Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Kushok Bakula Rinpoche"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:Bakula_Rinpoche-bb.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Bakula_Rinpoche-bb.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
[[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[སྐུཤོག་བ་ཀུ་ལ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ།]]}}) is nowadays the {{Wiki|head}} of [[Pethup Gompa]] in [[Spituk]], {{Wiki|Ladakh}}, [[India]]. He is an [[emanation]] of the [[Buddha]] [[Amitabha]] and was one of the 16 [[disciples]] of [[Gautama Buddha|Buddha]] (Naytan Chudrug, or the 16 [[Arhats]]). His first 19 [[incarnations]] have been documented in the [[Tibetan]] text [[Naytan Chagchot]] (Wylie: [[gNas hrtan phyag mchod]]).
+
[[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[སྐུཤོག་བ་ཀུ་ལ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ།]]}}) is nowadays the {{Wiki|head}} of [[Pethup Gompa]] in [[Spituk]], {{Wiki|Ladakh}}, [[India]]. He is an [[emanation]] of the [[Buddha]] [[Amitabha]] and was one of the 16 [[disciples]] of [[Gautama  
 +
 
 +
Buddha|Buddha]] (Naytan Chudrug, or the 16 [[Arhats]]). His first 19 [[incarnations]] have been documented in the [[Tibetan]] text [[Naytan Chagchot]] ([[Wylie]]: [[gNas hrtan phyag mchod]]).
 +
 
 +
 
  
 
==[[Name]]==
 
==[[Name]]==
 +
 +
 +
 
There are two different explanations for his [[name]].
 
There are two different explanations for his [[name]].
  
According to [[Tibetan]] chronicles, he was fond of doing [[meditation]] and praying and was very simple. After renouncing all wordly comforts he used pakula grass in his every day [[life]], especially as a sitting and [[sleeping]] mat..
+
According to [[Tibetan]] chronicles, he was fond of doing [[meditation]] and praying and was very simple. After renouncing all wordly comforts he used [[pakula]] grass in his every day [[life]], especially as a sitting and [[sleeping]] mat..
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The [[Manorathapurani]] and the [[Pali]] version of [[Milinda Panha]] maintain him as being born at [[Kaushambi]] in a minister's [[family]] and then having been swallowed by a {{Wiki|fish}} in the {{Wiki|Yamuna river}} that was later caught by an angler. The angler sold it to another
 +
 
 +
minister's wife, Upon cutting pen, the child was found unharmed and alive. The minister's wife adopted him. However, a dispute with his natural [[parents]], about who should take [[care]] of him was resolved by the [[king]], who judged that both should have custody of him. Thus, he became known as [[Dva Kula]] ([[Two Families]]).
 +
 
  
The [[Manorathapurani]] and the [[Pali]] version of [[Milinda Panha]] maintain him as being born at [[Kaushambi]] in a minister's family and then having been swallowed by a {{Wiki|fish}} in the {{Wiki|Yamuna river}} that was later caught by an angler. The angler sold it to another minister's wife, Upon cutting pen, the child was found unharmed and alive. The minister's wife adopted him. However, a dispute with his natural [[parents]], about who should take care of him was resolved by the [[king]], who judged that both should have custody of him. Thus, he became known as [[Dva Kula]] ([[Two Families]]).
 
  
 
==[[Incarnations]]==
 
==[[Incarnations]]==
 +
 +
  
 
*    2nd [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] – [[Tilopa]]
 
*    2nd [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] – [[Tilopa]]
Line 16: Line 37:
 
  [[Tilopa]]
 
  [[Tilopa]]
  
:    The second [[incarnation]] of [[Bakula]] was an [[Indian]] [[Mahasiddha]] [[Tilopa]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ཏི་ལོ་པ]]}}, Wylie: Ti lo pa), or [[Sherab Zangpo]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ཤེས་རབ་བཟང་པོ]]}}, Wylie: [[Shes rab bzang po]]) (Prajnabhadra). In [[order]] to spread the [[Buddha dharma]]. The [[king]] of [[Visnunagar]] [[offered]] [[Tilopa]], a learned [[guru]], 500 {{Wiki|gold}} coins a day, if he would [[live]] at his court. [[Tilopa]], however, wanted rather to [[live]] as a [[yogi]] and he quietly departed from the court and retreated near a cemetery to [[meditate]]. During that [[time]], [[Naropa]] came to serve him. And through the practice of the six famous [[yoga]] lams ([[paths]]) he attained the [[mahamudra]] [[siddhi]]. After preaching extensively, he entered the [[heavenly]] [[abode]] of [[Amitābha]] during his [[lifetime]].
+
:    The second [[incarnation]] of [[Bakula]] was an [[Indian]] [[Mahasiddha]] [[Tilopa]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ཏི་ལོ་པ]]}}, [[Wylie]]: [[Ti lo pa]]), or [[Sherab Zangpo]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ཤེས་རབ་བཟང་པོ]]}}, [[Wylie]]: [[Shes rab bzang po]]) ([[Prajnabhadra]]). In [[order]] to spread the  
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[Buddha dharma]]. The [[king]] of [[Visnunagar]] [[offered]] [[Tilopa]], a learned [[guru]], 500 {{Wiki|gold}} coins a day, if he would [[live]] at his court. [[Tilopa]], however, wanted rather to [[live]] as a [[yogi]] and he quietly departed from the court and retreated near  
 +
 
 +
 
 +
a [[cemetery]] to [[meditate]]. During that [[time]], [[Naropa]] came to serve him. And through the practice of the six famous [[yoga]] lams ([[paths]]) he [[attained]] the [[mahamudra]] [[siddhi]]. After preaching extensively, he entered the [[heavenly]] [[abode]] of [[Amitābha]] during his [[lifetime]].
  
 
*    3rd [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] – [[Luipa]]
 
*    3rd [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]] – [[Luipa]]
Line 22: Line 49:
 
  [[Luipa]]
 
  [[Luipa]]
  
:    The third [[incarnation]] of [[Bakula]] [[manifested]] as the [[Indian]] [[Mahasiddha]] [[Luipa]] (Wylie: Laa wa pa). He abandoned his {{Wiki|kingdom}} in [[Sri Lanka]] and journeyed to Ramesvaram, where he became a [[Bhikkhu]]. A [[Dakini]] at [[Dorje]] Dan ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན]]}}, Wylie: [[rDo rje gdan]]) ([[Bodh Gaya]]) revealed to him an [[upaya]] for realising [[Buddhahood]] -- and in this way he continued practising for many years in a cemetery. [[Dakinis]] at {{Wiki|Pataliputra}} further instructed him to remove his {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|pride}} about the [[purity]] of [[foods]], after which he sat in [[meditation]] for twelve years near [[river]] [[Ganges]], where he lived on the minute guts of {{Wiki|fish}} rejected by the fishermen
+
 
 +
:    The third [[incarnation]] of [[Bakula]] [[manifested]] as the [[Indian]] [[Mahasiddha]] [[Luipa]] ([[Wylie]]: Laa wa pa). He abandoned his {{Wiki|kingdom}} in [[Sri Lanka]] and journeyed to [[Ramesvaram]], where he became a [[Bhikkhu]]. A [[Dakini]] at [[Dorje]] Dan ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན]]}}, [[Wylie]]: [[rDo rje gdan]]) ([[Bodh Gaya]]) revealed to him an [[upaya]] for realising [[Buddhahood]] -- and in this way  
 +
 
 +
he continued practising for many years in a [[cemetery]]. [[Dakinis]] at {{Wiki|Pataliputra}} further instructed him to remove his {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|pride}} about the [[purity]] of [[foods]], after which he sat in [[meditation]] for twelve years near [[river]] [[Ganges]], where he lived on the minute guts of {{Wiki|fish}} rejected by the fishermen
 +
 
 +
 
 
[[File:I_es.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:I_es.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 
*    4th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
*    4th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
Line 30: Line 62:
 
*    5th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
*    5th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
  
:    The fifth [[incarnation]] was [[Aryasura]] ([[Lopon Pawo]], Wylie: [[sLob dpon dpa' bo]]), the [[disciple]] of [[Nagarjuna]] ([[Gonbo Ludup]], Wylie: [[mGon po klu grub]]).
+
 
 +
:    The fifth [[incarnation]] was [[Aryasura]] ([[Lopon Pawo]], [[Wylie]]: [[sLob dpon dpa' bo]]), the [[disciple]] of [[Nagarjuna]] ([[Gonbo Ludup]], [[Wylie]]: [[mGon po klu grub]]).
 +
 
  
 
*    6th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
*    6th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
  
:    The sixth [[incarnation]] was [[Gyalwa Chogyangs]], (Wylie: [[rGyal ba mchog dbyangs]]), one of [[Lopon Padma's]] [[twenty-five disciples]].
+
:    The sixth [[incarnation]] was [[Gyalwa Chogyangs]], ([[Wylie]]: [[rGyal ba mchog dbyangs]]), one of [[Lopon Padma's]] [[twenty-five disciples]].
 +
 
  
 
*    7th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
*    7th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
  
:    The seventh [[incarnation]] was [[Ratna Udam]] ([[Nyamet Rinchen Chondus]], Wylie: [[mNyam med rin[chen brtson 'grus]]), the [[disciple]] of [[Kasdup Kyungpo]], (Wylie: [[mKhas grub 'khyung po]]).  
+
:    The seventh [[incarnation]] was [[Ratna Udam]] ([[Nyamet Rinchen Chondus]], [[Wylie]]: [[mNyam med rin[chen brtson 'grus]]), the [[disciple]] of [[Kasdup Kyungpo]], ([[Wylie]]: [[mKhas grub 'khyung po]]).  
 +
 
  
 
* 8th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
* 8th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
: The eighth [[incarnation]], was [[Yeshe Dzin]], [[dharmaguru]] of [[King]] [[Gedun Bang]].
 
: The eighth [[incarnation]], was [[Yeshe Dzin]], [[dharmaguru]] of [[King]] [[Gedun Bang]].
 +
  
 
* 9th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
* 9th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
: [[Rinchen Sangpo|Lotsawa Rinchen Sangpo]], 954 - 1055.
 
: [[Rinchen Sangpo|Lotsawa Rinchen Sangpo]], 954 - 1055.
 +
 
* 10th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
* 10th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
: The tenth [[incarnation]], was [[Geshe Chagpa Thrichog]] of the [[Kadmapa]] [[tradition]].
 
: The tenth [[incarnation]], was [[Geshe Chagpa Thrichog]] of the [[Kadmapa]] [[tradition]].
Line 54: Line 92:
  
 
*  13th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
*  13th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
: [[Drupchen Choskyi Dorje]] ([[Mahasiddha]] [[Dharmavajra]]) was the pupil of [[Basco Chokyi Gyaltsen]] (Dharmadhvaja).
+
: [[Drupchen Choskyi Dorje]] ([[Mahasiddha]] [[Dharmavajra]]) was the pupil of [[Basco Chokyi Gyaltsen]] ([[Dharmadhvaja]]).
  
 
* 14th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]
 
* 14th [[Incarnation]] of [[Kushok Bakula Rinpoche]]

Latest revision as of 20:48, 18 April 2024

Bakula Rinpoche-bb.jpg




Kushok Bakula Rinpoche (Tibetan: སྐུཤོག་བ་ཀུ་ལ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ།) is nowadays the head of Pethup Gompa in Spituk, Ladakh, India. He is an emanation of the Buddha Amitabha and was one of the 16 disciples of [[Gautama

Buddha|Buddha]] (Naytan Chudrug, or the 16 Arhats). His first 19 incarnations have been documented in the Tibetan text Naytan Chagchot (Wylie: gNas hrtan phyag mchod).



==Name==



There are two different explanations for his name.

According to Tibetan chronicles, he was fond of doing meditation and praying and was very simple. After renouncing all wordly comforts he used pakula grass in his every day life, especially as a sitting and sleeping mat..


The Manorathapurani and the Pali version of Milinda Panha maintain him as being born at Kaushambi in a minister's family and then having been swallowed by a fish in the Yamuna river that was later caught by an angler. The angler sold it to another

minister's wife, Upon cutting pen, the child was found unharmed and alive. The minister's wife adopted him. However, a dispute with his natural parents, about who should take care of him was resolved by the king, who judged that both should have custody of him. Thus, he became known as Dva Kula (Two Families).



==Incarnations==




 Tilopa

The second incarnation of Bakula was an Indian Mahasiddha Tilopa (Tibetan: ཏི་ལོ་པ, Wylie: Ti lo pa), or Sherab Zangpo (Tibetan: ཤེས་རབ་བཟང་པོ, Wylie: Shes rab bzang po) (Prajnabhadra). In order to spread the


Buddha dharma. The king of Visnunagar offered Tilopa, a learned guru, 500 gold coins a day, if he would live at his court. Tilopa, however, wanted rather to live as a yogi and he quietly departed from the court and retreated near


a cemetery to meditate. During that time, Naropa came to serve him. And through the practice of the six famous yoga lams (paths) he attained the mahamudra siddhi. After preaching extensively, he entered the heavenly abode of Amitābha during his lifetime.


 Luipa


The third incarnation of Bakula manifested as the Indian Mahasiddha Luipa (Wylie: Laa wa pa). He abandoned his kingdom in Sri Lanka and journeyed to Ramesvaram, where he became a Bhikkhu. A Dakini at Dorje Dan (Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན, Wylie: rDo rje gdan) (Bodh Gaya) revealed to him an upaya for realising Buddhahood -- and in this way

he continued practising for many years in a cemetery. Dakinis at Pataliputra further instructed him to remove his royal pride about the purity of foods, after which he sat in meditation for twelve years near river Ganges, where he lived on the minute guts of fish rejected by the fishermen


I es.jpg


The fourth incarnation was a king. He appears in the religious book 'Kadam Buchos'.



The fifth incarnation was Aryasura (Lopon Pawo, Wylie: sLob dpon dpa' bo), the disciple of Nagarjuna (Gonbo Ludup, Wylie: mGon po klu grub).



The sixth incarnation was Gyalwa Chogyangs, (Wylie: rGyal ba mchog dbyangs), one of Lopon Padma's twenty-five disciples.



The seventh incarnation was Ratna Udam (Nyamet Rinchen Chondus, Wylie: [[mNyam med rin[chen brtson 'grus]]), the disciple of Kasdup Kyungpo, (Wylie: mKhas grub 'khyung po).


The eighth incarnation, was Yeshe Dzin, dharmaguru of King Gedun Bang.


Lotsawa Rinchen Sangpo, 954 - 1055.

The tenth incarnation, was Geshe Chagpa Thrichog of the Kadmapa tradition.


Sthavira Lodros Choskyong was Khedrup Rinpoche's main disciple.

Drupchen Choskyi Dorje (Mahasiddha Dharmavajra) was the pupil of Basco Chokyi Gyaltsen (Dharmadhvaja).

Lobzang Jinpa (Sumatidana) was the main disciple of Lobsang Palden Yeshe, 6th Panchen Lama.

Yongdzin Yeshe Gyaltsen was the tutor of Jamphel Gyatso, 8th Dalai Lama.

Jetsun Ngawang Jampek Yeshe Gyatso, Khempo of Loseling.

Kongchog Rangdrol Nyima was the first Incarnation to appear in Ladakh, he appeared in Lamayuru Monastery.



Source

Wikipedia:Kushok Bakula Rinpoche