www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

jump to navigation

A Gift of Dharma for 2.10.10 February 10, 2010

Posted by Danny Fisher in A Gift of Dharma, Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche.
Tags:
add a comment

Today’s quote is another from the great Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche, the Bhutanese tulku and filmmaker whom I previously quoted and wrote a short bio for in this post.  It comes to us from Tricycle:  The Buddhist Review by way of William Harryman at The Masculine Heart:

Keep it simple, don’t make it complicated. Concentrate on the breathing, sit straight—that’s all. Every day, do a few minutes, and, on top of that, do it spontaneously in different places—not just in front of the shrine, but everywhere. There’s so much merit in just sitting there.

“Mongolia: The Disaster You Haven’t Heard Of” February 10, 2010

Posted by Danny Fisher in Mongolia, Shambhala SunSpace.
Tags: , ,
add a comment

Image via Shambhala Sun Space.

Over at Shambhala Sun Space, the great Konchog Norbu of Bitterroot Badger (and formerly Dreaming of Danzan Ravjaa) blogs about “the disaster you haven’t heard of” in Mongolia.  Get yourself educated right here.

Burma’s Regime Escalates Attacks against Karen Villagers, Destroys Mobile Health Clinic, Schools, Villages, Forcing Thousands to Flee February 10, 2010

Posted by Danny Fisher in Burma, U.S. Campaign for Burma.
Tags: , , ,
1 comment so far

This from the U.S. Campaign for Burma:

U.S. CAMPAIGN FOR BURMA: PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release:

(Photos, map and additional information from Free Burma Rangers and CIDKP are enclosed and attached)

February 10th, 2010
Contact: Jennifer Quigley (732) 606-7508

(Washington, DC and Bangkok) While Burma’s military regime has been trying to disarm ethnic ceasefire groups at the China-Burma border with its so-called “Border Guard Force” plan, its soldiers have escalated military offensives against ethnic Karen people in eastern Burma this week, destroying not only villages but also a vital mobile health clinic, that sent thousands of villagers and health workers fleeing for their lives.

At 9:00 am on February 8, 2010, 200 soldiers of the regime (from Light Infantry Battalions No. 362 and 367, under No. 10 Military Operational Command) attackedTee Mu Ta Village in Nyang Lay Bin District, destroying a mobile health clinic and 38 homes of internally displaced families.  Following this, at 6:00 pm on the same day, the regime soldiers continued on to K’Dee Mu Der village and burned the village of 15 homes, a middle school, and a nursery school.  In total, because of these attacks, 50 families from Tee Mu Ta and 30 families from K’Dee Mu Der villages have been forced to flee and are now hiding in the jungle.  Both villages are approximately 100 kilometers from the Thailand-Burma border, the equivalent of a 4-5 day journey by foot across hilly terrain (see attached map).

These attacks follow the previously reported attacks last month on ten villages inNyang Lay Bin District by Burmese soldiers, in which 4 villagers were shot, one decapitated, sending at least 2000 villagers into hiding (see attached information and photos).

Denial and destruction of health services provided by back-packed health workers, is a key component to the military regime’s ethnic cleansing campaign. For years, humanitarian aid organizations have been denied access to ethnic minority areas of Burma and community-based health workers are routinely targeted by the regime soldiers. Aung Din, Executive Director of the U.S. Campaign for Burma said: “Mobile health clinics are always targeted by the regime’s troops because they provide life-saving services to Karen and other ethnic minority villagers, who are under continuous and inhumane attack by the regime. This is a clear violation of the Geneva Conventions and the principal of medical neutrality, further evidence of the regime’s crimes against humanity and war crimes.”

Although the clinic was burned to the ground by the regime soldiers, clinic staff, in hiding with the displaced villagers, is courageously continuing to provide essential services, which include malaria control, treatment to landmine victims, and clean delivery.  In addition to essential medical services, the attack has disrupted the clinic’s village health worker program, malaria control program, reproductive health program, and vitamin A and deworming program for the community. These brave health workers and villagers continue to be at risk of further attacks by the Burmese army.

Aung Din states: “These attacks are further evidence of the urgent need for the United Nations to take effective action to stop war crimes and crimes against humanity in Burma, perpetrated by the regime with impunity.”

======================================================================

Bob Dylan Performs for the First Time Ever at the White House February 10, 2010

Posted by Danny Fisher in arts and entertainment, human rights.
Tags: , , , , ,
add a comment

India’s Government Must Stop Dangerous Mining until Human Rights are Addressed February 10, 2010

Posted by Danny Fisher in Amnesty International, India.
Tags: ,
add a comment