Menri Monastery Explained

Menri
Map Type:Tibet#China
Coordinates:29.509°N 89.535°W
Map Size:250
Location:Namling County, Tibet Autonomous Region
Founded By:Nyamme Shérap Gyeltsen (1356–1416)
Consecration Year:1405
Menri
Tib:སྨན་རི་
Wylie:sman ri

Menri Monastery (— "medicine mountain") is the name of a Bon monastery in Tibet that has been refounded in India. The name derives from the medicinal plants and medicinal springs on the mountain.[1] Menri became the leading Bon monastery in the Tibetan cultural region. The abbot of Menri is recognized as the spiritual leader of Bon.

History

Menri Monastery was established in 1405 by Nyammé Shérap Gyeltsen (1356–1416) from Gyarong (Gyelrong), on the slope of Mount Shari Phowa in Topgyel, Tsang.[2]

Nyammé Shérap Gyeltsen had been the eighteenth abbot of an old monastery also called Menri. The first monastery at Menri was founded in 1072 as Yéru Wensakha Monastery . It was destroyed by a flood in 1386.[1] [3]

The new Menri Monastery, established in 1405, was founded in the Bru lineage of Bon and the Yéru Wensakha tradition.[4] "Many of the monks who succeeded [Nyammé Shérap Gyeltsen] were also from Gyarong."[5] The monastery practiced Yungdrung Bon, and was known "for its strict practice of monastic rules, which set a standard for other Bon monasteries."[3] Rinchen Gyeltsen was the second abbot.

The monastery had 32 abbots between its founding and 1966. The administration of the monastery is the subject of an article by Per Kvaerne.[6]

Sanggye Tendzin (1912-1978) served as lopön at Menri, and "was also in charge of printing important works of Dzogchen."[7]

The administration of the monastery is the subject of an article by Per Kvaerne.[3]

Menri Monastery in India

thumb|Menri Monastery, IndiaIn 1967, Menri was refounded at Dolanji in Himachal Pradesh, India by Lungtok Tenpai Nyima and Lopön Tenzin Namdak. This monastery has recreated the geshe training program, and is home to over two hundred monks. Menri in India and Triten Norbutse Monastery in Nepal now host the only two geshe programs in the Bon lineage.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Berzin . Alexander . Alexander Berzin (scholar) . A Brief History of Menri Monastery . Study Buddhism . 1991 . 2016-06-06.
  2. Encyclopedia: Achard . Jean-Luc . Nyamme Sherab Gyeltsen . The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters . 2013-10-08 . March 2010 .
  3. Book: Gray Tuttle. Kurtis R. Schaeffer. The Tibetan History Reader. 13 August 2013. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-51354-8. 469–.
  4. Book: Andrew N. Woznicki. Transcendent Mystery in Man: A Global Approach to Ecumenism. 2006. Academica Press, LLC. 978-1-933146-15-7. 60–.
  5. Book: Gray Tuttle. Kurtis R. Schaeffer. The Tibetan History Reader. 13 August 2013. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-51354-8. 483–.
  6. Book: Gray Tuttle. Kurtis R. Schaeffer. The Tibetan History Reader. 13 August 2013. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-51354-8. 472–.
  7. Encyclopedia: Achard . Jean-Luc . Sanggye Tendzin . The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters . 2013-10-08 . March 2010 .