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Ajahn Sumedho

Author of The four noble truths

48 Works 960 Members 18 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Ajahn Sumedho at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery, UK (cropped for Ajahn Sumedho only). By Jake Barnes, cropped by user:Xiengyod~commonswiki - Blessing (cropped from File:Ajahn Sumedho 1.jpg), CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=80874325

Series

Works by Ajahn Sumedho

The four noble truths (1992) 135 copies, 6 reviews
The Way It Is (1998) 95 copies, 2 reviews
Now Is The Knowing (1996) 44 copies, 1 review
Peace and Kindness (1990) 35 copies
Intuitive Awareness (2004) 32 copies
Seeds of Understanding (2014) 24 copies
Peace is a Simple Step (2014) 22 copies
Direct Realization (2014) 21 copies, 1 review
The Wheel of Truth (2014) 20 copies
Gratitude to Parents (1998) 6 copies, 1 review
Gratitude 2 copies
Cittavivaka 2 copies
Gratitude 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1934-07-27
Gender
male
Education
University of California, Berkeley (BA/Far Eastern Studies)
University of California, Berkeley (MA/South Asian Studies)
Occupations
Buddhist monk
Organizations
Chithurst Forest Monastery
Thai Buddhism
Theravada Buddhism
Relationships
Chah, Ajahn (Teacher)
Short biography
Born in Seattle, Washington, USA in 1934. Left the USA in 1964 and was ordained in NE Thailand in 1967. In 1967 involved in the setting up of Chithurst Buddhist Monastery and Amaravati Buddhist Monastery (both in the UK)

Ajahn is a title.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Seattle, Washington, USA
Places of residence
Seattle, Washington, USA
Nong Khai, Thailand
Bung Wai, Warin Chamrari, Ubon Rat Chathani, Thailand
Chithurst, West Sussex, England
Gaddesden, Hemel Hampstead, Hertfordshire, England

Members

Reviews

18 reviews
A very good introduction to Buddhism from a Theravada frame (specifically the Thai Forest Tradition), Sumedho's The Way It Is is edited from dhamma talks given during the 80s and 90s. The tone is informal and easy to read yet goes surprisingly deep. An enjoyable read for both novices and and experienced practitioners alike.
A beautiful little book. Wonderful artwork as well. We are lucky to have it.
A new translation and edition of "Gratitude to Parents" with additional sections on gratitude to Luang Por Chah and the Buddha.
This book relates the establishment of a Theravadin Buddhist monastery - the Chithurst Buddhist Monastery (Wat Pah Cittaviveka) - in Sussex, England, by Ajahn Sumedho. It also contains an anthology of teachings by Venerable Ajahn Sumedho given during the monastery's first five years.

About the Author:

Ajahn Sumedho was born Robert Jackman in Seattle, Washington in 1934. During the Korean War he did military service for four years from the age of 18 as a United States navy medic. He then did a show more BA in Far Eastern studies and graduated in 1963 with an MA in South Asian studies at the University of California, Berkeley. After a year as a Red Cross social worker, Jackman served with the Peace Corps in Borneo from 1964 to 1966 as an English teacher. In 1966 he became a novice or samanera at Wat Sri Saket in Nong Khai, northeast Thailand. He took profession as a bhikkhu in May the following year.

From 1967-77 at Wat Nong Pa Pong, trained under Ajahn Chah. He has come to be regarded as the latter's most influential Western disciple. In 1975 he helped to establish and became the first abbot of the International Monastery, Wat Pa Nanachat in northeast Thailand founded by Ajahn Chah for training his non-Thai students. In 1977, Ajahn Sumedho accompanied Ajahn Chah on a visit to England. After observing a keen interest in Buddhism among Westerners, Ajahn Chah encouraged Ajahn Sumedho to remain in England for the purpose of establishing a branch monastery in the UK. This became Cittaviveka Forest Monastery in West Sussex.

Ajahn Sumedho was granted authority to ordain others as monks shortly after he established Cittaviveka Forest Monastery. He then established a ten precept ordination lineage for women, "Siladhara".

Ajahn Sumedho is currently the abbot of Amaravati Buddhist Monastery near Hemel Hempstead in England, which was established in 1984. It is part of the network of monasteries and Buddhist centres in the lineage of Ajahn Chah, which now extends across the world, from Thailand, New Zealand and Australia, to Europe, Canada and the United States. Ajahn Sumedho has played an instrumental role in building this international monastic community.

Sumedho's imminent retirement was announced in February 2010. His successor is to be the English monk Ajahn Amaro, hitherto co-abbot of the Abhayagiri branch monastery in California's Redwood Valley.
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Statistics

Works
48
Members
960
Popularity
#26,837
Rating
4.0
Reviews
18
ISBNs
34
Languages
5
Favorited
1

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