1,130 Pilgrim Monks Embark on the 4th Dhammachai Dhutanga to Revive World Morality
1,130 Pilgrim Monks Embark on the 4th Dhammachai Dhutanga to Revive World Morality, Welcome the New Year, and Accrue Great Merit for the Country
In the Arizona desert, Buddhists will embark on a three-year silent retreat
Surprise! An 8-year-old novice can recite Dhammacakkapavattana Sutta fluently without looking
An 8-year-old novice in Trang Province takes time about 20 minutes to recite Dhammacakkapavattana Sutta fluently without looking. He unveiled that he can recite the Seven Books of Abhidhamma since he was 5 years old. The recitation causes good concentration so that he often gets the first place in his class and he wants to study more about Buddhism in the future.
False Friendship 4: The One Who Leads You Down the Road to Ruin
Basically, the one who leads you down the road to ruin likes persuading you to do bad, unnecessary, or useless things.
I Became Pregnant From My Father
She was raped by her father since she was 9 years old. Finally, she got pregnant from her dad when she was 15 years old. She married with another man to solve the problem but he divorced her after she gave birth. Her father took her son and taught him to hate his own mother. Fortunately, she had begun her new life with a new husband who accepted and understood her. And, her life is getting after she met DMC.
The Ceremony of Receiving the new building
The ceremony of receiving the new "The National Office of Buddhism" Building and other ceremonies were arranged in Buddha Monthon, Nakhon Pathom province.
Drink to keep us warm
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun, the vice abbot of Dhammkaya Temple, kindly answered this question: If you drink to keep you warm, does it break the five precept? Click to read his answer!
ภาษาอังกฤษในชีวิตประจำวัน เกี่ยวกับ Greeting
วันนี้เราจะแนะนำวิธีการทักทาย หรือ "Greeting" เรียนรู้ภาษาอังกฤษกับ Aj. Lynnette Vince Jillings
The Photo Collection of Dhammachai Dhutanga (January 12th, 2012)
The Collection of Waited Photo of the World !! The Dhammachai Dhutanga on January 12th, 2012
More than You can Chew
When it comes to the subject of ‘merit’, there’s no such thing as ‘biting off more than you can chew’.