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Ser-byes-mkhas-snyan Grwa-tshang (Bylakuppe, India) (Corporate Name)

Preferred form: Ser-byes-mkhas-snyan Grwa-tshang (Bylakuppe, India)
Used for/see from:
  • Earlier heading: Sera Jeh Monastery (Karnataka, India)
  • Ser Byes Mkhas-sñan Grwa-tshaṅ (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Je Monastery (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Ser Byes Gtsug-lag Slob-gñer-khaṅ Chen-po (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Je Monastic University (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Jey Monastery (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Je Bauddha Vihārada (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Jey Khe Nyen Dratsang (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Jey Dratsang (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Sera Jey Monastic University (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Byas-pa grwa-tshang (Bylakuppe, India)
  • Se-ra theg-chen-gling (Bylakuppe, India). Ser-byes-mkhas-snyan Grwa-tshang

Sera : the way of the Tibetan monk, 2003: p.5 CIP galley (Sera Jeh Monastery; re-established in Karnataka, South India)

ʼJam-mgon bstan paʼi rtsa lag Ser Byes Mkhas-sñan Grwa-tshaṅ gi ... 2002: t.p. (Ser Byes Mkhas-sñan Grwa-tshaṅ; Sera Je Monastery)

Gsuṅ lan Śāk lan Go lan ..., 2003: seal on t.p. (Ser Byes Gtsug-lag Slob-gñer-khaṅ Chen-po) t.p. verso (Sera Je Monastic University)

Ser-byes ṅo sprod gter gyi kha byaṅ, 2009: t.p. (Sera Jey Monastery; Sera Je Bauddha Vihārada) p. 9, 2nd gr. (Sera Jey Khe Nyen Dratsang) p. 10, 2nd gr. (Sera Jey Dratsang)

Lhag mthong chen moʼi gzhung ʼgrel ʼJam dbyangs bla ma dgyes par bskyed paʼi mchod sprin zhes bya ba bzhugs so, 2017: t.p. (Ser-byes-mkhas-snyan Grwa-tshang)

Sera Jey Monastic University (Website), view on April 4, 2019 (In 1970 the group of 197 Sera Jey monks with 103 of Sera Mey monks was moved to a special site within the resettlement of Bylakuppe in Mysore District, South Indian state of Karnataka, for re-establishing the Sera Monastery, under the patronage of H.H. The Dalai Lama and the Central & State Government of India) https://www.serajeymonastery.org/histroy/5-re-establishment-at-bylakuppe

On reaching India in 1959, under the leadership of His Holiness The Dalai Lama, the members of Sera Jey Monastery along with escaped monks of all the four different Monasteries under the four Orders of Tibetan Buddhism, were rehabilitated at a special camp at Bhaksa in the state of West Bengal. This was especially intended by His Holiness concern over the fate of Tibet's culture & religion, which has abruptly come under the terrible threat to its very survival from the appalling cultural genocide perpetrated by the invading communist Chinese at Tibet; and in his visionary effort to preserve and resurrect the unique culture, religion & identity of Tibet in a land of refuge, away from the reach of communist Chinese brutal oppression; re-establishing the Sera Monastery, under the patronage of H.H. The Dalai Lama and the Central & State Government of India. A forestland area of 225 acres, measuring 3/4 acres in ratio per monk were given to the two monasteries. For Sera Jey Monastery the share for 197 monks were given 147. 3/4 acres. The Indian Government sponsored 38 one-room tiled houses for the overall 300 monks of the two Monasteries, with 24 for Sera Jey and 14 for Sera Mey; it wa previously established in Tibet as main seat of Dge-lugs-pa studies in 1419; also known as Byes-pa Drwa-tshang; Jetsun Kunkhen Lodroe Rinchen Senge is the founder of Sera Jey Monastery. He was a master at Drepung Monastery and fate led him to leave with hundreds of his disciple to form Sera Jey Monastery. He was the first abbot of Sera Jey Monastery and instituted Tamdin Yangsang (Haya-griva) as the presiding deity of Sera Jey.) https://www.serajeymonastery.org/histroy/4-rehabilitation-and-restoration

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