Skip to content
logo, one version
  • about
  • blog
  • weekly sessions
  • teachers
  • resourcesExpand
    • recommended reading
    • a short course in Buddhist meditation
    • contemplative poetry
    • for further exploration
  • signup
  • contact
logo, one version
appreciate your life with simple mindfuness

Relevant Links

The resources offered here are meant to help you discover the breadth of contemporary expressions of Early Buddhist thought and practice.

You will not find links to Mahayana or Vajrayana resources only because of the limited and specific focus of this website and of this Buddhist community, not because of any implied superiority of one expression of Buddhism over another.

Personally, I have a deep love for Buddhist wisdom and I respect all Buddhist traditions.

You will find here a number of suggested resources grouped into four broad topic areas (see Table of Contents for details below).

Mindfulness and the secular approach
Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
The teachings of Early Buddhism
Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
  • Mindfulness and the secular approach
    • Secular mindfulness and personal development
  • Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
    • Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.
      • Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)
      • Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA
      • Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula
      • Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)
      • Common Ground Meditation Center
      • Mid America Dharma
      • The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)
      • Southern Dharma Retreat Center
    • Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.
      • Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition
      • Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka
      • Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach
      • The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition
      • The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma
  • Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.
    • Centers in North America
    • Centers in the The UK and Europe
    • Centers in Australia and New Zealand
    • Centers in Africa
    • Centers in Thailand
    • Centers in Sri Lanka
    • Centers in Burma
  • The teachings of Early Buddhism
  • Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
    • As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders
    • Resources to assist white people in this work
    • Resources related to the environmental crisis
    • Other resources that may be helpful
  • Please see our Suggested Reading page

Mindfulness and the secular approach

Secular Buddhism is growing as a unique modern take on Buddhist practice and thought. As a “movement” it owes a lot to the writings of the former Buddhist monk Stephen Bachelor, especially his Confession of a Buddhist Atheist. This is a pragmatic approach to Buddhist teachings based on humanist values. From the Secular Buddhist podcast:

Secular Buddhism allows for the ancient wisdom of early Buddhism to be added to whatever background/world view you already possess. Whether you’re a Christian, Muslim, Atheist, Hindu, Believer, Non-believer, it doesn’t really matter; Secular Buddhism is about helping you to become a better whatever you already are.

What is secular Buddhism?

Secular mindfulness and personal development

Back in the late 1970s, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D, developed a modern, scientific-based application of traditional Buddhist principles of mindfulness and meditation and developed a flexible approach to reducing stress called MBSR — Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction.

There are so many MBSR programs and trainings worldwide that it would be a monumental task to list them all here. Instead, here are just a few resources available to those interested in MBSR.

I must give a shout out here to the MARC program — The Mindful Awareness Research Center, which is a partner of the Center for Psychoneuroimmunology at UCLA. This innovative research center provides an excellent set of free guided meditation exercises. They also have a very well produced app on on Google Play or Apple App store.

Here are just a few of the well-known online MBSR classes, which are taught in an 8 week series:

Mindful Leader.

UMass Memorial Health.

Mindfulness Meditation Live.

East Coast Mindfulness.

Mindfulness has also found it’s way into public education, with impressive results. Have a look at the Mindfulness in The Schools Project, whose aim is to improve the lives of a generation of children and young people by making a genuine, positive difference to their mental health and well being.

The popular Buddhist Geeks podcast asks the question: “How can we serve the convergence of Buddhism with rapidly evolving technology and an increasingly global culture?”

They organize an annual conference and week-long retreat, and their podcast holds interviews and discussions with Buddhist teachers, scholars and advanced practitioners.

Mind & Life Institute is dedicated to creating a collaboration and research partnership between modern science and Buddhism to better understand the mind and create positive change in the world.

At this critical moment in history, it’s clear that efforts to address mounting global challenges must take into account our inner lives, and how individual well-being contributes to collective flourishing.

buddha life9 scaled e1625653185734
  • Mindfulness and the secular approach
    • Secular mindfulness and personal development
  • Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
    • Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.
      • Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)
      • Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA
      • Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula
      • Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)
      • Common Ground Meditation Center
      • Mid America Dharma
      • The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)
      • Southern Dharma Retreat Center
    • Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.
      • Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition
      • Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka
      • Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach
      • The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition
      • The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma
  • Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.
    • Centers in North America
    • Centers in the The UK and Europe
    • Centers in Australia and New Zealand
    • Centers in Africa
    • Centers in Thailand
    • Centers in Sri Lanka
    • Centers in Burma
  • The teachings of Early Buddhism
  • Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
    • As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders
    • Resources to assist white people in this work
    • Resources related to the environmental crisis
    • Other resources that may be helpful
  • Please see our Suggested Reading page

Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West

I include here a sampling of the major Western teaching centers of meditation following Early Buddhism. One could say there are four major lineages of Buddhist meditation that have taken root in the West:

From Burma–the lineage of Mahasi Sayadaw and his successor, the late U Pandita Sayadaw.

From Burma– the lineage of Pa-Auk Forest Sayadaw.

From Burma– the lineage of U Ba Khin and his student S.N. Goenka.

From Thailand–various Thai Forest lineages of which Ajahn Chah and the American monk Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu are the best known representatives.

Teachers in the West vary in the degree to which they follow the model set by their Asian teaching lineage. Some well-known teachers blend their understanding of the practices they inherited from Asia with insights from psychology, ecology and literature. I call these centers ones that follow their Asian influence less meticulously.

There are also teachers which follow their inherited Asian lineage very meticulously, and these are grouped together and listed below as well.

Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.

Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)

IMS is one of the Western world’s oldest and most-respected meditation retreat centers. We are dedicated to providing a spiritual refuge for all who seek freedom of mind and heart.

Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA

Located on over 400 acres in beautiful West Marin County just north of San Francisco, Spirit Rock offers a refuge from everyday life where it’s truly possible to quiet the mind, soften the heart and see life in a new way. The caring teachers, staff, and volunteers, create a supportive environment for turning inward and letting go of the struggles that get in the way of experiencing the freedom and joy that are inherent in every moment of life.

Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula

The Insight Meditation Center is a community-based, urban refuge for the teachings and practice of insight meditation, also known as mindfulness or vipassana meditation. We offer Buddhist teachings in clear, accessible and open-handed ways.

Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)

CIMC is a non-residential urban center for the teaching and practice of insight meditation. CIMC’s programs are designed to provide a strong foundation in formal meditation as well as daily practice. An open invitation is extended to all to stop by CIMC and browse through the library or join in any of the public sittings or Wednesday evening Dharma talks.

Common Ground Meditation Center

Based in Minneapolis, MN, and supporting the Twin Cities mindfulness meditation community, Common Ground exists to support the awakening of suffering beings through the development of an ethical life, the cultivation of a pure heart and quiet mind, and through a deepening of insight into the way things are.

Mid America Dharma

Mid America Dharma is a non-profit organization dedicated to making the practice of vipassana or Insight Meditation available to others in the central region of the United States.

The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)

The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS) is a non-profit organization devoted to offering the Buddha’s teachings on insight and awareness to all those who seek them. Founded by a group of longtime practitioners of the dharma, or teachings of the Buddha, SIMS intends to create and nurture an open and cohesive spiritual community, or sangha, to support the practice of mindfulness in daily life.

Southern Dharma Retreat Center

Southern Dharma Retreat Center is a nonprofit educational facility, welcoming a variety of spiritual paths, whose purpose is to offer meditation retreats. Southern Dharma is located in a remote mountainous area of Western North Carolina, an hour northwest of Asheville. Facilities include a meditation hall, dormitory, a private forest hermitage and creekside campsites.

Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.

Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition

Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery is a Buddhist community in Redwood, CA, in the Thai Forest Tradition of Ajahn Chah, and his Western student Ajahn Sumedho.  It is a part of a large international network of monasteries in this tradition, e.g.,–>Amaravati Buddhist Monastery in England.

Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka

Bhavana Society – Established in Washington DC, in 1982 by Bhante Henepola Gunaratana Mahathera, the Bhavana Society is dedicated to the practice of Theravada Buddhist meditation. The center offers rare opportunities to practice Vipassana meditation in an ideal setting, in keeping with the forest traditions of Sri Lanka.

Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach

Mahasi.us are a non-profit network of Vipassana meditators, retreat organizers, and independent meditation centers in North America and Europe. Their aim is to provide information about Vipassana meditation as taught by the 20th century Burmese teacher Mahasi Sayadaw.

Saddhamma Foundation is devoted to supporting meditation practice and the teachings of Theravada Buddhism–in particular the work of the late Venerable Sayadaw U Pandita’s disciples. A renowned meditation master, Sayadaw U Pandita was a chief disciple of the Late Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw of Burma.

Tathagatha Meditation Center – was formed under the spiritual guidance of the late Venerable U Silananda in 1987. The group progressed until 1991 when it founded Tathagata Meditation Center (TMC), following the tradition of Mahasi Sayadaw of Burma, and located in San Jose, California.

The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition

There are many hundreds of centers wordlwide teaching Vipassana Meditation as taught by S.N. Goenka in the tradition of Sayagyi U Ba Khin. An Introduction to Vipassana by Mr. Goenka & related videos and Questions & Answers about Vipassana are available.

There are six International Meditation Centres in the Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition. All were founded to provide facilities for the instruction and practice of Theravada Buddhist Meditation. Each of the centres in the West is a direct offshoot of the International Meditation Centre of Yangon, Myanmar (formerly Rangoon, Burma), which was founded by Sayagyi U Ba Khin.

The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma

Pa-Auk Meditation Group comprises over 40 branches and associate centres in Myanmar and internationally. Of all the branches and associate centres, 29 are located within Myanmar, the others are located internationally, spreading from Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Nepal, China, Taiwan, and USA.

Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.

Centers in North America

Aloka Vihara/Saranaloka Foundation The Saranaloka Foundation supports a small community of Theravada Buddhist nuns living at Aloka Vihara in the Sierra Foothills of California. There, a rural monastery is being developed where women can live and train as nuns and where the lay community can practice.

Asheville Insight Meditation A meditation community located in Asheville, North Carolina offering weekly guided meditation sessions, classes, visits from meditation teachers, reading resources, group sharing and resources for participating in extended retreats.

Brazos Insight Meditation is a community of meditators, providing the opportunity to learn about and practice the Buddhist Theravadan tradition in Bryan/College Station, Texas. We seek peace, understanding and wisdom through developing mindfulness in meditation and everyday life.

Buffalo Mindfulness Community offers spiritual education and training about mindfulness (the cultivation of a non-judgmental awareness of the mind-body) and loving-kindness (the intention for all beings to be free from the root of suffering).

Cambridge Insight Meditation is a non-residential urban center for the teaching and practice of insight meditation. CIMC’s programs are designed to provide a strong foundation in formal meditation as well as daily practice. An open invitation is extended to all to stop by CIMC and browse through the library or join in any of the public sittings or Wednesday evening Dharma talks.

Collingswood Insight Meditation is a Buddhist community (or sangha) located just outside Philadelphia in Collingswood, New Jersey. Weekly gatherings include sitting and walking meditation practice, peer-led dharma discussion, and mindful listening. In our busy urban context, practicing mindfulness in community is a powerful support to one’s spiritual path to awakening.

The Community Meditation Center is located in New York City on Manhattan’s upper west side. With a relaxed and comfortable atmosphere, the CMC offers classes, Insight Meditation (Vipassana) instruction and practice, daylong retreats, workshops, and social events.

Delaware Valley Insight is a Vipassana, or insight meditation, community active in the greater Philadelphia area throughout Southeastern Pennsylvania, Southern New Jersey and Northern Delaware.

Dharma Zephyr Insight Meditation Community Dharma Zephyr Insight Meditation Community represents Buddhist Vipassana (insight) meditation groups in northern Nevada.

Gainesville Vipassana Society Located in Gainesville, Florida, the purpose of the Gainesville Vipassana Society is to support the practice of Vipassana (Insight Meditation) by offering frequent residential retreats and weekly sitting groups.

Insight Chicago Meditation is a nonprofit organization which hosts  weekly meditation groups (sanghas) around a variety of Chicagoland’s diverse neighborhoods. Our intention is to serve as a resource within the community supporting the practice of Insight (Vipassana) meditation as grounded in the teachings of the Buddha.

Insight Community of the Desert Located in Palm Springs, California, The Insight Community of the Desert’s mission is to cultivate peace, compassion and interconnection through mindfulness practice and wisdom teachings from Buddhist and other contemplative traditions. The center offers weekly meditation and teaching, daylong retreats and class series. Larry Yang serves as guiding teacher.

Insight Meditation in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Friendly, open Sunday morning sitting group, vipassana classes for beginning and continuing meditators. Weekend retreats several times a year, vipassana instruction in the traditional Theravadan tradition.

InsightLA under the direction of Trudy Goodman, guides the practice of Buddhist meditation individually, in sitting groups, and through retreats in the Los Angeles and Southern California area. We offer a range of programs which include the practice of Insight Meditation, also known as Vipassana in the Buddhist tradition.

Insight Meditation Center of Redwood City, California has been meeting since 1986. It is a gathering of individuals who meet in order to learn, support and deepen their mindfulness practice. It is an informal group and those interested in mindfulness meditation are heartily welcome to join whenever they wish.

The Insight Meditation Center of Newburyport offers a variety of meditation opportunities including daily sittings, practice groups, retreats and workshops. IMCN is conveniently located in a beautiful rural setting close to I-95 and downtown Newburyport, Massachusetts.

The Insight Meditation Center of the Pioneer Valley IMC PV is a non-residential urban center located in Easthampton, MA. Its mission is to offer the Buddha’s teachings of liberation to all those who are interested and to those who want to sustain and deepen their practice.

The Insight Meditation Community of Charlottesville IMCC holds a weekly sangha meeting with a period of meditation, followed by a dharma talk. The teachers also offer two other weekly sits, a biannual Introduction to Mindfulness Meditation course, a weeklong retreat as well as a weekend and several daylong retreats.

Insight Meditation Community of Columbia Located in South Carolina, we are a peer-led group of practitioners with diverse levels of experience who meet for meditation and discussion on vipassana meditation and lovingkindness (metta) practice. We also study and practice mindfulness with the intention of integrating wisdom and manifesting compassion in all aspects of our lives.

Insight Meditation Community of New Jersey offers peer support and beginning instruction in Vipassana (Insight) meditation. The purpose of our community is to provide a supportive and friendly environment for the practice of meditation.

Insight Meditation South Bay IMSB, dedicated to the liberating teachings of the Buddha, was founded by Shaila Catherine to support Buddhist meditation practice in the Silicon Valley and South Bay area of California. IMSB offers training in mindfulness-based meditation, lovingkindness, ethics, concentration and jhana practices.

Insight San Diego invites you to join a new study group. Using Joseph Goldstein’s book, Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Awakening as a guide, this group will methodically explore the fundamental path to awakening as described by the Buddha in the Satipatthana Sutta.

Madison Insight Meditation Group is comprised of people with varying levels of training and experience in Vipassana, or Insight Meditation. They focus on the essence of the Buddha’s teachings that underlie 2500 years of cultural traditions.

Mahapajapati Monastery Mahapajapati Women’s Monastery is located in the hi-desert region of the Mojave Desert. We strive to practice the teachings of the Buddha. We  observe the traditional “rains” retreat, a three month retreat, from July-Oct.

Mariposa Sangha offers weekly meditation, book discussions, beginning meditation instruction and Dharma talks. There are experienced meditators available to provide instruction. We collaborate with other Texas sanghas to offer retreats in Central Texas with visiting teachers from Spirit Rock in Woodacre, CA and Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS).

Mid America Dharma is a non-profit organization dedicated to making the practice of vipassana or Insight Meditation available to others in the central region of the United States.

Mindful Harlem is a non-profit community center dedicated to the practice of mindfulness as a vehicle for an awakened life. Through meditation, dharma talks and yoga, individuals will be guided toward recognition of their inner wisdom as the path for liberation.

Mindfulness Outreach Initiative Located in Omaha, Nebraska, Mindfulness Outreach Initiative (MOI) is a non-profit organization providing Insight Meditation instruction rooted in the Early Buddhist teachings of ethics, concentration, and wisdom.

Monmouth Insight Meditation includes Monmouth County, New Jersey, residents who enjoy the benefits of Insight Meditation. They offer a peer-led group in a community space on Monday evenings.

The Mountain Hermitage Conceived as small meditation center in the exquisite, pristine, high country of northern New Mexico, The Mountain Hermitage is dedicated to the cultivation of wisdom and compassion and a way of life based on teachings of the Buddha. Marcia Rose is the founder and guiding teacher.

New York Insight Meditation Center was founded as a nonprofit center for the practice of mindful awareness (vipassana or insight meditation). NYI provides a place where all are welcome to begin or deepen meditation practice based on the liberation teachings of the Buddha. Programs include evenings with renowned meditation teachers, ongoing classes, daylong retreats and weekend courses for the integration of meditation teachings in daily life.

Open Door Sangha is a community for Buddhist practice, primarily in the Insight (Vipassana) tradition, in Santa Barbara, California. The Sangha offers weekly meditation groups, introductory meditation classes, occasional daylong mini-retreats and weekend retreats with well-known Buddhist teachers. All are welcome.

The Philadelphia Meditation Center A Non-sectarian Meditation Center in the Philadelphia Area. A center for regular silent meditation practice. A place for learning in an open and non-sectarian environment. A place to meet others, learn a non-hierarchical, non-teacher centered place where we can support each other’s spiritual growth.

Philly Insight – Northeast Philly Insight – Northeast is a peer-led insight meditation group that meets on the first and third Tuesdays of each month for meditation and dhamma discussion (and sometimes cookies). We welcome beginners and experienced meditators alike.

Princeton Insight Meditation is a meditation group that welcomes and respects all spiritual and religious traditions. We offer knowledge, skills and tools that can be naturally integrated into daily life and personal values.

Roswell Insight Meditation Community We are a teacher led diverse community of practitioners dedicated to cultivating greater compassion, understanding and wisdom, through the teachings of the Buddha.  These teachings, or Dharma, provide a path of practice, leading directly to the reduction of our personal and collective suffering.

Sacramento Insight Meditation”s mission is to serve as a learning, training, and community center for the development, integration, and skillful use of meditation practices and awareness in all aspects of individual, family, educational, institutional, work, and community life.

Sandy Springs Insight Meditation A peer-led insight meditation group in Atlanta, GA, that meets weekly for meditation and dharma discussions.

Santa Fe Vipassana Sangha A Dharma Community in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Santa Fe Vipassana Sangha is a community of Dharma practitioners seeking liberation through Insight Meditation and integration of the Buddha’s teachings into daily life.

Southern Dharma Retreat Center is a nonprofit educational facility, welcoming a variety of spiritual paths, whose purpose is to offer meditation retreats. Southern Dharma is located in a remote mountainous area of Western North Carolina, an hour northwest of Asheville.

Taos Mountain Sangha Based in the beautiful mountains and mesas of Northern New Mexico, Taos Mountain Sangha is a small community-based meditation center dedicated to the practice and teaching of Buddhist principles.

Temple Forest Monastery is a Buddhist monastery in the Thai forest tradition of Ajahn Chah and Ajahn Sumedho, located in the small town of Temple, New Hampshire. The monastery aims to provide an accessible contemplative sanctuary for anyone interested in this way of life.

True North Insight is a nonprofit center for the practice of insight (vipassana) meditation in English and French in Eastern Canada. TNI’s programming includes residential retreats, day-long retreats, non-residential daily life retreats, and weekly sitting groups in the regions of Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and Kingston.

Triangle Insight Meditation Community We are an Insight Meditation community located in Durham, NC, founded over ten years ago by three graduates of Spirit Rock’s Community Dharma Leader Program, and a fourth founder who teaches Insight Dialogue.

Vallecitos Mountain Refuge is a wilderness ranch and contemplative retreat center seeking to strengthen and support progressive leaders and advocacy organizations working for social change and the protection of the environment in our society.

Valley Insight Meditation Society based in the Upper Valley of New Hampshire and Vermont, is a spiritual refuge for all who seek freedom of mind and heart. We offer weekly sitting groups suitable for beginners and more experienced meditators; non-residential retreats; and meditation instruction — all rooted in the ethics, concentration and wisdom teachings of Insight (Vipassana) Buddhism.

Vermont Insight Meditation is a community-based, non-residential center for the practice of Vipassana or Insight meditation, and for the study of Buddhist teachings and mindfulness practice in daily life. We are located at Solar Hill, 229 Western Avenue in Brattleboro, Vermont.

Vipassana Metta Foundation of Maui Located on Maui, the Vipassana Metta Foundation currently conducts regular silent vipassana metta retreats: daylong, weekend, annual two-week (March) and an annual month-long (August)..Our vision includes establishing a small spiritual sanctuary and hermitage for solitary dhamma practice.

Vipassana Hawaii was established in Honolulu in 1984 to support the teachings of classical Buddhism and to make them relevant to the issues of our day. Our teachers currently offer weekly guided sittings, classes for old and new students, individual meditation instruction, and weekend, ten-day and three-week retreats.

The Westcoast Dharma Society was formed in Vancouver, BC, Canada to promote Buddhist meditation practices (primarily Vipassana and Metta) for the benefit of all beings. WDS focuses on retreat management with the specific mandate of bringing senior Western Dharma teachers to Vancouver to lead meditation retreats.

Western Connecticut Insight Meditation Society The Western Connecticut Insight Meditation Society is a community of Insight meditators at all stages of practice that gather together on a regular basis to learn, to practice and to provide support, inspiration and fellowship to one another.

Centers in the The UK and Europe

Dhamma Madrid An English- and Spanish-speaking Buddhist meditation community located in Madrid. We offer weekly meditation sittings as well as occasional day-long and weekend retreats.

The Forest Hermitage – Wat Pah Santidhamma  is a Buddhist monastery after the style of the forest monasteries of N.E. Thailand but set in the Heart of England. It is owned and maintained by the Buddha-Dhamma Fellowship on behalf of and for the Bhikkhu Sangha, the community of monks founded by the Buddha more than 2,500 years ago.

Kalyana Centre for Mindfulness is located in the southwest of Ireland, on the Dingle Peninsula, close to Mount Brandon.The Centre offers Mindfulness Meditation, as well as Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction.

Nirodha is a Theravada Buddhist organization based in Helsinki, Finland. The group organizes weekly sittings, practice days, silent meditation retreats, courses and study groups.

Seminarhaus Engl is a non-profit organization that was founded 1990 to offer retreats from different Buddhist traditions. We were inspired and encouraged by Sylvia Wetzel and Fred von Allmen. Engl is set among fields and woods in Niederbayern, about 100 km east of Munich, Germany.

The Sharpham Trust, Devon, England offers a broad education in traditional Buddhist values critically applied to contemporary needs. The nature of this education is meditative, transformative and creative. The curriculum is designed to nurture a wiser and more compassionate orientation to daily life.

Stichting Inzichts Meditatie This organization promotes the practice of vipassana meditation in The Netherlands and organizes vipassana meditation retreats with teachers from the East and the West.

The Swedish Vipassanagruppen is a Swedish nonprofit organization for people who are interested in insight meditation. They arrange regular sittings, seminars and retreats.

Vimalakirti Center in Geneva  Switzerland, the Vimalakirti Center offers classes in vipassana meditation and other practices within the Buddhist tradition. Its founding teachers are Patricia Genoud-Feldman and Charles Genoud.

Centers in Australia and New Zealand

Bodhinyanarama is a monastic residence of the Theravada tradition of Buddhism set in a 51 hectare Native Reserve of regenerating bush 29 kms from Wellington, New Zealand. Bodhinyanarama has its origins in the Thai Forest Tradition and is associated with the many branch monasteries of meditation master Ajahn Chah.

Buddhist Society of Western Australia is a Theravada Buddhist group based on the forest tradition of SE Asia. It was started by a small group in 1973 and has since grown to become the largest Buddhist organisation in Australia. We have members throughout Western Australia, in all states of Australia and Christmas Island, and overseas in countries such as Canada, UK, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore and USA.

Te Moata is a beautiful retreat center situated six kilometres north of Tairua, New Zealand, in 850 acres of protected native forest in the heart of the Coromandel peninsula. Te Moata offers regular Insight Meditation Retreats and many other workshops.

Centers in Africa

Dharmagiri, which means sacred mountain, is the name of a hermitage founded by Kittisaro and Thanissara on the border of Lesotho and South Africa in 2000. It is a small center hosts meditation retreats and educational courses, including guided self-retreat as well as scheduled retreats.

The Uganda Buddhist Centre was established on April 10, 2005. This centre was founded by Venerable Buddharakkhita with the dedicated support of a group of pioneering devotees led by Felista Nampiima and Joyce Nakatte. The primary aim of the centre is to spread Buddhism in Uganda and other African countries.

Centers in Thailand

Suan Mokkh Suan Mokkh is a forest monastery along the coast of Southern Thailand, 600 km from Bangkok. It was founded in 1932 by Buddhadasa Bhikkhu and grew to become the most innovative and progressive Buddhist teaching center in Siam. Although Buddhadasa Bhikkhu has passed away, much of his work continues.

Centers in Sri Lanka

Centers in Burma

Pa-Auk Forest Monastery is a Buddhist monastery in the Theravada tradition, with emphasis on the teaching and practice of both Samatha (tranquility) and Vipassana (insight) meditation. Situated in a forest along the Taung Nyo Mountain range in Mon State, Myanmar, the monastery provides a conducive setting for the practice of long-term, intensive meditation.

The International Meditation Centres There are six International Meditation Centres in the Sayagyi U Ba Khin tradition of Burma. All were founded to provide facilities for the instruction and practice of Theravada Buddhist Meditation. Each of the centres in the West is a direct offshoot of the International Meditation Centre of Yangon, Myanmar.

Buddha Life Image scaled e1625653040639
  • Mindfulness and the secular approach
    • Secular mindfulness and personal development
  • Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
    • Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.
      • Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)
      • Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA
      • Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula
      • Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)
      • Common Ground Meditation Center
      • Mid America Dharma
      • The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)
      • Southern Dharma Retreat Center
    • Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.
      • Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition
      • Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka
      • Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach
      • The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition
      • The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma
  • Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.
    • Centers in North America
    • Centers in the The UK and Europe
    • Centers in Australia and New Zealand
    • Centers in Africa
    • Centers in Thailand
    • Centers in Sri Lanka
    • Centers in Burma
  • The teachings of Early Buddhism
  • Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
    • As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders
    • Resources to assist white people in this work
    • Resources related to the environmental crisis
    • Other resources that may be helpful
  • Please see our Suggested Reading page

The teachings of Early Buddhism

I present in this section resources you might find helpful in exploring early Buddhist thought and practice. The links below offer a variety of approaches–some are unabashedly traditional, while others less so.

The Buddha’s Teaching As It Is – An excellent way to get a feel for Early Buddhist teachings, recorded back in 1979 by Bhikkhu Bodhi. A wonderful and very accurate set of four talks.  This is to many practicing Buddhists comparable to The White Album by the Beatles– a classic!

Access To Insight – Very thorough and comprehensive resources for practice and meditation — directories, text archives, self-guided tour through the Pali Canon. See for example their–>> A Path to Freedom: A Self-guided Tour of the Buddha’s Teachings.

Barre Center for Buddhist Studies – Onsite and online programs supportive of personal transformation through Buddhist inquiry as a way of developing wisdom and compassion for the benefit of all beings. (Barre, MA, USA).

Sati Center for Buddhist Studies – cholarly inquiry, personal practice, and training in the application of the original Buddhist texts in support of our wider world, with an appreciation for the richness of the tradition and lineage.

Paliaudio – offers readings from the Pali Suttas (Buddhist scriptures) in English.

Buddha Net – is a large, non-sectarian online database of Buddhist educational and supportive resources. It is a not-for-profit organization affiliated with the Buddha Dharma Education Association, which was started in 1992 as a vipassana meditation center in Sydney by Ven. Pannyavaro.

Sutta Readings – A selection of the Buddha’s Suttas read aloud by senior teachers and practitioners in the Theravada Buddhist tradition.

Suttacentral – A large collection of teachings attributed to the Buddha or his earliest disciples, with a special focus on the Pali texts, the core of the Theravada school. Teachings are offered in original languages, translations in modern languages.

bodhisattvas scaled e1626082839888
  • Mindfulness and the secular approach
    • Secular mindfulness and personal development
  • Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
    • Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.
      • Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)
      • Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA
      • Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula
      • Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)
      • Common Ground Meditation Center
      • Mid America Dharma
      • The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)
      • Southern Dharma Retreat Center
    • Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.
      • Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition
      • Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka
      • Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach
      • The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition
      • The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma
  • Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.
    • Centers in North America
    • Centers in the The UK and Europe
    • Centers in Australia and New Zealand
    • Centers in Africa
    • Centers in Thailand
    • Centers in Sri Lanka
    • Centers in Burma
  • The teachings of Early Buddhism
  • Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
    • As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders
    • Resources to assist white people in this work
    • Resources related to the environmental crisis
    • Other resources that may be helpful
  • Please see our Suggested Reading page

Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues

As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders

Social justice issues were never outside of the central focus of Early Buddhism. Many today incorrectly believe the Buddha’s teaching was solely concerned with an individual’s liberation from the ills of the world.

As modern day inheritors of these priceless wisdom teaching, it is crucial we extend our meditation practice outward from the “internal” realm of personal healing and insight into the “external” realm of collective healing and liberation.

As the great civil rights leader Fannie Lou Hamer famously said,

Nobody’s free until everybody’s free.

But this work starts with ourselves, as an often deeply challenging process of self-reflection. Our meditation practice allows us to recognize our unconscious bias, and gives us the space to become less reactive and to choose how we respond to injustice and to heal from our own injustices.

Law professor and mindfulness teacher Rhonda Magee shows that by healing from injustices and dissolving our personal barriers to connection we can view others with compassion and to live in community with people who may have beliefs and opinion contrary to our own.

This is from Rhonda’s recently published book The Inner Work of Racial Justice: Healing Ourselves and Transforming Our Communities Through Mindfulness:

Because there are so many rivers of pain joining and forming the ocean of racial suffering in our times, personal awareness practices are essential for racial justice work. In order for real change to occur, we must be able to examine our own experiences, discover the “situated” nature of our perspectives, and understand the ways that race and racism are mere cultural constructions.

The individual interdependence with the world of suffering beings was at the heart of many of the historic Buddha’s oral message to his students. Our work as modern day practitioners is to seek our collective liberation with the same passion we have brought to the path of individual healing.

Doing so honestly we recognize our interdependence with all beings.

May our practice and study be for the benefit of all.

What follows is a selection of resources highlighting this expansive view of Buddhist practice as social justice practice. I have chosen statements and articles by modern day Buddhist thought leaders and well as from teachers and groups addressing these critical issues in this time of global crisis.

Resources to assist white people in this work

When popular Buddhist mindfulness teacher Tara Brach came to recognize her own white privilege, it revealed blind spots. That changed her as a dharma teacher and leader. Writing in Lion’s Roar- >Facing My White Privilege

Mindfulness teacher Oren Jay Sofer offers 10 Things White People Can Do To Work For Racial Justice.

An excellent short video by Ruth King, author of the very popular book Mindful of Race: Transforming Racism From The Inside Out in which she says “Racism is a heart disease that’s curable. Cultivating a heart (through mindfulness practice) that is wise and open can be the medicine that heals this condition.”

Pamela Ayo Yetunde’s recent article in Lion’s Roar –>Buddhism in the Age of #BlackLivesMatter. Pamela is the author of Black and Buddhist: What Buddhism Can Teach Us about Race, Resilience, Transformation, and Freedom.

Buddhist Peace Fellowship
The mission of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship (BPF), founded in 1978, is to serve as a catalyst for socially engaged Buddhism. BPF’s purpose is to help beings liberate themselves from the suffering that manifests in individuals, relationships, institutions, and social systems. Their programs, publications, and practice groups link Buddhist teachings of wisdom and compassion with progressive social change.

Resources related to the environmental crisis

One Earth Sangha “May all beings be well ” is more than a blessing. It is wise action to actively protect the health of the elements and all species, including our own. This organization offers ways to be involved.

Other resources that may be helpful

East Bay Meditation’s Resources for White People

White Awake’s “Waking Up to Race“

Anti-racist resources for secular Buddhists

Jack Kornfield’s personal anti-racism resources

  • Mindfulness and the secular approach
    • Secular mindfulness and personal development
  • Buddhist meditation as practiced in the West
    • Meditation taught in a humanistic context, following their lineages less meticulously.
      • Insight Meditation Center in Barre, Massachusetts, USA (IMS)
      • Spirit Rock Meditation Center, West Marin County, California, USA
      • Insight Meditation Center of the Mid-Peninsula
      • Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC)
      • Common Ground Meditation Center
      • Mid America Dharma
      • The Seattle Insight Meditation Society (SIMS)
      • Southern Dharma Retreat Center
    • Main Western centers meticulously following their lineages.
      • Abhayagiri Monastery: Ajahn Chah tradition
      • Bhavana Society: forest traditions of Sri Lanka
      • Centers following the Mahasi Sayadaw approach
      • The Sayagyi U Ba Khin Tradition
      • The Pa Auk Tradition from Burma
  • Smaller branch centers teaching Buddhist meditation world-wide.
    • Centers in North America
    • Centers in the The UK and Europe
    • Centers in Australia and New Zealand
    • Centers in Africa
    • Centers in Thailand
    • Centers in Sri Lanka
    • Centers in Burma
  • The teachings of Early Buddhism
  • Racism, social justice, the environmental crises, and LGBTQ issues
    • As addressed by contemporary Buddhist thought leaders
    • Resources to assist white people in this work
    • Resources related to the environmental crisis
    • Other resources that may be helpful
  • Please see our Suggested Reading page

And finally — a very comprehensive reading list covering many aspects of Buddhism of interest to contemporary practitioners ->

Please see our Suggested Reading page

This resource lists books in the following categories

  • Meditation guidance
  • The Buddhist tradition
  • The Suttas of the Buddha
  • Buddhism in the West
  • People of color and Buddhism
  • Buddhist books for children, youth and teens
  • Socially engaged Buddhism
  • Women in Buddhism
  • Mindfulness-based practices in medicine and neuroscience
  • Buddhism and psychology
  • and much more

Happy reading!

  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Email
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Reddit
  • Share on WhatsApp
join the Aloha Sangha familywe all need a little support sometimes

Enter your best email below and we'll send you our weekly support newsletter to help keep you moving forward on this journey of a lifetime. You can easily unsubscribe anytime.

Enter your email address

A mind unruffled by the vagaries of fortune, from sorrow freed, from disturbing emotions cleansed, from fear liberated, this is the greatest blessing.

~The Buddha (Mangala Sutta)

When you find your place where you actually are, practice occurs. When you find your way at this moment, practice occurs. Here is the place. Here the way unfolds.

Dogen, 1200 – 1253, Genjōkōan: Actualizaing the Fundamental Point

We can always imagine more perfect conditions. But it's not our task to create ideals, but to learn from the world as it is. For the awakening of the heart, conditions are always good enough.

Ajahn Sumedho

Facebook Group Facebook GroupYouTube YouTube
  • about
  • blog
  • weekly meetings
  • teachers
  • intro to Buddhist meditation
  • resources

topics

© 2025 Aloha Sangha ~ made with love in Honolulu

Scroll to top
at times, we all need a little encouragementsign up below-we'll send you some every week

Sign up for our free weekly support newsletter, and we'll send you two guided mindfulness meditation programs, plus lots of insider tips and info.

Enter your email address
  • about
  • blog
  • weekly sessions
  • teachers
  • resources
    • recommended reading
    • a short course in Buddhist meditation
    • contemplative poetry
    • for further exploration
  • signup
  • contact
Search