Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: March, 2009

Adopt a Monk

Via Aaron Lachowski over at the Tricycle Editors’ Blog: The Clear View Project has begun a new “Adopt a Monk” program to bring international attention to the plights of Buddhist political prisoners in Burma. They write:

    Currently there are approximately 220 monks and 8 nuns in prison in Burma, almost all arrested after the 2007 Saffron Revolution. Living under one of the most repressive regimes in the world, these monks and nuns braved death to call attention to the suffering of their people. Chanting the sutra of loving kindness, they walked, one hundred thousand strong, through the streets of cities across the country. The brutal crackdown that followed left untold numbers dead and thousands imprisoned.

    Many of the monks have received lengthy prison sentences some totaling up to 68 years. In prison, monks and nuns are forcibly disrobed and are unable to follow the Vinaya, the monastic code of conduct. Most are tortured. Their sentences mean deprivation, humiliation, torture, meager meals, and almost no medical care. To survive in prison, monks and nuns depend on their families to bring them food, medicine, money, and love. However, many are sent to remote prisons or labor camps far from their families.

    Clear View Project’s new program invites you to “Adopt a Monk” to help bring attention to the false imprisonment of the monks and nuns in Burma. The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners of Burma (AAPPB), reports that when the international community shines a light of attention on particular prisoners, their lot improves. When one prisoner’s life improves, hope is restored.

    Adopt a Monk – How it Works

  • Contact Clear View Project to choose a monk or nun.
  • Send regular letters on his/her behalf to the United Nations, Burmese Generals, & US government.
  • Send funds to buy more food & medicine for that monk. (details follow)
  • Hold monthly meditations at your center or public vigils in honor of the monk or all imprisoned monastics.
  • Send loving kindness to the monks & nuns, their families and the Burmese generals.
    Monks inside & outside of Burma continue to risk their lives by educating & organizing in order to help their people.

    Contact Margaret Howe at Clear View Project:
    margaret@clearviewproject.org / 707-360-8452

Ven. Palden Gyatso on "Serf Emancipation Day"

Via Tibet Will Be Free:

ANNOUNCEMENT: Project Compassion’s Seventh Annual Spring Symposium

I’m participating in an interfaith panel at Project Compassion’s 7th Annual Spring Symposium this Saturday, March 28th, at the United Church of Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC. If you’re in the area, I hope you will attend. You can register here, and more information on the event is below.

    Project Compassion’s 7th Annual Spring Symposium:

    The Unbroken Circle: Exploring Spirituality during Illness and End of Life

    Saturday, March 28, 2009, 9:30 am – 12:30 pm

    Held at United Church of Chapel Hill, 1321 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Chapel Hill, NC

    Serious illness and end of life are important seasons of life that affect us all. These seasons may extend for months or years—sometimes decades—affecting every aspect of life.

    One of the challenges individuals, families, faith communities and health care providers face is knowing how to cope with the spiritual changes that can occur during these life passages. People facing illness and end of life often deal with questions of meaning and purpose, faith and beliefs, healing and hope. Illness and end of life can reshape how people understand spirituality.

    The Symposium:

    The Unbroken Circle: Exploring Spirituality during Illness and End of Life is a half-day workshop on Saturday, March 28, 2009, that will offer participants the opportunity to explore spiritual perspectives around illness and end of life and learn ways that to support themselves and others.

    This event includes:

    · The launch of a new publication: The Unbroken Circle : A Toolkit for Congregations around Illness, End of Life and Grief, a collaborative effort by the Duke Institute on Care at the End of Life, the Caring Connections program of the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization and Project Compassion, written by Project Compassion’s Executive Director, James L. Brooks

    · A facilitated panel of spiritual leaders addressing diverse perspectives on spirituality, illness and end of life

    · Opportunities for personal reflection and small group interaction on spiritual perspectives related to these important seasons of life

    · Tools, materials and resources that individuals, families, faith communities and health care providers can use to support themselves and others around spirituality, illness and end of life

    Symposium Information and Registration:

    The Unbroken Circle will be held Saturday, March 28, 2009 , 9:30-12:30 , at United Church of Chapel Hill, 1321 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Chapel Hill , NC . Registration includes the half-day symposium, continental breakfast and materials.

    The cost is $20 for Participants and $10 for Seniors and Students by March 20th. After March 20th, the cost will be $30 for Participants and $20 for Seniors and Students. Copies of The Unbroken Circle: A Toolkit for Congregations around Illness, End of Life and Grief may be purchased on-site.

    Click here to go directly to online registration or call (919) 402-1844.

    Symposium Flier:

    Please help us spread the word about this event! Click here to a downloadable, printable flier for the event. Please post in key spots in your community!

    Symposium Sponsorship:

    Individuals may register as event sponsors for $50. Business and organizations that wish to serve as event sponsors may contact James Brooks at james@project-compassion.org or call (919) 402-1844 for a sponsorship packet.

Tibet News (3.26.09)

“Former Chinese People’s Liberation Army photographer Lan Zhigui, left, shows his guests one of the photographs in his photo exhibition, Witnessing the Democratic Reform in Tibet from 1950 to 1970, in Beijing on Saturday.” Photo by Goh Chai Hin for AFP/Getty Images.
Here’s the latest on Tibet:

  • The New York Times reports that Google announced Tuesday that YouTube has been blocked in China. Google says it does not know why the site has been blocked, but the Associated Press reports that Chinese media is the Dalai Lama’s supporters of fabricating the recently-released video that shows (among other things) Chinese police beating handcuffed Tibetan protestors in Lhasa last year.
  • The Agence France-Presse reports that Lodi Gyari, His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s chief envoy, has said that Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton “absolutely, totally baseless lies about the proposal I submitted [on the issue of Tibet].”
  • The Times also reports that “organizers of a peace conference that was to have been attended by five Nobel Peace Prize winners in Johannesburg said Tuesday that they had canceled the conference after the South African government denied entry to the Dalai Lama.” South African Nobel laureates, Archishop Desmond Tutu and former President F. W. de Klerk, both “condemned the government for giving in to pressure from China to block the Dalai Lama’s entry and said they would refuse to participate in the conference this Friday if he was not there.”
  • According to the AP, the South African government responded by stating that His Holiness would not be welcome “until after the 2010 football World Cup for fear that Tibet will overshadow all other issues.”
  • Reuters reports that “France sought to heal its fraught relationship with China on Tuesday with a conference that emphasised trade and business ties but eschewed any talk of political flashpoints such as Tibet.”
  • Lastly, USA Today writes about “celebrations” around China’s politically calculated “Serf Liberation Day” (which falls on the same day as the anniversary of the Tibetan Uprising in Lhasa in 1959).

  • Burma News (3.26.09)

    Here’s the latest on Burma:

  • The BBC reports that the UN’s working group on arbitrary detentions has said that the detention of Nobel Peace laureate and Prime Minister-elect Daw Aung San Suu Kyi “violates both international legislation and the laws of Burma.” The group further called for her immediate and unconditional release.
  • The Associated Press reports that the National League for Democracy has asked the US to open talks with the junta, while the Agence France-Presse has reported that they have “issued a fresh appeal for permission to see Aung San Suu Kyi and other detained leaders.”
  • The New York Times Stephen Blake, the director of the Office for Mainland Southeast Asia at the U.S. State Department, visited with both government and opposition leaders in Burma this week.
  • Reuters has the news that the European Union is considering whether or not to extend sactions against Burma.