Heraldnet.com
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 1:20 am
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Tuesday
Whidbey Island whooping cough outbreak threaten...
Text messages led to 2 arrests in Sultan man's ...
Edmonds man wins $670,000 lottery jackpot
Monday


Group Health tries Web-based care to treat high...
Conserve and you can save, PUD says
Sound Transit jeered by county leaders
Sunday


Jetty Island opens: Leave your shoes behind
Police turn to third suspect in burglaries
Man arrested at scene of fires
Saturday


Everett celebrates in style
Addition of 19,000 residents to Marysville may ...
Gap in Centennial Trail won't be fixed soon
Friday


Everett man's face a portrait of patriotism
Don't be a slowpoke in left lane, police say
Man's death a stark reminder of food allergy risks
Thursday


Plan your fun for the Fourth of July holiday
Everett caretaker arrested in theft from elderl...
If you think gas costs hurt now, just wait
Wednesday


At Russian-style bath house in Everett, clients...
Everett teen remembered as standout at school
Report on Lake Stevens Marine's death to be con...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Entertainment   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Melanie Munk, Features Editor
munk@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, May 9, 2008

Documentary chronicles meditation behind bars

Is a prison a place of rehabilitation or a warehouse? That question continues to vex the penal system in this country, and jailhouse documentaries such as "The Dhamma Brothers" argue hard for rehab.

This movie chronicles a program in Buddhist meditation, initiated at the rough Donaldson Correctional Facility in Alabama. For 10 days, a group of inmates strictly follow the silent meditation techniques of Vipassana meditation.

At first, some skepticism about this is understandable. Surely such a program would probably look good on a prisoner's record, or at least be a break in an otherwise monotonous life.

But one inmate, in jail for murder, describes the 10-day program as the hardest thing he'd ever gone through -- and he spent years on Death Row.

Meditation may not sound like the most arrestingly cinematic image; Let's face it, it's people sitting around with their eyes closed for hours at a time. But the movie weaves in before-and-after interviews, not only with the convicts but with guards, wardens and the teachers who brought the program to Donaldson.

There must have been some washouts, although we don't hear about that. (We do hear about cultural resistance to a Buddhist-based program in a heavily Christian community.) But some of the inmates emerge as -- well, if not as changed men, then at least as people who have gone to some deep place and had a profound experience there.

The movie has some similarities to "Shakespeare Behind Bars," which was about prisoners performing in an annual Shakespeare production. That film had more richness, because it gave the inmates something to talk about besides themselves.

One of the directors of "The Dhamma Brothers," Jenny Phillips, is a psychotherapist who began the meditation course at the prison, so this is not an objective outsider's look at the subject. It doesn't claim that serious criminals should be let free, either -- just that something significant might happen to them while they pay their debt to society.

1. Text messages led to 2 arrests in Sultan man's killing
2. Man shot to death in south Everett
3. Arrest made in early morning shooting death
4. Boeing 7-8-07 rollout : One year later
5. Hikers rescued off Mount Pilchuck
6. Governor's race gets costly; in Snohomish County, Rossi leads Gregoire in fundraising
7. Neighborhood fireworks ruin day
8. Auburn teen pleads guilty in gang-related slaying
9. Everett needs parking more than new children's theater, some businesses say
10. Miss Jessica: Racecar teacher
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
PCC illegally chops three trees in Edmonds
Local lottery winner takes biggest ever prize
Man shot to death south of Everett
Terrace seeks to sharpen dog ordinance's teeth
Terrace council OKs controversial housing development
An era ends: the curtain falls on the Sonics
Red, White, and Blue: Parade photoalbum
World famous, and headed to Everett
The man in charge
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes



ADVERTISEMENT