The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 24, 2025
Today: April 24, 2025

India overhauls teaching in Himalayan Buddhist monasteries to counter China

Lama Chosphel Zotpa, a monk and vice president of IHCNBT reads a document at its office in New Delhi
April 08, 2025
Rupam Jain - Reuters

By Rupam Jain

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India is preparing to roll out its first school curriculum for Buddhist monasteries this month, aiming to unify education programmes and foster patriotism in Himalayan religious centers near its border with China.

Home to many ancient monasteries as the birthplace of Buddhism, India received an influx of Tibetans in the 1950s that led to many new institutions being set up, but now it seeks to insulate religious learning from Chinaโ€™s influence.

India overhauls teaching in Himalayan Buddhist monasteries to counter China
A monk shows a book that is part of the new school curriculum for Buddhist monasteries at the IHCNBT office in New Delhi

"We are trying to inculcate Indian identity through education along with Buddhism to make sure China can never control our monasteries in the Himalayas," said Maling Gombu, a Buddhist worker of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

"Thousands of children living and studying in remote monasteries deserve education recognised and certified by India," added Gombu, one of a team promoting Indian Buddhist traditions and national education in Arunachal Pradesh.

The border state is claimed by China, but New Delhi rejects this.

About 600 monasteries scattered across the northern states of Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and the regions of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh offer training in four types of Tibetan and Indian Buddhist traditions.

India overhauls teaching in Himalayan Buddhist monasteries to counter China
A man shows books that are part of the new school curriculum for Buddhist monasteries at the IHCNBT office in New Delhi

They also teach modern subjects and English, but the courses lack consistency outside a national education effort that aims to weld an overarching identity from India's patchwork of languages and religions.

"The non-religious education taught by monks or nuns is not acknowledged outside monasteries," said Rajeev Kumar Singh, a director of the education ministry's National Institute of Open Schooling.

Singh, who has worked on the new curriculum that caps a five-year assessment effort, said it hoped to prepare Indian and Tibetan students for academic life in India.

"They (Tibetans) are free to learn Tibetan history and their tradition, but they should learn about India as they reside here and require proper education to secure jobs outside monasteries."

India overhauls teaching in Himalayan Buddhist monasteries to counter China
A photo of Dalai Lama is pictured at the IHCNBT office in New Delhi

A government document reviewed by Reuters showed that 20 monasteries near the 3,000-km (1,860-mile) border with China have agreed to adopt the new curriculum, with the rest to be phased in later in the year.

MORE TIME NEEDED

While authorities negotiate individually with monasteries to take up the syllabus, they also need time to print up new textbooks and locate teachers to staff the schools, most in sparsely-populated areas, officials said.

But monks in some monasteries, such as the Gontse Garden Rabgye Ling in Arunachal Pradesh, say their syllabus focused on Buddhist philosophy, along with modern education, is carefully curated to meet the needs of children who may become preachers.

"We don't think introduction of government-mandated syllabus is required in our monastery as it can break the rhythm designed since the 1970s," said Geshe Dondup, a religious teacher at the monastery, home to about 300 students this year.

Tens of thousands of Tibetans sought refuge in India where their spiritual leader and Nobel Peace laureate, the Dalai Lama, fled as Chinese troops crushed an attempted uprising in their homeland in 1959.

About 75,000 Tibetan refugees now live in settlements managed by the Dalai Lama's government-in-exile, the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA), which controls some monasteries directly, though not those outside the Tibetan tradition.

Reuters reviewed the first batch of textbooks prepared for monasteries by education ministry officials and Indian Buddhist scholars, which delve into India's modern and ancient history, and the nation's role in Tibet's freedom struggle.

The texts also emphasise mathematics, science and computer training, besides mandatory studies in English, Hindi and the native Bhoti language.

The CTAโ€™s education minister, Tharlam Dolma, said monastery schools have historically been managed by monks and nuns based on their funding, and the CTA lacked governance rights over them. An official in the Dalai Lama's office did not comment.

India will begin offering funds to monasteries, run for decades by different sects of Buddhism with the help of foreign aid, to recruit teachers, pay stipends to monks and pave the way for annual examinations.

In its effort to unify school programmes, a court essentially banned Islamic schools in India's most populous state in March last year, saying they violated constitutional secularism and ordering students moved to conventional schools.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a home ministry official said streamlining education in monasteries in far-flung strategic areas was part of a larger plan to fence off religious institutions from Chinaโ€™s influence.

A home ministry spokesperson did not respond to an email seeking comment.

Last year the Asian giants began unwinding a military standoff on their disputed border since clashes in 2020 killed two dozen troops, but India aims to spend more to develop border areas amid the slow thaw in ties.

(Reporting by Rupam Jain; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Related

Asia|Education|Political|World

India overhauls teaching in Himalayan Buddhist monasteries to counter China

Local

Local

L.A. sees decline in parking enforcement, fines

Environment|Health|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

Los Angeles named โ€˜smoggiest cityโ€™ by American Lung Association for 25th time

Local

Los Angeles claims 'Right to Counsel' for low-income tenants

Economy|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

L.A. housing construction plummets in first quarter, according to analysts

Share This

Popular

Asia|Crime|Political|Travel|World

Dozens killed as gunmen massacre tourists in Kashmir beauty spot

Dozens killed as gunmen massacre tourists in Kashmir beauty spot
Asia|Crime|Political|World

Hong Kong allows outspoken Cardinal Joseph Zen to attend Pope Francis' funeral

Hong Kong allows outspoken Cardinal Joseph Zen to attend Pope Francis' funeral
Asia|Business|Economy|Technology|US

Robotaxi maker Pony.ai sees Trump's trade war hitting sentiment, overseas expansion plans

Robotaxi maker Pony.ai sees Trump's trade war hitting sentiment, overseas expansion plans
Asia|Business|Economy|World

Taiwan proposes another $10 billion in aid to deal with US tariffs

Taiwan proposes another $10 billion in aid to deal with US tariffs

Political

Political|World

Top Russian official says Moscow has right to use nuclear weapons if attacked by West, TASS reports

Top Russian official says Moscow has right to use nuclear weapons if attacked by West, TASS reports
Africa|Asia|Business|Economy|Political|World

China, Kenya upgrade ties amid 'turbulent international situation'

China, Kenya upgrade ties amid 'turbulent international situation'
Crime|Political|World

Pakistan minister calls India's suspension of river treaty 'water warfare'

Pakistan minister calls India's suspension of river treaty 'water warfare'
Political|World

Ukraine's Zelenskyy arrives in South Africa for state visit following Trump's renewed criticism

Ukraine's Zelenskyy arrives in South Africa for state visit following Trump's renewed criticism