Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Kabir Project

      I have watched some of these documentaries thru NDTV last month… They were really good and captivating.  I am attaching the program schedule.    I  have  put in my calendar.  I recommend it quite highly...

Vishy 

The Kabir Festival is week long event, a festive yet critical immersion in the ideas of the 15th century mystic weaver poet Kabir, through a series of film screenings, live music concerts by folk, classical and Sufi singers from India and Pakistan, discussions, seminars, an exhibition and outreach events in colleges, institutions of higher education, socio-cultural and religious communities in and around, Bangalore.

The festival would be an opportunity for audiences to experience the joy of Kabir in song, while engaging with the radically transformative power of his poetry. It would offer a powerful encounter with the philosophy of Kabir, hopefully generating moments of critical self-awareness and reflection on ideas of cultural identity and social divisions, death and impermanence, oral traditions and the nature of knowledge. It would offer an opportunity for singers from diverse musical and cultural traditions in India and Pakistan to come together in one performative space and share and exchange notes on the oral traditions of Kabir that they represent.

Envisioned by filmmaker Shabnam Virmani (see http://www.kabirproject.org/), the event is an outcome of her experiences consisting of a series of musical journeys in quest of the socio-political and spiritual legacy of Kabir in our contemporary worlds.
This project has been supported by the Ford Foundation and resulted not only in the production of a series of films, music CDs and books, but also many relationships, workshops, festivals and social networks spun off by this 5-year journey.
A range of events are planned as part of this festival in satellite locations and a central venue. They revolve around the 4 recently completed feature-length musical documentaries and the presence of 7 fine singers of Kabir in our midst.

It is an open invitation!

Friday, February 20, 2009

Was Doing Time !

A few weeks back, when I had published   2 -3 blogs in a week, an esteemed colleague of mine, had told me that instead of Sunday Sambar, i should rename it as  everyday sambar. J .  Incidentally after that, I was hardpressed for time, i let  Sambar drop in my list of priorities. (Not becoz  of the  Everyday sambar comment.. I swear!) .  But  i should admit, it was quite nice  to receive a note from a good friend of mine, urging me not to convert this into a monthly sambar.  He told me in his kind words, that he was really looking forward to my   Sunday Sambar servings. So here i go again....

I was away for two weeks.  Was doing my time (literally).   Was attending my annual Vipassana course.  The only difference  from  a real prison,  here  we  were   volunteering  to  be IN  , to be free from  Outside World.   For almost 10 days..  No Blackberrys /Cell phones. No Emails… No TV. No FM.  No Newspapers.. No Reading material…   No Talking / Communicating in any other means.    Just imagine  you are  cutting yourself  from the outside world, when the latest   breaking news   was   Raju’s   (a)Satyam confession  and  South Africa’s  last innings  chase  of Aussie  total and ego  on  an even keel.

The program is rigorous to say the least. No participant is allowed to leave until the end of the course. All stimuli in the form of reading, writing and talking are forbidden. After a delicious vegetarian lunch at 11.30 a.m., there is nothing but tea and fruits at 5 p.m. And that's the easy part. It's the meditation that is grueling. Continuing virtually nonstop, save for a few breaks for food and rest, it calls for formidable levels of self-control and concentration.

What is Vipassana?

Vipassana in my opinion is the simplest meditation in the world.

“Vipassana is one of two main categories of Buddhist meditation, and means ''insight'' in the Pali language of the Buddhist texts. It is a kind of meditation, found in the Theravada tradition, that aims at an understanding of dukkha or ''suffering,'' anicca or ''impermanence,'' and anatta or ''not-self.'' The Theravada tradition is based on the teachings of Buddha as found in the earliest texts.


Buddhists in South and Southeast Asia practice this 2500-year-old tradition. Vipassana is also called ''Insight meditation'' because the purpose is to give the meditator an accurate understanding of the nature of reality. It helps us explore the deepest levels of the mind, and offers direct access into the spiritual realm without addressing deities or spirits.”
  (Source unknown.)

 

Teachers?

This meditation approach was probably discovered by Gautama Buddha, 500 years before the birth of Christ. Although the practice of Vipassana faded for the most part after the seventh century, a Burmese businessman, S. N. Goenka, visited a monastery in the 1950s where it was still practiced by a small group of monks. He was so impressed with this meditation technique that he introduced Vipassana to prison inmates and helped spread the practice around the world. It was  quite pleasant  to meet Goenkas.  I had chosen the centre  next  Global Pagoda this time. And  Goenkaji  was there. Even though  he was not really doing well, Health wise, was  very gracious to meet us. He does not demand  ( Manasa Vacha  Karmana)  Guru like reverence from his Students.  I did feel the same kind of  respect and love  i had felt  towards  some of the teachers who taught me. (Devaki Teacher  ( My 1st std teacher)  who could manage  bunch of  50 odd brats with that benign smile, without ever needing Shouting or  Corporal punishment , Gopalakrishnan  Master ( my Grandpa's cousin  and who was my mentor  and tution teacher, who was a Gandhian , National award winning teacher ) , my headmaster Manimaster who stood out for  his knowledge and command of English language & , Dr. Richard Mchugh ( who taught me NLP))...... 

Why did I choose Vipassana?

Meditation always intrigued me and I have learnt a lot of techniques which I would practice on and off--with unsuccessful results. I don't know whether there was anything wrong with the methods; I probably didn't practice them correctly.  Or in some cases  I did not feel comfortable  being part of  a Cult / Guru Worshipping brigade.   In any case, I was not happy with my meditation and was looking for something else.

My search for something that does not violate my values did end with Vipassana.  The way of the Buddha is not a religion.  It has no belief system. No Dogma. I should add that  I did take my time on deciding to do this.Even after it was recommended   by Dr. Richard McHugh.

Should you do it?

I truly believe that all of us have a “door of change within ourselves”, which can be opened only from inside.

Let me end with a quote from Buddha “Don’t accept something: because you have heard it many times; because it has been believed traditionally for generation; because it is believed by a large number of people; because it is in accordance with your scriptures; because it seems logical; because it is in line with your own belies; because it is proclaimed by your teacher, who has an attractiveypersonality and for whom you have great respect.

Accept it only after you have realized it yourself at the experiential level and have found it to be wholesome and beneficial to one and all. Then, not only accept it but also live up to it. “  I have experienced it. I have accepted it and  i am going to live up to it.