Tashi Shagagh Jyochen Chhoyokhor Ling (Chhairo, Tsérok Monastery) | |
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Chhairo gompa courtyard, Lhakang and Padmasambhava shrine room, Chhairo, Lower Mustang, Nepal | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Tibetan Buddhism |
Sect | Nyingma |
Deity | Padmasambhava |
Leadership | Shashi Dhoj Tulachan |
Location | |
Location | Chhairo, Mustang, Gandaki |
Country | Nepal |
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Geographic coordinates | 28°44′17.7″N 83°40′58.1″E / 28.738250°N 83.682806°E |
Architecture | |
Founder | Chhawang Thinlen |
Date established | 16th century |
Chhairo Monastery (Wylie: tshe rogs dgon pa, THL Tsérok Monastery) was the first monastery of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism founded in Upper Mustang. It was established in the 16th century and is part of present-day Mustang District, Nepal.
The village and the gompa are located on the historic salt trade route and the population of both Chhairo Monastery and Chhairo village, which fell into decline when China closed its border with Nepal in the 1960s to restrict movement by pro-Tibetan activists and again recently due to security concerns during the 2008 Summer Olympics.[1][2]
The last remaining monks left the monastery in the 1970s,[3] and by 1981 only four nuns were taking care of the monastery.[4] From 1981 to the 1990s, the management of Chhairo Gompa was left wholly to Chhairo village.
Since the mid-2000s, efforts to reconstruct the main gompa complex have been made. This work is restricted to the monastery, shrine room to Padmasambhava and the main rooms that form a quad around these. The larger monastery complex of rooms for monks, visitors, pilgrims and their horses remain in ruins to the east.