Dharma Library

A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.

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  • Iris Tute |

    During our recent trip to India we spent one whole day in a rowing boat being taken down river to Banares.

    We had an early morning start from a sandy beach clutching our picnic boxes and water bottles to sustain us through the day. Blazing sunshine mellowed and warmed the coolness of the morning as we embarked to the amusement of the village onlookers.

    The river Ganga or Ganges is for Indians…

    Read more of: A Eucharist on the Ganges
  • Anonymous |

    A particular attraction of this retreat was for me the possibility of examining the stages of meditation as it deepened. In order that the process of moving towards a reasonably quiet and spacious state could become rather less haphazard, I had been trying to identify progression in my own meditation. I found the Mahamudra immensely helpful in this respect, clarifying the exact point where it is…

    Read more of: An Experience with Mahamudra
  • Natasha Caitlin Lawless, Julia Lawless, John Crook |

    The "Grand Tour of Buddhist India", a major contribution to our pilgrimage programme, visited nearly all the major sites of Buddhist history and archaeology in India: Elephanta, Kanheri, Bhaja, Karla, Nasik, Ajanta, Ellora, Sanchi, Sarnath, Bodhgaya, Rajgriha, Kusinagara and Lumbini, just over the border in Nepal. Along the way we wrote notes and poetry some of which we record here. Julia has…

    Read more of: Indian Pilgrimage 1996
  • Stephen Batchelor |

    Edited version of a talk given at the symposium "American Buddhism Today" to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Rochester Zen Center, Rochester, New York, June 22, 1996.

    Something I've noticed over the years is how, although we may start out at a young age rebelling against Christianity or our Jewishness and then finding in Buddhism a vindication for our rebelliousness, as we grow older, we…

    Read more of: The Agnostic Buddhist
  • John Crook |

    Grey stone mountain
    rain
    and the gathering fogs
    Drip drip the gutters
    and the gurgling stream.
    Two ravens out of the mirk
    strut about warily
    not seeing the face behind the window,
    Read more of: Welsh Winter: Maenllwyd
  • Simon Child |

    In the Lotus Sutra the Buddha predicted a future Buddhahood for most of his followers yet both his cousin and personal attendant, Ananda, and his son, Rahula, had to wait until after the others before the Buddha made predictions concerning them. In his "A Guide to the Threefold Lotus Sutra," Nikkyo Niwano interprets this as indicating the difficulty inherent in teaching those close to oneself.…

    Read more of: Training in Lay Zen
  • John Crook |

    The Need for an Examination

    The authority of experience depends upon authenticity. If we base our action or feeling in inauthentic experience it can only lead to play acting or pretence with potentially catastrophic consequences. Sadly, many of our justifications for action rest on the outcomes of past personal, familial and social tensions that have remained unresolved and which distort our…

    Read more of: Authenticity and the Practice of Zen
  • James Crowden |

    To work the land or to gain one's living from the land is 99% hard work and, in the history of Man, the shift from hunting and gathering to settled agriculture was perhaps the most important change in our whole structure and way of thinking.

    Without agriculture where would the monasteries be? To sustain such a complex there must be a stable local economy or at least a trade route nearby. The very…

    Read more of: Mind in Agriculture
  • Simon Child |

    We are presenting here an important article sent us by Dr Simon Child. Based in his personal practice of meditation it clarifies a way of looking at the Buddhist concept of rebirth which is often a stumbling block for many a Westerner. In conversation, Shifu once commented that for a Buddhist the idea of rebirth might be taken as myth but that to be a Buddhist, a concern with the continuity of…

    Read more of: No Mind - Mind Only
  • Anonymous |

    Walking across the hillside the fresh spring sunlight warmed the skin, the distant fir woods glistened and a pair of buzzards were playing in the sky.

    "Funny!" he said to himself, "I am not here."

    There were the feet, two of them, his feet, steadily pacing through the grasses; looking down he could see his coat collar and the binoculars hanging from their strap. Lifting his hand he observed the…

    Read more of: On an Empty Hill - Not a Retreat Report

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The articles on this website have been submitted by various authors and the views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the Western Chan Fellowship.