A Series of Online Conversations
Open to Everyone
An Initiative of One Earth Sangha, Buddhist Teachers Collaborative for Climate Action, and Conversations That Change The World from Maestro Conference
We invite you to join a conversation as we explore the impact of climate change, its underlying causes, and how Dharma practice can inform our personal and collective response. Climate change, the greatest crisis of our civilization, threatens a sustainable environment that can support life on Earth. We have a short window of opportunity to shift this unprecedented challenge into a radically new way of being and living. To meet this task requires a profound reorientation of our relationship to the earth and its resources, including a move from our fossil fuel economy to renewable energy. Underpinning this shift is a transformation of consciousness from seeing the world as an object to exploit, to knowing and living our profound interconnection with all things.
As part of Earth Care Week this October, the Dharma Teachers International Collaborative on Climate Change and One Earth Sangha will launch a set of five online conversations with leading Dharma and mindfulness teachers, listed below. This introductory series will be followed by a three-month online interactive program for aspiring “EcoSattvas” beginning Earth Day, 22 April 2015. Offered free to everyone with the invitation to donate, the conversations will be hosted by Dharma teacher Thanissara Weinberg and One Earth Sangha founders Lou Leonard and Kristin Barker as part of Maestro Conference’s Conversations That Can Change the World. We aspire to offer context, guidance and a practice to support this extraordinary journey, as we engage the immense struggle of our times with hope, fearlessness, and vision.
Join us, as together we can bend the course of history.
These conversations are offered freely to the community in the interest of supporting a wise and compassionate response to climate change. Dana, or generosity, is considered an essential part of our practice. All of the teachers and support staff on these calls offer their gifts freely in this spirit of dana. We invite you to help us defray the direct costs associated with this offering as well as the continued work of One Earth Sangha by making a donation here. Any amount you offer is deeply appreciated.
During the series and in between calls we invite you to participate here in our discussion group on facebook.
To keep up with our growing community, we invite you, if you haven’t already, to join the One Earth Sangha mailing list.
Schedule
Sunday, October 5; 12:30 – 2:00 pm EST
Jack Kornfield is one of the leading Buddhist teachers in America. A practitioner for over 40 years, he is one of the key teachers to introduce mindfulness and vipassana meditation to the West. His approach emphasizes compassion, lovingkindness and the profound path of mindful presence, all offered in simple, accessible ways in his books, CD’s, classes and retreats. More at
www.jackkornfield.com
Tara Brach, PhD, is a clinical psychologist, lecturer, and popular teacher of Buddhist mindfulness (vipassana) meditation. She is founder and senior teacher of the
Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC, and teaches meditation at centers throughout the United States. Tara has offered speeches and workshops for mental-health practitioners at numerous professional conferences. These, along with her many audio and video talks, address the value of meditation in relieving emotional suffering and serving spiritual awakening. Tara is the author of
Radical Acceptance and
True Refuge. More at
www.tarabrach.com and
www.imcw.org
Sunday, October 12; 12:30 – 2:00 pm EST
Ayya Anandabodhi Bhikkhuni, originally from Wales, has lived as a Theravada Buddhist nun in the Forest Tradition for over 20 years. She is co-founder of Aloka Vihara, a Forest Monastery for nuns located in the foothills of the Sierras. In 2011 she took full ordination as a bhikkhuni, joining the growing number of women who are reclaiming this path of practice originally given by the Buddha. She offers Dharma teaching in Northern California and occasionally further afield.
Susie Harrington teaches meditation nationwide and is the guiding teacher for
Desert Dharma, based in Moab, Utah. She has trained in the Insight tradition since 1989, and began teaching in 2005. Influenced by her long relationship with wilderness, she often offers retreats outside, believing nature to be a profound teacher, and a gateway to our true self. Her teaching is deeply grounded in the body, our daily lives, and our connection to the earth. Susie brings the skills of inquiry, relational dharma, and the psychological/spiritual interface to her teaching.
Sunday, October 19; 12:30 – 2:00 pm EST
James Baraz is a founding teacher of
Spirit Rock Meditation Center. James started Spirit Rock’s Community Dharma Leader program, the Kalyana Mitta (Spiritual Friends) Network, is teacher-advisor to the Spirit Rock Family program and serves on its Board of Directors. He’s been teaching the popular online
Awakening Joy course since 2003. James is co-author of
Awakening Joy, which is based on the course. He is also an advisor to
One Earth Sangha, a sangha website devoted to Buddhist responses to Climate Change. He lives in Berkeley, California.
Catherine McGee has been teaching Insight Meditation at
Gaia House and internationally since 1997. Her teaching emphasises embodiment and working with whatever hinders us from living our deepest knowing in the world through body speech and mind. She is also a student of the
Diamond Approach. You can read a a beautiful article by Catherine on the First Foundation of Mindfulness shared
here on One Earth Sangha.
Sunday, October 26; 12:30 – 2:00 pm EST
Chas DiCapua has been practicing mindfulness and Buddhist meditation, primarily in the Theravada school, for over 20 years. He has trained with Burmese meditation masters, western monastics of the Thai Forest tradition and senior western Vipassana teachers. Chas is interested in how the basic material of our everyday lives, including relationships, can be used as a vehicle for awakening. Chas is the Resident Teacher at the
Insight Meditation Society and teaches retreats there and at various centers and sanghas throughout the country.
Vinny Ferraro Vinny Ferraro is the Senior Trainer for
Mindful Schools in Oakland, California, his work was the subject of MTV’s
If You Really Knew Me. Vinny is a meditation instructor and a nationally recognized leader in designing and implementing interventions for at-risk youth. In 2001, he began teaching for
Challenge Day, teaching emotional intelligence and other social skills, eventually becoming their Training Director, leading workshops to more than 100,000 youth. He then became the Training Director for the
Mind Body Awareness Project, a non-profit that teaches meditation to the incarcerated. He is a Guiding Teacher for
Against the Stream, and for 10 years has lead a friday night meditation group in San Francisco, California. Vinny doesn’t like talking about himself in the 3rd person.
Sunday, November 2; 12:30 – 2:00 pm EST
David Loy is a professor, writer, and Zen teacher in the Sanbo Kyodan tradition of Japanese Zen Buddhism. His essays and books have been translated into many languages. He lectures and leads workshops nationally and internationally on various topics, focusing primarily on the encounter between Buddhism and modernity, social and ecological issues. More at
www.davidloy.org
Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi is a Theravada Buddhist monk originally from New York City. He was ordained in Sri Lanka in 1972 and lived in Asia for almost twenty-five years. Ven. Bodhi has many important publications to his credit, including translations of several major collections from the Pali Canon. In 2008, he founded
Buddhist Global Relief, a nonprofit that sponsors projects dedicated to hunger relief and sustainable agriculture for poor communities around the world. In 2013 he was elected president of the
Buddhist Association of the United States(BAUS).
Ayya Santussika Bhikkhuni left her career in software design to train as an interfaith minister in 1998, during which time she also began staying in monasteries and learning from master teachers in Thailand. She took robes in 2005 and trained in the Ajahn Chah tradition in both England and America. She received bhikkhuni ordination and co-founded
Karuna Buddhist Vihara in Mountain View, CA in 2012. She is a director on the board for
Buddhist Global Relief and teaches Dharma with a focus on engaged Buddhism.
Ayya Santacitta Bhikkhuni was born in Austria and has a multifaceted background in hotel management, cultural anthropology and avantgarde dance theatre. Her first teacher was Ajahn Buddhadasa, who sparked her interest in Buddhist monastic life. She has practiced meditation for over 25 years and trained as a nun in both the East and West since 1993, primarily in the lineage of Ajahn Chah. Ayya Santacitta is co-founder of
Aloka Vihara, a training monastery for women near Placerville, CA and received bhikkhuni ordination in 2011.
Conversation Hosts
Host Dharma Teacher,
Thanissara, was trained in the Forest School of Ajahn Chah, is a Dharma teacher and activist. She is co-founder of
Dharmagiri on the border of Lesotho and South Africa, and
Chattanooga Insight. She has taught meditation retreats for 25 years, and has an MA in Mindfulness Psychotherapy Practice. Thanissara is author of T
he Heart of the Bitter Almond Hedge Sutra, co-author, with Kittisaro, of
Listening to the Heart, and is writing Time To Stand Up, a book on Buddhism and Climate Action, due out next year.
Lou Leonard is the leader of the climate change program at
World Wildlife Fund which he joined in 2008 after a year on the staff of the Obama for America campaign. He has worked with Kristin Barker to create One Earth Sangha and practices within the
Insight Meditation Community in Washington Lou actually came to the Dharma as a response to the challenges of working on climate issues, so he’s very interested in the connections between these two issues.
Kristin Barker is co-founder of One Earth Sangha with Lou Leonard. She is dedicated to cultivating broad-scale awakening to authentic earth relationship through meditation, sustainable living and advocacy. As an active member of the
Insight Meditation Community of Washington, DC (IMCW), Kristin is also a co-founder of “
White Awake” whose mission is to develop awareness of race dynamics among white people engaged in spiritual communities and progressive causes. She has worked as an independent consultant and staff member at several environmental organizations in Washington, DC.
Yong Oh works as an acupuncturist and offers mindfulness classes in Chattanooga, TN. He is dedicated to exploring that vital connection between the body and mind through both acupuncture and meditation. He entered the Buddhist path through the Soto Zen tradition but has practiced primarily in the Insight tradition under the guidance of Kittisaro and Thanissara since 2010. Yong is an active member of the Chattanooga Insight Meditation sangha and is currently serving as a Board member for Southern Dharma Retreat Center in North Carolina.
Charlie Rebich lives in Oakland, California and teaches mindfulness and communication part time. His full-time gig is at
www.MaestroConference.com. MaestroConference is the technology partner with One Earth Sangha, creator of the online conferencing technology behind these events. MaestroConference is also hosting a whole series of events called Conversations That Can Change World. See their website for more information.
“In this present age, so full of danger and confusion, spirituality and social engagement cannot remain separate domains each sealed off by rigid boundaries. The major social upheavals of our age-global warming, widespread poverty, war, ethnic conflicts, the violation of human rights, the cruel treatment of animals- all stem from a deep crisis at the core of the human mind. To heal the maladies that afflict humanity calls for something far more potent than international treaties and technological innovation. A more stable solution must be ethical and spiritual. The only solution that can truly work must begin at the foundations, within the depths of human consciousness. Most of all we need a global awakening of the wisdom that embodies timeless standards of justice, and a boundless love and compassion that extends to all living beings. But to heal the crisis of our age, love and compassion must serve as more than lofty spiritual ideals. They must become spurs to action moving us to work indefatigably to eliminate the suffering of others and to promote their long-term welfare and happiness.”
~ Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi