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The Tibetan word “gompa” (often rendered as “monastery”) translates the Sanskrit term “araṇya” which literally means “forest” or “wilderness.” Many Buddhist texts from the time of the Buddha onwards praise the wilderness as the ideal environment for those wanting to cultivate their hearts. And many early Buddhist monasteries were called araṇyas. Whether to those who understand their spiritual cultivation in personal and individual terms or to those who locate their cultivation within the bodhisattva-ideal, the virtues of cultivating at araṇyas apply equally. And it is in this sense that the formal Tibetan name of Drikung Forest Hermitage’s is “Drikung Kunzang Naktsel Gompa.” We are building a forest hermitage to provide the Buddha’s ideal environment for male and female monastics and laity to cultivate the heart. Here, at the “Ever-Excellent Forest (“Kunzang Naktsel”), we choose a life of simplicity in the forest, studying the Buddha’s teachings and cultivating freeing our hearts from the afflictive emotions, and doing this for the greater good of all.