Willa Baker: Difference between revisions
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==Short description== | ==Short description== | ||
Zach Larson is a practitioner in the [[Longchen | Zach Larson is a practitioner in the [[Longchen Nyingthig]] lineage of the Nyingma School and an aspiring translator and author. He was born in 1978 in Wisconsin and received a BA in "Buddhism and Politics" at UW-Madison in 2001 after a year-long study abroad program in Kathmandu, Nepal in which he met his first teacher, [[Changling Tulku Rinpoche]] of Shechen Monastery, with whom he studied the Longchen Nyinthig preliminaries for six months. While working on the research project "Nonviolence in Tibetan Culture: A glimpse at how Tibetans view and practice nonviolence in politics and daily life," he met and received profound blessings from [[Chatral Rinpoche]] and offered to compilie and translate teachings by him in the coming years. Chatral Rinpoche approved of the idea, and Larson returned to Wisconsin to study Tibetan language and Buddhism for three years at the UW-Madison Graduate School. He returned to Nepal in 2004 and compiled, edited and translated Chatral Rinpoche's biography and teachings into the book "Compassionate Action: the teachings of Chatral Rinpoche," which was published by [[Shechen Publications]] in New Delhi in 2005. | ||
Larson attended the full [[Nyingma Kama Wang]] with [[Trulshik Rinpoche]] in the winter of 2004 in Boudha and received the [[Kunsang Lama'i Shelung]] empowerment from [[Tsetrul Rinpoche]] in January 2005. It was there he met his root teacher, Shyalpa Rinpoche, with whom he currently studies with in New York. | Larson attended the full [[Nyingma Kama Wang]] with [[Trulshik Rinpoche]] in the winter of 2004 in Boudha and received the [[Kunsang Lama'i Shelung]] empowerment from [[Tsetrul Rinpoche]] in January 2005. It was there he met his root teacher, Shyalpa Rinpoche, with whom he currently studies with in New York. |
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Short description
Zach Larson is a practitioner in the Longchen Nyingthig lineage of the Nyingma School and an aspiring translator and author. He was born in 1978 in Wisconsin and received a BA in "Buddhism and Politics" at UW-Madison in 2001 after a year-long study abroad program in Kathmandu, Nepal in which he met his first teacher, Changling Tulku Rinpoche of Shechen Monastery, with whom he studied the Longchen Nyinthig preliminaries for six months. While working on the research project "Nonviolence in Tibetan Culture: A glimpse at how Tibetans view and practice nonviolence in politics and daily life," he met and received profound blessings from Chatral Rinpoche and offered to compilie and translate teachings by him in the coming years. Chatral Rinpoche approved of the idea, and Larson returned to Wisconsin to study Tibetan language and Buddhism for three years at the UW-Madison Graduate School. He returned to Nepal in 2004 and compiled, edited and translated Chatral Rinpoche's biography and teachings into the book "Compassionate Action: the teachings of Chatral Rinpoche," which was published by Shechen Publications in New Delhi in 2005.
Larson attended the full Nyingma Kama Wang with Trulshik Rinpoche in the winter of 2004 in Boudha and received the Kunsang Lama'i Shelung empowerment from Tsetrul Rinpoche in January 2005. It was there he met his root teacher, Shyalpa Rinpoche, with whom he currently studies with in New York.
Main teachers
Shyalpa Rinpoche, Lama Wangdu Rinpoche, Changling Tulku Rinpoche
Published Works
Compassionate Action: The teachings of Chatral Rinpoche (2005) New Delhi: Shechen Publications. Edited with Commentary by Zach Larson. ISBN 81-7472-123-1
Active Projects
Compassionate Action: The teachings of Chatral Rinpoche. (expanded and updated version). To be published by Snow Lion Publications in Spring of 2006.
Unpublished Works (completed)
"Nonviolence in Tibetan Culture: A glimpse at how Tibetans view and practice nonviolence in politics and daily life."
Internal Links
External Links
"Nonviolence in Tibetan Culture" available at: http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/Buddhism/BuddhismAnimalsVegetarian/VegMeatTibet.htm
Review of "Compassionate Action" at: http://www.veggiedharma.org/wst_page6.html
Email: zpariah29@yahoo.com