Yachen Gar: Difference between revisions

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'''Yachen Gar''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ya chen sgar''), also known as '''Yachen Orgyen Samten Chöling''', offered students a comprehensive Buddhist education. During the 1990s, the population of monks and nuns grew to over 7,000. The authorities deemed the encampment of huts and tents to be problematic, and in 2001 they ordered the demolition of large parts of Yachen Gar. Akhyuk Rinpoche remained there during the demolitions and continued to teach. The monastic community survived, and in recent years a new nunnery was constructed.
'''Yachen Gar''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ya chen sgar''), also known as '''Yachen Orgyen Samten Chöling''' (''ya chan o rgyan bsam gtan chos gling''), offered students a comprehensive Buddhist education. During the 1990s, the population of monks and nuns grew to over 7,000. The authorities deemed the encampment of huts and tents to be problematic, and in 2001 they ordered the demolition of large parts of Yachen Gar. Akhyuk Rinpoche remained there during the demolitions and continued to teach. The monastic community survived, and in recent years a new nunnery was constructed.


==Further Reading==
==Further Reading==

Revision as of 08:12, 31 May 2012

Yachen Gar (Wyl. ya chen sgar), also known as Yachen Orgyen Samten Chöling (ya chan o rgyan bsam gtan chos gling), offered students a comprehensive Buddhist education. During the 1990s, the population of monks and nuns grew to over 7,000. The authorities deemed the encampment of huts and tents to be problematic, and in 2001 they ordered the demolition of large parts of Yachen Gar. Akhyuk Rinpoche remained there during the demolitions and continued to teach. The monastic community survived, and in recent years a new nunnery was constructed.

Further Reading

  • Terrone, Antonio. 'Householders and Monks: A Study of Treasure Revealers and their Role in Religious Revival in Contemporary Eastern Tibet' in Sarah Jacoby and Antonio Terrone, Buddhism Beyond the Monastery: Tantric Practices and their Performers in Tibet and the Himalayas, Brill, 2009.