Kunpan Cultural School

Last updated

Kunpan Cultural School
ES Tibet logo neu.png
Location
,
India
Information
Type Private
Established2000
Faculty9
Enrollment24 (as of July 2015)
CampusUrban
Houses1
Affiliation2001
Website estibet.ch
The Kunpan Cultural School building in Dharamshala Kunpan Cultural School - Dharamsala - H.P. India - Aussenansicht.jpg
The Kunpan Cultural School building in Dharamshala
the small library of the school Kunpan Cultural School 9 2011-03-25 08-50.jpg
the small library of the school
the Himalayans as seen from the school's location Kunpan Cultural School 31 2011-03-25 13-13.JPG
the Himalayans as seen from the school's location

The Kunpan Cultural School, provided by the Swiss-Tibetan foundation ES Tibet, is located in Dharamshala in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

Contents

History

In 2000 no institution existed that could provide young Tibetans refugees in India any further education except the basic scholar edition given by the Tibetan Transit School (T.T.S.). The Tibetan Exile Government in Dharamshala had already established educational support by setting up the T.T.S. in which newly arrived Tibetan refugees are educated for five years. [1]

Having had the idea of setting up an educational organisation, but not having any practical experience, the project Educational Support Tibet (ES Tibet) started in October 2000 in Delhi with five students (four boys and one girl) who were leaving the TTS. The startup school was registered as a National Open School, to get either the 8th or 10th grade normal school qualification in India. At the beginning of 2002, courses for twenty female and male students in Whitefield, Bangalore, started in a building that had rooms enough to provide living quarters and classrooms. That first class finished in the summer of 2004, followed by a second group of twenty students that finished their studies in August 2006. Since the middle of 2006, the Kunpan Cultural School has been located in Dharamshala, the seat of the exile Tibetan Government and centre of the Tibetan diaspora in India.

Jigme Lhundup Rinpoche, the former speaker and minister of the Central Tibetan Administration, had been an important supporter of ES Tibet, and had contributed immensely toward overall development of Kunpan Cultural School. With his unmeasurable effort and clear vision had brought many supporters and great results both to students’ achievement and organisation development as whole. Supported by Jigme Lhundup Rinpoche, in June 2010 the board members of Kunpan Cultural School had the privilege of privately meeting the 14th Dalai Lama at his residence in Dharamsala. He acknowledged and appreciated the successful work that Kunpan have been doing for the previous ten years in terms of educating Tibetan refugees in India. He also encouraged the board members at least keep up the good work for another ten years. Knowing that the school didn't have an official name at that time as it uses ES Tibet, HH 14th Dalai Lama vested the name Kunpan Cultural SchoolKunpan is a Tibetan word, meaning beneficial to all. [2]

Goals

Living too far away from schools, Tibetans who grow up in the rural areas of Tibet often have no possibility to attend a basic scholar education. In addition, fees for the Chinese state schools are so high that Tibetan families very often cannot afford it. To avoid the sad fate of an uneducated person or an analphabet, every year more than 4000 young Tibetans (aged 18 to 30) to refuge to Northern India where a large Tibetan diaspora is living. [3]

Selected T.T.S students are educated for a further two years in English, computer skills and Chinese. These subjects were identified as key elements for professional success once the students will be back in Tibet. [1] The Kunpan Cultural School promotes the independency of Tibetans with professional and personal training and thus makes an important contribution to the preservation and development of the traditional Tibetan culture. Within 2.5 years the students earn educational basics to aa level which corresponds with the 10th grade in India public schools. This level of general education will significantly enhance the students chances, to live their lives free and independent from the refugees center, in order to find their place in the society, and back at home in Tibet, to find themselves a job. [3]

Academics

Main subjects of the school are lessons in English and Chinese and computer skills, supported by additional workshops in mathematics, bookkeeping and Tibetan and Western philosophy. The professional training may permit the students to learn commercial and technical professions as well as nursing, education or home economics; but also professions in Information Technology sector. [3] [4]

The school has been run by Tibetans themselves, and beside the Tibetan manager and the permanently employed Tibetan teachers, there are always Volunteers from Western countries. The students live in a flat-sharing community and organise their cohabit by themselves. [5] [6] [7] [8]

Kunpan Cultural School graduation class of 2015 with His Holyness, the 14th Dalai Lama in Dharamsala. ES Tibet - Kunpan Cultural School IMG 4538.JPG
Kunpan Cultural School graduation class of 2015 with His Holyness, the 14th Dalai Lama in Dharamsala.

The current group of 24 students at the Kunpan Cultural School started their two years of study in July 2013 and have finished in June 2015. Among others, the'll absolve the Cambridge University Preliminary English Test (PET) and the First Certificate in English (FCE) examinations. For example, the curriculum of English lessons progresses from beginners’ level, using the Cambridge University English Tests, from Key English Test (KET), Preliminary English Test (PET), First Certificate in English (FCE) and Certificate of Advanced English (CAE). In the last fourteen years, about 130 students at Kunpan Cultural School have passed the KET examinations, [1] and in all about 200 students attended Kunpan Cultural School. [2]

Since most of the students will be going back to Tibet, the students learn Chinese at least at a level of everyday Chinese, which is essential for them to get a job back in their native land. The computing education includes computer fundamentals, Microsoft Office, web design, book publishing, Adobe CS4, Internet and Windows skils, hardware, network troubleshooting and configuration. [1]

80% of the students who have completed their studies at Kunpan Cultural School have returned to Tibet and all of them have found employment there, some are self-employed, English teachers, tourist guides, some are working as translators in NGO's in Tibet and some are doing further education in China. One of the former students set up a school and two others started their own travel agency. [1]

Present situation

As there are always more applicants for places than the school was able to provide, it is planned to expand the school localities to host 40 students, thus the financial situation is unsure. The ES Tibet foundation strives towards donations and adaptations for Tibetan students of an age between 18 and 30 years. [9] In 2012 a new building was inaugurated.

The 6th group of students graduated in June/July 2015, and the 7th group started their time at the Kunpan Cultural School in July 2015. Out of group of little more than 40 people, now 14 young men and 10 young women form the 2015/17 group of students, [2] although there were not enough sponsors in Switzerland to support all of them, [9] but to ensure capacity building to enable a better prospect for the student's future back in Tibet.

Related Research Articles

Dhardo Rimpoche

Dhardo Rinpoche (1917-1990), born Thubten Lhundup Legsang, was the 12th in a line of tulkus from Dhartsendo on the eastern border of Tibet who hailed from the Nyingma Gompa in Dhartsendo called Dorje Drak. The 11th tulku rose to the Abbot of Drepung and during the 1912 invasion of Tibet by China was the most senior of the retired abbots in the National Assembly. He died in 1916 and the 12th Tulku was born in 1917.

There are currently two separately enthroned 17th Gyalwang Karmapas: Ogyen Trinley Dorje and Trinley Thaye Dorje. The Karmapa is the spiritual leader of the 900-year-old Karma Kagyu lineage of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism.

Jigme Phuntsok

Kyabje Khenchen Jigme Phuntsok, born 1933– died January 7, 2004, was a Nyingma lama and Terton from Sertha Region. His family were Tibetan nomads. At the age of five he was recognized "as a reincarnation of Lerab Lingpa. Known also as Nyala Sogyel and Terton Sogyel, Lerab Lingpa was an eclectic and highly influential tantric visionary from the eastern Tibetan area of Nyarong ." He studied Dzogchen at Nubzor Monastery, received novice ordination at 14, and full ordination at 22. In 1980, he founded Larung Gar, the largest Tibetan Buddhist monastic academy.

Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje

Kyabje Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje known as Terchen Drodül Lingpa and as Dudjom Rinpoche, is considered by Tibetan Buddhists to be from an important Tulku lineage, a renowned Tertön treasure revealer and a direct incarnation of Padmasambhava and of Dudjom Lingpa (1835–1904). He is a Nyingma householder, yogi, and a Vajrayana and Dzogchen master, and according to disciple Khenpo Twewang Dongyal is referred to by them as "His Holiness" and as a "master of masters".

Tibetan Childrens Villages

Tibetan Children's Villages or TCV is an integrated community in exile for the care and education of orphans, destitutes and refugee children from Tibet. It is a registered, nonprofit charitable organization with its main facility based at Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh, North India. TCV has a network spread across India with over 12,000 children under its care.

McLeod Ganj Suburb in Kangra, Himachal Pradesh, India

McLeod Ganj is a suburb of Dharamshala in Kangra district of Himachal Pradesh, India. It is known as "Little Lhasa" or "Dhasa" because of its large population of Tibetans. The Tibetan government-in-exile is headquartered in McLeod Ganj.

The Green Book is a document issued since 1971 by the Central Tibetan Administration to Tibetans living outside Tibet, and described by the issuing organization as "the most official document issued by the Tibetan Government in Exile." More than 90 percent of Tibetan exiles own one. It serves as a receipt book for the person's "voluntary taxes" to the CTA, and has been described by a CTA official as "the passport of the exiled Tibetans to claim their rights from the Tibetan Government in Exile". The CTA says that in the future, the document "will become the basis for claiming Tibetan citizenship".

The Tibet Fund is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization based in New York City, NY, United States. Founded in 1981 under the auspices of the Dalai Lama, The Tibet Fund is the primary funding organization for the health, education, refugee rehabilitation, cultural preservation and economic development programs that enable Tibetans in exile and in their homeland to sustain their language, culture and national identity.

Tibetan diaspora

The Tibetan diaspora are the diaspora of Tibetan people living outside China.

Rato Dratsang

Rato Dratsang, also known as Rato Monastery, Rato Dratsang is a Tibetan Buddhist monastery of the Gelug or "Yellow Hat" order. For many centuries Rato Dratsang was an important monastic center of Buddhist studies in Central Tibet.

Ling Rinpoche

Kyabje Yongzin Ling Rinpoche is a Tibetan tulku. The best-known incarnation is the sixth incarnation, Thupten Lungtok Namgyal Thinley, a Tibetan buddhist scholar and teacher.

The Sherab Gatsel Lobling School, formerly known as Tibetan Transit School (T.T.S.), is located in Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh, India.

ES Tibet

ES Tibet is a charitable foundation in Switzerland. Established as a private initiative in 2000 in Whitefield, Bangalore, in the Indian state of Karnataka, in 2001 the non-profit organisation ES Tibet was founded in Switzerland. The foundation offers for Tibetan refugees opportunities for a professional education by earning the 8th or 10th grade school qualification in India. The foundation is based in Zürich, and since 2006 the Kunpan Cultural School for 24 students is in Dharamshala in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

LHA Charitable Trust

Lha Charitable Trust – Institute For Social Work and Education (Lha) is a grassroots, nonprofit organization, and one of the largest Tibetan social work organizations based in Dharamsala, India. It is the first organization that was established in exile to develop a primary focus on Tibetan social work. The Lha Charitable Trust was founded in 1997 and is registered as a charitable trust by the Himachal Pradesh government of India. Lha is managed by Tibetan refugees, is supported by volunteers and contributors from around the world, and serves refugees, the local Indian population and people from the surrounding Himalayan region. In a short period of time, the organization "has grown in leaps and bounds, from a small start-up with two computers to one of largest community based Tibetan NGOs in Dharamsala." Lha is a sacred Tibetan word that means "superior body" or "energy body", whereby the "Lha body" exists between the physical body and the mind.

Central Institute of Buddhist Studies

The Central Institute of Buddhist Studies, formerly known as the School of Buddhist Philosophy, located in Leh town of Ladakh is a deemed university under Ministry of Culture. It was founded in 1959 and formerly affiliated to the Sampurnanand Sanskrit University in Varanasi.

Losang Thonden

Losang Thonden was a Tibetan government official, scholar, calligrapher, and author.

Alak Jigme Thinley Lhundup Rinpoche

Alak Jigme Thinley Lhundup or Alak Jigme Lhundup Rinpoche was a Tibetan Tulku, as well as the former speaker of the Tibetan Parliament in Exile and former Minister with the exile Tibet administration.

Lobsang Dolma Khangkar

Lobsang Dolma Khangkar also called Lobsang Dolma or Ama Lobsang Dolma was a 13th gemeration doctor of traditional Tibetan medicine. She travelled with the Dalai Lama in 1959 from Tibet to India. She was the First woman to become chief physician of the Men-Tsee-Khang. She and the others carried her daughters on their backs into what is now Dharamsala, India: Tsewang Dolkar Khangkar and Pasang Gyalmo Khangkar, succeeded her in the family line of doctors, the Khangkar.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 ES Tibet: School: History Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. 1 2 3 Information by mails in July 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 ES Tibet: Vision Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Lauren Amrhein (9 December 2014). "A look at the experiences & education opportunities for Tibetan refugees in Dharamsala, India" (in German). workingabroad.com. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  5. "ES Tibet: Tibetan team in India". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  6. "Kunpan Cultural School of E.S. Tibet". omprakash.org. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  7. "E.S.Tibet". idealist.org. 10 August 2013. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  8. "Search for Certificate of Advanced English (CAE) Teachers in the UK". thetutorpages.com. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  9. 1 2 ES Tibet: Sponsorship Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine