& The Khmer Buddhist Humanitarian Association
Abbot Ven. Viriyapandito
2400 6th Street
Philadelphoa, PA 19148
Telephones: 215.336.9547, 215.336.9545
Fax: 215.336.4546
E-mail: webadmin@ratanamuni.org
Blog: muni-vision.blogspot.com
Website: http://preahbuddharangseytemple.blogspot.com
វត្ដព្រះពុទ្ធរង្សី
វត្ដខ្មែរនៅរដ្ឋផេនស៊ីលវែនញ៉ា សហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក
Wat Khmer in Pennsylvania.
Abbot: Bhikkhu Buddhasirimuni
2870 Plainfield Pike
Cranston, RI 02921
Telephone: 401.942.2084
E-mail: donnguon@dhamagosnaramofri.org
Website: www.dhamagosnaramofri.org
វត្ដធម្មឃោសនារាម
វត្ដខ្មែរនៅរដ្ឋរ៉ូដអៃឡិន្ដ សហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក
Wat Khmer in Rhode Island.
Khmer Buddhist temples in the United States of America http://www.templenews.org/2011/10/31/khmer-buddhist-temples-in-the-united-states
Abbot The Maha Thera Ven. Khemiyo
247 Park Street
Bristol, CT 06010
Telephones: 203.270.1404, 860.261-5601, 203.942.8197
Blog: http://rattanaram.wordpress.com
វត្ដរតនារាម
វត្ដខ្មែរនៅរដ្ឋខនណិកធីខិត សហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក
Wat Khmer in Connecticut.
វត្ដខ្មែរបាលិលេយ្យ ស្ថិតនៅទីក្រុងហ្វុីឡាដេលហ្វុីយ៉ា រដ្ឋផេនសុីលវែនញ៉ា សហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក
Wat Khmer Palelai
Bhikkhu Pannadipo Sem Sokhoeun, Chief monk
2701 South 58th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19143
Phones: 215.687.3871, 267.242.2978, 215.339.5830, 215.339.5840
Image David Seng, December 26, B.E.2564 A.D.2020
5415 Rising Sun Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19120
Phone: 215.329.4264
1732 Mifflin Street
Philadelphia, PA 19145
Phone: 215.467.3971, 215.454.2876
13800 New Hampshire Avenue
Silver Spring, MD
Phone: 301.622.6544
Website: www.cambodian-buddhist.org
click on image to view picture of Wat Buddhikaram
131 Dellway Drive
Nashville, TN 37207
Phone: 615.228.5625
5111 Bryndale Avenue
Memphis, TN 38118
Phone: 901.365.1799
10620 South Angkor Road
Irvington, AL 36544
Phone: 251.2671
595 Weld County Road #7
Erie, CO 80516
Phone: 720.890.7290
185 Pone Lodge Road
Lexington, NC 27292
Phone: 336.357.5769, 336.357.2449
219 Owen Boulevard
Charlotte, NC 28213
Phone: 704.596.6628
1901 7th Street
Desmoines, IA 50314
Phone: 515.247.0189
2620 Alumcreek Drive
Columbus, OH 43207
Phone: 614.449.1492
Wat Brahma Vihara (or Wat Prohm Vihear in Khmer)
2318 Quebec Road, FL. 3
Cincinnati, OH 45214
Phone: 513.471.6780
8609 Denison Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44102
Phone: 216.939.0228
Abbot Ven. Viriya Dhammo Puoch Kandaal
2738 Marion Avenue
Bronx, New York City, NY 10458-3802
Phone: 718.563.5456
Blog: http://jotanaram.wordpress.com
—————————————————
Asian-American Week: Bronx House Provides Cambodian Community With A Place To Pray
21 May 2012, By: Shazia Khan, Bronx.NY1.com
To mark Asian-American Heritage Week on NY1, the station revisits communities it has covered over the past two decades. NY1’s Shazia Khan filed the following report on Cambodian New Yorkers in the Bronx.
On a residential block in the Bedford Park section of the Bronx, a two-story house serves as a house of worship. The Khmer Buddhist Society is a home away from home for many Cambodian-American Buddhists living in the borough.
“We live in the Bronx and we want to meet each other in the Bronx,” says worshipper Davin Hun.
The 2010 U.S. census finds 1,430 Cambodians living in the Bronx, about half of the city’s Cambodian population. Ten yeas before that, the Bronx had 1,082 Cambodians.
About 200 Cambodian refugees founded the Khmer Buddhist Society in 1984, the first of its kind in the city and the only one in the borough.
The house, which serves as many as 300 people, is a community center, temple and monastery. Resident monk Kandaal Puoch, who last spoke with NY1 in 2005, says the space has expanded in the last seven years, but it is still not large enough to accommodate the community.
“When we have a ceremony it is hard to sit down, you see. This hall is too small,” says Puoch. “However, they come here and they try hard to sit down and listen to the Buddhist monk chanting and study Buddhism and Cambodian cultures.”
Continuing cultural traditions could not be more vital to a community that survived a genocide in its homeland.
“Imagine just being resettled here from a refugee camp and being thrown in the middle of the Bronx, the cultural vertigo, the dislocation. And this is a haven,” says photographer Pete Pin, who has been documenting Cambodian communities across the country.
Sanbo Som, who lost his siblings in the genocide, has lived in the Bronx since 1982.
“When I meet my friends or my people who come from Cambodia I’m very happy,” says Som.
Puoch, who is searching almost every day for an affordable new space, wants to make sure his community members will always have a piece of their homeland right near their homes in the Bronx.
ព្រះធម្មទេសនាសំដែងដោយ ព្រះធម្មវិបស្សនា កេតុធម្មោ សំ ប៊ុនធឿន
Dhamma talk by the late and renowned Cambodian Vipassana Buddhist Master Ven. Ketodhammo Som Bunthoeun.
Watch our shows on LTC – Channel 95
Broadcast hours | Fridays: 4 – 5 pm, 8 – 9 pm
Tuesdays 11 am - 12 pm
Email: templenewscast@yahoo.com
Phone: 978.853.9623
Website: templenews.org
Youtube: www.youtube.com/templenewstv