LP Piak Visits WBD from 28 October to 7 November


LP PiakSaturday 29th October @ Wat Buddha Dhamma

Dana              10:00 am

Q & A            11:30-12:30 pm

Sunday 30th October  @ Wat Buddha Dhamma

Robes Offering Ceremony 10 – 3 pm

Monday 31st October @ Wat Buddha Dhamma

Dana                          10:00 am

Tuesday 1st November @ Buddhist Library

Public Talk    7-9 pm

For more info, please call 02-9519-6054

Wednesday 2nd November @ Buddhist Library

Public Talk    7-9 pm

For more info, please call 02-9519-6054

5-Day Retreat at Wat Buddha Dhamma

3rd to 7th November

Register for the retreat by visiting our website at www.wbd.org.au, filling out an online application form under “Visiting/Overnight and Longer”.   If you have any further queries, please call the office between 8-10 am and 11 to 2 pm at (02) 4323 3193 or 0409-389-887.

 NB: Please register early as there are limited spaces.

The above schedule is subject to last minute changes depending on LP Piak’s health and energy. Please plan to arrive by 9:30 am for dana at 10. Any queries, please call the office at 0409-389-887 or email: wbdoffice@gmail.com

About the Teacher:

Luang Por (Venerable Father) Piak is one of Thailand’s most respected teachers of Dhamma and meditation. Born in 1948, Luang Por Piak’s given name is Prasobchai but he was nicknamed ‘Piak’. As a child and young man Luang Por Piak did not have much interest in religion or meditation. It was when he was studying for his Masters in New York that Luang Por Piak began to develop an interest about the mind.

The first time Piak began to develop an interest in his own mind was during the years in New York. On the subway, for example, while heading to work, he would find his mind naturally observing and converging on his breath. There he found both pleasure and peace. He also noticed that he was able to wake up in the morning at whatever time he wished simply by mentally determining the time the night before. Even if he’d spent most of the night at a party, he’d still wake up exactly at the predetermined time. These experiences made him curious about how the mind worked and led on to an interest in meditation.

Venerable Piak then received full bhikkhu ordination from Luang Por Chah on July 3rd 1976, just before the beginning of the rains retreat that year.  In 1981, when Venerable Piak had been ordained for five years, a piece of property was offered outside of Bangkok for a branch monastery.  Luang Por Chah asked Venerable Piak to live there as the abbot. It was unusual for a monk to be asked to take on so much responsibility at such a young age, but Venerable Piak had had quick progress in his Dhamma practice and was also native to that region.  Initially surrounded by rice fields as far as one could see, within ten years his small monastery had been completely engulfed by Bangkok’s urban sprawl. Noise, heat and pollution notwithstanding, Luang Por Piak has remained a refuge of peace and soothing coolness within the heart of Thailand’s largest city. Although he never completed his masters degree, he quickly came to be recognized as one of the most respected  masters of our time.

He will be accompanied by Ajahn Mudito, his translator.  Ajahn Mudito, born in Brazil, has been a monk for 12 years, and has spent the last 7 years living with Luang Por.