Wood Valley Temple
Wood Valley Temple is a Tibetan Buddhist temple located five minutes above Pahala[1] on the Big Island of Hawaii.[2] Its Tibetan name is Nechung Dorje Drayang Ling (Tibetan: གནས་ཆུང་རྡོ་རྗེ་བྲག་གཡང་གླིང, Wylie: gnas-chung rdo-rje brag-g.yang gling).
History
[edit]The temple was built in 1902 as a Nichiren Buddhist temple. Originally built closer to Pahala, the temple was moved in 1925 to its current location after a major flood in 1917 damaged the temple.[2]
In the mid-1960s, the temple was abandoned after the Ka'u Sugar company ended their operations in the area. In 1973, the temple was leased to the Nechung lineage, a Nyingma lineage of Tibetan Buddhism associated with the Nechung Oracle, in order to start a center for Buddhist study and meditation on the island.[2]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Anon (n.d.).
- ^ a b c Valentine (2020).
References
[edit]- Anon (n.d.). "Explore Ka'u above Pahala". Kaucoffeefestival.com. Ka'u Coffee Festival with support from Hawaii Tourism. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- Valentine, Karen (2020). "Wood Valley Temple and its Fascinating Historical Journey". Ke Ola Magazine (Sept-Oct 2020). Retrieved 2021-07-01.
Further reading
[edit]- Schwabe, Marya Waifoon (2020). Road to Freedom: A Journey from Occupied Tibet: The True Story of the Search, Discovery, and Escape of a Reincarnate Lama. Luminare Press. ISBN 978-1643883991. Retrieved 2021-07-01. A book about Nechung Rinpoche who founded the temple.
External links
[edit]19°16′03″N 155°28′05″W / 19.2676°N 155.4680°W