Mindfulness Teachers Conference Retreat 2015
Short biographies of featured speakers and panel moderators
As a lay person, Thich Chan Phap Kham obtained a BSEE from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in June 1983 and a MSEE from The University of Maryland in May 1986. From 1983 to 1986, he worked at National Institute of Health (in Bethesda, Maryland) and completed his master's thesis on signal processing methods for Evoked Potentials. Fom 1986 to 1997, he worked at Harry Diamond Laboratories (in Adelphi, Maryland), doing research on radar systems.
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Professor Chan is the MB Lee Professor in the Humanities and Medicine, Chair Professor in Department of Pathology in Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine; and a Director of The Centre for the Humanities and Medicine at the University of Hong Kong. Trained as a clinical haematologist in the UK, Professor Chan has been a faculty in HKU since 1989. He has a special interest in curriculum development, problem-based learning in medicine, general education, and mindful practice. He is a Co-Director of the Medical Ethics and Humanities Unit, and the Chairman of the Medical Humanities Planning Group responsible for the development and the teaching and learning of medical humanities which is part of the core undergraduate medical curriculum. Though the medical humanities program, students learn to understand and experience who they are beneath the white coat, the nature of suffering and healing, the role of empathy and compassion, and the importance for health care professionals to take care of themselves and to build resilience. He is a member of the Common Core Curriculum Steering Committee of HKU that is responsible for developing a liberal arts education for all students. Professor Chan received an Outstanding Teaching Award (OTA) from the University of Hong Kong in 2009 and OTA (Team) in 2013. |
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Ms. Jacqueline Law is a Registered Clinical Psychologist in Hong Kong. |
Dr. Ha Vinh Tho is the Program Director at the Gross National Happiness Centre in Bhutan. In this capacity, he is overseeing the implementation of“A Call to Care”, a curriculum aiming at developing Compassion from kindergarten to University in all the school in Bhutan and in Vietnam. He is also the founder and chairman of Eurasia Foundation, a humanitarian NGO developing educational programs for children and youth living with disabilities, as well as ecological projects in Vietnam. Previously, he served as Head of training, learning and development at the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva. He is a Buddhist teacher the Tradition of Vietnamese Zen Buddhism ordained by Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh. Dr. Ha Vinh Tho has been a professor of education at several universities in Europe and Vietnam, he has published several books and many articles on topics including curative education, engaged spirituality, intercultural dialogue, adult education and humanitarian action. He holds a Ph.D. in Psychology and Education from the University of Geneva. |
Christine Cheung is the spiritual trainer (School Development Officer) of the Spiritual Education Project “InSpirEd” (心靈教育計劃) under the HK Institute of Educational Research at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. A former secondary school teacher, she has been practicing mindfulness in the Plum Village tradition since 2001, and is one of the founders of the "Friends of Plum Village Sangha" which was the first lay sangha to bring Plum Village practice to the public in Hong Kong. She has been keen to share mindfulness with a variety of people, including teachers, students, parents, her own family and the general public. |
Parry Leung is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Work at the China University of Political Science and Law. He was the founder and chair of Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM) during 2006 to 2013. SACOM is a Hong Kong-based anti-sweatshop organization which has been active in uncovering labor abuses. Parry has been a member of the Order-of-Interbeing of the Plum Village Sangha since 2011. He has been keen to share mindfulness teaching in Hong Kong, Beijing, Yangzhou and Chengdu. |
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Shantum is actively involved in social, environmental and educational programmes including work on teacher training through Cultivating Mindfulness in Education, being pioneered by the non-profit trust, Ahimsa. www.ahimsatrust.org He is working on setting up a Mindfulness Practice centre in Dehradun, India. He is a Senior Advisor to the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation on Buddhism and Pilgrimage Tourism and is on the advisory board to the Minister of Culture, Government of India. He worked in the corporate sector and later in social advocacy and development, fifteen years of which were with the United Nations Development Programme, managing programmes on volunteer promotion and artisan support across 16 countries, as also initiating the Endogenous Tourism programme in India. He has contributed to a number of books including, 'Walking with the Buddha', 'Planting Seeds… Sharing Mindfulness with Children', and 'Volunteers against Conflict'. He has also been a consultant on films including 'Life of the Buddha' made by the BBC and Discovery and 'The Story of India' made by BBC and PBS. There is also a book written about his pilgrimage 'In the Footsteps of the Buddha' called 'Every Day is Magical' by Susan Wiget. He has had a weekly programme on Zee TV in India, where he offered teachings on Buddhism and Meditation in Everyday Life. He has been a guest speaker at many forums including to the World Presidents’Organization, the United Nations Development Programme executive board, the Confederation of Indian Industries, the Government of India's Buddha Purnima divas and a number of educational institutions, corporations and museums East and West. Shantum Seth studied at The Doon School and St Stephen’s College in India and then graduated in Development Studies with his thesis in Gandhian Economics from the University of East Anglia, while also graduating in Footwear Technology and Management in England. His commitment to a cross-cultural and global understanding has led him to travel to more than 50 countries and nearly every state of India. Having lived in England, the USA and France for over 14 years, he now lives with his family in Mussoorie, in the Indian Himalayas. |
Michelle Choi is a practicing clinical psychologist and a registered social worker in Hong Kong. Being aspired to live a meaningful life since young, she has developed her volition to become a clinical psychologist since the age of twelve. Before beginning her journey as a psychologist, she served as a medical social worker at the Queen Mary Hospital after obtaining her Bachelor degree in Social Work at the University of Hong Kong in 2009. In 2013, she obtained her Master Degree in Clinical Psychology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Currently, she is serving individuals and families who are suffering from mental health problems, going through the aftermath of abuses, and facing life’s crisis. To her, becoming a helping professional offers her the privilege to navigate with other individuals to deepen their as well as her understanding about life. As a young psychologist facing the complexity of life manifestations, she realized the importance of cultivating compassion, solidity and wisdom in her clinical practice. Feeling joyfully connected with Plum Village’s teachings, she has started her mindfulness practice with the Plum Village sangha since 2012 and completed the One-Year Mindfulness Teachers Training Program in 2015. |
Vicente Hao Chin Jr. is the President of Golden Link College Foundation, a theosophical school in the Philippines. He has conducted the Self-Transformation Seminar in eighteen countries around the world, and has served as Director of the School of the Wisdom in India. He has published several books such as the Process of Self-Transformation, Why Meditate?, On Education, and edited the chronological edition of the Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett. He has served as President of the Theosophical Society in the Philippines and the Indo-Pacific Federation of the TS. |
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Grace Bruneel was educated in Rosaryhill School in Hong Kong and received her Bachelor Degree of Arts in York University in Canada. She was a Human Resources professional, working in various multinational companies including Cathay Pacific Airways, American President Lines, and a freelance trainer/facilitator in personal development, teambuilding and leadership programs. She retired in 1998 because of ill health. In year 2000, after a sudden loss of three very dear friends in several months, she started to question about life and became a Zen Buddhist practitioner. In 2007, Grace encountered Thich Nhat Hanh’s teachings and has taken 14 Mindfulness Trainings in 2010. She is currently a volunteer in Rosaryhill School helping to share mindfulness with students, teachers and parents. |
Prof Lee Seng Teik holds an Emeritus Senior Consultant position in Singapore General Hospital and he is on the Faculty of the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School. He is semi-retired and spends most of his spare time in humanitarian medical missions in the region like Hainan province, China, Laos PDR and Cambodia. Last Nov, he organised the inaugural International Conference on Humanitarian Medical Missions which attracted over 300 attendees from 17 different countries. In his own specialty of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, he is a mentor to surgical trainees and also to researchers working in the areas such as epidermal stem cells, skin tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. He is an active member of the Joyful Garden Sangha in Singapore. He has been with the PV tradition for 5 years and acts in an advisory capacity to JGS which is a new fledgling Sangha community . However, the Sangha has an energetic and vibrant core group which is active in the wake-up movement and in organising regular DOMs and retreats. One of our Sangha members has now been ordained as a novice nun resident in Plum Village, France, Sr Linh Cac, and 6 have been take up the OI order. Prof Lee is interested to introduce Mindfulness training into the medical curriculum. He is currently working closely with the Duke-NUS GMS to explore the ways in which this can be done in a secular manner |
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Dr. Katrina Tsang is a mindfulness practitioner with the the Plum Village Hong Kong Sangha since 2011. She received the 14 Mindfulness Trainings in 2014 and is a core member of the PVHK Healthy-Body Healthy-Mind health and social professional sangha. She is an assistant professor at the School of Public Health and Primary Care in the Division of Family Medicine and Primary Health Care since September 2011. She is conducting a randomized controlled trial to study the effects of Mindfulness-based Childbirth and Parenting (MBCP) on mothers-to-be, fathers-to-be and their newborns in Hong Kong. Katrina is also interested in research and application of mindfulness in children, end of life and palliative care, and medical education and training for students and health professionals. Katrina obtained her medical degree from The Chinese University of Hong Kong and holds a Bachelor of Science in International Health from University of Leeds. She received her post-graduate medical training at University of Virginia Medical Center and is certified by the American Board of Family Medicine. Katrina completed a fellowship in Maternal and Child Health in Chicago, worked with pregnant women with high obstetric risks, and performed normal and operative deliveries including cesarean sections. She also has an interest in global health and has practiced medicine in Cambodia, China, The Gambia, Malawi, South Africa and Tanzania. During her family medicine training at University of Virginia, she worked in the International Family Medicine Clinic to provide healthcare for refugees from different regions of the world.
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Dr Alfred C C Wong works as Consultant Vascular & Endovascular Surgeon and Honorary Clinical Associate Professor in Surgery in The University of Hong Kong (HKU), Department of Surgery, Queen Mary Hospital. He developed his interest in photography since his medical student's day back in early 90's in HKU. After his return from vascular surgical overseas training in Royal Perth Hospital, Western Australia in 2007, C C met Mr Alain Yip (葉青霖), a talented and renowned portrait photographer in Hong Kong. Apart from being a commercial photographer, Alain was also a devoted buddhist student who conveyed buddhist teachings and zen messages through his photography. Alain's work touched C C's heart deeply and then he became a student of Alain and learned the art of zen photography from him. Moment came when Mr Alain Yip let go everything and became Venerable Chang-lin (常霖法師) in 2010, C C continued to follow his teacher, learning mindfulness and zen practice. Conditions matured and Venerable Chang-lin appointed CC as Alain Yip's 8th photographic disciple during Winter retreat in Plum Village in France in 2013. |
Larry Ward Director: The Lotus Institute. Together We are One, contributing author (Parallax Press 2010) recent presentations: Spirituality and Neuroscience Conference, Claremont School of Theology (2009). Mindfulness and Psychotherapy, UCLA (2008), The Mind and Society, Pitzer College. (2010). American Buddhism, Claremont School of Theology (2010). Psychology of Mindfulness and Wellness, Scripps Clinic (2011) Buddhist Contemplative Traditions and Western Science (2012), Leading Mindfully: Bringing Presence and Wisdom to Action, Mindfulness Week, Sweden (2013) Consultant, Professor and Social Artist Larry Ward was deeply inspired by the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and has spent his life committed to non-violent social change, healing, and transformation on a global level. He served on the staff of the Ecumenical Institute and Institute of Cultural Affairs for twenty years as director, academy dean and master teacher. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Organizational Behavior and established his own firm providing consulting services with multinational clients He has successfully designed, sold and facilitated executive education over twenty years in the private sector. Larry received his Christian ordination in 1972 and now serves as a 43rd generation lineage holder of the Lam Te Dhyana School having received Dharma Teacher Transmission in 2000 by Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh. He is a leading proponent of Buddhism in America and leads retreats around the world (i.e. Vietnam, China, Korea, Canada, Mexico, France and the United States). Larry mentors ministerial students and Zen priests in the Order of Interbeing founded by Thich Nhat Hanh. Love’s Garden: A Guide to Mindful Relationships, co-authored with his wife Peggy Rowe-Ward were acknowledged as one of the best Buddhist writings of 2009. Larry is currently completing his doctoral studies in Religious Studies majoring in Buddhism. He is currently completing his dissertation on Meditation as self-directed neuroplasticity. In his leisure time, Larry enjoys playing with Charlie their dog and a round of golf. Contact information: larry@thelotusinstitute.org (909) 621-9302 |