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Camp teaches basics of Buddhism

Activities help children and adults gain deeper understanding of faith

Inside the large meditation room, 10 children are circled around their teacher, alternatively squirming and listening as she explains the significance of the offerings on the altar behind her.

The water bowls, Bev Gwyn says, represent generosity; the flowers, happiness; the string of coloured lights and small candles, illumination. And she talks about the abundance of gifts and "stuff" the children already have, and how seeing their friends wearing something new or getting a new toy often prompts feelings of envy.

People love to get things, she concedes, but "that doesn't really help our lives much.

"That just makes us crave and want and feel greedy and jealous and upset if we don't get what we want," she adds. "That's not helpful for our minds. So at the altar, we practise giving and being generous."

At Family Camp, a threeday retreat for adults and children ages 5 to 12, groups separated by age spend their days engaged in activities to gain a better understanding of Tibetan Buddhist teachings and their nights sleeping in dormitory-like buildings or camping in the forest.

Outside, a group of children is seated at picnic tables, quietly working on various crafts: colouring in drawings of Buddha. The children use watercolours and glitter to animate small plaster statues and use string to connect small scraps of paper to plastic cups. The cups are used to catch and release bugs, rather than killing them.

Yet another group, this one made up of adults, slowly circles around a larger-than-life statue of Buddha, with elephants, peacocks and horses carved into its base, water bowls balanced at each of the four corners. The Enlightenment Stupa was built to celebrate the life of Tibetan monk Lama Yeshe, whose followers founded the 75-acre Vajrapani Institute in 1975, in a tucked-away corner of Boulder Creek.

Camp participants also take nature walks and perform rituals such as fire pujas, where they set afire sesame seeds that represent undesirable aspects of their personalities.

Vajrapani has operated the family camps for 19 years, with each having its own theme. This year's is "Compassion in Action," and the roughly 50 children and adults are learning how to be compassionate with themselves and others.

Some families already practise Buddhism, a way of life that emphasizes peace, kindness and helping others. Others just want to learn how to be better parents and have more "mindfulness in their parenting," said Giselle Tsering, who has been operating the camp since the late 1990s.

Family Camp - and the presence of children in general - is an aberration at Vajrapani, a "sister centre" to the more well-known Land of Medicine Buddha in Soquel, California. Both are operated by the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition, said Fabienne Pradelle, who has served as director of Vajrapani since 2004.

The institute provides a place for weekend workshops and retreats, and even short, personal withdrawals from the busyness of everyday life, said Sharon Gross, one of the institute's initial founders.

Clara Chiu, a 13-year-old Palo Alto resident, has been coming to the camp since she was 5 and is now a "teen helper," helping other children with their projects. In the hectic pace of everyday life, she says, it's hard to remember to slow down, meditate and practise other principles of Buddhism.

Attending the camp is always something she looks forward to, she says, adding, "It's nice to be able to refresh yourself before school starts."

For information, go to vajrapani.org.