I found this interesting piece of news today. Does anyone know if this is the first time a Westerner has been chosen as the abbot of a Tibetan Monastery in India?
I researched a little on Rato Dratsang and am posting some background from
http://www.ratodratsangfoundation.org/about.html here:
Rato Dratsang was known as a great center for intellectual development and spiritual practice. It was located just outside Lhasa, Tibet, from its founding in the fourteenth century by Tak Pa Zang Bo until the destruction of its physical structure in 1959. Rato Dratsang has been reestablished in Mundgod, in the south Indian state of Karnataka, by a group of scholars and monks educated at the original monastery.
In Tibet, Rato Dratsang was a scholastic monastery of over four hundred residents. While studies in all branches of Buddhism were pursued, leading to the Doctor of Divinity or "Geshe" degree, it was most renowned as a center for the study of logic. Students were expected to become completely familiar with the methods and rules of traditional Buddhist logical analysis. Texts were memorized and meditated on until their meaning was thoroughly absorbed. A student's grasp of the subject was tested and tempered by frequent intense debates held under highly formalized rules.
The great fifth Dalai Lama (1614-1682) said the following verse in praise of Rato Dratsang, also known as Tiger Nest Monastery:
In the heart of the dense forest of
Scriptural knowledge,
Lies the Tiger Nest sounding
The roar of the wisdom of logic.
May the study of logic to clear the minds,
Forever develop in the boundaries of the upper,
middle, and lower parts of the land of snow.
As Rato Dratsang is a Gelugpa monastery, does anyone know if they practised Dorje Shugden?
Dalai Lama taps American as monastery abbothttp://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Dalai-Lama-taps-American-as-monastery-abbot-3674749.phpReligion & Ethics Newsweekly
Updated 12:55 a.m., Saturday, June 30, 2012
Nicholas Vreeland will become the new abbot of Rato Monastery in southern India.
For many observers, the Dalai Lama's choice of the director of the Tibet Center in New York to be the new abbot of Rato Monastery in southern India is surprising, given the background of this particular American.
On July 6, Nicholas Vreeland will begin a daunting assignment at one of the most important monasteries in Tibetan Buddhism. He will be the first Westerner to hold such a position.
Vreeland had a privileged upbringing — he is the son of a U.S. diplomat and the grandson of Diana Vreeland, the legendary editor of Vogue magazine. When he first encountered Tibetan Buddhism in his 20s, he was working as a photographer in some of the fashion industry's top studios.
Vreeland was born in Switzerland and also lived in Germany and Morocco before his family returned to New York. They were Episcopalians and sent 13-year-old Nicky to a boys' boarding school in Massachusetts. He was miserable there — until he discovered photography.
Vreeland had a good relationship with his famous grandmother. "I went to NYU to study film, and at that time initially lived with her and became very close," he said.
She opened the door for him to work with prominent photographers Irving Penn and Richard Avedon. In 1977, Avedon's son John introduced Vreeland to Khyongla Rato Rinpoche, founder of the Tibet Center. Under Rinpoche's supervision, Vreeland began learning about Tibetan Buddhism.
In 1979, he went to work on a photography assignment in India. Because of his growing interest in Tibetan Buddhism, he included a stop in Dharamsala, the headquarters-in-exile of the Dalai Lama. Vreeland photographed the Tibetan leader.
"I had been so moved by the way in which the Tibetan people had helped me ... during my time in Dharamsala, and I asked His Holiness what I could do in return. And he said, 'Study,'" Vreeland recalled.
Vreeland explored the Tibetan Buddhist concept that logic can lead to developing compassion and attaining enlightenment.
In 1985, Vreeland decided to become a Buddhist monk. His grandmother was not happy.
"She was not a big proponent of following a spiritual life," he said, adding that she came to accept his decision.
Vreeland pursued his monastic studies at Rato monastery, the monastery he will now lead. Rato was established in Tibet in the late 14th century to preserve Buddhist teachings on logic and debate. After the Dalai Lama fled China in 1959, Rato was re-established in India.
When Vreeland arrived in 1985, there were 27 monks. Today, there are about 100 between the ages of 6 and 90. A massive construction project at the monastery was funded through the sale of his photographs, including $400,000 from a series documenting life in and around the monastery.
As abbot of Rato, Vreeland will have administrative and spiritual responsibility for the monastery and its monks. He'll also interact with abbots of the other Tibetan monasteries — and that's where the Dalai Lama has instructed him to help incorporate more Western ideas.
Vreeland will divide his time between India and New York, where he'll continue as director of the Tibet Center, which promotes Tibetan Buddhism in the West.