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[[image:Atisha.JPG|frame|'''Jowo Jé Glorious Atisha''']]'''Atisha''' (982-1054) was a great Indian master and scholar, and author of many text including the ''[[Lamp for the Path of Awakening]]''. One of the main teachers at the famous university of [[Vikramashila]], he was also a strict follower of the monastic rule and was widely acclaimed for the purity of his teaching. He spent the last ten years of his life in Tibet, teaching and translating texts, and was instrumental in reinvigorating Buddhism there after a period of persecution. His disciples founded the [[Kadampa]] school.
[[image:Atisha.JPG|frame|'''Jowo Jé Glorious Atisha''']]  
'''Atisha Dipamkara Shrijñana''' (Skt. ''Atiśa Dīpaṃkara Śrījñāna'', or ''*Adhīśa''; Tib. ཨ་ཏི་ཤ་མར་མེ་མཛད་དཔལ་ཡེ་ཤེས་, ''Atisha Marmézé Pal Yeshé'', [[Wyl.]] ''a ti sha mar me mdzad dpal ye shes'') or Jowo Jé Palden Atisha (ཇོ་བོ་རྗེ་དཔལ་ལྡན་ཨ་ཏི་ཤ་, Wyl. ''jo bo rje dpal ldan a ti sha'') (982-1054) was a great Indian master and scholar, and author of many texts including the ''[[Lamp for the Path of Awakening]]''. One of the main teachers at the famous university of [[Vikramashila]], he was also a strict follower of the monastic rule and was widely acclaimed for the purity of his teaching. He spent the last ten years of his life in Tibet, teaching and translating texts, and was instrumental in reinvigorating [[Buddhism]] there after a period of persecution. His disciples founded the [[Kadampa]] school.


==Biography==
==Writings==
[[Ga Rabjampa Kunga Yeshe]] writes:
*[[Lamp for the Path of Awakening]]
*{{LH|indian-masters/atisha/jewel-rosary-bodhisattvas|''The Bodhisattva’s Garland of Jewels''}}


:The details of Atisha’s life can be learned from the extensive biographies, but here is a brief summary. He was born as the son of Kalyana Shri, the king of Zahor, and immediately upon his birth he had a vision of Noble [[Tara]]. From an early age he studied the [[five sciences]] and especially the four classes of tantra, so that he became supremely learned. He served in the proper way his learned and accomplished teachers, who included [[Shantipa]], [[Serlingpa]], and Rigpé Khujuk (''rigs pa’i khu byug''). From the moment he first received the [[Hevajra]] empowerment from his guru Rahulagupta, he had visions of many [[yidam]] deities. He mastered unimaginable kinds of [[samadhi]] meditation. In accordance with prophecies he had received from several masters and yidam deities, directly and in dreams, he took ordination in the [[Mahasanghika]] tradition. He gained clairvoyance and miraculous abilities and subjugated demons and tirthika extremists. He received instructions on mind training from the gurus mentioned above and from his yidam deities, and twofold bodhichitta flooded his mind, expanding like a river in summertime.
==Main Disciples==
Chief among Atisha's Tibetan disciples were the three known as "Khu, Ngok, and Drom," who were renowned as emanations of the three main bodhisattvas—[[Avalokiteshvara]], [[Manjushri]], and [[Vajrapani]]: [[Khutön Tsöndru Yungdrung]], [[Ngok Lekpé Sherab]] and [[Dromtön Gyalwé Jungné]].


:In particular, when he realized that the great master of Suvarnadvipa was a perfect embodiment of the [[bodhichitta]] teachings, he travelled to Sumatra to seek his instruction. When they met he immediately recognized him as his teacher from former lives and felt boundless devotion. The guru offered him a golden statue [of the Buddha] that he had found in the forest as a child, signifying his empowerment as the holder of his teachings. Atisha spent twelve years receiving instructions, all the while staying close to his guru, and the bodhichitta of cherishing others above oneself was born in his mind.
==Further Reading==
*Chattopadhyaya, Alaka. ''Atisha and Tibet''. Calcutta: Indian Studies Past and Present, 1967.
*Decleer, Hubert.  'Atisha's Journey to Sumatra', in ''Buddhism in Practice'', edited by Donald S. Lopez Jr., Princeton University Press, 1995
*Decleer, Hubert. 'Atisha's Journey to Tibet', in ''Religions of Tibet in Practice'', edited by Donald S. Lopez Jr., Princeton University Press, 1997
*Eimer, Helmut. 'The Development of the Biographical Tradition concerning Atisa (Dipamkarasrijnana)' in ''The Journal of the Tibet Society'', Vol. 2 (1982), pp. 41-51
*Seyfort Ruegg, David. ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 110-113
*Sherburne, Richard, trans. ''The Complete Works of Atiśa Śrī Dīpaṃkara Jñāna''. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 2000.


:He returned to India and became an elder at [[Vikramashila]] Monastery. From there his enlightened activity spread in all directions, East and West. He was revered as a master by followers of all schools without any sectarian bias, and he caused the teachings of sutra and mantra to spread far and wide through teaching and through practice. His yidam deities, such as [[Tara]] and Kasarpani, and many of his teachers, such as Rahula, told him how beneficial it would be if were to travel to Tibet, and especially how it would benefit a certain lay practitioner, or [[upasika]], and cause the teachings of his oral lineage to flourish. He also received several invitations from the nephew of [[Lha Lama Yeshe Ö]] [i.e., [[Changchub Ö]]] who had himself been prophesied by the Buddha. So it was that he went to Tibet, where he took pity on the ignorant Tibetans and eradicated their mistaken views and practices through scriptural authority and logical reasoning, thereby setting them upon the genuine path. He caused the torch of the sacred Dharma to blaze, burning away the thickets of mistaken views. He developed people’s minds so that they could see the nature of reality, and he showed clearly the distinction between Dharma and non-Dharma. In the fertile minds of his fortunate disciples, he planted the seeds of bodhichitta and watered them with the finest nectar-like explanations, so that they ripened into the wonderful harvest of liberation. For his foremost heir, the great [[Dromtönpa]] in particular, he filled the fine mansion of his intellect with gems of transmission and realization. As if opening up the treasure chest of his precious oral lineage, he dispelled the spiritual poverty of the Land of Snows by bringing bountiful riches of virtue and goodness. Thus, we should know that the glorious Atisha, holder of this precious oral lineage of which is like a chain of golden mountains, was even kinder to us Tibetans than the Buddha himself.
==Internal Links==
 
*[[Ka khol ma]], ''The Pillar Testament''.
==Main Disciples==
*[[Quotations: Indian Masters#Atīśa|Quotations from Atīśa's works.]]
Chief among Atisha's Tibetan disciples were the three known as "Khu, Ngok, and Drom," who were renowned as emanations of the three main bodhisattvas--[[Avalokiteshvara]], [[Manjushri]], and [[Vajrapani]]: [[Khutön Tsöndru Yungdrung]], [[Ngok Lekpé Sherap]] and [[Dromtön Gyalwé Jungné]].


==External Links==
*{{LH|indian-masters/atisha/jewel-rosary-bodhisattvas|''The Bodhisattva’s Garland of Jewels''}} by Atisha
*{{TBRC|P3379|TBRC Profile}}
*{{84000|http://read.84000.co/section/O1JC76301JC11278.html|Works of Atiśa}}
*[http://www.treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Atisha-Dipamkara/5717 Biography at Treasury of Lives]


[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Indian Masters]]
[[Category:Seventeen Nalanda Masters]]
[[Category:Seventeen Nalanda Masters]]

Revision as of 08:04, 21 July 2020

Jowo Jé Glorious Atisha

Atisha Dipamkara Shrijñana (Skt. Atiśa Dīpaṃkara Śrījñāna, or *Adhīśa; Tib. ཨ་ཏི་ཤ་མར་མེ་མཛད་དཔལ་ཡེ་ཤེས་, Atisha Marmézé Pal Yeshé, Wyl. a ti sha mar me mdzad dpal ye shes) or Jowo Jé Palden Atisha (ཇོ་བོ་རྗེ་དཔལ་ལྡན་ཨ་ཏི་ཤ་, Wyl. jo bo rje dpal ldan a ti sha) (982-1054) was a great Indian master and scholar, and author of many texts including the Lamp for the Path of Awakening. One of the main teachers at the famous university of Vikramashila, he was also a strict follower of the monastic rule and was widely acclaimed for the purity of his teaching. He spent the last ten years of his life in Tibet, teaching and translating texts, and was instrumental in reinvigorating Buddhism there after a period of persecution. His disciples founded the Kadampa school.

Writings

Main Disciples

Chief among Atisha's Tibetan disciples were the three known as "Khu, Ngok, and Drom," who were renowned as emanations of the three main bodhisattvas—Avalokiteshvara, Manjushri, and Vajrapani: Khutön Tsöndru Yungdrung, Ngok Lekpé Sherab and Dromtön Gyalwé Jungné.

Further Reading

  • Chattopadhyaya, Alaka. Atisha and Tibet. Calcutta: Indian Studies Past and Present, 1967.
  • Decleer, Hubert. 'Atisha's Journey to Sumatra', in Buddhism in Practice, edited by Donald S. Lopez Jr., Princeton University Press, 1995
  • Decleer, Hubert. 'Atisha's Journey to Tibet', in Religions of Tibet in Practice, edited by Donald S. Lopez Jr., Princeton University Press, 1997
  • Eimer, Helmut. 'The Development of the Biographical Tradition concerning Atisa (Dipamkarasrijnana)' in The Journal of the Tibet Society, Vol. 2 (1982), pp. 41-51
  • Seyfort Ruegg, David. The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 110-113
  • Sherburne, Richard, trans. The Complete Works of Atiśa Śrī Dīpaṃkara Jñāna. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 2000.

Internal Links

External Links