Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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Hope For The Future
John Crook |During my last visit to Dharma Drum Retreat Centre in Pine Bush, New York, I was introduced to Dena Miriam the head of the Global Peace Initiative of Women based in Manhattan. We discussed the world crisis and I promised her a copy of my new book, World Crisis and Buddhist Humanism, as soon as it appeared. In due course I sent a copy to her and received an invitation to attend the Conference of…
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Ancient Teachers in Full Flow
John Crook |On two occasions during our tour, we met extraordinary ninety-year-old masters who were clearly delighted to be talking with us. These two men were rarities indeed. Their monastic careers cover a vast length of time including the period of repression of Buddhism under the communists. In Yun Men Si some years ago, my friend Yiu Yan-nang and I had talked with the Guestmaster who had said that the…
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The Buddhas Do Not Understand!
Anonymous |A monk said to the Master "The Buddhas of past present and future don't understand. Cats and oxen do. Why don't the Buddhas understand?" Master Nanquan replied, "Before they entered the Deer Park they knew it. "The monk said, "How is it that cats and oxen do know it?" "How could you doubt that they do?" responded Nanquan.
When I read the list of koans in this Koan retreat, I was intrigued by this…
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Meditation and Personal Disclosure: The Western Zen Retreat
John Crook |Supreme accomplishment is to realize immanence without hope. (Tilopa1)
In the last couple of years several people have asked me to contribute something on the Western Zen Retreat (WZR) to the New Chan Forum (NCF). This was indeed the founding retreat practised at the Maenllwyd before Shi fu came there and the Western Chan Fellowship was founded. We prefer all practitioners to begin by attending…
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Travelling Verses - Nanjing
George Marsh |Nanjing has been the unhappy site of two terrible massacres: the annihilation of the Taiping rebels in 1864; and the Japanese atrocity of 1937. In the gardens behind Qixia monastery there are grottoes containing ancient Buddha sculptures beheaded by the Taiping rebels who were intolerant monotheists, and again vandalised in the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s.
Qixia Temple, Nanjing, May 2008
In…
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Keep Practicing!
Anonymous |The retreat was a scientific experiment and the constants were meditation, eating, working, sleeping, waking, meditating. The repetition of the same actions over time showed the illusions of the mind and how untrustworthy the mind is. After the turmoil came a calm and then an essence appeared.
Who Am I?
I can't describe who "I" am any longer. All labels have dropped as they are all illusions.…
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Everything In Its Place
Anonymous |I approached the retreat with some trepidation owing to my being workmaster, my first time on a retreat of any size. Previously I had carried out this role, but only on smaller retreats and very much as an assistant. This time I had to get things organised and, most worrying of all, get up in the morning and get things started! Not only that, but make sure I didn't miss giving any signals and let…
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A WCF Centre for Buddhist Education: Proposal for Discussion
John Crook |On further reflection concerning the possible futures of the WCF (See NCF 31) I have recently come up with the following ideas.
1. The WCF does very well in promoting the Dharma through the medium of intensive retreats. Many retreatants come again and again to one or other of our events. This is all to the good. However many retreats simply serve a remedial function for those stressed by the…
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Coming Home
John Crook |Mahamudra Retreat 2005 - Session One
When we were introducing ourselves last night, several of you remarked on how valuable you found it just coming to the Maenllwyd and how much you valued the place.
Let us begin then by asking why that might be so. I have a good story that helps us here. Some years ago there was a practitioner, Jane Turner, whom some of you might remember, who used to be a…
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Retreat Poems
Julia Lawless |(Written during a three month solitary retreat at Mount Amiata in Tuscany, Italy).
Sitting by the doorstep
on a dusty sheepskin
in the early morning,
a hazy sun warms my cheeks.
I wonder what will
come to mind?
I remember my dreams.
My thoughts are like
a bird tied to a pole
by a long string.
they fly in endless circles
under the illusion of freedom.
Alone
all alone
in an empty room
in an empty…
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