" /> From Brahma to Buddha, Fall 2008: May 2008 Archives

Main | June 2008 »

May 28, 2008

Daily Itinerary

Fall 2008 Daily Itinerary

Please note: the below itinerary is planned months in advance and may change due to group interest, health and safety concerns, or other factors beyond the control of Global Learning Across Borders.

In United States:

Sept 12 - 14: Group orientation at Cross Roads Camp and Retreat Center

In India:

Sept 14 - 15: Flight--Newark to Delhi

Sept 15 - 17: In country orientation, introductory language lessons, and visits to key cultural and religious sites in Delhi

Sept 18 - 21: Arrival in Leh and introduction to Ladakh; Ladakhi language lessons and walking tours of Leh Old Town and Shanti Stupa; day excursions to Thiksay Gonpa and an audience with the Sabu Oracle; guest speakers to include local political figures, intellectuals, religious leaders from both Buddhist and Muslim communities, and youth activists

Sept 22 - 30:, Homestays and service work in Domkhar village. Continued Language Lessons. Volunteering with Domkhar Government High School. Excursions to Alchi and Likir Monasteries. Possible visit to SECMOL.

Oct 1 - 10: Trek to spectacular high mountain location. Please be sure to double check the packing list to ensure you have the right gear for this portion of the program!

Oct 11 - 14: Return to Leh. Finish guest speaker series, Visits to Tsemo Gonpa and Leh Palace.

Oct 15: Arrival in Delhi: Visit to Naz Foundation; Bollywood cinema experience in the afternoon, Nizammudin Sufi Shrine and lecture

Oct 17 - 19: Train to Amritsar, site of the Sikh pilgrimmage center the Golden Temple, experience nightly ritual flag-lowering ceremony at the Wagah Border, Jallianwala Bagh site visit

Oct 20 – 21: Train to Pathankot/bus to Dharamsala, Tibetan language lessons and orientation. Begin Dharamsala homestays, ISPs, guest lecture series, school/museum visits

Oct 22 - 31: Introduction to Buddhism retreat at Tushita Meditation Centre

Nov 1 - 13: Homestays in McLeod Ganj, Independent Study Projects, continued language lessons, and riveting guest speaker series focused on the experiences of Tibetans living in exile in India. Possible audience with His Holiness the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa

Nov 14 – 17: Travel to Delhi and Agra. Visit Taj Mahal, Fatehpur Sikri, Keoladeo National Park, Agra Fort

Nov 18– 30: Jaipur homestays, ISPs, language study, and possible desert excursions to Jodhpur, Jaisalmer, and Udaipur. Village excursion to Chomu and service work with Vidya Gram International School. Guest speaker series on Non Violence, Hinduism, Sikhism, and Jainism with possible audience with Jain monks and nuns.

Dec 1 - 4: Possible yoga and meditation retreat in the Hindu tradition.

Dec 5 – 11: Student-led portion (to be determined by students)

Dec 12 - 13: Return to Delhi

Dec 14 - 15: Flight to USA, arrival to Newark Airport early morning on the 15th

May 08, 2008

Namaste from Shivani, our Jaipur Coordinator

Hi Everyone!

I wanted to introduce you to Shivani, our coordinator in Jaipur. We're so lucky to have the opportunity to work with Shivani. Check out her bio below!

Tracy

Shivani01-1.jpg

• Researcher • Educator • Meditator •

Shivani holds her masters in Science of Living. Her area of interest is research and experimental work in the field of education, teaching and training methods. She is currently working on her doctoral degree on developing non-violent behavior among children. As an educator, her major focus is value education among children and youth. She delivers lectures on themes like education, non-violence, yoga & meditation at several institutes.

She closely interacts and observes the practitioners and preachers of ahimsa and self-discipline. Thus regularly visits the monks and nuns to draw upon inspiration from the ancient teachings. Her increasing curiosity has led her to actively participate in peace walks, seminars and camps organized at various spiritual platforms.

She is a strong believer and practitioner of yoga and meditation. She has crafted a unique minimalist lifestyle for herself to live in peace within and harmony with the environment around.

Tashi Delek from Peter, our Dharamsala Coordinator

Sonam Peter_small.jpg

Hello. My name is Sonam, but you can also call me Peter. I was born on the 10th of March, in 1979, in small village called Changthang Nyoma in Leh, Ladakh to a family of nomads. At a young age, I was sent to the Tibetan Childrens' Village School located in the town of Choglamsar, in Ladakh. After the 10th class, I completed two additional years at a school in South India and then completed my college-level courses at Delhi University in the field of Business. In March of 2000, I started to work in the travel business IATO (India Association of Tours Operation) company at New Delhi as a travel coordinator. I stayed with the company for six years.

Two years ago, I started my own travel business company at New Delhi in the name of SP Travels 24/7. I now work with a dedicated team, which combines the dynamism of youth with the experiences of age, to ensure a memorable tour experience to our clients. This work has allowed me to develop a good relationship with the native people. I look forward to sharing with you the actual lifestyle and culture of the people you will meet.

With regards,

Sonam (Peter)

Julay from Namgial, our Ladakh Coordinator

Namgial's Intro Photo_small.jpg

Julay!

My name is Rinchen Namgial. I come from Domkar village, which is 118 km west of Leh, Ladakh. I grew up in that village, and received my high school education there. Afterwards I moved to Jammu for higher secondary school and college. I graduated in history, geography, economics and English. Later I went to Jammu University where I studied Buddhist philosophy.

To support my studies I worked as a freelance guide for the local travel agencies in Ladakh. This started my interest in working with people from different countries to help them understand Ladakhi culture.

Since then I have worked as a translator and guide with many different organizations, schools and universities, and with different travel agencies. As a guide, I have been leading treks since 1990 in Ladakh, Zanskar Valler, Changthang, Sikkim, Nepal, and Tibet. In 1996 I started the Yama Adventures travel agency, which is based in Leh, the capital of Ladakh. In addition to Ladakhi, I am able to speak English, German, Tibetan, Hindi, and Nepali.

As a guide/coordinator I have worked with the Smithsonian Institute, Earthwatch, Indian Wildlife Institute, and Agclon College from Switzerland. As a translator, I have worked for students from Oxford, Berkeley, Wisconsin, Oregon, New York, Michigan, Toronto and Ulm University in Germany with their research in Ladakh.

Over the last several years, I have been working with "From Brahma to Buddha" semester students and my experience with them has been wonderful. We have worked on many cleaning projects including the monastery area in Leh near the Palace and Namgyal Tsemo, at the base of Stok, at Tsokar and in the Markha valley. I have also arranged Independent Study Projects with a thangka painter, woodcarver, musician, Amchi ( local doctor), and Buddhist lama to give teachings. I have also introduced students to local community leaders to speak about different topics such as cultural information, Buddhist philosophy, etc.

I have coordinated treks, cultural trips to monasteries, and home stays as well. Sometimes I have been going as a translator when the groups visit Oracles and high Lamas. I truly enjoy sharing the knowledge I have gained with visitors, and making sure that they have a pleasurable and rewarding experience in Ladakh. I enjoy working with Global LAB semester students, and look forward to meeting you this fall in the Himalaya and helping you learn more about Ladakh.

Namgial

Greetings from Justin, Assistant Program Director

Justin.jpg

Namaste!!!

Congratulations on choosing such a wonderful way to spend time abroad. I’m so excited to share this opportunity with you. India holds a world of possibility, and it is up to all of us to make this journey everything it can be.

To begin with, I would like to tell a brief story about when I was first in India. On a hot and humid day I was sitting with a group of Sadhus (traveling Hindu ascetics) along a river bank and they told me that it takes seven lifetimes to experience their beloved country. This took a little while to sink in. Having already spent a few months in Northern India, I believed I was beginning to understand this foreign land. It was eye-opening to think that people’s scale of time could be so drastically different from my own. I was thinking in terms of months; years seemed long and lifetimes, come on. This bit of information transformed the way I was exploring, not only India, but the inner and outer world in general. India can have this effect on people, challenging the way we think, feel and interact with each other and the world. For me it challenged my concept of time; for you it may be different, but remaining open to whatever arises is the key. I would like to invite each of you to embrace this way of thinking: staying open to all India has to offer and seeing where this semester can lead us.

So, a little bit about me. I was raised on a small New England farm and from an early age I was taught to embrace the outdoors and my surroundings. This idea has followed me throughout my life. As a high school student, I spent time swimming in rivers, hiking mountains and pondering questions about life. To this day, there is nothing I like better then a cool fall afternoon spent exploring the outdoors. In college at Tufts University, the majority of my time was spent focused on academics and athletics. I competed for the university’s football team, and because of this I was unable to study abroad. Although my time as an athlete taught me numerous important lessons, I also had a sense that something was missing, something beyond the classroom or athletic field. This feeling led me to leave the U.S. and spend some time in Asia.

After a year traveling throughout South and Southeast Asia, I came back to the U.S. and began to think more directly about how I was living my life. This is what led me to my current position at the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, a meditation facility and supporting organization of the Insight Meditation Society. During this period at BCBS I have had the chance to explore numerous Buddhist traditions and have spent ample time looking at my own mind through meditation. Now, I’m ready to refocus my life on facilitating a joyous and worthwhile journey for you all.

Signing up for this program is tremendous. We will have the opportunity to explore a magnificent culture in India. Some of our time together will be wonderful, but inevitably some difficulty will arise. I just ask that each of us helps to nurture our understanding of India and ourselves.

I’m greatly looking forward to meeting you all soon. Please do not hesitate to contact me with any questions or just to say hello. My email is: justin@global-lab.org. I’ll do my best to answer any questions and concerns you might have.

Have a great summer, enjoy your family and friends and be ready for everything, as it seems like that is often what India provides.

Blessings,

Justin

Greetings from Tracy, your Program Director

tracy.jpg

Tshangma-la Jullay!
Greetings to all of you!

So, you’ve taken on the exciting responsibility as ambassadors of the youth of the United States; what an important role for you to be playing at a time when global conflict riddles the news media and our hearts. I enthusiastically welcome you to this traveling community where we will create new definitions of “home” and share with each other the invigorating reality of group living.

I chose to work with Global LAB because I believe that engaging in and reflecting upon international experiences becomes a catalyst for personal transformation. This program will help facilitate the process of personal transformation in a safe, organic way, opening our eyes to the lives of people in this radiant country on the other side of the world. We participate in and observe different experiences every day of our lives. The challenge is to be present and aware of these experiences, new and old, as we realize we are already active contributors to the world around us. I feel excited about being a member of this group! Each of us contributes important knowledge, skills, and attitudes, and I feel fortunate to have the opportunity to learn from each of you.

My experiential learning journey has guided me through lands as close as New York City and as far as Nundakhi, Nepal. Each step of the way, I’ve encountered much wisdom and inspiration from the souls I am blessed with the opportunity to meet. While studying Soil Science, Environmental Conservation, and Music at the University of New Hampshire, I found myself in the Himal of Nepal with the School for International Training’s (SIT) Culture and Development program. Curiosity about the People’s Movement there in Nepal during my study led me back to SIT in Brattleboro, Vermont to work on a master’s degree in Conflict Transformation. It is rare to find me far away from a guitar, stimulating conversation, or the throws of laughter.

I have great respect and admiration of your valiant motion to be a part of this adventure that will challenge your very being. Courage and conviction of this sort is not to be taken lightly. As you’ll find in the coming months, you will be asked by the cultures we are invited to visit to be honest, caring, thoughtful, and passionate about many pieces of your lives in the U.S. and your experiences in India. I feel honored to be a witness to and a guide on your process of heart and mind expansion.

I look forward to your communications in the coming weeks with questions, thoughts, concerns, funny jokes (I love the really silly ones!), and witty banter. You can reach me at tracy@global-lab.org.

See you soon,

Tracy

Participant Handbook

Please be sure to read your Participant Handbook before arriving at Orientation.

Global LAB Participant Handbook

Packing & Gear Suggestions

He who would travel happily must travel light. - Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Lugging a heavy pack around for the entire time we are in Asia can be extremely tiresome for you, and for the rest of the group. There will be plenty of times when we'll be piling into a train or bus and we don't want to end up like this. Remember that we can find almost anything you’ll need in India, and you’ll also want to have room to pack gifts to take back to the U.S. Seriously challenge yourself to pack light, and lighter still…you definitely will not regret it! That said, you will not want to leave out any of the cold weather clothing/gear suggestions - our trek in the Himalaya will require appropriate protection against cold weather.

There will be opportunities to do “self-service” laundry where we’ll be staying.

PLEASE NOTE: We strive to be model visitors and therefore ask that everyone bring clothing that is lightweight and durable, but that also covers the body well, and looks respectable. Tie-dyed T-shirts, T-shirts sporting inappropriate phrases, cut-off jeans, clothing with rips or holes, tight fitting leggings, and tank tops are inappropriate as they show disrespect for local cultures.

BAGS
Internal Frame Backpack – Your main “suitcase” should be comfortable, durable, and as light as possible
Daypack – A book-bag to use for daily excursions.
Duffel Bag – While you’ll want to be able to fit all of your things in a backpack and daypack, an extra duffel can be handy for the trip back to the U.S. This bag should be nylon and durable.
Stuff Sacks – Light-weight and compact, using stuff sacks to separate clothes, food, toiletries for example, will bring order to your pack and allow you to pack and repack as we travel.
Ziploc Bags – Like stuff sacks, these can be invaluable for keeping things organized and dry.

GEAR
Passport – Valid for at least 6 months from the beginning of your program.
Money Belt – A very important item to wear daily, under your clothes, safely hiding your passport, money, etc.
Sleeping Bag – Sleeping bags should be “mummy” style and have a temperature rating between 0 and 20 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sleeping Pad – Much heat is lost through the ground, and a good insulating layer between the bag and the ground is important.
Water Bottle – Please bring two, one-quart, plastic. Nalgene bottles can be found at local outdoor gear shops.
Water Filter - (MSR Sweetwater is a good one)
Head Lamp – Flashlights are okay, but headlamps are more convenient.
Alarm Clock/Watch – Travel-size, to catch early buses and trains.
Swiss Army Knife – Pack this in your checked luggage, not in your carry-on bag.

CLOTHING
Down Jacket – Not just a vest.
Outer Shell – Water-proof or gore-tex, ideally light-weight and breathable.
Sweater/Fleece jacket
T-shirts – 3, in decent shape, but prepared for wear and tear.
Nice shirt – for meetings and special occasions.
Pants – 2, ideally light weight.
Thermal Underwear – 1 top, 1 bottom.
Gloves & Warm Hat
Socks & Underwear – 5 pairs each.
Sleepwear – Ideally, T-shirt/shorts can double for this. Minimize extra weight!
Skirt/Dress – Ankle-length skirt, Dress with long sleeves. Good idea for women, though we will have opportunities to purchase traditional clothing in Asia.
Hiking Boots – Please have them well-worn in before we meet for orientation – you’ll be happy when there are no blisters on your feet when we are trekking! We recommend something fairly rigid, with good ankle support.
Sneakers – Durable and comfortable, for daily wear.
Sandals – Good for every day use in hot weather.
Visor/Sunhat
Sunglasses

TOILETRIES (Just the basics! No hair driers, irons, etc.)
Toothbrush & paste
Hair brush/Comb
Shampoo
Chapstick
Sunscreen
Towel – Small and light (and ideally fast-drying).
Medications – That you take regularly. Keep pills in original containers to avoid head-aches with Customs. Global LAB will carry a separate, comprehensive first aid bag.
Glasses/Contacts/Contact Solution – if you wear them. (Extra pair of glasses is a good idea).

OTHERS
Camera & film – Film is widely available in Asia. You should bring an extra camera battery and memory card if using a digital camera.
Notebook/Journal
Pen/Pencil
Book – Ideally about the places we will visit (we can swap around to minimize weight).
Gifts – A few light items to share with new friends (post cards of your home state, a simple t-shirt, a small calendar or picture book).
Spending Money – This of course depends a great deal on your personal spending/shopping habits. In our experience, some participants spend less than $100 of personal money during an entire semester, while others spend over $1,000. We suggest bringing at least $500 in American Express traveler's cheques, in a mix of $20 and $50 denominations. ATM cards can be used in some of our destinations, but the machines are not as reliable as you might be accustomed to.

OPTIONAL
Shorts – 1 pair, at least mid-thigh length (shorts won’t be appropriate much of the time; in fact, you may never wear them, but they can be good to sleep in).
Bandana – These can serve multiple purposes while traveling.
Umbrella – A lightweight, travel umbrella can serve you well in rain or shine.
Extra Reading Book(s) – We have a small library in Delhi with program-specific books from which to pick as well.
Extra Stuff Sacks
Duct Tape – Wrap a bunch around your water bottles and pull it off as you need it.
Insect Repellent
Playing Cards
Purell – A small bottle of anti-bacterial hand gel or anti-bacterial hand-wipes.

How to get your India Visa

You will find step by step instructions for applying for your visa in person or by mail by going to this link.

Feel free to contact Global LAB's admissions staff if you have any questions: admissions@global-lab.org

Application Information

2008 India Fall Semester Tuition is $9,845. Tuition includes residential pre-trip orientation in the US; preparatory and educational materials; dedicated student website for program communications and resources; all logistical facilitation; all hotels and guest houses; all meals; all domestic air fares/taxis/buses/trains/boats; museum, park and temple entrance fees; Global LAB faculty and instruction as well as local coordinators, cooks, porters; all program elements (independent study projects and apprenticeships, community service projects, home-stays, guest lectures, community support/charitable contributions).

Please note: Additional expenses not covered by Global LAB include r/t international airfare and costs of domestic travel to point of departure (NYC), inoculations, travel insurance and international medical and evacuation insurance; visa/passport processing fees; personal costs (laundry, phone calls/emails, souvenirs, etc.).

Semesters are open to those ages 17-21. While Global LAB semesters are geared toward interim or ‘gap’ year students, high school seniors as well as university students are welcome to apply. No language prerequisite is required.

Global LAB accepts applications on a rolling admissions basis, accepting qualified applicants until programs are full. Each program has a maximum of 12 participants and 3 Global LAB instructors. For this reason, we recommend candidates submit their applications as early as possible.

To begin the application process, print out the preliminary application and FAQ below:
* Application Form
* FAQ

India Semester Overview: Sept. 12 - Dec. 14, 2008

Go! Go forth to India and live! There's nothing that I've done that has been more expanding, more eye-opening, and more exciting all at once. I'd recommend this experience to anyone looking to learn a little about themselves and the world, but more about the vastness of all that there is to be learned, and the pleasure of learning it experientially.
--Julia Bloch, "From Brahma to Buddha" India semester alumna

indiasemsplash.jpg

Whenever I meet a ‘foreigner’, I always have the same feeling: ‘I am meeting another member of the human family.’ This attitude has deepened my affection and respect for all beings. May this natural wish be my small contribution to world peace. I pray for a more friendly, more caring, and more understanding human family on this planet. To all those who dislike suffering, who cherish lasting happiness, this is my heartfelt appeal.
--Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet

Exploring a traditional village perched on the Tibetan Plateau. Sipping butter tea around a kitchen fire. Smelling jasmine flowers and curries sold in the bazaar. Listening to horns and bells echo over ancient monastery walls. Watching colorful prayer flags blowing in the wind on top of a Himalayan mountain pass. Throughout this cultural immersion program, we will live and study in the country that gave birth to two of the world’s major religions—Hinduism and Buddhism—and will travel amid some of the most spectacular landscapes on earth. On this journey, we will meet many of the people who keep ancient traditions and spiritual practices alive, including possible audiences with the Dalai Lama and/or the Karmapa. And at the same time we will witness and study the forces of modernization and globalization that are influencing all aspects of traditional ways of life. Though it is impossible to predict the most memorable experience you will have during the Global LAB India semester, those who choose to participate can expect to embark on a journey of discovery that may well last a lifetime.

Primary Locations: Tibetan Communities & Culture of the Himalayas

moon over leh.jpg
Semester students watching the moon rise over the Himalayas in Ladakh

Ladakh

Few things could be lonelier than that landscape of storm-beaten rose-brush and rock, and yet I never felt alone. All round me, along the path, in the willow grove, by the stream, on and between the rocks, there were signs that others had passed the same way. Prayer flags shook out their yellow and red rags from the heart of a gully or from the tops of crags above me; stones arranged in half circles, in sacred letters…I came to the fork in the path and looked up. There, half a mile above me, was the monastery; there Go-Tsang was at last, high in its cradle of rock, with nothing but the wide, burning sky behind it.
--Andrew Harvey, “A Journey in Ladakh”

High on the Tibetan Plateau in India’s northern-most region is the former kingdom of Ladakh. Known as “Little Tibet”, Ladakh has been open to foreigners only since 1974. Prior to 1962, when the threat of Chinese invasion prompted the rapid construction of a road into the region, travel to Ladakh involved several weeks of difficult walking at high altitudes. Over the centuries, many teachers, nomads, traders, and pilgrims did make this journey over mountain passes, across vast plains and from one sparsely settled town to the next, most with ancient monasteries built into the cliffs above the villages. Because of the nearly impassable Himalayan ranges to the south and southwest, almost all of Ladakh’s cultural influences came from its neighbor in the other directions—Tibet. As you walk through some of the quiet side streets of Leh, Ladakh’s capital, it is easy to think that you’ve stepped back in time and are wandering through a traditional Tibetan town before the Chinese invasion. In fact, as many experienced travelers have noticed, Ladakh is one of the very few regions in the world where Tibetan Buddhism and all its cultural forms have flourished without interruption since introduced more than 1000 years ago. This continuity and endurance of a religious tradition and the people that support it, set in a landscape of austere and formidable beauty, help make Ladakh one of the world’s most magical destinations.


jaipur.JPG

Jaipur, Rajasthan

On the edge of the west Asian desert, capital of the land of kings and queens, Jaipur is the site of exploration into multiple religious traditions in India: Hinduism, Islam, Jainism, and Sikhism. Founded by Maharaja and astronomer Jai Singh II in 1727, popularly known as the Pink City, Jaipur is hailed by urbanists as the most thoroughly planned city in India. While most Indian cities sport narrow lanes twisting into unrecognizable confusion, Jaipur's wide streets are based on Hindu architectural manuals.

Creating order and harmony and encouraging the same within its population, Jaipur's streets are home to hundreds of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) who are working to address various social issues in the state of Rajasthan, ranging from prosthetic limbs for amputees and arm-powered wheelchairs for polio sufferers to advocating for injured street animals and providing stabilizing population controls for dogs and cats.

In addition to service projects and individual explorations of these organizations and artisans, Jaipur serves as a base for our travels and exploration of brilliant forts protecting the city valley as well as investigation of tribal and Rajasthani village cultures. We will have the opportunity to travel to other parts of Rajasthan as well, including Jodhpur, Pushkar, and Jaisalmer, to name a few of the special surrounding towns, while exploring the reality of traditional village life.

Jaipur is a meeting place of modernity and traditionalism. We'll have the opportunity to hear folk musicians come together with pop artists to create collaborative work, explore fantastic Hindu rituals seeking understanding of the complexity of worship in this religious tradition, and engage with the founders and staff at NGOs who are making positive changes in their own community to create hope for a better life for their neighbors.


Varanasi Worship.jpg
Nightly worship ceremony in Varanasi

Varanasi (Benares)

Banares is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old of all of them put together. Mark Twain

Banaras is a magnificent city, rising from the western bank of the River Ganges, where the river takes a broad crescent sweep toward the north. There is little in the world to compare with the splendor of Banaras, seen from the river at dawn. The rays of the early-morning sun spread across the river and strike the high-banked face of this city, which Hindus call Kashi—the luminous, the City of Light. The temples and shrines, ashrams and pavilions that stretch along the river for over three miles are golden in the early morning. They rise majestic on the high riverbank and cast a deep reflection into the water of the Ganges. Long flights of stone steps, called ghats, reaching like roots into the river, bring thousands of worshippers down to the river to bathe at dawn. In the narrow lanes at the tops of these steps moves the unceasing earthly drama of life and death... But here, from the perspective of the river, there is a vision of transcendence and liberation…. Diana L. Eck, from Banaras, City of Light

In Varanasi (also known as Kashi or Banaras), our students have the opportunity to enjoy an intensely thriving city located above many of the most sacred ghats of the Ganges River. It is here where Hindu bathers such as Brahmins, sadhus or other yogis stir in the dawn's misty, incensed air to seek a ritual dip in the cherished Ganges. Varanasi is also a place where Jains, Muslims, Buddhists, Sikhs and other devoted worshippers have made their home and practiced their own forms of religion for centuries. It is amid this vivid, inspirational celebration of life and transformation that we immerse ourselves, live with families, and participate in service projects. In informal daily sessions, leaders in the community will also help us explore the history, religion, philosophy, arts, language, and politics that make Varanasi so vital. Here we will observe festive celebrations, as well as somber cremation ceremonies on the funeral pyres along the banks of the Ganges. Walking among the narrow cobblestone streets of the Old City, we can visit the most sacred Shiva temple in all of India. We will have the opportunity to watch traditional dances performed on the steps of a Hindu temple, attend a candlelight sitar and tabla concert and drink many cups of chai with inhabitants of this intriguing city.

Eleven kilometers away is the holy Buddhist city of Sarnath, where the Buddha delivered his first teaching after reaching enlightenment. A visitor to Sarnath can listen to Zen monastics chanting and drumming in the Japanese temple, hear monks offering Tibetan prayers and take a turn spinning prayer wheels at the Tibetan temple, and make visits to Chinese Buddhist and Thai Buddhist temples to witness examples of religious ritual and tradition from those cultures as well. Each of the Buddhist temples in Sarnath is constructed in the traditional style found in the host country that built the temple. Resident monks from all over Asia maintain temples in this holy city. Visiting other Buddhist pilgrimage sites in the region is possible on weekend excursions from Varanasi. Rajgir, where the Buddha gave sermons during the monsoon seasons and Nalanda, a center of Buddhist learning for over seven centuries and famed for its master teachers are both in this region. (In the seventh century, more than ten thousand Buddhist students and scholars conducted their studies in Nalanda.) We can also visit Vaishala and Kushinagar, where the Buddha gave his last sermon before passing into Nirvana.

Students_HHDL.jpg
Semester students enjoying a private audience with the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala