Chanoyu tea ceremony

Chanoyu, L'art japonais du thé

Dans 1980, during her first visit to Boulder, Colorado, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche invited Mrs. Kiyoko Shibata to introduce the practice of chanoyu to his students. A handful of people began to study this centuries old contemplative practice. Trungpa Rinpoche named the group Kalapa Cha.

The arrival in Nova Scotia of tea masters John Soyu McGee Sensei and Alexandre Soro Avdoulov Sensei in 2000 brought Kalapa Cha a fresh opportunity to continue the practice some of us began many years ago.

The Abode of the Equable Tiger

The opening of Yukoan, Novembre 2004
photo by Marvin Moore

Dans 2002, McGee Sensei and Avdoulov Sensei presented Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche and Shambhala with a gift of an interior tea room, constructed in Japan and shipped to Nova Scotia in pieces to be assembled on site. The tea room was built in the Halifax Shambhala Centre and officially opened by Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche on November 13, 2004. He chose the name Yukoan for the tea room, which means Abode of the Equable Tiger.

As a place of practice and tranquility, Yukoan manifests the vision of Shambhala. Contemplative arts and practices not only bring beauty and vividness to our lives and environment, they enable us to synchronize body and mind in the present moment.

The Practice of Chanoyu (Cérémonie du thé japonaise)

Chanoyu signifie littéralement "eau chaude pour le thé". L'art de Chanoyu, préparer et servir un bol de thé, est une synthèse de nombreux arts japonais tels que l'arrangement floral, calligraphie, poésie, céramique, laque, cuisson, architecture, jardinage, et plus.

Comme la méditation en action, la pratique du thé s'est développée au Japon parallèlement à la pratique du bouddhisme zen. The tea master Sen Rikyu (1522-1591) studied tea from an early age and received Zen training at Daitoku-ji temple in Kyoto. It was Rikyu who joined the ordinary activities of daily life with contemplative practice in what has been passed down to the present as the Way of Tea.

Laisser derrière soi des repères familiers du monde, hosts and guests create a gentle moment, sans passé ni avenir. In this space of simplicity and appreciation, the student prepares and offers a bowl of tea. The practice of tea is a discipline of mindfulness and awareness, une célébration des sens et un voyage à cœur ouvert.

Crédits image: World History Encyclopedia.

2024-05-04 09:28:29