Upasika Kee Nanayon (Thai: กี นานายน) or Kor Khao-suan-luang (ก. เขาสวนหลวง) was a Thai Buddhist upāsikā (devout laywoman) from Ratchaburi (1901 - 1978).[1] After her retirement in 1945, she turned her home into a Samatha-vipassanāAnapanasatimeditation centre with her aunt and uncle.[2] She was mostly self-taught, reading the Pali CanonSutta Piṭaka and other Buddhist texts.[3] Her Dhamma talks and poetry were widely circulated. As word of her spread, she became one of the most popular female BhāvanāmeditationAjahns in Thailand. Many of her talks have been translated into English by Thanissaro Bhikkhu, who sees her as "arguably the foremost woman Dhamma teacher in twentieth-century Thailand".[3]
Publications
Upasika K. Nanayon, An unentangled knowing: lessons in training the mind, Buddhist Publication Society, 1996.
Upasika Kee Nanayon, Thanissaro Bhikkhu, Pure and simple: teachings of a Thai Buddhist laywoman, Somerville, 2005