We’ve so enjoyed being able to connect with our sangha and friends through some recent online events, and we’re pleased to bring you highlights of those meetings.
We need to learn to be resilient. Fortunately, there are ways to develop resilience when we get hurt—even when we collapse and are totally broken. We see it in nature.
Rinpoche spoke on many topics, but one theme that emerged again and again was how KF can, and must, find new ways to connect to those who are suffering and have yet to meet the dharma.
In 2005, Venerable embarked on another important mission: to seek common ground with other Buddhist traditions and collaborate with them to uplift the training and education of monks from various countries in Asia.
KF endowed the Khyentse Gendun Chopel Professorship at the University of Michigan in 2018 to further enhance one of the largest Buddhist Studies programs in North America.
Since its inception, Khyentse Foundation has supported the academic study of Buddhism. In particular, support for academic institutions has always been one of the pillars of our work.
Both as a Buddhist and as a close friend of Steven Goodman, I am praying and in fact know with certainty that he will never stop working for the dharma.
In this year of unusual difficulty and change, Rinpoche spoke confidently about what the foundation can do to support people in this time of uncertainty and volatility.
The foundation now works with more than 40 universities around the world, and most of them are in “new” Buddhist countries, such as the United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, and many places in Europe.