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About
> The Tradition Spreads – India to West Sussex
The
Sangha in its original form has survived centuries of change, and the
birth and decay of many empires. From India to Sri Lanka, Burma,
Thailand, and throughout Asia, it spread and prospered. In Southern
Asia, where the Theravada school of Buddhism developed, the Sangha
received the kind of support that allowed it to retain its mendicant
and homeless ethos. At times it has been corrupted by worldly
aims and ambitions, but throughout history it has reformed itself
through returning to the guidelines of the Vinaya and the homeless
life. In the middle of the 19th century CE this was very much the
case in Thailand, where a reform movement found great teachers (ajahns)
in meditation masters such as Ajahn Sao and Ajahn Mun. Shielded
from the effects of urbanisation, the more remote forested lands of the
North-East that they frequented have up until the present day
maintained the standards of the samana life with integrity and purity.
Because such a life draws strength from an austere lifestyle lived in
forests and remote places, their lineage is called the Thai Forest
Tradition. This lineage has subsequently produced a number of very fine
and widely-respected teachers, including Ajahn Chah (1918-1992).
Ajahn Chah spent his early years wandering and practising meditation in
solitude, but in the 1950s, at the request of local villagers, he
settled down in a forest in Ubon province. Gradually other monks came
to study under him and rudimentary huts were built. This was the
beginning of Wat Pah Pong,
a monastery where, for the rest of his life,
Ajahn Chah trained monks, nuns and lay people in Dhamma-Vinaya.
His was a style that was as down-to-earth as it was subtle, as humorous
as it was profound, and both readily applicable and far-reaching.
Consequently, Ajahn Chah soon developed a large following of both
monastics and lay people, and before
his death in 1992, over thirty forest monasteries following his
teaching and training had been established in Thailand.
Nowadays, this number exceeds 200.
Ajahn
Chah's followers, however, were not confined to his own countrymen.
Since the late 1960's a number of Westerners had also taken up
monastic training under his tutelage. Several of these would eventually
help to transmit his tradition overseas. This
process began in 1979, when the first of Ajahn Chah’s monasteries
was established in the West in the hamlet of Chithurst, West Sussex, in
England.
Punning on the name ‘Chithurst,’ Ajahn Sumedho, Ajahn
Chah’s most senior Western disciple and first abbot of the
monastery, decided to call it Cittaviveka - a word that
in the language of the scriptures means ‘the mind free of
attachment.’
However, Cittaviveka is not just an import; it is also rooted in the
aspirations and good-will of Western followers and supporters. The material resources for the
monastery were initially provided by the English Sangha Trust, a
charitable organisation which had been founded in 1956 for the purpose of
establishing a Buddhist monastic order in Britain. After years of
supporting a number of different monks, the Trust invited Ajahn Sumedho to their
Hampstead Vihara, in Hampstead, North London, in 1976. There he
and a small group of fellow-monks lived the samana life, meditating,
wearing the traditional robes, and going on alms-round through North
London. This attracted attention and support, and in 1978, the
Trust was given Hammer Wood, an area of land in a beautiful and
unspoilt region of West Sussex. Fortuitously Chithurst House - a
derelict mansion built in 1862, less than half a mile away from the
forest - came up for sale in 1979 with its outbuildings and 22 acres of
land. Soon, another benefactor purchased a small cottage and land
adjacent to Hammer Wood as a residence for nuns. The final piece
of today's property, another cottage and land adjacent to Hammer Wood,
was purchased in 2005. These latter two cottages, now called
Aloka and Rocana, form a residence for nuns and female lay guests.
About
Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha: The Triple Gem
A Living Transmission
Chithurst House And Dhamma Hall
Facilities for Women: Rocana And Aloka
Hammer Wood
Our Practice: Going Forth A Moment at a Time
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