
Retiro da Iluminação do Buda | CEBB Caminho do Meio
Retiro da Iluminação do Buda com Lama Padma Samten no CEBB Caminho do Meio, de 01 a 08 de dezembro.
Budismo, meditação e cultura de paz | Lama Padma Samten

Retiro da Iluminação do Buda com Lama Padma Samten no CEBB Caminho do Meio, de 01 a 08 de dezembro.

Nos dias 26 a 28 de setembro de 2025
The Enlightened View of Samantabhadra, by Düdjom Lingpa — part 2 October 12-15, 2022

Sharp Vajra of Conscious Awareness Tantra – part 2 October 9-16, 2020, online retreat with Lama Alan Wallace



People are imprisoned, but when we see them imprisoned, we are the ones who are imprisoning them, for we give birth to them as people

by Cristiano Potamianos* | Oct 20th, 2010

His Holiness the Dalai Lama often summarizes Buddhist philosophy in a sentence: “Do good whenever it is possible; if you can’t do good, try to avoid doing evil.” One of the special notions of Buddhism is that the world surrounding us is inseparable from ourselves. So, if we are good to other beings and the environment, we are taking care of our own good. If we do harm to others and to the environment, we are harming ourselves. All beings are connected to each other, all depend of each other.
The Buddhist concept of interdependence also says that we – and everything around us – lack the solidity we deem to have. We assign identities and qualities to each and every thing, including ourselves, from a limited binary standard of liking and disliking, wanting and not wanting.

Lama Padma Samten, formerly Alfredo Aveline, a physics professor at the Federal University in Porto Alegre, invited H.E.

The Enlightened View of Samantabhadra, by Düdjom Lingpa — part 1 October 8-12, 2021
The Enlightened View of Samantabhadra, by Düdjom Lingpa — part 2 October 12-15, 2022

Sharp Vajra of Conscious Awareness Tantra – part 2 October 9-16, 2020, online retreat with Lama Alan Wallace



People are imprisoned, but when we see them imprisoned, we are the ones who are imprisoning them, for we give birth to them as people

by Cristiano Potamianos* | Oct 20th, 2010

His Holiness the Dalai Lama often summarizes Buddhist philosophy in a sentence: “Do good whenever it is possible; if you can’t do good, try to avoid doing evil.” One of the special notions of Buddhism is that the world surrounding us is inseparable from ourselves. So, if we are good to other beings and the environment, we are taking care of our own good. If we do harm to others and to the environment, we are harming ourselves. All beings are connected to each other, all depend of each other.
The Buddhist concept of interdependence also says that we – and everything around us – lack the solidity we deem to have. We assign identities and qualities to each and every thing, including ourselves, from a limited binary standard of liking and disliking, wanting and not wanting.

Lama Padma Samten, formerly Alfredo Aveline, a physics professor at the Federal University in Porto Alegre, invited H.E.

The Enlightened View of Samantabhadra, by Düdjom Lingpa — part 1 October 8-12, 2021