Friday, December 4, 2009

HEADLINES: Wisdom Network News


Frontline: Culture of Compassion
(Flonnet.com) Buddhism, with its vision of eternal harmony of the world, shaped the culture of the Orient, particularly South-East Asia. SIDDHARTHA GAUTAMA is one of humanity’s wisest teachers. He lived in the 6th century B.C. in the northern plains of India. He taught lessons of compassion and universal love. The message spread to all corners of Asia and shaped the culture of the continent. Today it is one the great religions of the world, with millions of followers: Buddhism.


A great hero (a deva+human "man of renown") from the Ramayana in Bali, Indonesia.

The philosophy of Buddhism was accepted with open arms wherever it went. It is a philosophy that looks beyond the material aims of life to the eternal. Early Theravada Buddhism travelled in the 3rd century B.C. to Sri Lanka and to other countries of South-East Asia. In the first millennium A.D., Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism spread to Indonesia, Vietnam, Myanmar, Tibet (China), China, Korea and finally to Japan and the northern countries of Asia.

1st Annual Buddhist Film Festival begins
The Cell Theater (700 1st St. NW, Albuquerque, New Mexico): RigDzin Dharma Center presents the FIRST ANNUAL BUDDHIST FILM FESTIVAL in Albuquerque. This special event features three new Buddhist films, a question and answer session with Venerable Traga Rinpoche, and a silent auction of unique Buddhist items (Local IQ).

Like happiness, loneliness is contagious
Loneliness, like happiness, can be contagious, says research out today that shows how feeling lonely can make others lonely, too. The study by John Cacioppo, a psychologist at the University of Chicago, builds on recent research showing that happiness is contagious and spreads through social networks. LONELINESS: It's increasing and can harm your health

Tantra now used in dating in Europe
NEVADA -- Tantra is now reportedly being used in dating in Europe. It is said to be an activity in such dating where each session is guided by a tantric expert and the participants just follow his/her instructions, and where Tantra is employed as "the art of meeting, the science of relationship" (DNA/ANI).


TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama is confident that he can return to Tibet in this lifetime. [We're sure the Chinese will welcome him with open arms, if not open cell doors.] And believes he will be reborn many times after his death, according to a book published Friday. In The Oldest Laughter in the Himalaya, written by Taiwan film producer Liao Wen-yu, the Dalai Lama said that when the situation in China has changed and its leaders become more open-minded, he will be able to return to Tibet, the homeland that he had to flee in 1959 (Earth Times).

Dalai Lama Hails Obama Support
The Dalai Lama in exile in Dharamsala, India arrives for a meeting with journalists. The Tibetan spiritual leader said U.S. President Barack Obama wanted serious engagement on the issue of Tibet. WATCH VIDEO

L.A. Episcopal Diocese elects 1st woman bishop
Dec. 4, 2009 -- The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles elected the first woman bishop in its 114-year history today but had yet to decide whether to select an openly gay priest for a second bishop opening. Clergy and lay leaders, meeting in Riverside for their annual convention, chose the Rev. Canon Diane M. Jardine Bruce, a local favorite from Orange County known for her financial expertise and ability to build up congregations (LA Times).

Atheist billboards: What does it mean to be "good"?
What incredible irony! A group of atheists and agnostics calling themselves the Coalition of Reason has put up billboards around town which use God's name to attract nonbelievers ("Seeking out a community of nonbelievers," Dec. 3). "Are you good without God?" they ask. "Millions are."

Vietnam Buddhists complain of ongoing harassment
HANOI, Vietnam -- Followers of a famed Buddhist monk say they are continuing to suffer police harassment two months after they were forcibly evicted from a monastery in southern Vietnam. The followers of Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh, who has popularized Buddhism in the West and sold millions of books worldwide, say they are being persecuted (AP).


NEPAL: Gov't signs Everest Declaration on Mt. Everest
Cabinet expresses concern over climate change impact on Himalayas. The country’s protected areas are extended by 25 per cent. Funds are allocated to help people living at the foot of the mountain range and for greater protection of Nepal’s natural heritage.

Nepal holds highest Cabinet meeting at Mt. Everest
SYANGBOCHE, Nepal — Nepal's top politicians strapped on oxygen tanks Friday and held a Cabinet meeting amid Mount Everest's frigid, thin air to highlight the danger global warming poses to glaciers, ahead of next week's international climate change talks (AP).

INDIA: Miltants shoot leader in Kashmir
SRINAGAR – Militants shot a top leader of the moderate faction of the Hurriyat, Fazal Haq Qureshi, in Srinagar. His condition is said to be critical. The attack comes days after reports of Mirwaiz holding talks with Centre (Vijay Kumar, Ground Report).

Virginia yoga regulation a stretch for teachers
Instructors sue over state's move to certify training classes. Virginia yogis are taking the state to the mat. Three yoga instructors on Tuesday asked a federal judge to halt a state plan to regulate yoga instructor training. The Old Dominion, they say, has stretched too far into an ancient, spiritual practice. "Yoga is the study of... (Group's Video: "Teaching is Not a Crime" (Washington Post).

Hindus ask museum to remove painting
Two national Hindu leaders have called on the Neuberger Museum of Art at Purchase College, SUNY, to remove a painting that they say denigrates the Hindu goddess Kali by portraying her as a gruesome , machete-wielding figure. They even object to the name of the painting, "Housewives With Steak-Knives," as practicing Hindus do not eat beef but revere cows as a symbol of life.

World Bank: India may return to 8%-9% growth
NEW DELHI, India -- India may return to 8%-9% economic growth in the next one... (WSJ article).

India ready to withdraw troops from Kashmir
NEW DELHI -- Home minister says he favors "quiet talks" with Kashmiris but no dialogue with Pakistan until conditions met. India’s home minister said on Wednesday the government was prepared to withdraw a “significant” number of troops from Indian-held Kashmir (IHK). Briefing lawmakers in parliament on the state of domestic security, P. Chidambaram noted that militant violence in the region had dropped in the past few years (Pakistan's Daily Times).

Kashmir: Thousands of Bodies Discovered...Rights Group says
Nearly 2,600 bodies have been found in single, unmarked graves and in mass graves throughout mountainous Indian-controlled Kashmir, a human rights group said (NY Times, AP, Dec. 3, 2009).

Disabled in India-controlled Kashmir call for gov't support
SRINAGAR, India-controlled Kashmir -- A group of physically challenged persons in Indian-controlled Kashmir Thursday evening staged a candle light protest demonstration to highlight their problems on the World Disability Day (Xinhua/Chinaview.cn).

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- At least 16 Uighurs have fled ethnic unrest in China and are seeking asylum with the help of the United Nations refugee agency in Cambodia, a government spokesman in Phnom Penh said Friday. Fierce clashes in China's far-western Xinjiang region in July between the local Muslim Uighur community and China's majority Han ethnic group left 197 people dead and more than 1,600 injured, according to an official toll (AFP).

INDIA: Discovering the footprints of Jainism in South
Delhi University -- There is a blatantly wrong notion prevailing in our country that Jainism has no significant presence in states like Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu. In order to demolish this baseless myth, prestigious Somaiya Publications Pvt. Ltd. has recently published a very important book Spectrum of Jainism in Southern India.

Bigfoot roaming San Antonio? It MAY be possible!
Police in San Antonio, as well as local TV stations, have been getting calls about bizarre sightings.The callers told the NBC affiliate WOAI that they saw a large, hairy, bigfoot-type creature around San Antonio's west side.Police also got a similar call Monday night at the same location.

Origin in Asian exploration venture
Origin Energy is ramping up its exposure to one of the world's fastest-growing energy regions through a gas exploration partnership across Southeast Asia. Origin yesterday said it would buy stakes of 20 to 40 per cent in a series of five exploration blocks in Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam, in partnership with the British-listed Salamander Energy.

Atheism vs. Bible
I read a letter written by Robert D. Bowers on Nov. 27 ["Liberals and Science Are Not Anti-Religion At All; Lies Destroy Faith"] and while I may agree with some of his statements, it's for a different reason. For example, we both disagree that atheism on college campuses is a coming-of-age thing. Also we both think that young people will turn away from something or someone who lies to them. But those are the only viewpoints we hold in common (TheLedger.com).

Orthodox and Catholics should oppose world atheism
Moscow -- Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia stresses importance of Orthodox-Catholic dialogue in opposing the challenges of atheistic society. "Today we're facing the challenges of secularism. We need to respond the challenges together basing on historical experience," Patriarch Kirill said at his Thursday meeting with a delegation of the Roman Catholic Church in France at Moscow patriarchal residence in Chisty Pereulok (Interfax).
WEST CHESTER, PA – For the last three years, a local group of atheists, skeptics, rationalists, humanists, freethinkers, etc. have joined in the winter festivities by putting up a display representing their values along side other displays in front of the Chester County Courthouse in West Chester, Pennsylvania (Examiner.com).

Is the CIA watching your pictures on Facebook?
If you send out a tweet, or privately post pictures on Facebook to a selected group of friends, can police turn those uploads against you? In October, a man was arrested for using Twitter to help a demonstration at the G20 summit. Now, a non-profit group thinks that that's going too far. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) says the government is already using social networking data in some investigations. That's why they think all internet users deserve to know what information is collected -- and exactly who can access it. In an eight-page official complaint, EFF says anyone posting things on Facebook or Twitter deserves to know whether the government has access to it. WATCH VIDEO

Secret CIA "Magic" Manual reveals Cold War spy tricks
During Cold War, American magician wrote "Trickery and Deception" manual for C.I.A. For decades, rumors of top-secret "magic" manuals swirled within CIA circles. The long-lost guides were said to have been written by a prominent magician, but many officers dismissed them as myth, believing them too fantastical to be true. But in 2007, retired CIA officer Robert Wallace unearthed an extraordinary archived file and is now making its contents available to the public for the first time. The file contained once highly-classified manuals written in the early 1950s by American magician John Mulholland that detailed the secrets of magic that could enhance the art of espionage (ABC News).

In Defense of Religion Part II: Buddhism
In the last article we accessed and defended the religion of Islam, and urged readers to not categorize all Muslims with the extremist sects. Extremism is not as much a problem with Buddhism as it is with the Abrahamic religions. However, there persist several problems with Buddhism which prevent its ability to spread further. Despite having the most historically opaque existence, Shakyamuni Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama) left the world with a religion that despite textual translations, changes, and renditions throughout the last 2500 years, survives today in a very accurate and well preserved form....the first texts which survived this period were all not created (from the oral tradition) until at least four or five hundred years after the Buddha's [passing]. Yet despite all of this, Buddhists today are probably the happiest people on the planet. And all across the board agree on the main tenets of their religion...

Tiny creature, big environmental find
Chameleon discovery highlights importance of forest’s biodiversity: A tiny chameleon species with a scaly horn on its snout has been discovered in Tanzanian forests, according to LiveScience.com.

Cambodia, Thailand veer closer to collision course
PHNOM PENH — Long-standing dispute escalates dramatically as Phnom Penh hires fugitive former Thai PM as government adviser. The armies of Cambodia and Thailand declared last week that they have no intention of fighting a war with each other. That's the good news (Globe and Mail, 12/4/09).

Creature in Central Park, New York
Ufologist and Cryptozoologist Nick Redfern posted a far fetched but interesting story about a Bigfoot-like creature spotted in New York’s Central Park. As silly as this might sound, the witness appeared sincere in his face to face interview with Nick. It’s important to remember that as skeptical as you are, you have to listen and investigate claims in order to weed-out the hoaxes and misidentified sightings (GhostTheory.com).

Britain had a UFO Hotline
In this file image made available by Britain’s National Archives in May 14, 2008, a sketch made by a police officer after a sighting of an Unidentified Flying Object in England in 1984 is seen. Seen a UFO? Don’t bother calling the Brits, they’ve stopped listening. Score this one a victory for the bean counters: The British military has quietly shut down its UFO hotline as a costcutting measure it was revealed Friday Dec. 4, 2009. After more than 50 years in operation, the UFO desk was quietly closed earlier this week, its e-mail deactivated, and the phone line snipped. No longer will Britons who think they’ve seen Martian craft in the sky be able to enlist the services of Her Majesty’s armed forces (Suomen Kuvalehti.fi).


"Twilight" -- Yeti crabs kill vampires dead
Mark Morford, SF Gate
Sweet Jesus of the surefire apocalypse, it is easy to become discouraged. It requires almost no effort at all to take a cursory glance at the whims and vagaries of the whipsaw culture and get instantly dragged down into the sticky abyss of sighing, what-the-hell-is-wrong-with-you-people despair as you note, for example, that Sarah Palin's abomination of human thought and progressive womanhood sold upwards of 300,000 copies in the first few days, all to adorably confused people just like these. Or maybe it's how a hugely boring, soft-core soap opera about teen depression and vacuous, undead male models raked in $140 million over a single weekend, suggesting that teen girls -- and their swooning mothers -- all secretly wish to be worshipped/ravished by pale, joyless, empty-headed man-boys who have nothing better to do than blindly revere said girl, despite how she is tremendously plain and weak and not all that beguiling in the slightest, and neither is he. More>>

Planning a Buddhist pilgrimage to India? (us.makemytrip.com)

Right Here, Right Now (Alan Watts)

"The Birth of Responsibility: right here, right now" with Alan Watts and Shambhala International's controversial guru Chögyam Trungpa (music by Fatboy Slim)

(Sivali) Karma and Great Wealth

Gold plated amulets of Ven. Sivali, a monk in the Buddha's time renowned for his amazing good fortune (dhammapath.blogspot.com)

Ven. Sivali was praised by the Buddha as the most miraculous monk for manifesting fortune. Sivali is recollected by Thai Buddhists as a great fortune-fetching figure with a mantra uttered to secure wealth:

"Sivali ja Mahathero Devatanarapuchito Soraho Pajjayatimhi Sivali ja Mahathero Yakkhadeva Puchito Soraho Pajjayatimhi Ahang Wanthami Tang Sathatassatherassa Aetang Khunang Sotthilabhang Bhavantumae."

Eating modestly is a type of eating that is very good, both in terms of the world and of the Dharma. Take Ven. Sivali, who ate modestly, as an example. How did he eat modestly? All that most of us know about Ven. Sivali is that he was wealthy in terms of the donations he received. But where did that wealth come from?

It came from eating modestly. Eating modestly is the source that gives rise to wealth. What Sivali did (in a previous birth) was this: Whenever he received cloth, if he had not yet given a gift of cloth, he would not wear what he had received. When he received food in his bowl, he would not eat it until he had given some of it as a gift to someone else. No matter which of the four requisites he received — food, clothing, shelter, or medicine, no matter how much or how little — once it was in his possession, he would not use it until he had shared some of it with those around him.

When he received a lot, he would make a large gift to benefit many people. When he received just a little, he would still try to benefit others. This gave rise to all sorts of good things: His friends loved him, his community loved him, and they were kind to him. This is why being generous is said to tie the knot of friendship and to wipe out your enemies.

When he passed away from that lifetime and was reborn in his last lifetime, he gained all kinds of wealth and never went hungry. Even when he went to live in places where food should have been scarce, he never suffered from scarcity, never had to do without... Source


Cave-dwelling brothers to get billions
In a reversal of fortune, two destitute brothers living in a cave could inherit a fortune. Photo - Rags-to-riches stories


The story of Sivali in the Dhammapada Commentary is an example of the great merit which even a small gift can yield when presented to the Sangha led by the Buddha. At the time of Vipassi Buddha, the citizens of a country were competing with their king to see who could make the greatest offering to the Buddha and Sangha.

The citizens had obtained everything for their offering except fresh honey. And they sent out messengers, each with plenty of money, to buy the missing ingredient. One of these messengers met a villager who happened to be bringing a newly harvested honeycomb into the city for sale. The messenger was only able to buy it from the peasant when he had offered his entire allowance of a thousand pieces of money, which was far more than a single honeycomb was worth.

The villager said: "Are you crazy?... This honey isn't worth a penny but you offer me a thousand pieces of money for it? What is the explanation for this?" The messenger told him that the honey was worth so much to him because it was the final item on the menu for the citizens' offering to Vipassi Buddha. The peasant spontaneously replied, "If that is the case, I will not sell it to you. If I may receive the merit of the offering, I will give it to you!" The citizens were impressed with the conviction (saddha) of this man who so readily gave up a windfall and enthusiastically agreed that he should receive the merit of the offering.

Because of this simple gift at the time of Vipassi Buddha (aeons ago), that villager was reborn numerous times in celestial planes and then became the prince who inherited the throne of Benares. In his final lifetime, he became the Great Elder Sivali and attained full enlightenment (arahantship) as a disciple of Shakyamuni Buddha.

But even after that, his gift of the honeycomb continued to bear fruit. To honor the one who had made the sweet gift aeons before, the devas provided lodging and food for the Buddha and many monks, including Sivali, when for several days they had been walking along a deserted road.

The practice of giving is also beneficial when directed to someone who is not spiritually advanced. If the donor's intention is good, then even though the receiver is immoral, the donor will earn merit. Furthermore, by the act of giving one will strengthen within oneself one's own disposition to renunciation. A gift mentally offered to the noble (arya or accomplished, i.e., enlightened) Sangha but physically presented to a monastic who is morally corrupt will still bear great fruit. To be sure, we should not pretend that a bad person is good, but we must be most careful of our own attitude while giving, as our attitude is the factor over which we have most control.

The Objects Given
The third factor involved in giving is the gift itself, which can be either material or immaterial. Dhamma-dana, the gift of the Noble Teachings, is said by the Buddha to excel all other gifts (Dhammapada, Verse 354). Those who expound the Teachings — monastics who preach sermons or recite from the Tipitaka, teachers of meditation — frequently share the Truth, thus practicing the highest kind of generosity.

Those of us who are not qualified to teach the Dharma can give the gift of the Dharma in other ways. We can donate Dharma books or pay for the translation or publication of a rare or new manuscript propagating the Buddha-word. We can discuss the Dharma informally and encourage others to keep precepts or to take up meditation.

We might write an explanation of some aspect of the Dharma for the benefit of others. Giving cash or labor to a meditation center or helping support a meditation teacher can also be considered the gift of the Dharma, as the purpose of the center and the teacher is the transmission of the Buddha's Teaching.

The most common type of gift is material. A material object need not have a high monetary value for it to bring great results, as the story of Sivali and the honeycomb illustrates.

If a poor person gives a monastic the cup of rice that was to be his or her only food for the day, the person is making a great donation which may bear abundant fruit. Conversely, if a prosperous merchant, knowing in advance that the monastic was coming for alms, were to give the same small portion of rice, that merchant would reap meager fruits. We should try to give things whose quality is at least as good as those we use ourselves, like the people of Burma, who buy the best fruits on the market as gifts for the monastery although these fruits are much too expensive for them to consume themselves.

Gifts to the Sangha may consist of food, robes, medicine, or shelter (monasteries themselves), each of which has a wide range. The limits are set by the rules of the Vinaya to keep the Sangha pure and strong. Lay Buddhists who understand the monastic rules can earn vast merit by donating the proper things at the proper time to the Order of monks and nuns and to other good or needy people.

Bhikkhu Bodhi introducing BuddhistGlobalRelief.org to alleviate world hunger

Terra Nova Sinfonia Antarctica: DJ Spooky

(SubliminalSpooky) This is a trailer for DJ Spooky (Paul D. Miller)'s new large scale multimedia performance work (now being performed): It is an acoustic portrait of the rapidly changing Antarctic continent. "Terra Nova: Sinfonia Antarctica" transforms Miller's first person encounter with the harsh, dynamic landscape into multimedia portraits with music composed from the different geographies that make up that land mass.

Miller's field recordings from a portable studio -- set up to capture the acoustic qualities of Antarctic ice forms -- reflect a changing and even vanishing environment under duress. Coupled with visual material from Getty Images' vast collection, Terra Nova: Sinfonia Antarctica is a 70 minute performance, creating a unique and powerful moment around the human relationship with nature.

Monks for War?

(Aljazeera/TamilVoice2009) Are Buddhist monks in the wrong for (apparently) promoting Sinhalese nationalism instead of universal compassion and impartiality (upekkha)? It all came to a head in Asia's longest-running civil war on the majority Buddhist island of Sri Lanka. In hopes of preserving their ancient religion and culture, some monks (JHU: National Heritage Party) may have gone too far. For they would have in the process engaged in counterproductive activities, disgracing the Dharma and the local Sangha.

Soto Zen (www.tealeaf.org)

What is the Soto Zen school, and how/where can one practice?
"Zen Comics" by Ioanna Salajan

Is our Boob-Tube to blame?


(ZeitgeistMovie.com) From the Final Edition of "Zeitgeist," a fictional news announcer from the movie "Network" famously goes over the edge and tells voyeuristic viewers the truth.

The Oracle Speaks (Alex Collier)

Contactee Alex Collier explains with amazing foresight many of the things that are now happening. The information speaks for itself. While too far fetched to contemplate seriously, it corresponds with the Buddhist and ancient Indian view of the cosmos. Buddhist cosmology speaks of the "heavens" as literal celestial worlds in the sky and space. They are akin to a modern understanding of extraterrestrial planes of existence, vimanas (space craft), and planets within and beyond this solar system. Alien visitation and contact is common in the great literature attributed to Buddhism, Hinduism (Mahabharata, Vedas, etc.), and the Sumerians.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Muslim mercy, Bad guy goes Good


Shop owner is repaid for his kindness
A storeowner who showed mercy to a would-be robber receives mysterious letter (NYPost.com)
  • The Dhammapada: "The Path of the Dharma"
    (Chng Tiak Jung & Tan Chade Meng) This famous collection of Buddhist sayings consists of 423 verses uttered by the Buddha on 305 occasions for the benefit of a wide range of human beings. The sayings were selected as being worthy of special note and compiled into a single book on account of their relevance to everyday life. They are divided into 26 chapters with stanzas arranged according to subject matter:

The Pairs - Heedfulness - Mind - Flowers - The Fool - The Wise - Perfected One - The Thousands - Evil - Violence - Old Age - The Self - The World - The Buddha - Happiness - Affection - Anger - Impurity - The Just - The Path - Miscellaneous - The State of Woe - The Elephant - Craving - The Monastic - The Holy Person

Institute of Buddhist Studies (California)


The institute, begun in 1949, specializes in graduate-level Buddhist studies as well as Shinshu ministerial training in Berkeley.


IBS is a Buddhist seminary and graduate school affiliated with the Graduate Theological Union and associated with the Buddhist Churches of America. Located in the Jodo Shinshu Center in downtown Berkeley, California. IBS offers a systematic educational program specializing in contemporary Shin Buddhist studies and culminating in a fully accredited Master of Arts degree jointly administered by the GTU.

Among the IBS programs are: Master's degree in Buddhist Studies, Jodo Shinshu ministerial training, Buddhist chaplaincy training program, a number of academic journals and publications, and study abroad opportunities with Ryukoku University, Kyoto, Japan.

Peruvian Amazon tribe close to extinction


Lost tribe attacks small aircraft with bows and arrows. While neither completely isolated nor completely ignorant of the outside world, some tribes choose non-contact, occassionally making an exception for an intrepid anthropologist or disease carrier.

(AFP) The Candoshi people in Peru's northern Amazon jungle are close to extinction from an infection that has gone unchecked since 2000, tribal leaders and health officials said Tuesday. "My people are suffering; we're in real danger of extinction," said Candoshi chief... More>>
Amazon tribe threatened by virus (Cool Earth) More>>

The Amazon's dirty war
In the whole of its history the tribe has never had any peaceful contact with the outside world, choosing to live totally isolated from civilization in this... (Times Online).
Experience the Amazon without those pesky mosquitoes
One chief of a tribe named his daughter Diana (Spanish for Diane) after Lovell. The exhibit at North Richland Hills Library is the 54th time Lovell has put... (Pegasus News).‎
Will Peru's next president come from Sonoma County?
His American studies began at Santa Rosa Junior College in 1993, and he graduated from Sonoma State University in 1999, the first man from his tribe to... (Santa Rosa Press Democrat‎).

Zen Garden: Buddhist meditation music

SoCal meditation center under construction



No more driving up to North Fork. Soon Southern California will have its own Goenka retreat center for free 10-day Art of Living courses. Construction of the new Dhamma Vaddhana meditation center is well under way in Joshua Tree.

In October 2009 three buildings for the women's side residences were approved by the city. Work will begin immediately on the layout, underground trenching and utilities, and the ground breaking for these buildings. On the men's side, final items are being addressed on the first two residential buildings. The solar collector tubes have been installed for heating water. Electricity and plumbing are now on and working. The third building is also moving ahead.

Buildings already completed on the site in Joshua Tree, California (dhamma.org)

The plans for the Dhamma Hall are currently being reviewed by the city. In the meantime, the development committee is pursuing pricing and bids from suppliers and subcontractors. Logistics are being worked out regarding the audio-video equipment. The kitchen/dining hall plans are also being finalized. See floor plans and renderings. What is Vipassana meditation?

Karma: Turnabout is Fair Play

Odd News from Around the World


Shoe-thrower karma: he has shoe thrown at him
The Iraqi man who threw his shoes at President Bush gets a taste of his own medicine. "He stole my technique" - See the incident - Muntadhar al-Zeidi - Notable Bush moments

Just as in the days of the Buddha, fish will be poisoned on a mass scale. The result for the Buddha's own relatives, the Shakyans, was to be slaughtered in an attack by a neighboring (and related) warrior clan. Can the results be any better for the U.S. as it undertakes a plan to kill fish in the Great Lakes?

"Mr. Hyphen" redefines image of Asian-American men
(AP) The six men on stage included a poet, a break dancer, and a filmmaker. They pounded rhythms on the dhol drum, modeled fresh fashions, slathered whipped cream on bare skin and discussed their passion for community service. This is the "Mr. Hyphen" contest, a faux pageant in the San Francisco Bay area aimed at redefining the image of Asian-American men...

Google once had a creedo, which was "to do no evil." Those were the days. As Google takes over the world and makes it costlier to live in, will people switch their searches to GoodSearch.org and other innovative search engines? Will Microsoft's "Bing" gain the upper hand?


Working two jobs, but still struggling
Richard Crane once made $100,000 a year, but now finds work at gas stations and fast-food chains. Similar stories


Addictive foods we can't stop eating
From the sugary-sweet to the super-salty, we can't stop at just one bite of these tasty treats. 8 irresistible eats


A place with lightning 160 nights a year
The nearly constant presence of lightning over a small fishing village mystifies scientists. Possible causes - Slow-motion lightning - Catatumbo lightning - Calm coda to hurricanes

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

"Crazy Wisdom" (trailer)



"Crazy Wisdom: The Life and Times of Chogyam Trungpa" directed by Johanna Demetrakas, produced by Lina Leeman

Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, the "bad boy of Buddhism," shattered notions about how an "enlightened" guru should behave when he abandoned his monk's vows and eloped with a 16 year old British girl. He founded Shambhala Int'l, which some call a cult and others a made up lineage, then bequeathed it to his son. Twenty years after his death, Trungpa's name still evokes outrage and admiration. What made him tick? What is crazy wisdom? And just what is enlightenment in Tibetan Buddhism anyway?

Warrior King of Shambhala: My Life with Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche (Jeremy Hayward): A pioneer in introducing Tibetan Buddhism to the West, Chogyam Trungpa is also one of its most controversial figures. Born in Tibet and trained in the traditional manner, he arrived in the U.S. in 1970, a time when there was virtually no knowledge of Tibetan Buddhism in the general culture. He defied notions of how a holy man should act. Dressing in Western clothing and at times exhibiting unconventional behavior, his "crazy wisdom" and his anti- "spiritual materialism" made him a magnet for a generation of counterculture spiritual seekers. This book begins when Hayward meets Trungpa in 1970, then progresses year by year until Trungpa’s death and beyond.

Free Insight Retreats

Long and Special Meditation Course Schedules 2009/2010
(Dhamma.org) Each of the long Vipassana courses listed below have special course qualification requirements. Students who have participated in a free 10-day course must meet these special requirements in order to be considered for free admission. Application for admission to a long course must be made on special application forms available from each of the centers. All instruction is Buddhist based insight meditation as taught by S.N. Goenka. Download a form in (PDF) for return by either printout or email. Choose the correct file from the Application Form Page.

The Man Who Sold the World: Obama


"Just read the teleprompter, Mr. President" (PR Guru).

(WQ) Having sold himself to the American public and the world as the "peace candidate," promising to bring invading troops home, Barack Obama last night abruptly altered course. It's war full steam ahead. The torture and extrajudicial prison system will continue for the time being. What has changed? It's a nicer delivery system. The words are prettier, the lies smoother, and Bush's dream of a New World Order moves forward just as it would have with Sarah Palin after John McCain's heart attack. But with distractions like Tiger Woods' love life, this hypocritical turnaround and war escalation should all get swept under the rug. Nevertheless, the undeniable thing coming to light is the difference between Democratic and Republican candidates: style not substance. Whoever runs the country, selects its leaders (through political donations and mass media manipulation) and its policies. The "election," it is now clear, was a giant PR stunt telling the world what it wanted to hear while planning its own agenda despite the world. The job of a president, after all, is not to wield power so much as to draw attention away from it. Who better than Obama for that?
  • Master of Manipulation
    What a coincidence. Two days before Obama's speech at West Point, announcing at least 30,000 more troops for Afghanistan, a Senate Foreign Relations Committee report is released that blames an insufficient number of troops for Osama bin Laden’s escape from American forces in 2001. You could be forgiven for thinking that the chairman of the committee, (former democratic presidential candidate) Sen. John Kerry, is serving his commander in chief's interests (TheDailyBeast.com).
  • Cheney accuses Obama of "projecting weakness"
    In fact, [President Barack] Obama is doing it far more decisively and vigorously and assertively. The wavering occurred over the last seven years, not now. Dick Cheney says... (Politico).
  • U.S.-Afghanistan War Timeline
    Oct. 7, 2001 — U.S. and British forces begin airstrikes in Afghanistan after the Taliban refuse to hand over al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, blamed for the 9/11 attacks....Dec. 1, 2009 — Obama outlines his decision to rapidly expand the U.S. role in the war in Afghanistan, sending an additional 30,000 troops. About 71,000 U.S. troops are currently in Afghanistan. At least 849 U.S. troops [and countless Afghan civilians] have been killed so far in the war.
  • Hillary on hot seat: Clinton answers for Obama's surge...
    chairman of the Armed Services Committee, then told Clinton that Obama had gotten it backwards on the surge -- thousands of Afghan troops should be trained... (New York Daily News).
  • Hillary Clinton: Obama's Afghan policy "right" for U.S.
    WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is calling the Obama administration's newly announced surge-and-exit strategy in Afghanistan "the best way..."

Colonialism+Christianity+Capitalism=Poverty



(Karen Tate) "The End of Poverty?" is a new film that cites colonialism, Christianity, and capitalism as the principal causes of world poverty over the last 500 years. Goddess spirituality speaks to the needs of the many, not the desires of the few. The elite, who are the rich and most powerful, steal from the poor. That makes this new documentary, opening this weekend in Los Angeles area theaters, must viewing... More>>

Lost European world found


Lost European world pulled from obscurity
Archaeologists unearth a culture older than the first [Sumerian] cities of Mesopotamia (NYTimes.com). Buddhist heritage threat - King Tut's tomb renovation - Search: Lost world of Old Europe

Did Women Rule Old Europe?

(NYTimes.com) The proliferation of female imagery throughout the fifth and fourth millennia BC has prompted some scholars to interpret Old European culture as a peaceful world where female-centered goddess worship prevailed.

Female figurines predominate in Old European material culture. They can be found represented individually as well as in large groups and in contexts identified as domestic, ritual, religious, and funerary.

Males, according to this theory, played a largely secondary role in society. Some scholars, however, consider this argument idealized — in fact many villages were fortified, weapons were buried with men, and adult males had the richest graves in cemeteries. Full article

Female figurine fired clay 4050–3900 BC, Botoşani County Museum (Marius Amarie)