
IN THE PRESS
New Sanctuary on Hill lives up to its name
by
MARY PRICE LEE
and RICHARD S. LEE
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The new Sanctuary at 8611
Germantown Avenue is painted maroon because it is the color of Buddhist monks'
robes, and the green of the front door is the traditional Tibetan color
representing life.
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August 3, 2006
It was a steamy Mad Dogs and Englishmen day when we visited Sanctuary, the
Hill's newest store, at 8611 Germantown Ave. Chris Aibel, the shop's charming
and energetic owner, gave us real sanctuary, and not simply from the ghastly
weather. Her spirit was pleasantly infectious; she radiates the inner joy that
comes from following your heart's desire.
Chris, who looks
a good decade younger than 53, opened Sanctuary in the former Rug Maven
location on July 11, after a year of planning. The plan was to create a shop
that is also a personal oasis, a place where a customer can receive
replenishment and rejuvenation as well as jewelry, music, books and clothing
all with a spiritual connection.
Chris has no
problem defining what she wants her store to offer. Yes, it is a retail and
gift shop, but "I want my store to offer a feel-good atmosphere (in the
best sense), a place to de-stress. I want this to be a sanctuary where you can
find wisdom, self-realization, a sense of peace."
Part of that
goal is met just inside the front door, where a handy shelf holds brochures
from nearby spas, yoga classes and related activities. And Chris is planning
her own courses in basic wellness, yoga and meditation starting in the fall, in
collaboration with staff members at The Village Earth Bead Market, 8442
Germantown Ave., next to Kilian's Hardware. Also, Chris welcomes customers'
suggestions about things to do or items to stock; even a sanctuary should be a
work in progress.
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Chris Aibel, owner of Sanctuary,
is delighted to have a shop of her own on the Avenue.
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From color
scheme to clothing, virtually everything in Sanctuary is connected to inner
reflection, or to so-called New Age philosophy (more about that later). The
striking green of the entrance door and of the shop's lettering represent the
color of life. "Green is ever-blooming," says Chris. The warm russet
earth tone accenting the store's windows and used as the background for Chris'
business card is a Buddhist symbol of spirituality, frequently the color woven
into monks' robes. And both colors appear in the ancient Chinese circular
symbol on Chris' business card, the Universal Spirit of Life.
Chris has
merchandise that reflects her store's message, which is her Internet message
too (www.sanctuaryyogashop.com): "everything you need to create your own
sanctuary." This is particularly true of her yoga-inspired clothing and
accessories. (Ask her about the yoga shirt she designed, and the meaning of its
Sanskrit lettering.) Chris carries the city's most complete and beautiful lines
of clothing for yoga and after-yoga, plus yoga mats, towels, pillows and bags.
Beside yoga items, she carries Buddha statuary and Buddha-decorated bags,
blouses and wall hangings.
For those
yearning for Webster's New Collegiate at this point, it defines yoga as "A
system of exercises for attaining bodily or mental control and
well-being." The same source identifies Buddhism as "A religion of
Eastern and Central Asia growing out of the teachings of Guatama Buddha that
suffering is inherent in life and that one can be liberated from it by mental
and moral self-purification."
Chris'
inventory also includes New Age books, organic flowering trees and candles,
incense, music CDs for meditation everything to tempt the inquiring
mind. (Someone might be lucky enough to buy the beautifully crafted alarm clock
we saw. It is so gentle it could be said to lull one awake if it
disturbs slumber at all.)
To appreciate
the "why" of Sanctuary, it helps to know something of Chris Aibel's
life journey so far. Chris is a Philadelphian, and proud of it. She earned a
B.A. in Psychology at Temple University, and was planning on a career as a
clinical psychologist. Her major interest was the Holocaust, and she was
accepted as a Masters' candidate at Richard Stockton College in New Jersey, the
only college in the United States offering a Master's Degree in Holocaust and
Genocide Studies. "This gripped me," Chris says, "I wanted to
explore what happens to people living under such trauma. My Master's project
involved psychological and biographical work with Holocaust survivors. [In the
course of this] I traveled to Eastern Europe, and to death camps, including
Auschwitz. There is such unbearable sadness there: it was and is
overwhelming."
Chris has not
practiced clinical psychology, but her studies and experiences led directly
into understanding the elements of spirituality now found at Sanctuary.
"The need for the world to be uplifted is so great," she says.
When the shop
was almost ready to open with its "Opening July 11 or as close as
we can" sign in the window a Zen-like event took place. A friend
told Angie Rapalyea about the future store. Angie, a life-long Hill resident,
was thrilled. After five years of sales experience at El Quetzal, she wasn't
actively looking for another post but Sanctuary sounded perfect
and so it has proved to be. Chris says theirs is the ideal pairing.
Like most
peoples' lives., Chris' existence runs on parallel tracks. Although spiritual,
she is well aware of the practical trials of retailing since her husband, Bob,
owns the Moderne Gallery at 111 North 3rd St. in Old City. The Gallery
specializes in furniture by the famed New Hope craftsman, the late George
Nakashima. It also has a working arrangement with Nakashima's daughter, Mira.
(At Sanctuary, sitting on a genuine Nakashima stool is something of a spiritual
experience in itself. So is looking at or running your fingers over the store's
exquisite custom display cabinets.)
In earlier
days,, the Aibels lived on Boyer Street in Mt. Airy with their children, now 20
and 24. Today, they live in Fort Washington, in a house that to Chris'
delight backs up on woods. And there is something inherently likeable
about someone who's a happy captive of two Pomeranian dogs named Curly Girlie
and Harvest Moon!
One of Chris
Aibel's heroes (heroines?) is a multi-talented transplanted Texan now living in
New York, Lorene McClintock, who has become Chris' good friend and spiritual
advisor. McClintock rebelled from a "you-can't-do-that" adolescence
to become a fashion designer, artist, concert-caliber pianist, inventor (of a
wildly successful self-teaching piano method) and an icon of spiritual
instruction. McClintock's 2004 book, Love and Forgiveness A New Way to
Live ($38), is a surprisingly practical interpretation and application of
Biblical and other spiritual principles. It is among the New Age books and
music CDs for sale at Sanctuary.
Which brings us
to the subject of what New Age is. Chris' helpmate at Sanctuary, Angie Rapalyea
says, "New Age is really Old Age. It's the distillation of ancient
wisdom." So, unlike what one might think, it's not way-out or something
left over from the 1960s' hippie scene. Instead, it's way in an
individual search for peace and fulfillment as old as mankind, as modern as
tomorrow.
Its ideas can be
simple but profound, like the bumper sticker we bought from Sanctuary. It
reads: "BEGIN WITHIN."
Sanctuary is
open Tuesdays Saturdays, 10:30 5:30. Closed Sundays and Mondays.
Information: 215-242-3150.
Published in the
Chestnut Hill Local
Northwest Philadelphia's Leading community newspaper online
http://www.chestnuthilllocal.com/issues/2006.08.03/locallife1.html
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