Video Presentation on Buddhism

Aleister Crowley considered himself a devoted Buddhist for a significant length of time, visiting Sri Lanka at one point to study with his Golden Dawn mentor Alan Bennett who’d entered a monastery there and said he struggled with the contents of Liber AL as it contradicted some of his beliefs as a Buddhist. So I did think some of y’all might enjoy this quickie online presentation by Andrew Henry going over some of the basics of this philosophy, which appears on the Religion For Breakfast YouTube Page.

Have a look: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w88sWMukcO4.

Here’s some deets on Mr. Henry:

“Andrew launched Religion for Breakfast in 2014 during his studies at Boston University when he realized that religious studies content was completely lacking on YouTube. Religion for Breakfast aims to remedy this by publishing introductory videos such as a 15-minute introduction to Islam as well as pop-culture topics such as a video titled ‘How Has Japanese Religion Influenced Pokémon?’

“Andrew has partnered with academic, non-profit, and government organizations to further the mission of producing freely-available religious literacy content. In 2017, he produced introductory videos for online, graduate-level classes for the Religious Freedom Center. In 2019, he partnered with Sacred Writes, an initiative based at Northeastern University dedicated to public scholarship about religion, to produce three videos on topics such as racial segregation in US religious communities, the rise of humanist gatherings on Sundays, and an introduction to indigenous religion. As a member of the Applied Religious Studies Committee at the American Academy of Religion, Andrew has organized and lead workshops for scholars to learn how to better reach a broader public at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion.

“Andrew’s academic background spans ancient history, archaeology, and religious studies. He specializes in the religions of the ancient Mediterranean world, focusing specifically on early Christianity in late antique Asia Minor and the Levant.

“He worked at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology in Philadelphia before moving to Boston. He has excavated in Athens with the American School of Classical Studies, and he is a former Educational and Cultural Affairs research fellow at the Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem.”

Frater Lux Ad Mundi

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