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Programs at
Retreat Center · Rhinebeck, NY
A leading nonprofit retreat center for holistic studies.
Omega Institute sits on 250 acres of wooded Hudson Valley land that was once Camp Boiberik, a Yiddish summer camp, its weathered buildings now housing one of the most ambitious experiments in holistic education in North America. Founded in 1977 by Elizabeth Lesser, holistic physician Stephan Rechtschaffen, and Sufi mystic Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan, Omega began with a radical premise: that personal transformation and social change are inseparable, and that the fragmentation of modern life, splitting body from mind, spirit from science, individual from collective, could be healed through integrated learning. The name itself, drawn from the writings of Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, references the "Omega Point," the unity toward which all life evolves.
Lesser was 22 when Pir Vilayat tapped her and Rechtschaffen to build what he envisioned as a modern Alexandria, a place where all disciplines and spiritual traditions could be studied as interconnected. After four years of renting space across New York and Vermont, the young founders discovered the old camp in Rhinebeck in 1982. Today those original structures have been joined by more than 100 buildings, including the lotus-blossom-shaped Ram Dass Library, the award-winning Omega Center for Sustainable Living (one of the first "Living Buildings" certified globally), and the hilltop Sanctuary.
Omega's programming has always reflected its founders' ecumenical vision. Over nearly five decades, the campus has hosted more than a million participants and featured teachers from Ram Dass and Thich Nhat Hanh to Maya Angelou, Deepak Chopra, Pema Chödrön, Jane Goodall, Gloria Steinem, and Eckhart Tolle. The curriculum spans six pathways: body, mind, and spirit; health and healing; creative expression; relationships and family; leadership and work; and sustainable living. Workshops run weekend or five-day formats, with subjects ranging from past-life regression and tarot to the science of longevity and climate activism. Signature programs include Arts Week (painting, writing, music, movement), Family Week, Retreat Week (contemplative practices across traditions), and the Omega Women's Leadership Center conferences.
Carla Goldstein now serves as president and CEO, stewarding Omega's nonprofit mission. The campus operates seasonally from late May through October, welcoming more than 15,000 in-person participants annually to 300+ programs, while nearly two million access online content year-round. A core staff of 60 swells to 260 seasonal workers during the open season. Staff receive enriching benefits including holistic studies classes, access to one workshop of their choice, and daily yoga, tai chi, and meditation.
The physical experience of Omega is intentionally unhurried. Ninety miles north of Manhattan, the campus unfolds around Long Pond Lake, with woodland trails, organic gardens, pickleball and basketball courts, and a waterfront for kayaking. A typical day begins with optional morning meditation or yoga (7 am), followed by workshop sessions, communal vegetarian meals in the air-conditioned dining hall (breakfast 7-8:45 am, lunch noon-2 pm, dinner 6-7:15 pm), afternoon learning or free time, and evening talks or performances. The grounds themselves function as a living classroom, guests wander the Omega Center for Sustainable Living's eco-machine water reclamation system, browse the 7,000-volume library, or simply sit by the lake as woodchucks and rabbits move through the gardens. Elizabeth Lesser has said the environment in which teaching occurs is as important as the teaching itself, and Omega's design reflects that belief: the campus invites slowness, encounter, and the kind of unstructured time in which transformation quietly unfolds.
What's Happening
253 programs · 255 total sessions scheduled at Omega Institute
Showing 253 of 253 programs