Ajahn Pasanno
Ajahn Pasanno | |
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Ajahn Pasanno at Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery, September 2013 (Photo by Brian Carniello) | |
Religion | Theravada Buddhism |
School | Theravada, Maha Nikaya |
Other names | Reed Perry |
Dharma names | Pasanno |
Personal | |
Nationality | Canadian |
Born |
July 26, 1949 Manitoba, Canada |
Senior posting | |
Based in | Abhayagiri Monastery, Redwood Valley, California, USA |
Religious career | |
Teacher | Ven. Ajahn Chah |
Website | abhayagiri.org |
Ajahn Pasanno (born Reed Perry, Manitoba, Canada, July 26, 1949) is the most senior Western disciple of Ven. Ajahn Chah in the United States, and most senior in the world after Ajahn Sumedho and Ajahn Khemadhammo.[1] For many years he was the abbot of Wat Pah Nanachat International Forest Monastery in Northeast Thailand. In the late 1990s, Ajahn Pasanno moved to California to head the new Abhayagiri Monastery. With more than 40 years as a bhikkhu (Buddhist monk), Ajahn Pasanno has been instrumental in training many monks in Thailand and the United States and has been supportive of training for women.[2]
Biography
Ajahn Pasanno was born on July 26, 1949 in The Pas, Manitoba, Canada. In 1972 he finished his studies at the University of Winnipeg, Canada, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in History. A year later, in 1973, he travelled to Asia through Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan, to India, Nepal and finally Thailand, where Ajahn Pasanno travelled to a meditation monastery in Chiang Mai. He studied the Tripitaka in English and enrolled in a month of meditation retreat.[3]
In January 4, 1974, at the age of 24, Ajahn Pasanno took ordination at Wat Pleng Vipassana in Bangkok, Thailand with Venerable Phra Khru Ñāṇasirivatana as preceptor. During his first year as a monk he was taken by his teacher to meet Ajahn Chah, with whom he asked to be allowed to stay and train. One of the early residents of Wat Pah Nanachat, Ajahn Pasanno became its abbot in his ninth year.[4] During Ajahn Pasanno’s tenure as abbot, Wat Pah Nanachat developed considerably, increasing in size from 40 acres to 140 acres, and Ajahn Pasanno initiated an extensive tree-planting project that made Wat Pah Nanachat a model site for reforestation with the Department of Forestry in Ubon Ratchathani.
In 1990, Ajahn Pasanno established Poo Jom Gom Hermitage in Ampher Khong Chiam, Ubon Ratchathani Province (adjacent to Pah Dtaem National Park) as a forest retreat facility for Wat Pah Nanachat. One year later, he established Dtao Dum Hermitage inside Sai Yok National Park in Kanchanaburi Province as another forest retreat facility Buddhist monks. In addition to their function as places of meditation practice and monastic training, they help to protect the surrounding forests and natural environment and thus have received support from the Department of Forestry and the Thai military.
As abbot of Wat Pah Nanachat, Ajahn Pasanno was also involved in community development work, helping villages to develop projects that helped village harmony, virtue, and livelihood, and he started organizations that worked with villagers in northeast Thailand to protect areas of forest.[5] In 1991, he helped to draw a group of people together in the Ubon Ratchathani region who were interested in forest conservation and community development, which was formally established as the Nature Care Foundation in 1992 and continues to work for the benefit of the community, facilitating environmental education, cooperation between governmental and non-governmental organizations, and the initiation of projects to support sustainable livelihood. Ajahn Pasanno ordained many trees in order to protect them, putting robes around them, holding traditional ceremonies, and chanting for the protection of the forest.[6]
After Ven. Ajahn Chah became ill and died, Ajahn Pasanno was part of the steering committee for administering to the needs of Wat Nong Pah Pong and its branch monasteries, which at the time numbered over 200. In 1992 and 1993, Ajahn Pasanno was directly involved in helping the preparation and organization of the royal funeral of Ajahn Chah (Phra Bodhinyanathera) at Wat Nong Pah Pong, Ampher Warin, Ubon Ratchathani Province. Over a period of ten days for the funeral there was Dhamma instruction and practice. Over a million people passed through the monastery during that time. On the day of the cremation, between 300,000 and 400,000 people were in attendance.
Spending 24 years living in Thailand, Ajahn Pasanno became a well-known and highly respected monk and Dhamma teacher. Prior to leaving Thailand, he was appointed an official preceptor with authority to preside over ordinations of sāmaṇeras and bhikkhus.
Ajahn Pasanno moved to California on New Year's Eve of 1997 to share the abbotship of Abhayagiri Monastery, Redwood Valley, California, with Ajahn Amaro.[7] In addition to leading the community at Abhayagiri, his spiritual activities shortly after arriving in California ranged from traveling to San Quentin Prison in order to provide spiritual counseling for Jaturun "Jay" Siripongs, who was executed on February 9, 1999,[8] to leading monks from Abhayagiri to visit, make offerings, and chant for Julia Butterfly Hill, who was living in a 1500-year-old California Redwood tree in order to protect it from Pacific Lumber Company loggers.[9]
With Ajahn Pasanno’s help, support, and spiritual guidance, three lay followers, Sakula (Mary Reinard), Barbara Backstrand, and Chris Robson, founded Portland Friends of the Dhamma in 2000.[10] In 2010, the Pacific Hermitage, a branch of Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery, was founded in the Columbia River Gorge along a forested stretch of White Salmon's Jewett Creek with the support of Ajahn Pasanno, who encouraged Ajahn Sudanto to lead the effort to establish the Pacific Hermitage.[11]
In 2010, Ajahn Amaro accepted an invitation to serve as abbot of Amaravati Buddhist Monastery in England.[12] Ajahn Pasanno is now the sole abbot of Abhayagiri.[13] The monastery has developed significantly under his leadership and guidance. The Bhikkhu Commons (also known as the Monks' Utility Building, or MUB) was dedicated on July 4, 2010, and the building of a new Reception Hall, which will be a two-story complex that will include a spacious meditation hall, a larger and more modern kitchen, office, a library, guest rooms, a child care room, bathrooms and showers for laymen, laundry, a small shrine room/reliquary, as well as covered decks and storage rooms, began in July 2013.[14] The first phase of construction is complete.[15]
Bibliography
- Don't Hold Back - by Ajahn Pasanno (2013, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- Ajahn Chah's Teachings On Nature - by Ajahn Pasanno (2011, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- On Becoming and Stopping - by Ajahn Pasanno (2011, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- The Island: An Anthology of the Buddha’s Teachings on Nibbāna - by Ajahn Pasanno & Ajahn Amaro (2009, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- Like a River - by Ajahn Pasanno, Ajahn Amaro et al. (2008, Patriya Tansuhaj)
- A Dhamma Compass - by Ajahn Pasanno (2006, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- To the Last Breath - by Ajahn Pasanno (2003, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- Broad View - Boundless Heart - by Ajahn Pasanno & Ajahn Amaro (2001, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- The Dhamma and the Real World - by Ajahn Pasanno & Ajahn Amaro (2000, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
- Words of Calm and Friendship - by Ajahn Pasanno & Ajahn Amaro (1999, Abhayagiri Buddhist Monastery Publications)
Notes
- ↑ "An Interview With Ajahn Pasanno", Fearless Mountain Magazine. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Update on the Saranaloka Nuns’ Community", Board of Directors of the Saranaloka Foundation. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "An Interview With Ajahn Pasanno", Fearless Mountain Magazine. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Ajahn Pasanno Biography", Little Bangkok Sangha, Bangkok, Thursday 6th December 2012. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Saving Forests So There Can Be Forest Monks", Forest Sangha Newsletter, January 1996. Retrieved on 28 October 2014.
- ↑ "The Bhikkhu and the Butterfly: A Conversation between Ajahn Pasanno and Julia Butterfly Hill", Inquiring Mind, Fall 2005 issue. Retrieved on 16 October 2014.
- ↑ "An Interview With Ajahn Pasanno", Fearless Mountain Magazine. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Preparing for Death: The Final Days of Death Row Inmate Jaturun "Jay" Siripongs", UrbanDharma.org. Retrieved on 17 October 2014.
- ↑ "The Bhikkhu and the Butterfly: A Conversation between Ajahn Pasanno and Julia Butterfly Hill", Inquiring Mind, Fall 2005 issue. Retrieved on 16 October 2014.
- ↑ " Portland Friends of the Dhamma: Our History".
- ↑ " The Pacific Hermitage: About Us".
- ↑ "Ajahn Amaro Biography", Amaravati Buddhist Monastery. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Monasteries in the lineage of Ajahn Chah", Forest Sangha. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
- ↑ "Groundbreaking: July 23 - August 8, 2013".
- ↑ "Construction", Updates, Floor Plans, Cost Estimation.
"Monasteries in the lineage of Ajahn Chah", Forest Sangha. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
to replace:
"Monasteries in the lineage of Ajahn Chag", Forest Sangha. Retrieved on 19 September 2013.
External links
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- Short biography and picture.
- Dhamma talks given by Ajahn Pasanno in English
- Interview with Ajahn Pasanno in English
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