Difference between revisions of "Dge slong ma dpal mo"

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|MainNameDev=भिक्षुणीलक्ष्मी
 
|MainNameDev=भिक्षुणीलक्ष्मी
 
|MainNameSkt=Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī
 
|MainNameSkt=Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī
|bio=Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī, or Gelongma Palmo as she is known in the Tibetan world, was the originator of the practice of nyungne (''smyung gnas'').  While some Tibetan sources identify her as a princess of Oḍḍiyana who later became a nun, there is also a temple in a small hilltop town on the outskirts of Kathmandu that is believed to have been her family home. Based on the thousand-armed form of the deity Avalokiteśvara, nyungne involves a typically three day cycle of practice that combines long periods of prostrations with intermittent fasting and the strict observance of vows. The practice was developed by Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī and through it she is reported to have cured herself of leprosy. The practice continues to be popular among Himalayan Buddhists, especially among older lay people for whom it is often an annual event that they practice collectively in groups.
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|bio=Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī, or Gelongma Palmo as she is known in the Tibetan world, was the originator of the practice of nyungne (''smyung gnas'').  While some Tibetan sources identify her as a princess of Oḍḍiyana who later became a nun, the Adinath temple in the small hilltop village of Chobhar on the outskirts of Kathmandu is believed to have been either her family home or the original site in which she engaged in this practice. Based on the thousand-armed form of the deity Avalokiteśvara, nyungne involves a typically three day cycle of practice that combines long periods of prostrations with intermittent fasting and the strict observance of vows. The practice was developed by Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī and through it she is reported to have cured herself of leprosy. The practice continues to be popular among Himalayan Buddhists, especially among older lay people for whom it is often an annual event that they practice collectively in groups. It is also traditional to repeat the three day cycle eight times in a row.
 
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors
 
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors
 
|images=File:Gelongma Palmo.jpg
 
|images=File:Gelongma Palmo.jpg

Latest revision as of 10:30, 1 October 2021

Dge slong ma dpal mo on the DRL

དགེ་སློང་མ་དཔལ་མོ་
Wylie dge slong ma dpal mo
Devanagari भिक्षुणीलक्ष्मी
Romanized Sanskrit Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī
English Phonetics Gelongma Palmo
Gelongma Palmo.jpg
Dates
Birth:   11th century
Place of birth:   India/Nepal


Tibetan calendar dates

About

Biographical Information

Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī, or Gelongma Palmo as she is known in the Tibetan world, was the originator of the practice of nyungne (smyung gnas). While some Tibetan sources identify her as a princess of Oḍḍiyana who later became a nun, the Adinath temple in the small hilltop village of Chobhar on the outskirts of Kathmandu is believed to have been either her family home or the original site in which she engaged in this practice. Based on the thousand-armed form of the deity Avalokiteśvara, nyungne involves a typically three day cycle of practice that combines long periods of prostrations with intermittent fasting and the strict observance of vows. The practice was developed by Bhikṣuṇī Lakṣmī and through it she is reported to have cured herself of leprosy. The practice continues to be popular among Himalayan Buddhists, especially among older lay people for whom it is often an annual event that they practice collectively in groups. It is also traditional to repeat the three day cycle eight times in a row.

Links
BDRC Link (P4CZ10542)
https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P4CZ10542
Wiki Pages