Buddhadasa (actually Ngueam Phanit, 1906–1993), who at that time still bore the religious name Indapañño, returned from his studies in
Bangkok to his southern Thai homeland in 1932 and moved into an abandoned monastery (
Wat) near his birthplace of Phumriang. He believed that a natural environment was conducive to the practice of the
Dhamma. Unlike existing monasteries in the
Thai Forest Tradition, he did not want to emulate the teachings and meditation skills of a prominent monk, but rather follow exclusively the Dhamma and
Vinaya of
Gautama Buddha. He did not see study and practice as opposites, but rather as complements. He sought to abolish the centuries-old differentiation of the
Sangha into city monks who studied and performed ceremonies and withdrawn, ascetic, meditating forest monks. During the first four years, Buddhadasa lived mostly alone in Suan Mokkh, but also visited other wats to teach there. He also published his ideas and insights in the quarterly magazine
Buddha-Sasana and gave lectures at the Buddha Dhamma Society in Bangkok. These were characterized by a simple language, without the typical monastic vocabulary, and an intellectual, demythologized interpretation of Buddhist teachings. In doing so, he also attracted the attention of established clergy and laypeople in the capital. At the end of the 1930s, a small group of monks joined him, and others - including high-ranking representatives of the Buddhist hierarchy and state officials - sought him out in Suan Mokkh. By the early 1940s, the original Suan Mokkh was so overcrowded that it had to be moved to another location. Suan Mokkh II was founded in 1942 in the former Wat Than Nam Lai ("Temple of Flowing Water"), over whose grounds a small river runs and where the remains of a very old
stupa were found. Two years later the community moved there permanently. Suan Mokkh attracted and continues to attract followers and those interested in Buddhadasa's philosophy from all social classes, at home and abroad. In 1972,
Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th
Dalai Lama of Tibetan
Vajrayana Buddhism, visited Suan Mokkh to teach here. In 1989 the facility was significantly expanded and an international meditation center was created. A separate center for nuns was also set up. Buddhadasa died in Suan Mokkh in 1993. == Buildings ==