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Sera Monastery

 
Wikipedia: Sera Monastery
Sera Monastery

Monks practicing their debating skills following afternoon meditation
Tibetan name
Tibetan: སེ་ར་
Wylie transliteration: Se-ra
Chinese name
traditional: 色拉寺
simplified: 色拉寺
Sera Monastery is located in Tibet
Sera Monastery
Location within Tibet
Coordinates: 29°41′53″N 91°8′0″E / 29.69806°N 91.133333°E / 29.69806; 91.133333
Monastery information
Location: Wangbur Mountain, Lhasa Prefecture, Tibet, China
Founded by: Jamchen Chojey
Founded: 1419
Type: Tibetan Buddhist
Sect: Gelug
Dedicated to: Je Tsongkhapa
Colleges: Pabonka Hermitage, Purbuchok Hermitage

Sera Monastery (Tibetan: སེ་ར་Wylie: Se-ra; simplified Chinese: 色拉寺traditional Chinese: 色拉寺) is one of the 'great three' Gelukpa university monasteries of Tibet. The other two are Ganden Monastery and Drepung Monastery. The origin of the name 'Sera' is not certain, but it may derive from the fact that the original site was surrounded by 'Wild Roses' (se ra in Tibetan). The original Sera monastery is in Lhasa, Tibet, about 5 km north of the Jokang in Lhasa. After the Chinese took control of Tibet in 1959, it was reconstituted in Bylakuppe,[1] India, near Mysore. The original in Tibet continues as a working monastery.

Contents

History

Sera Monastery

Sera was founded in 1419, by Jamchen Chojey (Sakya Yeshe), a disciple of Tsong Khapa.

Like the Drepung and Ganden monasteries, it had several colleges: Sera Mey Dratsang, built in 1419, gave basic instruction to the monks. Sera Jey Dratsang, built in 1435, was the largest, and was reserved for wandering monks, especially Mongol monks. Ngagpa Dratsang, built in 1559, was a school for the teaching of the Gelukpa tantras.

Young monks printing scriptures. Sera Monastery, 1993
Monks' debate practice at Sera Monastery, April 2009

Sera housed more than 5,000 monks in 1959. Although badly damaged following the invasion of Tibet and the Cultural Revolution, it is still standing and has been largely repaired. In 2008, it housed 550 Buddhist monks, but the number dropped to only a handful after the 2008 Tibetan unrest. [2].

After the Chinese invasion of Tibet and the destruction of the majority of the monasteries in Tibet, Sera monastery was re-formed in Bylakuppe, India, near Mysore.

Because none of the monks of the Ngagpa Dratsang (Tantric College) survived the invasion[3], only the Sera Mey College and Sera Jey College were re-formed in India.[4]

Purbuchok Hermitage

Graduates of Sera Jey College who are known in the West include:

  • Geshe Ngawang Tsondu, Wisdom of The Staten Island Dharma Center, The Mediation Factory, and Tibet House, New York
  • Geshe Lhundub Sopa, professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • Geshe Rabten, an eminent monk who directed Tharpa Chloing Buddhist Center in Mont Pelerin, Switzerland
  • Lama Thubten Yeshe, founder of the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPTM)
  • Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, founder of the New Kadampa Tradition
  • Lama Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, a student of Lama Yeshe and presently director of FPMT
Monks practicing their debating skills.

Graduates of Sera Mey college who are known in the west include:

Footnotes

  1. ^ Personal journal, Jonnalagadda Chandra Kiran—photos taken by a tourist of the monastery and village in Bylakuppe.
  2. ^ Buddhist Monk of Sera Monastery, Lhasa, Tibet
  3. ^ Wildlife, Tamed Mind—interview with David Patt, Glow Magazine, Spring, 1996. Contains some discussion of the rebuilding of Sera, and of the fate of Ngagpa Dratsang.
  4. ^ Sera Mey Monastery (Asian Classics Institute) — Information about the new monastery in Bylakuppe
The kitchen at Sera


References

External links


Coordinates: 29°41′53″N 91°08′00″E / 29.69806°N 91.1333333°E / 29.69806; 91.1333333



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