Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Khangsar Tenpe Wangchuk.jpg|thumb|'''Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk''']]
[[Image:Khangsar Tenpe Wangchuk.jpg|thumb|'''Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk''']]
'''Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk''' ([[Wyl.]] ''khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug'') aka '''Tulku Tenpo''' (b. 1938)
'''Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk''' (Tib. ཁང་སར་བསྟན་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་, [[Wyl.]] ''khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug'') aka '''Tulku Tenpo''' (b. 1938)


==Biography==
==Biography==
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==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://www.tbrc.org/link?RID=P8382 TBRC Profile]
*{{TBRC|P8382|TBRC Profile}}


[[Category:Nyingma Teachers]]
[[Category:Nyingma Teachers]]
[[Category:Tertöns]]
[[Category:Tertöns]]
[[Category:Longchen Nyingtik Teachers]]
[[Category:Longchen Nyingtik Teachers]]

Revision as of 10:53, 20 March 2011

Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk

Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk (Tib. ཁང་སར་བསྟན་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་, Wyl. khang sar bstan pa'i dbang phyug) aka Tulku Tenpo (b. 1938)

Biography

Khangsar Tenpé Wangchuk was born amidst miraculous signs in Akyong Khangsar in Golok at dawn on January 1st 1938. The time of his birth was marked by the conjunction of 'four tigers': he was born in the Earth Tiger year, in the tiger month, on the tiger day, and at dawn, which is the time of the tiger. He was soon recognized as the incarnation of Payak Önpo Rigdzin Dorje, who was an emanation of Yudra Nyingpo, one of Guru Rinpoche's twenty-five disciples.

He studied with Palyul Choktrul Jampal Gyepe Dorje, Akyong Tokden Rinpoche Lodrö Gyatso and other masters, gaining profound levels of realization, so that he met deities in visions and received prophecies from them, and his understanding of the sutras and tantras expanded to became limitlessly vast. He revealed both earth and mind termas. Some of them he even unearthed in public, before crowds of people. Khenpo Jikmé Phuntsok declared him to be a great bodhisattva who had reached the more advanced stages (bhumis).

He established both Khangsar Taklung Monastery and Payak Monastery.

His Writings

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.

External Links