
Programs at
Retreat Center · Eskdalemuir, Dumfries and Galloway
The first Tibetan Buddhist center established in the West.
Kagyu Samye Ling Monastery sits in a remote valley on the banks of the River Esk in Eskdalemuir, Dumfriesshire, 15 miles from the nearest town of Lockerbie and worlds away from almost everything else. The first Tibetan Buddhist monastery established in the West, it was founded in 1967 by two young Tibetan refugees who had fled the Chinese invasion: Dr. Akong Tulku Rinpoche and Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche. They took over a former hunting lodge called Johnstone House and named their fledgling community after Samye, the first Buddhist monastery in Tibet. Within two years, the monastery attracted a curious mix of spiritual seekers, including a young David Bowie, who came close to ordaining before deciding monastic life wasn't for him, and Leonard Cohen, who studied there briefly in 1969.
The early years were tumultuous. Trungpa Rinpoche's unconventional teaching methods, and personal conduct that included heavy drinking, created friction with both Akong Rinpoche and the trustees. By 1970, Trungpa departed for America, leaving Akong to guide Samye Ling through its next four decades of development. Under Akong's steady, humble leadership, the center transformed from a single building into an elaborate Tibetan temple complex with colorful pagoda-style roofs, golden dragons, prayer flags snapping in the Scottish wind, and extensive gardens dotted with stupas and statues. The main temple, completed in 1988 after years of community labor, can hold 500 people and is decorated with exquisite thangkas painted by master artist Sherab Palden Beru and his Western students.
Akong Rinpoche worked as a hospital orderly when he first arrived in Britain, supporting himself and fellow lamas while building what would become the largest Tibetan monastery in Europe. He was equally at home wielding a trowel on the building site as giving teachings. His brother, Lama Yeshe Losal Rinpoche, gradually took on more responsibility and was appointed Abbot, especially as Akong devoted increasing energy to ROKPA, the humanitarian charity he founded in 1980 to serve communities in Tibet, Nepal, and Africa. In October 2013, Akong Rinpoche was murdered in Chengdu, China, in circumstances that remain devastating to the community. Since then, Lama Yeshe Losal Rinpoche has continued to lead Samye Ling, maintaining its role as the mother house for a network of Samye Dzong centers across the UK and Europe.
Today, Samye Ling is home to a residential community of around 40 to 60 people, monks, nuns, and lay volunteers of many nationalities. The temple is open daily from 6am to 9pm, with puja at 6am, meditation at 8am, and evening prayers. The site includes Johnstone House, the Purelands Retreat Centre half a mile away for week-long retreats, separate long-term retreat facilities for men on the Isle of Arran and women on Holy Isle (supporting one-year and three-year traditional retreats), a Tibetan tea room, a shop selling crafts and Buddhist books, organic gardens, and accommodations ranging from dormitories to single rooms. Guests are asked to contribute 2-3 hours of work per day if able, often in the kitchen or cleaning, and to follow the Five Golden Rules: no killing, no stealing, no lying, no intoxicants, and no harmful sexual activity. Meals are vegetarian, breakfast sparse, lunch the main event, and supper a simple affair of soup and bread.
The monastery remains a working training ground for the Karma Kagyu lineage, one of the four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism. Samye Ling has hosted visits from some of the most eminent teachers in Tibetan Buddhism: His Holiness the 16th Karmapa came twice in the 1970s; the 14th Dalai Lama consecrated the temple site in 1984 and returned in 1993; and teachers including Kalu Rinpoche, Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche, and Chamgon Tai Situpa have taught here for extended periods. Drupon Khen Rinpoche Karma Lhabu now serves as the primary retreat master. While it offers weekend courses in meditation, mindfulness, yoga, and Buddhist philosophy accessible to complete beginners, Samye Ling is fundamentally a monastery, not a luxury retreat center, and the atmosphere reflects that priority: discipline, simplicity, devotion, and an unshakeable commitment to preserving an ancient tradition on Scottish soil.
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