Drepung Gomang
Institute
Tashi Gomang Dharma Center
Drepung Gomang Institute
1578 Parsons Place
Louisville , KY 40205

When communist China completed their invasion of Tibet in 1959, 5500 monks had been studying at Drepung Gomang, near Lhasa, the capital. Only about 100 were able to follow His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama into exile in India, with the goal of preserving and maintaining cultural identity and religion. Ten years later, 60 monks succeeded in re-establishing Drepung Gomang monastery in a Tibetan settlement in South India, on land donated by the Indian government.
Close to 1500 monks are currently studying at the monastery, with about 150 new arrivals annually. In 1998 there were 221 from Tibet alone. Children as young as six years old continue to flee Chinese-occupied Tibet to South India and arrive at the monastery penniless to study their own language, culture, and religion freely. Monks from India, Nepal, Bhutan, the Czech Republic, New Zealand, Mongolia, Australia, Indonesia, England, Japan, Taiwan, and Russia are also arriving at the monastery. The University provides facilities to everyone wishing to study the great texts in a monastic setting.
Study at the University is rigorous. Every year, six days a week, over 46 weeks per year, the students memorize texts for an hour and debate for 2 hours in the morning. After lunch, they have 3 hours of classroom and another 2 hours of debate. After dinner, the debate practice continues sometimes stretching till morning. The traditional education of novice monks starts from the memorizing of scriptures and learning of elementary texts in class. They also learn modern studies such as science, math, and English grammar. A majority of the beginning students are between the age of five and eighteen. After learning these preparatory skills, the students then move to more intense studies of Buddhist philosophy and logic. The mode of instruction is mainly through discussion or dialogue between the teacher and the student, using a dialectical method or inquiry. After more that 20 years of extensive study in Pramana, Madyamika, Abhidarma and related subjects, a monk sits before the Gelukpa Board Examination, after which her may be honored with a geshe degree. The geshe degree is equivalent to a Ph.D. in Philosophy from a western university.
Currently nearly 2000 monks live, work, and study at Drepung Gomang; almost all are refugees. About 100 monks arrive every year. In their home away from home the monks have labored building housing, libraries, temples, and classrooms, while continuing their studies, growing crops and caring for livestock. They continue to care for the community of Tibetans, also in exile, that surrounds them, and work diligently to save their culture and way of life. In summer months, the monastery provides classes for the lay community in Buddhist philosophy and the Tibetan language to ensure the preservation of its culture.



Drepung Gomang Institute
1578 Parsons Place
Louisville , KY 40205