Through intimate letters, interviews, and stories, this narrative reveals the impact that a life-changing retreat had on a group of inmates at the highest level maximum-security state prison in Alabama. The 38 participants in the first-ever intensive, silent 10-day program inside the walls of a corrections facility--many serving life sentences without parole--detail the range of their experiences, the depth of their understanding of the Buddha's teachings gained by direct experience, and their setbacks and successes. During the Vipassana meditation program, they face the past and their miseries and emerge with a sense of peace and purpose. This compelling story shows the capacity for commitment, self-examination, renewal, and hope within a dismal penal system and a wider culture that demonizes prisoners.
Letters from the Dhamma Brothers, Jenny Phillips, Pariyatti Press, Paperback, 2008, 222 Pages, $15.95
Jenny Phillips is a practicing psychotherapist in Concord, Mass., who also works in state and county prisons teaching courses on emotional literacy skills. She first visited Donaldson prison in 1999 and through her initiative the Vipassana program was established there. The inmate-meditators began writing to her about their lives and quest for inner peace. Their letters and the award-winning documentary film The Dhamma Brothers, produced and directed by Jenny, open hearts and minds to the possibility of genuine transformation.
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Contents: Letters from the Dhamma Brothers |
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Forward |
ix |
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Introduction |
xiii |
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INSIDE DONALDSON |
1 |
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Graduation |
3 |
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The Journey Inside |
5 |
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Sowing Seeds of Change |
10 |
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Introducing Vipassana |
12 |
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Dhamma Takes Root |
14 |
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Setting Up the Vipassana Retreat |
18 |
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Free Worlders Move Inside |
20 |
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Working Deep Within |
25 |
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THE DHAMMA BROTHERS |
33 |
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Grady Bankhead |
34 |
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Torrence Barton |
35 |
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Michael Carpenter |
36 |
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Willie Carroll |
37 |
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Wayne Finch |
38 |
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James George |
40 |
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Charles Ice |
40 |
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Edward Johnson |
42 |
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John Johnson |
47 |
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Leon Kennedy |
49 |
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Benjamin "OB" Oryang |
50 |
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Omar Rahman |
53 |
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Larry Singletary |
56 |
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Rick Smith |
58 |
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Johnny Mack Young |
60 |
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THE LETTERS |
63 |
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Before and After: The First Two Ten-Day Courses |
64 |
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Interview with Benjamin "OB" Oryang |
72 |
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Interview with Leon Kennedy |
76 |
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Shut Down: Courses and Group Sitting Privileges |
79 |
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Dhamma Brother Transferred |
89 |
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Interview with Edward Johnson |
90 |
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The Addict's Mentality: Not Just Another Fix |
94 |
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Support Letters to Pardon & Parole Board: Request Declined |
98 |
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After One Year, How Does Dhamma Fare Inside? |
100 |
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Wishes to a Dhamma Friend on a Course |
111 |
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Vipassana and Christianity and Islam |
115 |
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Interview with Omar Rahman |
118 |
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Interview with Larry Singletary |
123 |
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Underground: Group Sittings by Any Other Name |
126 |
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Cell Course Rings in the New Year |
133 |
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Ups and Downs of Dhamma: Donaldson and Other Camps |
139 |
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Life and Death: Dhamma Brothers Lose Loved Ones |
162 |
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Legal Again: Vipassana Reinstated; A Three-Day Course |
168 |
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Interview with Wayne Finch |
170 |
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Appreciation to the Wardens; Dhamma Rolls On |
180 |
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Parole Denied |
197 |
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Conclusion |
199 |
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Postscript |
205 |
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Address by S. N. Goenka at Donaldson |
208 |
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More about Vipassana |
212 |
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Glossary |
216 |
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Resources |
218 |
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About the Author |
220 |
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