Late Spring Haiku walk on April 30 at Yume Japanese Gardens

  • Sunday, April 30, 2023
  • 12:00 PM  to 1:30 PM
  • Yume Japanese Gardens of Tucson (

This will be our last Haiku workshop before Yume Gardens closes for the summer. We’ll continue our time together and in the garden, watching the changes and observing the AWARE (essential charm) of life, and writing haiku.

The workshop talk will be on Buson, the second of the great Haiku poets, the aesthetic concept of Yugen and its relationship to Japanese Buddhism, and haiku practice for the summer season.

Led by award-winning haiku poet Yukihiro Ibuki and Yume Cultural Director, Paul Amiel.

Date/Time:

Sunday, April 30th at 12PM

Tickets:

$20 general/$10 Members 

Space is limited. Please reserve your spot!Purchase Tickets


Perspectives: An Exploration of Taiko by Odaiko Sonora on April 22

Event by Odaiko Sonora atRhythm Industry Performance Factory

“Join us Saturday, April 22nd at our studio as our Performing Ensemble and Understudies explore the history, inspirations, and spirit of taiko in this 90-minute concert.Tickets are sliding scale $10-15, and seats are first-come, first-served – buy your tickets in advance for access to the reserved front rows!Tickets can be purchased in advance or at the door via:
Venmo: venmo.com/odaikosonora
PayPal: paypal.me/tucsontaiko
Credit card: tinyurl.com/4fvkvwncTickets can also be purchased with cash at the door.There will be a brief intermission; please feel free to bring your own beverages. Masks are encouraged and appreciated. “

April 22 at 7 to 8:30 p.m.

(14) Perspectives: An Exploration of Taiko | Facebook

UA East Asian Studies professor Jiang Wu to lecture on Japanese Obaku Canon on April 18 at UA Main library

The Early Books Lecture Series was established at the University of Arizona by Dr. Albrecht Classen, University Distinguished Professor of German Studies, nearly 20 years ago. 

The Japanese Ōbaku Canon 黃檗藏 and Modern Buddhist Canon Compilations in East Asia is the third and final lecture in this year’s Early Books Lecture Series XVIII.

Date and time:Apr 18, 2023

4:00pm to 6:00pm

Location:

Main Library A313/314; 1510 E. University Blvd. Tucson, AZ 85721

Register today!

“Although the creation of various modern Buddhist canons, such as the Taishō canon, is well-known in East Asia, little is known about the fact that the Ōbaku Canon, originated in early modern China but carved in Japan by the Japanese Ōbaku monk Tetsugen Dōkō 鐵眼道光 (1630-1682), a disciple of the Chinese monk Yinyuan Longqi 隱元隆琦 (1592-1673) and the founder of the Japanese Ōbaku Zen tradition.

This canon, however, was the first Chinese canon brought to Europe through the Japanese Iwakura mission in 1875.  Both Samuel Beal (1825-1889) and Max Müller’s Japanese student Nanjō Bunyū 南條文雄 (1849-1927) translated its entire catalogue into English in 1876 and 1883 respectively. These catalogues, which predated all the modern canon compilations, introduced modern techniques of textual criticism which greatly influenced scholarly communities in Japan.

This lecture investigates the history of the Ōbaku Canon in China and Japan and evaluates its role in reinventing the Buddhist textual tradition in the modern era.  

Registration 

  • Free and open to the public
  • Registration is required to attend in-person or via Zoom
  • Contact Lori Strazza Brown for questions or requests regarding disability-related accommodations

About the presenter
Dr. Jiang Wu (Ph.D., Harvard University, 2002) is director of the Center of Buddhist Studies and professor in the Department of East Asian Studies in the College of Humanities at the University of Arizona.

His research interests include seventeenth-century Chinese Buddhism, Chinese Buddhist canons, spatial analysis of religion, and the historical exchanges between Chinese and Japanese Buddhism. Dr. Wu is the author of numerous books and articles such as Enlightenment in Dispute (Oxford, 2008), Leaving for the Rising Sun (Oxford, 2015), and editor of Spreading Buddha’s Word in East Asia (Columbia, 2016), Reinventing the Tripitaka (Lexington, 2017), The Formation of Regional Religious Systems in Greater China (Routledge, 2022). “

Dance of Spring evenings at Yume Japanese Gardens on April 14 & 15

Join us for our last Evenings of the season when Yume puts on its most beautiful luminous garments. The stroll through the glowing lights of lanterns and candles is absolutely magical. 

Suzu Mitsuyuki will perform Japanese dances during the event on the theme of “Haru Ichiban” (Dance of Spring). An enchanting evening for the whole family!

About the Artist: Suzu started studying Nihon Buyou, Japanese classical dancing, in Japan at the age of three. She is a professionally trained performer and choreographer with master instructor degrees from Japan and the US.

Date & Time:

4/14

6:30 PM – 8:00 PM

Tickets:
General Admission: $19

Members: $15

Children 3-15: $5

Advanced ticket reservation is required. This is a limited admission event.Time & Date:Purchase Tickets

Join us for our last Evenings of the season when Yume puts on its most beautiful luminous garments. The stroll through the glowing lights of lanterns and candles is absolutely magical. 

Suzu Mitsuyuki will perform Japanese dances during the event on the theme of “Haru Ichiban” (Dance of Spring). An enchanting evening for the whole family!

About the Artist: Suzu started studying Nihon Buyou, Japanese classical dancing, in Japan at the age of three. She is a professionally trained performer and choreographer with master instructor degrees from Japan and the US.

Date & Time:

4/15

6:30 PM – 8:00 PM

Tickets:
General Admission: $19

Members: $15

Children 3-15: $5

Advanced ticket reservation is required. This is a limited admission event.Time & Date:Purchase Tickets