Uma Thurman's father Robert Thurman, a monk and renowned scholar of Tibetan Buddhism, has died at the age of 84; the father and daughter are pictured in May 2006


Uma Thurman’s father Robert Thurman, a monk and renowned scholar of Tibetan Buddhism, has died at the age of 84. 

He made history as the first westerner to be ordained a Tibetan Buddhist monk by the Dalai Lama himself, according to his official website.

For three decades until his retirement in 2019, he held the Je Tsongkhapa professorship of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies at Columbia University.

Robert raised Uma a Buddhist, with two years of her childhood spent in Almora, a town famed as a hub for western Buddhists in a North Indian state bordering Tibet.

His death was announced Tuesday by Tibet House US, the nonprofit he co-founded at the Dalai Lama’s urging with names including Richard Gere.

‘We are deeply saddened to announce that Robert A.F. Thurman , prominent American Buddhist scholar, co-founder of Tibet House US, author and translator whose teachings shaped countless lives, died Tuesday morning, June 16, in Woodstock, New York,’ the organization posted to Instagram.

Uma Thurman's father Robert Thurman, a monk and renowned scholar of Tibetan Buddhism, has died at the age of 84; the father and daughter are pictured in May 2006

Uma Thurman’s father Robert Thurman, a monk and renowned scholar of Tibetan Buddhism, has died at the age of 84; the father and daughter are pictured in May 2006

Robert raised Uma a Buddhist, with two years of her childhood spent in Almora, an Indian town famed as a hub for western Buddhists; the pair are raised in 1993

Robert raised Uma a Buddhist, with two years of her childhood spent in Almora, an Indian town famed as a hub for western Buddhists; the pair are raised in 1993

Invoking the Sanskrit mantra: ‘Om Mani Padme Hum,’ the statement noted that the ‘Thurman family requests privacy at this time.’

Born in New York in 1941 to a stage actress and a news editor, Robert Thurman was in a grisly accident while changing a tire that left him with a glass eye at the age of 20.

Jolted into life-changing action, he divorced his heiress wife, dropped out of Harvard and traveled rough through Turkey and Iran before reaching India.

There, he converted to Buddhism and trained under the 14th and current Dalai Lama, who was by then already in exile in India after Mao Zedong’s crackdown on Tibet.

After three years of ascetism as a monk, Robert resumed the enjoyment of worldly pleasures and married the Swedish-German model Nena von Schlebrügge, with whom he welcomed four children including a daughter with the Sanskrit name Uma.

However his attachment to his religion remained intact, and thus part of Uma’s childhood was passed in Almora, an Indian town whose landmarks include a ridge known as Hippie Hill for its popularity among bohemian western Buddhists. 

‘There’s been a lot written about my upbringing, making it sound as if it were some hippie-dippy childhood, but that’s totally absurd,’ she insisted to the Irish Examiner.

‘There’s an assumption that because someone is a Buddhist, they are a leftie loose cannon, unusually weird, and that’s complete baloney! I was brought up in academic housing, I went to school, my father was a professor. It was all extremely normal.’

Robert worked not only as a professor but also as a writer and translator, producing an English version of a classic Mayahana Buddhist text called the Vimalakirti Sutra. 

He became a vigorous and charming promoter of Tibetan Buddhism in America, and in 1987 he joined forces with a number of his coreligionists including Richard Gere and composer Philip Glass to found Tibet House US.

As his daughter became a movie star, Robert’s own work vigorously promoting Tibetan Buddhism to the west achieved greater prominence.

In 1997, the year Uma’s movies Gattaca and Batman & Robin were released, Robert was named one of Time magazine’s 25 most influential Americans.

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