On Wednesday, September 14,speeches, musical performances and prayers were offered during the blessing ceremony for the totem pole carved by members of the Lummi Nation’s House of Tears Carvers. This story pole, dedicated to Chief Tsilixw, accompanied by two of his house poles, then travelled to Pittsburgh PA for an international Clean Air symposium. At the symposium and along the way they were a focus for public gatherings and conversations about clean energy use, salmon health, orcas and the removal of the Snake River dams.
Swil Kanim, beloved Lummi violinist and storyteller, served as host for the celebration. At one point he invited “his brother of a different mother,” Jeff McKenna, to share a song from his Native heritage, one that came to Jeff in a dream. After slowly making his way to the stage, Jeff’s strong voice truly inspired as it carried far and never wavered. Swil Kanim and Jeff drummed and sang together 7 verses representing all the elements that must come together for a truly sacred gathering, including music, dance, art, earth, sky, water, love. All these elements and many more were gathered, and there were tears in many eyes.
Among the spiritual leaders offering blessings for the journey to was our guiding teacher Nomon Tim Burnett, who invoked Jizo Bodhisattva, the protector of children, teachers, andtravelers:
Jizo Bodhisattva – Earth Store Bodhisattva – great being who cares for the earth and for all of the beings on the earth:
Help us to heal this Earth. This Earth we love. This Earth we’ve neglected. This Earth we can so easily forget. Help us to remember. Help us to know that we are the Earth. Help release us from this illusion of our separateness.
Jizo Bodhisattva – protector of travelers - protect this totem, protect Chief Tsilixw and his protectors as they travel these lands. Protect them as they teach, protect them as they learn. Protect them as they embrace what is right, protect them as they resist what is wrong.
Jizo Bodhisattva – protector of children – help us all remember that everything we do here is for our children, and their children, and their children’s children’s children. May the benefit of this strong clear effort to bring light move through the generations.
Jizo Bodhisattva we call on you with your sacred sounds mantra:
OM KA KA KABE SAN MA EH SOWA-KA
Jizo Bodhisattva we call on you also in silence, in the pause between all sounds, in the deep peace of non-doing, in the intimacy of not-knowing.
[Silence]
Thank you Jizo Bodhisattva, thank you House of Tears carvers, thank you to the Lummi Nation for taking care of our lands and waters, thank you to the Bellingham community. Thank you to all beings in all directions in the three times.
While chanting the Jizo mantra, Tim played the mokugyo, a small handheld Japanese drum, and his words and the mantra reflected and expressed all the blessings, chanting, and drumming of the afternoon.
The Lummi House of Tears carvers have been creating and sharing memorial totem poles with the world since 9/11, and before. The launching of the next journey, whenever it may happen, is not to be missed.
Post submitted by Karen McMains of RCZC. Thanks to the Lummi Nation, Tim Burnett and Kate McKenna respectively for the photos.
In the most recent Bending Bough, RCZC Board President Joden Bob Rose gives us the following update on our new Zendo:
New Zendo Update: Open House, Open Minds, Open Walls
On Sunday, August 21, a lovely, sunny summer day, about 60 sangha members, friends, and fellow students of the Buddha’s way, enjoyed home-made cookies and refreshments as we toured our recently acquired home at 2509 Cedarwood.
Red Cedar Zen Community’s good fortunes were emphasized as we realized the harmony of our name and our new address. That coincidence was further emphasized by the location – a new base for our Mountains and Rivers walking tradition that can now be realized by stepping out the front door, walking a few feet west, and accessing the Sea to Sky trail with Little Squalicum Beach Park little more than a mile away. In fact, our south property line is the trail that will soon link to Cornwall Park and beyond. How propitious.
Comments from our guests were uniformly positive and excited. “Great space,” “so big,” “lots of possibilities,” “what a nice building.” After a year-and-a -half of searching, it really looks like we have secured a structure that meets nearly all of our needs as laid out in the criteria that guided the SCORE committee’s search. Now the work begins to define how we can best organize and use this space to meet our sangha’s needs while responsibly using the funds we raised to re-model and upgrade the facility.
The RCZC board has appointed a “Design Committee” (Bob Rose, Bob Penny, Heidi Epstein, Robin Kucklick, and Mark Flamer) to assess the interior and exterior features and evaluate how to best organize and use “what the building offers us.” The committee has met twice since the property was officially acquired on August 15. We now understand its basic structure and are in the initial stage of developing conceptual alternatives for creating a logical flow of ritual and accessible spaces for our sangha and for other interested groups.
Those spaces include: a dedicated zendo; dokusan/teacher’s room; library; kitchen; bathrooms; entry closets for coats and shoes; flexible space for sangha programs and rental use by other groups; and storage. Once determined, those conceptual plans will be presented to the senior students’ group to assure that appropriate space and connectivity are provided for ceremonial activities. The board will then review the committee’s proposal or proposals and offer them to the sangha for your comments, suggestions, and perspectives.
Upon the board confirming a basic “concept design,” the Design Committee will engage the services of a compatible licensed and bonded contractor (with board approval) to prepare more detailed architectural drawings for submission to the City of Bellingham. We purchased a commercial office building which will be re-purposed to a “public religious gathering” space. This requires submitting an application for a “change in use” permit with review by the fire marshal to ensure public safety standards are fully met.
The design process, engaging a contractor, city plan review and approval, and the remodeling work (demolition, construction, flooring, finish carpentry, painting, etc.) will take some time to reach completion. As this process and timeline become more clear, subsequent newsletter articles will provide a more specific schedule. In the meantime, based on the inspection report and our follow-up investigations, a new roof will be installed in early October, before the first big rains. This work will be done in conjunction with replacing the obsolete roof-top heater unit and re-routing of the interior ventilation system. As we are fond of saying, the board’s job is to provide a roof and a warm space for practice. First things first.
If you have any questions about how this process is proceeding or have skills or knowledge that might assist our work, please contact board president Bob Rose (boardpresident@gmail.com).
– Joden Bob Rose
Members helping members: A group of volunteers who can offer things to sangha members in need, like:
Members needing a hand: If you are in need of assistance, the sangha may be able to help. Your privacy will be respected.
If you are able to give OR need to receive support, please contact membership@redcedarzen.org.
"We have to do this because it's our lifeline of our people.
The water is our lifeline. The land is our lifeline. The air is our lifeline”
~Chief Bill Tsi’li'xw James
On September 14, 2022 from 3-6 pm at the Port of Bellingham property (Granary Building) on Granary Ave in Bellingham, Lummi House of Tears Carvers has requested a Blessing Ceremony for a Totem Pole that will be traveling to the 2022 Global Clean Energy Justice Convergence being held in Pittsburgh, PA later in the month.
Here's the current schedule for the event:
3-4 pm Visiting with the Carvers and the Totem Pole 4-5 pm Music with Dana Lyons and Swil Kanim and others 5:00 pm Guest Speakers 5:40 pm Blessings
3-4 pm Visiting with the Carvers and the Totem Pole
4-5 pm Music with Dana Lyons and Swil Kanim and others
5:00 pm Guest Speakers
5:40 pm Blessings
BUF/Interfaith Choir Sikh Temple Priests Nomon Tim Rev. Paul Emma Rev. Seth (maybe)
BUF/Interfaith Choir
Sikh Temple Priests
Nomon Tim
Rev. Paul
Emma
Rev. Seth (maybe)
The House of Tears Carvers will embark on the Totem Pole Journey to the Clean Energy Justice Convergence which will be held in Pittsburgh, PA, September 21-23. The Convergence is a response to the September 2022 Global Clean Energy Ministerial hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy in Pittsburgh, PA also held during that time. The Clean Energy Ministerial brings together the world’s largest and leading countries, international organizations and companies to work on accelerating clean energy transitions.
From ElectionRetreat.org:
Hello Ballot Bodhisattvas
Yesterday about 50 of us came together in communion and action - sending out about a thousand letters to Nevada voters. We are offering four more retreats before the election; our retreats include meditation, a dharma talk, and companionship while we write our letters to democrati- leaning voters in Nevada. Please join us at our next retreat on September 11. www.electionretreat.org/2022-engaged-buddhist-letter-writing-retreats/ Retreats are held from 10:00 – 1:00 Pacific time (11-2 Mountain, noon-3 Central, 1-4 Eastern). Our Speaker Roshi Joan
Roshi Joan Halifax, Ph.D. is a Buddhist teacher, Founder and Head Teacher of Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The Red Cedar Zen Community Has a New Home
On Monday, August 15 at 5 PM, RCZC Board president Joden Bob Rose received the keys for the building 2509 Cedarwood Avenue.
After nearly two years of probing every corner of Bellingham during an intense and dynamic real estate market, a building that met nearly all of our search criteria became unexpectedly available. Of interest a few months earlier, we believed it had sold. But that sale fell through and by a series of remarkable circumstances, our offer was accepted in early July. Now that this purchase has been recorded, Our Journey Home can pause as a new era of settling and care begins for our sangha.
And, if you are available, Please join us on Sunday from 1-3 PM for an Open House with light refreshments.
A few brief facts to note:
What’s Next?
Note: If you can’t make the open house, you can see pictures of the building here https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/2509-Cedarwood-Ave-Bellingham-WA/25754442/
I'm excited to have virtual visit by Bakurin Judith Ragir from the Clouds and Water Zen Center in Minneapolis. Judith will be give the talk on at our weekly Thursday evening practice about her new book Untangling Karma: Intimate Zen Stories on Healing Trauma.
Judith is Eko Jeff Kelley's teacher and someone I've been looking forward to learning with for some time. Below is a note from noted Zen writing teacher Natalie Goldberg about her book.
Please join us in person at BUF or online on Zoom.
-Nomon Tim
“Judith Ragir, a Zen teacher, a mom, a Jew, a sexual assault survivor, splits open her heart and fearlessly pours out the hate, internalized anti-Semitism, and unquestioned rule-following that blocks her love. This book is at once a love letter to Zen practice and a critique of late twentieth century American Zen. Judith inspires us to investigate our own karmic knots, and in the middle of this suffering, she invites us to walk quietly down the backyard steps to the neighborhood pond and take a cooling dip in the moonlight.” —Natalie Goldberg, author of Writing Down the Bones, Long Quiet Highway, Three Simple Lines, and many other books
You can find all past Summer Series talks on our Buddhist Psychology page.
A warm welcome to Ginger Harris, who has volunteered to take the position of Assistant Treasurer.
Ginger Harris became interested in Buddhism after picking up a Buddhist text in a Netherlands hotel room in 2009 and reading what the Buddha taught about suffering. She began studying Buddhism in its various forms and had the opportunity during that time to visit to several Buddhist temples in Thailand and Singapore. In 2010, she took an Introduction to Zen Meditation course series at the Houston Zen Center, and in 2011 attended a retreat with Thich Nhat Hanh, where she received the Five Mindfulness Trainings. She also practiced for couple of years after this with Lost Coin Zen, a semi-virtual Zen group from both Rinzai and Soto Zen lineages.
In 2016, she moved for work to the PNW with her two sons and husband and practiced on her own until recently when a desire to deepen her practice and to be part of a Sangha led her to find Red Cedar.
Professionally, Ginger is an engineer and works in business development for bp in Cherry Point, where she seeks to help bridge the gap from fossil fuels to renewable sources of energy. She has served as the Treasurer for both Bayou Village school in Houston in 2013, and for OPAL, a community beautification non-profit in La Conner in 2019. She is a Kundalini Yoga instructor and loves health and fitness. She is looking forward to serving the Red Cedar Sangha and getting to know more of our members in the future!
Open House! We'll be having an open house to celebrate our new home on August 21st from 1-3 pm. Please come! We'll be providing light refreshments, so please RSVP here so we have any idea of how many to plan for.
Red Cedar Zen Community is a 501(c) non-profit organization.