Showing posts with label International Burmese Monks Organization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Burmese Monks Organization. Show all posts

September 10, 2008

Mindful Reading for Burma

Reading Burma: A Benefit for
Cyclone Relief and Freedom of Expression
in Burma/Myanmar

Location: New York City
Event Date(s): September 23, 2008
Event Time: 7:00 p.m.

Great Hall at Cooper Union
7 East 7th Street
Speaker(s): Kiran Desai, Venerable U Gawsita, Siri Hustvedt, Joseph Lelyveld, George Packer, Orhan Pamuk, Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, Salman Rushdie
This event marks the fir
st anniversary of the monks’ uprising, in which thousands of Buddhist monks protested against Burma’s military dictatorship, and the twentieth anniversary of the 1988 pro-democracy protests by millions of ordinary civilians. PEN, the Burma Project of the Open Society Institute, and the New York Review of Books will join together to honor Burmese writers whose work has been suppressed by the military regime and to support the victims of the recent cyclone. The event will also pay tribute to the thousands of monks who are missing or have lost their lives last year, and to those who have continued to speak out against injustice for the past twenty years.
All proceeds will be donated to the International Burmese Monks Organization, a network of Burmese Buddhist monks collecting relief aid for the victims of Cyclone Nargis.
In addition to readings of Burmese writers’ work, some of which includes unpublished accounts from the cyclone-affected areas of Burma, The New Yorker’s George Packer will join the Venerable U Gawsita, one of the leaders of the 2007 monks’ uprising, in conversation.
Featuring
· Nobel Prize Laureate Orhan Pamuk
· Booker Prize Winner Salman Rushdie
· Booker Prize Winner Kiran Desai
· The Venerable U Gawsita, one of the leading monks of the 2007 uprising
· Author Siri Hustvedt
· Journalist Joseph Lelyveld
· Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, UN Special Rapporteur on Myanmar
· Journalist George Packer
· Other Special Guests
Don’t miss this extraordinary opportunity to hear from the monks who stood up to the Burmese regime in 1988 and again in 2007, and from those men and women whose lives have been changed forever by the recent cyclone.
Co-sponsored by the OSI Burma Project, PEN American Center, The New York Review of Books, and Cooper Union.
Location
Great Hall at Cooper Union
7 East 7th Street
Subway: 6 to Astor Place; N/R/W to 8th Street-NYU
New York, New York
For Donations and Tickets
Visit www.smarttix.com or call 1-212-868-4444.
$20 (general admission) and $100 (includes post-event reception).
$15 for students and PEN members (with valid ID).
Support 1991 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Aung San Suu Kyi and the struggle for freedom and democracy in Burma:

May 16, 2008

Fast for Cyclone Victims

Burmese Monks to Fast for Starving Cyclone Victims
Ask United Nations to Take Action to Save 2 Million People
Ralph Bunch Park, across from UN
43rd St. and 1st Ave. New York City
Thursday, May 15 3-7pm
Friday, May 16 9am-6pm

Join the Fast
Join the Prayers and Meditation
Support the Monks and the People of Burma

Supporters are invited to join the monks as they fast with alarm and grief for their country. Please come and support this courageous, peaceful action. They petition the United Nations to take action immediately in Burma before more people die of starvation through willful government neglect.
If you want to join the fast, you are very welcome! The monks will eat their last meal Thursday morning and then will break the fast Saturday morning. If you wish to fast for any of that time, or part of that time, please do. Please wear white if you are fasting so that you can be identified. All are welcome to come and meditate and pray with the monks. The more the better, and the stronger the message will be.
These days of fasting, meditation, and prayers is sponsored by the International Burmese Monks Organization, (International Burmese Monks Organization, IBMO) -- www.burmesemonks.org

May 11, 2008

Help the Burmese Monks Help Burma

Burma Cyclone--Stand with the People

The cyclone that ripped through Burma left tens of thousands dead and a million homeless--a natural disaster made much worse by the failure of the military junta to warn or evacuate its people.
Now, the government has slowed the urgent process of providing humanitarian relief--so Avaaz is raising funds for the International Burmese Monks Organization and related groups, which will transmit funds directly to monasteries in affected areas.
In many of the worst-hit areas, the monasteries are the only source of shelter and food for Burma's poorest people. They have been on the front lines of the aid effort since the storm struck. Other forms of aid could be delayed, diverted or manipulated by the Burmese government--but the monks are the most trusted and reliable institution in the country.
We cannot accept cheques--for donation by Switch, Maestro or other questions click here for donation FAQ