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Khensur Kangur Lobsang
Thubten Rinpoche, or simply Rinpoche as his thousands of
students around the world affectionately call him, is a
Buddhist Monk and also the founder of TBI.
He was born in December
1925 to a farming family in the small village of Rinda
in a mountainous valley of eastern Tibet (Kham) in what is
now the Kartse (Ganzi) Prefecture of Western Sichuan. This
area was the birthplace of many great lamas of contemporary
times, including Khensur Rinpoche Urgyen Tseten, the late
Geshe Ngawang Dhargye and the late Geshe Rabten, teacher of
many leading western scholars of Tibetan Buddhism.
Khensur Lobsang
Thubten Rinpoche was not a recognized reincarnation (tulku).
However, at a very early age, he displayed signs that he
very likely was the reincarnation of someone of great
spiritual attainment. Among these were an affinity for
religious ceremonies such as pujas and for playing with
torma, the ritual cakes offered in such ceremonies. One
incident, in particular, impressed the people of his
village. A man had become very sick, and was close to death.
According to tradition, a fire and an arrangement of stones
was placed outside his home. One day, the small child that
would become Rinpoche, passed by the stone and fire
arrangement, stopped and urinated on them, putting out the
fire and spattering the stones. Miraculously, the man began
to recover from that day.
He came from a family
in which several members were ordained. When his mother
died in his infancy, he was raised by an aunt who was a nun.
At age seven, he entered Dhargye Gonpa to become a monk.
There he studied well under the instruction of the renowned
teacher Jampa Khedrup Rinpoche, teacher to many great lamas
of contemporary times. At age 18, he made the arduous
journey to Lhasa to further his education at the great
monastery of Sera, one of the "three seats" of Tibetan
Buddhist learning in the Gelukpa tradition founded by
Tsong-khapa and headed by His Holiness, the Dalai Lama. He
entered the college of Sera Je.
His education was
interrupted in 1959, when an uprising against the
increasingly oppressive Chinese occupation of Tibet failed,
and His Holiness escaped to exile in India. Like tens of
thousands of monks, nuns and lay people at that time,
Rinpoche followed his spiritual leader into exile - in his
case, into the refugee camps at Buxa.
The Indian Government
was extremely generous to the Tibetan refugees, but
still the conditions in the camps were hard. Used to high
altitudes and cool climates, the Tibetans were physically
shocked by the heat and dust of India, especially after the
long trek out of Tibet. Most grew sick; many died. Monks
from the four schools of Tibetan Buddhism were thrown
together for the first time. While just trying to stay
healthy or alive, the monks continued their study. Because
it looked as though their stay in India might be a long one,
some of the older students, such as Rinpoche, were also
required to assist in planning the new monasteries that
would be established in southern India. It was in these
conditions that Rinpoche completed his Lharampa Geshe
(Doctorate of Philosophy), the highest degree in the Tibetan
system.
The new site for Sera
Monastery was to be in Karnataka State, in southern India.
The monastery, and the agricultural fields that would
initially sustain it, literally had to be hacked out of a
thick forest. The work was unbelievably hard. Disease was
common and moved swiftly among the tents in which the monks
lived. For the first few years, all they did was labour.
Then a study curriculum was established and more and more
monks were freed to study. Monks live in house groupings (khangsten)
organized on the basis of their home region in Tibet. As a
senior student and geshe, Rinpoche had a large role in
establishing Tehor Khangsten, the house grouping for his
region of eastern Tibet (Kham). Today, the monks of Tehor
Khangsten comprise over half of the total population of
monks at Sera Je.
Rinpoche distinguished
himself, not only as a scholar and administrator but
also as a meditator. On the insistence of His Holiness'
Junior Tutor, His Eminence Trijang Rinpoche, Khensur
Rinpoche made the great (three and a half year) retreat on
Vajrayogini.
His scholarly
achievements were recognized by His holiness the Dalai Lama,
who asked Rinpoche to provide the oral transmission (in
1972) of the complete Tibetan canon, the Kangur, to an
assembly of monks at Dharamsala - a feat that is done about
once a generation and takes about six months. The title
Kangyurwa reflects this honour.
His administrative
achievements include his election first as the Sera Je
disciplinarian and then, in 1982, his appointment by His
Holiness to be the monastery's abbot. The abbot is normally
elected by the senior monks of the monastery and then
formally appointed by His Holiness. In this case, Rinpoche
came second in the balloting, but His Holiness over-ruled
the popular choice and selected Rinpoche. The title Khensur
Rinpoche means " former abbot".
In 1984, during his time
as abbot, he restructured Sera Je School, which has resulted
in an extremely high standard and diverse curriculum,
achieving very exemplary results in examinations. He planned
to come and teach at Buddha House in Adelaide for a year,
but stayed as the resident spiritual teacher for over a
decade because he was begged by his beloved students to
continue. Under Rinpoche’s guidance, Buddha House grew in
stability, prosperity and educational strength. Because of
his extremely high qualifications, advanced knowledge and
spiritual insights so rarely found in Lama's today, Rinpoche
is often requested to teach interstate, overseas and at Sera
monastery, where thousands of monks flock to hear him speak.
Whilst teaching at in
Adelaide, Rinpoche did not neglect his monastery, however.
In response the many requests from senior monks for
assistance, Rinpoche established a monk sponsorship
scheme. With over 950 monks, nuns, lay Tibetans in India and
Gyalten Charity School in Tibet on the scheme (December
2005) and over 550 sponsors from 6 countries, the Khensur
Kangur Rinpoche Sponsorship Schemes is perhaps the largest
and is certainly among the most successful schemes in the
world today.
Rinpoche has also
successfully helped to raise funds to rebuild his first
monastery in Kham, Dhargye Gonpa, which was destroyed twice
during the Chinese invasion and occupation. In addition, he
has raised money to support the important philosophical
debating program at Sera Je.
A major heart project of
Rinpoche's is Gyalten Charity School in Tibet for the poor
uneducated Tibetan children in the region. Approximately 280
children are enrolled in the school.
Mostly monks are sponsored
in Rinpoches schemes, however there are also nuns in India
as well as nuns at
Nyagye Nunnery in Tibet and many
Lay Tibetans in India.
Khensur Rinpoche
also set up the Emergency Medical Fund, which was
established for any monk or lay Tibetan in India that is in
urgent need of medical assistance.
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