Archive by Author

The places you will go, The people you will see

Sarnath

PILGRIMAGE

“The aim of all Buddhist practice is to catch a glimpse of the awakened state. Going on pilgrimage, soaking up the sacred atmosphere of holy places and mingling with other pilgrims are simply different ways of trying to achieve that glimpse.” Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche

Pilgrim at Sarnath photo Sarah Mist

Rinpoche wrote the book “ What to do at India’s Buddhist Holy Sites “ in response to the questions students frequently ask about going on pilgrimage to Buddhist holy sites. What to do at India’s Buddhist Holy Sites is not a guidebook for ordinary tourists, but for Buddhists who wish to purify their defilements and accumulate merit by going on pilgrimage. Focusing primarily on the teachings of Shakyamuni Buddha and the great Indian masters of the past, Rinpoche offers pilgrims advice on every aspect of pilgrimage: where to go, what to do, the meaning of pilgrimage  and generating the right motivation before leaving home. He explains what Buddhists mean when they describe a person, place or object as being ‘holy’. Included are suggestions for which prayers and practices one can do at the four main Buddhist holy sites in India and Nepal.

Click here to request a pdf file of Rinpoche’s book

Click here for a preview of Rinpoches Book


This story below is an excerpt from “What to do at India’s Buddhist Holy Sites” and was told to Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche By Deshung Rinpoche.

There are many stories, about people whose devotion was such that their one-pointed longing actually created holy places, or even invoked the material presence of holy beings into their own perceptions.

Like Lodro, for example, who felt tremendous devotion for the bodhisattva Mañjushri. One evening, he came across an amazing passage in a book he was reading about how Mañjushri had vowed three times to show himself to anyone who travelled to Mount Panchashisha * . For Lodro this was the most wonderful and inspiring discovery, and he became so excited that, after a sleepless night and without eating breakfast, he ran to his master’s house to ask his permission and blessings to visit the mountain. At first Lodro’s master did his best to convince him that such a journey, fraught with danger and hardship, was entirely unnecessary, but Lodro would not be convinced. Again and again he begged his master to allow him to go, until eventually he gave in and agreed.

In those days travelling was difficult, but Lodro, undaunted by the dangers that lay ahead, packed enough food and medicine for several months onto the back of his donkey, waved goodbye to his master, family and all his friends, and set off across the Tibetan plateau.

The terrain was extremely tough. He had to cross several fast flowing rivers and survive the punishing heat of empty deserts where his only companions were venomous snakes and wild animals. Nevertheless, after several months, Lodro arrived safely at Mount Panchashisha and immediately started searching for Mañjushri. He looked everywhere, again and again, but couldn’t find anyone who even vaguely resembled the bodhisattva. Then, one evening as he rested his back against the cold iron steps of a monastery he fell fast asleep. The  next  thing  he  remembered  was  walking  into  a  lively  bar  where  a  boisterous  crowd  of  locals  were drinking, laughing and having fun. It was late and Lodro was tired. He asked for a room, and the enormously fat Madame who sat behind a small desk at one end of the main corridor told him they were full up, but he could sleep in a corner of the corridor if he wanted to. He accepted gratefully and pulled a book out of his luggage to read before he went to sleep. Before long a rowdy gang of Chinese boys burst out of the bar into the corridor and started making fun of the fat Madame. Lodro tried to ignore them, but the leader caught sight of him and swaggered over to examine him.

The path that leads to the Manjushri Cave at Wu Ti Shan in China

“What are you doing here?” he demanded.

Not  quite  knowing  what  to  say,  Lodro,  in  his  innocence,  found  himself  telling  the  Chinese  boy  about Mañjushri’s vow. The boy laughed and laughed.

“You Tibetans, you’re so superstitious! Why is that?” he cried. “And you actually believe what you read in books! I’ve lived here all my life, and I’ve never heard of anyone called Mañjushri.”

Shaking his head in disbelief he turned back to his friends, saying, “Winter’s coming. You should go home before you freeze to death.”

The whole gang then staggered back into the bar for another drink as the Madame and Lodro exchanged a look of relief. A few days later, on his way back from another futile trek up the mountain, Lodro bumped into the same Chinese boy.

“You still here?” exclaimed the boy.

“Alright, I give up,” replied Lodro, with a wan smile. “You were right, I am too superstitious.”

“So, you’ve finally had enough, have you?” crowed the Chinese boy. “Will you go home now?”

“I thought I’d make a pilgrimage to Mongolia,” said Lodro. “I might as well, it’s on the way home. And it’ll mean this journey wasn’t a complete waste of time.”

Lodro looked sad and there was something about the way his shoulders slumped as he spoke that softened the Chinese boy’s heart.

“I tell you what,” he said, slightly less aggressively than before. “You don’t have much money and you’ve run out of supplies, so you’re going to need some help. I have a friend in Mongolia. I’ll write him a letter. If you deliver it to him I’m sure he’ll do what he can.”

Auspicious Clouds at Wu Ti Shan

The next day, Lodro once again packed everything he had onto his old donkey and, feeling depressed and disheartened, took one last look at Mañjushri’s mountain, hoping desperately that Mañjushri might appear at least long enough to wave him goodbye. But no. The crowds of people rushing to and fro before him gave up nothing but the Chinese boy with the letter he’d promised. Lodro thanked him, tucked the letter into his yak skin coat and left for Mongolia.

After several months Lodro reached the town where the Chinese boy’s friend was supposed to live. Waving the letter in his hand, he stopped everyone he met to ask where the recipient of the letter might be found. To his surprise, every single person he approached burst out laughing. Lodro was extremely puzzled. Eventually he met an old woman who managed to control herself long enough to ask if she could read the letter. Lodro gave it to her, without reading it himself. She studied it carefully, then asked,

“Who wrote this letter?”

And Lodro told her the whole story. She shook her head and sighed, “Those young men are always bullying helpless pilgrims like you. But there is one creature I know of who bears the name written in this letter. If you really want to deliver it, go to the rubbish tip at the edge of the village. There you’ll find a pig. He’s very fat so you can’t miss him.”

Lodro was a little baffled by this information, nevertheless he decided that, as he was already so close he would go to the tip and have a look at the pig.

Before long, he found a huge hill of rubbish on top of which sat an extremely large and rather hairy pig. Feeling a little self-conscious, Lodro unrolled the letter and held it in front of the pig’s small, bright eyes and was completely astounded when the pig appeared to read it. Once he’d finished, the pig started weeping uncontrollably and fell down dead. Suddenly curious about what could possibly have had such a strong effect on the animal, Lodro finally read the letter.

Dharma Arya Bodhisattva,

Your mission to benefit beings in Mongolia has been accomplished. Now hurry back to Mount Panchashisha.

Mañjushri

Amazed and reinvigorated, Lodro rushed back to Mount Panchashisha with just one thought in his mind,

“This time, when I meet Mañjushri, I’m going to hold onto him extremely tightly and I’ll never let him go!”

His first stop back on the mountain was the bar where the Madame had given him shelter. Lodro asked her if she’d seen the Chinese boy.

“Those boys are always on the move. Who knows where they’ll be?” she said.

Lodro’s heart sank.

“But you’re tired,” continued the Madame, a little more gently. “Why don’t you sleep now. You can look for the boys tomorrow.”

And she offered him his old place in the corridor. He fell asleep quickly, only to wake with a start to find himself slumped against the steps of the monastery and freezing cold. There was no sign of the Madame, the bar or the town. Physically he was on Mount Panchashisha, the external realm where Mañjushri is said to live, yet his merit had been such that his experiences of Mañjushri had all taken place in a dream.

I’ve always hoped that Lodro finally realized that Mañjushri’s compassion is so immense and all pervasive that it’s possible to invoke his presence absolutely anywhere—even his hometown. And from that point of view, his journey to China had been unnecessary, but it definitely wasn’t a waste, because if Lodro had not made his pilgrimage he probably wouldn’t have experienced this inner journey, or realized anything at all.

Chotu, the chai wala at Bodhgayas Number 1 tea stall photo Pawo Choyning

After I heard this story from Deshung Rinpoche, I visited Mount Panchashisha * several times, but had even less success than Lodro. Not only did I completely fail to invoke Mañjushri’s presence, I didn’t have any dreams at all. The only thing that happened was I got annoyed by the ticketing system that’s been instituted at most of the temples and by the monks who sold the tickets. Most of all I was extremely disappointed to see holy shrines reduced to the status of national monuments. Later, though, my intellectual mind began to wonder if one of those arrogant, acquisitive monks who could only think about the amount of tickets they were selling, was in fact Mañjushri. Who knows?

*Also known as Mount Wu Tai Shan.

The eight great sites with Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche

Rinpoche Sarnath

“At the close of the World teaching tour of Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche, eight stupas were consecrated at the following places: Lumbini, Shravasa, Sankisa, Sarnath, Kushinagar, Vaishali, Rajgir, Bodhgaya.

Here are a selection of photographs taken by Mathieu Rikard and Raphaele Demandre to inspire and encourage pilgrimage.

Thank you to Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche, Rabjam Rinpoche and everyone who made possible this extraordinary tour to all parts of the world ”

Lumbini

Shravasti

Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche at Sarnath

Sarnath

Nalanda, Rajgir

Vultures Peak, Rajgir

Stupa at Rajgir

Vashali

Vaishali Stupa

Bodhgaya

Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche Sarnath

Rinpoche with Flowers in Nepal

BStupa

In December 2010 Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, Jigme Khyentse Rinpoche and Tsikey Chokling Rinpoche lead a Barche Kunsel Drupchen at the sacred Asura Caves in Pharping, Nepal. Here are a few photos from Pawo Choyning Dorji’s gallery of this time.

Dzongsar Khyentse, Jigme Khyentse and Tsikey Chokling photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

Dzongsar Khyentse, Jigme Khyentse and Tsikey Chokling photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

Flowers on the last day of the drupchen photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

And more blessings photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

Bodhanath Stupa photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

O Guru Rap Story

Dudjom Rinpoche and Alex

By Alex Swanson

In October 2010 I traveled to India with my wife Lindy (Star) to attend a Samantabhadra Aspirations Monlam prayer festival at Bodhgaya being held by Dzongzar Khyentse RInpoche. We stayed on in Bodhgaya after it finished, for another ten days before traveling to Varanasi.

On the day before leaving for Varanasi I went with a friend on pilgrimage to Vulture Peak, the place where the Buddha taught the Prajna Paramita Sutras as I wished to recite the Heart Sutra there. On our way home we also visited Nalanda University and finally returned to Bodhgaya in time to eat our evening meal at the Shechen Monastery restaurant, (the spinach and cheese pastries are highly recommended). While sitting at the restaurant a friend mentioned they were going for a walk with a young Rinpoche and asked if a few of us would like to join. I eagerly took the opportunity and went with them.  First we walked up to the Mahabodhi stupa and then made circumambulation (kora) together with Dudjom Yangsi Rinpoche.

It turned out that Rinpoche and I were both there to complete 100,000 prostrations, and so I asked if I may join him. He was very supportive and encouraging and from the next day we began prostrating next to one another.  Later after Star and I had completed our pilgrimage to Varanasi, she went returned to Australia, and I went back to Bodhgaya and started prostrating.

The sessions consisted of one from 4 to 9am and another from 3 to 6 pm. During the morning session I would sit and drink tea with Rinpoche, his teacher and two attendants. We would sit and chat and exchange English and Tibetan lessons.

One day Rinpoche suggested we should write a rap song together about prostrating. We played around with a few ideas over the next two weeks but did not think much of it.

One day Rinpoche mentioned it again and while I walked home I started to compose a song, and wrote down the lyrics over breakfast porridge when I arrived home after the morning session. This resulted in more than half of the song’s lyrics. Two days later we got together and recorded the first part of the song.  It was a fun productive time.

A week later I dreamt of Rinpoche, where he told me we would finish the rap in two days time. The next day I related to him the dream?

The following day we were rained off the prostration boards and so together wrote the rest of the lyrics and recorded and finished the whole rap song. I was amazed? that within 30 mins of completing the rap I started to feel quite sick, becoming bed ridden for about 5 days with a gastric bug.

Anyway, the result is an audio recording of the song attached here, along with the lyrics. We both hoped it would inspire others in their practice, specifically in their prostrations. The song is funny? and light hearted. I hope you enjoy it.

I would particularly like to thank Rinpoche for his inspiration, collaboration and especially his Blessing!

Dudjom Rinpoche & Alex photo: Alex Swanson







Click here to hear the O Guru Rap

and follow the lyrics!

O Guru Rap Lyrics

As I wake up in the morning

Exhaustion exposes me

To my insanity and insecurities

I do not know where I am going or what I need to do

All I know is that I’ll do my best to follow my Guru

So I get out of my bed

I use my hands they’re sore

I try to bend my knees but the skin on them’s too raw

The muscles in my arms are aching even more

And those in my legs are so sore it’s a chore

To even walk out of my room let alone down those stairs

That will lead me to the path that will get me there

I get up and leave my house

The dogs are chasing me

I walk swiftly down the path

To the Maha Bodhi

Lying down on my board

I slide forward in prayer

With all other sentient beings

We prostrate with great care

The refuge tree is here

And the guardians too

I think deeply of you and I pray to you too

O Guru O Guru

Enlighten me and all sentient beings too

O Guru O Guru

I do not want samsara or nirvana, unite the two

O Guru O Guru

I offer myself and my obstacles too

O Guru O Guru

I pray to you now until my face is blue

Being blessed with this life

Being healthy and strong

Yet understanding that this life

is not destined to last long

My past actions are flaws

And they result in the cause

Of unbelievable pain

As all phenomena change

I read in my text that I am going to hell

I’ll be reborn as a pig or my belly will swell

My neck will be too small to eat anything

And all there’ll be to do is more suffering

And so whatever it takes

Or even if my back breaks

Or my limbs no longer bend

I’ll put my faith in a friend

To take me beyond all words

With mind pervading all worlds

Manifesting wherever

Any dualism occurs

O Guru O Guru

Enlighten me and all sentient beings too

O Guru O Guru

I do not want samsara or nirvana, unite the two

O Guru O Guru

I offer myself and my obstacles too

O Guru O Guru

I pray to you now until my face is blue

One day of prostrations later

I’m feeling healthy and strong

I’ve purified some obstacles

Including smoking the bong

My mind is moving in time

It is beginning to shine

And this allows me to see

The truth of insanity

It is full of delusion

Manifesting illusion

But now I have a solution

Providing deep realization

Buddha’s infinite wisdom

And all pervading compassion

Enlightenment beyond suffering

Is the source of all things

O Guru O Guru

Enlighten me and all sentient beings too

O Guru O Guru

I do not want samsara or nirvana, unite the two

O Guru O Guru

I offer myself and my obstacles too

O Guru O Guru

I pray to you now until my face is blue

A Warrior Song by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche

Taksang

May the great revolutionary banner

May the great revolutionary banner

Blow in the wind of peace,

May it blow in the wind of karma.

May it blow in the wind of fearlessness.

One’s own mind is revolutionized:

There is no need to conquer others.

Like the warriors of ancient times

Going to war by imperial command,

Like seasoned masters of the martial arts,

We will destroy the fortress of erroneous thinking.

We will no longer tolerate the confused way of life

Controlled by the imperial forces of materialism,

Since these forces may snatch away

The freedom of human dignity.

One must first give up the ego

And enter the war with one’s mind.

That is the first step to freedom.

But we will never be free

By following the voice of desire.

Liberation is only gained

By treading the path of what is.

September 1968

Bhutan

Message from Taksang photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

SI Australia

DJKR3

Nine days of teaching with Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche

“Buddha Nature and Vajrayāna” 13th-21st May, 2011

Bangalow, NSW, Australia

Please click here to go the SI Australia Site for further infomation on the teachings

and other updates.

Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche

Timeless Tashiding

Mt. Kanchenjunga from Tashiding Gonpa

Noa Jones

Feb 2011
In September, Rinpoche posted a message on the SI Web site warning people who might be thinking to following him on his pilgrimages to Bodhgaya and Sikkim:

“Here in India, worlds like “delay”, “cancellation”, “confirmation”, “cleanliness”, “no problem,” “yes” and “no” all have different meanings. And in fact, if you learn how to appreciate those different definitions, you will find that this is what makes this part of the world magical. So, people who are wishing to come from the first world expecting their toilet will flush, and a hot shower, who are married to, the whole principal of no trespassing, who value individual rights and personal space, might as well just look at pictures, preferably black and white and especially taken by Cartier Bresson and Raghu Rai.”

Attending the drupchen in Tashiding, Sikkim was part practice, part pilgrimage and part adventure. About 20 of Rinpoche’s Bhutanese, Tibetan and Sikkimese students attended the ten-day drupchen and another ninety came from other parts of the world. Tashiding Gonpa is remote and even when one drives—and if one makes it through the road blocks and striking protesters—there is a good 10 to 15 minute walk up a set of stairs to arrive at its gates. People scrambled to find housing near the top but the higher one stayed, the more rustic the conditions became. People were shacking up in the strangest of places to be closer to the action. The action being a red hot drupchen, Lhatsun Namka Jigme’s Ridgin Songdrup, in a very cold temple.

Tashiding landscape and Farmhouse

Like all sangha gatherings, there were exuberant reunions with old friends and lots of new connections made. And of course the restrained clamour for the guru’s attention. He appeared, but always seemingly just out of reach, emerging from the mist, disappearing, giving scant moment of his precious time to as many people as possible before moving on with the enigmatic grace of his. And as the days progressed, as we all became grimy and exhausted, he only seemed to become more luminous.

It rained for days and then hail, the likes of which a 17-year resident had never seen, came crashing down on the temple roof on one sunny cold day. Most days were cold, though sometimes hot. The nights were frigid and in the sky the moon waxed from half to full. We asked if there was a reason the drupchen landed on these particular dates. Did it have to do with the moon? “Sometimes we check astrology for dates but this time we only checked Rinpoche’s schedule,” said Khenpo Sonam Tashi. The shivering masses, old friends, wanderers, court jesters, and royalty, engaged in all kinds of survival techniques, sharing supplies and telling stories, inviting romance, butting heads, and spending rollicking nights with that Sikkimese potion, tongba, in the parking lot below.

“No matter where we go, it’s the people we meet who create the ambience and character of a place and who inject it with a unique energy. A café becomes ‘cool’ or a ‘dive’ depending on the kind of people who hang out there; a rave party for three hundred over-60s and two teenagers is unlikely to involve much raving. It goes without saying that for people like us whose minds and perceptions aren’t very flexible, a holy site is made powerful by collective devotion and veneration, not wall-to-wall carpets.”

Fresh paint on old stone - Tashiding Gonpa

The real potion of the week, however, was the amrita, the mendrup, that was produced with the help of the monks from Pemayangse over the course of the ten days. Preparations had been underway for months prior to the drupchen, overseen by Khenpo Sonam Tashi. Substances were ordered and gotten from an expert in Kalingpong, others were brought from Rinpoche’s secret stash. “Mother pills” are required, just like starter is needed to make sourdough bread. These pills contain parts of pills that contain parts of pills that go all the way back to Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo’s days and with those came snow lion milk, herbal medicines, the eight substances, and so on. During the ten day drupchen, one day is spent preparing these substances, then three days is spent mixing the dry substances, and on the fifth day it is mixed with the mother pills and wet substances. This mix is placed into a large vase and the main practice begins. On the ninth day, the vase was opened and the mendrup is measured. Everyone was very pleased because there were clear signs that the substances had increased, which is the best result. Khenpo Sonam Tashi said that this means it “woke up” and that the worst case scenario is that it merely rots.

Stupa that Liberates upon Seeing - Lhatsun Namkha Jigme photo Sangpo Shresthra

Drupchens are magical, not least because of the chanting of the mantras must continue uninterrupted through the night. Not everyone signed up for all night shifts, although some signed up for almost all of them. Tshewang Dendup, the “hero” from Travellers & Magicians, became the hero of the night, taking it upon himself to make sure there were thermoses of tea and some biscuits to keep people awake. Sometimes only one or two people would show up and the pressure of the drupchen’s success lay on their shoulders, which was enough to keep them alert and chanting ! The mantras changed every few days to match the activity of the amrita production.

We were told plainly not to complain but by the fifth day, Tashi Colman was making the rounds in the shrine room, alerting people to the exact number of minutes and seconds until the drupchen would end (although there was a rumour that he may have been set up).

Rinpoche sat on the throne flanked by Thangthong Tulku, who is the reincarnation of Thangthong Gyalpo, the famous bridge maker.  Jamyang Gyeltshen, whom many students know from Sea to Sky Retreat Centre in Canada attended them both. Jamyang was in fine form, serving Rinpoche all kinds of crazy concoctions, and seemingly always going for elaborate costume changes between services. You never knew what he’d show up with at tea time, perfectly pressed espresso in a Tibetan robe, banana flambé in traditional Sikkimese dress, paan in a tracksuit, all variety of chili pastes. Rinpoche seemed amused.

And Rinpoche was more than just amused by the westerners that came to the drupchen. He made a point of praising the effort they put into making the drupchen a success. He even went so far as to say they “saved” it. This was a surprise for some of the monks who were unaccustomed to foreigners participating in such rituals. “In the end they learned a lot,” said Khenpo Sonam Tashi about the monks, “and they were very happy.”

Stupa of Choki Lodro at Tashiding Gompa

Rinpoche noted that the very first empowerment he ever received after his enthronement was from Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, the Lama Gongdu. It took place right there in Tashiding, in the room that was now used for cold storage. It was also here that Dzongsar Khyentse Chokyi Lodro was cremated in 1959. Several of Jamyang Khyentse Chokyi Lodro’s close students were key coordinators of the drupchen. If one wasn’t made aware of these men, they might have seemed like any other old codgers fetching thermoses of tea and making sure things were running smooth. “Butter tea or sweet?” We asked them. And they pointed and poured with a smile. But these were the very same men, his carpenter and his cowherd, who travelled with Chokyi Lodro from Derge, witnessing miracles and mastery along the way.

Khenpo Sonam Tashi, Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, Orgyen Tobgyal Rinpoche and Thangthong Tulku on the last day at Tashiding

After the drupchen, a smaller group of students followed Rinpoche to Ghezing (Geyshing) where Rinpoche did a fire puja and hosted two bonfires to burn loads of his old possessions so that he could clear way for the new abbot of the Gonpa there. He saved a few things, his Bee Gees record, a tea set from his teens, and of course his pechas, but suitcases full of clothes and books went up in flames while his students sang and danced around the flames.

For the two weeks following the drupchen, the nine monks who had come from Rinpoche’s Chokyi Gyatsho Institute (Dewathang, Bhutan), remained in Tashiding to roll the mendrup into pills, which will be saved for special occasions. Seeing what goes into the production gave many of those who attended the drupchen a new appreciation for precious pills. Many participants are now back at home with their hot showers and routines, some kept going on the pilgrim path. But all took a little shining memory of Tashiding with them that can be lit up or forgotten, clung to, used, misremembered. It doesn’t really matter. As Rinpoche said in “ What to Do in the Holy Sites of India”:

What exactly is the right motivation for going on a pilgrimage? At best, it is to develop wisdom, love, compassion, devotion and a genuine sense of renunciation (renunciation mind). So, as you set out, you should make the wish that your journey, one way or another, will continuously remind you of all of the great noble enlightened qualities of the Buddha, and that as a result you will accumulate merit and purify defilement.“

Noa Jones  – Feb 2011

Mt. Kanchenjunga from Tashiding Gonpa

Book Review – Now I Know

page 25 – 26

Introducing the “ Now I Know ” series of ebooks

by Sally Devorsine

Sally Devorsine is a young mum who many of us have met during our wanderings in India and Bhutan. Sally had the great good  fortune to have been the English teacher to Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche when Rinpoche was a young boy.

Sally, Yann and Anwen

I meet Sally, her husband Yann and little daughter Anwen in Tashiding. They had just completed the Indian leg of the world wide visit by Yangsi Khyentse Rinpoche. Their display as an authentic young Dharma family is inspiring and we can all look forward to seeing Anwen grow into someone who will help bring the Dharma to others just as her mother Sally has done. They are now back in Bhutan , playing , painting and awaiting the spring.

The ” Now I Know “ series is a unique and vibrant group of books for children written and illustrated by Sally and they have been endorsed by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Matthieu Ricard .

Based on the one – thousand year old eight verse mind training of Geshe Langri Thangpa, which has never before been translated for children, they delightfully combine ethics, wisdom and sense of humour.

The “Now I Know” collection is for both parents and kids offering different methods of finding happiness for self and others!

Published by Chocolate Sauce, a new boutique brand of spiritually orientated books for children.

You can purchase these great little e books at www.chocolatesauce.org

Pages from the Now I Know series of Childrens Books from Chocolate Sauce Publishing






THE MIND TRAINING EIGHT VERSES

by Geshe Langri Thangpa

Wishing to attain enlightenment

For the sake of all beings,

Who excel even the Wish-fulfilling Jewel

May I cherish them all

Whenever I am with others

May I consider myself least important

And, from the depth of my heart,

Cherish all and hold them supreme.

In all activities, may I examine my mind

And as soon as conflicting emotions arise

Endangering myself and others

May I firmly face and avert them.

Whenever I see an evil being

Overwhelmed by intense negativity and suffering

May I cherish him as something rare

As if I’d chanced upon a priceless treasure.

When others out of envy

Mistreat me, with slander and abuse

May I take defeat upon myself

And offer the triumph to others.

When someone whom I’ve helped

With much hope and expectation

Hurts me, deeply and unjustifiably

May I regard him as my sublime master.

In short, may I directly and indirectly

Offer happiness and Peace to all my mothers.

All their evil and suffering

May I secretly take upon myself.

In all this may my mind be unstained

By the eight ordinary concerns

And know all things to be illusion

Free of clinging, may I release all beings from bondage.

Pages from the Now I Know series of Childrens Books from Chocolate Sauce Publishing

Pages from the Now I Know series of Childrens Books from Chocolate Sauce Publishing

Spring thru Late Summer

By Zeljka Jovanovic

The oldest one within me is the little girl
covered with layers of life
now already a bit wrinkled

The outer, visible skin
although the last one that appeared
is the newest, the freshest.
I am repeatedly surprised to see her in the mirror

I see them all
They all become beautiful through love

The Sleeping Beauty

awaits a wake up call
meanwhile
sitting quietly, doing nothing.


Oh, I thought I stopped writing poems
Oh I thought the well had dried up!
But one little message from “Gentle Voice Dateless and Desperate”
gently reminded me
saying
“Next issue of GV… if you wish… short amusing bio…”
and so words were formed:

Breathing Ganges

Ganges

Sonam Palden

Varanasi

After passing a procession of dead bodies in bustling traffic at the market , a friend and I entered the ghat in Varanasi, and were thronged by people selling lamps and flowers for offering, caged birds and fish for releasing. Everything seemed to happen all at once and in no time, we were sitting on a wobbly boat on the river Ganges with the vendors carrying buckets of fish and pigeons still wrung by their neck. The Ganges stood still, almost colourless in the afternoon light and the dipping sound of the oars in the water seemed to hark of another existence, much more raw and agile, and so the title “Breathing Ganges”.

Breathing Ganges photo Sonam Palden

Lotus Outreach

Lotus Outreach

A Heartfelt Partnership

By Glenn Fawcett

26/01/2011
Pammy Croci asked Lotus Outreach for a short update to publish in the Gentle Voice and I thought it would be nice to tell you more about Lotus Outreaches growing relationship with a relatively new organisation, Buddhist Global Relief (BGR). BGR is also dedicated to alleviating the suffering of the poor and disadvantaged in the developing world.

BGR was founded by a Buddhist scholar-monk, Ven.Bhikkhu Bodhi, as a response to his views that, “the narrowly inward focus of American Buddhism, had been pursued to the neglect of the active dimension of Buddhist compassion expressed through programs of social engagement.” This view is precisely the basis on which Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche founded what was originally, White Lotus, out of which Lotus Outreach was eventually born.

We of course loved the idea of working with BGR from the outset and quickly found common ground for their funding support in our Girls Access To Education (GATE) scholarship programs across Cambodia. This work is through the medium of rice support for the poorest families whose girls are vulnerable to dropping out of school and therefore to the real and present danger of being trafficked, due to the most extreme poverty. Our relationship deepens as we continue to find other areas of common interest. BGR is now supporting small business training and startup funds for Peer educators from our Safe Migration and Reduction of Trafficking program at Poipet on the Thai Cambodian border.

Altogether, BGR is partnering LO to deliver food security elements through several LO programs including provision of agricultural tools, seeds for crops and profitable home gardens in rural Pursat. Other programs are nutrition education and food preparation training programs for sex workers, vulnerable children such as the orphaned, from single parents and those living with HIV AIDS.

As secular organisations which have grown from the same ideal we obviously have a lot in common, so it’s sure this ‘heartfelt partnership’ will be a long and happy one.

Growing, Selling and Sharing under the guidance of Lotus Outreach and Buddhist Global Relief projects

Deer Park Institute

welcome

The Spirit of Nalanda continues…

By Melitis Kwong

Deer Park Institute is a centre for study of classical Indian wisdom traditions. The Institute’s core vision is to re-create the spirit of Nalanda, a great university of ancient India where all traditions of Buddhism were studied and practiced, alongside other schools of classical Indian philosophy, arts and science.

Interfaith Meetings with His Holiness Dalai Lama photo Jennifer Yo

Deer Park Institute’s campus is situated on the former site of Dzongsar Institute, a well respected Tibetan Buddhist college. When Dzongsar Institute moved to its new site in Chauntra, Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche transformed the campus into a centre with a new vision.

In remembrance of the Buddha’s first teachings at the historical Deer Park (Mriga Dava) in Sarnath, where the Buddha displayed a spirit of open inquiry into the nature of mind, existence and suffering without any bias, Dzongsar  Khyentse Rinpoche named the new (centre) institute “Deer Park”.

Since opening in March 2006, the Institute has hosted teachings by great masters of all lineages of Tibetan Buddhism including Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, Sakya Trizin Rinpoche, Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche, Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo, Geshe Lakdor ….  Deer Park in the spirit of inclusiveness also runs courses and retreats in the Zen and Theravada traditions within Buddhism and courses on other classical Indian philosophy such as Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras and Kashmiri Shaivism, which have recently been integrated into the program.  This year (2011) Deer Park launched a series of Tibetan language courses and translation workshops, providing an exciting new dimension to the Institute’s academic curriculum.

The principal vision of Deer Park is to create a welcoming, safe and open-minded place of learning. Students from all over the world visit and attend programs, sharing their knowledge and experience. The atmosphere is intimate and friendly. A youthful kitchen staff prepares simple, healthy, delicious vegetarian food. The office staff includes young interns from different Asian countries.

Clowning in the Himalayas photo Jennifer Yo

Deer Park welcomes students, laypeople and wisdom seekers to attend their programs. Most of the programs are free of charge and the language of instruction is English.The Institute’s programs are not advertised extensively, relying instead on ‘word of mouth’. People, who have come to know about its existence, appreciate its non-sectarian approach as upheld by Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche. The dining area often becomes the centre for activities with lively discussions and exchanges. The campus has a number of meditation halls that are the venues for different activities, from meditation and ecology workshops to film screenings. The Institute can accommodate up to 65 or 70 people in single rooms with attached bathrooms; double rooms with shared bathrooms and the dormitory.

Communities bond on the steps of Deer Park photo Jennifer Yo

One feature of the Institute’s activities is its commitment to ecological sustainability. Deer Park has organized workshops and conferences on environmental issues, preserving local culture and sustainable livelihoods with courses held in the Institute as well as in local schools. To disseminate awareness of these issues, informative documentaries and printed materials have also been produced. Since 2009, Deer Park Institute has been invited by the Himachal Pradesh (HP) Government (the local state government) to advise on zero waste and has received an Appreciation Award.

Deer Park is located in Himachal Pradesh , within the Bir Tibetan colony at the foothill of the Himalayas.  Set in an idyllic landscape, Deer Park is surrounded by hills, namely the Dhauladhar range, and rice fields. On a sunny day, students and guests can take an hour’s walk to visit Dzongsar Institute in the nearby town of Chauntra, or walk through the rice fields to Sherabling Monastery (Situ Rinpoche’s monastery). In Bir village itself you can visit four other monasteries, all within ten minute’s walk. There are other holy places of the Hindu and Buddhist traditions nearby such as Tso Pema where Guru Rinpoche displayed miracles and practiced in the caves or the ancient temple of Baijnath.  For students keen on outdoor adventure, one can hike up the hill from Deer Park to a waterfall or simply take a thirty-minute stroll to the Upper Bir village.

Lunchtime with Rinpoche at Deer Park Institute photo Jennifer Yo

With Dharamsala becoming more crowded as tourists flock to this famous Tibetan settlement, home of H.H. Dalai Lama, many long-term Dharma students are attracted to the spaciousness and tranquillity of Deer Park and its surroundings.  Although, over the past ten years more hotels and restaurants have been established in Bir, it still retains its charm as a small village with its monasteries against the backdrop of the magnificent Dhauladhar range.

You can travel to Deer Park by air, train or bus from Delhi. It’s a long journey but once you arrive you’ll appreciate the fresh air and the serene countryside. As you walk up the hill towards the Institute, the friendly staff or our friendly dogs, the majestic temple and the clean surroundings of the campus will welcome you. You can then sip a cup of “Chai”, taste homemade cookies from the Deer Park café, visit the temples, browse through the expansive library and sit back and enjoy your stay at Deer Park.

It is through Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche’s vast vision, and the dedication of the staff and volunteers, that Deer Park Institute came into being. May this endeavour be auspicious and enable the precious Dharma to spread and benefit all beings.

For detailed information on Deer Park programs and other related information, please check the web site www.deerpark.in

For further inquires on program registration and room booking, please write to: info@deerpark.in

Welcome to Bir photo Pawo Choyning Dorji

84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha

84000

HAPPY LOSAR!

On this auspicious new year, we’re happy to share with you our new name

84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha

and our new web address

http://84000.co

We look forward to your continued support, and may you have a fulfilling year ahead!

Sincerely from 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha

(formerly known as Buddhist Literary Heritage Project, BLHP)

84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha new web site

Peace Vase Project

Peacevase

Interview with Pema Biddha

By Pamela Croci

Recently while passing through Delhi I recorded an interview with Pema Biddha, the coordinator for the Peace Vase Project. Pema told me that the response from the call out for volunteers was fantastic.

“ So many people emailed us, with lots of enthusiasm but because we couldn’t have immediate action they vanished. However there were some that really helped. One of them is Tineke Adolphus. Tineke! Wow! I think if we were to give out a medal she would be the one who gets it. She planted many vases and is going to complete the Swedish allocation.”

Pema went on to tell me that we still need volunteers to come back to help.

“ Africa is a country where we need people. We have a volunteer there Robyn Sheldon and it looks like she has a team but some vases are stuck in other places. Also we need vases planted in North East India, in places like Assam, Nagaland, Punjab and Kolkata, a few in South India, some in Iraq, Iran, Israel. Plus we need people to carry vases to different places within countries and other countries”

If anyone has connections in any of these places please get in touch with Pema and she will put you in touch with other volunteers in the relevant area.

Email : pema@siddharthasintent.org

Pema acknowledges that some planting of vases have not been registered on the website . Pema would like to apologise, to those whose kindness in placing vases,  often in  remote and challanging parts of the world, has not been registered on the website. Pema told me that a new website was being constructed and that these omissions will be corrected.

NB If you have been involved in planting a vase, and it is not registered on the current website please email her with details e.g. Many vases were planted in France, in fact they were the first to be planted, but information has been mislaid.

Please check the website and see if you can help. 2011 is the 20th year of this project and it would be very beneficial to have the Peace Vase Project completed.

Click here to go to the Peace Vase Project

A 2636 km whirlwind went through Sweden and found homes for 12 Peace Vases credit Tineke Adolphus

A view in Ladakh

6

A pilgrimage to Phokar Guru Dzong, Guru Rinpoche Caves in Ladakh, June 2010 by Sarah Mist and Sangpo Shrestha

Small Gompa near Pokar photo Sarah Mist

200m steep walk through glacial water and snow... intense! photo Sangpo Shrestha

Caves from a distance photo Sangpo Shrestha

Entrance photo Sangpo Shrestha

View from Guru Rinpoche Cave photo Sarah Mist