre found that the rogue monks travelled to Malaysia from China and operated for a month before heading back to their homeland.

“One bogus monk we nabbed recently confessed his group could earn up to RM9,000 from a month's stay here,” he said.

Gan said in recent months, the centre's monk police had caught four rogue monks who solicited donations at busy streets and private hospitals in the city.

“In one case, a bogus monk in his late 40s was forced to return to his native country with the help of the authorities,” said Gan.

He added that these conmen could damage the sanctity of the Buddhist faith if drastic steps were not taken to stop them from cheating people.

Gan said he would work closely with the relevant enforcement agencies to stop these bogus monks.


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Monday, June 27, 2011

Buddhism In America: What Is The Future?

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Article Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/14/america-buddhism_n_876577.html

GARRISON, N.Y. -- Backed by the nation’s largest Buddhist magazines and meditation centers, a recent invite-only gathering at an old monastery in this riverside hamlet north of New York City included a guest list of crimson-robed monks of Buddhism’s Tibetan line, tattooed “Dharma Punx,” professors and Japanese-influenced Zen Buddhists that read as a "who’s who" of Buddhism in America.


But the "Maha Council" (maha means “great” in Sanskrit) has created buzz and sparked soul-searching among members of the growing Buddhist religion in the United States for different reasons. Who speaks for "western Buddhism," many attendees and observers of last weekend's event have asked, and how accurately and honestly are elder Buddhists passing on their knowledge to new generations?

What is the relation of U.S. Buddhists to those in India and other parts of Asia, where the spiritual practice was born from Hindu roots in the 5th century B.C.?

And in a society where traditional Buddhist concepts such as "mindfulness," mental wellness and spiritual health are now a common part of corporate health programs, what role is left for Buddhism to play?

The questions highlight the growing pains of a religion that has gone from being a native practice of relatively small Asian immigrant populations who came to the U.S. in the 19th century to one that has been increasingly adapted by non-Asians since the 1950s to become one of the largest largest religions in the country. By low estimates that don’t count non-English speakers, Buddhism has more than 2 million adherents in the U.S. Hundreds of Buddhist meditation centers dot urban and rural American landscapes.

"A few decades ago, people would look at me with a weird face when I said I taught people about meditation for a living," said conference organizer Jack Kornfield, who is known in the Buddhist community as a leader in the vipassana movement (named after a method of meditation that traces itself to Buddha). “Now, at the gas station or supermarket, people say, 'oh yeah, I could really use that.' "
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Kornfield, a teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Marin County, Calif., and other big names in American Buddhism -- many who came of age during the 1960s and encountered the religion through the hippie subculture before receiving formal training in India and East Asia -- put together the council with an aim to unite and organize American Buddhists in similar ways to how Jewish, Muslim and other minority groups have coalesced around issues outside the theological. A similar gathering, which the Dalai Lama attended, happened 11 years ago at Spirit Rock, but large-scale meetings have since been sparse.

"The Buddhists in Thailand and Burma and the ones in China and the ones in Japan and Tibet, they develop within those cultures very independently. Here, we have all these different styles," said Kornfield. "We want people across lineages meeting and learning with mutual respect."

The four-day retreat also discussed strategies for growth and more inclusion in American society.

That included a panel on the influence among non-Buddhists of "mindfulness," a traditional practice of trying to maintain a day-to-day "calm awareness" of one’s body, sensations, thoughts and existence as one of several paths that Buddhists believe will together bring enlightenment.

Most attendees at the Maha Council were white, many were men, and the average age skewed toward the 50s. In addition to well-known American Buddhists such as Western Buddhist Teachers Network founder Lama Surya Das, Shambhala Sun Buddhist magazine publisher James Gimian and Calif.-based Everyday Zen Foundation founder Zoketsu Norman Fischer, lesser-known Buddhists were also among the crowd.

"I don’t always have a lot of interaction with other Buddhists outside my practice," said Ari Goldfield, a 42-year-old meditation teacher from San Francisco who follows Tibetan Buddhism and attended with his wife. "But here, we got to talk to people from lots of paths and learn about their suffering as a way to experience unity."

"I came to meet younger people, who you don’t always come across," said Anuska Fernandopulle, a 41-year-old vipassana meditation teacher from San Francisco. "I think among younger people, there’s a larger awareness of social issues like gender, race and sexuality that may have been overlooked by older generations."

But among attendees and outside observers, the event has also attracted criticism.

"Although this was a conference of Buddhist teachers there was little if any consideration in the formal sessions of the teaching of Buddhism or of the nature of the teacher role and task. This was surprising," wrote David Brazier, a British psychotherapist and follower of Pure Land Buddhism who blogged the event.

"There is a sense here that this is something already so well known that it can be taken for granted. Being a Buddhist teacher is here pretty much taken to equate to being an instructor in mindfulness and meditation technique. There was no real scope to challenge this assumption," he later added.

Brad Warner, a Soto Zen priest and author who writes on Buddhism and punk rock, also blogged to criticize what he called was “an accepted group of tastemakers and trendsetters within American Buddhism” who he saw as wanting to "reify their positions and to expand their influence."

Warner, who did not attend the conference, continued: "It’s not that these people can enact any sort of legislation that is in any way binding. But they do have the power of their magazines and their institutes to push their version of the American Buddhist status quo."

Kornfield admitted disappointment that the gathering had no representatives of Asian Buddhist temples, which are some of the oldest and largest in the U.S. and largely serve immigrant communities.

"There is still a pretty big divide between temples and teachers whose communities are of immigrants and those who are called convert Buddhists. I don’t know how to address this," he said.

But in an attempt to ease any friction during an address during the retreat's last full day, Gelek Rimpoche, a 72-year-old high-ranking Tibetan Buddhist lama who is the nephew of the 13th Dalai Lama (the current Dalai Lama is the 14th incarnation) and was one of the few non-converts to attend the gathering, told attendees "there is one teacher -- that is Buddha -- and there is one sangha" -- the Sanskrit word for "community."

"Individual people, individual teachings,” he said. “All Buddha’s teachings, all are Buddhists to me."


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Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes reopen after floods in NW China province

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LANZHOU, China -- The Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes, one of the country's three major Buddhist art treasures, reopened as the severe flooding has been effectively controlled in northwestern Gansu Province.

After days of work, the dikes were repaired and traffic resumed to all tourism sites in Dunhuang City. The power supply and telecommunication services also resumed, said a statement released by the Dunhuang City government on Wednesday.

The province's western cities of Jiuquan and Zhangye typically receive little rainfall, relying on water from the icecap of the nearby Qilian Mountain. Located in a basin nearby the desert, Dunhuang is a city affiliated to Jiuquan.

Heavy rains have battered Gansu Province since June 15. In Dunhuang, the rain-triggered floods submerged railways, destroyed a major bridge and hampered transportation and supplies of electricity.

Dunhuang is a renowned tourist city known for the Mogao Grottoes, or the Ancient Caves of 1,000 Buddhas, which became China's first UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987.


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Zen and the art of mingling

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Buddhists of all kinds met at Lady Warsi's reception to celebrate the contribution of the community in London

London, UK -- What is the collective noun for a group of Buddhists. A meditation? A stupafaction? A dharmagation? Whatever, it was a rare gathering at Admiralty House on Whitehall this week where the leaders of the religion's various bodies in this country were brought together at the invitation of Sayeeda Warsi at a reception to celebrate the contribution of the Buddhist community to the UK.

<< Buddhist robes of all colours, such as these, were seen at Lady Warsi's reception for the community in London. Photograph: Reuters

One can view a room of Buddhist monks rather like an tube map – it's all about the colours. So here were the dark browns of the Zen robes, the decorative reds and golds of the Tibetan tradition and the various shades of orange and saffron of the Theravadan schools.

Here also were Burmese monks in their crimson robes, so familiar from the protests of 2007, as well as Zen priests from the Pure Land school, whose decorated brown robes looked faintly high church. Dotted among them, too, were two white-costumed Jain nuns and one brave, lone Zoroastrian.

This was always going to be a somewhat eccentric event, and so it proved – from the sight of monks producing mobiles from their robes to hand in at reception, to the choir of the London Buddhist Vihara in Chiswick who sang a happy-clappy song that sounded like a Sanskrit version of "I've got a never-ending love for you". And all of this taking place in grand, 18th-century rooms, beneath chandeliers and surrounded by enormous, gilt-framed naval paintings.

The final touch was the presence of so many members of the armed forces, all dressed to the nines, medals marching across their breasts, who gave the event a slightly Jewel in the Crown feel. Apparently, they were all members of the Armed Forces' Buddhist Society. Admit it, you didn't know it existed.

Climbing onto one of the sofas (ignoring the Cabinet Office sign which said: "In the interest of preserving this delicate antique, please refrain from sitting on or moving this furniture". Well, it didn't say anything about standing, I suppose), Lady Warsi welcomed everyone to the first event of this kind.

Afterwards, it was time for the monks to collect their phones and get back to their texts. As in the teachings, that is.


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Indonesian Officials Gereing Up for Hollywood Star’s Borobudur Visit

?We are ready to receive Richard Gere, both for the staging of The Masterpiece of Borobudur Ballet and his intention to make the rounds of villages around Borobudur Temple,? park spokesman Pujo Suwarno said in Magelang, Central Java, on Thursday.

Pujo said to ensure the security of Gere?s visit, park management had coordinated with the Magelang Police.

He said the veteran Hollywood actor who starred in the movie Pretty Women would be in Indonesia from Saturday, at the invitation of Culture and Tourism Minister Jero Wacik.

Pujo said Gere would arrive in Jakarta on Saturday before flying to Yogyakarta where he would be welcomed by the Sultan Hamengkubuwono X at Adisucipto Airport.

Besides the ballet on Sunday evening, Gere was also expected to participate in a Peace Walk circling the Borobudur temple three times while chanting Buddhist prayers in the company of monks from various temples throughout Indonesia.

He is also scheduled to visit the Mendut and Pawon temples and several tourist villages by a cart drawn by a horse, before flying to Bali on Tuesday.


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Millions of Sri Lankan devotees pay homage to sacred Buddhist relics

These sacred relics were sent by the Government of Pakistan on the special request of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, during the visit of President Asif Ali Zardari to Sri Lanka. In addition to the millions of devotees the President, the Prime Minister, Speaker of Sri Lankan Parliament, several Parliamentarians and other prominent personalities paid homage to the sacred relics of Lord Buddha during the exposition.

The sacred relics brought from Pakistan to Sri Lanka were taken back to Pakistan on Monday after the conclusion of the exposition of these sacred relics in Sri Lanka, according to a message received here from Colombo.

These relics included the sacred relics of the Lord Buddha, Kanishka Relic Casket from Shah-Ji-Ki-Deheri, stone reliquary in Stupa shape and a Golden Casket.

The exposition of the sacred relics was declared open by the President of Sri Lanka on June 4 at Maligakanda temple in Colombo where these sacred relics stayed for a period of four days from June 5 to 9, 2011 and over 300,000 people paid homage to these relics every day at the Maligakanda temple.

These relics were then taken to the Gangaramaya temple Hunupitiya where they stayed for public exposition for three days from June 10 to 12, during which over 350,000 devotees visited these relics every day.

On June 13, the sacred relics were taken to Tissamaharama temple in Hambantota to mark celebration of Poson Poya day on June 15. The sacred relics remained at Tissamaharama temple for a period of three days where they were visited by over a million devotees.

On June 17, the sacred relics were brought back to Colombo at Mahamewna Asapuwa Malabe from June 16 to 19, where they were kept in the inner chamber of the newly constructed stupa for sanctifying and conferring the blessing of the said sacred relics on the stupa and as a lasting testimony to this blessed event, this stupa was named as ?Siri Gauthama Dharmarajika Stupa?.

There after the sacred relics were exhibited at Mahamewuna Asapuwa, Malabe until June 19.

The exhibition of the sacred relics in Sri Lanka has further strengthened the already existing deep rooted cultural relations between the two friendly nations as it has marked the 2600th Year of the attainment of Enlightenment of Lord Buddha. Buddhism left a monumental and rich legacy of art and architecture in Pakistan.

Despite the vagaries of centuries, the Gandhara region preserved a lot of the heritage in craft and art. Much of this legacy is visible even today in Pakistan.

The Gandhara civilization was not only the centre of spiritual influence but also the cradle of the world famous Gandhara culture, art and learning. It was from these centers that a unique art of sculpture originated which is known as Gandhara Art all over the world.

Today the Gandhara sculptures occupy a prominent place in the museums of England, France, Germany, USA, Japan, Korea, China, India and Afghanistan, together with many private collections world over, as well as a vast collection in the museums of Pakistan.


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Hoa Hao Buddhists celebrate founding anniversary

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Hanoi, Vietnam -- Celebrations of the Hoa Hao Buddhist sect’s 72nd founding anniversary have been held across Vietnam’s 15 provinces and cities with support of local authorities.

The sect?s Central Executive Committee said the celebrations took place on the 16th,17th and 18th of the fifth lunar month, complying with religious rituals and the State laws and embracing the spirit of solemnity, solidarity and thrift.

Seventy-two years ago, Hoa Hao Buddhism was founded by prophet Huynh Phu So, a native of Hoa Hao village, Tan Chau district, Chau Doc province (now Phu My town, Phu Tan district, An Giang province).

The religion, which advocates the practice of Buddhism at home, is thriving in 15 provinces and cities from the central coastal province of Phu Yen southwards with more than 2 million followers and 358 executive committees and places of worship.

With more than 800,000 followers, An Giang province is regarded as the Holy Land of the sect.

Best conditions have always been provided for faith practices and religious activities by Hoa Hao dignitaries and followers, who have also enthusiastically participated in social and charitable activities at their localities as guided by their seniors.


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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Of course the Dalai Lama's a Marxist

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The leader's statement shocked some in the west, but reminds us of Buddhism's commitment to social as well as individual good

London, UK -- The Dalai Lama has a refreshing tendency to confound western caricatures. As a cuddly old monk, he could comfort fans by fuzzily connecting us to an imagined Shangri-La that contrasts favourably with our own material world. Only he won't play the game, regularly making ethical, political, scientific and (ir)religious statements that rudely pop the projections laid on to him.

<< The Dalai Lama reminds us of Buddhism's radical social and economic messages. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

He was at it again the other day, telling Chinese students that he considers himself a Marxist. This wasn't just playing to the crowd – although it was reported with surprise (at least in the US), the ideological alignment is longstanding. In 1993, he said: "The economic system of Marxism is founded on moral principles, while capitalism is concerned only with gain and profitability. Marxism is concerned with the distribution of wealth on an equal basis ... as well as the fate of those who are underprivileged and in need, and [it] cares about the victims of minority-imposed exploitation. For those reasons, the system appeals to me, and it seems fair."

There are a number of caveats (he's not a Leninist, believes compassion rather than class struggle is key, and doesn't consider communist regimes such as the USSR, China or Vietnam to have been true exponents), but the dissonance between image and reality remains – the Dalai Lama is not the comforting Oriental pet that consumer society might like.

Neither does his tradition match the capitalist fantasies attached to it. Perhaps because Buddhism came to the west on a wave of post-war hippy soul-searching, and was then co-opted as friendly religion of choice by new ageism and the self-help movement, its radical economic and social messages have been lost under an avalanche of laughing fat-man statues, healing crystals and copies of The Secret.

The very idea of self-help in Buddhism is an oxymoron – relief of suffering can only come from the realisation that pleasing ourselves doesn't bring happiness – instead we must try to work skilfully and compassionately with others, as part of interwoven systems of connectivity that bind us together. A "western Buddhism" that prioritises solipsistic focus on the individual is so great a misconception as to be unworthy of the name – or at the least the Buddhism part – as anyone who pays it more than passing attention knows. It's also largely a media invention – many western Buddhists are serious, deeply committed practitioners. That commitment means choosing to follow a path that leads against the stream of materialism and selfishness. Of course, we don't always manage it, but that's why it's called a path of practice.

Buddhism goes way beyond the confines of the personal – realising the truth of interdependence implies taking up the challenge of engaging with others in the wider world. This isn't missionary zeal – proselytising is hardly the Buddhist way – but it does mean social action that embodies dharmic principles, and western sanghas are increasingly prioritising community involvement. As they do so, Buddhism may start to look less like some nice bit of calm and relaxation and more like a radical, uncompromising critique of the status quo.

This critique has already begun to influence the UK mainstream. It's 45 years since EF Schumacher published his Buddhist Economics essay in Small is Beautiful, which the Times Literary Supplement listed as one of the 100 most influential books since the second world war. Though the male-centric, mechanistic world it describes now seems dated, Schumacher's outline of a world driven mad by consumption (and his Buddhist-inspired remedy of sufficiency and sustainability) has informed everything from the climate change debate to the happiness agenda – particularly through the influential New Economics Foundation (NEF) thinktank, which grew out of Schumacher's vision.

The well-being indices enthusiastically taken up by David Cameron have grown in part from NEF's links with the kingdom of Bhutan and its policy of favouring gross national happiness above gross domestic product. Is the prime minister aware of the Buddhist foundation to his plans for the nation's mood?

Of course, we're a long way from a government that looks even remotely dharmic. From a Buddhist perspective, only a revolution in our collective mind can counter the momentum that keeps us grasping for happiness in all the wrong places. And that would involve more than measuring whether someone with a job and a family in sunny Cornwall feels more upbeat than a lonely, unemployed Londoner on a rainy day. It would require systemic transformation on both an intimate and a huge scale, bringing the path of personal practice together with much broader societal shifts. Could this be what the Dalai Lama is thinking of when he describes himself as "half-Marxist, half-Buddhist"?


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Ven. Vitiyala Seevali Thera: A great Buddhist missionary

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Colombo, Sri Lanka -- Upon attaining Enlightenment the Buddha exhorted his first mission comprising 60 bhikkus led by the five ascetics - Kondanna, Bhaddiya, Wappa, Mahanama and Assaji - to go forth and spread the Dhamma for the good and welfare of the many in this life and the hereafter. (‘Charatha Bhikkawe Charikang Bahujana Hithaya, Bahujana Sukhaya...’) It is necessary to remember with gratitude that since this exhortation generations of bhikkus have fulfilled the sacred duty of propagating the Dhamma for 2600 years. It is a great and rare fortune that the institution of the Sangha which began in ancient India has today spread worldwide.

Courageous monk

<< Ven. Vitiyala Seevali Thera

Recent history shows that the strong anti-colonial movement that began in India parallel to Anagarika Dharmapala’s campaign for national and Buddhist revival gave new life to the Buddha Sasana. He accompanied the Venerable Parawahera Vajiragnana and several other bhikkus to England for training them in Buddhist missionary work. A group of other bhikkus including the Venerable Neluwe Jinarathana and Ven. Heenatiyana Dhammaloka were taken to India for the same purpose.

This immense service Dharmapala performed was so successful that well-educated monks are today making an excellent contribution to the preservation and spread of the Buddha Dhamma in both East and West.

Among them is the Venerable Vitiyala Seevali, former Principal of the Paramadhammachetiya Pirivena, Ratmalana. A resident monk in Minnesota, USA, Ven. Seevali has begun two Buddhist Viharas near the State Capital Minneapolis.

Two Nepalese bhikkus trained and educated in Sri Lanka have joined the Ven. Seevali in his unique missionary work there.

Ven. Seevali is a humble but courageous monk who is highly proficient in Sinhala, Pali, Sanskrit and English. He has an inborn talent for clearly explaining difficult points in the Dhamma and winning the hearts of his audience.
Buddhist activities

He has greatly impressed American Buddhists. It has made a rich American Buddhist to donate 500-acre block of land to Ven. Seevali for Buddhist activities.

Apples, grapes, oranges and bamboos grow in this large scenic area which has several large ponds. Deer, Sambhur and other wild animals freely roam in this land which has been allocated for a meditation centre. Comfortable seats have been provided for meditating under trees.

The centre also comprises a dining hall for bhikkus (danasala), a Dhamma discussion hall and a library. Not only white Americans but also Indian, Thai, Burmese, Cambodian, Laotian, Vietnam, Korean, Japanese and Sri Lankan-born Buddhists are among Ven. Seevali’s patrons and close associates.

Members of the Amarapura Sect have expressed their appreciation of the Most Venerable Mahopadhya, Thibbotuwawe Sri Sumangala Mahanayaka and the Karaka Sangha Sabha for honouring Rajakeeya Panditha the Venerable Seevali with the title Dharmakeerthi Sri Pragnarama and appointing him Dwitheeya Sangha Nayaka of North America in recognition of his great Buddhist missionary work overseas.

We wish Ven. Seevali long and healthy life and hope that the international community will extend its fullest cooperation to him in continuing his noble service for the cause of propagating Buddhism.

A ceremony will be held to felicitate Ven. Seevali Thera at the Paramadhammachetiya Pirivena, Ratmalana on Thursday June 23 at 3.00 p.m.

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Venerable Aggamaha Panditha Kotugoda Dhammawasa Anunayaka Thera is President, Sri Lanka Amarapura Maha Sangha Sabha


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Thailand To Tattoo Tourists: Think Before You Ink

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Bangkok, Thailand -- Many of Thailand's tattoo tourists find their way to Bangkok's Khao San Road, where tattoo parlors are nestled among the Internet cafes, noodle stalls and other backpacker hangouts. A visitor along this road might pick up a tattoo, along with some beads and dreadlocks, and perhaps even a nose ring.

<< A disciple of Master Noo Ganpai tattoos elaborate Buddhist designs onto the back of a customer. Anthony Kuhn/NPR

The Thais are famously welcoming to visitors. But last month, Thai Culture Minister Nipit Intarasombat called for a ban on foreigners' getting religious tattoos that offend Thai people.

The issue came up after an incident in the southern tourist haven of Phuket Island. Exactly whose tattoo offended whom is not clear. Nor is any sort of tattoo illegal under Thai law. But Thais consider the head sacred and the feet profane, and some foreigners get Buddhist tattoos below the waist, which can upset Thais.

"There are some tattoo artists who only care about money," confides Pongsuk Tammaget, who runs the Max Body Tattoo Parlor. "They heed no rules or regulations. If the law is aimed at them, that's fine by me. If I see foreigners with tattoos in the wrong place, we notice it. It's not good, and it offends Thai people's sensibilities."

The details of the minister's ban are a bit vague. But the Culture Ministry says it intends to print guidelines for religious tattoos and inspect tattoo parlors for compliance.

In an alley just off Khao San Road in Bangkok, an Australian man who goes by his Buddhist name, Tao Jaiphet, is checking out the tattoo parlors. He extends an arm adorned with sacred tattoos known as Sak Yant and comments that his tattoo master would never do these anywhere below the belt.

Tao explains that his window on the local culture is the art of Thai boxing.

"I was a boxer here. I was living here in the late '90s, and it's quite common for Muay Thai fighters to get Sak Yant," he notes. "I think they were kind of like the first, before Angelina Jolie got on the bandwagon. A lot of the boxers would get Sak Yant to protect them while they're fighting."

Master Noo Kampai is a former Buddhist monk who illustrated the back of actress Angelina Jolie — perhaps the most famous of tattoo tourists — with a crouching tiger and rows of sacred scripts. Master Noo explains that tattoos are essentially like amulets. He goes into a trance and channels the force of his teacher and the Buddha into his magic tattoos.
A disciple of Master Noo Ganpai tattoos elaborate Buddhist designs onto the back of a customer.

But Master Noo rose some time ago to guru status, leaving his young disciples to do much of the work. He agrees with the government's injunctions against improper tattooing.

"My message for those who want to get tattoos is that you should think it over repeatedly, because it'll be on your body for good," he said. "You should think about whether or not it will affect your job applications."

Another debate over public morals erupted in April, amid the water-splashing revelry of Songkran, the Thai New Year celebrations. In downtown Bangkok, three young women got up on parked vehicles, stripped to the waist and started dancing. Someone posted a video of it on the Internet.

In the ensuing uproar, Culture Minister Nipit called for the trio to be fined and to perform community work.

Professor Pavin Chachavalpongpun, of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore, says that the minister was apparently not concerned with Bangkok's Red Light districts, where standards of public behavior would make the topless teenagers look positively chaste.

"I just wish that, you know, we just be honest about what happens in Thailand," he laments. "And as a Thai, I mean, I find it frustrating because we know that, in reality, what I see every day in Thailand is just not what the state wants foreigners to see."

Pavin says officials' selective outrage suggests either double standards or political motives.

That is how many see the involvement of Thailand's military in politics. This spring, the army filed charges against the leaders of last year's "Red Shirt" political protests, as well as a Bangkok academic. Critics accused the military of using its self-appointed role as protector of the monarchy to silence political opponents.

Observers also noticed that even as Nipit fulminated about the topless girls, his ministry's website was adorned with festive folk art images of bare-breasted ladies. When this was pointed out, the images were quickly deleted.


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Upaya Zen Center’s Buddhist Chaplaincy Program

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A Visionary Program in Service to the  World
 
Santa Fe, New Mexico (USA)
-- The Upaya Buddhist Chaplaincy Training is a comprehensive two-year program for a new kind of chaplaincy intended to serve individuals, communities, the environment, and the world. The program, launched in 2008, is now accepting applications for 2012.

The Upaya Chaplaincy Program is designed for Buddhist practitioners who wish to serve as lay chaplains, as well as those who wish to deepen their understanding of service from a Buddhist and systems thinking perspective. The training is intended to prepare students to have the skillful means to transform all forms of suffering, including suffering induced by structural violence.

Over the last 20 years, there has been a huge growth of Buddhism in the West. Upaya’s Chaplaincy Program focuses on altruistic and compassionate applications of Buddhism in settings such as health care, hospices, prisons and jails, and the environment. The program is based on the premise that those doing ministerial work are endeavoring to serve and heal not only individuals, but also environments and social systems. This approach, based on complexity and systems theory and Buddhist philosophy, is radically innovative and is the theoretical and practical basis of the training.

The Chaplaincy Program is part of the Zen Peacemaker Order, a leader in integrating spiritual practice with social action.

Upaya’s Chaplaincy Program faculty represent some of the leading Buddhist teachers of our time as well as leaders in other professional fields, including Roshi Joan Halifax, Roshi Bernie Glassman, Sensei Fleet Maull, Joanna Macy, Tsoknyi Rinpoche, Sharon Salzberg, Hozan Alan Senauke, Roshi Pat Enkyo O'Hara, Norman Fischer, Stephen Batchelor, Frank Ostaseski, Richard Davidson, Merle Lefkoff, Laurie Leitch, Marty Peale, and many more.

Training paths include End-of-Life Care, Prison Ministry, Peacemaking, Environmental Ministry, Interfaith and Multifaith Ministry, and Women’s Ministry.

About Upaya

The Upaya Zen Center, founded by Roshi Joan Halifax, is one of the most renowned and respected Buddhist centers in the world offering socially relevant programming, making it possible for new and seasoned practitioners to explore how the contemplative life forms a base for social action and service.

WHEN: The next cohort begins March 1, 2012. Applications are now being accepted. (We start a new cohort each year.)
WHERE: The chaplaincy training may be done as a long-distance program, with 26 residential days each year at Upaya Zen Center, 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501

MORE INFO: http://www.upaya.org/training/chaplaincy/
email: chaplaincy@upaya.org


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Buddhist nun's social activism

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Sydney, Australia -- The Australian Buddhist nun featured here on Eureka Street TV breaks the stereotype of Buddhists as being quiet, mellow and laid back. She is larger than life, a very colourful character, and it's easy to be distracted by the colour.

As described in a December 2000 article in The Age, Robina Courtin has 'been a black belt in karate, one of many daughters in a large Catholic family, a supporter of the Black Panthers, a radical lesbian separatist feminist and a lot else besides ... she speaks at a million miles an hour and can swear like a truck driver/politician. But all that is colour. The substance is that she is a Buddhist nun.'

Courtin is a woman of great substance. She has been editorial director of a prominent Buddhist publishing house, director of a project to bring Buddhist teachings to prisoners, and is now a highly respected teacher of Buddhism in western countries.

Courtin was born in Melbourne in 1944 and was raised a Catholic. She went to a Catholic girls' school, and, after realising she couldn't fulfill her wish to become a priest, shifted her desires towards a vocation as a Carmelite nun.

But alongside her deep and abiding interest in religion, she was drawn in many other directions. She loved music and had a good voice. As a teenager, at a school fete, by chance she bought a record by Billie Holiday whose singing awakened a passion for black American music, and an appreciation of the injustices and prejudice suffered by African Americans. This stirred the beginnings of a strong social conscience, and a drive to become a social activist.

As a young adult she went to London to study singing. While there she joined the feminist movement, and began work on behalf of prisoners' rights.

She spent time living back in Australia and the USA and, in 1974, began studying martial arts. Injuries from a freak accident in 1976 prevented her from practising karate, so she decided to attend a Buddhist retreat in Queensland conducted by leading Tibetan teachers, Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche. She was captivated by these monks and by Buddhism. This set the direction for the rest of her life.

The following year she went to Kathmandu in Nepal and studied at Kopan Monastery. There she was ordained as a Buddhist nun in the Tibetan Gelugpa tradition, in the lineage of Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa.

Since then Courtin has worked in various capacities for the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT) which was founded by Lama Yeshe in 1975. Lama Zopa is spiritual director of the organisation. The FPMT has monasteries and nunneries in six countries, meditation centres in 40 countries, and runs health and nutrition clinics, hospices and programs in prisons around the globe.

According to its website, the FPMT provides 'integrated education through which people's minds and hearts can be transformed into their highest potential for the benefit of others, inspired by an attitude of universal responsibility'.

In the 1980s and '90s Courtin was editorial director of the FPMT's Wisdom Publications, and editor of its magazine, Mandala.

From 2000 to 2009, she was founding director of the FPMT's Liberation Prison Project in the USA which looked after the spiritual needs of hundreds of prisoners spread through some 150 institutions, sending them Buddhist literature and letters, visiting and giving teachings and advice.

In this role, she once asked Lama Zopa to write a card to a young Latino prisoner serving a life sentence. He wrote: 'Your prison is nothing in comparison with the prison of ordinary people: the prison of ego-grasping, the prison of attachment, the prison of anger, depression and pride.'

Courtin often repeats these words, and they have inspired her to take Buddhist teachings to broader society, to spread its message among ordinary people. This is now her main work.

To read or leave comments on this article, click here.

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Peter Kirkwood is a freelance writer and video consultant with a master's degree from the Sydney College of Divinity.

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More protests in eastern Tibet, many Tibetans detained

?Nine Tibetans, consisting of a monk of Dhargyal Monastery, four nuns, two lay women, and two youths, staged protests on Saga Dawa, a major Buddhist festival observed on 15 June,? RFA quoted a Tibetan resident of Kardze as saying.

?Their names and other details about them are not known. However, the movements of local people are restricted, and armed police are everywhere.?

The monk from Dhargyal Monastery was identified as Ngawang Lobsang Yoyo, 37.

?On 14 June, he made offerings at the Kardze monastery and prayed in front of a photo of His Holiness the Dalai Lama,? a Tibetan living India with contacts in Kardze told RFA.

?Then, at about 7:00 a.m. On 15 June, he went to downtown Kardze and chose a spot where the largest number of people had gathered for the holiday. He threw leaflets into the air and knelt down, folding his hands in appeal and calling out for a few minutes for the long life of the Dalai Lama and for the freedom of Tibet,? the man said.

Shortly afterward, the protesting monk was detained and taken away by Chinese security forces, the man said.

A Chinese police official in Kardze answered a phone call from RFA confirming that ?many? had been detained. ?But I don?t know the reasons why. I am busy,? he said, before hanging up.

Meanwhile, a local Tibetan said that Chinese police had blocked Kardze?s downtown area from two sides.

?Monks and nuns are not allowed to enter the city area,? he said, adding that Tibetans traveling from outside villages and nomadic areas must seek permission from local officials before entering Kardze.


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Saturday, June 25, 2011

Buddhist festival offers food, ceremony

Home The Americas US Northeast

TOWN OF BARKER, NY (USA) -- Usually the grounds of the Wat Lao Samakhitham Buddhist Temple are silent, except for the whoosh and rumble of trucks going by on Route 11.

This week, though, the place is abuzz with preparation. On Saturday and Sunday, an annual festival will take place on the temple's 31-acre grounds, located south of Whitney Point and north of Castle Creek in the Town of Barker. Just look for the towering saffron archway, and the line of flags leading to a nest of ornate and colorful buildings.

Called Boun Phravet, the holiday celebrates the life of Buddha.

The festival is free and open to the public. Vendors will sell sticky rice, egg rolls, soup and other ethnic food and fare -- but spirituality and tradition are at its heart.

Some monks and other hosts can speak English and explain the unfolding religious ceremonies and symbols, as do booklets written in both Lao and English, said monk Phayvanh Chanthalangsy. He has a temporary home at this Wat Lao, but monks are considered homeless and with few possessions, he said, going wherever they're sent to serve and depending on the grace of others for their natural sustenance.

Beginning at about 10 a.m. Saturday will be "Alm Laos," reminiscent of the daily life of a monk in his native land, when he takes his alms bowl in hand to ask his neighbors to give what they can.

At 1 p.m., a rarely performed "sprinkling ceremony" will honor two monks who have earned a promotion in rank, said temple spokesman Khamhune Chanthavongsa of Endicott.

That caused part of the week's racket: building the structure where the two honorees will sit. They'll be drizzled with water from a snake-like metal channel above them in a ritual purification rite.

That solemn rite begins inside the temple and moves outside, where lay people and monks will walk around the temple three times before returning inside. There, they'll gather for prayer and recitation of the Five Precepts, abstentions at the heart of Buddhist morality, said Chanthavongsa, a former monk who moved to the area in 1975.

At 2:30 and 3:30 p.m., the ceremony will move to the property's pond and into the nearby woods, then back into the temple, the chanting punctuated by the sounding of gongs.

At various points in the day, guests will be treated to Lao folk dancers and music, meet white-robed Buddhist nuns and orange-garbed monks, and can wander the grounds to take in the unique architecture and culture.

Sunday's events begin at 3 a.m. with a "thousand blocks of rice" procession. The balance of the day is devoted entirely to a sermon chanting the story of a man named Phravetsandon. Believers at this Theravada Buddhist temple of the Hinayana sect believe Phravetsandon was reborn as Prince Siddhartha Gautama, who became the Buddha.

"I've been there and I loved it," said Anne Bezek of Johnson City. "Everyone was very friendly and welcoming."

If you go

The Wat Lao Samakhitham Buddhist Temple at 2040 Route 11 in the Town of Barker will host a two-day Boun Phravetsandon Festival this weekend. Hours are approximately 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Sunday. Events -- including religious ceremonies, traditional dance and music -- are free and open to the public. Food and other ethnic fare will be available for purchase. For more information, call the temple at (607) 692-7401.


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Richard Gere to visit Borobudur this month

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Jakarta, Indonesia -- Hollywood star Richard Gere will visit one of the world’s most renowned and largest Buddhist temples, Borobudur, in Magelang, Central Java, on June 26, a Culture and Tourism Ministry official says.

Gere, who is also a human rights activist, was invited by the ministry to spend time at the temple, exploring and enjoying its beauty.

Apparently it took a year to bring Gere to Indonesia, Ministry of Culture and Tourism director general of marketing Sapta Nirwandar said as quoted by kompas.com.

?We did not pay him to come here. He came here as a personal guest of the ministry, not as a celebrity,? he added.

During his visit in Indonesia, Gere is scheduled to watch the sunrise at the temple and spend time with monks. He will also visit Yogyakarta and meet with Sultan Hamengku Buwono X.

?His presence will present a positive image for our country. We hope his visit will encourage other stars to visit the temple and other tourism cites nearby,? he said.

Sapta also hoped that Richard Gere?s visit would attract other visitors.


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US$ 3b Buddhist Centre for Lumbini

Home Asia Pacific South Asia Nepal

Kathmandu, Nepal -- China is providing funds to Nepal to build a US$3 billion Buddhist Centre to attract millions of pilgrims and spiritual tourists to the birthplace of the Buddha.

Lumbini is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that attracts half-a- million pilgrims every year from China, India, Japan, Sri Lanka and Thailand to its ponds, gardens and temples. Planners hope to build an airport, hotels, convention centres, highways, temples and a Buddhist university at the site on Nepal's Western border with India, where Buddha was born about 2,600 years ago.

The scheme is supported by a Chinese government-backed foundation.

It also has the support of Steven Clark Rockefeller, the heir to the Rockefeller dynasty. According to Nepali officials devout Buddhists spend more time at the other three main pilgrimage sites in India because Lumbini does not have the infrastructure for longer stays.

Saranath, in India's Uttar Pradesh, where Buddha first taught the Dhamma, Bodh Gaya in Bihar, where he attained Enlightenment under the Sacred Bodhi tree and Kushinagar where he reached Parinibbana are all drawing increasing numbers of high-spending tourists, and Nepal's government wants to increase its share of this income.

China and Nepal signed an agreement earlier this year to develop the site, and the Beijing-based Asia Pacific Exchange and Co-operation Foundation has launched an ambitious campaign to raise the three billion US dollars required for the site to be transformed into the world's leading Buddhist pilgrimage site.

Nepali Government officials have made a number of fund-raising trips to Singapore and Malaysia, and hope the project will create new jobs in Lumbini, a poor area.


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