Jamyang Study Programs in Kinnaur
Jampa Choling Institute (Meeru)
Jamyang Study Programs in Spiti Valley
- Yangchen Choling Monastery (Pangmo)
- Denchen Choling Monastery (Pin Valley)
- Sherab Choling Institute (Morang), now self-sufficient
Jamyang Study Programs in Zangskar (Ladakh)
- Changchub Choling Monastery (Zangla)
- Khachoe Drubling Monastery (Karsha)
- Namgyal Choling Monastery (Pichu)
- Phakmo Ling Monastery (Skyagam)
- Dorje Dzong Monastery (Dorge Dzong)
- Samten Chöling Monastery (Tungri)
- Pema Chöling Monastery (Manda)
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Jampa Choling Institute, Meeru, Kinnaur
Jampa Choling Institute is situated in Meeru, Kinnaur, in the state of Himachal Pradesh. Kinnaur enjoyed close relations with Tibet, especially before India’s independence and China’s occupation of Tibet. It is said that the entire region of Kinnaur used to be Buddhist; the people from Upper-Kinnaur look more Tibetan than Indian. However, since the border with Tibet closed, Buddhism has been gradually disappearing in Kinnaur.
In the villages in Kinnaur, people draw on Hindu and Buddhist beliefs and practices. Almost every village has at least one Hindu temple and one Buddhist temple. The village of Meeru reveres the village god, who is responsible for everything that happens there. The village god has been around ever since the villagers can remember and is respected in a large number of villages, with residences in two temples, one old and one new.
In 2000 Tenzin Uphal, a widow from Meeru decided to donate a piece of land for the building of a Buddhist monastery for women. At that time, there was no Buddhist nunnery in Kinnaur. Young women who aspired to become Buddhist nuns had to leave the area and go to Dharamsala to study, if they were lucky enough to be admitted. The founding of Jampa Choling Monastery attracted 25 young women from the area who started building the nunnery with their own hands. The project was under the guidance of Tenzin Dolma, a devout, older Buddhist woman from Meeru. Tenzin Uphal, the donor of the land is now a nun in Jampa Choling. The women received the help of the Jamyang Foundation towards the cost of the building.
For 3 years, these women lived in a 15-square-meter room in the village temple in Meeru. During the process of building the monastery, some women left to go to study in Ladakh and Dharamsala, discouraged by the hard work, lack of facilities, and lack of studies. In summer 2003, the remaining 17 women started living in the nearly finished monastery and received the precepts of a nun. That summer, two young nuns from Dharamsala came for 3 months to get the new nuns started with their studies and prayers. Due to the remoteness of the area and the lack of facilities, it took a huge effort to find a teacher willing to stay with the nuns on a permanent basis. In the summer of 2004, Jamyang Foundation was finally able to find a fully qualified teacher for the nuns. Gen Jangchup Yarphel has been their teacher ever since.
In 2004, the first American volunteer appeared on the scene to teach the nuns English for the summer. Since then, the nuns have enjoyed the company of volunteer teachers every summer. During the year, the nuns study Tibetan language and Buddhist studies, including philosophy and debate, with their teacher (gen-la). In the summer, the curriculum is enriched with classes on English, geography, math, bookkeeping, art, biology, and hygiene.
Jamyang Foundations provides the monastery with a teacher and pays for food and fuel with a yearly donation of Rs.135,000. In 2006, the nuns received a donation from the Private Office of H.H. Dalai Lama and were able to build two more rooms. In the spring of 2007, four new nuns joined the monastery. There are many more young women wanting to join, but due to a lack of facilities, this is not possible at the moment.
At present, there are 21 nuns and two teachers. Both teachers are highly respected scholars with geshe degrees. They teach the nuns Tibetan, philosophy, debate, and other subjects. This year the nuns will travel to Dolma Ling Monastery, near Dharmasala, for the nuns’ intermural debate tournament. In the summertime, the nuns enjoy studying English and other subjects with visiting volunteer teachers. Four laptops were donated to the monastery and the senior nuns have been learning to use them. CDs with dictionaries and language learning programs have made it possible for the nuns to study English over the winter.
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Just $240 a year can educate and put women in leadership roles in a desperately poor and culturally endangered region of the Himalayas. Please lend your support!
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- Provide health care, education, and cultural enrichment for hundreds of women in remote Himalayan villages.
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