Following the
Tibetan uprising of 1959, Namgyal Monastery relocated to
Dharamshala, India, where it continues, active, to this day. According to Namgyal's website, Namgyal (Dharamshala) has "nearly 200" monks (up from 55 in 1959), representing all four main Tibetan monastic lineages. In 1992, on the advice of the
present Dalai Lama, Namgyal established an American branch in
Ithaca, New York, including within it the
Namgyal Monastery Institute of Buddhist Studies. On 8 February 1996, the monks of Namgyal Monastery's Institute of Buddhist Studies offered their first "Blessing of Cyberspace" as part of the "Twenty-four Hours in Cyberspace" event. In 1998, Namgyal incorporated a Tibetan monastery in
Bodhgaya, India, called
Gendhen Phelgyeling. That monastery is now known as Namgyal (Bodhgaya), and has 45 monks. Namgyal (Dharamsala) also manages a temple in
Kushinagar (since 1967), and an elderly home in
Simla (since 1992). Whether the
People's Republic of China has maintained an institution with the same name inside Tibet is unclear. ==See also==