Thursday, December 30, 2010

What would Jesus and Buddha do … on holiday?

by Jolyon Baraka Thomas, The Guardian, 22 December 2010

A new manga novel lightheartedly depicting the two as everyday young men may inadvertently raise interest in religion in Japan
 
Tokyo, Japan -- What would Jesus and Buddha do if they were suddenly thrust into contemporary society, and how would they react to what they found?

Japanese author-illustrator Nakamura Hikaru has sketched an answer to this provocative question in a very popular manga, or illustrated serial novel, entitled Saint Young Men (Seinto oniisan).


Nakamura (her surname) depicts the adventures of the two religious founders as they room together in Tachikawa (a suburb west of Tokyo) while vacationing in Japan.

Humour, rather than veneration, sets the tone for the series, which is replete with visual gags and puns. For example, when the roommates discover that the prizes they have won at a shrine festival are cheap imitations of coveted handheld videogames, Nakamura quips: "The two were enlightened as to the true flavour of Japanese festivals," playing on a double sense of the word daigomi, which can either mean sublime Buddhist teaching or – more colloquially – the "true charm" of something.

Similarly, quirky interactions that juxtapose episodes from Jesus's ministry with hilarious social faux pas provide opportunities to chuckle. When Jesus says that he "just wants to wash his [disciples'] feet," a local gangster who overhears him misinterprets this phrase in its figurative sense as an indication of one's desire to start afresh after a life of crime. Jesus, oblivious to this misunderstanding, unwittingly gains notoriety among the mob as a particularly tough villain.

Nakamura's protagonists, though saintly, are hardly infallible. Jesus's all-encompassing love makes him excessively enthusiastic (Nakamura portrays him as a compulsive shopaholic), while Buddha's ascetic tendencies make him seem – as the back of one volume states – like "the parsimonious lady next door". The roommates drink beer, update blogs, and play online games, generally trying to have a good time while assiduously attempting to blend into contemporary. Like many tourists, however, they stick out like sore thumbs.

Teenage girls swoon over Jesus because of his resemblance to Johnny Depp, while neighbourhood boys tease Buddha for the auspicious tuft of hair on his forehead. Inadvertent performance of miracles also threatens to reveal their true identities. Jesus, for example, mistakenly turns the water of the local public bath into wine, while Buddha literally glows in moments of excitement.

Nakamura's rather irreverent depiction of these religious founders may seem blatantly sacrilegious, but upon investigation something more intriguing is apparent in her work.

Statistically speaking, levels of religious belief and affiliation are strikingly low in contemporary Japan, and most people prefer to describe their participation in apparently religious activities as custom or amusement. This has led some observers to anticipate the incipient demise of religion in the country, and no doubt some might be tempted to use Nakamura's work as evidence in support of this hypothesis. However, whereas some author-artists have tended to downplay religion in their works or have used manga as a vehicle for criticism of the allegedly pernicious nature of marginal religious groups, Nakamura makes religion startlingly normal.

Her story is not an introduction to abstruse religious doctrines, nor does it feature much overt commentary on the role of religions in contemporary society. Rather, she invites her readers to view contemporary Japan through the eyes of protagonists who are unambiguously religious.

While Saint Young Men hardly exhibits strict fidelity to canonical sources, Nakamura has done her homework. She seamlessly weaves tales of the Buddha's former lives and gospel accounts of Jesus's ministry into her narrative, loosely citing the biographies of these founders while (literally) drawing those stories into the present. While it is doubtful that her audience reads the manga for religious inspiration (and it is similarly doubtful that Nakamura intends to proselytise), one possible result of the work may be increased audience familiarity with – and even interest in – such canonical stories. It is therefore not insignificant that Nakamura's farfetched plot demands willing and sustained suspension of disbelief.

While it remains to be seen how Saint Young Men will be interpreted over the long term, for the moment it has successfully captured the mercurial interests of contemporary Japanese audiences.

The incongruous juxtaposition of ostensibly sacrosanct figures with mundane situations such as overpriced cafes, busybody landlords and free refills at family restaurants is inherently humorous, and through their eyes quotidian Japan suddenly looks exciting and new. Jesus and Buddha enter the audience's imagination not as staid preachers, but rather as the adventurous boys who live next door. The manga therefore demonstrates that venerable religious figures lead active lives outside the hallowed halls of church and temple and beyond the margins of scripture.

While religion may be a laughing matter for Nakamura and her audience, the role this manga might play in building and sustaining familiarity with the biographies of religious founders is certainly not to be scoffed at.


Monday, December 27, 2010

How and why this Buddhist celebrates Christmas

by Judith Sainsbury, Guelph Mercury Community Editorial Board, December 22, 2010


Guelph, Ontario (Canada) -- I’ve been a practising Buddhist for almost 30 years now, and I often get asked if I celebrate Christmas. I do. I love Christmas.



I just don’t celebrate it the same way a devout Christian would. I was raised Christian, and there are some traditions I just won’t give up and Christmas is one of them. So how does a previous Christian and now Buddhist celebrate Christmas? First of all, let me get some things straight. Buddhism is not a religion that believes in a God. Buddha is not regarded as a God or a deity. Buddha was a human being, so there is no theistic God belief in Buddhism. Which means that I am an atheist as well as a Buddhist.

So, how do I reconcile Christmas which celebrates the birth of the son of God? Dec. 25th was chosen as the birth date of Christ because it is near the winter solstice and the church wanted to stop those darn pagans from celebrating the rebirth of the sun, so it changed it to celebrate the birth of the son. It was unsuccessful at wiping out all the pagan traditions such as Christmas trees and the various incarnations of Santa Claus, although it tried pretty hard with the inquisitions and witch burnings. But the traditions around the winter solstice prevailed. It is these traditions that I am most attached to and I’ve also created my own traditions.

Every Christmas Eve I cuddle up with my children and watch A Christmas Carol: the original, with Alastair Sim. I have never liked any of the remakes. They just don’t measure up to Alastair Sim’s incredible performance as Scrooge. We can now pretty much quote the movie word for word. But nothing puts me in the Christmas spirit more than this movie. It’s a story about human transformation. It is the scene where Jacob Marley’s ghost appears before Scrooge that affects me the most.
 
There he is, with his long chain of bad causes which he has forged in life. He says “I made it link by link and yard by yard; I girded it of my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it,” and he warns Scrooge that his chain is longer. Scrooge replies that they were only being good men of business, Marley passionately screams: “Mankind was my business. Their common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence, were all my business.” He then points Scrooge in the direction of the window where there are a number of spirits with huge chains similar to Marley’s surrounding a homeless women and her baby on the street below. They are screaming and moaning and Scrooge asks why they lament. Marley replies they lament because they have lost the power to do anything; now that they are merely spirits. When I was a child this scene horrified me, now as a Buddhist it has significant meaning.

We all forge chains of causation good and bad. What matters is what we do while we are living. Whatever belief system one may have, I think we can agree it is our behaviour as humans that is the most important thing. Scrooge’s transformation as he realizes he can change is a scene of a man full of joy. He actually says he doesn’t deserve to be this happy. Realizing he can now work to do good transforms his life.
Humanity becomes his life tendency. 

Christmas is one of those holidays that embodies this potential and acts as a reminder for me, that there is hope for the world. Some of us may not need to be reminded of this, and many of us struggle to feel hopeful. But if we can hang on to that feeling and do just one good thing the chain reaction is tremendous. We can forge a chain of hope, and humanity will become the life tendency of society.

I will always celebrate Christmas or solstice even though I’m not a Christian. It brings out the best in people, and for me as a Buddhist, is reason to celebrate.

Blessings, everyone!

Jesus the Christ and Siddhartha Gautama the Buddha

By JULIA CORBETT-HEMEYER, The Star Press, December 23, 2010

Yorktown, Indiana (USA) -- The figure of Jesus as it's presented in the sacred writings of Christianity and developed over centuries of Christian tradition differs in several significant aspects from that of the Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, as his story is told in the Buddhist sacred scriptures and elaborated over the centuries.


To note just two: Most Christians believe that Jesus is the single, unique incarnation of the one holy God. The Buddha is believed by Buddhists one of untold numbers of manifestations of Buddha nature. And for most Christians, Jesus is the savior of humankind, sent by God to rescue women and men from the inevitable effects of human sinfulness. While some Buddhist teachings present the Buddha as something like a savior, most do not. I don't want to gloss over these differences because they are important and have given rise to very distinctive religious perspectives. 

However, there are also striking similarities between these two great religious founders, similarities that have to do with their both being manifestations of a wide-spread mythic figure known as the hero. First, however, we need to be clear what I mean by "myth" here, because a lot of misunderstanding surrounds the use of the word.

As I use the term, a "myth" is not an untrue story. Myths are not the same as fables, folktales, fairy tales, anecdotes or simple fiction. Myths are accounts which convey symbolic truths of great meaning and value for those who accept them. They often form the bedrock of cultures and religions. There are striking similarities in certain types of myths across many cultures. If the story of Jesus is the defining one for our faith, or if the Buddha is our guide on the spiritual path, our understanding can be enriched by a wider acquaintance with the hero myth as a type, and with the variations on that theme represented by these two great religious founders.
 
My understanding of the hero myth and its significance is informed by Joseph Campbell's work in The Hero with a Thousand Faces and by Otto Rank's The Myth of the Birth of the Hero. Campbell identifies a three-part sequence in this myth: separation, initiation and return. But prior to that, there are the birth narratives.

The accounts of heroes' births are marked by their unusual features, their miraculous character. They serve to set the hero apart from more ordinary people right from the beginning. To note just a few examples: According to tradition, Jesus was born to a virgin, conceived by God without human intervention. Siddhartha Gautama was born from his mother's side, according to one account, without causing her any pain or discomfort, having been conceived by supernatural means as well. Although Queen Maya and King Suddhodana were married and no mention is made of her being a virgin, Queen Maya's moral purity is spelled out in detail in the birth narratives of the future Buddha.

An angel appeared to Joseph in a dream to announce that Jesus would save his people from their sins. Hindu priests told Siddhartha's father that if the baby to be born were to remain in the household of his birth he would become a world conqueror. However, if he were to leave the household, he would become a Buddha. (There is also a notable difference here: While Jesus' birth is recorded as being humble, attended by the animals surrounding the manger, Siddhartha was born in a palace and his childhood was spent in luxury.)

An angel appeared to Joseph in a dream to announce that Jesus would save his people from their sins. Hindu priests told Siddhartha's father that if the baby to be born were to remain in the household of his birth he would become a world conqueror. However, if he were to leave the household, he would become a Buddha. (There is also a notable difference here: While Jesus' birth is recorded as being humble, attended by the animals surrounding the manger, Siddhartha was born in a palace and his childhood was spent in luxury.)

As the story of Jesus unfolds, we learn that his life was threatened by King Herod, and an angel appeared to Joseph to warn him to flee with the child into Egypt. While there is no parallel threat in the Buddhist tradition, Siddhartha's childhood was marred by the death of his mother a week after his birth. In light of the seer's prediction, King Suddhodana struggled, unsuccessfully as it turned out, to prevent anything happening to his son that might lead him to abandon the life into which he had been born and thus become a Buddha.

As noted above, the birth narratives of mythic heroes set them apart from the time of their birth and often, before it. The hero is one whose life is marked by trials and challenges, often great danger. The culminating point of the story of the hero comes at the end of the cycle: Heroes successfully navigate the challenges presented, and return with great gifts for humankind. Jesus became known as a savior of humankind. The Buddha became known as one who showed people the way to enlightenment. Both founded religions that have helped to make life meaningful and good for untold numbers of people since their births so long ago.

Article's link: Buddhist Channel

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Another Chapter Closed

KCBA Dhamma Youth Camp 15: Buddha In Jeans has finally come to an end. A great and eventful camp which would be remember by all those that comes...

Some facts of the camp:
No. of Participants: 87 pax
No. of Group: 8 Group
Day of Camp: 4 days
Record broken:
Number of people with same name (3 Wei Han, 3 Jason, 2 Mandy)
Highest Number of Player in a game: 87 person playing pepsi-cola.
Fair Game of Captain Ball: G6 vs Committee Selection

Photos of the camp would be uploaded within this week....

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Youth Camp 15: Buddha In Jeans

It is finally here.

Updates on the camp after 21st December 2010. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

10 days

10 days until KCBA Dhamma Youth Camp 15.
Have you registered?

See you there!

Saturday, November 20, 2010

COUNTDOWN

Are you ready?

KCBA Dhamma Youth Camp 15 - Buddha In Jeans is just around the corner. Less than 30 days...

Have you signed up?

Dont know the details? It is there in the sidebar...

Will I be seeing you?

* Gosh... I am so excited... Cya!

Monday, November 15, 2010

Buddhist secrets for everlasting love

by Nash Siamwalla, The Bangkok Post, Nov 12, 2010

Nash Siamwalla looks into Buddhist teaching that will guarantee couples everlasting love

Bangkok, Thailand -- Buddhist secrets for everlasting love. Sounds too good to be true? Not at all. Lord Buddha himself gave these tips in the following story that is retold in the Pali Canon's Samajivita Sutta.

Once during Lord Buddha's time, there was a loving merchant couple by the name of Nakul who invited Lord Buddha to receive alms and preach at their home. Throughout their life, they had been perfectly devoted to each other, never once being dishonest or going astray. Wanting to be together forever in perfect bliss, both in the present life and ever after, they asked Lord Buddha:

"Dear Lord, since our youth, we have been perfectly devoted to each other. Never once did our minds stray. We wish to remain in this loving bliss forever both in this present lifetime and all the future lifetimes. Please, Lord, tell us what we have to do."

Hearing their question, Lord Buddha answered: "Nakuls, if husband and wife wish to be together in loving bliss both in this lifetime and the lives after, they should endeavour to achieve the same level of faith, morality, generosity and wisdom. They should also be modest, live by the Dhamma, and converse with loving words. They should also never have ill-will towards each other. If they can practice this, they will enjoy the worldly pleasure and happiness together, both in this life and in Heaven."

The first part of Lord Buddha's teaching is called Samajividhamma 4 which is sometimes known as "the qualities which make a couple well-matched". If you do not have that special someone in your life yet, Samajividhamma 4 will serve as a fool-proof guideline for you in finding someone that you want to spend the rest of your life with.

If you are already in a relationship and want to make it last in a loving bliss, this timeless advice of Lord Buddha is also useful.

The same level of faith applies even if you each follow different religions. The author is fortunate to know many couples who live together happily in full loving bliss despite different faiths. It is the same level of faith that counts, not the same faith itself.

As for the same level of morality, Lord Buddha used the term Sila, or precepts. For typical laypeople, there are five precepts, which are to refrain from killing; stealing; committing adultery; lying and intoxicating your mind. To be a decent human being in Buddhism, these five precepts are required. In Buddhism, the five precepts are what separate us from animals.

Talking about precepts, if you want to be a real Buddhist, you should also aim to try living by the eight precepts now and then, say, every Buddhist holiday _ that is, every half moon, full moon, and black moon on the lunar calendar. It comes roughly once a week. In the eight precepts, in addition to the five precepts, you refrain from any worldly pleasure and also do not eat after noon.

The same level of generosity refers not only to the idea of "giving" per se, but also to the sacrifice each person is willing to make. As for the idea of giving, we can already visualise how couples can get into trouble if one partner prefers to give more to society than the other partner.

The same goes for the level of sacrifice. For every relationship to last, one partner has to sacrifice him or herself at some point. It goes without saying that the willingness to sacrifice for the other should be mutual. The sacrifice should be without condition, though, for condition leads to the idea of "give and take". You want the other party to do something for you in return for what you have to sacrifice. Real love, the author presumes, should be about "give and give", don't you think?

The last advice on Samajividhamma 4 is perhaps the most difficult one to achieve: "To have the same level of wisdom."

By wisdom, Lord Buddha refers to the Buddhist type of wisdom, which means true understanding of Dhamma. In other words, it is the true understanding of life and of how the world operates. To achieve this type of wisdom, one needs to practice mindfulness training, either Theravada's vipassana style or Zen's mindfulness practice.

Yet, even if this last advice is the most difficult to achieve, it should be the first goal of any couples who wish for an everlasting love to try. Why? Because the wisdom from mindfulness practice will serve as a natural guideline as to how to achieve the same level of faith, morality and generosity.

Still, from the author's observation, in general, people seem to be oblivious to the true benefits of mindfulness. If you and your loved one haven't tried it yet, it is never too late to do so. The first step is to find a proper teacher because this is something that you can not just learn to do by yourself. It needs proper and constant guidance.

Secondly, the setting that will yield the true benefits of mindfulness is a proper meditation retreat.

Find one that has scheduled sessions throughout the day under close supervision. The key to successful mindfulness practice is continuity. That is why retreats offer a better chance of success.

See you in two weeks' time. Until, then, let us stay mindful. And all the best to couples and couples-to-be out there. To have an everlasting love, you have to work at it. Hey, if you love each other enough, you would work hard for it, wouldn't you?

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

The Mexican Fisherman

In a quiet Mexican fishing village, an American on vacation was watching a local fisherman unload his morning catch. The American, a successful professor at a prestigious US business school, couldn't resist giving the Mexican fisherman a little bit of free advice.

"Hey!" began the American. "Why are you finishing so early?"

"Since I have caught enough fish, Senor, replied the genial Mexican, "enough to feed my family and a little extra to sell. Now I will take some lunch with my wife and after a little siesta in the afternoon, I will play with my children. Then, after dinner, I will go to the cantina, drink a little tequila and play some guitar with my friends. It is enough for me, Senor."

"Listen to me, my friend." said the business professor. "If you stay out at sea until late afternoon, you will easily catch twice as much fish. You can sell the extra, save up the money, and in six months, maybe nine, you'll be able to buy a bigger and better boat and hire some crew. Then you'll be able to catch four times as many fish. Think of the extra money you will make! In another year or two, you will have the capital to buy second fishing boat and hire another crew. If you follow this business plan, in six or seven years you will be the proud owner of a large fishing fleet. Just imagine that! Then you should move your head office to Mexico office, or even to LA. After only three or four years in LA,you float your company on the stockmarket giving yourself, as CEO, aqa generous salary package with substantial share options. In a few more years - listen to this! - you initiate a company share buy-back scheme, which will make you a multi-millionaire! Guaranteed! I'm a well-known professor at a US business school. I know these things."

The Mexican fisherman listened thoughtfully at what the animated American had to say. When the professor had finished, the Mexican asked him, "But, Senor Professor, what will I do with so many millions of dollars?"

Surprisingly, the American professor hadn't thought the business plan through that far. So he quickly figured out what a person would do with a millions of dollars.

"Amigo! With all the dough, you can retire! Yeah! Retire for life. You can buy a little villa in a picturesque fishing village like this one, and purchase a small boat for going fishing in the morning. You can have lunch with your wife every day, and siesta afterwards with nothing to worry you. In the afternoon you can spend quality time with your kids anad, after dinner in the evening, play guitar with your friends in the cantina,drinking tequila. Yeah, with all that money, my friend, you can retire and take it easy."

"But, Senor Professor, I do all that already."

WHY DO WE BELIEVE THAT WE HAVE TO WORK SO HARD AND GET RICH FIRST, BEFORE WE CAN FIND CONTENTMENT?

~from Opening the door of your heart by Ajahn Brahm

Friday, October 01, 2010

'Detective Dee' for Dharma?

by Shen Shi'an, The Buddhist Channel, Oct 1, 2010

Singapore -- The movie 'Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame', which of course mixes fact and fiction, creatively and colourfully tells the story of how, in 690 A.D., a giant Bodhisattva-like image was made in the likeness of China's first and only female 'emperor', Wu Zetian. Its creation created unrest when her key supporting men seemingly spontaneously combusted in ominous ways shortly before the completion of the statue.

 As the statue is to be launched on the very day she formally ascends the throne, any mishap that challenges it is seen as dangerous rebellion. Desperate to uncover the murderer, she appoints the ingenious Dee Renjie, who was once an imprisoned rebel himself, to solve the mystery. Realising the gravity of guarding her rule for the peace and well-being of the nation, he embarked on solving the whodunit.

Perhaps somewhat true in spirit to history, the film paints Wu Zetian in a deliberately ambiguous light, as it is hard to tell if she really was unscrupulous in her ways to attain the throne, or if she had the best of intentions. While history is rewritten by its winners, it is at times sullied by its opponents too. Interestingly, upon hindsight today, despite her faults, many historians view her to had been a capable and attentive leader on the whole.

Empress Wu was also one of the most powerful champions of Buddhism in China. During her reign in the Tang Dynasty, Buddhism reached its golden age. This is partly due to her promotion of Buddhism over Confucianism and Daoism as the preferred state religion. Almost for sure, she did this to counter traditional Confucian thought against female rule too. Unbeknownst to many, the beautiful 'Verse for Opening Sutras'(???)is attributed to her, which is still chanted by many Buddhists today:


The unsurpassed, profound, and wonderful Dharma
Is difficult to encounter in thousands of millions of eons
Now that I see and hear it, I shall receive and uphold it
And vow to realise the Tathagata’s true message.


Wu commissioned the construction of many Buddha images, with the most outstanding being the huge statues chiselled into the Longmen Grottes. It is said that the largest Buddha image there, of Vairocana Buddha, was carved in her likeness - probably in an attempt to justify her rule with the 'blessings' of the enlightened! Did she do this out of great ego or great compassion for the masses? Was it to remind all that she 'received' a divine mandate from the Buddha, that she is one with him? Is it inevitable that the growth of politics and religion must intertwine in a love-hate relationship?

For a brief period, she claimed to be Maitreya Buddha to garner more support! However, according to the sutras, Maitreya arrives to be the next Buddha in some 56 billion years' time! Royalty in the past, no matter what nation they are of, often like to imagine or even sincerely believe they are 'enlightened' or endorsed by the heavens to rule, that they are even above the reproach of the wise. But if this is so, how can they ever be overthrown? When they fall out of divine favour?

The truth is, bad kings and queens are deluded, who manifest egoism instead of enlightenment. However, their rule does stand for the collective karma of the masses at that point in time. The sutras speak of the rare coming and going of great noble Wheel-turning kings though, who practise, rule and spread the Dharma. In recorded history, the great King Asoka of ancient India perhaps strove to be one. Nice try! May all leaders of all nations continue to awaken to universal compassion and wisdom, to rule in more enlightened ways!

Original article can be found here.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Thich Nhat Hahn urges parliaments, corporations, schools and families to adopt 5 mindfulness training

The Buddhist Channel, Sept 26, 2010

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – World renowned Venerable Thich Nhat Hahn in his keynote address at the World Buddhist Conference 2010 currently held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, have urged politicians in parliaments, business executives in corporations, teachers in classrooms and families to adopt the “5 mindfulness training” as first steps in redeeming this planet from our destructive tendencies.

Famed Zen Master Thich Nhat Hahn delivering his keynote address at the World Buddhist Conference 2010 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

By way of integrating the “5 mindfulness training” (which is based on the 5 moral precepts ) into the core values of the mentioned institutions, Thich Nhat Hahn says that such collective effort will be able to bring about happiness and the well being of the world.

“When we implement these mindfulness trainings with understanding and compassion, we transfer happiness to the world. Corporations using these trainings will be able to realize profit not just in terms of making money, but profits that can also help to protect the planet,” reasons the venerable.

This famed Zen Master said that it was possible for corporations or parliaments to cultivate happiness and compassion within. He explained that each of these institutions can be treated as Sangha, very much like the traditional community of monks and nuns. 

As with the Sangha, he says that these entities can also practice deep listening and loving speech. When they do this, then they will be opportunities to transform the parliament, corporation, classrooms and families in Sangha.

“When this happen, we will be able to understand the suffering of each other, and our actions shall bring good happiness and well being to the world,” he said.

The venerable pointed to a situation as to how the current generation had failed future generations.
Citing unbridled consumerism and unmindful living as the cause, he said that a practical way to the save the planet is to encourage collective practice by the young.

“One Buddha is not enough. We need many Buddhas,” he reasoned.

He said that now the onus of the younger generation is to become “activists of the 5 mindfulness training”. 
It is through deep listening and compassion within that parliaments, corporations, classrooms and families can be transformed into mindful Sanghas. And it is by these transformations thereby lies the hope of salvation for this planet.

The World Buddhist Conference 2010 is being held in the Malaysian capital from Sept 25-26, 2010. Nine speakers including Ven Thich Nhat Hahn have been invited to share their experiences and wisdom on the theme “Living in Harmony, When Things Fall Apart”. 

For more details, please visit: www.wbc.my.

See also:  The Five Mindfulness Training of Plum Village

Article from Buddhist Channel, click here.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

More Photos from Inter-Buddhist Youth Games 2010

More Photos from Inter-Buddhist Youth Games 2010... enjoy!


Everyone from KCBA
Speech by Chief Reverend
At Tug of War
Us and the medals

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Inter-Buddhist Youth Games - How it went...


I might says that it went better than expected... I heard that there were states players so I was happy to be able to go and meet new and old friends...

What we got was definitely more...

We managed to snatch 2 (read TWO) golds, one silver and one bronze from some of the games being played...

We managed to get gold for Basketball and Volleyball due to top performance from our players...

We also managed to get a silver for Tug Of War...

And we managed to get a bronze for the 100m run...

Thanks to all the people that come and participate and we hope that we would be able to go for the 3rd Inter-Buddhist Youth Fellowship Games next year...

Friday, September 17, 2010

Inter-Buddhist Youth Games 2010

The people behind KCBA Dhamma Youth Camp would be participating in their first ever Inter-Buddhist Youth Games this coming weekend.

Venue: Garden International School, Mont Kiara
Date: 19 September 2010 (Sunday)
Time: 8.30 am - 6.00 pm

Assortment of games being played that day-
1) Basketball (Males)
2) Volleyball (Mix of Males and Females)
3) Badminton (Males and females)
4) Captain Ball (females)
5) Tug of War (Males and Females)
6) 100m run (Males and Females)


And KCBADYC would be participating in all these games...

We are not aiming for any win (it would still be great if we get some) but we wont go down without giving the rest a run for their money. If you have time during that day, please drop by and cheer for our team... :)

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Buddha In Jeans

Dear All,

We know that it has been a very long since we last update this blog. Everyone has been busy preparing and now that most of the details has been finalized, we are proud to announce it to you.

As you can see on the title of this post, the theme for this year camp is "Buddha in Jeans"
Venue: The Klang and Coast Buddhist Association, Klang
Date: 18th - 21st December 2010

Need more details? Contact our committee members...

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Some updates 2010

Dear All,

It has been a long while since the last post. Youth Camp 14 is over and we are already in a new year. FYI, new group of committee members has been interviewed last week and I believe we can expect another installment of KCBA Dhamma Youth Camp at the end of the year.

Another thing that I would like to mention is that I have officially retired from the group. Thus, most of these posting of post here and updating our unofficial webpage would be pass on to another person soon.

Anyway, CNY is coming. And as tradition, there would be house hopping. If you are free, please join us for it. More information, contact past year committee members.

Lastly, wishing you a Happy and Prosperous Chinese New Year.

Not just mandarin oranges and another Chinese New Year

The Buddhist Channel, Jan 25, 2010

Petaling Jaya, Malaysia -- Kechara Soup Kitchen finds a different and meaningful way to celebrate the new year which goes far beyond the family’s reunion dinner dining table.


On top of celebrating with family and welcoming the new year with a bang, let the start of 2010 be one that will really make a difference to someone. Or will it just be another day filled with oranges, nosy relatives and food to make your cholesterol levels soar again?

KECHARA SOUP KITCHEN (KSK) is organising its annual fundraising dinner on Sunday FEB 7 2010, at Sunway Pyramid Convention Centre, to raise funds for its new renovations and maintenance of its new permanent base in the city. With this new building, KSK will be able to go out to DONATE FOOD TO THE HOMELESS more often, FORGE FRIENDSHIPS and give people on the streets a RENEWED LEASE OF LIFE.


Already, they are working hard to find placements for the homeless in old folks homes and find them jobs, thus giving them new opportunities in society. Since 2006, come rain or shine, KSK volunteers have been going out every weekend, bringing hot vegetarian and dry food to the hungry on the streets, regardless of their race, culture or creed. Over the last three years, the number of packets they have been distributing each week has increased from a mere 20 packets to 700 PACKETS.

Read the incredible stories of how they are literally taking people off the streets and into new homes and jobs: www.kechara.com/ksk

Imagine how much more they can do with their new permanent base in the city! You could make this a reality and be a part of giving people not just a new year greeting but a whole new life again.

This KSK fundraising dinner is offering you a night to celebrate the spirit of sharing, giving and hope for the many people who don't even know when they will have their next meal. Among the many fantastic celebrations you'll be having with your loved ones, let at least one dinner make a profound difference in someone's life.

Tables are available for sponsorship at RM2,500 and RM5,000. There are further details here: http://www.kechara.com/ksk/event_view.php?a=0&p=47

For tickets to the event, or for further information on how you can help, please contact our Project Director Justin Cheah at justin.cheah@kechara.com or +6012 203 2135.