Lobsang Dechen: Systematic Education
in Dolma Ling Leading to Gender Equality. Internationales Symposium: Frauen im Buddhismus, 7.-9. Febr. 1997,
Frankfurt am Main. Journal of Religious Culture No. 27-07 (1999)
______________________________________________________________________________________________
Journal of
Religious Culture
Journal für Religionskultur
Ed.
by / Hrsg. Von Edmund Weber
Institute for Irenics / Institut für Wissenschaftliche Irenik
Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
ISSN 1434-5935- © E.Weber
______________________________________________________________________________________________
No. 27-07 (1999)
Systematic Education in Dolma Ling Leading to
Gender Equality
By
Ven. Lobsang Dechen,
Project
Coordinator, Tibetan Nuns Project, Dharamsala, India
The
primary aim in establishing Dolma Ling Institute is to raise the education
standard and improve the opportunity for nuns to study advanced Buddhist
philosophy and doctrine. During the Tibetan Women's Association fourth working committee
meeting in Dharamsala in October, 1992, His Holiness the Dalai Lama said,
" In our society , we have as a legacy from the past the notion that nuns
engage in ritual only and do not study Buddhist texts. This should be
changed." His Holiness has in this way been urging the nuns to study
higher Buddhist philosophy, in order to gain a deeper knowledge of Buddhism.
Whenever His Holiness visits the Tibetan nunneries, he takes the opportunity to
ecourage them to study.
Dolma Ling Institute is specifically non sectarian and intented to provide nuns
from all lineages with the opportunity to study to develop their full academic
and spiritual potential. The crucial purpose of the overall project is to allow
scholastically gifted nuns to attain the highest level of religious studies,
that is the Geshe degree. This much respected degree has up until now only been
attained by monks. Enabling women to participate in the study course leading to
this goal will give them the confidence to take on roles as teachers and
leaders within the communities.
From the religious point of view, there is no reason to object to or create
obstacles to women’s rights because we believe that every sentient being has
the potential to become enlightened. The deity Arya Tara (Jetsun Dolma)
generated the mind of Bodhicitta, and through engaging in the Bodhisattva
practices eventually achieved enlightenment, all in dependence on a female
body. Indeed, the tantric vows specifically state that if a practitioner
despises women it is a transgression of the fourteenth root tantric vow.
However, in nunneries in the past, a great deal of emphasis was placed on the
memorization of prayers and ritual ceremonies. The mastering of Buddhist
philosophical topics was very rarely undertaken by nuns. Therefore, very few
nuns became qualified teachers which perpetuated the nuns dependence on monks
as teachers.
Despite the lack of emphasis on studies in the nunneries, there have been many
great nuns throughout history who gained high spiritual realization through
meditation and staying in retreat. These can be found in India as well as
Tibet. I will tell you about a few of the notable examples of women who
revealed remarkable determination and courage in pursuit of their chosen goal,
without regard for acknowledgment or disappointments.
Gelongma Pelmo (Bhikshuni Lakshmi) was a famous Indian nun of the late tenth or
eleventh century who was previously a princess known as Lakshmi. She was
afflicted with leprosy and was cured by blessings she received from the great
Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara directly through her meditation. She was the
founder of the fasting practice (nyung nas) of Avalokiteshvara. Her story is
still frequently told in connection with the fasting ritual, which is an
especially popular practice among Tibetan nuns.
Machig Lapdron (ma-gcig-lab-sgron, 1055-1153), founder of the Chod ego-severing
ritual, lived in the eleventh century in Western Tibet. She was a great
scholar, religious practitioner and a renowned healer. She had many disciples.
It is said that at one time she was visited by three Indian scholars who
debated with her. The Indians claimed that all teachings originated in India
and that Tibet had no teachings of its own. Machig Lapdron explained her point
extensively for seven days to a vast assembly of scholars who at last concluded
that what she said was true. They invited her to India but she did not go.
Instead she sent teachings of Mahamundra Chod and several commentaries to them
there, saying, "This is the first time that a Tibetan teaching has gone to
India".
Samding Dorjee Phagmo was the famous abbess of Samding Monastery who presided
over a community of monks. His Holiness the Dalai Lama has said that the
incarnation system was first established with Karmapa Dusum Khenpo's reincarnation
around the 13th century. At the same time, the female reincarnation system was
also established with the acceptance of Samding Dorjee Phagmo as a
reincarnation of Vajra Yogini. The present fourteenth incarnation of this
lineage is a woman who lives in Tibet. The lineage of Samding Dorjee Phagmo is
highly respected by Tibetans.
Shugseb Jetsun Rinpoche was a famous woman practitioner born in 1865 at Tso
Pema in the mountains of Himachal Pradesh in India, where there is a lake
sacred to Padmasambhava. By the time she was only six years old, Lochen had
revealed a deep understanding of the Dharma. She traveled throughout Western
Tibet explaining the meaning of the stories depicted in religious paintings.
Later she went to Kyidrong to receive the transmission of Kunsang Lama and the
empowerments of Longchenpa, the Heart’s Drop Instruction of Dzogchen, or the
Great Completion, as well as the One Hundred Initiations of Chod, or
Ego-Severing Rite. She became a great religious practitioner, meditating and teaching
her many disciples. She lived at Shugsep Nunnery, situated southwest of Lhasa,
where she established a firm body of disciples and lineage of teachings. She
passed away in 1951. Fifty nuns from Shugsep Nunnery, which was revived in
Tibet in the late 1980s after being completely destroyed during the Cultural
Revolution, have arrived in Dharamsala since 1990 and are being taken care of
by the Tibetan Nuns Project.
Khandro Rinpoche, a recognised Nyingma re-incarnation of the great Khandro of
Tsurphu who was an emanation of Yeshe Tsogyal and the consort of the fifteenth
Karmapa, was born in 1967. She is a lineage holder in the Nyingma school of
Tibetan Buddhism and presently is the head of Karma Chokhor Dechen Nunnery, and
Samten Tse Retreat Center in Mussoorie. She received both the traditional
Tibetan and a Western education and speaks English fluently. She also teaches
widely in the West.
Another present day notable woman adept is Sakya Jetsun Kusho, Chime Luding,
the sister of Sakya Tridzin, head of the Sakya order. She is a renowned
practitioner who has received initiations and practiced along with her brother.
Fully empowered as a teacher, she now teaches in the West where she resides.
We should not underestimate how many nuns in Tibet as well as in India have,
through remaining quietly in the mountains and continuing their practice in
solitude, attained high realizations.
There were also a remarkable number of famous great freedom fighters among the
nuns. In 1959, when Tibet was forcefully annexed by the communist Chinese,
Ghalingshar Choe-la, a nun from Nechung Ri Nunnery, was one of the leaders of
the Tibetan women’s uprising when they demonstrated against the Chinese
occupation of their country on 12th march 1959. Five thousand courageous
Tibetan women followed Pamo Kunsang in this demonstration. Later Ghalingshar
Choe-la was arrested and thrown into prison. She was subjected to physical
assault and merciless interrogation in an attempt to make her confess her
crimes. Since she would not confess, she was subjected to repeated struggle
sessions, each more intense than the one before, for almost six years. The
Chinese method is that they take victims to hospital to recover sufficiently to
withstand the rigors of the next session. She eventually died in the hospital.
Her corpse was thrown out on the outskirts of Lhasa town and the Chinese
authorities would not allow anybody to touch it. Many people saw it and were
dismayed at the fate of such a courageous nun.
The list of such nuns continues despite the Chinese oppression in Tibet. In
1969, Thinlay Choedron, a nun from Nyemo near Lhasa led a guerrilla
organization against the Chinese, bravely fighting against the Chinese rule in
Tibet. Later, she, along with sixty women were arrested and killed by the Chinese.
Pemba Choela a nun from Shar Pemba, led a rebellion of 30,000 guerrillas
against the Chinese. They stopped the Chinese troops entering their region for
nine years. Ani Palchen, another brave nun form Kham, Eastern Tibet, who
defended bravely against the Chinese invasion was caught and imprisoned for
twenty-one years. She is now in Dharamsala.
Recently, many younger nuns have been actively participating in peaceful
demonstrations in Tibet and many of them are now in prison. Reliable sources
say that there are one hundred twenty nuns in one prison called Gutsa. Who
knows how many there are in all the prisons in Tibet.
Now let me tell you a little about the background of the Tibetan nuns. We do
not have good historical records regarding nuns and nunneries, and the
following figures are a bit low. However, records indicate that prior to 1959,
there were 160 nunneries throughout the country with 6,831 nuns in central
Tibet, 4,468 in Amdo in 52 nunneries and 8 nunneries in Kham with 290 nuns.
There were also an indefinite number of nuns living in small groups in retreat
communities or in caves. Still others lived with their families and relatives.
In 1949, the Chinese Communist regime began a systematic attempt to militarily
force the absorption of Tibet into China. The peaceful nature and philosophy of
the Tibetan people led them to exert noble efforts in their attempts to
negotiate a peaceful settlement in the face of China's expansionist aggression.
However, by 1959, the situation had become untenable; the Chinese government
had reneged on many of its agreements and the very survival of the Tibetan
culture and people was in serious jeopardy. Under these circumstances, His
Holiness the Dalai Lama, the religious and temporal leader of Tibet, escaped
along with 100,000 Tibetans to seek refuge in India and Nepal.
Thereafter, the Chinese have shown continued and unrelenting hostility towards
the Tibetan people and their culture. Over 6,000 religious institutions were
destroyed, nuns and monks were forced to disrobe, scriptures were burned,
religious objects were smashed, and other precious things were taken away by
the Chinese officials. Since then only a few could escape to India either
individually or with their relatives. Very few nuns were able to escape to India
until recently because many of those who tried were caught by the Chinese and
some died as they made their way through the mountains without proper guides.
During the early years of exile, the nuns who had escaped lived an isolated
life. Some lived with their relatives, others looked after children in schools,
worked on road construction and so on. It was only gradually that some nuns
began to realized the importance of living in a religious community in order to
preserve their purity of practice and the traditional lifestyle in a nunnery.
One by one, through the interest and support of individuals and organizations
in the exile community, nunneries began to be established.
The first to be established was the Mahayana Buddhist Nunnery, established in
Dalhousie, India by an English nun, Ven. Khechok Pelmo (Freda Bedi) in the
early sixties. Later the nunnery was moved down to Tilokpur. Now there are
almost sixty nuns at Tilokpur and the nunnery is run by the nuns themselves
under the kind guidance of H.E. Situ Rinpoche.
Gaden Choeling nunnery was started in a rented house, Rishi Bhawan above McLeod
Ganj, Dharamsala, in the mid-1970's, by twenty one nuns on the initiative of
two Nechung Ri nuns. Later, they bought the present land on which Geden
Choeling is established which is only a ten minute walk from the main temple of
McLeod Ganj. They built a big wooden house which was divided into halls and
rooms for the nuns with a small kitchen nearby. Now there are almost one
hundred fifty nuns living at Geden Choeling. Their accommodation and education
have improved a great deal due to the kind help given by individuals and
organizations.
In 1987, Jangchup Choeling nunnery was established by the Tibetan Women's
Association and the local Tibetan welfare office. Their main supporter is
Bhikshuni Jampa Tsedron from Germany. Recently, many new arrival and Himalayan
nuns have joined the nunnery, swelling the number of nuns resident there to
almost one hundred. They have a well established educational program.
In 1988, Jamyang Choeling nunnery was established by an American Bhikshuni
Karma Lekshe Tsomo with three or four Himalayan nuns. At present this nunnery
has around fifty nuns living at their new property in Garo, a village outside
of Dharamsala and sixteen at their original home in McLeod Ganj. They also have
a well organized study program.
There is another nunnery in South India run by Penor Rinpoche, head of the
Nyingma lineage, which contains more than a hundred nuns. Karma Chokhor Dechen
nunnery situated near Rajpur in Uttar Pradesh, North India is run by Khandro
Rinpoche, and also in Rajpur a new nunnery for nuns of the Sakya tradition has
recently been established. There are also a number of nunneries established in
Nepal, including Kopan nunnery and Keydong Thugche Cheoling. A further
unrecorded number of nuns and small nunneries exist in the Himalayan border
regions including Zanskar, Ladakh, Sikkim, and Lahoul Spiti.
In addition to these, Dolma Ling Nunnery and Shugsep Nunnery were both set up
by the Tibetan Nuns Project in 1991 in Dharamsala in response to the arrival of
large numbers of nuns from Tibet fleeing the Chinese repression after the wave
of demonstrations in Tibet in the late 1980s. Shugsep traditionally follows the
Mindroling Lineage with slight variations in rituals. Their main practice is
the Heart's Drop (snying tik) -- the essence of Dzokchen, or the Great
Completion, following Longchenpa's Heart's Drop ritual text. Here in India,
they also follow the regular Nyingma nine year study program developed at the
Ngagyur Nyingma Institute in Bylakuppe, South India.
This summarizes the expansion of Tibetan nuns in exile. Clearly there has been
a great increase in numbers and an unprecedented emphasis of education since
they left Tibet. During the same period of time how have nuns been faring in
Tibet?
In Tibet during the cultural revolution, nuns and monks were forced to disrobe.
They were made to work together in the hope that they would be attracted to
each other and break their vows. Sometimes they put monks in one row and nuns
in other and forced them to choose partners. One old women with revealed with
some embarrassment that her husband had chosen her when the Chinese authorities
had forced him to choose a wife. She was a nun before the cultural revolution.
Nevertheless, there were some nuns who were able to keep their vows purely even
though there was so much pressure on them not to do so. They kept up their
prayers and meditation secretly.
After over thirty years of repression, in 1981 China announced individual
freedom of religion in Tibet and those monks and nuns who had kept their vows
secretly took the opportunity to start rebuilding their monasteries, despite
the illusory nature of religious freedom in Tibet since all the monasteries are
under the control of the Chinese authorities. Gari, Nechung Ri, Tsamgon, and
Shugsep have all been rebuilt over the past ten years.
In September, 1987 monks from the great monasteries of Lhasa staged
demonstrations against the Chinese occupation of Tibet and were quickly joined
by many lay people. The Chinese were swift to respond by catching and
imprisoning the demonstrators. The Chinese authorities asserted that only a
handful of people were creating problems in the country and the majority were
very happy under Chinese rule. Just to show the Chinese that it was not only
the handful of people who not happy, a series of demonstrations initiating from
Gari Nunnery calling for freedom for Tibet were undertaken by nuns.
Since then the Chinese authorities have increasingly tightened their control
over the nunneries, restricting who may be admitted, their numbers and their
activities and insisting on political education and investigations of any
glimmer of insurrection. Following in the tradition of the nuns who fought for
freedom in the 1960s, since 1989, many nuns have led resistance activities in
Tibet by initiating and organizing demonstrations. If caught, they are tortured
suffer imprisonment, and when they are eventually released, they are denied
re-admission to their nunneries. Compelled to return to their home villages,
they are forbidden to continue their religious practices or to communicate
freely with the local people or to receive help from them. As a result, many
nuns have left and continue to leave Tibet to seek asylum in India.
The Tibetan Nuns Project was initiated in 1987 in Dharamsala as a centralized
entity for channeling assistance to Tibetan nuns in exile. It operates under
the auspices of the Tibetan Women's Association and the Department of Religion and
Culture of the administration-in-exile of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. This
Project is the first of its kind devoted solely to the needs and problems of
Tibetan nuns living in exile. It's primary aim is to provide improved
educational opportunities for nuns. With the intention of establishing a higher
education and training institute, in 1990 the project bought four acres of land
in the valley below Dharamsala.
Unexpectedly, at the beginning of 1991, a group of sixty-six nuns arrived in
Dharamsala from Tibet, with no means of support at all. The Tibetan Women's
Association organized emergency assistance to provide them with their basic
needs, and as there was insufficient space to accommodate them all in the
existing nunneries and more nuns were continuing to arrive, it became necessary
for the Project to establish a new nunnery. Therefore, it was decided to build
a nunnery, now called Dolma Ling, large enough to accommodate about two hundred
nuns on the site purchased for the educational institution which could be built
along side. This building project has been going on steadily since March, 1993.
The first phase of the construction which provided basic accommodation and
educational facilities for one hundred nuns was completed in October, 1995. A
second housing wing was completed in 1996 and now we are engaged in a three
year project funded by Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, to provide facilities for the
institution of higher education initially planned.
Since 1990, around seven hundred nuns have arrived in Dharamsala. Most are very
young, between fifteen and twenty-five and even though many, especially those
from the more remote regions of Tibet, are illiterate, they are determined to
receive a proper education in the Tibetan language and religion. They are also
interested in English studies and learning about the world. Nuns from the Lhasa
and central region have usually received some education but many of these have
endured torture and imprisonment, sometimes involving sexual abuse and solitary
confinement, at a very young age.
The primary goal of the Tibetan Nuns Project has always been to improve the
educational level of the nuns, seeing education as the key to provide them with
the resources leading to eventual self-sufficiency and improved status within
the Tibetan community. His Holiness the Dalai Lama has said that it is
important that women should use their potential and feel empowered to take
responsibilities which will enable them to enjoy their equal rights in both
religious and secular matters. Without education this goal is impossible. We
cannot fully appreciate our rights without education and determination.
From the very inception of the Tibetan Nuns Project, the nature of education
for nuns has been a primary topic of discussion and investigation by the
Project organizers. Establishing an educational curriculum which encompasses
the essential elements of both the traditional monastic education and the
modern secular one is considered to be essential in order to provide nuns with
the means to excel in any of the various fields which they might wish to enter
in the future. Dolma Ling Institute has been chosen as the central locus for
the development of this program for a number of reasons. The nuns in Dolma Ling
are almost all young recent arrivals from Tibet who have come to India with the
express purpose to gain the education they have been denied in Tibet. Therefore
their motivation to study and achieve is high. Furthermore, Dolma Ling has been
set up as a non-sectarian nunnery unencumbered by pressure to follow a
particular course of study. Because the nunneries in general have less
established study traditions, it is more easy to change things. More
specifically, since Dolma Ling is a brand new institution it is a conducive
environment in which to develop an innovative program.
Having said this, it is also necessary to understand the limitations to
innovation. In order to develop gender equality between monks and nuns we do
not have to merely imitate the monks established study programs, indeed we may
see some limitations in the traditional courses of study in the modern context.
Yet, in order that the nuns qualifications through this program are respected
in the Tibetan community, it cannot deviate too much from an accepted norm. The
study of Tibetan Buddhist philosophy in Dolma Ling leads to the attainment of
the Geshe degree which is the top degree traditionally attained by monks.
Whilst we do not expect all the nuns who work through the Dolma Ling study
program to become Geshes, we are very hopeful that we will produce the first
female Geshes in the Tibetan tradition. However, it is important to point out
that the Dolma Ling nuns are not the only nuns engaged in the studies of the
geshe program--several of the other nunneries mentioned above--Jangchup
Choeling, Jamyang Choeling, Keydon Thukche Choeling, and Geden Choeling, for
instance, all have initiated programs of traditional philosophical study.
The educational program in Dolma Ling Institute is specifically designed to
provide for the long -term educational needs of the Tibetan Buddhist nuns. The
aim is to offer an educational program which is relevant and takes into account
the needs of the nuns. A thirteen year curriculum with a four-pronged focus has
been developed and initiated. The first four years of the study program is
undertaken by all the nuns. This involves traditional training in Tibetan
Buddhist philosophy (such as is followed
in the Tibetan monasteries but has not previously been available to women). In
addition, there is training in Tibetan language, history, and culture, training
in the essentials of a modern education including basic science, social
sciences, and mathematics, and training in English language which is essential
for communication and accessing information.
Those nuns who have passed through this first four years of the program are
encouraged to proceed with the advanced study program, This involves advanced
training in Buddhist philosophy and doctrine. This program will be developed in
the Dolma Ling Institute of Higher Studies and will be open to any nuns in
exile. This crucial aspect of the overall project will enable scholastically
gifted nuns to attain the highest levels of religious studies, the Geshe degree
and to take on roles as teachers and leaders within the community.
It is seen as a very important aspect of the educational program provided
within the Institute that opportunities will be provided for some nuns to
undertake professional training as teachers, health workers, or training in
various community services such as counseling and care of the elderly,
administrative training and possibly technical training in services such as
electrical installation, water management and so forth.
In addition, the development of income generating projects is acknowledged to
be essential in the long term subsistence of the nunneries. Model arts and
crafts projects are to be set up in Dolma Ling which will provide training
bases for nuns coming from other nunneries and will in themselves generate
income for the nunnery. Initial trial projects are presently being undertaken.
Finally, the Institute will conduct research through interviews and archives to
document the current and historical conditions of the Tibetan nuns in order to
raise awareness of the needs, modes of living, and aspirations of the nuns in
the Tibetan community as well as abroad. Already we have quite a substantial
base of information about nuns through the documented case histories of all the
nuns assisted by the Nuns Project.
Let me go through a more detailed analysis of the program as it is presently
functioning at Dolma Ling. At present there are one hundred and fifteen nuns
enrolled in the study program--ninety-seven of whom are resident at Dolma Ling
and the other eighteen who attend as day scholars. In terms of level, they are
spread out over the first five years of the study program. The first four years
undertaken by all the nuns are named Preliminaries (Ngondro), Logic (Dusda),
Science of mind and science of reasoning (Lotak) and the transitional class
(Tsamjor). The Buddhist philosophy course is divided into two parts. In the
first part Ngondro class studies Primary Logic. In Dusda they study the small,
medium and large presentations of logic. In Lotak they study the divisions of
consciousness and the science of reasoning. In Tsamchor, comparative tenets and
the stages of spiritual realization are studied.
The second part of the Buddhist philosophy course involves study of Logic in
terms of Dharmakirti's Pramanavarrtika, Commentary onValid Cognition.
This begins with and continues over the remainingyears of the study program.
Throughout this time period, essential texts of the Buddhist philosophical
tradition such as the Pramanavarrtika, the Abhisamayalamkara, and
the Madhyamikavatara, are memorised in their entirety.
Alongside this two part Buddhist philosophy course, the nuns are studying
Tibetan Language and Literature. In Ngondo they learn Tibetan calligraphy,
reading and writing and study the first and second Tibetan Pre-Primary
text-book along with the 3rd Tibetan Reader by Sherig. Dusda class studies
Legs-bshad-ljon-dbang & byis-pa-dag-yig along with how to write
applications and letters. They begin studying the history of Tibetan language
and literature. Lotak studies rtags-'jug-dka'-gnad-gsal-ba'-melong, both the
root text and the explanation and Sakya-legs-bshad up to the third chapter.
They continue the study of the history of Tibetan language and literature. In
Tsamjor they study Thonmi-zhal-lung, by Tseten zhabdrung. Sakya-legs-bshad from
the fourth chapter through to the sixth. They also continue with the study of
the History of Tibetan language and literature.
The fourth course of study is Tibetan Religious and Political History. This is
based on Shakyapa's two volume history. In Ngondo they study a brief
geographical tophography of Tibet and the twelve deeds of Lord Buddha from
Shakyapa's Political History of Tibet. Dusda studies unique and common Tibetan
customs and education and a brief history of five Tibetan religious sects. In Lotak
they study a brief history of the three great kings of Tibet and the
hagiography of eight great Indian scholars, the "six ornaments and two
most excellent". Tsamjor studies Tibetan history from Nyatri through Lang
Darma and the administration of the Tibetan government-in-exile.
At the same time the nuns study English using standard English textbooks
available here in India. For the general studies portion we are using Tibetan
language textbooks developed for use in the Tibetan Children's Village school system.
We kept this general studies for only first five years. Mathematics is also
studied up to the point of passing a basic proficiency test in order to give
the nuns a basic working knowledge.
The subsequent years consist of six years study of the Perfection of Wisdom
(Parchin, prajnaparamita) and three years of the Middle Way (U-ma, madhyamika).
They follow a complex course which I will not narrate in detail here.
At the same time as engaging in this extensive study program the nuns at Dolma
Ling are fully involved in the normal activities of a nunnery which include
performing ritual ceremonies. In preparation for these the nuns need to be able
to create ritual offering cakes (tormas), butter sculptures, mandalas and
become familiar with the preparation for and performance of the rituals. Whilst
in Tibet the nuns would make tormas and simple butter sculptures, they would
not usually learn to make the large or elaborate butter sculptures or sand
mandalas. These days the nuns are learning these monastic arts as well.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama said that a few nuns might decide to go to the
mountains to meditate after finishing their studies. For them there is no need
to have certificates. Indeed, this is the best thing that one can do with one's
life. For others, he stressed the importance of having certificates on
graduation from Dolma Ling in order to serve the community with confidence and
to generate respect for their well earned position in society. The Geshe degree
is the ultimate degree which fully qualifies them as teachers in the Tibetan
monastic context. One of the first priorities will be to staff the various
nunneries with nun teachers instead of always having to look outside the
nunneries for teachers. However,
not all the nuns will aspire to or be able to complete this level of study, and
the other components of our study program will give them the qualifications
needed to teach in any school or study group in the Tibetan community in exile
as well as in Tibet itself. Those who choose to gain skills in administration,
community services such as counseling and care of the elderly, technical
training in services such as electrical installation, water management and so
forth or training in income generating arts and crafts will have no difficulty
finding a very useful place for themselves in any nunnery and will enable them
to reach out to the broader community.
To conclude, our situation at Dolma Ling is unique because our student body is
composed primarily of young adults most of whom came to us totally illiterate.
This means that as they arrive, the nuns are taught right from the beginning,
learning the Tibetan alphabet through a course of study that will eventually
give them a level of competency comparable to a western doctorate. They are very
determined to receive a proper traditional education in Tibetan language and
religion but they are also interested in studying English and learning about
the world. Therefore our curriculum is very specifically tuned to their
requirements and they are enjoying their courses and producing good results.
The curriculum has been made through experience of the nuns and will, if it is
seen to be necessary be adapted to suit changing needs. It is our hope that
through this education the nuns will gain more confidence and determination to
use their natural potential to enjoy their rights for the benefit of other
sentient beings.
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