Rak ra thub bstan chos dar: Difference between revisions

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|MainNameWylie=rak ra thub bstan chos dar
|MainNameWylie=rak ra thub bstan chos dar
|PersonType=Authors of Tibetan Works
|PersonType=Authors of Tibetan Works
|bio=Rakra Rinpoche (Rakra Thubten Choedar) was born in 1925 (Fire Ox Year) to Gyurme Gyatso Tethong, then Governor of Derge (Derge chikyap) and Dolma Tsering nee Rong Dikyiling (d/o Dikyiling Sawang Tsering Rabten). The boy was named Rigzin Namgyal by Khenchen Ngawang Samten Lodroe (1868-1931) of the Great Monastery of Derge. At the age of two he was recognized as the 6th Rakra incarnate of Pakshoe monastery in Kham. His father was initially against having his child become a lama, but after the 13th Dalai Lama himself recognized the incarnation, Gyurme Gyatso had to give up his son. His Holiness named the boy Rakra Thubten Choedar.
|bio=Rakra Rinpoche (Rakra Thubten Choedar) was born in 1925 to the governor of Derge, studied at Drepung (Gomang College) and studied poetry and literature with Gedun Chophel. He excelled as a Geshe, but gave up his monastic vows to his root guru Mogchok Rimpoche shortly before moving to India in 1950. In 1960 Rakra was asked by the Dalai Lama’s brother Taktser Rimpoche, to take charge of Tibetan refugee children at the Pestalozzi International Children’s Village in Switzerland, set up for displaced European children after World War II. He painted, sketched, and wrote often and produced children's books to help educate young Tibetans.
“He managed to finish a translation of the travels of the earliest Chinese traveler to India, the monk Fa-hien (faxian)  (CE 399-414) in search of the vinaya-pitaka texts (dulwa). He was assisted in this project by his younger brother Tsewang Chogyal. In this translation published by LTWA, Rakra included accounts of early Buddhist sites in India, to complement Fa-hien’s original travelogue. He also completed his first draft of the history of the Tethong family.


Rakra was first schooled at Pakshoe monastery, but from 1935 he started his formal education at Drepung monastery, specifically Gomang college, Ghungru khamtsen (fraternity). He was a bright child and a fast learner. He was also very lucky to have as his principal teacher a geshe (doctor of divinity) who combined profound erudition with an unusual liberal disposition. This geshe seemed to have left a deep impression on the young Rakra. ([https://tibetanwhoswho.wordpress.com/2018/12/09/rakra-rinpoche/ Source Accessed Feb 10, 2023])
Rakra Rimpoche passed away on July 10, 2012, at the age of 87.
 
[https://www.jamyangnorbu.com/blog/2013/06/26/poet-artist-scholar-teacher-and-reluctant-rimpoche/ Read more details about his life here] and [https://tibetanwhoswho.wordpress.com/2018/12/09/rakra-rinpoche/ here… (Source Accessed Oct 1, 2024])
|images=File:Rakra Thubten Chodar.jpg
|images=File:Rakra Thubten Chodar.jpg
File:Rakra and Gendun Chopel.jpg{{!}} Rakra with Gendun Chopel c. 1949, Lhasa
File:Rakra and Gendun Chopel.jpg{{!}} Rakra with Gendun Chopel c. 1949, Lhasa

Revision as of 07:36, 1 October 2024

Rakra Thubten Chodar.jpg Rakra with Gendun Chopel c. 1949, Lhasa
PersonType Category:Authors of Tibetan Works
MainNamePhon Rakra Tupten Chodar
MainNameTib རཀ་ར་ཐུབ་བསྟན་ཆོས་དར་
MainNameWylie rak ra thub bstan chos dar
AltNamesOther Rakra, 6th
bio Rakra Rinpoche (Rakra Thubten Choedar) was born in 1925 to the governor of Derge, studied at Drepung (Gomang College) and studied poetry and literature with Gedun Chophel. He excelled as a Geshe, but gave up his monastic vows to his root guru Mogchok Rimpoche shortly before moving to India in 1950. In 1960 Rakra was asked by the Dalai Lama’s brother Taktser Rimpoche, to take charge of Tibetan refugee children at the Pestalozzi International Children’s Village in Switzerland, set up for displaced European children after World War II. He painted, sketched, and wrote often and produced children's books to help educate young Tibetans.

“He managed to finish a translation of the travels of the earliest Chinese traveler to India, the monk Fa-hien (faxian) (CE 399-414) in search of the vinaya-pitaka texts (dulwa). He was assisted in this project by his younger brother Tsewang Chogyal. In this translation published by LTWA, Rakra included accounts of early Buddhist sites in India, to complement Fa-hien’s original travelogue. He also completed his first draft of the history of the Tethong family.

Rakra Rimpoche passed away on July 10, 2012, at the age of 87.

Read more details about his life here and here… (Source Accessed Oct 1, 2024)

YearBirth 1925
YearDeath July 10, 2012
TibDateGender Female
TibDateElement Wood
TibDateAnimal Ox
TibDateRabjung 15
TibDateDeathDay 22
TibDateDeathMonth 5
TibDateDeathGender Male
TibDateDeathElement Water
TibDateDeathAnimal Dragon
TibDateDeathRabjung 16
ReligiousAffiliation Geluk
ClassicalProfAff Drepung Monastery
StudentOf Gendun Chöpel  ·  blo bzang ye shes bstan 'dzin rgya mtsho
BDRC https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P6079
IsInGyatsa No
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