Visit to Italy
I have been
in Europe for over one month already. Having been away for two years it has
been a curious experience of the old and familiar mixed with the completely new.
I arrived on March 22 at Santacittarama Monastery near Rome where I was very
warmly welcomed. I had not been there for nearly ten years and it was strange
that not much had changed during that time, other than a major increase in the
number of huts, the addition of much better guest accommodation and a large (taller than Ajahn Chandapalo) standing Buddha image. It was also
somewhat of a ‘deja vu’ to be together with Ajahn Chandapalo and Ashin Ottama,
the last time we were together was in the first Dhammapala in Konolfingen,
Switzerland some 25 years ago!
At
Santacittarama the original house is still being used for the meal and
meditation (or, in warmer weather, the still-enduring, sixteen-year old tent) even
though there are six monks and four anagarikas, plus quite a few lay guests. Besides
Ajahn Chandapalo and Ashin Ottama, in residence there are three Thai monks:
Ajahn Preecha, Ajahn Tok and Ajahn Go, and the senior Italian monk, Ajahn Mahapanyo.
Now, however, after nearly fifteen years, they have finally received permission
to build a large three-storey Sala, with two meeting halls, library, guest-monk rooms,
toilets and showers, and a basement workshop.
Ajahn Chandapalo
was telling me of how fortunate they were to find this very suitable property
after viewing hundreds of potential ones. It is favourably situated 50 km NE of
Rome in the beginning of the Sabine hills, an area of rolling forested hills
and valleys cultivated mostly with olive orchards. The monastery property is
primarily along the bank of a lush, tree-covered stream, with the main house on
a hilltop surrounded by lawns and fruit trees, allowing for plenty of parking
space. My hut, situated only five minutes walk from the house, was high above
the stream yet still sheltered under the trees. Even though neighbouring houses
are fairly close and visible from most parts of the monastery, the atmosphere
was exceptionally quiet and peaceful.
While it
was very refreshing to be out of the Bangkok Hot Season, unfortunately, my
first week in Europe was mostly rainy and cool, with one morning of frost. Fortunately
though, I was accommodated in one of the newest huts (next to the ruins of an
old stone building) with a very efficient wood stove which, with careful
management, kept the temperature around 25C. Spring flowers were already in
prolific abundance and the cherry trees were in splendid bloom.
The hut next to the ruined building.
The day
Ajahn Chandapalo and I began a short trip to Sorrento the weather fortuitously
turned sunny and warm. Khun Waew, a Thai supporter who has been in Italy for
many years, invited us for a visit and very generously provided transport and
accommodation, as well as acting as tour guide. With an early morning departure
from the monastery we took the high-speed train from Rome (travelling up to 300
km/hr) and were in Naples for lunch. Before travelling to Sorrento we managed a
short excursion to the top of Mt. Vesuvius, the dormant volcano towering over
the Bay of Naples made infamous with the destruction of Pompeii in 79 AD. Other
than some sulphur-smelling steam rising from a few places, it was not an
especially impressive volcano (although potentially dangerous for the 3 million
people who live beneath it), however the view over Naples, the Bay of Naples
and the snow-capped mountains inland was quite spectacular.
View of Mt. Vesuvius from Sorrento.
The Bay of
Naples is a huge crescent-shaped bay with peninsulars at both ends. Sorrento
lies halfway along the southern peninsular in a broad bowl between the hills,
with fifty meter cliffs lined with hotels along the sea. Off the very end of
the peninsular is the Island of Capri with steep cliffs and rocky shoreline. The
Amalfi Coast begins over the southern hills from Sorrento. One tour book says this
is the ‘most beautiful coastline in Europe’. While not being able to confirm
that, it was indeed quite spectacularly scenic with very steep hillsides plunging
into the turquoise Mediterranean Sea and pastel-coloured houses stacked up the
rocky slopes.
Amalfi Coast (AC photo).
At the meal
invitations we met some of the Thais living in the Sorrento area and all the
six Thais who live on Capri. Ajahn Chandapalo gave meditation instructions and
teachings in Italian for the non-Thais who attended. The Italians, like the
Thais, are exceptionally friendly, grand-hearted and ever-grateful and, also
like the Thais, are very generous when it comes to offering food. We were very
abundantly fed and were accommodated in a quiet, country-side guest house,
Villa Rosmary, surrounded by burgeoning lemon trees, and overlooking the sea
with Mt. Vesuvius in the distance.
Santacittarama
is now very well-known throughout Buddhist Italy which means that there is a
steady stream of guests coming for short or long stay, an increasing number of
people interested in taking up the monastic training and Ajahn Chandapalo is
very busy teaching retreats, giving talks and lectures throughout the whole of
Italy, including Sicily and Sardinia. Wherever we went people smiled or
greeted us, and a number wanted to talk
or asked to have their photo taken with us (Khun Waew skilfully telling
the women not to hug us!). Hopefully there will eventually be more
Italian-speaking monks to help with the teachings and the spread of Dhamma in
the Italian-speaking world.