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Sera Monastery

Sera Monastery (Tibetan: སེ་ར་Wylie: Se-ra) (Se ra Theng chen gling) is one of the 'great three' Gelukpa university monasteries of Tibet. The other two are Ganden Monastery and Drepung Monastery. 'Sera' means 'Enclosure of Roses'. The original Sera monastery was in Lhasa, Tibet, about 5 km north of the Jokang in Lhasa. After the Chinese took control of Tibet in 1959, it was reconsituted in Bylakuppe[1], India, near Mysore.

Contents

History

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

Like the Drepung and Ganden monasteries, it had three colleges:

Sera Mey Dratsang, built in 1419, which 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.

Sera housed more than 5,000 monks in 1959. Although badly damaged, it is still standing and has been largely repaired. It now houses a few hundred Buddhist monks.[2]

After the Chinese invasion of Tibet and the destruction of the majority of the monasteries in Tibet, Sera monastery was reformed 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 reformed in India.[4]

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

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

References

  1. ^ Personal journal, Jonnalagadda Chandra Kiran—photos taken by a tourist of the monastery and village in Bylakuppe.
  2. ^ Sera Monastery: Tibet Lhasa Travel Guide—provides some history of Sera Monastery in Tibet, as well as information for tourists in Tibet who are interested in visiting the old monastery.
  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

Other sources

External links

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Coordinates: 29°41′53″N 91°08′00″E / 29.69806, 91.133333


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