Archive for the ‘Buddhist Centre Activities’ Category

Beaufoy Institute Open Days: Diamond Way Buddhist centre invites Lambeth for tours and tea

Posted on: May 12th, 2013 No Comments

The Beaufoy Institute has been empty for over a decade, and many Lambeth residents who walk down Black Prince Road often look at the grand facade of number 39 and would very much like to see the inside. That was never possible – until this April. Having taken ownership in January 2013, the charity Diamond Way Buddhism UK, which is renovating the building as a Buddhist centre, opened the doors for the first Open Days on the weekend of 27-28 April.

The Open Days showed the past, present and future of the Beaufoy Institute. Photographs of children attending lessons in the Beaufoy when it was a technical school were exhibited on the wall in the main hall. We were even lucky enough to have a visitor who happened to be a former student of the Beaufoy Institute. He was able to tell us many stories of what life was like for the students in the old days.

Photographs of the children studying in the old Beaufoy InstituteStands about Diamond Way at the Beaufoy InstituteOpen Days at the Diamond Way Buddhist CentreOur visitors to the Open Days were a cross-section of Lambeth residents

We also exhibited architectural drawings of Diamond Way’s plans to renovate the building into a Buddhist centre. And in one room, there was a video touring different Diamond Way Buddhist centres around the world, showing how volunteers have renovated beautiful and historical buildings, transforming them into vibrant meditation centres while carefully conserving the beauty and listed features.
And of course, being British, there was tea and cake.

After the Kennington Fayre, the Diamond Way centre is now known for delicious cakesLambeth residents talk with our architectVisitors in the meditation room in what will be the new Buddhist centrePlans for the Beaufoy as Diamond Way Buddhist centre

As there are so many interesting architectural features to the Beaufoy, we gave regular guided tours around the building. The history of the Beaufoy family’s philanthropy, how they built Ragged Schools in Lambeth, and the original features of the Institute such as the Cockrill-Doulton tiles, made for fascinating tours.
Some visitors were themselves very knowledgeable about local history, and told us about the Black Prince, after whom Black Prince Road is made, and the Duchy of Cornwall’s ownership of the area and how it had changed over the years.

Over the two days, more than a hundred Lambeth residents dropped in to visit us, having seen our sign on the pavement, or heard about it through friends. Everyone was impressed with the progress made so far in cleaning up the building, and with the plans that we have for it. One recurring theme was how happy people are that “someone is now taking care of the building”. Many people signed up for more information on the various art, renovation, and history projects run or planned by the Friends of the Beaufoy group. Several people also expressed an interest in learning Buddhist meditation.
Everyone wished us well with our work, and lots of visitors left touching comments in the comment book.

Lovely to see the Beaufoy in use.

Thankyou and good luck! Welcome to Kennington!

Really fabulous space. Good to see the old building being loved.

Very encouraging. Looking forward to the final opening.

Thanks for today’s viewing and tour. As a past student of the school it is good to see the new exciting project the building is to be used for.

What an amazing place! Thank you for opening the doors this weekend, a wonderful insight into this beautiful Lambeth landmark! Your neighbour (Orsett Street)

The tour of the Beaufoy Institute, looking out onto Black Prince RoadThe tour of the Beaufoy InstituteComments for the Beaufoy Open DaysWe received pages of supportive comments in the Visitors' Book

London at the Brno Buddhist Centre

Posted on: February 5th, 2013 No Comments

As the wheels of the RyanAir plane squeaked down onto the runway at Brno, they threw up clouds of sparkling dust into the air. The miniature airport and the fields around were dusted with snow. For Londoners, snow is a rare treat, and the powdery scene just heightened our excitement that we were here, on the latest of a long list of adventures. We had never really made a wishlist of where we wanted to go – it just seemed to happen. And then it kept on happening.
Rewind to 2009, and we are in the middle of our project to find, buy, and renovate a building for a new home for Diamond Way Buddhism in London. A group of friends in the London sangha decide that the best way to learn how to build a big, vibrant, well running Buddhist centre would be to visit existing large, wonderful Buddhist centres, and just ask them how they did it.
Soon we got an invitation from the Graz Diamond Way Buddhist Centre in Austria to come and talk about our own project to build a new home for Diamond Way Buddhism in the centre of London. We gladly accepted, had a great time, and learned a lot from our generous and experienced hosts. Later in 2009 we helped to organise the entertainment at a public event run by the Berlin Buddhist Centre, at which hundreds of Buddhists from centres all over Europe attended – and the international London Centre Roadshow was born.
For the next three years we travelled to some of the most amazing Buddhist centres in Europe, finding out their stories, making friends, and gaining experience.
In Zurich and Amden they told us that the first place a community sets its heart on is rarely the one they end up with – and that same year the building that we had made so many plans for was indeed sold to another buyer. We didn’t have long to dwell on this ‘setback’, however, because soon an even more amazing place appeared – the Beaufoy Institute in Lambeth, south London, which we have since bought.

The Beaufoy Institute in Lambeth, which we've now bought for our new Buddhist centre, in the snow

The Beaufoy Institute, our new Buddhist centre, in the snow

In Copenhagen, the city where in 1972 Lama Ole and his wife Hannah Nydahl started their life’s work of spreading Diamond Way Buddhism in the West, we soaked in the blessing of the very powerful meditation hall, and experienced first-hand the powerful nature of the Danes, who have built what was a one-room affair into a huge Buddhist centre spanning three buildings, in the prestigious diplomatic district.
Vienna next showed us her cultural side, with tours of the exquisite coffee shops of the town alternating with Buddhist lectures and discussions of their plans to expand from the apartment they were in and renovate the first floor and basement of the building. The Vienna Buddhist Centre is now relocated and many times bigger.
The story of Stupa House, the Warsaw Buddhist Centre, where we visited in 2011, was one of heroism and hard work. Renovating the tall building, resembling a tower, or Buddhist monument called a stupa, through the bitter Polish winters and all manner of hardships, was a Milarepa-like task.
Hamburg allowed us to join in with the demolition of some walls, preparing for one large residents’ kitchen. They shared with us their great experience in how to represent Buddhism on a large scale – the Hamburg Buddhist Centre often has 150 people for the daily meditations!

Zurich Buddhist centre stupaThe Amden Buddhist Centre in SwitzerlandHamburg Buddhist Centre
The Warsaw Buddhist Centre, known as Stupa HouseBudapest dharma shopThe Budapest Buddhist Centre by night

The mighty Budapest Buddhist Centre finally gave up its secrets to us last year. We gleaned a huge amount of practical information about how to manage a large, multifunctional building, and we very much enjoyed a trip to the town’s cavernous bath complex, fed by hot mineral springs. The centre is now in the middle of a huge rebuilding project.
Over these years, along with joint ventures, presentations, and visits to centres like Altmühle, Emmendingen and others, we built up a lot of experience and close contacts. And just before Christmas, we had the privilege of taking the London Roadshow to Brno.

The Brno Buddhist Centre is a purpose-built, two-storey building designed from the ground up to function as a place for meditation and community living. As soon as you enter the building you have the feeling of space. The stairs, the corridors, and the common rooms are slightly oversize, with clean lines and solid colours, which gives it a very friendly feel. Of course this friendly feeling might be less of an architectural artifact than a byproduct of the members of the Brno sangha, who exhibit an excess of that open, straightforward engagement with people and uncomplicated warmth that is characteristic of strong meditators in general and the Czechs in particular.
After a bit of sightseeing (if you go to Brno, be sure to check out the huge, mysterious clock in the main square), we had a dharma lecture by Veronika from Brno. On Saturday there was some great food, some meditation, and another lecture by Crissie from London. We gave a presentation of our own project to buy the Beaufoy Institute as the new London Diamond Way Buddhist Centre, and there was a lively Q&A. The Brno sangha was so inspired by our project that they spontaneously and very generously offered £1,000 towards the large Buddha statue that we want to have made for the new London Buddhist Centre – one of the special items on our Wishlist. Then it was time to relax and socialise. London and, especially, Brno performed some comic sketches – more or less faithful interpretations of Monty Python. We discovered that the two nations have very similar senses of humour. The evening rounded off with a party and plenty of time to get to know each other.
On Sunday, after English Breakfast (we always try to export the best parts of our culture, and English Breakfast has proved to be popular everywhere we’ve been), we exchanged experience of running meditation centres.

Veronika from Brno gives a Buddhist lecture on "The sangha"Lay travelling teacher gives a Buddhist lecture in the Brno centreLondon presented our project to buy the Beaufoy Institute

Monty Python sketch by the sangha from the Brno Buddhist CentreExchange of experience between the London and Brno Buddhist centresEarly risers from London serving English Breakfast in the Brno Buddhist Centre

As a Karma Kagyu centre, the Brno Buddhist Centre is organised around meditation. They do the meditation on the 16th Karmapa together every day except Fridays, when there is a Ngöndro meditation session. They organise some experienced members of the sangha, or perhaps travelling teachers, to explain the Ngöndro meditations quite informally every second Thursday; in this way they avoid ad-hoc explanations on traditional meditation practices by newer members and ensure the standard of transmission of information is kept high.
And as befits a lay Buddhist centre, they are also organised around eating together. Someone cooks pretty much every day, and the huge dining/social area is where people can be found most of the time. Eating together is a crucial part of the way that our lay Buddhist communities function. Eating and chatting together in a relaxed atmosphere, people get to know each other on a different level than when taking part in centre work or strictly dharma activities.
As Lama Ole always reminds us, travelling to other countries and other centres helps to broaden our outlook by sharing ideas and experience. The Brno sangha told us that they make special effort to travel and to support other projects. Indeed, we’d met a carful of Brno sangha in Budapest at the last roadshow, and we were happy to accept their invitation to also visit their centre. Once a month, they also have a meditation in English.
As Diamond Way centres are autonomous and run by local volunteers, one could expect a wide variance of organisational styles. On our travels though, we found very similar patterns, with slight national colouring. In Brno, decisions like who should have keys to the centre or who should live in the centre are made by a ‘board’ of seven Brno sangha members, who are voted in every year by the whole sangha. They try to have a mix of ‘old dogs’ and newer people on the board, to pass on experience and to keep the energy fresh.

The information session was so interesting that we decided to forgo lunch in order to talk more, and ended up rushing to the airport, after a final quick meditation session together.
Exhausted but happy, all the Roadshow Knights agreed that the trip had been a great success:

The London roadshow is about the joy of being with other sanghas to share ideas, make friends and feel inspired. Plus have lots of fun, travel and build something together! – Rita

It was great to see how a big center works, how equally everyone is treated and how everything is based on a very strong friendship. I felt immediately included. It was a wonderful event; it felt like a proper transmission. – Jana

A fantastic opportunity to learn how the Brno centre works and have a lot of fun. Truly inspirational, thank you Brno. – Sian

What struck me the most about the whole experience, was the welcoming nature of the Czech sangha, as well as the creativity they displayed in their sketches. The weekend was a great opportunity to tap into the sangha’s “key learnings” and to experience, in the flesh, how a well-functioning center operates. I definitely won’t forget this weekend and I really hope we’ll be able to share a similar experience on Black Prince Road and show our Czech friends the same level of hospitality. – Michael

We very much look forward to our upcoming roadshows to the Brussels, Rousse, and Schwarzenberg Buddhist centres in 2013. Join us!

Diamond Way gets the keys to the Beaufoy Institute!

Posted on: January 23rd, 2013 2 Comments

The wait is over and the work starts on Wednesday 23rd January 2013 to transform a derelict school in Lambeth into one of the capital’s biggest Buddhist centres, with a visit by Lama Ole Nydahl.

Over the last 10 years, London’s Buddhist community has rocketed by more than 50% – that’s 27,000 new Buddhists, who now total 1% of the capital’s population. This makes London more Buddhist than India, where just 0.8% follow this famously peaceful tradition.
Unsurprisingly, London’s Buddhists have been looking to expand to accommodate the growing interest. Today, a derelict school in Lambeth starts its transformation into one of the capital’s biggest Buddhist centres as a home for Diamond Way Buddhism.
The Grade II Beaufoy Institute promises to be regenerated back to its former splendour, having stood empty for more than 15 years.

The project gained community support and planning approval from Lambeth Council in July and turning the empty Institute into a Buddhist meditation centre will now take some time – and hard work too, explains Steve James, a doctor and spokesman for Diamond Way Buddhism:

“We’re thrilled and delighted to bring the Beaufoy Institute back to life – it’s our dream fulfilled. The project’s success is thanks to the enormous support we’ve had from everyone. It will make a hugely positive impact locally. We’re expecting a lot of hard work now cleaning, painting and cooking for all the volunteers – and the fun starts today”.

If you are interested to hear more about the project, the Danish Lama Ole Nydahl, who has inspired the founding of this and more than 600 other Diamond Way Buddhist centres around the world, will be talking about “Buddhism in the West” at Kensington Town Hall, 5pm Saturday 26th January.

The keys to the Beaufoy Institute, our new Buddhist centre

The keys to the Beaufoy Institute!

Lambeth Buddhist Centre symbolically opened by Lama Ole Nydahl

Posted on: January 23rd, 2013 4 Comments

It was a long journey, from the wishes of our highest Karma Kagyu lamas 40 years ago until now, running through the long preparation and planning application, down to the approval and the receipt of the keys, supported by the enormous hard work and altruistic dedication of many friends and supporters.

Finally, on Wednesday 23rd January 2013, the London Diamond Way Buddhist Sangha entered their new Buddhist centre and home for many years to come, the Beaufoy Institute. Lama Ole Nydahl, founder of over 640 Buddhist Centres around the world to date, symbolically unlocked the front doors and led a large group of students and friends inside.

Lama Ole helped to carry an impressive-sized statue of Maitreya, the Future Buddha, into the main meditation hall. Truly, the power-field of the direct unbroken lineage of the Karmapas was now established definitively, here in the heart of Lambeth. In the centre of London, we are a stone’s throw from the Thames and the Houses of Parliament, home of the oldest parliamentary democracy, heir to the Magna Carta, the “foundation of the freedom of the individual against the arbitrary authority of the despot”, often mentioned by Lama Ole in his lectures. History was in the air, and it seemed to fit perfectly that this very Institute, founded to help people, embodying a hundred years of idealism, would now be an exemplar of the development of selflessness and freedom – a Buddhist centre – home to so many idealists, and carrying the blessing of a thousand years of the Karma Kagyu Buddhist meditation transmission.

Waiting for Lama Ole, holding the keys to the Beaufoy InstituteLama Ole Nydahl entering the Beaufoy Institute, our new Buddhist centreLama Ole Nydahl unlocked the door to the Beaufoy Institute
After having waited on Black Prince Road in the crisp winter weather, everyone was glad to be inside. Lama Ole gave a short speech, praising the hard work of his friends and students and underscoring the importance of working to benefit others. Especially, building up Buddhist meditation centres, places where people can access the Buddha’s teachings and experience the nature of their mind, is considered to be one of the most useful things one can do.

Statue of Maitreya and Lama Ole Nydahl in the Beaufoy InstituteLama Ole gives a speech by the altar in the BeaufoyLama Ole gives a speech about the new Buddhist Centre

Immediately after Lama Ole’s speech, work began on cleaning the small meditation room. The delicate task of restoring the Beaufoy Institute and making it usable as a Buddhist centre will take some months; then we will open it for the Lambeth community and the general public, and it will be some years before the full potential of the Beaufoy Institute as a Buddhist centre is realised. The work continues – we shall not be bored!