Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Month: August, 2009

The New York Times on the Sixth Dalai Lama

477px-VI-dalai-laamaThe New York Times today offers a piece about His Holiness Tsangyang Gyatso, the Sixth Dalai Lama of Tibet, and his home town of Urgelling in India.  Take a look.

Unorthodox to say the least, the Sixth Dalai Lama wrote some of the most remarkable erotic poetry you’ll ever read.  Over at the Tricycle Editors’ Blog, editor and publisher James Shaheen posts one powerful example (translated Rick Fields, Brian Cutillo, and Mayumi Oda):

That girl who’s stolen my mind—
If we could be together forever—
Like the joy of finding a jewel
Deep in the depths of the sea.

White teeth smiling.
Brightness of skin.
On my seat in the high lama’s row
At the quick edge of my glance
I caught her looking at me.

Doing what my lover wishes
I lose my chance for dharma.
But wandering in lonely mountain retreats
Opposes my lover’s wishes.
By drawing diagrams on the ground
The stars of space can be measured.
Though familiar with the soft flesh
Of my lover’s body
I cannot measure her depths.

When I held the jewel in hand
I didn’t know its worth.
When I lost it to another
The wind of loss howled in my chest.

If young girls never died
There would be no need to brew beer.
At such a time
This is a young man’s surest
Source of refuge.

The arrow of fortune is shot.
It strikes the target
Or buries its tip in the ground.
Since I’ve met my new lover
My heart flies after her all on its own.

Meditating, my lama’s face
Does not shine in mind.
Unbidden, my lover’s face
Again and again appears.

First, best not to see.
Then mind won’t be captivated.
Next, best not to become intimate.
Then mind won’t be trapped.

Treasures from the Roof of the World

This from the Asian Art Museum:

Exhibition video from Tibet: Treasures from the Roof of the World (on view at the Asian Art Museum from June 12, 2006 – September 11, 2006).

Tibet: Treasures From The Roof Of The World offers a rare glimpse into a culture both opulent and deeply spiritual. The exhibition featured objects drawn exclusively from collections from the Dalai Lama’s magnificent residence at the Potala Palace, as well as the recently established Tibet Museum in the magical Tibetan capital of Lhasa.

Organized by the Bowers Museum of Cultural Art, Santa Ana, California in collaboration with the Bureau of Cultural Relics, Tibet Autonomous Region; the Potala Palace; and the Tibet Museum.

Announcing My New Weekly Round-Up of Buddhist News for Shambhala SunSpace — “On the Buddhism Beat”

sunspace-aug08

I’m very pleased to announce that I’ve begun doing a weekly round-up of news from the Buddhist world for Shambhala SunSpace: “On the Buddhism Beat”.  You can read the first post here.  I hope you’ll keep up with it.

As you might expect, this means the end of the “news” posts here at this blog.  From now on, I’ll just refer you to my posts and the others at Shambhala SunSpace.

A Big News Day for Buddhist Military Chaplains

24buddhist3It was a big news day for Buddhist chaplains today. 

First, Tricycle: The Buddhist Review‘s marvelous editor and publisher James Sheehan points us to The Commercial Appeal‘s profile of Buddhist Army National Guard chaplain Thomas Dyer (pictured).

Next, over at Shambhala SunSpace, web editor Rod Meade Sperry blogs about Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s “promised financial support to the Buddhist community and to place Buddhist chaplains in the military.”

Lastly, Lt. Jeanette Shin at the Buddhist Military Sangha shares with us the news that “U.S. Air Force SSGT Henry Sims has just begun a new blog chronicling his attempt to become a military chaplain of Buddhist faith.”  Take a look!

[Photo by Mike Brown for The Commercial Appeal.  "Chaplain Thomas Dyer of the Tennessee National Guard is the first Buddhist chaplain in the Army. According to Army Chaplain Carleton Birch, spokesman for the Office of Chief of Army Chaplains in Washington, there are at least 3,300 Buddhists in the Army."]

PBS’s Wide Angle Presents “Eye of the Storm”

Check out PBS’s Wide Angle recently ran a film entitled “Eye of the Storm” about the lives of Burmese orphans in the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis. You can watch the full episode online here.  A clip is embedded below.