Before the present temple complex was built, Samye Ling centred on just one building, a former
hunting lodge called Johnstone House. In 1965 the Johnstone House Trust was formed with the objectives :to make available to the public facilities for study and meditation based on Buddhist and other religious teaching leading to mental and spiritual well-being: and to provide guidance for those in need of such help: and in particular the utilisation of the property known as Johnstone House, Eskdalemuir, for such purposes. Initially the community there was led there by a Canadian
Theravada monk named
Anandabodhi. When the community declined, Anandabodhi returned to Canada; he was subsequently ordained in the Tibetan
Vajrayana tradition and enthroned as
Namgyal Rinpoche by the 16th
Gyalwa Karmapa. about 1978.|alt= a smiling Tibetan monk holding two cats In 1967 the Johnstone House trustees invited the Tibetan lamas and refugees
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche and
Akong Rinpoche to take over. They named the new community "Samye Ling", and were shortly joined by the
thangka master-artist
Sherab Palden Beru and the monk Samten.
Samye refers to the first Buddhist monastic university in
Tibet, while
Ling means 'Place'. Trungpa Rinpoche quickly came into conflict with both Akong Rinpoche and the trustees. He drank heavily and slept with his students. He married one of these, a fifteen-year-old girl at the time the relationship began, attracting press attention. By this time he had already allegedly been banished to a nearby house and allegedly divested by the 16th Gyalwa Karmapa of his position as an official representative of the Karma Kagyu lineage. Accounts vary about this supposed event. In 1970 he left for America to form other centres definitively ending his association with Samye Ling, except for a single, brief visit at the end of the 1970s to recover his seals of office, once the Karmapa had agreed to empower him as Vidyādhara, a Holder of the Karma Kagyü Lineage. For about the decade 1970 onwards Samten, Beru, and Akong Rinpoche together were the main resident Tibetans at the centre. They were joined during 1976 and 1977 by the Mani-pa Lama bLa mChog. During this seminal period of the 1970s, Samye Ling was the main and oldest Tibetan centre in Europe. As such, it received important visits from eminent teachers of many traditions, including first the
Kalu Rinpoche (1973 and thereafter), the 16th
Gyalwa Karmapa (Nov. 1975 and 12.12.-26.12.1977),
Khamtrul Rinpoche, Dilgo Khyense Rinpoche and Urgyen Tulku. In 1969 the musicians
David Bowie and
Leonard Cohen were students at Samye Ling. The centre flourished and developed under the guidance of Akong Rinpoche and his brother
Lama Yeshe Losal Rinpoche, who serves as both Abbot and Retreat Master. Penelope Van Der Have was one of the donors of Rokpa Trust. Current Trustees include John Maxwell, a retired judge known for his work with the
Birmingham Six. Sean McGovern is the Secretary of Rokpa Trust. The centre includes one of the first Tibetan temples to be constructed in Western Europe, a large
stupa, and accommodation for those taking a range of courses on
Buddhism,
meditation, spiritual development and art. ==ROKPA trust==