THE LINK
The Newsletter Editorial Note
Dear Friends
K: Why Don't We Change? Krishnamurti Letters to the Editor
Articles Krishnamurti's Meditation: A Quantum View of Mind
Meditate in Solitude
Living in the Wild
Creativeness and Discontent
Mind, Brain and Behaviour by Lloyd Williams Nurture, Knowledge, Education
On Values
Book Review: Can Humanity Change?
On Education Don’t Walk Out of this School into the Past
New Directions for Wholeschool
Rajghat Besant School Report
The New Culture School “La Cecilia” K: Mind is Society
International Network International Report: K's Teachings in Vietnam
Events Annual Winter Gathering in Thailand Theme Weekends at The Krishnamurti Centre, Brockwood Park 2005 Krishnamurti Meetings in The Netherlands Annual Saanen Gathering 2005 in Switzerland Psychiatrists and Psychologists Meeting in Switzerland European Krishnamurti Education Committee K: The Impotence of Truth
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Dear Friends
The time has come to prepare for the next Link. We have been collecting material all year for this new edition, including, of course, quotations from K and photographs; but what comes to mind at the moment are several of the international meetings in which the Link team participated this past year. The International Trustees Meeting of the four Krishnamurti Foundations took place in a monastery in Segovia, Spain. The KFT, KFI, and KFA were invited by the Fundación Krishnamurti Latinoamericana (FKL), and important decisions were taken concerning the publication work for the Spanish-speaking world. Javier Gómez Rodríguez (one of the Trustees of the Fundación, the editor of The Link, and a former Brockwood student and teacher) attended, as did Raman Patel of The Link team. The German Committee organized an education conference with the theme “Has modern education failed?” in the Tagore Centre of the Indian Embassy in Berlin. The event was attended by 300 people, and Rajesh Dalal, Trustee of the KFI and Director of the Rajghat Education Centre, was the main speaker. Rajesh went on to speak at meetings in Köln, Göttingen, Saanen and Haus Sonne in Germany. The Saanen Gathering, attended by the Link team, was held for two weeks at the beginning of August. It now takes place in Schönried, a village a stone’s throw from Saanen. The event – which also includes a week prior to the Gather¬ing for parents with children, and a week afterwards for young adults – is direc¬ted by Gisèle Balleys, a former Brockwood teacher and currently Trustee of the KFT. Themes for the two weeks were “Why are we isolating ourselves, thereby feeding fear, loneliness and nationalism?” and “Can we observe the whole movement of love and death in our lives?” There was also a two-day meeting of the International Committees. Brockwood Park brought together over 200 former students and staff members for its 35th anniversary Reunion. Several of us attended. At one point, Mary Zimbalist – a Trustee of both the KFT and the KFA, who is in her 90th year – addressed the assembly and bid her goodbyes to Brockwood. She will now stay in Ojai, California, year round. The Reunion was an amazing event that showed just how much Brockwood means to so many people, and how well many of the students do after being at the School. Several of the former students I spoke to are now professors, doctors, musicians and journalists and seem to be caring, balanced human beings. In other news, Raman Patel and Rabindra Singh helped to develop the growing network of people interested in K in Vietnam (see pg. 54) and in The Philippines. And former Brockwood staff member and Link colleague Nick Short became a Trustee of the KFT. In addition to attending such events, I visit Brockwood at least twice a year, staying for several weeks at a time. While there, I like to ask guests at the adult study Centre how they came upon K. On the last occasion, two guests (one a teacher), had seen the Hollywood film The Hurricane, in which the lead character is briefly shown reading the K book The Awakening of Intelligence – and it was a very brief shot. But it seems that most guests have been reading K for years; some, however, having heard of the Centre and the School only recently. Increasingly, guests and prospective students and staff members are coming to Brockwood through the Foundation and School websites and through www.kinfonet.org. Before the Centre was built, I spent quite a bit of time at the School, and I have just remembered a funny story that happened there. As a preamble: when I take photos, it often happens that the sun, which has been hiding behind clouds for what has seemed like forever, suddenly appears at just the right moment for my photograph, and I give thanks to the heavens as if there were a force that arranged it to happen. The funny story is that a man who was camping in the woods near Brockwood during a series of public Talks that K was – ¬giving, one day entered the dining room during lunch. Just at that moment, a staff member rang the bell for quieting the room in order to make an announce¬ment. And as with me and the sun, the man thought that the bell was expressly for him and said a gracious Thank You and began making a speech! We are funny creatures. One Centre guest told me that he feels that The Link is a bit heavy and needs some humour. So, to continue in this vein I will include one of the many jokes that K used to tell. Saint Peter is showing God what is happening on Earth and the first thing they see is human beings labouring and toiling away from morning to night. God is amazed and asks Saint Peter: What is the matter with those people down there? Saint Peter replies: Didn’t you tell them that man should earn his bread by the sweat of his brow? God: But I was only joking! Then they watch another event. People in festive attire are sitting at tables lavishly loaded with food and drink. They are cardinals and bishops. To God’s question as to who these people are, Saint Peter ans¬wers: These, my Lord, are the people who understood that you were only joking. Many more such stories can be found in The Kitchen Chronicles – 1001 Lunches with J. Krishnamurti, by our dear friend Michael Krohnen, who worked as chef at Oak Grove School and for the KFA from 1975 to 1988. He now verifies transcripts of K’s Talks for the KFA. His book can be ordered through ¬www.pathless.com. The joke above is also included in my book of remembrances of my time with K, The Beauty of the Mountain. A new edition will be available from the end of 2004 and can be ordered through www.pathless.com or through the K Foundations, with all proceeds benefiting ‘K projects’ (see pg. 62). Now, I would like to return to a less amusing subject, one that still bothers some people. I do so by reprinting a letter from an old friend, Bill Quinn, who spent a year in the 1940s at Arya Vihara in Ojai, working in the garden. K was living there at that time and they often tended the garden together. Bill worked on the first Krishnamurti Index of subjects that later became the KFT’s three-volume Index of all the audio and videotapes. He died in Ojai in the mid-1990s. Because Bill’s letter addresses the concerns that some people still have after reading a certain book ostensibly about K, I include it here.
And finally, two years ago Bill Taylor and Antonio Autor initiated a ‘K class’ at Brockwood. I have had the good fortune to attend it a few times. Bill has recently written a short report about it, and I am including some of this below. Since Krishnamurti’s death in 1986, the School has explored a number of ways in which to ensure that students have direct contact with his verbatim teachings and with the provocative questions and challenging insights he expresses. We have wrestled with the issue of how to do this without estranging students from the teachings by insisting on participation in K-related activities, so in September 2002, when we started a Krishnamurti Class at Brockwood, it was made optional. A few of these responses are reproduced here with permission. “I have to say I really enjoyed K Time. We are always a funny group of people. What I really found good and challenging is that we questioned a lot of thoughts which are always going on in people’s minds, for example awareness. And it’s not like you have to say yes to everything K said. You can always question everything that we’re talking about. That’s what I think is best, because you get more open-minded.” – Daniel, 19, from Germany I have been attending these classes and like them too! Friedrich Grohe, September 2003 |