SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
The Venerable Lama Losang Samten will be working on the mandala from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day in the atrium of Driscoll Hall, with a break for lunch. The public and campus community are welcome to access the livestream and to visit all day.
Faculty may encourage their students to visit the mandala in progress. To bring an entire class to visit the mandala, please .
Welcome and Opening Ritual
Monday, Sept. 9 | 4 p.m. | Reception to follow
The Ven. Samten will lead an opening ritual for empowerment and blessing on Monday, Sept. 9 at 4 p.m. in the atrium of Driscoll Hall.
All are welcome to join the reception immediately following in the Driscoll Hall Atrium.
Lectures and Complimentary events
Monday, Sept. 9, 2024
12:45 p.m. | Mindfulness Monday: Tibetan Meditation Teaching and Practice session
, a weekly event presented by the Office of Mission and Ministry, features special guest, Julie Regan PhD. Dr. Regan will explain and lead a session in Tibetan meditation, with the practice itself running from 1:00-1:30. Please join in-person at St. Rita Hall鈥檚 Multifaith Prayer Room or via .
4 p.m. | Opening Ritual, Driscoll Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024
12:30 p.m. | Lunch for doctoral students with Ven. Samten
6 p.m. | Eric Huntington, PhD, Rice University, 鈥淔our Views on Buddhist Mandalas," Driscoll auditorium
, T. T. and W. F. Chao Assistant Professor of Transnational Asian Studies at Rice University, is an interdisciplinary scholar of Buddhist studies. He employs methods from religious studies, art history and area studies to investigate complex topics of doctrine, ritual, philosophy, and visual and material culture. Specializing in Southern and Central Asia, he also addresses issues of transnational connection and comparison. His work traces long histories and contrasts disparate traditions to better understand both widespread features of religion and the unique ideas, practices and objects of specific cultural contexts.
Wednesay, Sept. 11, 2024
12 p.m. | Ugyan Choedup, PhD, Yale University, "Catching up with the Time: Exile, Nationalism and Modernity," St. Augustine Center, room 300
Ugyan Choedup, PhD, is a third-generation, exile-born Tibetan. He completed his schooling at Tibetan refugee schools in India and earned his M.Phil in China studies from Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. He received his doctorate in History from Pennsylvania State University, with a dissertation, "Tibet's Winding Road: Modernity, Nationalism and Unsettled Exile." He is currently a Postdoctoral Associate and Lecturer with the Council on East Asian Studies (CEAS) at the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale University. He also co-hosts "Khyeltam," a Tibetan language podcast.
This lecture will include lunch. Please register so we can plan.
5:30 p.m. | Julie Regan, PhD, 鈥淭he Art of Ending Suffering: The Practice of the Medicine Buddha Mandala in Tibetan Buddhism,鈥 Driscoll Auditorium
Julie Regan, PhD, draws on years of study and practice in Buddhist traditions, and she holds an MFA in Literary Arts from Brown University and PhD in Religion from Harvard University. Her research takes an interdisciplinary approach to reading a variety of texts, performances and rituals, from early Sanskrit court poetry to contemporary Tibetan works of art, literature and protest. She published essays on Buddhist pedagogy, the role of aesthetics and poetics in interpreting Buddhist religious texts, and discourses of gender in Tibetan Buddhism. Her book in progress presents original translations of the works of the second century author As虂vaghos蹋a from Sanskrit and Tibetan and explores the relationship between literary experience and practices of liberation in Buddhism. Most recently, she has taught courses on Buddhism in Asia and beyond; Tibetan Buddhism; Zen Buddhism; and Yoga, Dharma and Devotion at La Salle University and New York University.
Thursday, Sept. 12
12 p.m. | C. Pierce Salguero, PhD, Pennsylvania State University, Abington, 鈥淏uddhist Approaches to Health and Healing,鈥澛燬t.聽Augustine Center, room 300
, professor of Asian History and Health Humanities at The Abington College of Pennsylvania State University, is a transdisciplinary scholar of health humanities who is fascinated by historical and contemporary intersections between Buddhism, medicine and crosscultural exchange. After spending years studying traditional medicine in Thailand, he completed his doctorate in History of Medicine from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 2010. The major theme in his scholarship is discovering the role of Buddhism in the global transmission and local reception of knowledge about health, disease and the body. He approaches this topic using methodologies from history, religious studies, translation studies, literary studies and ethnography, and he is passionate about connecting his scholarship and teaching with contemporary issues and events both within and beyond the academy.
This lecture will include lunch. Please register so we can plan.
Dissolution Ritual
Friday, Sept. 13 | 10:30 a.m. | Driscol Hall Atrium
The Ven. Samten will lead a ritual of dedication before destroying the mandala and distributing small portions of sand. Together, the Ven. Samten and all participants who wish to join will walk to Dundale Hall to pour the sand in nearby running water.