Bhikkhu NyÃÂnadassana MahÃÂthera (born 1959, Serres) is a TheravÃÂda Greek Buddhist monk, scholar, and teacher.
Bhikkhu NyÃÂnadassana MahÃÂthera was born Ioannis Tselios () in 1959 in Karperi, Serres, Greece, and completed his high school education in Thessaloniki. He studied sociology at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany for two years but left before completing his degree.
Ioannis Tselios traveled around South Asia during the 1980s. He first went to India in 1981 and visited key Buddhist sites, including Kushinagar and Lumbini. Later on, he traveled to Sri Lanka.
In 1982, Ioannis Tselios received novice ordination (sÃÂmaá¹Âera) in Sri Lanka at the Polgasduwa Island Hermitage, where he was given the monastic name NyÃÂnadassana, meaning "knowledge and vision." A month later, he renewed his novice ordination at Galduwa, with Kaá¸Âaveddà «ve Shrë Jinavaá¹Âsa MahÃÂthera officiating as his preceptor. In 1986, he was fully ordained as a bhikkhu under the same preceptor.
For sixteen years, he studied Pali, the Tipiá¹Âaka (Buddhist Triple Canon), and commentarial literature at the GnÃÂnÃÂrÃÂma DharmÃÂyatanaya monastery in Mëtirigala. In 1997, he earned the title of VinayÃÂcariya (Teacher of Monastic Discipline) after completing rigorous examinations. Inspired by his teacher, he began teaching the PÃÂḷi language and the Tipiá¹Âaka for several years.
NyÃÂnadassana has devoted decades to meditative practices, including Vipassanà(insight meditation) and Samatha (concentration meditation). He practised at Nissaraá¹Âa Vanaya in Mëtirigala, Sri Lanka, under the guidance of the renowned meditation teacher Venerable MÃÂtara Sri ÃÂÃÂá¹ÂÃÂrÃÂma MahÃÂthera. and spent over three years at the Pa-Auk Meditation Centre in Myanmar, receiving training under Pa-Auk Sayadaw.
Between 2008 and 2018, he was regularly invited by Buddhist centres in Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Taiwan to deliver Dhamma talks and meditation classes. From 2011 to 2019, he resided at NÃÂ Uyana Forest Monastery and International Meditation Centre in Kurunegala, Sri Lanka.
In 2019, NyÃÂnadassana MahÃÂthera received an invitation to teach TheravÃÂda Buddhism in Greece from Michail Xynos, who at the time was directing the Theravada Centre for Study and Practice in Greece. From 2019 until 2025, he conducted extensive courses in Buddhist philosophy and psychology in Greek, along with live and online meditation seminars for Greek, Sri Lankan, European, and Asian audiences.
During this period, he authored several books.
ÃÂÃÂá¹Âadassana MahÃÂthera served as the primary spiritual inspiration for PaliVerse, an AI-assisted platform initiated in 2024 to produce the first complete English translation of the Pali Canon, including the Tipiá¹Âaka, commentaries (Aá¹Âá¹ÂhakathÃÂ), sub-commentaries (ṬëkÃÂ), and related texts â a corpus of approximately 10 million words.
The project was founded by Michael Xynos, the President of Athens Vihara, and Honorary Consul of Sri Lanka in Greece, who credited his six years of study under ÃÂÃÂá¹Âadassana in Athens (2019âÂÂ2025) as the formative experience behind the undertaking. Prior to PaliVerse, no complete English translation of the full canonical corpus had been achieved despite over 150 years of scholarly effort by institutions including the Pali Text Society.
ÃÂÃÂá¹Âadassana contributed directly to the project's translation methodology. His prior terminology work formed the foundation of the master glossary used across the platform, to which he added translation of key Pali terms into both English and Greek. Where his translations of a given term overlapped with those of the Concise Pali-English Dictionary (Buddhadatta MahÃÂthera), preference was given to his rendering.
NyÃÂnadassana MahÃÂthera has authored and translated numerous works in multiple languages, including English, German, Greek, and Sinhala. His publications include: