April 16th, 2009 Comments Off

Protein is often at a premium in the Tibetan monasteries I’ve visited. The Dalai Lama has asked monks to become vegetarian but Tibetans love meat and so many resist. Around Tibetan New Year (Losar) monks receive a variety of food and sweets they don’t get at other times. This young monk was happy eating egg.
April 6th, 2009 Comments Off
History says, Gautama Buddha travelled from Bodhgaya to Sarnath after his enlightenment to find his five former companions. He found them and the Dhamek stupa commemorates the spot in the Deer Park where Buddha gave his first sermon, the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, to these five monks.
Buddha spent his first rainy season in Sarnath and the ruins of the old Mulagandhakuti vihara supposedly marks that place.
The modern Mulagandhakuti Vihara Temple was built in the 1930s by the Sri Lankan Mahabodhi Society. Behind it is the Deer Park (still with deer) and alongside it is the impressive Dhamek stupa.
March 28th, 2009 §
Inge took this shot a few years back when I travelled to met her in Tibet. She’d been living and working in a town called Ganzi (Karze if you’re Tibetan) teaching English at a free school. I’d arrived the day before — it had taken me 5 days to get there from Sydney.
She took this shot while we were walking back from the main Ganzi monastery after receiving a surprise blessing — hence the red dot. Ganzi is 3,800 meters above sea level and I remember being rather puffed.

As I look at the photo now, I see is a tired, puffy-faced old geezer who’s looking forward to a beer.
The poem is a favourite. I obviously think it applies.
a warning to my readers
by Wendell Berry
Do not think me gentle
because I speak in praise
of gentleness, or elegant
because I honor the grace
that keeps this world. I am
a man crude as any,
gross of speech, intolerant,
stubborn, angry, full
of fits and furies. That I
may have spoken well
at times, is not natural.
A wonder is what it is.
September 19th, 2008 Comments Off
The monk is six years old and is part of a Losar (Tibetan New Year) ceremony. He joined the monastery a few weeks before I took this photo.

January 8th, 2008 Comments Off

This shot was taken during a Losar (Tibetan New Year) ceremony in 2003. I’d just had a cup of tea with HH Penor Rinpoche and then went for a look at the temple. I took this shot on a film camera and then scanned it on a crappy scanner. Hence the less than pristine quality. There is something I’ve always liked about the shot — probably those horns.
March 26th, 2007 Comments Off
This statue of Sakyamuni Buddha — by the way I just found out that Sakyamuni Buddha means sage or wise man of the Shakyas — is in the new Kagyu monastery in Bylakuppe, which is near Mysore, South India.
Sakyamuni Buddha statues are often shown with the Buddha meditating and with his hands in one of three ways: His right hand may touch the earth signifying his realization of spiritual discovery as in my snapshot; both hands may be in his lap, palms turned upward as in meditation; or both hands may be near his chest, symbolic of the delivery of his sermon, ‘The Wheel of Truth.’ Amazing what you can learn on the Internet.
January 16th, 2007 Comments Off
flash fiction by John Holman
His head newly shaven, he walks to the temple with a slow, regal demeanour. Each stride measured, each footfall quiet on the fine gravel path. His hands are soft and warm. His fingers entwined like tender lovers resting in some quiet ritual togetherness.
A misty rain falls. Feather-like droplets touch his ageing face but he is unconcerned with rain. He stops as he sees the temple rooftop appear above the trees — bright terracotta and angular, cutting the grey mist with waves of orange and specks of gold.
He hears the low rhythmic chanting of monks at prayer, a drumbeat and a frog whose call has a sadness that seems to match his own. And in the distance, he hears the faint step of a sandalled monk approach.
March had been cold and April even colder. No snow, just cold wind and a rain that had seeped inside of him, filling his lungs and his heart.
“Welcome home, Master.”
He smiles and bows his head but does not reply, preferring to hold back, to enjoy his silence a moment longer. He waits, listening as the monk’s tread slowly fades.
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