LANDREVIE, France, Oct. 29 (UPI) -- The vast blue tent is stifling, and the sweating faithful fan themselves vigorously as they chant the mantras that will cleanse their minds and souls.
"Zonte." "Tsoe." "Bardu." "Gungi."
Each word is pronounced carefully by the 19-year-old Gyalwa Karmapa, considered the 17th reincarnation of the spiritual leader of the Karma Kagyu lineage -- one of four Tibetan schools of Buddhism. Each is earnestly repeated by an estimated 2,000 Buddhist monks and lay practitioners, gathered for this rare visit of the India-based Karmapa.
The recent, three-day meeting honoring the Karmapa is a special event. But year-round, hundreds of French and foreign visitors enroll for professional retreats and individual study and meditation sessions offered at the sprawling Buddhist center in the Dordogne.
Here, in the deepest heart of France, the students of Karma Kagyu are colorful new visitors to a region famed for foie gras and hearty red wine, thick-stoned villages and winding country roads. More broadly, however, the surging attendance at the Dordogne center and other Buddhist establishments testifies to the religion's stunning growth in France, and elsewhere in Europe.
As in the United States, Buddhism is ranked among the fastest growing religions in many Western European countries. In France, Buddhism is considered the fourth largest faith -- after Christianity, Islam and Judaism -- with an estimated 600,000 practitioners. Many French Buddhists are Asian immigrants, who retain the religion of their ancestors.
By chance or intention, France has also developed into a center of sorts for Tibetan Buddhism, which draws many newer advocates, according to practitioners and scholars.
The biggest Buddhist meditation center in the West is based in the region of Touraine. Two Tibetan monasteries in France's Auvergne region have trained the largest number of Buddhist monks outside Asia. The monasteries are headed by the same Karma Kagyu administrators directing the Dordogne center.
"A lot of Buddhist masters consider France to be somewhat the center of Europe, both geographically and perhaps symbolically," said Louis Hourmant, a specialist on Buddhism for the Paris-based Group on Religion and Secularity. Hourmant attributes the phenomenon partly to France's colonial past in Southeast Asia, partly to the popularity of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.
A weekly French TV program, "Buddhist Voices," draws about 250,000 viewers, according to the Buddhist Union of France, an umbrella group representing the different Buddhist currents. Hundreds of Buddhist centers have also opened across the country over the last few decades.
And while the French government has placed a more activist Japanese strain of Soka Gakkai Buddhism in its list of questionable "sects," others are officially tolerated.
Several monasteries, including the Karma Kagyu's in Auvergne, are accorded the same tax-free exemptions as the Roman Catholic Church.
"Why this Buddhist wave? And why particularly in France, a very Catholic country in the past?" wrote philosopher Luc Ferry, appointed this year as France's minister of Youth and Education, in an earlier article in Le Point magazine. " ... In this time of de-Christianization, Buddhism has furnished to the West a rich and interesting alternative."
But Hourmant, for one, suggests Buddhism's popularity in France and elsewhere marks a passing phase, rather than a more profound change in Europe's spiritual map.
"French have a very positive image of Buddhism, as a religion that's more tolerant, more open to interreligious dialogue," Hourmant said. "There's a huge interest in Buddhism, especially among the young. But I think it's a very superficial adhesion that's not going to translate into intensive practice."
A case in point, Hourmant said: French answering religious surveys often identify Buddhism as the religion they feel closest to. "But the responses aren't at all about affiliation," he added, "but simply declarations of sympathy."
The Dalai Lama, too, has expressed concern that Buddhism may be assumed too lightly.
"I believe that the French, who are Christian by culture and ancestry, should remain Christian," he told a Swiss weekly, during a visit to Switzerland two years ago.
Without "mature" reflection on whether Buddhism is the proper religious path, the Dalai Lama added, "it is better to stick to your own traditional values."
But the recent Dordogne gathering suggests few are following his advice. The sea of hot faces receiving the Karmapa's lessons were almost all Western. So are most of the monks at the center's Kundreul Ling monasteries in Auvergne.
Olivier Coudroy, 18, who attended the three-day retreat with his parents and a high-school friend, said he became a Buddhist a year ago, after being introduced to the religion by his geography teacher.
"My friends thought I had joined a sect," said Coudroy, who lives near the French city of Bordeaux. "But I talked to them. They aren't convinced, but at least now they don't judge."
Xavier Dubouch also turned to Buddhism as a young man. At 23, selling real estate and on the verge of marriage, Dubouch realized "something was missing in my life."
Ten years later, he is known as Lama Drakpa, a graduate of two, three-year stints at Auvergne's Kundreul Ling monastery for men. Dubouch has since renounced his monastic vows. Still, he still teaches at the Dordogne center, reluctant to return to a more materialistic world.
So far, the two monasteries in Auvergne have graduated roughly 300 monks, its administrators say. Days turn around meditation and prayer, from the 4:30 a.m. wake-up gong, to lights out at 11 p.m.
"It seems very short when you look back on it," said Candice Podboll, a Californian who spent six years at the Auvergne monastery. "I felt very lucky to have this gift of time to look into myself."
Now going by her Buddhist name, Khedroup, Podboll was dispatched by the Dordogne center to Santa Barbara, to build up the presence of the Karma Kagyu school in the United States. She is still technically married. But both Podbolls have taken monastic vows, and donned the trademark wine-colored robes of monks.
Founded in 1983, with a land grant from an American Buddhist, the Dordogne complex has since established 200 centers in Eastern and Western Europe. In Dordogne, the center holds retreats for doctors and other professionals looking for ways to better interact at work.
Others come to meditate, or to learn more about the religion, said Lama Jigme Rinpoche, the center's director. The center's aim is not to convert students to Buddhism, he said, but rather to offer spiritual enlightenment.
"Many people are looking for a spiritual path, and when they go to the Buddhist center, all the answers seem clearer somehow," Lama Jigme said. "I believe Buddhism can help some people to have a better idea of their own Christian faith."
Despite the Dalai Lama's concerns about Buddhism's trendiness, his representative in France believes many here are serious about their studies. "There's a deep interest in the philosophy of Buddhism," said the representative, Tashi Phun Tsok. "The interest is not merely in certain ceremonies and rituals."
Tellingly, the Dalai Lama is expected to visit France late next year -- at the request of a number of Buddhist centers, Tashi said.
"The fact is," he added, "interest in Buddhism has been here for a number of years. It's quite clear that Buddhism in France is not a passing phase."