I know of Tibetan Buddhist monasteries in India and Nepal that accept westerners as residents, eventually ordaining them if it works out, but I’d be surprised if the Chinese authorities would allow westerners to reside in Tibetan monasteries in Tibet. Shoot, even the Tibetans are barely able to maintain a monastic tradition in their own country.
Westerners are not accepted into Taoist monastaries in China, I’m not sure about other places, but it is not like buddhist monastaries. You have to be Chinese to live at wudang for example. This is what I’ve been told anyway from Taoists.
Knowing others is wisdom, Knowing the self is enlightenment- Lao Tzu
was that there can be no foreigners in a buddhist monastary because, when enveloped in the buddhist philosophy of the unity of man, there is nothing foreign
Thanks you for your replies
I think it is really awful rejecting people because of their nationality and as Lyle said it has nothing to do with Buddhism neither Taoism.
I was just curius (i was almost sure that they would not accept foreigners in China but wasnt sure about Tibet)
I take refuge in the Buddha
I take refuge in the dharma
I take refuge in the sangha
i was ordained here in sydney 1992 in my taoist temple, i know i could have done it in hongkong also. if i can do it here and there i couldnt see a problem in china because i belong to the same sect!!
different sects may have different ways and rules when ordaining a person (forign) or local, we are all human beings and we are all brothers and sisters on this earth and this life time!