At festival, Buddhists explore budding bond with film

by Tricia Cambron, Special to The SF Chronicle, Jan 28, 2005

San Francisco, USA -- J.Lo is intrigued by it. Richard Gere is a longtime devotee. According to the tabloids, director Oliver Stone raised his daughter in its traditions. And if anyone had any doubt that Buddhism is big in Hollywood, even the cartoon character Lisa Simpson ("The Simpsons") is now depicted as a Buddhist.

The International Buddhist Film Festival, coming to the Bay Area today through Feb. 13, is a natural extension, says San Francisco Zen Center's Michael Wenger, of the symbiotic relationship evolving between film and the way of the Buddha.

"I think there are two things that are happening. One, the American media and film are discovering Buddhism, but also of interest is that Buddhists are discovering film.

"There is a saying in Buddhism, 'pecking in and pecking out,' and in a certain way this is happening in film," says Wenger. Pecking in and pecking out is a koan about a mother bird pecking from the outside of an egg and a baby bird pecking from the inside. Each is pecking away, trying to get rid of the eggshell, an image that reflects how a teacher and a student each work in their own way on the barriers to wisdom.

"We have a visiting Tibetan teacher who is now doing full-length films, and there are other western Buddhists who are now using film. Many of us who have studied film find it is a very good way to talk -- it is a good expression of Buddhism because it is a series of flashing stills, which in some ways is what life is like. Suzuki-roshi once said the most important thing about film is the empty screen because it can accomodate anything."

Wenger, who recently completed co-writing and editing a book on Buddhism and film to be published this fall by Wisdom Press, has lived at the San Francisco Zen Center since 1972. He will introduce a special program of rarely seen films about the late Shunryu Suzuki-roshi, the founder of the San Francisco Zen Center, on three Sunday evenings: at the Castro Theater in San Francisco on Sunday, at Wheeler Auditorium in Berkeley on Feb. 6, and at the Smith Rafael Film Center in San Rafael on Feb. 13.

Suzuki-roshi, a Japanese Zen priest belonging to the Soto lineage, was in his 50s when he came to San Francisco in 1959. Under his tutelage, the Zen Center grew into City Center, Green Gulch Farm and Tassajara Zen Mountain Center. Suzuki-roshi died in 1971.

The films include a KQED documentary filmed at Tassajara, a five-minute video made by a UCSF student, and a film of a Suzuki-roshi lecture.

Wenger put together a screening of films about Buddhism at the Castro a few years back, but the International Buddhist Film Festival, based in Berkeley, is the first official film festival devoted to the spiritual practice to come to the Bay Area. But the film festival is not the organization's first. Over the last four years, IBFF has presented festival events in cooperation with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, the Asia Society in New York, and the Buddhist Broadcasting Foundation in Amsterdam. IBFF also functions as a resource for distributing, programming and collecting films about the Buddhist experience.

Throughout the 17-day festival, the curious and converted can choose from more than 50 films, including documentaries, animated works and independent films from 15 countries, including several premieres with directors attending.

Among film highlights are a Fresh Look presentation of Jim Jarmusch's "Dead Man" (starring Johnny Depp, with a soundtrack by Neil Young); the San Francisco premiere of a little-known Giuseppe Tornatore ("Cinema
Paradiso") classic, "A Pure Formality" (starring Roman Polanski and Gerard Depardieu); the U.S. premiere of "Beyond the Mountain," by Korean director Chung Ji-young; the San Francisco premiere of "Hi! Dharma," by Korean director Kwan Park; and the U.S. premiere of a Thai feature, "Angulimala," by Suthed Tunnirat.

The festival also will screen the San Francisco premiere of the documentary "What Remains of Us," shot inside Tibet over eight years (1996- 2004), using small, sometimes hidden, digital cameras and without the sanction, or even knowledge, of the Chinese authorities.

Works by Bay Area filmmakers, including Ellen Bruno, Isaac Solotaroff and Sapana Sakya, will be presented.

One hot ticket is sure to be "The Compassion Concert," with Mickey Hart, Hamza El Din, former Kronos Quartet cellist Joan Jeanrenaud ("and
friends") Feb. 11 at Zellerbach Hall in Berkeley. Concert proceeds will benefit the Buddhist Film Society, with 10 percent of proceeds going to the tsunami relief effort.

Promising to be as intriguing as the film programming is a two-day conference on "Speaking for the Buddha? Buddhism and the Media." Organized by the Center for Buddhist Studies and the Institute of East Asian Studies, it will be offered at UC Berkeley's Barrows Hall, Feb. 8-9. The first day will be devoted to print media, the second to film, with panel discussions of Buddhist themes in movies, Hollywood's role in American Buddhism, and the use of Buddhist concepts and images in American advertising. A 30-minute screening of TV commercials and print ads from the U.S. media will be followed by a roundtable discussion. The conference is free and open to the public.

"Reflecting Buddha: Images By Contemporary Photographers," an exhibition and sale benefiting IBFF, opened earlier this month at the San Francisco Art Commission gallery. The exhibition, which closes Saturday, explores diverse Buddhist themes, ideas and imagery. Thirty-one artists contributed to the exhibition, including Richard Gere, Lena Herzog, Kenro Izu, Michael Kenna, Wayne Levin and Steve McCurry.

If you go

The International Buddhist Film Festival opens today and runs through Feb. 13 with screenings at the Castro Theater in San Francisco today-Sunday; the Wheeler Auditorium in Berkeley, Thursday-Feb.13; and the Smith Rafael Film Center in San Rafael, Feb. 10-13. www.ibff.org; (925) 275-9005.

For details on the Buddha and the Media conference, visit ieas.berkeley.edu/events/speakingforthebuddha.

We Need Your Help to Train the
Buddhist AI Chat Bot
NORBU!
(Neural Operator for Responsible Buddhist Understanding)



For Malaysians and Singaporeans, please make your donation to the following account:

Account Name: Bodhi Vision
Account No:. 2122 00000 44661
Bank: RHB

The SWIFT/BIC code for RHB Bank Berhad is: RHBBMYKLXXX
Address: 11-15, Jalan SS 24/11, Taman Megah, 47301 Petaling Jaya, Selangor
Phone: 603-9206 8118

Note: Please indicate your name in the payment slip. Thank you.


Dear Friends in the Dharma,

We seek your generous support to help us train NORBU, the word's first Buddhist AI Chat Bot.

Here are some ways you can contribute to this noble cause:

One-time Donation or Loan: A single contribution, regardless of its size, will go a long way in helping us reach our goal and make the Buddhist LLM a beacon of wisdom for all.

How will your donation / loan be used? Download the NORBU White Paper for details.



For Malaysians and Singaporeans, please make your donation to the following account:

Account Name: Bodhi Vision
Account No:. 2122 00000 44661
Bank: RHB

The SWIFT/BIC code for RHB Bank Berhad is: RHBBMYKLXXX
Address: 11-15, Jalan SS 24/11, Taman Megah, 47301 Petaling Jaya, Selangor
Phone: 603-9206 8118

Note: Please indicate your purpose of payment (loan or donation) in the payment slip. Thank you.

Once payment is banked in, please send the payment slip via email to: editor@buddhistchannel.tv. Your donation/loan will be published and publicly acknowledged on the Buddhist Channel.

Spread the Word: Share this initiative with your friends, family and fellow Dharma enthusiasts. Join "Friends of Norbu" at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/norbuchatbot. Together, we can build a stronger community and create a positive impact on a global scale.

Volunteer: If you possess expertise in AI, natural language processing, Dharma knowledge in terms of Buddhist sutras in various languages or related fields, and wish to lend your skills, please contact us. Your knowledge and passion could be invaluable to our project's success.

Your support is part of a collective effort to preserve and disseminate the profound teachings of Buddhism. By contributing to the NORBU, you become a "virtual Bodhisattva" to make Buddhist wisdom more accessible to seekers worldwide.

Thank you for helping to make NORBU a wise and compassionate Buddhist Chatbot!

May you be blessed with inner peace and wisdom,

With deepest gratitude,

Kooi F. Lim
On behalf of The Buddhist Channel Team


Note: To date, we have received the following contributions for NORBU:
US$ 75 from Gary Gach (Loan)
US$ 50 from Chong Sim Keong
MYR 300 from Wilson Tee
MYR 500 from Lim Yan Pok
MYR 50 from Oon Yeoh
MYR 200 from Ooi Poh Tin
MYR 300 from Lai Swee Pin
MYR 100 from Ong Hooi Sian
MYR 1,000 from Fam Sin Nin
MYR 500 from Oh teik Bin
MYR 300 from Yeoh Ai Guat
MYR 300 from Yong Lily
MYR 50 from Bandar Utama Buddhist Society
MYR 1,000 from Chiam Swee Ann
MYR 1,000 from Lye Veei Chiew
MYR 1,000 from Por Yong Tong
MYR 80 from Lee Wai Yee
MYR 500 from Pek Chee Hen
MYR 300 from Hor Tuck Loon
MYR 1,000 from Wise Payments Malaysia Sdn Bhd
MYR 200 from Teo Yen Hua
MYR 500 from Ng Wee Keat
MYR 10,000 from Chang Quai Hung, Jackie (Loan)
MYR 10,000 from K. C. Lim & Agnes (Loan)
MYR 10,000 from Juin & Jooky Tan (Loan)
MYR 100 from Poh Boon Fong (on behalf of SXI Buddhist Students Society)
MYR 10,000 from Fam Shan-Shan (Loan)
MYR 10,000 from John Fam (Loan)
MYR 500 from Phang Cheng Kar
MYR 100 from Lee Suat Yee
MYR 500 from Teo Chwee Hoon (on behalf of Lai Siow Kee)
MYR 200 from Mak Yuen Chau

We express our deep gratitude for the support and generosity.

If you have any enquiries, please write to: editor@buddhistchannel.tv


TOP