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Showing posts with label Upaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Upaya. Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2012

Landmark Dogen Symposium this summer at Upaya Zen Center

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Santa Fe, New Mexico -- This July at Upaya Zen Center, a team of renowned Buddhist teachers and scholars will lead a three-day exploration and celebration of the works of Eihei Dogen, the founder of Soto Zen.

During the Dogen Symposium, July 12 – 15, acclaimed artist and translator Kazuaki Tanahashi explores being a “clumsy student” of a great master through his passion for poetry, practice, and painting.

Taigen Dan Leighton, who has co-translated many Dogen fascicles with Tanahashi, offers his insights into the work of a teacher he has spent much of his life studying. Writer Natalie Goldberg invites us to sit, write, and walk in the spirit of Dogen. Poet and Zen teacher Peter Levitt touches the heart of practice through Zen Master Dogen's life and work.

Roshi Pat Enkyo O’Hara, abbot of the Village Zendo in New York City, will share her love for Dogen’s works. Sensei Irene Kyojo Bakker, founder of ZenSpirit in the Netherlands, helps to lead practices. Shohaku Okumura Roshi, founder of the Sanshin Zen Community and world-renowned Dogen translator, will join the weekend as well.

Dogen (1200-1253), also known as Dogen Kigen or Dogen Zenji, was a Japanese Buddhist monk who may be best known for his collected written works, Shobogenzo, considered to be a masterpiece of the world's religious literature. His teachings and style of writing, characterized by paradox and subtlety, has been beloved by generations of Soto Zen students. One of the most famous passages from Dogen’s writing comes from Genjokoan:
“To study the Buddha Way is to study the self. To study the self is to forget the self. To forget the self is to be actualized by myriad things. When actualized by myriad things, your body and mind as well as the bodies and minds of others drop away. No trace of enlightenment remains, and this no-trace continues endlessly.”
If you go

WHAT: Dogen Symposium

WHEN: July 12 – 15, 2012
WHERE: Upaya Zen Center, 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501

COST: $320 (plus lodging). CEUs for counselors, therapists and social workers are available.

INFO: http://www.upaya.org/programs/event.php?id=770

Tel: 505-986-8518 x12;

Email: registrar@upaya.org

ABOUT UPAYA

Upaya Zen Center is one of the most respected Buddhist centers in the world in the area of socially engaged Buddhism. Founded by Roshi Joan Halifax in 1990, Upaya is a place for new and seasoned practitioners to explore how the contemplative life forms a basis for social action and service.


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Sunday, June 26, 2011

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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