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News 2026 on

Susan Orr Memorial Garden Dedication

May 4, 2026

On April 18, 2026, the Susan Orr Memorial Garden at SDC was formally dedicated in an event attended by Susan’s family and friends. The centerpiece of the garden, a statue of the bodhisattva of compassion Quan Yin, had its eyes “opened” in a special ceremony.

Susan Orr, who passed away in September 2018, was instrumental in the process of finding and acquiring the building and grounds that we have enjoyed since 2016.

On the occasion of the opening of the garden dedicated to her memory (and to introduce Susan to those who might not have known her) we are reprinting an article about her (below) from the May 2018 SDC News.

And next time you are at the Center, step outside to visit the garden (located near the northeast corner of the building).  Take a moment to sit before the Quan Yin shrine and admire the beauty of the plants and natural stones of the landscaping.

(This article originally appeared in the May 2018 SDC News)

What can be said, but that Susan is a gifted leader? She guided the board through good times and bad, with optimism, good humor, and wisdom.  She is a listener, a peacemaker, a finder of the middle way. Despite health challenges, she is indefatigable. She seems to dwell close to the spiritual but is practical and funny too. Board duty, she stresses, is inseparable from her practice and she believes that aggravation and setbacks are opportunities for practice.

For Susan, the call for a Dharma center came in February 2009 over breakfast at a café on 10th Street. Jim Hare of Valley Streams Zen Sangha (VSZS) asked if she was interested in a project to acquire a permanent home, a Dharma Center, for the three Sacramento sanghas that shared common roots—Sacramento Buddhist Meditation Group (SBMG), Sacramento Insight Meditation Group (SIM), and VSZS. The idea had come to Jim during a January intensive Zen retreat, and Susan, an SBMG leader, was the first person he approached about its feasibility. After many such breakfasts and lunches with other leaders, the Inter-Sangha Coordinating Committee (ISCC) was formed in the spring of 2010.

The ISCC worked for two years laying the groundwork for SDC, recruiting board members and obtaining non-profit status. In March 2012 the SDC Board met for the first time, with Susan as a representative for SBMG (and later, an at-large member). The new board began the hard work of fundraising to prove to lending institutions the financial viability of the project. It also began to create SDC’s administrative infrastructure–Susan was part of the committees that wrote the bylaws and the SDC mission statement.

But front and center always was the search for a suitable property. Following up on every lead, and touring and evaluating each prospective building was not easy. Every building they debated and rejected, or pursued and lost, created a cycle of raised and dashed hopes. The lowest point came when the board decided not to buy the former Armenian church on B Street. “It was really awful,” Susan recalled. “Peoples’ spirits became despondent. But even then, there was the deeper urge to keep going, to not give up.”

Susan became SDC’s second president in March of 2015 at an opportune time. “I lucked out to be, timing wise, president just as we found the property.” In January of 2016 the board took a chance and made an offer to buy a former credit union building and land on Wissemann Drive, on the eastern edge of Sacramento. So began an intense period of negotiations, inspections, loan approval, acquisition of permits, and construction.

By the time of the SDC Dedication on November 6, 2016, it was apparent that along with pride, ownership of a building would bring with it a completely new set of challenges. For one, Susan discovered that “owning a property meant a mysterious sprinkler system. We found out how to practice with a continually mysterious sprinkler system.” The difficulties, she says, are what her teacher, James Baraz, calls “your curriculum.”

Her most significant achievement on the SDC Board was “helping people find ways to work together for the mission, to let go of fixed ideas and personality issues to the degree they could.” In fact, Susan’s secret goal is to see a Dantesque banner over the entrance to the building reading, “Abandon all preferences, ye who enter here.”

She stresses the centrality of “process,” a word that she invests with great meaning. Process is being patient–“There’s so much enthusiasm to get stuff done, but process is important, so things endure.” Process is how SDC found the right property, one that the sanghas would be able to expand into, rather than one that felt cramped at the start. And someday, she says, “We’ll expand into the space and it’ll feel not big enough. This is just the beginning of something that will keep evolving.”

Based on her experience on the SBMG and SDC Boards, she feels assured that SDC will continue: “People want access to the Dharma, and when it looks threatened, people rally ‘round. With the team approach to governance, the community won’t let something like this fail.”

In the future she plans to stay involved with SDC and keep “butting in” when necessary. She is hoping to be part of an independent SDC Ethics and Reconciliation Council for when big issues come up within sanghas or between sanghas and SDC.

In parting she added, “The best gift to my practice has been to be fully engaged with my sangha’s life and my Dharma Center’s life. So come on in, step up and do something. It won’t continue without people participating.”

 

Filed Under: News, News 2026 on, Sacramento Dharma Center

MEMORIAL SERVICE HONORING THE LIFE OF KYŌJI LINDA DEKKER

June 26, 2023

Please join us on July 9th, 2023, at 2:00 p.m. to honor and celebrate the life of Kyōji Linda Dekker. The memorial service will be held at the Sacramento Dharma Center, with a reception to follow. We would appreciate those attendees who are able to bring a snack, sweet, or fruit to share.

The Sacramento Dharma Center and its sustaining sanghas offer their deepest gratitude and respect to Kyōji Linda Dekker, one of the founders of SDC and Valley Streams Zen Sangha. Linda passed from this life on April 2nd after a long illness, surrounded by her family and friends. She is survived by her son Bryn, partner Nuala, and grandchild Parlee, as well as her best friends, Gwen Roedel Green and Garry Green, her honorary grandson Nathaniel Green, many close friends, and Dharma brothers and sisters.

A devoted practitioner, Linda became a student of Tenshin Reb Anderson in the late 1990s and practiced with him in residence at Green Gulch Farm. She served as Ino (head of the meditation hall) at VSZS from 2015 to 2018. Linda’s commitment to the Sacramento Dharma Center can be traced all the way to the roots of the organization. She was a founding member of Valley Streams Zen Sangha and a strong contributor in the early days of the Sacramento Buddhist Meditation Group. This relationship placed her in a position to help in drawing the sanghas together and encouraging the conversations that led to the vision of sharing a permanent home and future.

Linda strongly supported the idea to seek out a shared space for inter-sangha practice and committed herself to making the venture a reality. She served on the Inter-Sangha Coordinating Committee as a representative for Valley Streams and worked to find the best path forward for securing a home for the sanghas. After a year of discussion, the group decided to form a nonprofit, the Sacramento Dharma Center, to act as the entity responsible for finding, purchasing, and maintaining a permanent home for VSZS, SBMG, and Sacramento Insight Meditation.

Linda’s contributions to the formation of the SDC were immense and began with the work of incorporating the nonprofit, creating its structure, and pursuing a tax-exempt status. She served on the SDC Board of Directors and dedicated herself to the challenging work that the board faced in securing a property for SDC. Linda and other board members took a fundraising seminar and worked together to build the network of donors that sustain SDC and our sanghas to this day. The board’s search committee diligently looked for properties that would accommodate the needs of the three sanghas. Finally, in 2016, the property on Wissemann Drive was presented as a possible site and Linda toured the location along with SDC president Susan Orr. Seeing the promise of the property, the board made the decision to purchase it. Linda’s leadership and dedication to the project were crucial through the long process of negotiating the purchase, securing the loan, and beginning renovations once the sale was finalized.

Linda would serve a total of eight years on the SDC board, while also sitting at times on the VSZS board and commanding a variety of roles and responsibilities. She served on the SDC Art and Design Committee, and worked to enrich the aesthetic and spiritual environment that makes SDC the inviting and peaceful refuge it is today. Linda also served as the first office manager for SDC, taking on the immense duties of managing the property, maintaining the financial health of the organization, and scheduling events. As Jerry Simpkins, an early SDC board member and friend, remembered, “Linda always showed up. She was there for all and provided support and ideas and presence for all whom she encountered.” In every room of the Dharma Center, in every area of its history and workings, and in the deep practice of its sanghas and members, Linda’s contributions can be found.

Even with all of her service to the Dharma, Linda will be remembered best as a friend and a fellow traveler of Buddha’s Way. “Linda was an extraordinary friend, a friend who was direct, honest and supportive in the truest sense of those virtues,” remembers John Penfield, a long-time friend and VSZS member. She shared her passions and interests with her friends, from literature and movies to gardening to cooking, and was always happy to swap a book or recipe recommendation. Decades of deep practice and intensive retreats created strong friendships with many as Linda supported the Dharma path of her fellow practitioners and encouraged their efforts.

Through her sustained practice in the Dharma and her devotion to the strength and future of the SDC mission, Linda walked the bodhisattva path. The communities that she brought together and supported recognize her selfless and compassionate work in creating a home for their sanghas and a place to offer the Buddha Way. She worked tirelessly for the benefit of all practitioners who seek out SDC for community, healing, and authentic practice. Linda will be deeply missed by our community as we move forward to honor her legacy with sustained practice and a dedication to celebrating the Dharma. We invite all to join us in honoring Linda’s memory on July 9th at the Sacramento Dharma Center.

Filed Under: News, News 2026 on, Sacramento Dharma Center

SDC Founders Speak

December 5, 2013

You can help the Dharma Center vision be realized! We are excited about our online fund raising campaign with Indiegogo. Go the the site and watch our video, then please donate what you can! We’ve raised $400,000 so far, please help us raise another $80,000 with Indiegogo. If we do we will receive a $20,000 challenge grant and meet our $500,000 Capital Campaign goal! The campaign ends 12/31/13. Let’s start the new year with a successful campaign!

Filed Under: News 2026 on, Sacramento Dharma Center

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