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The Dhamma Brothers

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Language
  
English

7.6/10
IMDb

Duration
  

The Dhamma Brothers movie poster

Director
  
Jenny Phillips Andrew Kukura Anne Marie Stein

Release date
  
2007

The Dhamma Brothers is a documentary film released in 2007 about a prison meditation program at Donaldson Correctional Facility near Bessemer, Alabama. The film features four inmates, all convicted of murder, and includes interviews with guards, prison officials, local residents and other inmates, and reenactments of their crimes. The soundtrack includes music by Low, New Order and Sigur Rós.

Contents

The Dhamma Brothers wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart178894p178894

The film was directed by Jenny Phillips, a cultural anthropologist and psychotherapist; Andrew Kukura, a documentary filmmaker; and Anne Marie Stein, a film-school administrator. In 2008 Phillips released Letters from the Dhamma Brothers: Meditation Behind Bars (ISBN 1-92870-631-2), a book based on follow-up letters with the inmates.

The Dhamma Brothers has been compared with another documentary, Doing Time, Doing Vipassana (1997), which documented a large-scale meditation program at Tihar Jail in India with over a thousand inmates using the same meditation retreat format.

The dhamma brothers trailer


Meditation program

Director Jenny Phillips was largely responsible for the meditation program's inception at the prison. Phillips had previously studied prison culture in Massachusetts. In 1999, she heard that prisoners at Donaldson were practicing meditation and she then organized the first ten-day intensive retreat there in January 2002. Phillips believes that was the first time a ten-day retreat had been held in a United States maximum-security prison such as Donaldson. Previous US courses had been in county jails.

The meditation program taught was Vipassana meditation as taught by S.N. Goenka. The first ten-day intensive at the prison occurred in January 2002 with twenty inmates. The film includes material from the second ten-day intensive meditation retreat held in May 2002 with thirty seven inmates and a follow up three-day retreat and interviews in January 2006. Each retreat consisted of a rigorous daily schedule and was held in complete silence. Convicted murderer Grady Bankhead described the retreat as, "tougher than his eight years on Death Row."

Reception

Jack Brown of the Valley Advocate rated the film four stars. Julia Wallace of the Village Voice said that the film contains "cheesy, half-assed re-enactments of the inmates' crimes."

The meditation program at Donaldson was shut down shortly after the second meditation retreat. According to New York Times reviewer Whitney Joiner this was because the chaplain of the prison complained to administrators that he was losing his inmate congregation. In December 2005, the prison administration changed and the meditation program was allowed to begin again. The program has continued with only minor interruptions at Donaldson since that time. Vipassana programs at Donaldson and other North American prisons are organized by the North American Vipassana Prison Trust.

The film also includes interviews with local residents who provide statements that are negative about the meditation program, perceiving it as anti-Christian. One resident compared Buddhism with witchcraft.

Awards

  • Tied for Best Feature Documentary at the Woods Hole Film Festival 2007
  • NCCD PASS Award Winner 2007
  • References

    The Dhamma Brothers Wikipedia
    The Dhamma Brothers IMDb The Dhamma Brothers themoviedb.org