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Ven. Dr. Karuna Dharma
Ven Dr Karuna Dharma
Karuna Dharma, known also in Vietnamese as Thich Nu An Tu (1940–2014) was an American Buddhist scholar and nun. She was the first American-born woman to become a fully ordained Buddhist nun. She was the Abbess of the International Buddhist Meditation Center of Los Angeles.
Karuna Dharma was born Joyce Adele Pettingill on April 21, 1940 in
Beloit, Wisconsin
to a Baptist family. She attended the
University of Wisconsin–Madison
where she met Ben Ting Fun Lum. They married and moved to
Los Angeles
where he was an aerospace engineer for
McDonnell Douglas
.
She met Vietnamese Zen Buddhist master
Thích Thiên-Ân
in 1969 when she signed up for a class on Buddhism. She was one of his first students. She helped him establish the International Buddhist Meditation Center (IBMC) in 1970.
She took full ordination in the Lieu Quang school of
Vietnamese Thiền
from Thích Thiên-Ân in 1976. This made her the first fully ordained female member of the Buddhist monastic community in the U.S. Following Thích Thiên-Ân's death in 1980, she succeeded him in directing the International Buddhist Meditation Center.
Karuna Dharma used the International Buddhist Meditation Center to assist Vietnamese refugees
and was greatly influential in their resettlement in the United States following the
Vietnam War
. Dharma interpreted the
Prātimokṣa
's prohibition on sexual misconduct as not applying to people in a committed relationship. She estimated at one point that one third of the community at IBMC was lesbian or gay.
During Venerable Karuna Dharma's lifetime, she ordained nearly 50
bhikkhunis
and hundreds of Buddhist clergy and laity. She served as president of the American Buddhist Congress and vice president of the College of Buddhist Studies and the Buddhist Sangha Council of Southern California. She founded Sakyadhita, the Buddhist-Catholic dialog, Buddhist Sangha Council of SoCal, Inter-religious Council of SoCal.
She had two daughters, Chrystine and Elan. Venerable Karuna Dharma died on February 22, 2014 from complications of Alzheimer's Disease.
Books
"Ven. Karuna Dharma"
. Urban Dharma. Archived from
the original
on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December2015.
Ford, James Ishmael (2006).
Zen Master Who?: A Guide to the People and Stories of Zen
. Simon and Schuster. pp. 88–89.
ISBN
978-0-86171-509-1
.
Tweti, Mira (Winter 2006).
"Daughters of the Buddha"
.
Tricycle: The Buddhist Review
.
Morgan, Diane (2004).
The Buddhist Experience in America
(1st ed.). Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 163.
ISBN
978-0-313-32491-8
.
Levering, Miriam; Schireson, Grace Jill (2006). "Women and Zen Buddhisms".
Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America
. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 644.
ISBN
978-0-253-34685-8
.
Wilcox, Melissa M. (2009).
Queer Women and Religious Individualism
. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p.
68
.
ISBN
978-0-253-35351-1
. “Karuna Dharma
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