A place held with a lot of heart. The forest is close. The valley is wide. The days move at a pace that takes a little getting used to — and then becomes the thing you most want to keep. People arrive looking for stillness. They often find something more: a lightness they had forgotten was available to them.
This is the heart of the centre. A bright, open hall built for the full range of what it means to be human — dynamic meditation at dawn, dance, celebration, music, and the kind of silence that follows when everything has been expressed. Red cushions on warm wooden floors. Beyond the hall, an open terrace looks out over the valley — the Himalayan foothills stretching as far as you can see. Some sessions happen here, under open sky, with nothing between you and the mountains. Come in. See what happens.
The land here is generous. Tall forest rises above the centre — cedar and pine, light coming through in shafts. Stone paths lead down through dense green undergrowth toward the valley. Tea gardens roll across the hillsides in every direction. People come here to sit in stillness under open sky, to walk into the trees, to feel — sometimes for the first time in a long time — that they are part of something larger than their thoughts.
Food & drink
Grown here. Sourced locally. Made with care.
Much of what is served at Divine Door comes from the land itself — grown here, prepared here, and shared at the table.
What is not grown here is sourced locally, with the same attention to freshness and seasonality.
Vegetables, herbs, grains. Simple, nourishing food, prepared each day with care.
Farm to table is not a philosophy applied from the outside — it is simply how things are done here.
Zorba Café
Zorba Café sits close by — trained baristas, fresh coffee, simple food, and an easy, welcoming atmosphere.
A place to sit, and let the day unfold slowly.
It is the kind of place that stays with you.
Come and see