Samita ASBL

The Palm Tree with the Rock

A Story after a Legend from the Sahara Desert It was late afternoon, and there was a wind stroking gently over your hair and giving an ida of coolness to your face. It was the time of the day enticing…
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Bhikkhuni ordination and Burmese politics

The former Burmese Bhikkhuni Saccavadi, who was ordained as a Bhikkhuni in Sri Lanka in 2003, was accused and jailed in Burma some years ago. Some observers feel convinced that her later disrobing came as a direct response to the…
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The Art of Fighting

(by Silvie Weißkircher) First published 2014 in the magazine “Gegenwart” of the German Association for the Blind and Visually Disabled. Being blind, I feel like I live in a vacuum between two worlds. The one I cannot let go of…
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How to Grow a Nun

By Bhikkhu Sujato Originally published in May 2010 What do I know about growing nuns? Well, not much, actually, but I’m trying to learn. I use this metaphor because I want to emphasize the organic, complex, contextual nature of what this…
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Anything new about the new monastery?

Twenty months ago, in March 2015, we started out with just a handful of people (actually, exactly three… ) to found Samita ASBL. Our starting point we knew, but where it would lead us to was completely uncertain. It is…
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How to have a boundless heart

By Ayya Arannadevi The story of Kisagotami is relatively well-known by Buddhists. A young wife craves for a child, and after many years she gives birth to a son. Can you imagine her joy to have a son, after waiting…
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Teaching Weekend in Antwerp

On Friday 9 and Saturday 10 of December 2016 Ayya Vimala had been invited to teach at Ehipassiko Buddhist Centre in Deurne-Zuid close to Antwerp / Belgium. On Friday night Ayya gave a Dhamma talk based on the documentary “The…
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“The recipient determines the message”

(by Maria Backes) My friend Anna mentions this so often: “The recipient determines the message!” – And sometimes she adds: “unfortunately”. With this statement she refers to stories like this: “There is a person at my work who very often misinterprets…
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