Patrul Rinpoche: Difference between revisions

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'''Patrül Rinpoche''', Jigmé Chökyi Wangpo (Tib: dpal sprul 'jigs med chos kyi dbang po) 1808-1887
[[Image:13_jigme_choki_wangpo.jpg|frame|Dza Paltrul Orgyen Jigme Chokyi Wangpo]]
 
<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[དཔལ་སྤྲུལ་འཇིགས་མེད་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་པོ།]]</span></noinclude><br>
Patrül Rinpoche was born in the Dzachuka valley of Eastern Tibet. Although he is generally considered to have been the speech incarnation of the great tertön [[Jigme Lingpa]], Patrül Rinpoche was originally recognized as an incarnation of Palgé Tülku, a lama from Dzogchen Monastery. The first [[Dodrupchen Rinpoche]], one of Jigme Lingpa's two main disciples, entrusted young Patrül with the [[Longchen Nyingthik]] lineage shortly after the recognition. He practiced, studied, and taught this lineage throughout his life.
[[dpal sprul 'jigs med chos kyi dbang po]]<br>
 
<big>'''[[Paltrul Orgyen Jigme Chokyi Wangpo]]'''</big><br>
===Short Biography===
'''Dza Paltrül Rinpoche''' (1808-1887), was born in the Dzachuka valley of Eastern Tibet. Although he is generally considered to have been the speech incarnation of the great tertön [[Jigme Lingpa]], Patrül Rinpoche was originally recognized as an incarnation of Palgé Tülku, a lama from Dzogchen Monastery. The first [[Dodrupchen Rinpoche]], one of Jigme Lingpa's two main disciples, entrusted young Patrül with the [[Longchen Nyingthik]] lineage shortly after the recognition. He practiced, studied, and taught this lineage throughout his life.
[[Image:Patrul_Rinpoche.jpg|frame|The Great Bodhisattva Dza Paltrul Rinpoche]]
Patrül Rinpoche studied with many different masters. His two main teachers, however, were Jigmé Lingpa's second main disciple, [[Jigme Gyalwe Nyugu]], and the great tantric yogi [[Do Khyentse Yeshe Dorje]], the mind incarnation of Jigmé Lingpa. Under these and other important lamas, he studied a vast array of topics, from the foundational teachings of the Hinayana up to the most profound and secret oral instructions of the [[Great Perfection]].
Patrül Rinpoche studied with many different masters. His two main teachers, however, were Jigmé Lingpa's second main disciple, [[Jigme Gyalwe Nyugu]], and the great tantric yogi [[Do Khyentse Yeshe Dorje]], the mind incarnation of Jigmé Lingpa. Under these and other important lamas, he studied a vast array of topics, from the foundational teachings of the Hinayana up to the most profound and secret oral instructions of the [[Great Perfection]].


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In addition to the many stories of his life and exploits, which remain a much treasured part of Tibetan Buddhist lore, Patrül Rinpoche's writings have proven to be some of the most influential in recent history. His texts range from scholastic tomes on Mahayana philosophy to pithy poems on how to apply Buddhist principles in daily life. In particular, his text ''[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]'' (Tib: [[kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung]]), a commentary on the Great Perfection preliminary practices, is studied in all of Tibetan Buddhism's four main lineages. He also composed a profound commentary on [[The Three Words that Strike the Vital Point]], known in Tibetan as[[Tsigsum Nedek]].
In addition to the many stories of his life and exploits, which remain a much treasured part of Tibetan Buddhist lore, Patrül Rinpoche's writings have proven to be some of the most influential in recent history. His texts range from scholastic tomes on Mahayana philosophy to pithy poems on how to apply Buddhist principles in daily life. In particular, his text ''[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]'' (Tib: [[kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung]]), a commentary on the Great Perfection preliminary practices, is studied in all of Tibetan Buddhism's four main lineages. He also composed a profound commentary on [[The Three Words that Strike the Vital Point]], known in Tibetan as[[Tsigsum Nedek]].


Patrül Rinpoche's heart disciple was Lungtok Tenpé Nyima, who lived with him for twenty-eight years. His other disciples include some of the 19th century's most outstanding masters. Among them were Mipham Rinpoche, Khenpo Künpal, the 3rd Dodrupchen Rinpoche, the famed tertön and teacher of the 13th Dalai Lama Lerab Lingpa, and Adzom Drukpa. Patrül Rinpoche died at the age of 80. Patrül Rinpoche died at the age of 80.
Patrül Rinpoche's heart disciple was Lungtok Tenpé Nyima, who lived with him for twenty-eight years. His other disciples include some of the 19th century's most outstanding masters. Among them were Mipham Rinpoche, Khenpo Künpal, the 3rd Dodrupchen Rinpoche, the famed tertön and teacher of the 13th Dalai Lama Lerab Lingpa, and Adzom Drukpa. Patrül Rinpoche died at the age of 80.  
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*<br>
'''Please expand this page''' by pressing the '''edit''' tab above or consulting [[Sample Buddhist Teacher Info & Instructions]] for more details
<center><noinclude><span class=TibUni16>དཔལ་སྤྲུལ། ཕྱི་ལྟར་རྒྱལ་བའི་སྲས་པོ་ཞི་བ་ལྷ། །</span></noinclude></center>
----
<center>Outwardly, you are Shantideva, child of the Victorious Ones,</center>
<center><noinclude><span class=TibUni16>ནང་ལྟར་གྲུབ་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ཤ་བཱ་རི། །</span></noinclude></center>
<center>Inwardly, you are Shavaripa, the glorious saint,</center>
<center><noinclude><span class=TibUni16>གསང་བ་འཕགས་མཆོག་སྡུག་བསྔལ་རང་གྲོལ་དངོས། །</span></noinclude></center>
<center>Secretly, you are the real supreme Lord, self liberation of suffering (Chenrezig),</center>
<center><noinclude><span class=TibUni16>འཇིགས་མེད་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་པོར་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས།། །།</span></noinclude></center>
<center>Jigmé Chökyi Wangpo, to you I pray!</center>
===Literary Works===
===Literary Works===
See [[Writings of Patrul Rinpoche]]<br>
See [[Writings of Patrul Rinpoche]]<br>
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*[[fourth Dzogchen Rinpoche Mingyur Namkhe Dorje]]
*[[fourth Dzogchen Rinpoche Mingyur Namkhe Dorje]]
*[[Gyalse Zhenphen Thaye]]
*[[Gyalse Zhenphen Thaye]]
===Main Students===
===Main Students===
*[[Minyak Kunzang Sonam]]
*[[Lungtok Tenpe Nyima]]<br>
*[[Lungtok Tenpe Nyima]]<br>
*[[Mipham]]<br>
*[[Mipham Rinpoche]]<br>
*[[Khenpo Kunpal]]<br>
*[[Khenpo Kunpal]]<br>
*[[Dodrup Tenpe Nyima ]], the third [[Dodrupchen Rinpoche]]<br>
*[[Jigme Tenpe Nyima]]
*[[Lerab Lingpa]]<br>
*[[Lerab Lingpa]]<br>
*[[Adzom Drukpa]]<br>
*[[Adzom Drukpa]]<br>
===Main Lineages===
===Main Lineages===
*[[Longchen Nyingthig ]]<br>
*[[Nyingma Kama]]
 
*[[Konchok Chidu]]
*[[Nyingthig Yazhi]]
*[[Khandro Nyingthig]]
*[[Longchen Nyingthig]]<br>
===Alternate Names===
===Alternate Names===
*[[Jigme Chokyi Wangpo]]<br>
*[[Dza Patrul Rinpoche]]
*[[Jigme Chokyi Wangpo]]
*[[Palge Tulku]]<br>
*[[Palge Tulku]]<br>
===Other Reference===
*[[Tantric Practice in Nying-ma]] Another translation of of [[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]
*[[Kün-zang La-may Zhal-lung]] Another translation of of [[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]
*[http://groups.yahoo.com/group/patrul The Patrul Yahoo Group]


===Other Reference Sources===
===Internal Links===
*[[Fill in the blanks]]<br>
*[[Fill in the blanks]]<br>
===Internal Links===
*Add double-brackets "[[ ]]" around any relevant word or phrase and it will create a new page for that term or link to an already existing page
===External Links===
===External Links===
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id13.html Patrul Rinpoche Series on Lotsawa House]
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id13.html Patrul Rinpoche Series on Lotsawa House]
*[http://lotsawahouse.org/school/id43.html Index to Patrul Rinpoche's Collected Works on Lotsawa School]
*[http://lotsawahouse.org/school/id43.html Index to Patrul Rinpoche's Collected Works on Lotsawa School]
*[http://www.tbrc.org/cgi-bin/tbrcdatx?do=so&resource=P270 TBRC on Patrul Rinpoche]
*[http://www.tbrc.org/cgi-bin/tbrcdatx?do=so&resource=P270 TBRC on Patrul Rinpoche]
 
[[Category:Glossary]] [[Category:Key Terms]][[Category:Dictionary]][[Category:Rime Masters]][[Category:Buddhist Masters]][[Category:Nyingma Masters]][[Category:Dzogchen Masters]][[Category:Longchen Nyingthig Masters]]
[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]]
 
* http://groups.yahoo.com/group/patrul

Latest revision as of 14:39, 25 February 2009

Dza Paltrul Orgyen Jigme Chokyi Wangpo

དཔལ་སྤྲུལ་འཇིགས་མེད་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་པོ།
dpal sprul 'jigs med chos kyi dbang po
Paltrul Orgyen Jigme Chokyi Wangpo

Short Biography

Dza Paltrül Rinpoche (1808-1887), was born in the Dzachuka valley of Eastern Tibet. Although he is generally considered to have been the speech incarnation of the great tertön Jigme Lingpa, Patrül Rinpoche was originally recognized as an incarnation of Palgé Tülku, a lama from Dzogchen Monastery. The first Dodrupchen Rinpoche, one of Jigme Lingpa's two main disciples, entrusted young Patrül with the Longchen Nyingthik lineage shortly after the recognition. He practiced, studied, and taught this lineage throughout his life.

The Great Bodhisattva Dza Paltrul Rinpoche

Patrül Rinpoche studied with many different masters. His two main teachers, however, were Jigmé Lingpa's second main disciple, Jigme Gyalwe Nyugu, and the great tantric yogi Do Khyentse Yeshe Dorje, the mind incarnation of Jigmé Lingpa. Under these and other important lamas, he studied a vast array of topics, from the foundational teachings of the Hinayana up to the most profound and secret oral instructions of the Great Perfection.

At the age of twenty, Patrül Rinpoche left the residence of his predecessor and took up the life of a wandering hermit. For the rest of his days, Patrül wandered from mountain retreats to large monasteries, practicing the teachings, instructing students, and composing commentaries on important texts and practices. Though he was master of the Great Perfection teachings, he had a passion for teaching the Mahayana as well. He taught Shantideva's Bodhisattva-caryavatara over a hundred times. Throughout his life, Patrül Rinpoche demonstrated the impeccable life of a true siddha/scholar; he kept few possessions, had no fixed abode, and was often mistaken for a beggar due to his humble appearance.

In addition to the many stories of his life and exploits, which remain a much treasured part of Tibetan Buddhist lore, Patrül Rinpoche's writings have proven to be some of the most influential in recent history. His texts range from scholastic tomes on Mahayana philosophy to pithy poems on how to apply Buddhist principles in daily life. In particular, his text The Words of My Perfect Teacher (Tib: kun bzang bla ma'i zhal lung), a commentary on the Great Perfection preliminary practices, is studied in all of Tibetan Buddhism's four main lineages. He also composed a profound commentary on The Three Words that Strike the Vital Point, known in Tibetan asTsigsum Nedek.

Patrül Rinpoche's heart disciple was Lungtok Tenpé Nyima, who lived with him for twenty-eight years. His other disciples include some of the 19th century's most outstanding masters. Among them were Mipham Rinpoche, Khenpo Künpal, the 3rd Dodrupchen Rinpoche, the famed tertön and teacher of the 13th Dalai Lama Lerab Lingpa, and Adzom Drukpa. Patrül Rinpoche died at the age of 80.


དཔལ་སྤྲུལ། ཕྱི་ལྟར་རྒྱལ་བའི་སྲས་པོ་ཞི་བ་ལྷ། །
Outwardly, you are Shantideva, child of the Victorious Ones,
ནང་ལྟར་གྲུབ་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ཤ་བཱ་རི། །
Inwardly, you are Shavaripa, the glorious saint,
གསང་བ་འཕགས་མཆོག་སྡུག་བསྔལ་རང་གྲོལ་དངོས། །
Secretly, you are the real supreme Lord, self liberation of suffering (Chenrezig),
འཇིགས་མེད་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་པོར་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས།། །།
Jigmé Chökyi Wangpo, to you I pray!

Literary Works

See Writings of Patrul Rinpoche

Main Teachers

Main Students

Main Lineages

Alternate Names

Other Reference

Internal Links

External Links