Community Corner

Group to Share Their Spiritual Tour of India This Sunday at Laguna NCC

A slide show and an Indian meal will make for an enlightening evening.

By Robin Pierson

In the midst of the chaos and poverty of India, five Laguna Beach travelers received an abundance of individually tailored gifts: glimpses into the nature of the divine, insights about themselves, and the realization that the West can learn much about living well from the people of the Third World.

The group wishes to share their “Spiritual Tour of India” with a slide show, discussion and Indian meal on Sunday, April 29, beginning at 6 p.m. at the at 340 St. Ann’s Drive, Laguna Beach.

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Visiting six high energy spiritual centers, and spending most of their time with the people who live there, the group got an inside look into lifestyles rooted in spirituality stemming from a variety of religious traditions.

For trip leader Tenpa Dorjee, the journey retraced his childhood path—from the desolate refugee camp his parents were sent to after fleeing Tibet, to the orphanage where he was raised, to Dharamsala, home of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in exile for which he worked for two years.

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For Dorjee, owner of Forest Avenue’s Tibetan Handicrafts, the trip was “a dream come true. I got to share my personal life before I came to the United States with my friends.”

For Pam Wicks, the music director of the Neighborhood Congregational Church, longtime yoga practitioner and student of Buddhism, the religious smorgasbord and spiritual focus of the trip was a perfect fit. Whether visiting a Buddhist monastery, attending a Hindu puja on the banks of the Ganges in Rishikesh, or a Bahai temple in Delhi, “We always took time to feel the spirit of the place,” Wicks said. “We spent quite a bit of time in meditation in very powerful places.”

For Julien Kheymour, who has been traveling to India since his mother took him with her to meet her guru, the country allows Westerners to experience “a spiritual way of being that helps people lead a better life that people there have known about for centuries.”

At the first stop, Auroville, a world meditation center in Southern India where 2,000 people of varying faiths and from 44 countries are endeavoring to live harmoniously, participant Everett Hoffman had a truly mind altering, revelatory experience.

While meditating in the township’s massive, golden-domed mediation center, “It was the first time I considered myself as a spiritual being,” Hoffman said. “And my path was illuminated. I saw what is that I was meant to do.”

Since returning home to Boston, the 23-year-old college graduate has connected with people involved in the field of composting and is working for companies that pick up compostable materials, from both residents and the area's many universities, turn it into a valuable product and return it to the community. “I got so much inspiration and energy from that trip.”

After a 12-hour train ride, then three-hour drive, the group arrived at their second stop—Bhandara Tibetan Refugee Settlement—in one of the poorest, most desolate areas in India. With summer temperatures hitting 120 degrees and a severe lack of infrastructure, the community of 700 Tibetan refugees and the nearby monastery, have a difficult time being self-sustaining. Yet art restorer Susan Brown Madorsky was moved by the Tibetans who call the inhospitable place home.

“They were the warmest, most inviting, peaceful people,” she said. “We were invited to tea in the middle of nowhere. They had nothing, and despite unspeakable tragedies, they were smiling and generous."

And after a night spent eating and making music with the monks at the local monastery, then sleeping on a bed made of a board and blanket, Wicks said, “I had the best sleep there that I had in India. I think it was because the place was filled with love and devotion.”

This free event featuring slides and conversation from their journey is this Sunday night, April 29, at 6 p.m., and will conclude with a traditional Indian dinner, provided by participants. Sponsored by the Fellowship Ministry at Neighborhood Congregational Church, the event welcomes any and all to this enlightening conversation and meal.

Donations are welcome and will be used to help fund a generator for the monks in Bhandara.

For more information, contact Pam Wicks at 949-573-7104 or Tenpa Dorjee at 949-715-1043.

Neighborhood Congregational Church is located at 340 St. Ann’s Drive in Laguna Beach, one block east of Coast Hwy., with free parking behind the church at Cleo & Glenneyre.


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