- Ajahn Khemadhammo
"Luangpor Khemadhammo"Ajahn Khemadhammo, OBE (alternatively Chao Khun Bhavanavitayt or Achaan Khemadhammo, occasionally with honorific titles "Luang Por" and "Phra") is a teacher of
Theravada Buddhism . He was born in England in 1944. After training and practising as a professional actor for some years, in 1971 he travelled toThailand via the Buddhist holy places in India. In December 1971 inBangkok , he became a novice monk and about a month later moved to Ubon to stay withAjahn Chah atWat Nong Pah Pong . On the day beforeVesakha Puja of that year, 1972, he received "upasampada" as abhikkhu .In 1977, Venerable Khemadhammo returned to the U.K. and, after staying in
London andBirmingham , set up a small monastery on theIsle of Wight . In 1984, at the invitation of a group of Buddhist meditators that he had been visiting monthly for some years, he moved to Banner Hill nearKenilworth and formed theBuddha-Dhamma Fellowship . In 1985, he moved to his current residence, the Forest Hermitage, a property inWarwickshire ; in 1987, with considerable help from devotees in Thailand, this land was purchased by the Buddha-Dhamma Fellowship. Astupa was built there in 1988, known as the 'English Shwe Dagon'.Ajahn Khemadhammo began Buddhist
prison chaplaincy work in 1977. In 1985, with the help of others,Angulimala , the Buddhist Prison Chaplaincy was launched with him as its Spiritual Director.Presently, Ajahn Khemadhammo lives with another monk, continuing to visit
prison s and teachingmeditation .Ajahn Khemadhammo was appointed an OBE (
Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire ) in the Queen's Birthday Honours, June 2003 for 'services to prisoners'. [ [http://www.number-10.gov.uk/files/pdf/Queens-List-2003.pdf The Queen's Birthday Honours list for 2003] - Announcement by 10 Downing street] In December 2004, on the birthday of theKing of Thailand , he was made a "Chao Khun" with the ecclesiastical title of "Phra Bhavanavitayt"; he was only the second foreign-born monk to receive such an honour.External links
* [http://www.foresthermitage.org.uk Website of the Forest Hermitage]
Notes
"This article uses text adapted from the Forest Hermitage's [http://www.foresthermitage.org.uk/fh.html biography of Ajahn Khemmadhammo] . It is available for free distribution under the terms of the
GFDL ."
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