Wei Chueh

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Wei Chueh
Grandmaster.png
Title Venerable Master or Grand Master
Personal
Born 1928
Religion Chan Buddhism
Nationality Chinese
Lineage Linji school
Senior posting
Based in Taiwan

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Wei Chueh (Chinese: 惟覺法師; pinyin: Wéijué, born 1928) is a Chinese bhikkhu (Buddhist monk) in Taiwan. He is the founder of the Chung Tai Shan monastery and Buddhist order. Wei Chueh is often credited for reviving the traditional teachings of Chan Buddhism.

Wei Chueh was born in 1928 in Xikang (modern Sichuan), In 1963, he was ordained under Master Lin Yuan at the Shi Fan Da Jue (“Great Enlightenment”) Chan Monastery in Keelung, Taiwan. He was fully ordained as a monk in 1967 at Daijue Temple in Keelung. For over ten years, Venerable Wei Chueh went into solitary seclusion at Yangmingshan near Wanli District, New Taipei. He lived under extremely poor and primitive conditions, but continued to practice the Dharma. In 1982, he founded Lin Quan Temple in Taipei County and became known for his teaching on Chan practices by offering many lectures and seven day Chan retreats. As his popularity increased, his temple was unable to fit more people.

Due to the continuing growth of both lay disciples and monastic disciples, He was requested to build a larger monastery in Puli in Central Taiwan; planning started in 1987. After more than a decade of careful planning and construction, the new Chung Tai Chan Monastery 中台禪寺 was finally inaugurated on the first day of September, 2001.

Ven. Wei Chueh was one of eight venerables who proposed the World Buddhist Forum in China in 2004, a suggestion that won support from Buddhist circles in countries like Japan and South Korea.

In 2005, the Grand Master appointed his disciple Jian Deng to be the abbot of Chung Tai.

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