THE LINK
The Newsletter Editorial Note
Dear Friends
K: The Light Of Meditation Krishnamurti Letters to the Editor
Articles Toward Understanding Consciousness
Keep Far Away
Tower Lessons
If We Could Establish a Relationship with Nature
What Is the Core of Human Confusion?
On Sensuality
The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 1)
The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 2)
To Be Free of the Word
On Education Unlocking Key Insights at the Oak Grove Teacher's Academy
K: On Self-knowledge
Confessions of a Science Teacher
Mathematics for the Millions: a personal story
Our Children and the Real World
The Oak Grove school trip to India
K: To Bring Up Children without Comparison
International Network
International Report: Ukraine, Turkey and Azerbaijan
K: Order that Continues into Sleep
Events Theme Weekends at The Krishnamurti Centre, Brockwood Park 2007 Annual Saanen Gathering 2007 in Switzerland Summer Work Party at Brockwood Park 2007 Oak Grove Teacher's Academy 2007 Krishnamurti Summer Study Program 2007 Annual Gatherings in India, USA, Thailand
Announcements |
Dear Friends by Friedrich Grohe I am writing this during a warm September at Brockwood Park, where a new year has just begun at the School. There is a full complement of students from many countries, including two students who are children of former students. There is also a strong and innovative staff, which includes seven former students. I asked one of these former students, now staff, to write about his current activities, because I have heard concerns that the young adults who leave such a harmonious and protected place might not be able to succeed in the wider, competitive society. (See also the article on pg. 48.) The following is from Valentin Gerlier, who teaches singing and guitar at the School and organises the musical events at the end of each term. I play jazz and various other styles in bars and clubs in London and have toured in England, Germany, Austria, Ireland, France and Italy with groups and duos. More and more I have been writing my own music and lyrics and am quite committed to playing and recording it as of this summer. Here is some more news from former Brockwood students. Lauren Russell and George Mathew, who met through a former Rishi Valley student, organised a performance of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony at Carnegie Hall in New York to benefit victims of the Pakistan earthquake. And Suprabha Seshan, a former student of several of the Indian schools as well as Brockwood, recently won, on behalf of the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary in Kerala, India, one of the UK’s most prestigious environmental conservation prizes – the Whitley Award, presented by Princess Anne at London’s Royal Geographical Society. Suprabha wrote to me saying, "One good outcome of this is the big improvement in local relations ... everyone in the neighbourhood is very proud and there is a strong sense of ‘we have got an international award.’" (Suprabha has written the article on pg. 18.) There is an article on pg. 42 by Colin Foster, a former Brockwood physics teacher, and one on pg. 45 by Ashna Sen, a new maths teacher there. In her article, Ashna refers to a mathematics conference she attended in London, and she wrote to me in more detail about it. She said that two professors, one a director of a mathematics institute and the other the chairman of a mathematics centre and a government advisor for mathematics, gave her the impression that: they were both hesitant about implementing any radical change in the system. In fact, the government advisor mentioned that she was aware of all this ‘alternative type’ of thinking regarding ‘what is education’ etc. But there was a clear reluctance to think outside the box. It seemed to me that the emphasis was more on ‘how to provide greater rigour at the school stage so that the students can more easily face the tough road ahead.’ Of course, I was very disappointed with this general atmosphere of adhering to the old methods of 'cram' teaching – a very straight-jacketed approach, in my opinion. For me, visiting Brockwood Park means catching up with the many friends who work at the School, the Foundation and the Centre; it means joining in the School’s Morning Meeting, where the students and staff begin their day together; it means attending Kclasses; and the School’s end-of-term concerts are not to be missed. It also means interesting discussions with guests over lunch at the Centre, like the one with the French-speaking professor working in education at the Université du Québec. A recent thesis of his concerned self-learning: Pour une phénoménologie herméneutique des moments d’autoformation. He was a Centre guest while his daughter had her prospective week at the School, part of her application to study there. She was looking for a different kind of education and had found Brockwood on her own. Her father had been to several Saanen Gatherings in the 1970s, attending all the talks, but he had never told this to his daughter. And now she was bringing him to Brockwood! He found this amazing. I told him I was sorry, having learned in the early 1980s that Krishnamurti was speaking every year in Saanen, that I didn’t attend the talks right away (I waited until 1983). He replied that he was sorry he hadn’t continued to attend into the 1980s. On to Oak Grove School in California, from where the principal, Ellen Hall, wrote that they are working to develop the school as: a place of revolution in education, a place where sanity and intelligence emerge. ... We have begun to publish articles about our unique approach to education and next year we plan to have some of our teachers present our approach at educational conferences, therefore expanding our impact even more. Towards that end, Paul Herder organised a Teacher’s Academy at Oak Grove School last summer (see the article on pg. 35), the participant group: ranging from graduate students to a school director with thirty years’ experience. We had a teacher working with special needs students as well as one working with gifted students. We had public school teachers and private school educators. About half were from California, with the rest coming from the southeast of the U.S., Nebraska, Canada, Belgium and the Philippines. Three participants were Oak Grove teachers. In addition to these references to what is happening at Brockwood and in Ojai, you can find out about two programmes in Rishi Valley on pp. 51–52 and some of the work of the Krishnamurti Foundation India on pg. 62. On pg. 54, there is a report by Raman on activities in Ukraine, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Our old Brockwood friend Ray McCoy, a former teacher in several of the schools and one of the KFT’s editors, wrote: I was very touched by your (Raman’s) reports about your recent trips, especially to the Ukraine. As I read your vivid description of the adventure of getting there and then the wonderful setting in which all those people came to listen and participate seriously and eagerly, I could ‘see’ K sitting there with all of you and smiling at the enthusiasm of the people and the beauty and uniqueness of the surroundings. (Remember how he said he would have walked a thousand miles to hear the Buddha.) In the spirit of this international Friedrich’s Newsletter, I recently wrote to the Foundations: "I have been thinking again about K’s statements that the Foundations are one and that the Schools and Centres and so on should be international. He put a great deal of emphasis on this. Is there a way that more of the publicity materials from the Foundations can incorporate this sense? I often hear from readers of The Link that they appreciate learning about the worldwide interest in K and the varied and far-flung activities – for example, that there are small groups in Vietnam, an expanding centre in Thailand, emerging activities in Africa. Perhaps each Foundation’s newsletter could include some news from the other Foundations – for example, the FKL visit to South America, the KFI distribution project, and the joint efforts, like the Archives programme and the worldwide one-book dissemination project. It may give a more global feeling to the work. There was also to be a joint Centres brochure, I believe." The Foundations responded very positively. Friedrich Grohe, September 2005 P.S. Once upon a time, a religious teacher was approached by one of his disciples. “Master, you say that truth is a pathless land. So, how do you get there?” The master, smiling compassionately, replied, “Get lost.” New Photo Website
An updated catalogue of photographs by Friedrich Grohe, including those printed in The Link, can now be viewed online at www.fgrohephotos.com. The website features slideshow viewing, a facility to order prints and posters and to send greeting cards, and links to the Krishnamurti Foundations and Schools. |