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In 1991, a group of sixty-six Tibetan nuns appeared on the streets
of Dharamsala, India. Fleeing Chinese persecution, the refugees
had nowhere to live, nothing to eat, and no support network. Renchin,
a Tibetan refugee herself, helped the nuns find housing and establish
a nunnery. Her efforts grew into the Tibetan Nuns Project, an organization
that provides exiled nuns with shelter, health care, and, notably,
advanced educational opportunities. Traditionally,Tibetan nuns have
been taught how to pray, but not the meaning of their prayers.With
no direct lineage to the teachings of Buddha, the nuns lacked the
ancestry necessary for ordainment. Only monks could become ordained
teachers and, through their teaching, support themselves. By giving
the nuns the education necessary to become teachers, Renchin has
opened the door to their economic independence.
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