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  1. Doing time doing vipassana. Read this before watching the documentary film: Doing Time, Doing Vipassana. (see link below) This film is about how a specific mode of Buddhist meditation, known as vipassana, can change the state of our heart and mind – emotions, moods, feelings and thoughts – and so our behaviour and the quality of our life.

  2. 3. Mai 2020 · Doing Time Doing Vipassana – Part 1 of 6 (English) Doing Time, Doing Vipassana is a 1997 Israeli independent documentary film project by two women filmmakers from Israel: Ayelet Menahemi and Eilona Ariel. The film is about the application of the vipassana meditation technique taught by S. N. Goenka to prisoner rehabilitation at Tihar Jail in ...

  3. 6. Juli 2005 · Doing Time, Doing Vipassana strains to summon a sense of spiritual gravitas. by Ed Gonzalez. July 6, 2005. This Immediate Pictures release of Eilona Ariel and Ayelet Menahemi’s documentary from 1997 traces the effects of an ancient form of Buddhist meditation on a community of men inside an Indian prison. Kiran Bedi, the country’s first ...

  4. More Info. This classic documentary film (offered here as streaming video) takes viewers into India's largest prison, one of the toughest in the world, and documents the dramatic change in both inmates and guards brought about by the introduction of Vipassana meditation. This award-winning film is not only beautifully shot, but also serves as ...

  5. Doing Time, Doing Vipassana (Film, 1997): Der Film über die Meditationsform 'Vipassana' zeigt wie diese Technik in indischen Gefängnissen in Kursen...

  6. This award-winning film is not only beautifully shot, but also serves as an introduction to what a Vipassana course is for anyone interested in learning more about it. In the winter of 1994-95 the filmmakers spent five months in India, doing intensive research on the use of Vipassana as a rehabilitation method. The authorities were unusually ...

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  7. This film includes interviews with inmates and jail officials, the inspector general, and Buddhist meditation masters who taught Vipassana. According to Kyabje Kalu in Luminous Minds, meditation practice fosters mental stabilization: "In order to develop a stable mind, it is necessary to begin by abandoning attachment to sense objects and distracting activities.