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Archive for December 10, 2024

PCF Year end newsletter 2024

Thank you for all of your support!

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Dear Friends,

A token of gratitude for all of your support.

From all of us at The Pema Chödrön Foundation (PCF), we send our deepest gratitude for your interest and support of Pema and her work. Since 2006, the PCF has been able to support Buddhist nuns around the world, as well as help many wonderfulcharitable programs needing assistance during these challenging times.

Please consider including the PCF in your year end giving, or additionally, as part of your estate planning to support a wide range of projects and organizations that are dear to Pema’s heart.

Donate to the PCF

News of Pema

Pema is doing wonderfully, and will be spending her winter months in retreat followed by Yarne teachings at Gampo Abbey. Although Pema is no longer giving live public talks, she is still very active!

Join Pema Chödrön Live: A one-of-a-kind series filled with live video calls, guided meditation sessions with her long time co-teacher Tim Olmsted, and additional weekly inspiration for all of 2025, offered by Shambhala Publications.

Don’t miss this opportunity to engage with Pema’s wisdom and compassionate teachings in an intimate setting. Learn More

Highlighted Projects

The Training of Nuns in the Himalayas

Pema is dedicated to making it possible for Nuns in the Himalayas to have the same opportunities for deep study and practice as monks have always had. The Pema Chödrön Foundation helps to provide training programs to educate, empower, and improve the status of ordained Tibetan women.

HELP (Himalayan Environment and Life Protection)

H.E.L.P is a non-for-profit organization working to protect the environment and mitigate and adapt to climate change in the Himalayas while supporting communities and individuals to flourish and work towards reducing all forms of life’s suffering and increased welfare. Their projects are dedicated towards protecting the environment and biodiversity, empowering women and communities, and promoting animal welfare.

THE BOOK INITIATIVE

The Pema Chödrön Book Initiative aims to make Pema’s books and recorded teachings available to underserved individuals, and the non-profit organizations that support them. When you purchase Pema’s books directly from our online store, you support this program.

Learn more about the Projects we support

Give the Gift of Pema’s Teachings

Visit our online bookstore now to make sure your gifts of Pema’s teachings arrive before the holidays! We always offer to gift wrap, include a personalized message and ship for free within the USA. Pema’s books will be treasured for their wisdom, insight and humor.

When you order directly from our bookstore, you help support the Book Initiative program, dedicated to sharing Pema’s books with prisons, shelters, and other non-profit organizations.

Now Available! 2025 Wall Calendar

A year of inspirational quotes from Pema. Learn more…

Our website has a new look!

We are excited to announce the launch of our newly updated website that showcases the Foundation’s projects and strives to preserve and share Pema’s teachings.

Visit our website
Pema and The Board of The Pema Chödrön Foundation extend our deepest thanks for all of your support. Best wishes for a peaceful holiday season, and much love to each of you in the new year.
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Pema Chödrön Foundation · PO Box 770630 · Steamboat Springs, CO 80477-0630 · USA
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Sharing Someone Else’s Wound

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Dec 9, 2024

Sharing Someone Else’s Wound

–Ariel Burger

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2715.jpgMy son was on a trip, a semester-long program in Israel, and then they traveled to Poland for 10-days. On this program, he made a good friend, a new friend, named Mason. And when they got to Poland, they were touring some of the centers of Jewish life before the war, and they were also going to the camps. And on the third or fourth day of the time in Poland, Mason disappeared for the day with one of the counselors on the program.

Upon returning, he told my son a story. He said, “My grandparents were survivors. They were married three weeks before the deportation to Auschwitz. And in Auschwitz they were separated, obviously, and he would go every evening to the fence separating the men’s and the women’s sides of the camps, to bring her a crust of bread or an extra potato if he could, or even just to see her.

“Until my grandmother,” he said, “was transferred to a rabbit farm on the outskirts of Auschwitz.” The Nazis were doing experiments on rabbits that had to do with finding a cure for typhus. “And the rabbit farm was run by a Polish man who noticed, pretty early on, that the rabbits were getting better quality food and attention and care than the Jewish slave laborers. So he started to sneak in food for the Jewish slave laborers and the inmates.

“And then,” Mason told my son, “my grandmother cut her arm on a piece of barbed wire, and the cut became infected. And it wasn’t a serious infection, if you had antibiotics. But of course, if you were a Jew in that place, in that time, there was no way you were going to get antibiotics. So what did this Polish man who was running the rabbit farm do? He cut his own arm open, and he placed his wound on her wound so that he would get the infection that she had, and he became infected. And he went to the Nazis, and he said, ‘I’m one of your best managers. This rabbit farm is very productive. If I die, you’re gonna lose a lot of productivity. I need medicine.’ They gave him medicine, and he shared it with her. And he saved her life.”

So Mason said to my son, he said, “Where was I, when I left the other day and I disappeared? I went to see that Polish man. He’s still alive and living on the outskirts of Warsaw, and I went to say, thank you for my life. Thank you for my life.”

So my son told me this story this year, and it raises a lot of questions about, what does it take to be the kind of person who will share someone else’s wound, in spite of all the pressure to see them as less valuable than a rabbit? What does it take to push against all that pressure and do the right thing, with courage and moral clarity, and to see another person as a person, when everything around you is telling you not to?

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How do you relate to the notion of sharing someone else’s wound with courage and moral clarity? Can you share a personal story of a time you took a hit to improve the lot of someone less fortunate, or someone took a hit for you to improve your lot? What helps you push against pressure and see another person as a person when everything around you is telling you not to?

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