Sati Center Training in Buddhist Chaplaincy
As Buddhist spiritual practice finds an increasing presence within American society, there is both an opportunity and a need to train Buddhist practitioners to serve as spiritual caregivers and chaplains. The Sati Center for Buddhist Studies is offering a yearlong training program to provide an introduction to spiritual care skills from a Buddhist perspective. This is a unique opportunity to study Buddhist principles and practices relevant to spiritual caregiving, as well as an introduction to the psychological, social, and ethical issues related to chaplaincy. The program is designed to meet the needs of people in a variety of ways: • Introductory training for those interested in becoming volunteer or professional chaplains in hospitals, hospices, jails and other places where spiritual care is needed. (The training does not meet all the requirements needed for professional certification as a chaplain.) • Fulfilling one requirement that certain Buddhist groups have to endorse or ordain a member to become a Buddhist Chaplain. • Basic training in spiritual care: attending the
sick and dying, performing weddings, memorials and other ceremonies, and
offering spiritual
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• Eleven monthly day-long classes, held on Fridays
• Monthly support groups
• Individual mentoring meetings with faculty (every other month)
• One hundred hours of volunteer chaplaincy
• Assigned reading and written assignments
• Bi-monthly peer support sessions
• Visits to various Buddhist and other religious centers (including attending unfamiliar religious services or gatherings)
• Field trips to hospitals, psychiatric wards, morgues, homeless shelters, juvenile halls or other service centers
• Optional related classes
To complement the training program the Sati Center plans to offer several optional daylong classes on Saturdays on particular subjects relevant to chaplaincy work. In the past these have included classes on the History and Teaching of Engaged Buddhism, and Introduction to Prison Chaplaincy. Future planned topics are Buddhist views on death and dying, contemplative psychology, and Buddhist/Christian dialogue.
Please contact the Sati Center at 415.646.0530 (voicemail) or karuna@sati.org for more information about the program or to receive an application.
Applications are reviewed during the month of August.
The training program is designed for people who have a committed and ongoing involvement with Buddhist practice, teachings and way of life. With this in mind, the requirements for entering the program are the following:
• Letter of recommendation from a Buddhist teacher
• Regular and committed Buddhist practice and study for at least four years (or previous chaplaincy training)
• Three Buddhist retreats of at least one week or the equivalent
• An in-person or phone interview
The cost for the eleven-month program is $1350 and there is an application fee of $25. A limited number of partial work-exchange scholarships may be available.
To download an application for the program (avilable soon -- 6/4/06).
The Sati Center has been offering classes in Buddhist Studies in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1997. Our perspective balances scholarly inquiry with serious meditation practice. We believe that study and practice work together to deepen one’s realization of the Dharma and to help manifest that realization in the world. For information on ongoing Sati Center programs please visit us at www.sati.org or contact us at karuna@sati.org or 415.646.0530.
Classes will be held at the Insight Meditation Center at 1205 Hopkins Avenue in Redwood City, California. The center is located about thirty miles south of San Francisco and is a twenty-minute drive from San Francisco Airport.