Monday, December 19, 2011
BREAKING NEWS: KIM JONG-IL HAS DIED
Kim Jong-il, the leader of North Korea, has died at the age of 69 after suffering a heart attack, North Korean state media has announced.
Kim, known in the communist country as the "Dear Leader", died on Saturday aboard a train during a trip out of Pyongyang, a tearful presenter for the official KCNA news agency said on Monday.
May we all keep the people of the Korean Peninsula (North and South) in our hearts and thoughts as they face uncertainty in this time of change and hope that this transition does not bring any more suffering.
BBC Coverage here.
ABC Video here.
Wikipedia Entry on Death of Kim Jong-Il
CNN Coverage here.
USA Today Coverage
NYTimes Coverage here.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Restored scroll painting exhibited at Yeongsanjae Buddhist Ceremony in LA
Korean monks of Kuyangsa Temple in Incheon, South Korea, performed a ceremony combining chants, dance, and music. Also included was an exhibition of a recently restored important Korean Buddhist painting, Buddha Seokamoni (Shakyamuni) Preaching to the Assembly on Vulture Peak.
Watch a fascinating video about the painting and its restoration, and read more about this weekend’s ceremony, below.
According to Unesco, the ceremony is largely maintained today by the Korean Buddhist Taego Order. Unesco also reports that “Yeongsanjae is held in temples throughout the Republic of Korea to help all beings enter the world of truth by worshiping and admiring the Buddha and his laws and monks. The ceremony serves as an important space for transmission of values and art forms and for meditation, training and enlightenment.”
Source: Shambhala Sun News
Watch a fascinating video about the painting and its restoration, and read more about this weekend’s ceremony, below.
According to Unesco, the ceremony is largely maintained today by the Korean Buddhist Taego Order. Unesco also reports that “Yeongsanjae is held in temples throughout the Republic of Korea to help all beings enter the world of truth by worshiping and admiring the Buddha and his laws and monks. The ceremony serves as an important space for transmission of values and art forms and for meditation, training and enlightenment.”
Source: Shambhala Sun News
Monday, December 5, 2011
2011 Bhikkhu Ordination
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