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Venerable Sumangalo
Venerable Sumangalo
Venerable Sumangalo was a Buddhist monk of Chinese Mahayana Buddhism in Singapore and Malaysia.
(1903—1963) was born as Robert Stuart Clifton in
Birmingham, Alabama
in the United States in 1903. After receiving his Doctorate in Literature, he lectured on Buddhism in the United States before moving to Asia to further his study of Buddhism. He was ordainedas a monk during 1935 in the temple of
Shin Buddhism
in Japan. After a few months of studies he returned to the USA where for the next 18 years he had no connection with this sect. In 1952 he requested a letter of authority from Nishi-Honganji to found a “Western Buddhist Order.” This request was denied.
In 1957, he joined the
Theravada Order
in
Laos
and received the monastic name Sumangalo, meaning "very auspicious". He then left for
Malaya
and later visited Singapore on a
Dharma
tour in late 1959 with another American Buddhist monk,
Venerable Susiddhi
. Through his efforts, a number of Youth Circles and Sunday schools were set up locally.
Pioneering Buddhist Youth Movement in Malaya
Venerable Sumangalo, who is well known as the Father of Malaysian Buddhist Youth Movement. He urged the establish of the Federation of Malaya Buddhist Youth Fellowship (FMBYF) in 24 December 1958 which was the first national Buddhist youth organization in the Peninsular Malaya then with the objective to unite the Buddhist youth in the new born nation.
[
citation needed
]
The
Young Buddhist Association of Malaysia
(YBAM) set up the
Sumangalo Award
in 1995 to commemorate Ven.Sumangalo for his great compassion, contributions and pioneering spirit in the Buddhist youth movement in Malaysia.
Father Sumangalo Memorial Hall is located in Penang, Malaya
In January 1959 he was offered the honorary abbotship of Poh Ern Shih, thus becoming the first Westerner to be the abbot of a Buddhist temple in Singapore.
[3]
While in Singapore, he assisted Pitt Chin Hui in her translation of the Ksitigarbha Bodhisattva
Sutra
from
Chinese
to English. He returned to Malaya and spent his later years at Penang Buddhist Association, where most of his Dharma lectures were held. His lectures were later compiled in English and Chinese and are still freely distributed. Venerable Sumangalo died on 6 February 1963 and was cremated in
Penang
.
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