The growing religious activities at Kindo Baha and the swelling congregation of the
Newari faithful aroused the anger of the autocratic
Rana regime. In 1944, the monks were hauled before the prime minister and ordered to stop preaching Buddhism and writing books in the
Newar language. When they refused, eight monks were summarily expelled from the country. The
banishment of Buddhist monks from Nepal spurred the Theravada movement. The monks first went to
India and then scattered to
Sri Lanka,
Bhutan,
Tibet and
Burma. In exile, they devoted themselves to further religious studies, and also established an organization named Dharmodaya Sabha in
Sarnath, India to propagate Buddhism and publish books. In 1946, the expulsion order was withdrawn, and they returned to Nepal. The revolutionary days of Kindo Baha also came to an end as a new monastery came up. From 1947, Ananda Kuti Vihar, originally built as a small retreat by Dhammalok on the northern slope of Swayambhu hill, became the new center of Theravada Buddhism in Nepal. After the Rana regime was overthrown in 1951, the monks could work more freely, and Theravada Buddhism spread rapidly. ==See also==