Shambala Center
The Shambhala Meditation Center of Chicago was founded by Chogyam
Trungpa Rinpoche, a Tibetan Buddhist Master, artist and poet.
Mindfulness-awareness meditation practice and instruction are available
several times each week, free of charge, and classes are offered in
Buddhist studies, Shambhala Training, and Contemplative Arts. The
Shambhala community welcomes people of any spiritual background or way
of life. LINK
Here are three relevant articles from the July 2005 edition of Shambala Sun
"The Wise Woman Who Talked Back to God"
The Ancient Buddhist tale of the Seven Wise Sisters has Zen Teacher Bonnie Myotai Treace thinking about the koan of gender.
LINK
"How American Women Are Changing Buddhism"
American Women are taking Buddhism away from its patriarchal past, participating confidently as practitioners, teachers, and leaders. The job is not finished, says Rita M. Gross, one of Buddhism's leading feminist thinkers, but the role of American Buddhist women is unprecedented and may change Buddhism forever.
LINK
"Women's Liberation"
Whether they call it soul, spirit, atman or buddhanature, all the major religions say that men and women have the same essential nature. Yet in practice these religions are dominated by men, and women are often not held as equals. Our panel discusses the realities, hopes, and struggles of women in three of the world's major religions.
LINK
The Rime Foundation Rime ("ree-may") is Tibetan for "unbiased" and the
Rime Movement began in Tibet in the 19the century to bridge the
Foundation promotes the Dharma by sponsoring teachings in Chicago by
Vajrayana masters from different traditions.
LINK
SGI-USA
Soka Gakkai International (SGI-USA) is an American Buddhist association that promotes world peace and individual happiness based on the teachings of the Nichiren school of Mahayana Buddhism.
LINK
Buddha Dharma Meditation Center
The Buddha-Dharma Meditation Center (BMC for short) is a Theravada Buddhist Temple and edcuation center founded in 1986 by Thai and American Buddhists in the western suburbs of Chicago.
LINK
Liberation Park
Offers meditation classes, regular sittings, & other activities in Oak Park. Tehrevadan
Tradition.
LINK
Chicago Zen Center
Established in 1944, the Chicago Zen Center is a non-sectarian temple in the Japanese Mahayana tradition.
LINK
Buddhist Peace Fellowship (BPF)
Founded in 1978, the BPF serves as a
catalyst for socially engaged Buddhism. BPF's programs, publications, and practice groups link Buddhist teachings of wisdom and
compassion with progressive social change. LINK
Zoe Kaufman
An exhibit featuring the work of American Buddhist artist Zoe Kaufman LINK and others will be on the second level of the DePaul University Student Center during the Buddhist Women's Conference. Kaufman's work also appears on the cover of the 2007 Conference brochure and her "Quiet Mind on Fire" is used on this web site.
Shambhala Sun is the magazine about waking up. It celebrates the spirit of wakefulness wherever it appears - in the arts, relationships, politics, livelihood, popular culture, and all the challenges of modern life.
Buddha Dharma - The Practitioner's Quarterly is the first in-depth, practice-oriented journal for everyone with a serious interest in Buddhism.
Famous women who happen to be Buddhist... or, famous Buddhists who happen to be women
Blues and jazz singer Ernestine Anderson
was born on November 11, 1928 and started her career at the age of three years, when her
father discovered her singing along with a recording by Bessie Smith. Her singing
career has spanned half a century, except for a break from the business in the late
1960's, when Anderson devoted herself to family life and her study of Buddhism. Jazz
Profiles calls her "one of the most versatile jazz vocalists to emerge from the
big band era". See National Public Radio's profile
of Ernestine Anderson for more biographical details, along with RealAudio links to
interviews with Anderson.
Performance artist Laurie Anderson has
such a following that there is even a newsgroup
dedicated to her! The group's FAQ says: "Laurie Anderson is perhaps one of the
most significant artists of this century; a poet, writer, visual artist, sculor and social
commentator, she is perhaps best known as a recording artist, one whose technical wizardry
and live shows have earned her a reputation as one of the most eccentric performers in the
business." To learn more, consult HomePAGE of the Brave: Laurie
Anderson or check out her 1994
interview with Wired Magazine. See also Adrienne Redd's interview with
her in "The Speed of
Darkness".
Dadon (the singer Dadon
Dawadolma) is the star of the film Windhorse, the most recent big-screen
release on the subject of Tibet. While not explicitly a Buddhist film, Windhorse
is a passionate and moving treatment of the lack of religious and human freedom
endured by modern-day Tibetans living under Chinese occupation. It focuses largely
on the ethical dilemma of two women: Dolkar (played by Dadon), a young Tibetan
woman who has forged a career for herself as a singer of Chinese pop, and her cousin Pema,
who has followed a different path as a Buddhist nun.
Passionate writer, poet, and feminist Diane
di Prima was born in 1934. In the 1950's she moved to Greenwich Village
and joined Bohemian intellectual culture. She wrote and was associated with such
"Beat Poets" as Le Roi Jones (Imanu Amari Baraka), Allen Ginsberg, Audre Lord
and Jack Kerouac. In the late sixties she began to study Zen Buddhism. Di
Prima is widely published, her work translated into more than eight languages, and her
opus includes such works as The Calculus of Variation (1972), Memoirs of a
Beatnik (1969, 1988), Revolutionary Letters (1968, 1969, 1971), Selected
Poems, 1956-76 (1975), and Seminary Poems (1991). She has taught poetry
at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. For more, see Joseph Matheny's online interview with di Prima.
From Revolutionary Poem #16:
we are eating up the planet, the New York Times
takes a forest, every Sunday, Los Angeles
draws its water from the Sacramento Valley
the rivers of British Columbia are ours
on lease for 99 years...
English actress Joanna Lumley,
OBE was born in Srinagar, Kashmir in 1946. She is especially well known for playing
the roles of the glamorous
Purdey (successor to Mrs. Peel) on The New Avengers
(1976-77), and the hard-drinking, chain-smoking Patsy Stone in the BBC-TV comedy Absolutely Fabulous.(1992-96).
Lumley has narrated two BBC documentaries with Buddhist content: Kingdom
of the Lost Boy (April 1996), the excellent film about the young Panchen Lama, and Kingdom of the Thunder Dragon
(November 1997), a documentary about her visit to the mountain kingdom of Bhutan.
Lumley also supports Choose Cruelty Free, a non-profit organisation dedicated to stopping
produt testing on animals. More recently Lumley appeared as the piemaker Mrs.
Lovett, engaging in some very unwholesome karma in the film The Tale of
Sweeney Todd, and was active in
fundraising for the
victims of the 1999 floods in Orissa (India).
Screenwriter Melissa Mathison
developed the screenplay for Kundun
(Martin Scorsese's film about the life of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama) in conjunction with
H.H. the Dalai Lama. She speaks about her experience in The Making of Kundun,
an interview with Angela Pressburger of the Shambhala Sun. Mathison's
earlier screenwriting credits include The Indian in the Cupboard, Twilight
Zone: The Movie, The Black Stallion, and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,
for which she received an Academy Award nomination. (
For more on Kundun, visit this site or see the
new video In Search of Kundun
with Martin Scorsese.)
Me'shell Ndegéocello is a revolutionary musician, singer-songwriter and
activist whose work - which consistently addresses issues of racism, sexism and homophobia
in a fluid range of musical genres - has won critical acclaim and numerous awards.
See her sites:
"Belligerent bohemian punk poet.
Street-hot rock and roll messiah. Ultimate female rock rebel. The Queen of
Piss. That was the Patti Smith of the 1970's ... Mother of two. Widow.
Poet and performer. Student of religious imagery. Author. That is the
Patti Smith of 1996." Thus begins The Death
and Rebirth of Patti Smith, the Shambhala Sun interview with the
rock-and-roll legend Patti Smith. The article includes her account
of meeting H.H. the Dalai Lama and a short poem/prayer that Smith later wrote in his
honour. Patti Smith talks about
death in The power and the
glory, the resurrection and the life.
Renee Tajima-Peña, Japanese-American
filmmaker, directed and produced the documentary My
America, or Honk If You Love The Buddha, a tour of the Asian-American experience.
Visit the PBS site of the same name to explore her "virtual tour of Asian
America". Born in Chicago and raised in Altadena, CA, Tajima-Peña's other
filmmaking credits include the Academy Award-nominated Who Killed Vincent Chin? (PBS),
an investigation of the beating death of a Chinese-American in Detroit; Jennifer's In
Jail (Lifetime Television), a profile of teenage girls in trouble with the law; and
many others. Read Renee's question-and-answer
page for some incisive comments on anti-Asian racism in America.
The extraordinary American pop
singer Tina Turner
(Anna Mae Bullock) is possibly the most famous Buddhist woman in the west. She is a
long-time student of Soka Gakkai International
(SGI). The story of her life, and how she derived enough strength from her
meditation practice to be able to leave an abusive relationship, is told in the film What's Love Got
To Do With It -- Celebsite also has a short biography of the
performer.
Ruby Wax is an American-born actress
(ex-Royal Shakespeare Company) and comedienne who frequently appears as an interviewer on
BBC-TV (such as "Ruby Wax Meets"). She also starred in the 1996 BBC series
"Ruby's Health Quest" ... and visited the Buddhist monastery Kagyu Samyé Ling in Scotland for the episode on dealing
with stress!