| 
 The 
                  International Buddhist Meditation Center's Grand Ordination Ceremony
 on December 10, 1994.
 
 
 
 An American disciple of an Asian master ordained her own disciples 
                    as bhikkus. Ven. Dr. 
				  Karuna 
                    Dharma, a fully ordained bhikkuni   the Abbess of IBMC  led the ceremony with 
                    the blessing of the most elder monk present, Ven. Dr.
				  Havanpola 
                    Ratanasara. The founder of 
                    our Center, Ven. Dr. 
				  Thich Thien-An, 
                    believed that American Buddhism needs to contain all traditions. 
                    In that spirit, over thirty masters representing the three 
                    major traditions of Buddhism -- Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana 
                    -- joined in the ceremony. Female masters took an equal role 
                    with male masters. The masters were 
                    from many countries, all with temples in the U.S.: Vietnam, 
                    China, Korea, Japan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Tibet and America. 
                    Thirty-seven people took ordination at different levels. Seven 
                    Western nuns in the Tibetan tradition took bhikkuni ordination 
                    with the permission and participation of their masters. Full 
                    ordination is not available to women in the Tibetan lineages. 
                    One Vietnamese Theravadan nun also took full ordination, ordinarily 
                    unavailable in that tradition as well. Despite these firsts, 
                    the ceremony itself was the traditional one, dating back to 
                    the earliest Buddhist times. The lineage at the International 
                    Buddhist Meditation Center is also directly from the Buddha, 
                    through the Lam-Te School in Vietnam to the American Buddhism 
                    of today. |