Vipassana / Insight · São Paulo, Brazil

Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil)

Dhamma Torana — Centro de Meditação Vipassana
Vipassana / Insight In-person S.N. Goenka / U Ba Khin lineage Editorially curated

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10–30+ day courses
Duration
In-person
Format
Vipassana / Insight
Tradition
S.N. Goenka / U Ba Khin lineage
Accreditation
Donation-based
Est. cost
April 2026
Last reviewed

What this program is

Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil) is part of the global network of Vipassana meditation centers run in the tradition of S.N. Goenka and his teacher Sayagyi U Ba Khin. The center sits in São Paulo, Brazil, and offers the same fixed ten-day course taught at every Goenka center worldwide. Courses are residential. Students arrive in the afternoon, surrender phones, books, and writing materials, and follow a daily schedule that begins at 4:00 a.m. and ends around 9:00 p.m. They take noble silence for the first nine days. They eat only at fixed times. They sit, walk, sleep, and listen to recorded discourse from S.N. Goenka in the evening. The technique itself is taught in three stages over the ten days. The first three days establish Anapana, awareness of natural breath at the entrance of the nostrils. From day four, students are introduced to Vipassana proper: a body-scan technique that observes physical sensation with equanimity, working from the top of the head to the feet and back, with progressive refinement. On day ten, noble silence ends and Metta Bhavana, loving-kindness, is added as the closing practice. The whole arc is kept identical at every center under the lineage. Local centers don't adapt the curriculum; that's the point. Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil) runs on dana, the Pali word for generosity. There is no fee for the course, the lodging, or the food. Costs are met by donations from old students who have completed at least one ten-day course and who give as they're able. Assistant teachers conduct the courses under the authority of the principal teacher and lineage protocols set by the international Vipassana organization founded by S.N. Goenka. The center is staffed largely by volunteer old students serving Dhamma. Courses are conducted in Brazilian Portuguese and English. Calling this a teacher training is a stretch in the conventional sense. There's no diploma, no syllabus to teach, no commercial certification at the end of the ten days. What the center offers anyone seriously interested in teaching is a long, repeated apprenticeship: complete the ten-day course, then sit it again, sit a 20-day, sit a 30-day, give Dhamma service at courses, and over years of practice be invited by the principal teacher to take the assistant teacher path. The route to teaching this technique is the practice itself, repeated, under the eyes of senior teachers who know the lineage.

Curriculum and topics

AnapanaVipassana body scanNoble silenceGoenka lineageDonation-only

The ten-day course at Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil) follows the fixed Goenka curriculum used at every center in the network. Days one to three: Anapana, narrowing attention onto natural breath sensation at a small triangular area around the nostrils and upper lip. Day four: Vipassana is introduced through the body scan, working with sensation as the object of awareness. Days five through nine: deepening Vipassana practice, longer adhitthana sittings of strong determination where students don't change posture for an hour, and recorded evening discourses by S.N. Goenka covering the Buddha's teaching on the Four Noble Truths, dependent origination, sila, samadhi, and panna. Day ten: noble silence breaks and Metta is taught. Day eleven: students leave. Beyond the ten-day, the center offers Satipatthana courses (eight days, drawing directly on the Satipatthana Sutta), longer twenty- and thirty-day courses for old students, and one-day courses for old-student practice maintenance. Children and teenager courses run shorter formats. Service periods, where old students cook, manage logistics, and support sittings, are part of the long path.

How it's taught

Delivery is fully residential and synchronous. Students live on site for the duration of the course in dormitory accommodation, men and women separated. The schedule is fixed: ten and a half hours of sitting per day, broken into one-hour group sittings and longer self-directed periods. Brief individual interviews with the assistant teacher allow students to ask technical questions about the practice. Recorded discourses by S.N. Goenka anchor the evenings. Old students serve all roles outside the meditation hall, modeling Dhamma service. There is no hybrid format and no shortened version. The full ten days, in noble silence, on the prescribed schedule, is the program. This is by design: the lineage holds that anything less doesn't establish the technique.

Who this program is for

First-time meditators
Adults curious about a serious meditation practice and willing to give the technique a fair trial. No prior experience required.
Returning old students
Practitioners who have completed at least one Goenka ten-day and want to deepen the practice through repeat courses, longer formats, or Satipatthana.
Aspiring assistant teachers
Long-term old students with years of consistent practice, multiple courses sat, and Dhamma service who feel called toward eventual assistant-teacher training under lineage authority.

Outcomes

There is no certificate. Graduates of a ten-day course leave with a working knowledge of Anapana and Vipassana sufficient to maintain a daily two-hour practice (one hour morning, one hour evening), the recommended baseline. Long-term students who sit repeated courses, give Dhamma service, and demonstrate steadiness in the technique may eventually be invited by the principal teacher to train as assistant teachers. Authorization to teach is from the lineage, not from any external accrediting body, and it comes only after years of practice. The path is unhurried by design.

Prerequisites

For the ten-day course, no prior meditation experience is required and no prior Buddhist commitment is needed. Students must be in stable physical and mental health, able to sit for long periods, and willing to follow the Code of Discipline including noble silence and abstention from killing, stealing, sexual activity, lying, and intoxicants for the duration. Long courses (20 and 30 days, Satipatthana) are open only to old students who have completed earlier courses in the lineage.

How this compares

Within Vipassana, the Goenka network is the most uniform and the most accessible. Compared with insight meditation as taught at IMS or Spirit Rock, where teachers draw flexibly from Theravada and contemporary psychology, the Goenka method is fixed and lineage-bound. Compared with monastic Theravada forest training, it's lay-friendly and time-bound: ten days, then home. Compared with secular MBSR, there's no clinical framing; the discourse is explicitly Buddhist. The price model is also distinct. Goenka centers are donation-only, no tiered pricing, no discount codes, no marketing.

A donation-funded ten-day Vipassana course in São Paulo that teaches the same fixed Goenka technique used at every center in the global network.

Frequently asked questions

Is the ten-day course really free?
Yes. Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil) charges nothing for tuition, accommodation, or food during the course. Costs are met by donations from old students who have completed at least one ten-day. New students are not invited to donate. The principle is that the practice should be available to anyone, regardless of means, supported by those who've already benefited.
What does noble silence actually mean?
From the start of day one through the morning of day ten, students don't speak, gesture, or make eye contact with each other. Reading, writing, and electronic devices are surrendered on arrival. Students may speak briefly to the assistant teacher about practice or to management about logistics. The silence is treated as a working condition, not a religious vow.
Does completing a ten-day course qualify someone to teach?
No. The course is a technique introduction, not a teacher training. The path to teaching this method runs through years of repeat ten-days, longer 20- and 30-day courses, Satipatthana courses, Dhamma service, and eventual invitation to assistant teacher training by the principal teacher. There's no shortcut, no private certification, and no online route to teaching authorization.
What language are the courses in at Dhamma Torana Vipassana Centre (Brazil)?
Courses are conducted in Brazilian Portuguese and English.
LocationSão Paulo, Brazil
CountryBrazil
TraditionVipassana / Insight
FormatIn-person
Duration10–30+ day courses
Estimated costDonation-based
AccreditationS.N. Goenka / U Ba Khin lineage
Last reviewed: April 2026 · Information may change — always verify with the program directly.
OMP is not affiliated with this program and receives no commission. This listing is maintained as an independent research resource.
Independent research: Online Meditation Planet maintains this database without affiliation to any training program, lineage, or certifying body. We receive no commissions or fees from listed programs. Pricing and program details change — always verify current information directly with the program before making decisions.

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