Book Drive for Columbus Early Learning Center

Since the arson fire three and a half ago, Columbus KTC continues to make connections and develop friendships with people and organizations across central Ohio. Recently, we had an opportunity to connect with Columbus Early Learning Center. This organization serves children in low income areas across the city with hopes to build a new center in East Franklinton. 
Columbus Early Learning Center has amazing programs for children and families. Think of Head Start on steroids! 

In conjunction with the Lhahab Duchen, one of the four Buddhist festivals commemorating the Buddha, please consider donating the following types of new or gently used books for the children attending Columbus Early Learning Center to read in class and to take home to their families:

  • Infant/toddler board books
  • Infant cloth or vinyl books
  • Books about managing feelings
  • Books that represent diversity and different types of families
  • Nonfiction books  

Please bring the books to the Lower Social Hall and place them in the bins at the back of the room. This might be a good opportunity to clean out children’s books that are no longer needed or to make a trip to Half Priced Books!

May all beings benefit! 

Columbus KTC on the Move: September 22nd – October 9th

Greetings Sangha Members,

While congregants of Tifereth Israel celebrate the high holy days at Tifereth, we will be making some changes to our programs including moving the location of our services. 

On Sunday, September 22nd, most of our items will be packed up and only basic items for the shrine will be available; however, Sunday programs will go on at Tifereth on this day. 

On Sunday, September 29th,  Columbus KTC will be holding its Sunday service at the Martin de Porres Center at Ohio Dominican University.

Martin de Porres Center 
2330 Airport Dr, Columbus, OH 43219 
Please Park in Lot B
Directions  

On Sunday, October 6th, Columbus KTC will be holding its Sunday Service at the Thurber Center off East Broad St. 

The Thurber Center
91 Jefferson Ave
Columbus, OH  43215
Please park on the street

Tuesday night Chenrezig practices will also be relocating during this time. They will be held at the Center for Pragmatic Buddhism on Tuesdays October 1st and October 8th. 

Center for Pragmatic Buddhism
1225 Dublin Rd suite 030, Columbus, OH 43212

Here’s a list of key dates and locations:

  • Sunday, 9/15 – Pack up items in the Lower Social Hall
  • Sunday, 9/22 – Sunday Programs, Tifereth Israel Lower Social Hall, minimal setup
  • Sunday, 9/29 – Sunday Programs, Martin de Porres Center, Ohio Dominican University
  • Tuesday, 10/1 – Chenrezig, Center for Pragmatic Buddhism
  • Sunday, 10/6 – Sunday Programs, Thurber Center
  • Tuesday, 10/8 – Chenrezig, Center for Pragmatic Buddhism

Volunteers!

To make this move happen, we need volunteer support! If you can volunteer, please show up at these times. Thank you!

  • Sunday, September 15th: help pack up items in the Lower Social Hall at 12:30 pm following the Dharma Talk  
  • Sunday, September 22nd: help pack cushions and other items into the truck and cars at 12:30 pm following the Dharma Talk  
  • Sunday, September 29th: help set up at Martin de Porres 8:00 am and then pack up at 12:30 pm following Dharma Talk  

Sunday, October 6th: help set up at the Thurber Center, 8:00 am and then pack up at 12:30 pm following Dharma Talk

Feed the Hungry and Benefit Beings in Honor of the Buddha’s First Teaching Holiday!

As the summer calendar rolls along at KTC, we come to the annual celebration of Chokhor Duchen – the “great occasion” (Du = Time and Chen = Great) of the Buddha’s First Dharma Teaching (Cho = Dharma and khor = Wheel, or the turning of the dharma wheel). which always falls during the middle of the summer. 

To increase benefit for beings and to assist our Franklinton Neighbors, we will be collecting canned and packaged food every Sunday from now through Sunday July 7 for the Holy Family Food Pantry. Please consider donating non-perishable food items (canned fruit, vegetables, juice, meat and boxed crackers, pasta) and toiletries (shampoo, deodorant, toothpaste, diapers) Look for the specially marked bins in the Lower Social Hall (also known as the KTC Shrine Room].  Everyone who donates can put their name on a list in the bin, and on July 7 during the Dharma Talk, a name will be drawn from the list to receive a special dharma gift.  Thanks for your donations, and may all beings benefit!

Meditation Center Gives Free Lessons in “Mindfulness Day” Event

In honor of National Meditation Day, Columbus KTC Meditation Center is offering free one-hour meditation lessons at several Columbus public libraries on Saturday June 1, effectively creating “Mindfulness All Over Town.”

“There have been a lot of scientific studies about the benefits of mindfulness,” said Kathy Wesley, spokesperson for Columbus Karma Thegsum Chöling Meditation Center. Developing mindful attention “can help with stress relief and mental focus, and many people are learning it to improve their general wellness,” she said.

KTC has been offering meditation instruction for free weekly at its meditation center in Franklinton since 1990, Ms. Wesley said, “but we thought it would be interesting to bring meditation out to the wider community with this event.”

The free meditation instructions will be taught by six different KTC meditation instructors and will take place in meeting rooms reserved at Columbus Metropolitan Library branches.

“We chose the libraries because they are a great community resource, have good meeting spaces and because they are all over town, which meets our goal of bringing mindfulness to as many places as we can,” Ms. Wesley said.

The one-hour lessons are open to all ages. Lessons will include the basics of developing mindfulness using breath-awareness techniques, as well as strategies for making time to practice mindfulness during a busy day. Participants will sit in chairs for the lessons and will have time to ask questions.

“We chose different times throughout the day Saturday so it might help people find a time that suits them best,” Ms. Wesley said. “We hope people will feel free to come and learn about mindfulness and see how it can help them in their everyday lives.”

Columbus KTC has been part of the Columbus community since its founding in September 1977.  Its main weekly meditation instruction and sitting sessions are at 10 a.m. Sundays at Congregation Tifereth Israel, 1354 E. Broad St.

Here is the complete list of Free Meditation Lessons:

Friday May 31, 2019
12 noon to 1 p.m. – Columbus Metropolitan Library Main Branch, 96 S. Grant Ave.

Saturday June 1, 2019

11 a.m. to 12 noon
Columbus Metropolitan Library Main Branch, 96 S. Grant Ave.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Linden Branch, 2223 Cleveland Ave.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Livingston Branch, 3434 E. Livingston Ave.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Martin Luther King Branch, 1467 E. Long St.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Whitehall Branch, 4445 E. Broad St.

1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Hilliard Branch, 4500 Hickory Chase Way
Columbus Metropolitan Library South High Branch, 3540 S. High Street

1:30 to 2:30
Columbus Metropolitan Library Main Branch, 96 S. Grant Ave.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Franklinton Branch, 1061 W. Town St.

3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Columbus Metropolitan Library New Albany Branch, 200 Market St.
Columbus Metropolitan Library Whetstone Branch, 3909 N. High St.

For information, please visit www.columbusktc.org

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Can’t Join Us In Person? Listen to the KTC Columbus Podcast!

Each Sunday that the Columbus KTC has its regular weekly events there are Dharma Talks – hour-long discussions that sometimes include questions and answers and comments from the audience.  Lama Kathy and KTC’s Senior Meditation Instructors share duties on the talks, which range from general dharma discussions to studies of great books by Kagyu lineage masters. Click here or subscribe on iTunes, Google Play or Stitcher.  However you listen, we’re happy to have you in our “dharma family!”

Like what you hear? Consider a small donation to KTC before (or after!) you listen …

Lama Kathy Dharma Blog – Starting Next Chapter

Beginning the Next Chapter:  An Attitude of Gratitude

Dear Sangha Family and Friends:

Words cannot express the gratitude and love we are feeling at this moment for all of our Columbus Karma Thegsum Chöling family.  The Land Blessing and Groundbreaking on Sunday April 7, 2019 is a day we will remember for a long time. More than 100 of our dharma family and friends gathered under a tent and out on our lawn, to invite Buddhas and Bodhisattvas and wisdom beings from every quarter of space and ask them to dwell upon and bless our land for the benefit of beings.

Led by Khenpo Karma Tenkyong and Lama Karma Drodhul, a group of lamas and dharma family from our home monastery, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra of Woodstock, NY showed us how to bless our land with dharma music, chanting, and a sacred fire.  Assisted by Lama Zopa from Albany KTC and Lama Sonam from the dharma group on Long Island, NY, we created a shrine, chanted a purification for the land, made offerings to local deities and spirits and recited a protector chant.

Like a mythical city that only appears for one day, our site sprouted a shrine tent before 8 a.m. Sunday morning.  After having started a few days before the event with a “mini” land blessing and offering prayer of their own, the site preparation team led by KTC volunteer James Maze (a recent arrival at the center and principal of a landscaping company) used rolling equipment to level the tent site, installed a tent with a floor under a carpet of astroturf, brought us portable restrooms and cordoned off our parking lot to make it safer to park and cross Sandusky Alley.

Transport Captains Bill Miracle and Chuck Drake arrived with their truck and van at 8 a.m., unloading a treasure-trove of materials that could only be called “Instant shrine room.”

Sitting cushions gathered from several places, folding puja tables, a cafeteria-size table and a stair-stepped shrine borrowed from Don Fortner’s home quickly were installed and decorated by brocades and thangkas brought from the car trunks of Shrine Master Julane Goodrich and her team.

Julane and her team (of Roberta Riley, Chökyi Gyamtso, Marilyn Stephen, Bill Miracle and Sara Rampersaud) arrived at 8, along with Cathy Lhamo Jackson and the Offering Tormas – more than 40 small dough-and-butter sculptures made days in advance and meant to be offered to the land as a blessing. More than a dozen flower vases of all sizes came with Marilyn, who had selected flowers of the five primary colors – white, red, blue, yellow and green – to symbolize the five wisdoms and the five Buddha families.

Lama Karma and the chant team arrived soon after, and the site was abuzz with activity, as a shrine was assembled and dressed with brocade and offering bowls, and an area for chanters was created in the center of the “instant” shrine room.

James Wittenmyer donned a reflective vest and started guiding registered guests to parking places with assistance from Chantal Sapp and Helder De Andrade. Meanwhile, Chuck Drake (a Scoutmaster and KTC assistant director) called the Columbus Division of Fire to let them know we had an open burn permit and were about to light a little bonfire in a steel fire bowl at one edge of our property.  

A steady stream of guests arrived throughout the next hour, and were seated by Welcoming team lead Connie Jenkins, assisted by David Weaver – and by Sara, taking a break from shrine duties to assist.

Just a little after 9 a.m., Lama Karma Drodhul, acting as chant master, instructed Director Kim Miracle and me to cast the first fragrant juniper fronds into the fire, and our puja began.

The next hours were a whirl of sights, sounds and colors. Prayer books assembled over the previous week by a team of KTC “dharma elves” were opened, prayers were read, drums were played, Tibetan gyaling horns blew, and our land was home to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas once again.

On the east lawn, the fire consumed several pounds of offering substances: mixed flour, spices, tea, herbal medicines, the “three whites” (yogurt, milk and butter) and the “three sweets” (honey, sugar and molasses), bits of brocade and gem powder made sweet smoke that drifted through our neighborhood, carrying blessings. Every few minutes, a pair of KTC sangha members were dispatched from the shrine tent, carrying an offering of tea in a copper chalice and a plate of tormas and “sang offering” (smoke offering) substance.

Don Fortner provided sound with KTC’s brand-new battery-powered portable PA system. He worked with Joseph Francik and Anne McCain on capturing video from the day, and he and Tanya Schroeder snapped photographs of the event for posterity. Jaimee Patton came to help with cleanup, but ended up filling in just about anywhere she was needed.

Friends came from all over. Amy Wells, a meditation teacher at KTC in the 1990s has since relocated to North Carolina for an active life among the mountains and trees. But when she heard we were celebrating the place she met the dharma, she couldn’t stay away. Her smiles and hugs brought us joy.

Meanwhile, over at Congregation Tifereth Israel, 1354 E. Broad Street, KTC volunteer John Bova directed a team of helpers who welcomed members of the public to our “regular” weekly meditation and classes while the Land Blessing was going on.

Before the lunch break over at the KTC site, Lama Karma gave KTC friends a message of encouragement from founder, Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, who congratulated us on the work that had brought us to this stage in our development and expressed good wishes on the next phase of the work. After sharing these remarks, the Khenpo and Lamas led the group, now numbering about 60, toward the northeast corner of the property, where the groundbreaking was to take place.

Our architects Peter Macrae and Peter Lenz and builder Bill Jones were joined by Nannette Maciejunes, director of the Columbus Museum of Art and an honorary fundraising co-chair at the site of the groundbreaking on the northeast lawn, where three special shovels tied with white, red and blue Tibetan offering scarves symbolized the Buddha’s body, speech and mind, touched our land with future blessing.  Peter, Pete, Bill and Nannette, along with center leaders, and even the children in attendance, got to dig the first spades of earth on the new project. Erin Blue, our “special guest” concierge, assisted (along with Khenpo Tenkyong) in facilitating the groundbreaking event.

During the lunch break, Jaimee Patton helped with cleanup while others chatted and chowed down on sack lunches or the snacks provided by Michael Stone.

After a quick lunch at the Idea Foundry hosted by volunteers Kevin Dwinnell, Kirsten Carroll and Kim Miracle, the chanting group returned to the tent for a rousing chant to the Kagyu protector Mahakala, asking for his protection for our center and its sangha members.

Visiting Shrine Master Lama Sonam from Long Island, was assisted by local KTC folks as she prepared and made offerings to the protector Mahakala, followed by a smoke offering for spirits in the Bardo and a Chenrezig mantra chant.

Then, in a flash, it was over. The ground purified and blessed, it was time for our “illusory city of dharma” to be dissolved. The sun, which had been darting in and out of clouds all day, disappeared and rain clouds began to gather. Bill and Chuck parked their vehicles nearby, and the reverse stream of materials headed back to the trucks. Keith Mondal was on trash collection and tidying, and everyone pitched in to collect chairs and tables and load everything up again.

While disassembling the shrine, Marilyn pulled beautiful flowers from their vases and handed the blossoms to volunteers and departing guests. “Let’s leave these on the land as an offering and blessing,” she said, tossing carnations and roses. Small heaps of flowers dotted the landscape, beautifying every spot where they fell.

Rain, which had been a threat most of the day, did not fall until a couple of hours after the pujas ended at 3 p.m., about an hour after the tent crew arrived to take down the temporary shrine hall.

It is impossible to quantify the blessings of the day, but site preparer James Maze wrote us a short meditation on it by text message right before rain began to fall.

“I have visited the land at 231 S. Grubb Street several times over the last week. As I walk across this small piece of land today the energy feels different. Although I do not understand this energy, its feels good and bright. Something powerful happened here today … Good job and thank you.”

Thanks, and Still More Thanks …

A lot goes into a Land Blessing ceremony; substances and offering plates were ordered from other states, special tiny 5-color flags were made (by Sue Ellen Steinmetz) to offer on our Sang plates to collect positive energies from the universe; Lama Kathy worked with officials at the Columbus Division of Fire and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to get proper Open Burning permits for a fire puja (who knew fire pujas in the city limits were regulated – but they are); Treasurer Steve Phallen interviewed tent purveyors and helped work out our chair and shrine layout; and Bill Miracle helped assemble the steel fire bowl used for the fire puja.

There is no way to adequately thank everyone for their work, and any list will certainly leave out the many who lent a hand to put together our Land Blessing event. If you can think of folks who participated who you don’t see mentioned here, please let us know by writing to Lama Kathy at lamakathy@columbusktc.org.

Special Announcement: Land Blessing Tickets Available this Week!

Three years after our home temple was destroyed by an arson fire, the Columbus Karma Thegsum Chöling is ready to come “home” again! We are still raising funds to complete our new temple, but we have enough funds to begin building this year.

To spiritually prepare our ground for building, we will host Lama Karma Drodhul and a group of Buddhist lamas from KTD Monastery for a day-long traditional Tibetan Buddhist Land Blessing from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday April 7, 2019 on our property at 231 S. Grubb Street in Columbus.

The Land Blessing will have three parts:

  1. Morning offering and blessing prayers (called pujas) from 9-10:30 a.m. in a tent on the property.
  2. A Groundbreaking Ceremony for the new temple at 11 a.m. outdoors on the northwest corner of the property.
  3. Afternoon offering and blessing prayers from 1:30 to 3 p.m. in the tent on the property.

Due to conditions on the site and limited space in the tent, seats in the tent for the Morning and Afternoon prayer services will be by REGISTRATION ONLY.

In other words, in order to attend the morning and afternoon prayer sessions, a ticket will be required. Tickets will be free, and will be offered online only.

To ensure that the maximum number of people can attend, we are setting up an Eventbrite registration system for a total of 100 free tickets – 50 for the morning prayer session and 50 for the afternoon prayer session.

You can order a free ticket for EITHER the morning OR the afternoon session. Please be generous to our dharma family and friends and only sign up for one spot – either in the morning or afternoon, but not both.

To register for either the morning or afternoon prayer session, please click here.

Once all 100 free tickets have been claimed, a waitlist will form on Evenbrite. Those on the waitlist will be contacted if additional seats become available.

We regret that at this time, we cannot offer standing room inside the tent for the morning and afternoon prayers. However, the official Groundbreaking for the new temple will take place outside the tent and no ticket will be required to attend the ground-breaking ceremony at 11am.  

About the Day

Both prayer services in the tent will include Tibetan chants and offerings. In the morning we will make auspicious aspirations and offerings to the land; in the afternoon we will ask the blessing of the dharma protectors. We won’t have prayer books for all the chants (some will be in Tibetan only), and all seating will be in chairs without tables, but your personal prayers and mantras will help us bless the land, so bring your malas and join us!

Note: Please dress for the weather, as the Groundbreaking will be outdoors on the uneven ground of our construction site.

Schedule for the day includes:

9 a.m. Opening prayers and “Cleansing the Mountain” puja

9:30 a.m. Sang Smoke offering and Short Tara prayer

10:45 a.m. Break

11:00 Groundbreaking, followed by aspirations and dedications

12 noon: Lunch Break (bring a sack lunch or go out with friends)

1:30  p.m. Mahakala protector Puja and Sur Smoke Offering

3 p.m. Grand Dedication of Merit and end of pujas

Volunteers needed!

Would you like to volunteer to help during the day? We will need assistance with parking lot traffic control, crossing guard help (getting people safely across the alley), fire tending, supply runs and more. Contact Assistant Director Chuck Drake, ad@columbusktc.org to volunteer. Morning and afternoon shifts available.

Reduced Sunday program at Tifereth this week

If you cannot make it to the event on the 7th, please join us at our slightly shortened Sunday programs at Tifereth Israel, 1354 E. Broad St.:

10 a.m. Open Meditation

10 a.m. Introduction to Meditation Class

11 a.m. Tea break

11:30 Introduction to Buddhism Class and Dharma Talk – Main Shrine Room

And if you can’t be with us at either place, join us in prayer by reciting the Tashi Prayer for our community.   

The time of prayer and blessing is upon us. Please join us in dedicating the upcoming construction to the benefit of all beings.

Announcement of Special Election

Assistant Director Stacey Berry has had to step down from his post on the board due to time commitments for work and graduate school. The board thanks him for his service, particularly his help with our highly successful fundraising trip to the Karmapa’s teaching in New York last June. Thank you, Stacey! KTC wishes you all the best and looks forward to seeing you around the center when your schedule permits.

Consequently, in accordance with KTC elections policy, a special election will now be held to elect a member to fill the remaining term of the board member who is unable to serve. Any KTC member in good standing may be nominated for the position, but it is wise to check with the person first before nominating them. Nominees must receive two nominations from members in good standing to become eligible candidates for the office.

Nominations will be received by Rich Butchko at butchko1@columbus.rr.com, or in writing to Rich Butchko, c/o Columbus KTC, PO Box 14946, Columbus, Ohio 43214. You may also call Columbus KTC at (614) 228-6546 to nominate someone by phone.

The nomination period for special elections is one week’s time.

All nominations–whether by email, phone, or postal mail–must be received by 1:00pm on Sunday, March 3rd, 2019.

We also invite people who are considering membership in Columbus KTC to take this opportunity to become members and join us in this process; we welcome your input. To become a member, please visit our pledge page and/or contact Steve Phallen at treasurer@columbusktc.org.

The election itself will take place Sunday, March 24th, 12:45pm, after the Dharma Talk.

For more details on the election policy, please see the attached document.

Columbus KTC Board and Elections Policy 14.1-1.

Sincerely,

The Columbus KTC Board

Director: Kim Miracle
Treasurer: Steve Phallen
Secretary: Michael Stone
Member at Large: Eric Weinberg
Resident Adviser: Lama Kathy Wesley

Chenrezig Update

Due to circumstances beyond our control, the Chenrezig Sadhana usually held at 7 p.m. on Tuesday night will be canceled for Feb. 5, 13, 19, and 26. We hope to return to our regular schedule in March.  We apologize for any inconvenience. We hope you can join us for open meditation at 10 a.m. Sundays. Please contact us at info@columbusktc.org for updates.

First look: New KTC Exterior

Now that our “little Buddhist center that could” has begun its last push to raise the money needed to rebuild in the aftermath of a 2016 arson fire, we’re going to beging sharing “first looks” at our new 3-Dimensional architectural computer models.

Our incredible Columbus-based architectural team of Peter Macrae and Peter Lenz (who we call “Pete” and “Peter” to tell them apart) has taken the design originated by Wisconsin architect Keith Spruce and shaped it to meet Columbus city codes and add in features requested by the sangha.

To follow Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche’s request that we make our new home larger than the last, the design essentially doubles our floor space – from almost 5,000 square feet to 10,000 square feet. The split-level design includes a shrine room that will seat 100 on cushions and a community room that will accommodate a similar number of folks at tables and chars. An office and classroom wing to the west will give us a separate library, classroom, store space and children’s play area.

Our exterior, seen here in a birds’ eye view from the corner of Rich and Grubb streets looking west from Rich, will include a wheelchair access ramp (and circumambulation path, including a small stupa) and evergreen trees, and a pleasing stone and brick façade. Floor to ceiling windows on the south and north sides of the shrine room will let in light. 

A cupola at the top of the building will a feature special Tibetan architectural element called a “sertö” or “golden vase” spire, symbolizing richness and goodness. Along the roof line, repeating white circles on a dark background represent another Tibetan architectural element known as “the moon,” which symbolizes the Buddha nature inherent in every being.

Tibetan Buddhist teachings say that seeing sacred art and symbols is uplifting for those who see them, even if they are not aware of the symbolis’ inner meaning. We can’t wait to share more 3-D drawings with you and will gradually share them over the time of our campaign. We expect that as our designs mature (these are just early drawings, produced for our recent meeting with Mayor Ginther and do not have all the final details), but we are sure you will be as excited as we are by the vision of a new home for Tibetan Buddhist dharma in Columbus!

While you’re admiring the view of our new temple, take a moment to send us a comment or an encouragement, and feel free to donate toward the accomplishment of this goal. Even small donations participate in the merit of the entire structure, and accumulate the virtue of providing a shelter for the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha in the city.  May all be auspicious! And may all beings benefit ?