Tibet Foundation - Art and Culture - Tibetan Peace Garden

In May 1999, His Holiness the Dalai Lama opened and consecrated the Tibetan Peace Garden next to the Imperial War Museum, London, UK. The Peace Garden was commissioned by Tibet Foundation and built on land kindly provided by Southwark Council. It has been donated to the people of Britain for all to enjoy.


Overview of the Peace Garden, with the Language Pillar to the right.  

The Tibetan Peace Garden honours one of the principal teachings of His Holiness - the need to create understanding between different cultures and to establish places of peace and harmony in the world. It is hoped that it will create a deepening awareness of His Holiness’s thoughts and words.

At the same time the Garden also serves to create a greater awareness of Buddhist culture. At its heart is the Kalachakra Mandala associated with world peace. Merely to gaze on this Mandala is said to confer something of its blessing and power to transform, and here, cast for the first time in bronze, it rests as the central focus for the garden.


The fire Panel.

The contemporary western sculptures (which are set on a north, south, east, west axis) representing the four elements Air, Fire, Earth & Water and the language pillar with its carving in four languages of a message for the millennium by His Holiness The Dalai Lama, form a symbol of the harmony that can be created between different people and cultures.

Around the Mandala are 8 meditation seats which represent the noble eightfold path; right view, thought, speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness and concentration.

The garden also stands as a monument to the courage of the Tibetan people and their patient commitment to the path of non-violence and peace. It will remind us too that Tibet's culture is a treasure of our common heritage, and how vital it is that it be kept alive.

The inner gardens are planted with herbs and plants from Tibet and the Himalayan regions, while the pergola is covered with climbing plants, including jasmine, honeysuckle and scented roses. The surrounding area is landscaped and planted with trees in a collaborative venture that involved the Borough of Southwark and the local community.


View over the Peace Mandala looking toward the Language Pillar.

The Tibetan Peace Garden has a unique location. The park in which it is built houses The Imperial War Museum and so attracts large numbers of visitors from all over the UK and abroad. It is within walking distance of Waterloo Station and is close to the Houses of Parliament, Lambeth Palace, the London Eye, the South Bank Centre and Tate Modern.

Simply and yet perhaps most deeply, Samten Kyil means Garden of Contemplation and is a place where anyone can come and enjoy a time of peace and tranquillity. For the spiritually minded, this is no longer an ordinary place, because it has been both consecrated and blessed by His Holiness the Dalai Lama to have a spiritual life of its own.

In a very practical sense by offering this garden, we hope that it will encourage people to become aware of Tibet Foundation's activities and so enable us to achieve more with our existing programmes, and to initiate new ones. Anyone who knows the plight of Tibet and her people will know how much there is to do.

Reminder, symbol, sanctuary, offering, zone of peace and inner content, or simply just a garden - it is our aspiration that you enjoy the Tibetan Peace Garden and find in it a place of inspiration and delight.

The Language Pillar

Near to the Garden’s entrance, is a stone pillar known as the Language Pillar. Carved into each side of this pillar is a special message from His Holiness the Dalai Lama in Tibetan, English, Chinese and Hindi. The pillar design is based on the Sho Pillar, a 9th century treaty stone in Lhasa acknowledging the rights of both Tibet and China to co exist in peace. The three carved steps at the top of the pillar represent peace understanding and love.

The message reads:

FROM HIS HOLINESS THE 14th DALAI LAMA

“We human beings are passing through a crucial period in our development.

 

Conflicts and mistrust have plagued the past century, which has brought immeasurable human suffering and environmental destruction. It is in the interests of all of us on this planet that we make a joint effort to turn the next century into an era of peace and harmony.

May this peace garden become a monument to the courage of the Tibetan people and their commitment to peace

May it remain as a symbol to remind us that human survival depends on living in harmony and always choosing the path of non-violence in resolving our differences.”

How to get there

The Tibetan Peace Garden

Geraldine Mary Harmsworth Park

St George's Road

London SE1 6ER

Mainline train: London Waterloo; the garden is around 10 minutes walk from the station

Underground: Elephant & Castle (Bakerloo/Northern Lines)

Lambeth North (Bakerloo Line)

Bus: 12,45,53,63,68,159,168,

171,176,188,344 & C10 pass outside

Parking: There are very few parking facilities nearby, and we do not advise driving to the garden. The nearest NCP is at Elephant & Castle Shopping Centre, Elephant Rd

Credits

The Tibetan Peace Garden Appeal

President Lama Doboom Tulku
Patron Trudie Styler
Chair Jane Rasch

Although the construction is complete and the Tibetan Peace Garden is now open, we are still raising funds for the project. We have also established the Tibetan Peace Garden Trust to cover the long-term maintenance of the garden. We will continue to hold a number of fund-raising events but we rely equally on donations from individuals. If you would like to make a donation to the Tibetan Peace Garden Appeal or would like more information about the garden, contact peacegarden@tibet-foundation.org.

The Construction Team

The Tibet Foundation, under the guidance of the Venerable Duboom Tulku, worked with both Namygal Monastery and Gyurme Tantric College India in the adapting of the Kalachakra Mandala for the project. It was then carved in plaster at a London studio by Tim Metcalfe, assisted by Tibetan Awang Dorjee before being cast in bronze at the Nautilus Foundry, Essex.

Sculptor Hamish Horsley
Architect Guy Stansfeld
Contractor Roger Davis
Mandala Team Tim Metcalfe, Awang Dorjee, Iassen Dimitrov
Letter Design Sally Bower
Letter Carving Mark Frith, John Das Gupta
Stone Carvers Jason Mulligan, Alyosha Moeran, Keb Garavito, Lucy Churchill
Stone Masons

Kevin Turner, Rob Hall, Ian Pass, Simon Cruise

Landscaping Terra Firma Landscapes, Service Team

The Artists

The Sculptor

Hamish Horsley, the designer and sculptor of the Tibetan Peace Garden, has collaborated with a range of skilled professionals. Since his graduation from the Royal College of Art in 1985, he has completed many large scale public art projects. The Peace Garden, he believes, is his biggest and most significant project.

His extensive travels through Tibet and India, along with time spent in consultation with Tibetan experts, has given him the insight to create a piece of work which reflects the principles of Tibetan Buddhism and culture.

The Stonemason

Born into a nomadic family in Tibet, Awang Dorjee, the Tibetan stonemason, learned his carving skills from prominent Tibetan stone carvers at a very young age. Following his escape into India in 1990, he has done several significant carvings of various Tibetan Buddhist icons and sacred texts, receiving wide acclaim for his works.

Awang was chosen from among 20 applicants by the Dalai Lama's Department of Education in north India. He has given valuable assistance in the stonework of the Tibetan Peace Garden.

Help feed a Schoolchild

Provide a meal for a Tibetan Child

Art & Culture News

20/04/08  Tibetan Language : Past, Present and Future

All News...

Forthcoming Tibet Foundation Events

4 Jun 08 TF Tibetan Medical Consultations

18 Jun 08 TF Saga Dawa Festival: The Buddha Day

6 Jul 08 Ninth Anniversary of the Tibetan Peace Garden ... 

All Events...