Business Day

A refuge for the tolerant on the outskirts of the Karoo

- CHRIS THURMAN

The small town of McGregor lies in a region once referred to as the Middelbosj­esveld — that patch of the Western Cape halfway between the southweste­rn coastline and the Karoo. In the centre of McGregor sits Temenos Retreat and its renowned garden. At the heart of the garden is the Chapel of the Little Way.

Once inside the chapel, you cannot fail to be drawn to a striking image next to the cross behind the altar. Merging various iconograph­ic artistic traditions, it depicts Jesus Christ and the Buddha embracing each other. On a recent visit to Temenos, finding this painting felt a little like reaching the centre of a labyrinth or the end of a pilgrimage.

In its immediate context, the interfaith gesture is hardly anomalous; Temenos is dedicated to the idea that there are “multiple paths to enlightenm­ent”. The garden is dotted with shrines and temples paying tribute to many different faiths and spiritual practices.

Yet we live in a world that is influenced by resurgent religious fundamenta­lism, fused with nationalis­m and conservati­sm — from American evangelica­lism to Indian Hindutva. These pernicious ideologies promote the politics of separation (indeed segregatio­n) and thrive by stoking fears of difference.

Millions of South Africans imbibe a Christiani­ty of this kind. Derived from the conservati­sm of the global north, it is colonial at best, neocolonia­l at worst. It exists to justify patriarcha­l prohibitio­ns on women’s freedoms and to reinforce homo- and transphobi­a. It is easily recruited into other forms of right-wing propaganda.

In this wider context, the message conveyed by the hugging Jesus and Buddha seems not only unusual but also urgent. It encourages a blurring of world views, an openness to relativism and reciprocit­y, a dwelling in uncertaint­y. With this comes humility, the opposite of self-assurance and self-importance.

I’ll admit that I arrived in McGregor with certain secular reservatio­ns (a level of scepticism never quite amounting to cynicism, but also not too far off). I’d been warned that it might be all “hemp clothing and drum circles ” . But what I encountere­d was far from this rather unkind cliché.

Yes, Temenos remains primarily a place of retreat — of silence and reflection, perhaps meditation, perhaps prayer, perhaps conversati­on. But there is nothing ascetic about it. Good food and drink are central to the Temenos experience.

In 2022, chef Christiaan Graff and The Werf at Boschendal) took the reins at flagship restaurant Tebaldi’s. Campbell’ (previously­Campbell s emphasis on of Delaire sustainabl­e and ethically sourced ingredient­s fits with the Temenos ethos, and his reputation draws visitors from far and wide — which is saying something, given that McGregor is not exactly on the way to anywhere else.

Daytime fare at Temenos’ second restaurant, Out of Africa, is hearty rather than haute cuisine. The patrons insist it serves the best coffee in town, though the coffee shop known simply as 51, just down the road, gives Out of Africa some stiff competitio­n.

Saturday mornings in McGregor bring a gentle carnival atmosphere at the market on the local church square. Thrift shops, wine bars and art exhibition­s sit cheek by jowl on the main street.

Temenos also draws bon vivants at the annual McGregor Poetry Festival, and there is a certain jouissance in its bookishnes­s: not one but two cosy and well-stocked reading room spaces. If you find your Zen reading books by the fire with a glass of wine in hand, you’ll find it at Temenos.

Above and beyond these earthly delights, Temenos does create an environmen­t perfectly suited to the search for soul comfort (if not cosmic guidance). But it does so without seeming exclusive or exclusiona­ry.

On the contrary: when Billy Kennedy founded Temenos 25 years ago, turning an old clay homestead and a dust bowl into a verdant oasis, his founding principles drew on the mythos of the ancient Greek temple of Temenos: “What was remarkable about this temple was that no-one was ever excluded from entering it. It was a safe and sacred precinct for all.”

At the new Temenos, then, “everyone regardless of creed or station in life is welcome to come to heal or rest”.

And that, soberingly, remains a radical aim in the 21st century.

THE HUGGING JESUS AND BUDDHA … ENCOURAGES A BLURRING OF WORLD VIEWS, AN OPENNESS TO RECIPROCIT­Y

 ?? /Supplied ?? Multiple paths: Left: The Buddha and Jesus at Temenos Retreat in McGregor. Right: Temenos stained glass.
/Supplied Multiple paths: Left: The Buddha and Jesus at Temenos Retreat in McGregor. Right: Temenos stained glass.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa