Buddhist Peace Action Vermont

Buddhist Peace Action Vermont Vermont is very fortunate to have a large number of Buddhists or people who practice some form of Buddhist meditation.

They come from a wide variety of lineages and learn and practice in many different settings including the many sanghas and retreat cente The Vermont Chapter of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship is composed of Buddhists and Buddhist oriented people who communicate together by meeting monthly and/or by this page to plan and carry out activities to put their spiritual values and beliefs into action.

Vince Vermette installing a fiberglass roof on my sanctuary where I meditate and nap and now maybe sleep.
05/01/2025

Vince Vermette installing a fiberglass roof on my sanctuary where I meditate and nap and now maybe sleep.

02/17/2025
02/17/2025

Plant-based cooking course

12/13/2024

Not to spoil your day or anything, but... đŸ„€

12/13/2024
01/13/2023

Dear friends, here's Letter to the Editor by BPAV Board member, George Plumb.

Economy Ethics

Our exploding global population — 186,000 more people each and every day — clings for life to an exploding economy, a system faithful not to the habitat it exploits, but only the single species which gorges on it. Our economy obeys not the limits of the biosphere but the limitlessness of human greed.

I have long distrusted this economy. I was among a few volunteers who helped found the Hunger Mountain Coop when it was just a small group of us who gathered to buy bulk from a national cooperative and then met to divide up the bulk among us locals. That was in the ’60s and we judged that was a better way to buy than through commercial stores. I have invested my modest discretionary wealth in a green investment business instead of the regular stock market. I have flown in a jet plane only once in my life for recreation because I felt jet travel is harmful to the environment. The list goes on. The economy not only seemed to be helping the few, more than the many, but also day by day inflicting more and more damage on our habitat.

So, I was very pleased to learn that a Vermonter has written a book calling for a “new economy.” The book is "The Progress Illusion: Reclaiming Our Future from the Fairytale of Economics" written by Blittersdorf Professor of Sustainability Science and Policy at the University of Vermont, Jon D. Ericson. It is a challenging read, I’ll admit, but well worth the effort.

We are all connected to the Earth and all living things on it and this connection, not mindless devotion to our appetite, is what our economy must reflect.

--- George Plumb

As published in Times Argus, VT Jan. 10 2023

12/10/2022

Inivtation

Care to sit in on meetings with Buddhist Peace Action Vermont? You’d be most welcome. We gather online about once a month, Thursdays at 1:30 PM. Meet BPAV members; learn about our Buddhist roots and social activism. Our meetings include discussion of actions we can take, and readings related to topics of interest—currently climate catastrophe and anti-war/nuclear disarmament. New to the Buddhist worldview, or to activism? Not a problem. We look forward to knowing you and discovering common interests.

Our next meeting: Jan. 5th, 1:30 PM. Link provided upon request.

A deep bow,
Neville Berle [email protected]

11/23/2022

Dear readers, please see the commentary below, by a member of Buddhist Peace Action Vermont, as published in VTDigger, the Times Argus, and Rutland Herald.

Thriving With Less; Toward a Livable Climate

In Vermont and across the world, people are understandably anxious. Once stable democracies are in peril; the tide of refugees fleeing unlivable homes continues rising; nuclear war with Russia is again a possibility; the corrosive effects of greed and tribalism are everywhere. While all of these crises require immediate attention, what hope is there of addressing them while struggling to survive a hostile climate?

Reversing climate disruption is a massive undertaking - bigger than anything humanity has attempted - the possibility of failure is real. Faced with the enormity of the task, some deny the problem altogether; others accept human responsibility for global heating but think it’s too late; we’ve passed the point of no return. Still others believe the worst can yet be avoided if we take decisive action now.

What kind of action? As we work to replace fossil fuels with renewable energy, we often ignore simple, low-cost strategies for climate mitigation. One obvious example: preserving the world’s old-growth forests - our most efficient carbon-sinks. To name another, if people around the world did nothing but limit family size, especially in richer countries with low child-mortality, global population would fall steeply, giving our ecosphere time to heal. Local economies might suffer in the short term but at some point, expansion has to stop. Though some would persist in magical thinking, we cannot have endless growth on a finite planet.

Another, obvious strategy for regulating our climate involves reducing personal consumption. A few examples of this: returning to local, healthy activities like biking, hiking, and skiing; avoiding cruises and minimizing air travel; eating less meat, leading to improved health and vast reductions in land and water used for agriculture.

While a tiny fraction of Americans live like kings, many of us struggle to get by; good consumers, we equate material wealth with happiness and envy those with more. But as numerous studies show, once basic needs like food, shelter, and a sense of belonging are met, communities tend to thrive. In pre-industrial times, people met those needs through close attunement to the land and seas from which they lived; those who thrived were acutely sensitive to their place within the greater web of life. For humanity in the 21st century, the rules of the game remain the same.

Our world is at a turning point; American democracy may not stand. But while elections come and go, our duty as citizens remains the same. Those we elect need to know we’re serious about protecting our only home, that choices we make now will impact the earth for generations. Are we willing to work for what we love, to act on behalf of a world that yet may be?

Two BPAV members,  Glenda and Laurie, at the Montpelier Farmers’ Market, October 2022.They handed out many information s...
10/31/2022

Two BPAV members, Glenda and Laurie, at the Montpelier Farmers’ Market, October 2022.They handed out many information sheets about anti-war and anti-nuclear weapons actions, engaged in conversations with shoppers, and received some supportive responses.

From Hiroshima To Montpelier: Paper Cranes for PeaceIt’s not often that something happens in Montpelier and has reverber...
07/29/2022

From Hiroshima To Montpelier: Paper Cranes for Peace

It’s not often that something happens in Montpelier and has reverberations all the way to Japan. But last year, a survivor of the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima at the end of World War II saw a video of the annual Montpelier-based walk that commemorates the event. And she felt compelled to reach out to its sponsors.
Takako Shimizu was born in Yanai, about 40 miles from Hiroshima, four days after the bombing. She saw an ORCA video of the 2020 Remembering Hiroshima Peace Walk and Ceremony, which for the past several decades has taken place every August 6 in the Capital City and was so moved by the event that she crafted and shipped dozens of handmade origami peace cranes to the event’s sponsors, Buddhist Peace Action Vermont.
Participants in this year’s walk will carry one of her origami cranes, a symbol of peace, in a silent procession from Kellogg-Hubbard Library to the high school. “We are so grateful for and honored by her gift,” says Buddhist Peace Action Vermont member Glenda Bissex. “During our Peace Walk we will feel Takako with us as we carry her beautiful cranes from Hiroshima.”
“It is a great pleasure and honor for me that my paper cranes will join your Peace Walk on August 6,” says Taka, as she is familiarly known. “I really wanted to express my deepest respect and admiration for your peace activities.”

Taka is a professional tour guide in Hiroshima, and she uses her platform as a guide to help visitors understand not just the devastating effects of the atomic bomb on her city, but the destructive nature of war itself and the urgency of promoting world peace.
“We have realized the importance of learning history and not to make the same mistakes,” Taka says. “We have made a lot of mistakes which have led to many wars. War is an absolute evil.”

Taka and her immediate family were lucky enough to have survived the bombing because they were living outside the city. Nonetheless, they were subjected to the terrors of warfare. “In those days there had been a lot of air raid warnings because U.S. forces started full-scale air raids on the mainland of Japan in the closing days of WWII,” Taka explains. “People used to run into the shelter whenever the warnings were issued, but my mother was unable to move easily just before my birth. She hoped she would die with me in her womb rather than have to escape to the shelter.”
Taka’s mother and two sisters were inside their house on August 6. Her grandmother was outside. “She saw a huge mushroom cloud growing in the sky over Hiroshima. She experienced such shock and terror when she saw it, crying out, ‘What on earth happened?’”
Taka’s husband Ken’s family was not so fortunate. Even though his parents had moved six miles outside the city to avoid the air raids, his grandparents remained in town. After the bombing, Ken’s parents went into the city to try and find the grandparents, whose house was located 1,200-feet from the epicenter of the bombing. “After three days of searching, they found the silver comb that his grandmother used to wear in the kitchen area,” Taka says. “As for Ken’s grandfather, he was in the habit of reading a morning newspaper sitting on the river bank every morning. There were no bodily remains or even ashes. With such intense heat they evaporated instantly.”

The Hiroshima Peace Memorial, the epicenter of the atomic bombing, is located 1,200 feet from Takako and Ken’s home. Photo by Therese Mageau.
Ken’s uncle, who was 12 years old at time, was only 2,100 feet from the epicenter and one of the few people so close to the bomb site to have survived. He was in critical condition for three days, suffering from internal bleeding, and came close to dying but managed to live another 30 years, battling cancer for the last years of his life. “He rejected all requests to tell us about his A-bomb experience,” says Taka. “That was the memory he never wanted to recall.”
Even though most of Ken’s family were not at the epicenter, all of them suffered after-effects: his great grandmother was exposed to the heat rays of the bomb and died seven years later of leukemia; his father suffered from acute high fevers, causing him to hover between life and death for many days; his mother experienced symptoms similar to blood poisoning and had three miscarriages.
Taka and Ken were actually lucky that they were able to marry. “To have been involved in the nuclear disaster was a big issue in those days because of the fear about radiation effects on the offspring,” explains Taka. “There used to be lots of discrimination in marriage, employment, and many others matters against Japanese A-bomb survivors, known as Hibakusha.” Taka’s parents believed that Ken had avoided exposure to radiation because his family were living at the time outside the epicenter, and they allowed the marriage to take place. “Years after the birth of my third baby, my mother-in-law told me the truth that then 10-month-old Ken had been taken into the city on the second day after the bombing, carried on his parents’ back to look for his grandparents.”
Today Ken and Taka live in his grandparents’ house, 1,200-feet from the bombing epicenter, which is marked by the remains of a large domed civic building, now the Hiroshima Peace Memorial. Every day for Taka is a day to work for peace. She reminds us: “We are all responsible for future generations.”
Peace Walk on August 6

The annual Remembering Hiroshima Peace Walk and Ceremony on August 6 will begin at 6:45 p.m. at the Kellogg-Hubbard Library and proceed in silence down State Street to the high school. At 7:15 p.m., the exact time of the dropping of the bomb, the procession will stop and the bells of Christ Church will chime 76 times, once for every year since the bombing. A short ceremony will take place at the high school, culminating in sending flowers for peace down the Winooski river. All are welcome. For more information, visit buddhistpeaceactionvt.org.

Friends, here's a video of our 2021 Hiroshima Day Peace walk. Enjoy!
08/19/2021

Friends, here's a video of our 2021 Hiroshima Day Peace walk. Enjoy!

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Montpelier, VT
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