Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Bhikkhu Jagdish Kashyap

Bhikkhu Jagdish Kashyap was born in 1908 in Ranchi, Bihar, India; he died 28 January 1976. His birth name was Jagdish Narain, and the name Kashyap was given to him at his bhikkhu ordination in 1933


After finishing his MA, Bhikkhu Kashyap, desiring to doctoral work in Buddhist philosophy, was advised to study Pāli, and so resolved to go to Sri Lanka, to his parents' dismay. They relented in 1933 and he joined the Vidyalankara Pirivena (now the University of Kelaniya). He was ordained by Venerable L. Dhammananda NayakaDigha Nikāya into Hindi. Mahathero. During his time at the Vidyalankara Pirivena he translated the

On a trip to Japan he was stopped by the police in Malaysia due to his involvement in Gandhi's non-cooperation movement. He spent a year living in Penong, learned some Chinese, lived in a Chinese vihara, and published a collection of lectures.

In 1936 he returned to Sri Lanka to spend time in a forest hermitage to practice meditation, which was quite unusual for a bhikkhu in his day, so much so that his teachers tried to dissuade him. Bhikkhu Kashyap continued to practice meditation throughout his life. Towards the end of 1936 he returned to India and in 1937 settled at Sarnath where he was involved in scholarly and translating work, principally of the Pāli Canon into Hindi. In Sarnath he became associated with the Mahabodhi Society and was soon helping with the institutional organisation and social services. He became the headmaster of a new high school founded by the Mahabodhi Society General Secretary, Devapriya Valisinha. While in Sarnath he also worked for Benares Hindu University to offer courses in Pāli - even occasionally walking the 22 mile journey into Varanasi. Some accounts say this was because he persuaded officials to start these courses and even taught them from free, the accounts below varies slightly.

During this time Bhikkhu Kashyap took on a young English monk as a live-in student for about nine months. Sangharakshita went on to found the Western Buddhist Order in 1968, and considers Bhikkhu Kashyap to have been an important teacher in both the spiritual and secular senses.

Sangharakshita's version of the Benares university job, as he understood from Kashyap:

As he had already confided to me, he was there very much on sufferance. Dominated as it was by orthodox brahmins, the University had not wanted to have a Professor of Pali and Buddhist Philosophy at all, and Kashyap-ji’s appointment had been due to the insistence of the multimillionaire philanthropist Jugal Kishore Birla, a benefactor whose wishes the University could not afford to ignore. But though the University had been forced to appoint a Professor of Pali and Buddhist Philosophy it was not obliged to supply him with pupils. In fact it made it as difficult as possible for him to get any. Under University regulations, no one could take Pali without also taking Sanskrit. In other words Pali and Buddhist Philosophy were not allowed to become alternatives to Sanskrit and Hindu Philosophy. One could take Sanskrit and Pali, or only Sanskrit, but under no circumstances could one take only Pali. So effectively did these tactics limit the number of Kashyap-ji’s students that he never had more than three or four, sometimes none at all. For someone as devoted to his subject as he was this was a bitter disappointment. He had accepted the professorship only because he hoped it would enable him to make some contribution to the advancement of Buddhist studies and thus, indirectly, to the cause of Buddhism; but as it became more obvious every year that Pali and Buddhist Philosophy were unwelcome guests at the Benares Hindu University, he had come to the conclusion that he was wasting his time there and he was now thinking of resigning.

In 1947 India became independent and there was a new sense of identity for Indians. In 1949 he toured his ancestral homeland, the ancient province of Magadha, which was also the centre of ancient Buddhism. For the first time in many centuries the villages in Magadha saw a yellow robed bhikkhu, and were pleasantly surprised to find that he spoke their local dialect Magadhi. The locals had long forgotten their own history and Bhikkhu Kashyap was able to furnish many details. The very name of the state of Bihar comes from presence of so many Buddhist viharas in the past. He was able to point out the true identity of the images of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas which were being worshipped as Hindu gods or local deities. Villages such as Sari-chak, near Nalanda, had previously had an association with the Buddha's chief disciple Sariputta. Finally he was able, by quoting passages from the Pāli texts, to demonstrate that Magadhi is still closely related to the Magadhi dialect.

After this visit Bhikkhu Kashyap offered to teach Pāli at Gaya College and at Nalanda College in Bihar-Sharif. Later, when the Bihar state government decided to start an institute for Pāli studies at Nalanda, he was the obvious choice to head the project. In 1951 the institute became the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara.

1956 was the 2500th anniversary of the parinibbana of the Buddha, celebrated by the Indian government as the Buddha Jayanti. As part of the celebrations, Bhikkhu Kashyap's work of bringing out a Devanagari edition of the Pāli Canon was accepted as an official project, and was jointly sponsored by the governments of Bihar and India. The first volume appeared in 1956 on the occasion of the Buddha Jayanti, and the rest followed over five years - guided to completion with enormous effort and marathon labour by Bhikkhu Kashyap. At one point he sold his house to pay the salaries of workers when payments had been delayed.

During the Buddha Jayanti project Bhikkhu Kashyap returned to Varanasi and in 1959 was asked to become the first Professor of Pāli and Buddhism at the Sanskrit University of Varanasi. He remained there until 1965 when he returned to Nalanda for a second term as Director of the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara. He retired in 1973. Having earlier developed diabetes, he became seriously ill in 1974 and spent his last two years bedridden in the Japanese temple in Rajgir, from where he could see the Vulture Peak and the newly constructed Peace Pagoda. He died in 1976.

Friday, April 17, 2009

NAVA NALANDA MAHAVIHARA

In the early 1950's, in order to revive the lost glory and the heritage of ancient Nalanda Mahavihara, his Excellency Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the first President of the Republic of India, declared that the ancient seat of Buddhist learning at Nalanda would be revived.

At the insistence of Ven. Bhikkhu Jagdish Kashyap and with this goal in mind, the Government of Bihar established a research institute called Magadh Institute of Post-Graduate Studies and Research in Pali and Allied Languages and Buddhist Learning at Nalanda in 1951. It later came to be known as Nava Nalanda Mahavihara. The inspiration behind the establishment of this institute was to develop a centre of higher studies in Pali and Buddhism along the lines of ancient Nalanda Mahavihara. From the beginning, the institute functioned as a residential institution, with a limited number of Indian and foreign students.

The present campus of the Mahavihara is 100 km from the metropolis of Patna , situated on the southern bank of the historical lake, Indrapuskarani. Close to the northern bank lie the ruins of the ancient University of Nalanda .

On November 20, 1951, the foundation stone of the first building was laid by His Excellency, Dr. Rajendra Prasad. Engraved upon it are the following words:

"Let the rays of the sun of Nalanda rise from the summit of this rock in order to brighten the vernacular ( lokabhs in Pali ) after the passing away of its nights of darkness (period of its obscurity). "

Ven. Bhikkhu Jagdish Kashyap became the Founder-Director of Nava Nalanda Mahavihara, and continued in that capacity until February 1955. One of his major accomplishments was the complete publication, in 41 volumes, of a critical edition of the entire Pali Tipitaka in Devanagari script. It was very popular and quickly went out of print.

Prof. (Dr.) Satkari Mookerjee, erudite and peerless scholar of general Indology, Sanskrit and Philosophy became the second Director of the Mahavihara on March 1, 1955 in place of Ven. Bhikkhu J. Kashyap who was appointed Honorary Director. He streamlined teaching and research programmes and edited the first three Nava Nalanda Mahavihara research volumes.

The first building, designed by well-known artist and architect Padmashri Upendra Maharathi, upon completion, was formally inaugurated by His Excellency Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, then Vice-President of the Republic of India, in March 1956.

In 1965, Ven. Kashyap again became Director and continued until January 1973. Under his editorship the work of transcribing, editing and publishing of Pali texts again gathered momentum.

Dr. Nathmal Tatia succeeded Ven. Kashyap in 1973. The year marked the opening of post-graduate teaching in two additional subjects Philosophy, and Ancient Indian and Asian Studies. A meditation camp was also organized by the Vipassana Acharya Sri Satya Narayan Goenka at the Mahavihara, which was attended by participants from all over the country and abroad.1976 marked the year of the Silver Jubilee celebrations of the Mahavihara under the Directorship of Dr. C. S. Upasak.

In January 1981, the President of India His Excellency Sri Neelam Sanjiv Reddy laid the foundation stone of the International Hostel for scholars and students of the Mahavihara.

From the beginning, until March 1981, the Mahavihara functioned as a State Government institution under the Department of Education, Government of Bihar. His Excellency, the Governor of Bihar, was the Chairman, and the Director, its head. In order to give the Mahavihara freedom to plan its own development, the Government of Bihar granted the institute autonomy. However, lack of funds, a decreasing staff, gradually shrinking activities, localization and isolation, hindered the development and the position of the Mahavihara again began to deteriorate.

Considering the glorious past of Nalanda, the esteem and reverence Nalanda receives from Asian countries, and the immense potential for development as an institution of international importance, the Government of Bihar decided to hand it over to the Government of India in December 1990.
Instrumental in this decision of the Government of Bihar was Prof. Gustav Roth of Germany , who joined the Mahavihara as Director in 1982. With the support of his mentor, the Governor of Bihar, His Excellency, Dr. A.R. Kidwai, he prevailed upon the Government of Bihar and the Government of India to join together to preserve the Mahavihara. He proposed that the Government of India assume responsibility to develop the Mahavihara, and integrate it with the existing Xuanzang Memorial Hall thus turning it into a full-fledged university.

The Department of Culture, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India finally assumed responsibility for the institute with full financial liabilities in February 1994. Dr. D.K. Barua was the director from 1996-1999. In April 2000, Dr. Ravindra Panth was appointed Director. After his joining he geared up all round activities of the Mahavihara like Infrastructure, teaching, seminars, conferences and workshops etc.

In November 2001 the Mahavihara celebrated the Golden Jubilee Year. As a result the Heritage of Nalanda and its Continuity, a 35 minute documentary film narrating the ancient history of Nalanda and its continuity in the form of Nava Nalanda Mahavihara was completed in 2002. The film was released by his Excellency the President of India, Bharat Ratna Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam on May 30th 2003.

With the effort of Dr. Panth the Mahavihara got the Deemed University status on 13th November, 2006 with the notification No. F. 9-38/2004-U.3(A) by the Government of India.
Nava Nalanda Mahavihar is presently under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Human Resource Development and has been granted autonomy. The faculty consists of scholars of Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit, Buddhist history and archeology. Candidates both from inside and outside of India, interested in the study of Buddhism come here to pursue their academic goals.

Nava Nalanda Mahavihara is affiliated to the Magadh University, Patna university and Kameshwar Singh Darbhanga Sanskrit University for different courses. The courses for which it is affiliated to the Magadh University are

* M.A in Pali, Eligibility: a candidate having Acharya or B.A honours degree in Pali from any recognized Indian or foreign university can opt for a M.A in Pali.

* M.A in Philosophy, Eligibility: B.A (Hons.) in Philosophy from any recognized Indian or foreign university can opt for a M.A in Philosophy.

* M.A in Ancient Indian and Asian Studies, Eligibility: candidates with a B.A (Hons.) degree in Ancient Indian and Asian Studies, ancient Indian history, from any recognized Indian or foreign university can pursue a M.A in Ancient Indian and Asian Studies.

* Ph.D and D.Litt in the above mentioned subjects - Candidates having a master's degree with at least 50% marks, from an Indian university or an equivalent degree from a foreign university, can apply for a Ph.D or D.Litt in this institution.

For all courses besides having the above mentioned eligibility criteria a candidate needs to pass an entrance test conducted by the institution.

The institution is affiliated to the Kameshwar Singh Darbhanga Sanskrit University for the course of Pali Acharya. The eligibility for this course are - A candidate possesing a diploma in Pali form the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara, or from university of Calcutta, Delhi, or having Pali as one of the subjects in graduation from any Indian or Foreign University can avail this course.

The institute conducts courses on a set of subjects for which the syllabus has been framed its residential experts. These courses, their duration and their eligibility criteria are -

* Certificate course in Pali, duration: 1 year, Eligibility criteria: candidates who have passed the 10+2 from any recognized board/university can avail this course provided they qualify the entrance examination held by the institute.

* Diploma Course in Pali, Duration 1 year, Eligibility criteria: a candidate who has passed the certificate course in Pali from the institution, or has an equivalent degree in Pali from India or countries like Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Kampuchea, Vietnam, Laos, Bangladesh can apply for this course.

* Diploma in Chinese

* Diploma in Japanese

* Diploma in Tibetan

* Diploma in Sanskrit

* Diploma in Hindi

Academic Proceedings: A summer holiday of 45 days and an Autumn holiday of 15 days has been allotted to the teaching department.

Address:
Nava Nalanda Mahavihara
Nalanda - 803111, Bihar, India
Phone: 06112-281820, 281897
Fax: (06112) 281820
Web Site: http://www.navnalanda.com/