GSTDL 2015 Newsletter - Gaden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling
Transcription
GSTDL 2015 Newsletter - Gaden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling
May 29, 2016 GADEN SHARTSE THUBTEN DHARGYE LING 2015: THE YEAR IN REVIEW (TIBETAN YEAR 2142) GESHE TSULTIM GYELTSEN'S PASSING INTO PARINIRVANA Saturday, February 13, 2015 In an evening ceremony, at the GSTDL monastery, in Long Beach, California, the monks and community of Tibetan Buddhist students held a special Tsog Puja ceremony in honor of the sixth anniversary of Geshe Tsultrim Gyaltsen's passing into parinirvana. Geshe Gyeltsen was the original founder of Thubten Dhargye Ling, a center for the study of Tibetan Buddhism and culture. This center was named Thubten Dhargye Ling (Land of Flourishing Buddha) by H.H. Dalai Lama, and initially located in Los Angeles, California. Geshe-la first started teaching students here in 1978. Geshe Tsultrim Gyeltsen was born in the Kham region of Tibet. He entered monastic life in his local monastery, at the age of seven. When he was 16 years old, he joined the Shartse College of Ganden Monastery, in Lhasa, Tibet. In 1959, Geshe-la followed H.H. Dalai Lama to India, where he completed his studies earning the Lharampa Geshe degree. 1 May 29, 2016 His reincarnation, Tulku Tenzin Thardoe, has been recognized by His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Tenzin Thardoe was born July 5, 2011, in Mundgod, in the same Tibetan settlement where Gaden Shartse Monastery is located in South India. He has been formally admitted to the Monastery and has started his formal monastic education. He is also a student at a private English preparatory school. LOSAR ( ལོ་གསར) Tuesday, February 19, 2015 In the early morning hours, many people gathered at the GSTDL monastery to celebrate Tibetan New Year (Tibetan year 2142), Year of the Female Wood Sheep. Inside the Gompa, under the warm glow of the "butter lamps," everyone participated in the chanting of traditional New Year morning prayers. After the chanting, celebrants were served the eagerly awaited Tibetan butter tea, sweet rice, and a small bag of elegantly handcrafted holiday breads. Due to time constraints of contemporary American life, some people scurried off to work or school, though many in the group moved on to the residence area of the monastery and enjoyed a light breakfast. LATI RINPOCHE'S PASSING INTO PARINIRVANA Sunday, April 12, 2015 12:00PM Immediately after The Sunday teaching, under the guidance of Khensur Rinpoche, the GSTDL monks and community held a special Tsog Puja to commemorate the fifth anniversary of Lati Rinpoche's passing into parinirvana. Lati Rinpoche was a Tibetan master of the highest rank, and Abbot Emeritus of Shartse College of Ganden monastery in Mungod, South India. Lati Rinpoche was born in the Kham region of Tibet, in 1922. When he was very young, he entered Ganden monastery in Lhasa, Tibet. Upon completion of his studies, he earned the Lharampa Geshe degree, and then attended the Tantric College of Upper Lhasa. He was 2 May 29, 2016 Geshe Tsultrim Gyaltson's teacher and close friend. Lati Rinpoche gave initiations, and taught many times, at Thubten Dhargye Ling. It has been announced that his reincarnation was identified in Nepal, however, details have not been made public, at this time. FAREWELL CELEBRATION Sunday, April 19, 2015 From R to L: Geshe Tenzin Tsether, Khensur Rinpoche Dakpa Tenzin, Venerable Lobzang Namgial, Geshe Jampa Lobsang The GSTDL community hosted a celebration, in order to acknowledge the two years of dedicated service by our resident teacher Khensur Rinpoche and his supporting staff (Geshe Tenzin Tsether, Geshe Jampa Lobsang, Venerable Lobsang Namgyal, Venerable Jangchup Tharchin) and to show their appreciation for the excellent work this group of monks had done. Geshe Tsether, our expert manager director remained at the monastery to provide continuity in the monastic administration, and to provide a seamless transition for the incoming group of monks and GSTDL students. Khensur Rinpoche, Geshe Lobsang, and Venerable Lobsang headed back to their monastery of Gaden Shartse, in Mundgod, South India. ADVANCE PARTY OF MONKS ARRIVES AT THE GSTDL MONASTERY Tuesday, May 5th, 2015 3:00PM An advance party of two monks, Geshe Lobsang Gyaltsen and Venerable Thubten Gyaltsen arrived at Ganden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling monastery. They came from their home monastery Ganden Shartse, in Mungod, South India, to replace the group of monks which had headed back to India. This is the second tour of duty, at GSTDL, for these monks. 3 May 29, 2016 VENERABLE GESHE PHUNTSOK GYALTSEN RETURNS TO GSTDL Tuesday, June 2, 2015 10:30AM A small group of ten highly motivated students navigated their way through early morning Los Angeles traffic, in order to extend a warm welcome to the next resident master teacher of Ganden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling, Geshe Phuntsok Gyaltsen. Geshela was returning to GSTDL for his second tour of duty. After greetings and blessings at LAX, everyone drove back to the monastery in Long Beach where Geshe Phuntsok performed a brief prayer ceremony. SAGA DAWA ( ས་ག་zl་བ་) Tuesday, June2, 2015 In an evening ceremony, the monks and students of Ganden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling celebrated Saga Dawa with a special Tsog Puja. Saga Dawa is one of the four major holidays and the single most important month in the Tibetan Buddhist calendar. Saga Dawa commemorates Shakyamuni Buddha’s birth, enlightenment, and parinirvana. Shakyamuni Buddha was born in the Limbini area of (present day) Southern Nepal, enlightened in Bodh Gaya, India, and entered parinirvana in Kushinagara, India. Saga Dawa is called the month of merits, as it is thought that any merit, either positive or negative generated during the month will be multiplied by a factor of millions. The Tibetan yearly calendar consists of 12 lunar months. A Tibetan lunar month begins and ends with a full moon. The full moon day in the middle of the fourth lunar month is Saga Dawa. "Saga" is the name of the most prominent star in the sky, during the fourth month, and "Dawa" means month in Tibetan. 4 May 29, 2016 TENZIN GYATSO, H.H. the 14th DALAI LAMA OF TIBET IN ORANGE COUNTY In honor of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, monks from Namgyal monastery, in Dharamsala, India, created a Chenresig mandala, at the Phineas Banning house on the UC Irvine campus. The monks worked for nine days and almost 115 hours constructing the mandala. This mandala represented the abode of the enlightened being Chenresig(Tibetan) or Avalokitishvara(Sanskrit). Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet is considered to be an emanation of this Buddha of Compassion. The mandala was completed on July 2nd, consecrated and presented to HHDL on July 7th, at 10:00AM. It was dismantled later in the month and the sand was dispersed into the waters of the Pacific Ocean, on July 29th, at Corona Del Mar State Beach, near the UCI campus. HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA AT THE HONDA CENTER IN ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA Sunday, July 5th, 2015 On this day, His Holiness celebrated his 80th birthday, before an audience of 18,000 people, at the Honda Center, in Anaheim, California, and kicked off the first day of a three day "Global Compassion Summit." The three day summit was designed with the intention of inspiring compassionate action within His Holiness' diverse global audience, as well as to celebrate HHDL lifetime devotion to spreading the message on the value of peace, 5 May 29, 2016 kindness, and universal compassion throughout the world, and to spark discussion on the roll of compassion in the arts, the environment, and youth leadership. HHDL spoke to the audience, and then engaged professional musicians, artists, academics, actors, and comedians, in discussion on "Awakening Compassion: the Transformative Power of Creativity and Art." When asked why he was so motivated to share compassion, especially at a time when other people would be taking it easy, he said, "It is because this is my only profession. As a Buddhist practitioner and student of the Nalanda masters, I have learned about how the mind and emotions work, and it seems that due to this experience, I can be of service to other human beings. Everyday, I pray for the welfare of all mother sentient beings. If I were to pray and do nothing, it would just be hypocrisy." His one birthday wish was: Compassion for All. H.H. DALAI LAMA AT THE UCI BREN EVENTS CENTER Monday, July 6, 9:30AM to 11:30AM Today, during the morning session there was dialogue and discussion between His Holiness and a panel of experts with a focus on a "Compassionate Planet: The Effects of Climate Change and Taking Action to Resolve this Global Issue." Climate scientists presented the conclusions of their lifetime of work on climate change: global warming is real, it is not an intractable problem, humans are responsible, methods and resources exist to fix the climate change problem, and immediate action is necessary. The scientists suggested the key is to compel the top one billion humans (out of the almost seven billion people on the planet) the people who have the methods and resources to resolve the problem, to act out of compassion, for all beings on the planet, and to fix the global warming problem so as to prevent the immeasurable suffering which will result, if the process of global warming is not halted. The scientists thought we need to effectively communicate the Dalai Lama's message of universal compassion to world leaders, as the solution to the problem will require action on the part of world leaders. At the end of the discussion, the scientists presented HHDL with a placard acknowledging that a new species of marine life had been 6 May 29, 2016 named for him. The centipede looking creature lives deep within the ocean waters, far beyond the reaches of the sunlight, and is unique in that it gives back more to the environment than it takes in. The name of the new species is "Sirsoe dalailamai." Monday, July 6, 2015 In the afternoon session, the moderator engaged His Holiness and a panel of Nobel Laureates in dialogue and discussion with a focus on the topics of "Wisdom, Vision, and Experience." When asked what his thoughts were on these topics, he said experience comes first, then, when combined with human intelligence wisdom results, and from wisdom comes vision. Since there are many different traditions with many different meanings and beliefs about wisdom, he said what we need is to "develop a sense of oneness among the 7 billion humans on the planet...our beliefs are on a secondary level...we need to think interns of the more fundamental level...at the level of being a human being. Normal human beings can easily communicate as human beings." He said we can combine our human experience and intelligence to investigate what reality is, and then by doing this investigation, we can develop realistic, long term interests which we call Wisdom. It is from this type of wisdom that vision comes, e.g., a peaceful, compassionate world. Tuesday, July 7, 2015 The topic for dialogue with His Holiness and the panel discussion with youth leaders was "Youth leadership and The Significance of Education in Advancing Universal Human Values." It was concluded that education for 21st century youth should include education of one's inner world, with the cultivation of such values as peace, kindness, and ethics. One effort to achieve this goal is a privately endowed scholarship program which was established, in 2004, at the University of California at Irvine, after the Dalai Lama's first visit to the UCI campus. Under this scholarship program, UCI students develop projects concerned with Peace, Compassion, or ethics, and find real world applications for their projects. UCI is also now offering courses in Peace, Compassion, and Ethics and it is expected that 7,000 to 8,000 students will enroll in these classes each year. In addition to the Dalai Lama Scholarship program, at UCI, a Dalai Lama Fellows program which is based in San Francisco has also been established within the last 7 May 29, 2016 five years. To date, there are over 100 Dalai Lama scholars and fellows working throughout the world. Tuesday, July 7, 2015 HHDL, speaking in Tibetan, spoke to the American Tibetan community. CHOKHOR DUCHEN (ཆོས་ལཁོར་duས་ཆེན) Monday, July 20, 2015 The Gaden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling community held a special Tsog Puja to commemorate the first turning of the wheel of Dharma. There are different temporal or topical classification systems by which the Buddha's teachings can be organized, but according to Tsongkapa, The Wheel Of Dharma Sutra, in which Buddha taught his five original students the Four Noble Truths three times, is the actual first turning of the wheel of dharma. Chokhor Duchen is a holiday in celebration of the first turning of the wheel of dharma. It is one of the four major holidays in the Tibetan Buddhist calendar, and is celebrated on the fourth day of the sixth month. It is thought that any merit, either positive or negative, accumulated on that day, will be multiplied by a factor of millions. After attaining enlightenment, at the age of 35, in Bodh Gya, India, Shakyamuni Buddha went to the Dear Park, on Vulture's Peak, in Saranath, India and taught his students the Four Noble Truths. Four Noble Truths 1 The truth of suffering 2 The truth of the causes of suffering 3 The truth of the cessation of suffering 4 The truth of the path 8 May 29, 2016 YAMANTAKA (rd/་rj1་འཇིགས་byེད་) SELF INITIATION Sunday, July 26, 2015 A Yamantaka Self Initiation was held at the GSTDL monastery. Prerequisites for participation were a Yamantaka initiation, commentary, and Yamantaka retreat with fire Puja, all by a qualified master. YAMANTAKA (rd/་rj1་འཇིགས་byེད་) SOLITARY HERO RETREAT Saturday, August 1, 2015 Today, in the early morning hours, a small group of ten highly motivated individuals arrived at the GSTDL monastery, in order to undertake a three week, Solitary Hero Yamantaka retreat. Prerequisites for the retreat were: a Yamantaka initiation and commentary by a qualified master. The retreat was presided over by Geshe Phuntsok Gyaltsen and administered by the resident monks, Geshe Tsether, Geshe Lobsang, and Venerable Thubten. This was a hugely successful event and all participants were most grateful and appreciative for all the hard work and guidance by our monks which facilitated a very meaningful experience for all in attendance. All participants completed the retreat and each received an official certificate of competition of the three week retreat. FIRE PUJA Monday, August 17, 2015 Today marked the conclusion of the Yamantaka Solitary Hero retreat, and as per requirements, a traditional fire Puja was 9 May 29, 2016 performed. The fire Puja was done at the home of one of the long time students of GSTDL. In the front yard there is a gigantic Bodhi tree which was planted there more than 15 years ago. After the fire Puja, as the retreatants left, they were treated to the sight of a yellow water lily which had bloomed just that morning. After the ceremony, everyone headed off to one of the local eateries, to mingle with old and new friends, over lunch...which has itself become something of a mini tradition after the fire Puja. LHABAB DUCHEN (ལ་བབས་du་ཆེན) Tuesday, November 3rd, 2015 Geshe Phuntsok Gyaltsen gave a brief talk about the importance of this day. LhaBab Duchen is one of the four major holidays in the Tibetan Buddhist calendar and is considered a million multiplier day, i.e., any merit positive or negative accumulated on this day is multiplied by a factor of millions. LhaBab Duchen is a day celebrating Shakyamuni Buddha's descent from the Tushita Buddha field (heaven of the 33 gods) back to earth. Buddha's mother died 6 days after his birth, and when he became enlightened, he knew she had been reborn in the Tushita Buddha field. It is said that in order to repay his mother's kindness, he wanted to teach her the Dhama so that she could be liberated from samsara. To do this, he manifested in Tushita Buddha field and taught the Dharma to his mother and the community of gods living there. Further, it is said that the gods built a stairway of gold, silver, and beryl by which Buddha returned to earth, and arrived in Varanasi, India. The event of Buddha's return is marked by the " Stupa of Descent From the God Realm." Ganden Shartse Thubten Dhargye Ling celebrated this auspicious event with a special Tsog Puja. 10 May 29, 2016 YAMANTAKA (rd/་rj1་འཇིགས་byེད་) SELF INITIATION Sunday, July 26, 2015 A Yamantaka Self Initiation was held at the GSTDL monastery. Prerequisites for participation were a Yamantaka initiation, commentary, and Yamantaka retreat with fire Puja, all by a qualified master. REFUGE VOWS Friday, December 4th, 2015 7:30PM Geshe Phuntsok performed a refuge vow ceremony for a small intimate group of students. Before, during and after the ceremony, Geshe-la provided commentary on the significance of taking refuge vows, and instructions on how to implement them in one's daily life. The small group participating in the ceremony was composed of students taking them for the first time as well as those who were there to renew their vows. Lotsawa(ལོ་ʦa་བ)Tenzin Dorjee was present and his translating helped facilitate a deeply meaningful experience for all the participants. NYUNG NE RETREAT Friday, December 4th, 2015 To prepare students for the Nyung Ne retreat, Geshe Phuntsok delineated the prerequisite requirements which were necessary for a practitioner to have fulfilled, in order to participate in the retreat. All retreatants were required to haven taken refuge vows and to have had a highest yoga tantra initiation from a qualified master. A Nyung Ne retreat invokes the enlightened being Chenresig (Tibetan) or Avalokitishvara (Sanskrit)...the Buddha of Compassion, and combines this invocation with purification practices, e.g., prostrations, mantra recitation, maintaining silence, and fasting. This regimen of practice was originally composed by Bhlsuni Phalmo, and it is said that she achieved full enlightenment, as a result of practicing it for 12 years. 11 May 29, 2016 Saturday, December 5th, 2015 A group of 15-20 practitioners convened at GSTDL to undertake the three day Nyung Ne retreat which was presided over by Geshe Phuntsok Gyaltsen. LAMA TSONGKAPA DAY Saturday, December 5th, 2015 Lama Tsongkapa (1357-1419), also known as Je Rinpoche Lobsang Drakpa, is considered the single most important commentator in the history of Buddhism. He was a prolific writer composing some 18 volumes of work. These works include his, "Great Treatise on the Path to Enlightenment" which is considered to be one of the world's greatest monuments to philosophy and spirituality, as well as one of the most renowned works of Buddhist thought and practice to have been composed in Tibet. This treatise is the "heart' of the weekly teachings at GSTDL. Additionally, Tsongkapa founded or inspired the three great monasteries of Tibet: Ganden, Sera, and Drepung, and instituted the great Monlam festival of Tibet. He manifested passing into Parinirvana at his home monastery of Ganden, at 62 years of age. The GSTDL community celebrated this most auspicious day with a special Tsog Puja in his honor. VAJRAYOGINI (rd/་rj1་rnོལ་འbyོར་མ་) SELF INITIATION Saturday, January 4th, 2016 A small group of intrepid practitioners assembled in the GSTDL gompa, to undertake a Vajrayogini self initiation. Prerequisites to participate were: Vajrayogini initiation by a qualified master with commentary, and completion of a Vajrayogini retreat with fire Puja. In concluding year 2142 ཨཾ་མ་ནི་པdmེ་hauཾ་ 12