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Venerable Ajahn Chah (Pra Bhodinyana Thera) was born into a typical farming family in Bahn Gor village, in the province of Ubol Rachathani, N.E. Thailand, in 1917. He lived the first part of his life as any other youngster in rural Thailand, and, following the custom, took ordination as a novice in the local village Wat for a number of years, where he learned to read and write, in addition to some basic Buddhist teachings. After a number of years he returned to the lay life to help his parents, but, feeling an attraction to the monastic life, at the age of twenty he again entered a Wat, this time for higher ordination as a bhikkhu, or Buddhist monk.
He
spent the first few years of his bhikkhu life studying scriptures
and learning Pali, but the death of his father awakened him to the transience
of life and instilled in him a desire to find the real essence of the Buddha's
teaching. He began to travel to other monasteries, studying the monastic
discipline in detail and spending a very brief but significant time with
Venerable Ajahn Mun, the most outstanding meditation Master of the ascetic,
forest-dwelling tradition. Following his time with Venerable Ajahn Mun,
he spent a number of years traveling around Thailand, spending his time
in forests and charnel grounds, ideal places for developing meditation
practice.
At
length he came within the vicinity of the village of his birth, and when
word got around that he was in the area, he was invited to set up a monastery
at the Pa Pong forest, a place at that time reputed to be the habitat of
wild animals and ghosts. Venerable Ajahn Chah's impeccable approach to
meditation, or Dhamma practice, and his simple, direct style of
teaching, with the emphasis on practical application and a balanced attitude,
began to attract a large following of monks and laypeople.
In 1966 the first westerner came to stay at Wat Pa Pong, Venerable Sumedho Bhikkhu. From that time on, the number of foreign people who came to Ajahn Chah began to steadily increase, until in 1975, the first branch monastery for western and other non-Thai nationals, Wat Pa Nanachat, was set up with Venerable Ajahn Sumedho as the abbot.
In
1976 Venerable Ajahn Chah was invited to England together with Ajahn Sumedho,
the outcome of which was eventually the establishment of the first branch
monastery of Wat Pa Pong outside of Thailand. Since then, further branch
monasteries have been established in England, Switzerland, Australia, New
Zealand and Italy.
In 1980 Venerable Ajahn Chah began to feel more acutely the symptoms of dizziness and memory lapse which he had been feeling for some years. This led to an operation in 1981, which, however, failed to reverse the onset of the paralysis which eventually rendered him completely bedridden and unable to speak. However this did not stop the growth of monks and laypeople who came to practice at his monastery, for whom the teachings of Ajahn Chah are a constant guide and inspiration.
Copyright ฉ 1991 The Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat Copyright ฉ 1999 Wat Pah Nanachat [top]