Difference between revisions of "Khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug"

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|MainNameWylie=khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug
 
|MainNameWylie=khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug
 
|PersonType=Authors of Tibetan Works; Tertons; Tibetan Buddhist Teachers
 
|PersonType=Authors of Tibetan Works; Tertons; Tibetan Buddhist Teachers
|bio=Khangsar Tenpa’i Wangchuk (1938–2014), aka Tulku Tenpo, was a monk and tertön of the Nyingma school. A revered master of his own tradition, he was also learned in the rigorous Geluk scholastic curriculum. While imprisoned for twelve years during the Cultural Revolution, he continued his dedicated practice alongside other great masters. In his later years, he focused on teaching, writing, and restoring the monasteries of Khangsar Taklung and Payak in the region of Golok, Tibet. His collected writings include commentaries on The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva, Rigdzin Düpa, Tsik Sum Né Dek, Longchenpa's Neluk Dzö and Chöying Dzö, and Shabkar's Flight of the Garuda. ([https://www.shambhala.com/authors/u-z/khangsar-tenpa-i-wangchuk.html Source Accessed Feb. .4, 2022])
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|bio=Khangsar Tenpa’i Wangchuk (1938–2014), aka Tulku Tenpo, was a monk and tertön of the Nyingma school. A revered master of his own tradition, he was also learned in the rigorous Geluk scholastic curriculum. While imprisoned for twelve years during the Cultural Revolution, he continued his dedicated practice alongside other great masters. He studied with Palyul Choktrul Jampal Gyepe Dorje, Akyong Tokden Rinpoche Lodrö Gyatso, and others. In his later years, he focused on teaching, writing, and restoring the monasteries of Khangsar Taklung and Payak in the region of Golok (mgo log), Tibet. His collected writings include commentaries on ''The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva'' ([[gyal sras lag len so bdun ma]]), ''Rigdzin Düpa'' ([[rig 'dzin 'dus pa]]), ''Tsik Sum Né Dek'' ([[tshig gsum gnad brdegs]]), Longchenpa's ''Neluk Dzö'' ([[gnas lugs mdzod]]) and ''Chöying Dzö'' ([[chos dbyings mdzod]]), and Shabkar's ''Flight of the Garuda'' ([[mkha' lding gshog rlabs]]). ([https://www.shambhala.com/authors/u-z/khangsar-tenpa-i-wangchuk.html Source Accessed Feb. .4, 2022])
 
|images=File:Khangsar Rinpoche.jpg
 
|images=File:Khangsar Rinpoche.jpg
 
|yearbirth=1938
 
|yearbirth=1938

Revision as of 17:40, 4 February 2022

Khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug on the DRL

ཁང་སར་བསྟན་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་
Wylie khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug
English Phonetics Khangsar Tenpai Wangchuk
Sort Name Wangchuk, Khangsar Tenpai
Khangsar Rinpoche.jpg
Other names
  • དབོན་སྤྲུལ་བསྟན་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་
  • སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་བསྟན་པ་
  • dbon sprul bstan pa'i dbang phyug
  • sprul sku bstan pa
Dates
Birth:   1938
Death:   2014
Place of birth:   mgo log


Tibetan calendar dates

About
Religious Affiliation
Nyingma
Primary Professional Affiliation
Taklung Monastery, Jigdril, Golok
Other Professional Affiliation
Payak Monastery
Is emanation of
Yudra Nyingpo
Teachers
dpal yul mchog sprul 'jams dpal dgyes pa'i rdo rje · A skyong rtogs ldan blo gros rgya mtsho
Students
tshul khrims bzang po

Biographical Information

Khangsar Tenpa’i Wangchuk (1938–2014), aka Tulku Tenpo, was a monk and tertön of the Nyingma school. A revered master of his own tradition, he was also learned in the rigorous Geluk scholastic curriculum. While imprisoned for twelve years during the Cultural Revolution, he continued his dedicated practice alongside other great masters. He studied with Palyul Choktrul Jampal Gyepe Dorje, Akyong Tokden Rinpoche Lodrö Gyatso, and others. In his later years, he focused on teaching, writing, and restoring the monasteries of Khangsar Taklung and Payak in the region of Golok (mgo log), Tibet. His collected writings include commentaries on The Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva (gyal sras lag len so bdun ma), Rigdzin Düpa (rig 'dzin 'dus pa), Tsik Sum Né Dek (tshig gsum gnad brdegs), Longchenpa's Neluk Dzö (gnas lugs mdzod) and Chöying Dzö (chos dbyings mdzod), and Shabkar's Flight of the Garuda (mkha' lding gshog rlabs). (Source Accessed Feb. .4, 2022)

Links
BDRC Link (P8382)
https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P8382
Wiki Pages