- Lopön Tenzin Namdak
Lopön Tenzin Namdak [Lopön is a title that may be rendered in English as 'Great Teacher'.] (bo|t=སློབ་དཔོན་བསྟན་འཛིན་རྣམ་དག།|w=Slob-dpon Bstan-'dzin Rnam-dag) (born 1926) is
Bön religious leader.Vajranatha , a scholar and initiatedNyingma pangagpa s, has collaborated with the Lopön.Birth, family & early education
Lopön Tenzin Namdak (Tib. "slob dpon bstan 'dzin rnam dag") (1926 - ) born in Khyungpo Karu ("khyung po dkar ru") in
Kham province ofEastern Tibet to a family of famous artists. In 1933, at the age of seven he enteredTingchen Monastery ("steng chen") in the same district. In 1941 Lopön Rinpoche went toYungdrung Ling ("gyung drung gling"), then one of Central Tibet's two principalBönpo monasteries. AtYungdrunk Ling , Lopön Rinpoche helped execute a series of wall paintings in a newtemple . In 1944 Lopön Rinpoche went onpilgrimage toNepal including Solu-Khombu,Pokhara , Mustang andKathmandu .In 1945 at the age of nineteen Lopön Rinpoche returned to
Yungdrung Ling to commence studies inphilosophy (tsennyi; "mtshan nyid"). During 1945 - 1950 Lopön Rinpoche lived principally a hermetic existence cloistered with histutor and masterGangru Rinpoche (sgang ru tshul khrims rgyal mtshan) with whom he studiedpoetics (nyanga; "snyan ngag"),cosmology (dzopu; "mdzod phug"),grammar (da; "sgra"), monastic discipline (dulwa; "'dul ba") and the principal stages on the path to enlightenment (salam; "sa lam").Menri Monastery & awarded Geshi degree
Lopön Rinpoche, went to
Menri Monastery ("sman ri", literally "the medicine mountain") in Tsang Province inCentral Tibet in 1950 where on the instruction of hisguru Gangru Rinpoche he commenced his studies toward the degree ofGeshe ("dge bshes") (the Tibetan equivalent to aDoctor of Philosophy ) and achieved it in 1953 .First professorship, retreat at Sezhig Monastery
Lopön Rinpoche became the professor or teaching master ("slob dpon") at
Menri Monastery from 1953 - 1957. Lopön Rinpoche left Menri and this position in 1957 due to increasing conflicts between the indigenous Tibetans and the encroachingChinese Communists . In 1957 Lopön Rinpoche departed Menri andCentral Tibet forSezhig Monastery on theDangra Lake in northern Tsang where he remained in retreat until 1960 .Flight from the homeland: wounding, capture by the Chinese & escape to Nepal
Post
Lhasa uprising (March 10, 1959), many greatly esteemedlama s ofTibet , including the presentDalai Lama and theGyalwa Karmapa along with numerous Tibetan refugees departed theirhomeland to seekrefuge inIndia andNepal .Riding this
exodus , Lopön Rinpoche endeavoured to reach safety inIndia in 1960, but was shot, wounded, and seized by Chinese soldiers and imprisoned for ten months by the Communist Chinese. Lopön Rinpoche made good his escape via the smallprincipality of Mustang to the safety ofNepal .Kathmandu and the meeting of Tibetologist David Snellgrove
While in
Kathmandu in 1961, Lopön Rinpoche and the EnglishTibetologist David Snellgrove became colleagues. David Snellgrove invited Lopön Rinpoche toLondon where, through aRockefeller Foundation grant, he became a visitingscholar at theUniversity of London . Lopön Rinpoche resided for a period at theUniversity of Cambridge . The collaboration with David Snellgrove resulted in the publication of "The Nine Ways of Bön" which includes extracts translated from the esteemed "Zhiji" ("gzi brjid"): an extensivehagiography of the BuddhaTonpa Shenrab . This collaborative work was the first scholarly study of theBönpo tradition to be conducted in theWest . Lopön Rinpoche continued inEngland for three years (1961 - 1964). Lopön Rinpoche made a second visit toEurope in 1969 at the invitation of professorHelmut Hoffmann where he was a visiting scholar atMunich University where he significantly contributed to compiling of the "Tibetan-German-English Dictionary".The building of the Tibetan Bönpo Foundation in Dolanji, Himachal Pradesh
A social worker known as Doctor Khepa who was working in Nepal (Dorthang) Bon community as a social worker, had come to India and was looking forward to help any Bonpo community in India. Somehow he got to know about the small Bonpo community in India and decided to continue his support for the Bon community in India as well. At the time when he reached there, the head of the Menri monastery the then Menri Trizin his holiness had just expired and the next successor of the Menri trizin had not been appointed as yet. So at that time an acting head had to be appointed, and for that the organisation Bod Kyi Bonpo Tsokpa was started and Lopon Tenzin Namdak was appointed as the director by the members of that group and Dr Khepa. After that Dr Khepa had arranged some fund from the Catholic relief service for the Bonpos to purchase a place where they can start a small Bon community. The fund was transferred and the land had to be purchased. After searching many places Dolanji was selected. But the Bonpo community was not able to purchase the land due to certain legal barriers. Finally Gungthang Tsultrim helped the Bonpo community to get the land registered for the organisation Bod Kyi Bonpo Tsokpa, of which the director then was Lopon Tenzin Namdak, by including the Dolanji in the organisation called Tsokpa Chuksum, in which there were other settlements registered such as the Bir settlement in Himachal and Clement Town in Dehradhun etc.
Dolanji , nearSolan inHimachal Pradesh . In 1967 the settlement was formally established and registered with theIndian Government under the name of theTibetan Bönpo Foundation . About seventy families transferred there from Manali and each received a house and a small piece of land, the size depending on the number of people in the family in question. TheTibetan Bönpo Foundation possessed its own constitution and administration, with theAbbot of Menri acting as president. The new settlement atDolanji was namedThobgyal Sarpa ("thob rgyal gsar pa") after the villageThobgyal in Tsang Provence which was located nearMenri Monastery . Most of the Tibetans in the new settlement came from theMount Kailash region and Upper Tsang in the west, and from Hor, Kongpo, Derge,Amdo and Gyarung in the east ofTibet .piritual leader of the Bönpo community in exile
After the death of the abbot of
Menri in 1963,Sherab Lodro , the abbot ofYungdrung Ling became the spiritual head of the Bönpo community in exile.Sherab Lodro came toDolanji with a band of monks who founded a new monastic community. An intimateprayer chapel and a few small houses were built. In 1969 the successor to the abbot of Menri was established by lot and the office fell toLungtog Tenpai Nyima Rinpoche ("lung rtogs bstan pa'i nyi ma rin po che"), who was installed as the thirty-third abbot of Menri.Following the death of
Yungdrung Ling abbot,Sangye Tenzin assumed the spiritual leadership of theBönpos in exile. More houses were established, along with a library and abbot's residence (labrang; "bla brang"). Monastic life was structured around the ordinances of theVinaya (dulwa; "'dul ba"). The foundation for the principaltemple was inaugurated in 1969 and completed in 1978 and namedPal Shentan Menri Ling ("dpal gshen bstan sman ri'i gling"). The wholecomplex was styled theBönpo Monastic Centre and formed part of theTibetan Bönpo Foundation .From 1970 - 1979 Lopön Rinpoche continued writing and teaching whilst in residence at the
Bönpo Monastic Centre . Concurrently, Lopön Rinpoche was engaged inNew Delhi with the publishing of a large number of significantBönpo texts. From 1967, when the first monks came toDolanji , teaching had been done byLopön Sangye Tenzin (former head teaching master at Menri) and assisted by Lopön Tenzin Namdak, who became his successor.Yungdrung Bön Shedrup Lobnyer Dude: Lamas college at Dolanji
When
Sangye Tenzin died in 1968, Lopön Tenzin Namdak was assigned the full responsibility for the education of the younger generation of monks. By 1978 a sufficient number ofBönpo texts had been published so that classes could be organized around them in acurriculum . Thus alama 's college (shedrup; "bshad sgrub") was established in 1978, organized under the guidance of Lopön Rinpoche who served as one of the two professors at the college. The official name of the college isYungdrung Bön Shedrup Lobnyer Dude ("gyung drung bon bshad sgrub slob gnyer 'dud sde").The purpose of the new lama's college at Dolanji was to preseve the tradition of philosophy established and developed at
Yeru Wensaka ("gyas ru dben sa kha"), where philosophical analysis andlogic were applied to the understanding of "Do Nga Semsum" ("mdo sngags sems gsum"), that is, to the teachings of theSutras , theTantras andDzogchen . Unlike theNyingma pa tradition, theBönpo s developed a system oflogic anddebate specifically relating to theDzogchen teaching., AtMenri inTibet , the monks studied the five scripture systems (Dozhung Nga; "mdo gzhung lnga") in the philosophy college, but all instruction inTantra andDzogchen was done in private. The five scriptures, actually five collection of texts, are:
*1 "Tsema" ("tshad ma") -Pramana orlogic ;
*2 "Parchin" ("phar phyin") -Prajnaparamita or thePerfection of Wisdom Sutras ;
*3 "Uma" ("dbu ma") -Madhyamaka philosophy ;
*4 "Dzopu" ("mdzod phug") -Abhidharma orcosmology ;
*5 "Dulwa" ("'dul ba") -Vinaya ormonastic discipline .However, at the revived
Menri atDolanji , students also studyTantra andDzogchen in the college, as well as the above five scriptural systems which pertain toSutra . Also includedcurriculum are thesecular sciences ("rignai"; "rig gnas"), such asgrammar ,poetics ,astrology , and so on. The college has a nine-year term of studies which prepare the student for degree ofGeshe . The first group of young monks graduated in 1986 .Another
Bönpo monastery and college has been established under the direction of Lopön Tenzin Namdak inNepal . Known asTriten Norbutse ("khri brtan nor bu rtse"), it is located near the auspiciousSwayambhu , west ofKathmandu .Third trip to The West
In 1989, Lopön Tenzin Namdak made his third visit to the
West , this time toEngland , America andItaly , at the invitation of theInternational Dzogchen Community ofChögyal Namkai Norbu Rinpoche in those countries. During the course of six months Lopön Rinpoche presented to interested Western students theDzogchen teaching according to the Bönpo traditions of the Atri ("a khrid") and the Zhang Zhung Nyengyu ("shang zhung snyan rgyud").Also, in the beginning of 1991, he visited
Germany ,England ,Holland andItaly . During his visit to these countries he gavediscourse s and teaching on variousmeditation systems and fields of study of theBön tradition . Later that year he was invited by His Holiness theDalai Lama to represent theBön tradition at theKalachakra Initiation inNew York . In this way, Lopön Rinpoche has been spreading theBönpo teachings in many countries. His permanent residencies are inKathmandu (Nepal ) andDolanji (India ).Notes
References
*Lopön Tenzin Namdak and Dixey, Richard (2002). "Heart Drops of Dharmakaya: Dzogchen Practice of the Bön Tradition". Snow Lion Publications. ISBN : 1559391723
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.