In the
Media
courtesy Winnipeg Free
Press
Sensei Fredrich Ulrich and the
Manitoba Buddhist Temple have been fortunate to have been
featured in several outlets of the Canadian media.
Buddhism Explains
Stoic Reaction to Disaster
Winnipeg Free
Press
"Natural
tragedies are part of living on the planet," says
Fredrich Ulrich, Sensei of the Manitoba Buddhist
Temple. "Its geology and geography make such
recurring tragedies inevitable. There is no need to
think we have been targeted by a god of some sort."
Include atheists in
discussions, Buddhist urges
Winnipeg
Free Press
The next time someone convenes a discussion between
different faith groups, consider extending the
invitation to those who proclaim to have no faith at
all, suggests a leader in the Buddhist community....
Where is
God?
CBC
CBC Radio and CBCNews.ca are exploring the question
"Where is God today?" Commentators, religious thinkers
and ordinary Canadians give their thoughts...
The Promise of
Buddhist-Christian Dialogue
God Alive
(Vaughan Weekly Newspaper)
The Rev. Fredrich Ulrich was the key note
speaker at the Toronto Conference of the United Church
of Canada (the annual gathering of United Churches in
the GTA). Nothing extraordinary in that, is there?
Is there meaning in
life?
CMU/GodTalk Radio Forum
Is there meaning and purpose in life? That’s a question
many people ask. About 150 people turned out to a forum
at Canadian Mennonite University on March 5 to hear a
Christian, a Buddhist and a humanist offer answers to
that question...
Buddha, Beastie
Boys and the Way of the Fist
Canstar News
Service
It hard to imagine
that belligerent side of him as he gently pours tea
and, at times, closes his eyes when he speaks, as if
to put his words into a well-thought-out cadence. It
sounds like a movie, but the path Ulrich took to
Buddhism is wilder than any Bruce Lee film...
Canadian Buddhists
Celebrate 100 Years
Winnipeg Free
Press/Global TV
The 100th Anniversary of Shin Buddhism in this country
was celebrated on August 28 at the Manitoba Buddhist
Temple, 825 Winnipeg Avenue. It was built in 1946 by
Japanese-Canadian Buddhists on release from internment
working Manitoban beet fields...