The rains retreat
The ancient three-month monsoon retreat when monks and nuns settle in one place for deep practice.
The rains retreat (Pali vassa, Sanskrit varṣā) is the annual three-month period during the South Asian monsoon when Buddhist monks and nuns stop their usual wandering and settle in one place for intensified practice, study, and community life. It is one of the oldest institutions in Buddhism, going right back to the time of the Buddha ("the awakened one," the founder of the path that aims to free the mind from suffering). Understanding its origin makes it vivid: in early India, monastics traditionally traveled from place to place, but during the heavy monsoon rains travel damaged crops and harmed the small creatures that come out in wet weather. Staying put for the season was both practical and an expression of the Buddhist commitment to harmlessness.
During the retreat the monastic community (the saṅgha) lives together under shared discipline, often near lay supporters who provide food and necessities. The concentrated time allows for deeper meditation, teaching, and the resolving of community matters, and it strengthens the bonds between the ordained and the lay people who sustain them.
The rains retreat still structures the monastic calendar across the Buddhist world today, and a monk's seniority is even counted by the number of retreats he has completed rather than by his age. Its end is marked by ceremonies and, in many places, the joyful Kathina festival, when lay communities offer new robes and supplies to the monks who kept the retreat. This is a pan-Buddhist institution rooted in the earliest tradition, shared across the Theravāda, Mahāyāna, and Vajrayāna communities.
Key passages(20)
The Chapter on Lifting Restrictions · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Chapter on the Restoration Rite · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
The Chapter on the Rains · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)