The Photo Collection of the Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong
The Photo Collection of the Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong - The Founder of Wat Phra Dhammakaya
The big merit from offering the meals to the monks and novices
If you love to make merit, please read it and persuade your beloved ones to do with you. This kind of merit is easy to do...only you have the heart of a giver!
The Ceremony of Kathina – Robes Offering
The Great Master Day
At Wat Phra Dhammakaya, February 3rd of each year is known as the Great Master Day — an important and significant day commemorating the passing of the Great Master Phramongkolthepmuni (Sodh Candasaro), the re-discoverer of the Dhammakaya Knowledge; the passing of Master Nun Thongsook Samdaengpan, the first meditation teacher of Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong; and the day Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong was cremated.
The First Sunday Ceremonies on September 2nd, 2012
The First Sunday Ceremonies on September 2nd, 2012 at Dhammakaya Temple
The Great Master Day of Dhammakaya Temple is February 3rd every year. Who are they?
10th September : The Day Master Nun Chand Passed Away
“Khun Yai” Chand Khonnokyoong, the fifth of nine children, was born to a middle class farming family in Nakhon Chaisri sub-district of Nakhon Pathom. Possessing great endurance and determination since she was a child, Khun Yai was the backbone of the family’s farming business until their status improved.
“Khun Yai” Chand Khonnokyoong, the fifth of nine children, was born to a middle class farming family in Nakhon Chaisri sub-district of Nakhon Pathom.
The Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong Centennial Memorial Building.. the world’s Global Peace Generator.
The Master Nun Chand Khonnokyoong Centennial Building
Honoring the Most Venerable Phrarajbhavanajahn on the Anniversary of His 74th Birthday
As the 74th anniversary of the Most Venerable Phrarajbhavanajahn’s (Luang Por Dattajeevo) – Vice Abbot of the Wat Phra Dhammakaya, birthday approaches, it is of great honor and privilege for his disciples, comprised of venerable monks, novice monks, laymen and laywomen, and the general public, to recognize the benevolence and kindness of this magnanimous human being for his complete devotion to Buddhism and the vast knowledge he has imparted on us.