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[[Image:Gyalwe Nyugu.JPG|frame|'''Jikmé Gyalwé Nyugu''']]
[[Image:Gyalwe Nyugu.JPG|frame|Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu]]
'''Jikmé Gyalwé Nyugu''' ([[Wyl.]] '' 'jigs med rgyal ba'i myu gu'') (1765–1843) one of the foremost disciples of [[Jikmé Lingpa]] and a teacher of [[Patrul Rinpoche]]. His main immediate reincarnation was [[Kunzang Dechen Dorje]]. Another incarnation was born in the encampment of Khamgar and was enthroned with the title 'Khamtrul'.
'''Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu''' (Tib. འཇིགས་མེད་རྒྱལ་བའི་མྱུ་གུ, [[Wyl.]] '' 'jigs med rgyal ba'i myu gu'') (1765–1843) was one of the foremost disciples of [[Jikme Lingpa]] and a teacher of [[Patrul Rinpoche]].
 
==Biography==
Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu was born in 1765 in the [[Dzachukha]] valley. As a child, he experienced a strong desire to go to solitary places and devote himself to meditation. In his youth he made a pilgrimage to [[Lhasa]] and [[Samyé]] and other sacred places and received instructions on [[Dzogchen]], but was still obliged to accompany his elder brother on business trips. The dishonesty he encountered on such trips filled his mind with revulsion for [[samsara]]. Around this time he received teachings from Getse Lama Tsewang Rigdzin Gyatso on [[Tertön Nyima Drakpa]]’s ''Tsasum Sangwa Nyingtik''.
 
Later, when his brother died at the age of eighteen, this more than any other single event turned his mind resolutely to the Dharma. Nevertheless, his relatives put pressure on him to marry and take care of the family. Eventually fleeing his home, he went to see the [[Third Dzogchen Rinpoche]], before travelling to Central Tibet with Barchung Gomchung Rigdzin. At Samyé they met with the [[First Dodrupchen Rinpoche]] who advised them to visit [[Jikme Lingpa]]. When they reached [[Tsering Jong]] and met Jikme Lingpa for the first time, Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu felt incredible joy. They received [[empowerment]]s, transmissions and detailed instructions on Dzogchen.
 
In carrying out Jikme Lingpa’s instructions to visit the sacred mountain of [[Tsari]] and to meditate there, Gyalwe Nyugu suffered extreme hardship, but was sustained by the memory of his root teacher. During a six-month retreat he realised the ultimate nature of mind through the blessing of the lama and the accomplishment of the [[yidam]].
 
After several more retreats in east Tibet he returned to Tsering Jong and experienced once more the great joy of seeing the omniscient Jikme Lingpa, who invited him to stay for three years. He explained frankly that he had to go back home because of obligations. He returned to Kham and did many years retreat around [[Dzogchen Monastery]] and in Dzachukha and had many extraordinary experiences. For twenty years he stayed in caves in the Trama valley in upper Dzachukha, eventually becoming known as the 'Hermit of Dzachuka' and Dza Trama Lama. He lived under extremely austere conditions, sometimes under a rocky ledge, or even out in the open.
 
As advised by Jikme Lingpa, he devoted the entire latter part of his life to teaching whoever came to listen, giving empowerments or meditation instructions to all who were devout and sincere. During this period, he gave [[Patrul Rinpoche]] teachings on the [[ngöndro]] of [[Longchen Nyingtik]] no less than twenty-five times, as well as teachings on tsalung practice and Dzogpachenpo. His instructions on the preliminary practices are recorded in Patrul Rinpoche's famous ''[[Words of My Perfect Teacher]]''.
 
==Students==
His disciples included [[Patrul Rinpoche]], [[Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo]] and [[Gyalse Shenpen Thaye]].
 
==Incarnations==
His main immediate reincarnation was [[Kunzang Dechen Dorje]]. Another incarnation was born in the encampment of Khamgar and was enthroned with the title 'Khamtrul'.
 
==Texts==
*'''The Excellent Path of the Bodhisattvas''' (biography compiled by his students) ('''gro mgon bla ma rje'i gsang gsum rnam thar rgya mtsho las/_thun mong phyi'i mngon rtogs rgyal sras lam bzang'')


==Further Reading==
==Further Reading==
Line 7: Line 27:


==Internal Links==
==Internal Links==
*[[Four Jikmés]]
*[[Four Jikmes]]
*[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]
*[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://www.tbrc-dlms.org/kb/tbrc-detail.xq;jsessionid=F23D27F15F9581A2E117434FD6135FB8?RID=P695 TBRC profile]
*{{TBRC|P695|TBRC profile}}
*[http://www.treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Jigme-Gyelwai-Nyugu/9579 Biography at Treasury of Lives]


[[Category:Nyingma Masters]]
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]]
[[Category:Longchen Nyingtik Masters]]
[[Category:Longchen Nyingtik Masters]]

Latest revision as of 08:15, 18 October 2021

Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu

Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu (Tib. འཇིགས་མེད་རྒྱལ་བའི་མྱུ་གུ, Wyl. 'jigs med rgyal ba'i myu gu) (1765–1843) was one of the foremost disciples of Jikme Lingpa and a teacher of Patrul Rinpoche.

Biography

Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu was born in 1765 in the Dzachukha valley. As a child, he experienced a strong desire to go to solitary places and devote himself to meditation. In his youth he made a pilgrimage to Lhasa and Samyé and other sacred places and received instructions on Dzogchen, but was still obliged to accompany his elder brother on business trips. The dishonesty he encountered on such trips filled his mind with revulsion for samsara. Around this time he received teachings from Getse Lama Tsewang Rigdzin Gyatso on Tertön Nyima Drakpa’s Tsasum Sangwa Nyingtik.

Later, when his brother died at the age of eighteen, this more than any other single event turned his mind resolutely to the Dharma. Nevertheless, his relatives put pressure on him to marry and take care of the family. Eventually fleeing his home, he went to see the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche, before travelling to Central Tibet with Barchung Gomchung Rigdzin. At Samyé they met with the First Dodrupchen Rinpoche who advised them to visit Jikme Lingpa. When they reached Tsering Jong and met Jikme Lingpa for the first time, Jikme Gyalwe Nyugu felt incredible joy. They received empowerments, transmissions and detailed instructions on Dzogchen.

In carrying out Jikme Lingpa’s instructions to visit the sacred mountain of Tsari and to meditate there, Gyalwe Nyugu suffered extreme hardship, but was sustained by the memory of his root teacher. During a six-month retreat he realised the ultimate nature of mind through the blessing of the lama and the accomplishment of the yidam.

After several more retreats in east Tibet he returned to Tsering Jong and experienced once more the great joy of seeing the omniscient Jikme Lingpa, who invited him to stay for three years. He explained frankly that he had to go back home because of obligations. He returned to Kham and did many years retreat around Dzogchen Monastery and in Dzachukha and had many extraordinary experiences. For twenty years he stayed in caves in the Trama valley in upper Dzachukha, eventually becoming known as the 'Hermit of Dzachuka' and Dza Trama Lama. He lived under extremely austere conditions, sometimes under a rocky ledge, or even out in the open.

As advised by Jikme Lingpa, he devoted the entire latter part of his life to teaching whoever came to listen, giving empowerments or meditation instructions to all who were devout and sincere. During this period, he gave Patrul Rinpoche teachings on the ngöndro of Longchen Nyingtik no less than twenty-five times, as well as teachings on tsalung practice and Dzogpachenpo. His instructions on the preliminary practices are recorded in Patrul Rinpoche's famous Words of My Perfect Teacher.

Students

His disciples included Patrul Rinpoche, Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and Gyalse Shenpen Thaye.

Incarnations

His main immediate reincarnation was Kunzang Dechen Dorje. Another incarnation was born in the encampment of Khamgar and was enthroned with the title 'Khamtrul'.

Texts

  • The Excellent Path of the Bodhisattvas (biography compiled by his students) ('gro mgon bla ma rje'i gsang gsum rnam thar rgya mtsho las/_thun mong phyi'i mngon rtogs rgyal sras lam bzang)

Further Reading

  • Nyoshul Khenpo, A Marvelous Garland of Rare Gems: Biographies of Masters of Awareness in the Dzogchen Lineage, Padma Publications, 2005, pages 216-222.
  • Tulku Thondup, Masters of Meditation and Miracles, edited by Harold Talbott (Boston: Shambhala, 1996), pages 163-172.

Internal Links

External Links