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Programs at
Retreat Center · Pomaia, Tuscany
Tibetan Buddhist monastery and learning center in Tuscany.
Nestled in the rolling hills of Pomaia, forty kilometers south of Pisa, Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa occupies an 18th-century villa that has been transformed into one of Europe's most rigorous centers for Tibetan Buddhist study and practice. Founded in 1977 by Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche, the charismatic pioneers who built the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT), the Institute sits in countryside of exceptional beauty, surrounded by wooded grounds, terraced olive groves, and a vast park where golden stupas and prayer flags punctuate the landscape.
The founding story begins at Kopan Monastery near Kathmandu, where Lama Yeshe had been teaching Western students since the late 1960s. By the mid-1970s, his students were returning home and establishing dharma centers across Europe and North America. Lama Yeshe envisioned a European hub for deep study, a place where Western practitioners could spend years mastering the classical texts of the Gelugpa tradition rather than piecing together weekend workshops. In 1977, he established ILTK in this Tuscan villa, naming it for Tsongkhapa, the 14th-century founder of the Gelug school.
What sets ILTK apart is its unwavering commitment to scholastic rigor. The Institute is home to one of only two residential FPMT Masters Programs in the world, a seven-year curriculum (six years of study plus a one-year retreat) modeled on the traditional geshe studies of Sera Je Monastery. Students work through the great Indian and Tibetan philosophical texts: Maitreya's Ornament for Clear Realization, Chandrakirti's Supplement to the Middle Way, Vasubandhu's Treasury of Knowledge, and Dharmakirti's Commentary on Valid Cognition. Since 1998, when Geshe Jampa Gyatso launched the first Masters Program, ILTK has graduated cohorts of students who have gone on to become FPMT teachers and translators worldwide.
Today, the Institute is led by two resident Lharampa geshes, Geshe Tenzin Tenphel, who has taught at ILTK since 1998 and is beloved for his clarity, humor, and passion for debate, and Geshe Jampa Gelek, who arrived in 2012 and specializes in tantric studies. The grounds include a main meditation hall (gompa) adorned with golden Buddha statues, a separate woodland meditation hall called Chenrezig Gompa, a library with 8,000 volumes specializing in Tibetan philosophy and neuroscience, and a mix of accommodations, guest rooms in the main villa and rustic wooden huts scattered through the park for retreat participants.
ILTK has hosted His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama six times, most recently in June 2014 when he inaugurated Europe's tallest Buddha statue, the golden figure originally sculpted by Dante Ferretti for Martin Scorsese's film Kundun and rescued from destruction by the Institute. The center is also home to Italy's first Gelugpa monastery, Tagden Shedrub Dhargye Ling, established in the 1980s, and a nunnery, Shenpen Samten Ling, founded in 1989. Richard Gere has been photographed meditating here; the actor owns a small property nearby and returns regularly.
Beyond the Masters Program, ILTK offers the three-year FPMT Basic Program, weekend courses like "Buddhism in a Nutshell" and "Meditation 101," and a university-accredited Master's degree in Neuroscienze, Mindfulness e Pratiche Contemplative in collaboration with the University of Pisa. The Institute publishes Siddhi, a thrice-yearly Italian-language magazine, and operates JTK Publications, which produces Italian Buddhist texts. A culture of service pervades the place: long-term students and volunteers staff the kitchen, tend the gardens, and maintain the library. Meals are vegetarian, silence is observed during breakfast, and the rhythm of the day revolves around morning meditation at 6:45 a.m. in the gompa.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche, who served as FPMT's spiritual director from 1984 until his death in April 2023, visited ILTK often and shaped its educational vision. His reincarnation has been confirmed by the Dalai Lama and is being sought in Nepal. The Institute remains a pilgrimage site for serious practitioners worldwide, those willing to set aside months or years to study emptiness, bodhicitta, and the graduated path to enlightenment in the countryside where cypresses and olive trees frame views that stretch to the sea.
What's Happening
42 programs · 45 total sessions scheduled at Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa
Showing 42 of 42 programs