Difference between revisions of "Ajahn Chah"

From Dhamma Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
 
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
'''Ajahn Chah''' (1918-1992) was perhaps the greatest [[Theravada]] meditation master of the 20th century. Born in Thailand in 1918 he became a monk  as a young man but soon grew tired of sedate life in the conventional monasteries. He became a wandering monk, living in the forest and devoting his time to meditation. After many years he settled in a forest hermitage which eventually developed into a monastery and began to attract those interested in meditation. Ajahn Chah  became well-known for his warmth, his earthy humour and his particularly practical, direct and spontaneous approach to meditation. By the 1970’s he began to attract many Western disciples, some of whom later went on to establish monasteries and meditation centres in the West. Although he himself never wrote anything, some of his talks, sayings and anecdotes were recorded and published and have since circulated widely. Ajahn Chah died in 1992  after a long debilitating illness.  
 
'''Ajahn Chah''' (1918-1992) was perhaps the greatest [[Theravada]] meditation master of the 20th century. Born in Thailand in 1918 he became a monk  as a young man but soon grew tired of sedate life in the conventional monasteries. He became a wandering monk, living in the forest and devoting his time to meditation. After many years he settled in a forest hermitage which eventually developed into a monastery and began to attract those interested in meditation. Ajahn Chah  became well-known for his warmth, his earthy humour and his particularly practical, direct and spontaneous approach to meditation. By the 1970’s he began to attract many Western disciples, some of whom later went on to establish monasteries and meditation centres in the West. Although he himself never wrote anything, some of his talks, sayings and anecdotes were recorded and published and have since circulated widely. Ajahn Chah died in 1992  after a long debilitating illness.  
 +
 +
==See also==
 +
 +
*[[Ajahn Chah quotes]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 03:05, 30 March 2014

Ajahnchah.jpg

Ajahn Chah (1918-1992) was perhaps the greatest Theravada meditation master of the 20th century. Born in Thailand in 1918 he became a monk as a young man but soon grew tired of sedate life in the conventional monasteries. He became a wandering monk, living in the forest and devoting his time to meditation. After many years he settled in a forest hermitage which eventually developed into a monastery and began to attract those interested in meditation. Ajahn Chah became well-known for his warmth, his earthy humour and his particularly practical, direct and spontaneous approach to meditation. By the 1970’s he began to attract many Western disciples, some of whom later went on to establish monasteries and meditation centres in the West. Although he himself never wrote anything, some of his talks, sayings and anecdotes were recorded and published and have since circulated widely. Ajahn Chah died in 1992 after a long debilitating illness.

See also

References

Venerable Father – A Life with Ahjahn Chah, Paul Breiter, 1993.