MAHA GHOSANANDA, a Nobel Peace Prize-nominated monk who rebuilt Buddhism in Cambodia after the fall of the Khmer Rouge, has died.
The Cambodian monk, believed to be in his late 70s, lived in exile between 1975 and 1979, when the Khmer Rouge denounced Buddhism and killed nearly two million people through starvation, disease, overwork and execution. He was one of the first monks to return to Cambodia and train new Buddhist leaders after Pol Pot’s regime was toppled in 1979.”He did everything he could to restore Buddhism to Cambodia,” said Jim Perkins, pastor of the Leverett Congregational Church and a friend of the religious leader.Ghosananda was elected a Supreme Cambodian Buddhist Patriarch by fellow Buddhist monks in 1988 for restoring Buddhism in the war-torn country.During the 1990s, he led the Dhamma Yatra movement to rebuild religious life in Cambodia.He moved to western Massachusetts in the late 1980s at the invitation of the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist order in Leverett, which was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize three times in the mid-1990s.Nampa-APHe was one of the first monks to return to Cambodia and train new Buddhist leaders after Pol Pot’s regime was toppled in 1979.”He did everything he could to restore Buddhism to Cambodia,” said Jim Perkins, pastor of the Leverett Congregational Church and a friend of the religious leader.Ghosananda was elected a Supreme Cambodian Buddhist Patriarch by fellow Buddhist monks in 1988 for restoring Buddhism in the war-torn country.During the 1990s, he led the Dhamma Yatra movement to rebuild religious life in Cambodia.He moved to western Massachusetts in the late 1980s at the invitation of the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist order in Leverett, which was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize three times in the mid-1990s.Nampa-AP
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