Upcoming events.
What Now? Philly Post-Election Meditation and Conversation with BPF
*Digital collage by Daní Padilla, Gazan Sunbirds Rise Above the Fire
Let it Move You: a care package for grieving times
Your grief makes sense.
I want to write rage but all that comes is sadness. We have been sad long enough to make this earth either weep or grow fertile.
– Audre Lorde, The Cancer Journals
In this era of constant crisis, loss, and disruption, the collective weight of unprocessed grief is undeniable. Lives have been lost to pandemics, terrorism, genocide, state violence, and systemic injustice. Many of us are left struggling to move through the sorrow for all that we have already experienced, and bracing for the tragedies that are sure to come.
Some of us have hardly had time to breathe, let alone grieve, before responding to the next crisis.
Your grief is sacred.
Now this, monks, is the Noble Truth of dukkha (“suffering” or “stress”): Birth is dukkha, aging is dukkha, death is dukkha; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, & despair are dukkha; association with the unbeloved is dukkha; separation from the loved is dukkha; not getting what is wanted is dukkha.
– SN 56.11 Dhammacakkapavattana Sutta
The Buddha described grief and loss as part of the First Noble Truth of suffering, or stress. It is a "noble" truth because it’s a part of the human condition.
And, in a world like ours, we know that suffering is not distributed equally.
Those of us who are targeted by systems of oppression and domination may be carrying unique burdens of loss, trauma, and responsibility.
Your grief deserves to be held, supported, and tended to.
Let It Move You: a Care Package for Grieving Times, is a six week contemplative journey through the winter solstice and into the New Year.
It is filled with teachings, resources, and practices to help you be with your grief, even as you work to block injustice, and build a world where all of us are safe, loved and free.
Featuring Linda Thai, Lama Rod Owens, Malkia Devich Cyril, Rev. Duncan Ryuken Williams, Sarah Jawaid, Sam Rise, and others… this care package will offer you tools, teachings, and space for individual and collective grief, pointing us toward the freedom that mourning makes possible.
In six pre-recorded sessions, you’ll experience:
Dialogues featuring six grief workers, healers, activist-organizers, and politicized dharma practitioners, each exploring unique facets of loss and resilience, both personal and communal.
Guided Practices (video + audio) to help you settle, heal, and reconnect with your inner resources, that can you can build into your regular rituals of self- and community-care
Readings and Resources for further exploration and integration.
Three live sessions will feature guided practices, small group breakouts, and teacher led-Q&A, to deepen your engagement with the material and connect with others on the journey.
You will receive lifetime access to all course material. Live sessions will also be recorded and available to watch or listen later on.
We have to grieve. It is a duty like any other duty in life…Grief is seen as food for the psyche. Just as the body needs food, the psyche needs grief to maintain its own healthy balance.
– Elder Malidoma Patrice Somé, Of Water and the Spirit
Register here
When No Thing Works: A Zen and Indigenous Perspective on Resilience, Shared Purpose, and Leadership in a Timeplace of Collapse
A book reading and Q+A with Norma Wong
We are so geekily excited about the launch of this book! Norma Wong has been a wise, powerful and enduring force in the realms of Dharma and politics, and her teachings have inspired and sustained generations of movement leaders.
Come celebrate with us!
In Remembrance, We Heal Our Way Home
Two beloved teachers from Thich Nhat Hanh’s Plum Village tradition, Kaira Jewel Lingo and Marisela Gomez, offer wisdom and practices from their book to help us navigate towards freedom, one year into the genocide in Palestine.
Refuge Circle
30 minute: meditation + call your reps
Refuge Circle is a multi-lineage, spiritual-political space for us to ground in contemplative practice, with community, especially in times of grief, loss, and rage at ongoing harm from systems of oppression. It’s a space to share resources to support the freedom of all beings, and deepen our commitment to practicing peace and interrupting harm.
True Justice, True Peace: Practicing Non Violence in Times of Great Harm
Description
Sami Awad, Kazu Haga, Miki Kashtan in conversation with BPF Co-Director Kate Johnson
Wednesday Dec 6th 10:30am PT/ 1:30pm ET. Register here: bit.ly/bpfpeace
This is a 90-minute event that will be recorded with ASL interpretation and closed captions provided.
I chose. I chose to stand against your hate and not hate you, to resist your persecution and not demean you, to overcome your oppression and not suppress you, to respond to your violence with nonviolence. I chose to speak loud and clear for freedom and life and not insult you. I chose love to be my motivation.
– Sami Awad, Holy Land Trust
As we bear witness to the all-out assault on Gaza and the Palestinian people, we do so with profound grief.
We acknowledge and mourn the horror of the Oct 7 attack on Israeli lives. We acknowledge and mourn the horrific conditions of decades-long apartheid and occupation of Palestine from which this violence arose.
Transformative justice activist Mariame Kaba reminds us that “no one enters violence for the first time by committing it.” As we take the long view, we can see that the current crisis in Palestine and Israel is a manifestation of cycles of violence and domination that began thousands of years ago.
In this present moment, we also hold steadfastly to our fundamental interconnection and shared humanity. No one is free from the impacts of oppression and colonization, even as we are in so many different positions within it.
How does the Buddha’s commitment to the principle of Ahimsa (often translated as non-harm or nonviolence) respond to violence? How do we conjure up the courage to resist oppression without giving into the delusion of separation?
What can each one of us do to transform the conditions within us and around us, within the specific circumstances in which we find ourselves?
What can we each do to hold with reverence our own and everyone else’s humanity in the process, without exception or discrimination?
Please join us for an interdisciplinary, interfaith conversation on the practice of nonviolence, both internally and externally, as it relates to the current violence in Israel and Palestine.
Our speakers:
Sami Awad, Inspired by his uncle Mubarak Awad's leadership in Palestinian nonviolent resistance, Sami Awad founded the Holy Land Trust in 1998 to promote Palestinian nonviolent resistance to the Israeli occupation. Holy Land Trust initiatives include training workshops, participation in local nonviolent campaigns, and seeking increased media coverage for nonviolent resistance. Holy Land Trust also runs summer programs in which internationals live with host families in Bethlehem, study Arabic and volunteer with Palestinian organizations. Follow @Sami_Awad //
Kazu Haga, a trainer and practitioner of nonviolence and restorative justice, is a core member of the Ahimsa Collective and the Fierce Vulnerability Network and author of Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm. He works with incarcerated people, youth, and activists from around the country. He has over 20 years of experience in nonviolence and social change work, and has been an active trainer since 2000. He resides in Lisjan Ohlone land, a.k.a Oakland, CA.
Miki Kashtan is a practical visionary pursuing a world that works for all, based on principles and practices rooted in feminist nonviolence. Miki is the seed founder of the Nonviolent Global Liberation community (NGLcommunity.org) and a certified trainer with the Center for Nonviolent Communication. She has taught, consulted, and engaged with projects globally. She is the author of four books and blogs on The Fearless Heart. Her writing has also appeared in The New York Times, Tikkun magazine, Waging Nonviolence, Shareable, Peace and Conflict, and elsewhere.
Hosted by BPF Co-Director Kate Johnson.
Kate Johnson (she/her) is a teacher, facilitator, writer and mother. She began practicing Theravada Buddhism in the Western Insight tradition in her early 20’s, deeply influenced by the Thai Forest and Burmese Sayadaw lineages. She has participated in many multi-month meditation retreats and multi-year teacher trainings, and graduated from Spirit Rock Meditation Center’s four-year retreat teacher training in 2020, under the leadership of Gina Sharpe, Larry Yang and Lila Kate Wheeler. Kate began facilitating organizational training and retreats after co-founding the Meditation Working Group at Occupy Wall Street in 2011, and went on to help organize yoga and meditation communities in service of justice campaigns, and advise organizations committed to the practice of wise relationship. She is the author of the book Radical Friendship: Seven Ways to Love Yourself and Find Your People in an Unjust World.
Gratitude to Erin Selover and Fiona Teng for their thought partnership in preparation for this event.
Refuge Circles
Register here: bit.ly/bpfrefuge
We are called to practice together in sangha during these heart-shattering and activating times. This is a spiritually-politically aligned space for us to ground in our practice with community, especially in times of grief, loss, rage at ongoing harm from systems of oppression. This is a space to hold all of the spectrum of feelings and experiences that may be arising during this time.
This is not a space for discussion and sharing of views. We are committed towards peace and liberation so all beings may be safe and free from harm. As such, we call for an immediate complete ceasefire on Gaza and in solidarity with Palestinian liberation. We welcome politicized teachers from various Buddhist lineages lifting up Heritage and BIPOC voices.
Refuge Circles run from October 31 - December 22, 2023
Weekdays Mon-Fri 7pm-7:30pm PST
AGENDA
2 min - Arrive & Welcome
5 min - Dharma reflection related to the present crisis
15-20 min - Guided Practice
5 min - Action to call our representatives https://ceasefiretoday.com/
True Justice, True Peace: An Engaged Buddhist Response to the Crisis in Gaza
Register for FREE: bit.ly/bpf4gaza
How can we uphold the inherent Buddha nature of all beings, as we maintain absolute clarity in our work against Israeli apartheid?
How can wise discernment guide us to be clear in our commitment to Jewish life and dignity?
How can our practice serve us as we mobilize towards a free Palestine?
Join as we explore these questions and more with Palestinian-American Christian peacemaker Jonathan Brenneman, and Jewish-Israeli and Buddhist organizer and strategist Carinne Luck, in conversation with BPF co-director Kate Johnson.
We’ll offer short practices for grounding and centering throughout our time together, which will also include time for personal reflection/journaling, and time for questions and reflections with our guest speakers.