From Deseret News archives:

Faithful journey: Colorado students explore religions along Wasatch Front

Published: Saturday, April 26, 2008 12:41 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Inside the Kaisendo, or ancestors room, Monk Simon Heale points out the urns of human ashes that reside there, the remains of Zen Buddhist teachers who have helped guide the destiny of this spiritual retreat in downtown Salt Lake City.

Nine high school students and two teachers are visiting on a Wednesday afternoon, listening intently as the monk — clad in a fleece jacket, khaki shorts and tennis shoes — describes the importance of tracing ancestry within Buddhist teaching.

When the explanation is finished, the students head upstairs to the meditation room, or "Zendo," at the Kanzeon Zen Center, seating themselves in a half-circle on floor cushions with legs crossed. They listen as Simon asks them to think deeply about several questions he asks as part of the "Big Mind" class conducted regularly here.

The experience is one part of a weeklong, multidenominational tour along the Wasatch Front, which began earlier this month at the Krishna Temple in Spanish Fork in the south and ended with the Khadeeja Mosque in West Valley City before the students spent a day driving home.

The expedition, dubbed "Crossroads of the West: Religion, Diversity and Culture in Salt Lake City," was a field trip for students in Kelly Habecker's humanities class at Silverton High School in southwest Colorado.

Story continues below
Why only nine students? "They're the entire high school," Habecker replied, noting the town has only about 450 residents, so it wasn't difficult to get parents to agree to the trip once they learned the philosophy behind it.

The issues that often arise when public schools want to talk about faith didn't materialize for Habecker. "I expected a lot more (questions) than I got. We started the year with parent meetings, explaining the purpose of the course and that it would be unbiased and equal opportunity for all the faiths we visited.

"The parents were all very encouraging and supportive of their kids learning about different traditions, and there are a variety of faith traditions among students. For the most part, we really avoided personal perspectives. We tried to focus on what we were looking at."

Most people don't peg Utah as religiously diverse. In fact, they see it as spiritually monochromatic, dominated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. And that was the draw for Habecker.

"We wanted to see how diversity works when you have a very big majority of one religion," she said. "We were really surprised at the diversity and communication between religions that happens."

Recent comments

To "YesRay" and JohnnyGreen"

Oh, OK. then that makes it OK,...

Ray | April 27, 2008 at 12:20 p.m.

Never mind that the pastors got their members to chase out those bad...

JohnnyGreen | April 27, 2008 at 11:07 a.m.

I think the LDS church was just sick and tired of the way the rest of...

Yes Ray, | April 26, 2008 at 11:40 p.m.

Image

Monk Simon Heale describes the importance of tracing ancestry within Buddhist teaching to Colorado students at the Kanzeon Zen Center in Salt Lake City.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hair-pulling raises more questions

How about doing away with off sides call. What would basketball be like with...

Senators want food tax restored

It's obvious that the rich are trying to eliminate the poor, but then who...

'Gays and lesbians have the same rights as anyone else and no one has taken...

Disney studio executive exits

the 90 million surplus from last year was enough to pay this exec's golden...

Y. tight ends talented tandem

November 19, 2005 Utah 41—34 LaVell Edwards Stadium Utah won in 2005.

Perhaps this is just strategy on Mike Pratt's part to be able to be with his...

To: Anonymous:9:51 am. to Confused:get over yourself.::: What a comment to...

The comments of "busymomma" and "Out on Friday easy to manage" are what need...

TO "jackhp | 10:41 a.m. " nice to see you ignoring actual facts and jsut...

Who picks them. Doesn't the coaches nominate the girls?

Advertisements
Advertisement