Kuan Yin Goddess Circle
by Selena Fox
On
Thursday evening, July 24, 2003, twenty-one women gathered at Circle Sanctuary
land in Wisconsin to celebrate Kuan Yin and grow in understanding of Her.
This gathering was a meeting of the Goddess Circle, an interfaith women's
spirituality study group associated with the Circle Sanctuary Community.
Each month, we focus on a different form of the Divine Feminine. On this
evening, we worked with Kuan Yin and Her powers of healing, compassion,
and illumination.
We began our Kuan Yin evening indoors in the Temple Room. As we arrived,
we created a Kuan Yin altar with the variety of Her images and symbols
we brought from our homes. I presented an overview of the evening and
facilitated a brief group discussion about this. Then one of our members,
Elspeth, shared her ideas for our Shrine journey and passed around Kuan
Yin attribute cards she had crafted. Each card named some associated quality
of Kuan Yin, such as "Goddess of Healing," "She who brings
Inner Calm," "Protectress of Farmers," and "Goddess
of Mercy." Several colored ribbons were attached to each card to
signify Her connection with Rainbows. Elspeth invited the women to select
a card to take with them to add to the Shrine as an additional way of
honoring and connecting with the many facets of Kuan Yin there. After
we finalized our plans for the evening, we began our ritual work.
I guided our honoring of sacred space. Standing, we faced and connected
with the seven directions. As I sounded a ritual bell, we aligned with
the sacred powers of North, East, South, West, Cosmos Above, Land and
Planet Below, and the Center, the interconnecting Great Spirit. We envisioned
a Circle of Light around the entire land, encompassing our ritual activities
outside as well as indoors. Then we began aligning individually with the
Goddess Kuan Yin. I passed around the ritual bell. Each woman rang it,
and, speaking her own name, said "I celebrate Kuan Yin." After
going around full circle, we ended with a group alignment by chanting
three times: "We celebrate Kuan Yin!"
We next prepared for the processional to the Kuan Yin Shrine. We took
in hand our attribute cards and various offerings, such as flowers, incense,
and ritual objects. Rowan led us in an ancient mantra which included both
jewel and lotus, two symbols traditionally associated with Kuan Yin. As
we walked along the road to the Kuan Yin Shrine, we chanted: "Om
Mani Padme Hum" and resonated with its meaning: "The Jewel of
Creation is in the Lotus."
Upon
arriving at the Kuan Yin Shrine, we formed a circle and began repeatedly
chanting Kuan Yin's name to invoke Her and honor Her. As we continued
to chant, one by one, each woman went before the Shrine, placed flowers,
incense, and other offerings, and silently and personally asked for Kuan
Yin's help in some way. At the center of the Shrine is a statue of Kuan
Yin and behind it is a handcrafted trellis of Willow wood, a tree sacred
to Kuan Yin. As we each took our personal turn at the Shrine, we tied
onto this trellis the attribute card we had selected. After we had all
completed our individual work with Her, we joined our hands in the circle
and did a group honoring of Her as we intensified our chanting of Her
name. The chant peaked, and then we were silent for a time, experiencing
Kuan Yin's presence.
I then guided a Kuan Yin Healing meditation. We visualized ourselves
receiving healing from the Goddess for ourselves. Then we called upon
Kuan Yin to bring healing to loved ones as we called out their names.
We next visualized Kuan Yin bringing healing light to the community of
life on planet Earth. We concluded with a soft chant of thanksgiving to
Her, "We give thanks."
As we prepared to depart from the Shrine, I played a singing bowl and
we began toning on its note. We continued toning as we journeyed back
indoors into the Temple Room. Once we had reassembled there, our sharing
circle began. I began by talking about Kuan Yin's growth as a multicultural
Goddess and gave a bit of the history of the Kuan Yin Shrine on our land.
Then I passed around, as our speaking symbol, a small image of Kuan Yin
carved out of the gemstone adventurine. As the Kuan Yin symbol made its
way around our circle, each woman had the opportunity to say something
about Kuan Yin. Some spoke about experiences at the Shrine. Some talked
about their ways of working with Kuan Yin in their personal spiritual
practice. Some shared poems they had written or found. Others shared some
of Her lore or spoke about Her symbology.
Our Circle concluded with a thanksgiving to Kuan Yin. We faced the seven
directions and gave thanks as I rang the ritual bell. I passed around
the bell again and each woman rang it and spoke of something she took
from our evening into her daily life. We concluded a closing chant.
Selena Fox is high priestess of Circle Sanctuary. She has been guiding
rituals and presenting workshops for more than thirty years. Her writings
and photographs have been published in books and periodicals as well as
on-line. For more information about the Goddess Circle Selena facilitates
each month at Circle Sanctuary Land, see the website: www.circlesanctuary.org/goddesscircle
Monaghan, Patricia (1997). The New Book of Goddesses & Heroines. St.
Paul, Minnesota: Llewellyn Publications. pages 185-186.
Pears, Jeffrey. "Kuan Yin: Goddess of Compassion." www.monasticminds.com/news2.html
Vames, Amy "The Goddess of Mercy: How Kuan-Yin became a Chinese
Deity" Rutgers University News & Media, December 14, 2001. uc.rutgers.edu/medrel/viewArticle.phtml?ArticleID=1967
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