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Difference between revisions of "Kelsang Gyatso"

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[[File:Geshe Kelsang Gyatso.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]]
 
[[File:Geshe Kelsang Gyatso.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]]
[[Kelsang Gyatso]] is a [[Buddhist monk]], "[[meditation master]], [[scholar]], and author" of 22 [[books]] based on the teachings of the [[Gelug]] school of [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. He is the founder and former [[spiritual]] director of the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] ~ International [[Kadampa]] [[Buddhist]] Union (NKT-IKBU), a {{Wiki|Western}} [[Buddhist order]] based primarily on the teachings of the [[Gelugpa]] [[tradition]], albeit "not subordinate to [[Tibetan]] authorities other than [[Geshe]] Gyatso himself." The NKT-IKBU has grown to become a global [[Buddhist]] organisation that currently lists more than 200 centres and around 900 branch classes/study groups in 40 countries.
 
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] was born in [[Tibet]] in 1931 and [[ordained]] at the age of eight. After leaving [[Tibet]], he spent eighteen years in [[retreat]] in the [[Himalayas]] in [[India]]. In 1976 he was invited by [[Lama]] [[Thubten Yeshe]] via their [[spiritual guide]], [[Trijang Rinpoche]], to become the resident [[teacher]] at the main [[FPMT]] center, [[Manjushri Institute]] in Ulverston, Cumbria in {{Wiki|England}}.[5] Following a [[three-year retreat]] in Tharpaland, Dumfries, he founded the NKT-IKBU in 1991. He retired as General [[Spiritual]] Director of the NKT-IKBU in August 2009 but continues to write [[books]] and practice materials.
+
 
 +
 
 +
[[Kelsang Gyatso]] is a [[Buddhist monk]], "[[meditation master]], [[scholar]], and author" of 22 [[books]] based on the teachings of the [[Gelug]] school of [[Tibetan Buddhism]].
 +
 
 +
He is the founder and former [[spiritual]] director of the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] - [[International Kadampa Buddhist Union]] ([[NKT-IKBU]]), a {{Wiki|Western}} [[Buddhist order]] based primarily on the teachings of the [[Gelugpa tradition]], albeit "not subordinate to [[Tibetan]] authorities other than [[Geshe Gyatso]] himself."
 +
 
 +
The [[NKT-IKBU]] has grown to become a global [[Buddhist]] organisation that currently lists more than 200 centres and around 900 branch classes/study groups in 40 countries.
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] was born in [[Tibet]] in 1931 and [[ordained]] at the age of eight.  
 +
 
 +
After leaving [[Tibet]], he spent eighteen years in [[retreat]] in the [[Himalayas]] in [[India]].  
 +
 
 +
In 1976 he was invited by [[Lama]] [[Thubten Yeshe]] via their [[spiritual guide]], [[Trijang Rinpoche]], to become the resident [[teacher]] at the main [[FPMT]] center, [[Manjushri Institute]] in [[Ulverston]], [[Cumbria]] in {{Wiki|England}}.
 +
 
 +
Following a [[three-year retreat]] in [[Tharpaland]], [[Dumfries]], he founded the [[NKT-IKBU]] in 1991.  
 +
 
 +
He retired as General [[Spiritual]] Director of the [[NKT-IKBU]] in August 2009 but continues to write [[books]] and practice materials.
 +
 
 +
 
  
 
==[[Life]] and [[education]] in [[Tibet]]==
 
==[[Life]] and [[education]] in [[Tibet]]==
  
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]] was born on [[Dharmachakra]] Day (the 4th day of the 6th month of the [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|lunar calendar}}) 1931 in Yangcho Tang, [[eastern Tibet]]. His lay [[name]] was [[Lobsang]] Chuponpa. His [[ordination]] [[name]] "[[Kelsang Gyatso]]" means "Ocean of Good [[Fortune]]". His mother made great [[sacrifices]] to enable her son to attend the [[Ngamring]] [[Jampa]] [[Ling Monastery]] because he showed [[interest]] and aptitude from an early age. He joined the [[monastery]] when he was 8 years old and later described memorizing the [[Medicine Buddha Sutra]]:
 
  
:    In my first [[monastery]], [[Jampa]] Ling, this was the [[principal]] practice. The [[Tibetan]] translation of the [[Sutra]] is about fifty pages long. I memorized this together with some additional [[prayers]], because this was one of the [[commitments]] for being able to stay in the [[monastery]].
 
  
(In November 1986, [[Geshe Kelsang]] oversaw the rebuilding of [[Ngamring]] [[Jampa]] [[Ling Monastery]] after its destruction, and it was fully restored and reopened by September 1988.)
+
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]] was born on [[Dharmachakra]] Day (the 4th day of the 6th month of the [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|lunar calendar}}) 1931 in Yangcho Tang, [[eastern Tibet]].  
  
According to Cozort, [[Kelsang Gyatso]] is "a highly trained [[geshe]]." After studying on the [[Geshe]] {{Wiki|training}} program at [[Jampaling]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] passed two examinations at [[Tashilhunpo Monastery]] in [[Shigatse]], and received his [[Geshe]] [[degree]][citation needed]. Later [[Geshe Kelsang]] continued his studies at [[Sera Monastery]] near [[Lhasa]], one of the great [[Gelug]] [[monastic]] [[universities]] of [[Tibet]]. At [[Sera Je]], he successfully completed the full [[Geshe]] studies of five large [[philosophical]] texts. He was a member of the [[Tsangpa Khangtsen]], one of the fifteen houses at [[Sera Je]] [[monastery]]. Contemporaries at [[Sera Je]] included [[Geshe]] [[Lhundub Sopa]], [[Geshe Rabten]], and [[Lama]] [[Thubten Yeshe]].
+
His lay [[name]] was [[Lobsang Chuponpa]].
 +
 
 +
His [[ordination]] [[name]] "[[Kelsang Gyatso]]" means "[[Ocean of Good Fortune]]".
 +
 
 +
His mother made great [[sacrifices]] to enable her son to attend the [[Ngamring Jampa Ling Monastery]] because he showed [[interest]] and aptitude from an early age.
 +
 
 +
He joined the [[monastery]] when he was 8 years old and later described memorizing the [[Medicine Buddha Sutra]]:
 +
 
 +
:    In my first [[monastery]], [[Jampa Ling]], this was the [[principal]] practice.
 +
 
 +
The [[Tibetan]] translation of the [[Sutra]] is about fifty pages long.
 +
 
 +
I memorized this together with some additional [[prayers]], because this was one of the [[commitments]] for being able to stay in the [[monastery]].
 +
 
 +
(In November 1986, [[Geshe Kelsang]] oversaw the rebuilding of [[Ngamring Jampa Ling Monastery]] after its destruction, and it was fully restored and reopened by September 1988.)
 +
 
 +
According to Cozort, [[Kelsang Gyatso]] is "a highly trained [[geshe]]."  
 +
 
 +
After studying on the [[Geshe]] {{Wiki|training}} program at [[Jampaling]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] passed two examinations at [[Tashilhunpo Monastery]] in [[Shigatse]], and received his [[Geshe]] [[degree]].  
 +
 
 +
Later [[Geshe Kelsang]] continued his studies at [[Sera Monastery]] near [[Lhasa]], one of the great [[Gelug]] [[monastic]] [[universities]] of [[Tibet]].  
 +
 
 +
At [[Sera Je]], he successfully completed the full [[Geshe]] studies of five large [[philosophical]] texts.  
 +
 
 +
He was a member of the [[Tsangpa Khangtsen]], one of the fifteen houses at [[Sera Je]] [[monastery]].  
 +
 
 +
Contemporaries at [[Sera Je]] included [[Geshe]] [[Lhundub Sopa]], [[Geshe Rabten]], and [[Lama]] [[Thubten Yeshe]].
 +
 
 +
Waterhouse cites three [[reasons]], [[traditional]] in [[Tibetan Buddhism]], why [[Geshe Kelsang]] is authorized to be a [[Spiritual Guide]], saying "The combination of [[experience]], [[lineage]] and [[knowledge]] makes [[Geshe Kelsang]] {{Wiki|ideal}} as a [[teacher]].
 +
 
 +
He has the credibility of a genuine [[Tibetan]] [[teacher]] and the [[vision]] to instigate an [[organization]] (the [[New Kadampa Tradition]]) to {{Wiki|present}} that [[teaching]] to westerners.
  
Waterhouse cites three [[reasons]], [[traditional]] in [[Tibetan Buddhism]], why [[Geshe Kelsang]] is authorized to be a [[Spiritual Guide]], saying "The combination of [[experience]], [[lineage]] and [[knowledge]] makes [[Geshe Kelsang]] {{Wiki|ideal}} as a [[teacher]]. He has the credibility of a genuine [[Tibetan]] [[teacher]] and the [[vision]] to instigate an [[organization]] (the [[New Kadampa Tradition]]) to {{Wiki|present}} that [[teaching]] to westerners.
 
  
 
==[[Spiritual guide]]==
 
==[[Spiritual guide]]==
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] [[Gyatso's]] "[[Spiritual]] Father" was the great [[Gelugpa]] [[Master]] [[Kyabje Trijang Dorjechang]] (1900-1981 CE), who was also the "[[root guru]]" of the current [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]]. He describes his [[root]] [[Guru]] as "a vast reservoir from which all [[Gelugpa]] practitioners of the {{Wiki|present}} day received 'waters' of [[blessings]] and instructions." [[Trijang Rinpoche]] was also the Junior Tutor and [[Spiritual Guide]] of the [[14th Dalai Lama]] for fifty years.
+
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso's]] "[[Spiritual]] Father" was the great [[Gelugpa]] [[Master]] [[Kyabje Trijang Dorjechang]] (1900-1981 CE), who was also the "[[root guru]]" of the current [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]].  
 +
 
 +
He describes his [[root]] [[Guru]] as "a vast reservoir from which all [[Gelugpa]] practitioners of the {{Wiki|present}} day received 'waters' of [[blessings]] and instructions."  
 +
 
 +
[[Trijang Rinpoche]] was also the Junior Tutor and [[Spiritual Guide]] of the [[14th Dalai Lama]] for fifty years.
  
 
[[Geshe Kelsang]] has repeatedly talked about his complete indebtedness to and reliance upon his [[Spiritual Guide]], describing him as more important than his [[life]].
 
[[Geshe Kelsang]] has repeatedly talked about his complete indebtedness to and reliance upon his [[Spiritual Guide]], describing him as more important than his [[life]].
  
 
In 1978 [[Trijang Rinpoche]] wrote a [[prayer]] for [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[Gyatso's]] long [[life]] that is regularly recited at [[New Kadampa Tradition]] Centres.
 
In 1978 [[Trijang Rinpoche]] wrote a [[prayer]] for [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[Gyatso's]] long [[life]] that is regularly recited at [[New Kadampa Tradition]] Centres.
 +
 +
  
 
==Leaving [[Tibet]] and [[Life]] in [[India]]==
 
==Leaving [[Tibet]] and [[Life]] in [[India]]==
  
After the exodus from [[Tibet]] in 1959, [[Geshe Kelsang]] escaped to [[India]] through [[Nepal]] and stayed at the initial location of his [[monastery]], in Buxar. All he took with him were two [[Buddhist scriptures]] -- [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] and a text by [[Je Tsongkhapa]]. Later, after Prime [[Minister]] [[Nehru]] donated large tracts of land in {{Wiki|South India}} to the {{Wiki|community}} in exile, the [[monastery]] moved [[south]]. At this [[time]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] left the [[monastery]] at Buxar for Mussoorie (a [[hill]] station in the {{Wiki|Indian state}} of {{Wiki|Uttaranchal}}) where he [[taught]] and engaged in intensive [[meditation retreat]] for 18 years.
+
 
 +
 
 +
After the exodus from [[Tibet]] in 1959, [[Geshe Kelsang]] escaped to [[India]] through [[Nepal]] and stayed at the initial location of his [[monastery]], in Buxar.  
 +
 
 +
All he took with him were two [[Buddhist scriptures]] -- [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] and a text by [[Je Tsongkhapa]].  
 +
 
 +
Later, after Prime [[Minister]] [[Nehru]] donated large tracts of land in {{Wiki|South India}} to the {{Wiki|community}} in exile, the [[monastery]] moved [[south]].  
 +
 
 +
At this [[time]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] left the [[monastery]] at Buxar for Mussoorie (a [[hill]] station in the {{Wiki|Indian state}} of {{Wiki|Uttaranchal}}) where he [[taught]] and engaged in intensive [[meditation retreat]] for 18 years.
 +
 
  
 
==[[Journey to the West]]==
 
==[[Journey to the West]]==
 +
  
 
Even before coming to the [[West]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] was "by all accounts, a very well respected [[scholar]] and [[meditator]]" within the [[Tibetan]] exile {{Wiki|community}}. Since then, "this diminutive and unassuming [[Tibetan]] has won the hearts and [[minds]] of [[people]] from all cultures and walks of [[life]]."
 
Even before coming to the [[West]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] was "by all accounts, a very well respected [[scholar]] and [[meditator]]" within the [[Tibetan]] exile {{Wiki|community}}. Since then, "this diminutive and unassuming [[Tibetan]] has won the hearts and [[minds]] of [[people]] from all cultures and walks of [[life]]."
  
Kay remarks that [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe's]] [[decision]] to invite his former classmate to be Resident [[Teacher]] at the [[FPMT]]'s [[Manjushri Institute]] in {{Wiki|England}} was advised by the [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]]. The invitation was extended by [[Trijang Rinpoche]], the [[root Guru]] of [[Geshe Kelsang]]. He arrived in August 1977 and gave his first [[teaching]] on [[Lamrim]] on September 10. [[Geshe Kelsang]] later recounted that [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] asked him to go to {{Wiki|England}}, teach [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]], [[Chandrakirti]]'s [[Guide to the Middle Way]] and [[Lamrim]], and then “check whether there was any meaning in his continuing to stay."
+
Kay remarks that [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe's]] [[decision]] to invite his former classmate to be Resident [[Teacher]] at the [[FPMT]]'s [[Manjushri Institute]] in {{Wiki|England}} was advised by the [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]].  
 +
 
 +
The invitation was extended by [[Trijang Rinpoche]], the [[root Guru]] of [[Geshe Kelsang]].  
 +
 
 +
He arrived in August 1977 and gave his first [[teaching]] on [[Lamrim]] on September 10. [[Geshe Kelsang]] later recounted that [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] asked him to go to {{Wiki|England}}, teach [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]], [[Chandrakirti]]'s [[Guide to the Middle Way]] and [[Lamrim]], and then “check whether there was any meaning in his continuing to stay."
  
 
In [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[own]] words:
 
In [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[own]] words:
  
:    When I was in [[India]] I received an invitation from [[Manjushri Institute]] in {{Wiki|England}} through [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe]], who was my very close [[friend]] in [[Tibet]]. He and I were from the same [[monastery]] in [[Tibet]] and we had the same [[Teacher]]. He wrote to me and requested me please to go to {{Wiki|England}} and give [[Dharma]] teachings. I received this invitation but I didn’t answer for two months. At that [[time]] it was difficult for me to say yes due to certain [[commitments]] to local [[Tibetan people]], and also I [[thought]] how could I teach as I could not speak English? I had no [[confidence]]. [[Lama Yeshe]] was very clever; he went to visit my [[root Guru]] [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]], and requested him to ask me to go to {{Wiki|England}} to teach [[Dharma]]. He knew if my [[root Guru]] asked me, then I would agree to go.
+
:    When I was in [[India]] I received an invitation from [[Manjushri Institute]] in {{Wiki|England}} through [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe]], who was my very close [[friend]] in [[Tibet]].  
 +
 
 +
He and I were from the same [[monastery]] in [[Tibet]] and we had the same [[Teacher]]. He wrote to me and requested me please to go to {{Wiki|England}} and give [[Dharma]] teachings.  
 +
 
 +
I received this invitation but I didn’t answer for two months.  
 +
 
 +
At that [[time]] it was difficult for me to say yes due to certain [[commitments]] to local [[Tibetan people]], and also I [[thought]] how could I teach as I could not speak English?  
 +
 
 +
I had no [[confidence]]. [[Lama Yeshe]] was very clever; he went to visit my [[root Guru]] [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]], and requested him to ask me to go to {{Wiki|England}} to teach [[Dharma]].  
 +
 
 +
He knew if my [[root Guru]] asked me, then I would agree to go.
  
Under [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[spiritual]] [[direction]], {{Wiki|Manjushri Institute}} "became a thriving {{Wiki|training}} and [[retreat]] center." [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[taught]] the General Program at [[Manjushri]] from 1977 to 1987. At that [[time]], the [[Geshe]] studies programme was [[taught]] by [[Geshe]] [[Jampa Tekchok]] and then [[Geshe]] [[Konchog Tsewang]] (1982–1990). (In 1990 the [[Geshe]] Studies Programme at {{Wiki|Manjushri Institute}} was cancelled, as it had been in most of the other [[FPMT]] Centres where it had been established.)
+
 
 +
Under [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[spiritual]] [[direction]], {{Wiki|Manjushri Institute}} "became a thriving {{Wiki|training}} and [[retreat]] center."  
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] [[taught]] the General Program at [[Manjushri]] from 1977 to 1987.  
 +
 
 +
At that [[time]], the [[Geshe]] studies programme was [[taught]] by [[Geshe]] [[Jampa Tekchok]] and then [[Geshe]] [[Konchog Tsewang]] (1982–1990). (In 1990 the [[Geshe]] Studies Programme at {{Wiki|Manjushri Institute}} was cancelled, as it had been in most of the other [[FPMT]] Centres where it had been established.)
  
 
On October 13, 1983, [[Geshe Kelsang]] became a naturalized {{Wiki|British}} citizen: “I became a [[subject]] of the {{Wiki|British}} [[Queen]]”.
 
On October 13, 1983, [[Geshe Kelsang]] became a naturalized {{Wiki|British}} citizen: “I became a [[subject]] of the {{Wiki|British}} [[Queen]]”.
 +
  
 
==Establishing [[Buddhist]] Centres==
 
==Establishing [[Buddhist]] Centres==
 +
 +
 
{{see}} [[Manjushri Institute]]
 
{{see}} [[Manjushri Institute]]
  
In 1979, [[Geshe Kelsang]] opened a [[Dharma]] [[Center]] ([[Madhyamaka]] Centre in Yorkshire) under his [[own]] [[spiritual]] [[direction]] and apparently without [[FPMT]] approval. David Kay explained how many [[Geshe]]s who happened to teach at [[FPMT]] Centers in the early years still considered themselves to be autonomous entities: "Not all of the [[geshe]]s shared [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe]]'s [[vision]] of [[Gelug]] [[Buddhism in the West]] or understood themselves to be part of it."
+
In 1979, [[Geshe Kelsang]] opened a [[Dharma]] [[Center]] ([[Madhyamaka Centre in Yorkshire]]) under his [[own]] [[spiritual]] [[direction]] and apparently without [[FPMT]] approval.  
 +
 
 +
David Kay explained how many [[Geshe]]s who happened to teach at [[FPMT]] Centers in the early years still considered themselves to be autonomous entities: "Not all of the [[geshe]]s shared [[Thubten Yeshe|Lama Yeshe]]'s [[vision]] of [[Gelug]] [[Buddhism in the West]] or understood themselves to be part of it."
 +
 
 +
Robert Bluck explained that as a consequence of opening [[Madhayamaka]] Centre, [[Lama Yeshe]] asked for [[Geshe Kelsang's]] resignation, "but his students petitioned him to remain, and a struggle ensued for control of [[Manjushri Institute]], which eventually withdrew from the [[FPMT]]."
 +
 
 +
Although some [[FPMT]] students regarded [[Geshe Kelsang]] as a "rogue [[geshe]]" as a result of his separation from the [[FPMT]], Bluck suggests an alternative [[view]]: "[[FPMT]] [[teachers]] became increasingly remote, with [[Geshe Kelsang's]] single-minded approach and personal example inspiring many students.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==Creation of the [[NKT-IKBU]]==
  
Robert Bluck explained that as a consequence of opening [[Madhayamaka]] Centre, [[Lama Yeshe]] asked for [[Geshe Kelsang's]] resignation, "but his students petitioned him to remain, and a struggle ensued for control of [[Manjushri Institute]], which eventually withdrew from the [[FPMT]]." Although some [[FPMT]] students regarded [[Geshe Kelsang]] as a "rogue [[geshe]]" as a result of his separation from the [[FPMT]], Bluck suggests an alternative [[view]]: "[[FPMT]] [[teachers]] became increasingly remote, with [[Geshe Kelsang's]] single-minded approach and personal example inspiring many students.
 
  
==Creation of the NKT-IKBU==
 
 
{{see}} [[New Kadampa Tradition]]
 
{{see}} [[New Kadampa Tradition]]
  
In 1987, [[Geshe Kelsang]] entered a 3-year [[retreat]] at Tharpaland [[Retreat Centre]] in Dumfries, {{Wiki|Scotland}}. During his [[retreat]], he wrote five [[books]] and established the foundations of the NKT-IKBU. After completing his [[retreat]] in the early months of 1991, [[Geshe Kelsang]] announced the creation of the NKT-IKBU, an event which was celebrated by his students in the NKT-IKBU magazine [[Full Moon]] as "a wonderful [[development]] in the history of the [[Buddhadharma]]." Since that [[time]], the NKT-IKBU has grown to comprise over 1100 Centres and groups throughout 40 countries.
+
In 1987, [[Geshe Kelsang]] entered a 3-year [[retreat]] at Tharpaland [[Retreat Centre]] in Dumfries, {{Wiki|Scotland}}.  
 +
 
 +
During his [[retreat]], he wrote five [[books]] and established the foundations of the NKT-IKBU.  
 +
 
 +
After completing his [[retreat]] in the early months of 1991, [[Geshe Kelsang]] announced the creation of the NKT-IKBU, an event which was celebrated by his students in the [[NKT-IKBU]] magazine [[Full Moon]] as "a wonderful [[development]] in the history of the [[Buddhadharma]]."  
 +
 
 +
Since that [[time]], the [[NKT-IKBU]] has grown to comprise over 1100 Centres and groups throughout 40 countries.
  
 
==Teachings==
 
==Teachings==
  
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]] is a prolific writer and [[teacher]] of [[Buddhadharma]] in general, in particular the teachings of [[Je Tsongkhapa]]. He has [[taught]] extensively on all aspects of [[Buddha's]] [[Sutra]]s and [[Tantra]]s both in regular courses for the first ten years at [[Manjushri Institute]] and then in International {{Wiki|Festivals}} two or three times a year. His teachings draw on the original texts of [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] and a number of [[Indian]] and [[Tibetan]] [[teachers]] and commentators. They also draw on his [[own]] [[meditative]] [[experience]] acquired in his long 1959-1976 [[retreat]].
+
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]] is a prolific writer and [[teacher]] of [[Buddhadharma]] in general, in particular the teachings of [[Je Tsongkhapa]].  
  
Talking about his {{Wiki|training}} at the [[monasteries]], he explains that it mainly emphasized [[intellectual]] [[debate]], and that he would therefore stay up all night to [[meditate]] on [[Lamrim]] ([[stages of the path]]), [[Lojong]] ([[training the mind]]) and [[Mahamudra]] in the [[meditative]] [[tradition]] of [[Je Tsongkhapa]]. His teachings reflect this {{Wiki|emphasis}} on {{Wiki|practical}} teachings based on [[Lamrim]], [[Lojong]] and [[Mahamudra]]. When he established the NKT-IKBU study programs he said:
+
He has [[taught]] extensively on all aspects of [[Buddha's]] [[Sutra]]s and [[Tantra]]s both in regular courses for the first ten years at [[Manjushri Institute]] and then in International {{Wiki|Festivals}} two or three times a year.  
  
:    "I wanted to encourage [[people]] to practice purely. Just having a lot of [[Dharma]] [[knowledge]], studying a lot intellectually but not practicing, is a serious problem. This was my [[experience]] in [[Tibet]]. [[Intellectual]] [[knowledge]] alone does not give [[peace]].”
+
His teachings draw on the original texts of [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] and a number of [[Indian]] and [[Tibetan]] [[teachers]] and commentators.
 +
 
 +
They also draw on his [[own]] [[meditative]] [[experience]] acquired in his long 1959-1976 [[retreat]].
 +
 
 +
Talking about his {{Wiki|training}} at the [[monasteries]], he explains that it mainly emphasized [[intellectual]] [[debate]], and that he would therefore stay up all night to [[meditate]] on [[Lamrim]] ([[stages of the path]]), [[Lojong]] ([[training the mind]]) and [[Mahamudra]] in the [[meditative]] [[tradition]] of [[Je Tsongkhapa]].
 +
 
 +
His teachings reflect this {{Wiki|emphasis}} on {{Wiki|practical}} teachings based on [[Lamrim]], [[Lojong]] and [[Mahamudra]]. When he established the [[NKT-IKBU]] study programs he said:
 +
 
 +
:    "I wanted to encourage [[people]] to practice purely.  
 +
 
 +
Just having a lot of [[Dharma]] [[knowledge]], studying a lot intellectually but not practicing, is a serious problem.  
 +
 
 +
This was my [[experience]] in [[Tibet]]. [[Intellectual]] [[knowledge]] alone does not give [[peace]].”
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] explained how he received his [[Guru]] [[Trijang Rinpoche]]'s permission to {{Wiki|present}} [[Dharma]] in a more {{Wiki|practical}} way suitable to [[Westerners]]. Waterhouse commented that "He teaches in English with a strong [[Tibetan]] accent.
 +
 
 +
He is an endearing [[character]] to look at; petite with slightly downcast [[eyes]] which look about him as he walks or teaches his devoted students." Spanswick observes that "many of those who hear him speak are struck by his [[wisdom]] and sincerity."
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] explained how he received his [[Guru]] [[Trijang Rinpoche]]'s permission to {{Wiki|present}} [[Dharma]] in a more {{Wiki|practical}} way suitable to [[Westerners]]. Waterhouse commented that "He teaches in English with a strong [[Tibetan]] accent. He is an endearing [[character]] to look at; petite with slightly downcast [[eyes]] which look about him as he walks or teaches his devoted students." Spanswick observes that "many of those who hear him speak are struck by his [[wisdom]] and sincerity."
 
  
 
===[[Books]]===
 
===[[Books]]===
  
At the [[heart]] of the NKT-IKBU are its three study programs: the General Program, the Foundation Program, and the [[Teacher]] Training Program. In these programs [[people]] can study [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] with authorized NKT-IKBU [[Dharma]] [[teachers]].
 
  
According to the NKT-IKBU, it "seeks not to offer a westernized [[form]] of [[Buddhism]], but rather to make [[traditional]] [[Gelugpa]] [[Buddhism]] accessible to westerners." To achieve this, [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[taught]] himself English and wrote 22 [[books]] that aim to provide {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] practitioners with [[essential]] [[Buddhist texts]]. His first [[book]] published in 1980 was a commentary to [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] called [[Meaningful to Behold]]. This was followed by [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] in 1982. His [[books]] were first published by [[Wisdom Publications]]. In 1985, [[Tharpa Publications]] was founded, which since has been the exclusive publisher of his works worldwide.
+
At the [[heart]] of the [[NKT-IKBU]] are its three study programs: the General Program, the Foundation Program, and the [[Teacher]] Training Program. In these programs [[people]] can study [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] with authorized [[NKT-IKBU]] [[Dharma]] [[teachers]].
 +
 
 +
According to the [[NKT-IKBU]], it "seeks not to offer a westernized [[form]] of [[Buddhism]], but rather to make [[traditional]] [[Gelugpa]] [[Buddhism]] accessible to westerners."  
 +
 
 +
To achieve this, [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[taught]] himself English and wrote 22 [[books]] that aim to provide {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] practitioners with [[essential]] [[Buddhist texts]].  
 +
 
 +
His first [[book]] published in 1980 was a commentary to [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] called [[Meaningful to Behold]].  
 +
 
 +
This was followed by [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] in 1982. His [[books]] were first published by [[Wisdom Publications]].  
 +
 
 +
In 1985, [[Tharpa Publications]] was founded, which since has been the exclusive publisher of his works worldwide.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
A number of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] textbooks have received [[favourable]] reviews.
 +
 
 +
Bluck writes that "The three most popular works—Introduction to [[Buddhism]], The New [[Meditation]] Handbook and [[Transform]] Your Life—have sold 165,000 copies between them, showing their appeal far beyond the {{Wiki|movement}} itself."
 +
 
 +
[[Batchelor]] says that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] are written with "considerable clarity." Braizer echoes this sentiment, saying that [[Geshe Kelsang]] writes "{{Wiki|excellent}}" [[books]] that are "an important contribution to {{Wiki|Western}} [[understanding]] of [[Buddhism]] and its [[traditions]]. They can stand on their [[own]] [[merit]]."
 +
 
 +
[[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land and [[Essence]] of [[Vajrayana]] have been described as "the most detailed and revealing commentary on specific [[tantric practices]] yet to be published in a {{Wiki|Western}} [[language]]." In his [[book]] review of [[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land, Richard Guard said:
  
A number of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] textbooks have received [[favourable]] reviews. Bluck writes that "The three most popular works—Introduction to [[Buddhism]], The New [[Meditation]] Handbook and [[Transform]] Your Life—have sold 165,000 copies between them, showing their appeal far beyond the {{Wiki|movement}} itself." [[Batchelor]] says that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] are written with "considerable clarity." Braizer echoes this sentiment, saying that [[Geshe Kelsang]] writes "{{Wiki|excellent}}" [[books]] that are "an important contribution to {{Wiki|Western}} [[understanding]] of [[Buddhism]] and its [[traditions]]. They can stand on their [[own]] [[merit]]." [[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land and [[Essence]] of [[Vajrayana]] have been described as "the most detailed and revealing commentary on specific [[tantric practices]] yet to be published in a {{Wiki|Western}} [[language]]." In his [[book]] review of [[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land, Richard Guard said:
+
:    It is remarkable that the author has managed to give us so much [[information]] in only a few hundred pages.  
  
:    It is remarkable that the author has managed to give us so much [[information]] in only a few hundred pages. The editors are to be commended for their [[skilful]] efforts in conveying [[Geshe]] Kelsang’s instructions in such simple and precise [[language]]... By making this [[book]] available for [[Vajrayogini]] practitioners, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has truly brought a [[blessing]] into our [[lives]].
+
The editors are to be commended for their [[skilful]] efforts in conveying [[Geshe Kelsang’s]] instructions in such simple and precise [[language]]...  
 +
 
 +
By making this [[book]] available for [[Vajrayogini]] practitioners, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has truly brought a [[blessing]] into our [[lives]].
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] regards all his [[books]] as "coming from [[Je Tsongkhapa]], with himself as being like a cassette recorder into which the [[Wisdom]] [[Buddha]], the [[Dharma Protector]] [[Dorje Shugden]], has placed the cassette of [[Je Tsongkhapa's]] teachings."
 +
 
 +
And in the preface of one of his [[books]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] states:
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] regards all his [[books]] as "coming from [[Je Tsongkhapa]], with himself as being like a cassette recorder into which the [[Wisdom]] [[Buddha]], the [[Dharma Protector]] [[Dorje Shugden]], has placed the cassette of [[Je Tsongkhapa's]] teachings." And in the preface of one of his [[books]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] states:
 
 
:“I have received these teachings from my [[Spiritual Guide]], [[Trijang Dorjechang]], who was an [[emanation]] of [[Atisha]]; thus the explanations given in this [[book]], [[Joyful Path of Good Fortune]], actually come from him and not from myself.”
 
:“I have received these teachings from my [[Spiritual Guide]], [[Trijang Dorjechang]], who was an [[emanation]] of [[Atisha]]; thus the explanations given in this [[book]], [[Joyful Path of Good Fortune]], actually come from him and not from myself.”
  
Line 81: Line 216:
 
:    A [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[monk]] and [[scholar]]; [[Geshe Kelsang]] has written twenty [[books]] that aim to provide {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] practitioners with [[essential]] [[Buddhist texts]]; some are [[books]] for beginners such as [[Transform]] Your [[Life]] and How to Solve Our [[Human]] Problems, [[books]] about the [[Mahayana]] [[path]] like [[Universal Compassion]] ([[Lojong]]), and [[books]] on [[Vajrayana]] ([[Tantra]]) like [[Mahamudra]] [[Tantra]]; (born 1931, in [[Tibet]]).
 
:    A [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[monk]] and [[scholar]]; [[Geshe Kelsang]] has written twenty [[books]] that aim to provide {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] practitioners with [[essential]] [[Buddhist texts]]; some are [[books]] for beginners such as [[Transform]] Your [[Life]] and How to Solve Our [[Human]] Problems, [[books]] about the [[Mahayana]] [[path]] like [[Universal Compassion]] ([[Lojong]]), and [[books]] on [[Vajrayana]] ([[Tantra]]) like [[Mahamudra]] [[Tantra]]; (born 1931, in [[Tibet]]).
  
Over a million copies of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] have been sold, and "their [[popularity]] is increasing as more [[people]] become [[interested]] in the [[teaching]] of [[Buddhism]]." His [[books]] include titles for beginners such as Introduction to [[Buddhism]], [[Transform]] Your [[Life]] and How to Solve Our [[Human]] Problems, [[books]] about the [[Mahayana path]] like [[Universal Compassion]] ([[Lojong]]), The New [[Heart]] of [[Wisdom]] ([[Heart Sutra]]) and [[Joyful Path of Good Fortune]] ([[Lamrim]]), and [[books]] on [[Vajrayana]] ([[Tantra]]) like [[Mahamudra]] [[Tantra]], [[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land and [[Essence]] of [[Vajrayana]]. Two of his [[books]] are commentaries on [[Indian]] [[Mahayana]] texts: the [[book]] Ocean of [[Nectar]] is a commentary to [[Chandrakirti]]'s [[Guide to the Middle Way]], and [[Meaningful to Behold]] is a commentary to [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] or [[Bodhicharyavatara]].
+
Over a million copies of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[books]] have been sold, and "their [[popularity]] is increasing as more [[people]] become [[interested]] in the [[teaching]] of [[Buddhism]]."  
 +
 
 +
His [[books]] include titles for beginners such as Introduction to [[Buddhism]], [[Transform]] Your [[Life]] and How to Solve Our [[Human]] Problems, [[books]] about the [[Mahayana path]] like [[Universal Compassion]] ([[Lojong]]), The New [[Heart]] of [[Wisdom]] ([[Heart Sutra]]) and [[Joyful Path of Good Fortune]] ([[Lamrim]]), and [[books]] on [[Vajrayana]] ([[Tantra]]) like [[Mahamudra]] [[Tantra]], [[Guide]] to [[Dakini]] Land and [[Essence]] of [[Vajrayana]].  
 +
 
 +
Two of his [[books]] are commentaries on [[Indian]] [[Mahayana]] texts: the [[book]] Ocean of [[Nectar]] is a commentary to [[Chandrakirti]]'s [[Guide to the Middle Way]], and [[Meaningful to Behold]] is a commentary to [[Shantideva]]'s [[Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life]] or [[Bodhicharyavatara]].
 +
 
 +
The [[books]] are also highly [[thought]] of within the [[Tibetan]] establishment.
 +
 
 +
Three of his published works contained forewords by previous [[Ganden Tripa]]s and the [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]].
 +
 
 +
[[The Dalai Lama]] contributed a foreword to [[Buddhism]] in the [[Tibetan Tradition]], while [[Trijang Rinpoche]] and [[Ling Rinpoche]] (who each held the position of [[Ganden Tripa]]) also provided forewords for his [[books]] [[Meaningful to Behold]] (which was dedicated to the long [[life]] of the [[Dalai Lama]]) and [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] (which was dedicated to the late [[Trijang Rinpoche]]), respectively.  
  
The [[books]] are also highly [[thought]] of within the [[Tibetan]] establishment. Three of his published works contained forewords by previous [[Ganden Tripa]]s and the [[14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]]. [[The Dalai Lama]] contributed a foreword to [[Buddhism]] in the [[Tibetan Tradition]], while [[Trijang Rinpoche]] and [[Ling Rinpoche]] (who each held the position of [[Ganden Tripa]]) also provided forewords for his [[books]] [[Meaningful to Behold]] (which was dedicated to the long [[life]] of the [[Dalai Lama]]) and [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] (which was dedicated to the late [[Trijang Rinpoche]]), respectively. [[Kyabje Ling Rinpoche]] refers to [[Geshe Kelsang]] as "this most [[precious]] [[Spiritual Guide]]," while [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] refers to him as "The {{Wiki|excellent}} expounder, the great [[Spiritual Master]] [[Kelsang Gyatso]]." [[Tsem Tulku]] praised [[Geshe Kelsang]] and his publications: "The [[great master]], the [[Kadampa]] [[Geshe]], [[Kelsang Gyatso]], you can see very clearly his works, his centers, his [[books]], his [[pure]] [[vows]], and how many thousands of [[people]] he affects."
+
[[Kyabje Ling Rinpoche]] refers to [[Geshe Kelsang]] as "this most [[precious]] [[Spiritual Guide]]," while [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] refers to him as "The {{Wiki|excellent}} expounder, the great [[Spiritual Master]] [[Kelsang Gyatso]]."  
 +
 
 +
[[Tsem Tulku]] praised [[Geshe Kelsang]] and his publications: "The [[great master]], the [[Kadampa]] [[Geshe]], [[Kelsang Gyatso]], you can see very clearly his works, his centers, his [[books]], his [[pure]] [[vows]], and how many thousands of [[people]] he affects."
  
 
The [[books]] are being translated into many other [[languages]].
 
The [[books]] are being translated into many other [[languages]].
Line 94: Line 241:
 
* Eight Steps to Happiness: The Buddhist Way of Loving Kindness, Tharpa Publications (2000)
 
* Eight Steps to Happiness: The Buddhist Way of Loving Kindness, Tharpa Publications (2000)
 
* Essence of Vajrayana: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala, Tharpa Publications (1997)
 
* Essence of Vajrayana: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala, Tharpa Publications (1997)
* Great Treasury of Merit: How to Rely Upon a Spiritual Guide, Tharpa Publications (1992)
+
* Great Treasury of Merit: How to Rely Upon a Spiritual Guide, [[Tharpa Publications]] (1992)
* Guide to Dakini Land: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Buddha Vajrayogini, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1996)
+
* Guide to Dakini Land: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Buddha Vajrayogini, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2nd. ed., 1996)
* Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life: How to Enjoy a Life of Great Meaning and Altruism, a translation of Shantideva's Bodhisattvacharyavatara with Neil Elliott, Tharpa Publications (2002)
+
* Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life: How to Enjoy a Life of Great Meaning and Altruism, a translation of [[Shantideva's]] [[Bodhisattvacharyavatara]] with Neil Elliott, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2002)
* Heart Jewel: The Essential Practices of Kadampa Buddhism, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1997)
+
 
* The New Heart of Wisdom: Profound Teachings from Buddha's Heart, Tharpa Publications (5th. ed., 2012)
+
* Heart Jewel: The Essential Practices of [[Kadampa]] Buddhism, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2nd. ed., 1997)
* How to Solve Our Human Problems: The Four Noble Truths, Tharpa Publications (2005, US ed., 2007)
+
* The New Heart of Wisdom: Profound Teachings from Buddha's Heart, [[Tharpa Publications]] (5th. ed., 2012)
* Introduction to Buddhism: An Explanation of the Buddhist Way of Life, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 2001, US ed. 2008)
+
* How to Solve Our Human Problems: The Four Noble Truths, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2005, US ed., 2007)
* Joyful Path of Good Fortune: The Complete Buddhist Path to Enlightenment, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1995)
+
* Introduction to Buddhism: An Explanation of the Buddhist Way of Life, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2nd. ed., 2001, US ed. 2008)
* Living Meaningfully, Dying Joyfully: The Profound Practice of Transference of Consciousness, Tharpa Publications (1999)
+
* Joyful Path of Good Fortune: The Complete Buddhist Path to [[Enlightenmen]]t, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2nd. ed., 1995)
* Mahamudra Tantra: The Supreme Heart Jewel Nectar, Tharpa Publications (2005)
+
* Living Meaningfully, Dying Joyfully: The Profound Practice of Transference of Consciousness, [[Tharpa Publications]] (1999)
* Meaningful to Behold: The Bodhisattva's Way of Life, Tharpa Publications (5th. ed., 2008)
+
* Mahamudra Tantra: The Supreme Heart Jewel Nectar, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2005)
 +
* Meaningful to Behold: The Bodhisattva's Way of Life, [[Tharpa Publications]] (5th. ed., 2008)
 
* Modern Buddhism: The Path of Wisdom and Compassion, Tharpa Publications (2010)
 
* Modern Buddhism: The Path of Wisdom and Compassion, Tharpa Publications (2010)
* The New Meditation Handbook: Meditations to Make Our Life Happy and Meaningful, Tharpa Publications (2003)
+
* The New Meditation Handbook: Meditations to Make Our Life Happy and Meaningful, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2003)
* Ocean of Nectar: The True Nature of All Things, Tharpa Publications (1995)
+
* Ocean of Nectar: The True Nature of All Things, [[Tharpa Publications]] (1995)
* Tantric Grounds and Paths: How to Enter, Progress on, and Complete the Vajrayana Path, Tharpa Publications (1994)
+
* [[Tantric]] Grounds and Paths: How to Enter, Progress on, and Complete the [[Vajrayana]] Path, [[Tharpa Publications]] (1994)
* Transform Your Life: A Blissful Journey, Tharpa Publications (2001, US ed. 2007)
+
* Transform Your Life: A Blissful Journey, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2001, US ed. 2007)
* Understanding the Mind: The Nature and Power of the Mind, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1997)
+
* Understanding the Mind: The Nature and Power of the Mind, [[Tharpa Publications]] (2nd. ed., 1997)
* Universal Compassion: Inspiring Solutions for Difficult Times, Tharpa Publications (4th. ed., 2002)}}
+
* Universal Compassion: Inspiring Solutions for Difficult Times, [[Tharpa Publications]] (4th. ed., 2002)}}
  
 
[[Geshe Kelsang]] has also translated and/or composed many [[sadhana]]s, or [[prayer]] booklets, for the practice of many of the [[Buddhist]] [[Tantras]].
 
[[Geshe Kelsang]] has also translated and/or composed many [[sadhana]]s, or [[prayer]] booklets, for the practice of many of the [[Buddhist]] [[Tantras]].
 +
 +
  
 
==Emphasis on [[lineage]]==
 
==Emphasis on [[lineage]]==
  
Kay says that NKT-IKBU practitioners practice their [[tradition]] exclusively, "eschewing eclecticism." [[Geshe Kelsang's]] "conservative and [[traditional]] presentation of [[Buddhism]]" is appealing to [[Westerners]] who "wish for a meaningful alternative to [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|pluralism}}." According to [[Geshe Kelsang]] in [[Understanding the Mind]]:
 
  
:    Every [[Teacher]] and every [[tradition]] has a slightly different approach and employs different methods. The practices [[taught]] by one [[Teacher]] will differ from those [[taught]] by another, and if we try to combine them we shall become confused, develop [[doubts]], and lose [[direction]]. If we try to create a {{Wiki|synthesis}} of different [[traditions]] we shall destroy the special power of each and be left only with a mishmash of our [[own]] making that will be a source of {{Wiki|confusion}} and [[doubt]].
+
Kay says that NKT-IKBU practitioners practice their [[tradition]] exclusively, "eschewing eclecticism." [[Geshe Kelsang's]] "conservative and [[traditional]] presentation of [[Buddhism]]" is appealing to [[Westerners]] who "wish for a meaningful alternative to [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|pluralism}}."
  
Therefore, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has [[taught]] in [[Great Treasury of Merit]] that the most effective way to progress [[spiritually]] is by "following one [[tradition]] purely — relying upon one [[Teacher]], practising only his teachings, and following his [[Dharma Protector]]. If we mix [[traditions]] many [[obstacles]] arise and it takes a long [[time]] for us to attain realizations."
+
According to [[Geshe Kelsang]] in [[Understanding the Mind]]:
  
The [[lineage]] [[Geshe Kelsang]] follows is that [[taught]] to him by [[Trijang Rinpoche]], his [[root Guru]], and in turn by [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], the [[root Guru]] of [[Trijang Rinpoche]]. One of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[teachers]], the highly respected [[Lharampa Geshe]] [[Zong Rinpoche]], affirms [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[view]] on the importance of [[lineage]]:
 
  
:    [[Kyabje Phabongka]] passed all of his [[lineages]] to [[Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang]]. He often said this in [[discourses]]. The {{Wiki|purpose}} of this detailed [[exposition]] is to affirm the power of the [[lineage]]. If we lose [[faith]] in the [[lineage]], we are lost. We should remember the {{Wiki|biographies}} of {{Wiki|past}} and {{Wiki|present}} [[teachers]]. We should never develop negative [[thoughts]] towards our [[root]] and [[lineage]] [[gurus]]. If we do not keep the [[commitments]] after having received teachings, this is a great downfall.
+
:    Every [[Teacher]] and every [[tradition]] has a slightly different approach and employs different methods.
 +
 
 +
The practices [[taught]] by one [[Teacher]] will differ from those [[taught]] by another, and if we try to combine them we shall become confused, develop [[doubts]], and lose [[direction]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
If we try to create a {{Wiki|synthesis}} of different [[traditions]] we shall destroy the special power of each and be left only with a mishmash of our [[own]] making that will be a source of {{Wiki|confusion}} and [[doubt]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Therefore, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has [[taught]] in [[Great Treasury of Merit]] that the most effective way to progress [[spiritually]] is by "following one [[tradition]] purely — relying upon one [[Teacher]], practising only his teachings, and following his [[Dharma Protector]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
If we mix [[traditions]] many [[obstacles]] arise and it takes a long [[time]] for us to attain realizations."
 +
 
 +
The [[lineage]] [[Geshe Kelsang]] follows is that [[taught]] to him by [[Trijang Rinpoche]], his [[root Guru]], and in turn by [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], the [[root Guru]] of [[Trijang Rinpoche]].
 +
 
 +
One of [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[teachers]], the highly respected [[Lharampa Geshe]] [[Zong Rinpoche]], affirms [[Geshe Kelsang's]] [[view]] on the importance of [[lineage]]:
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
:    [[Kyabje Phabongka]] passed all of his [[lineages]] to [[Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang]].  
 +
 
 +
He often said this in [[discourses]].  
 +
 
 +
The {{Wiki|purpose}} of this detailed [[exposition]] is to affirm the power of the [[lineage]].  
 +
 
 +
If we lose [[faith]] in the [[lineage]], we are lost. We should remember the {{Wiki|biographies}} of {{Wiki|past}} and {{Wiki|present}} [[teachers]].  
 +
 
 +
We should never develop negative [[thoughts]] towards our [[root]] and [[lineage]] [[gurus]].  
 +
 
 +
If we do not keep the [[commitments]] after having received teachings, this is a great downfall.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==[[Ordination of Westerners]]==
 +
 
  
--[[Ordination]] of [[Westerners]]==
 
  
 
There are currently 700 [[monks and nuns]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]], all [[ordained]] by [[Geshe Kelsang]]. [[Geshe Kelsang]] says:
 
There are currently 700 [[monks and nuns]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]], all [[ordained]] by [[Geshe Kelsang]]. [[Geshe Kelsang]] says:
  
:“{{Wiki|Western}} [[people]] are well educated; they do not have [[blind faith]] but immediately question and try to understand the [[truth]]. I cannot pretend with you. We cannot be like a [[fully ordained monk]] who has taken 253 [[vows]], but who is not even keeping one. We should never do like this; we need to do everything correctly and purely. The [[Kadampa]] [[ordination]] solves all these problems. Practically {{Wiki|speaking}}, all the 253 [[vows]] explained in the [[Vinaya Pitaka|Vinaya Sutra]] are included within the ten [[commitments]].”
+
:“{{Wiki|Western}} [[people]] are well educated; they do not have [[blind faith]] but immediately question and try to understand the [[truth]]. I cannot pretend with you.  
 +
 
 +
We cannot be like a [[fully ordained monk]] who has taken 253 [[vows]], but who is not even keeping one.  
 +
 
 +
We should never do like this; we need to do everything correctly and purely.  
 +
 
 +
The [[Kadampa]] [[ordination]] solves all these problems.  
 +
 
 +
Practically {{Wiki|speaking}}, all the 253 [[vows]] explained in the [[Vinaya Pitaka|Vinaya Sutra]] are included within the ten [[commitments]].”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
That is to say, the [[vows]] of those [[ordained]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] do not enumerate the multitude of details specified by the [[Indian]] and [[Tibetan]] [[Vinaya]] [[traditions]].
 +
 
 +
Rather, the [[vows]] follow a {{Wiki|pragmatic}} approach in which the ten global [[commitments]] held by [[Vinaya]] novices constitute full [[ordination]].
  
That is to say, the [[vows]] of those [[ordained]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] do not enumerate the multitude of details specified by the [[Indian]] and [[Tibetan]] [[Vinaya]] [[traditions]]. Rather, the [[vows]] follow a {{Wiki|pragmatic}} approach in which the ten global [[commitments]] held by [[Vinaya]] novices constitute full [[ordination]].
 
  
 
The [[vows]] held by [[monks and nuns]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] are as follows:
 
The [[vows]] held by [[monks and nuns]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] are as follows:
  
 
:“Throughout my [[life]] I will abandon {{Wiki|killing}}, [[stealing]], {{Wiki|lying}} or cheating, {{Wiki|sexual}} [[activity]], taking [[intoxicants]] and engaging in meaningless [[activities]].
 
:“Throughout my [[life]] I will abandon {{Wiki|killing}}, [[stealing]], {{Wiki|lying}} or cheating, {{Wiki|sexual}} [[activity]], taking [[intoxicants]] and engaging in meaningless [[activities]].
 +
  
 
:I will practice [[contentment]], reduce my [[desire]] for [[worldly]] [[pleasures]], maintain the [[commitments]] of [[refuge]], and practice the [[three trainings]] of [[moral discipline]], [[concentration]] and [[wisdom]].”
 
:I will practice [[contentment]], reduce my [[desire]] for [[worldly]] [[pleasures]], maintain the [[commitments]] of [[refuge]], and practice the [[three trainings]] of [[moral discipline]], [[concentration]] and [[wisdom]].”
 +
 +
  
 
==[[Development]] of {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] [[Teachers]]==
 
==[[Development]] of {{Wiki|Western}} [[Dharma]] [[Teachers]]==
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] founded the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] "to bring [[pure]] [[Buddhist teachings]] to the [[west]]," where he would train equally four types of [[teacher]]: [[monks]], [[nuns]], lay men and lay women. NKT-IKBU [[Dharma]] Centres are mixed communities of lay and [[ordained]] practitioners who are all on the same [[teaching]] programs. He also promotes the [[development]] of local [[teachers]] in their [[own]] [[language]]. This is a departure from most [[Tibetan Buddhist]] Centres where [[monastics]] take precedence over [[lay people]], [[monks]] take precedence over [[nuns]], and [[Tibetans]] take precedence over [[Westerners]].
+
 
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] founded the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] "to bring [[pure]] [[Buddhist teachings]] to the [[west]]," where he would train equally four types of [[teacher]]: [[monks]], [[nuns]], lay men and lay women.  
 +
 
 +
[[NKT-IKBU]] [[Dharma]] Centres are mixed communities of lay and [[ordained]] practitioners who are all on the same [[teaching]] programs.  
 +
 
 +
He also promotes the [[development]] of local [[teachers]] in their [[own]] [[language]].  
 +
 
 +
This is a departure from most [[Tibetan Buddhist]] Centres where [[monastics]] take precedence over [[lay people]], [[monks]] take precedence over [[nuns]], and [[Tibetans]] take precedence over [[Westerners]].
  
 
In a [[teaching]] called Training as a Qualified [[Dharma Teacher]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] explained where the [[teachers]] of the NKT-IKBU come from:
 
In a [[teaching]] called Training as a Qualified [[Dharma Teacher]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] explained where the [[teachers]] of the NKT-IKBU come from:
  
:We need qualified [[Teachers]]. The [[New Kadampa Tradition]] cannot buy qualified [[Teachers]], nor can we invite them from outside. We need [[Teachers]] who can teach the twelve texts that we have chosen as our [[objects]] of study in the [[Teacher]] Training Programme and the Foundation Programme. Other [[Teachers]] cannot teach these [[books]] because they have not studied them and they do not have the [[transmissions]]. Therefore, qualified [[Teachers]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] can come only from our [[own]] students.
+
:We need qualified [[Teachers]].  
 +
 
 +
The [[New Kadampa Tradition]] cannot buy qualified [[Teachers]], nor can we invite them from outside.  
 +
 
 +
We need [[Teachers]] who can teach the twelve texts that we have chosen as our [[objects]] of study in the [[Teacher]] Training Programme and the Foundation Programme.  
 +
 
 +
Other [[Teachers]] cannot teach these [[books]] because they have not studied them and they do not have the [[transmissions]]. Therefore, qualified [[Teachers]] within the [[New Kadampa Tradition]] can come only from our [[own]] students.
 +
 
  
 
==Retirement==
 
==Retirement==
  
Although he is in [[good health]], in August 2009 he voluntarily stepped down as General [[Spiritual]] Director of the NKT-IKBU, in a democratic system of succession that he established in the NKT-IKBU's Internal Rules.
 
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] engages in [[meditation retreat]] and continues to write [[Dharma]] [[books]] and to help to preserve and promote the [[Kadampa Buddhism]] of [[Je Tsongkhapa]] in accordance with the instructions of [[Trijang Rinpoche]]. According to Richard Spanswick, "Since [[taking up]] residence at Conishead Priory, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has been working to produce a complete set of instructions for westerners wishing to set out on the [[path to enlightenment]]." Continuing this task, a new [[book]] entitled {{Wiki|Modern}} [[Buddhism]]: The [[Path]] of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]] is slated for [[release]] in 2010, and its [[oral transmission]] will be given by [[Geshe Kelsang]] at the Fall 2010 NKT-IKBU {{Wiki|Festival}}.
+
Although he is in [[good health]], in August 2009 he voluntarily stepped down as General [[Spiritual]] Director of the [[NKT-IKBU]], in a democratic system of succession that he established in the [[NKT-IKBU's]] Internal Rules.
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] engages in [[meditation retreat]] and continues to write [[Dharma]] [[books]] and to help to preserve and promote the [[Kadampa Buddhism]] of [[Je Tsongkhapa]] in accordance with the instructions of [[Trijang Rinpoche]].  
 +
 
 +
According to [[Richard Spanswick]], "Since [[taking up]] residence at Conishead Priory, [[Geshe Kelsang]] has been working to produce a complete set of instructions for westerners wishing to set out on the [[path to enlightenment]]."  
 +
 
 +
Continuing this task, a new [[book]] entitled {{Wiki|Modern}} [[Buddhism]]: The [[Path]] of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]] is slated for [[release]] in 2010, and its [[oral transmission]] will be given by [[Geshe Kelsang]] at the Fall 2010 [[NKT-IKBU]] {{Wiki|Festival}}.
 +
 
 +
 
  
 
==Relationship with [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|politics}}==
 
==Relationship with [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|politics}}==
  
Consistent with the [[lineage]] teachings he received from his [[root Guru]], [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] believes that the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] should continue to be practised by any [[Gelugpas]] who wish to do so. This [[view]] differs from that held by the [[Dalai Lama XIV]], who, despite having received the same [[lineage]] teachings, after long [[consideration]] has renounced this practice and actively discourages it as he considers it detrimental to the {{Wiki|unity}} of the various [[Buddhist traditions]] of [[Tibet]]. However, as it is an {{Wiki|independent}} {{Wiki|Western}} [[Buddhist]] [[organization]], the [[Dalai Lama]] has no authority in terms of how the NKT-IKBU is organized and what practices are [[taught]]. The [[controversy]] surrounding the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban of the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] (in communities within his [[own]] jurisdiction) is described in the article on the [[Dorje Shugden]] Controversy.
 
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] said at an NKT-IKBU {{Wiki|Festival}} in 1995 that the [[Gelug tradition]] is in a [[state]] of "serious {{Wiki|degeneration}}." In explaining this, [[Geshe Kelsang]] said that if the [[Dalai Lama]] succeeds in destroying the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]], the entire [[Gelug tradition]] itself will be destroyed:
 
: “ If the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] is harmful then it follows that [[Je Phabongkhapa]] was not an [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[Buddhist master]], and if he was not then there is no [[doubt]] that his [[heart]] [[disciples]], [[Kyabje]] [[Ling Rinpoche]] and [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] (the Senior and Junior Tutors of HH the [[Dalai Lama]]) were also not [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]]. These three [[Lamas]] are the most important [[Gelugpa]] [[Lama]]s of recent times. If these three are not [[pure]] [[Teachers]] then there is no [[doubt]] that the entire practice of the [[Gelug Tradition]] is invalid. This is the main issue that needs clarification.”
 
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] become critical of the [[Gelugpa]] hierarchy's attempts to prevent him from passing on [[Dorje Shugden]] teachings that he had received from his [[own]] [[teacher]]. The distancing of [[Geshe Kelsang]] from the [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|hierarchy}} has also been underlined by a number of revisions made to later editions of his earlier publications. [[Geshe Kelsang's]] dedications to the long [[life]] of the [[Dalai Lama]] found in earlier editions of [[Meaningful to Behold]] are omitted from the fourth edition (1994) onwards.
+
Consistent with the [[lineage]] teachings he received from his [[root Guru]], [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]], [[Geshe Kelsang]] believes that the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] should continue to be practised by any [[Gelugpas]] who wish to do so.
 +
 
 +
This [[view]] differs from that held by the [[Dalai Lama XIV]], who, despite having received the same [[lineage]] teachings, after long [[consideration]] has renounced this practice and actively discourages it as he considers it detrimental to the {{Wiki|unity}} of the various [[Buddhist traditions]] of [[Tibet]].
 +
 
 +
However, as it is an {{Wiki|independent}} {{Wiki|Western}} [[Buddhist]] [[organization]], the [[Dalai Lama]] has no authority in terms of how the [[NKT-IKBU]] is organized and what practices are [[taught]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The [[controversy]] surrounding the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban of the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] (in communities within his [[own]] jurisdiction) is described in the article on the [[Dorje Shugden]] Controversy.
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] said at an [[NKT-IKBU]] {{Wiki|Festival}} in 1995 that the [[Gelug tradition]] is in a [[state]] of "serious {{Wiki|degeneration}}." In explaining this, [[Geshe Kelsang]] said that if the [[Dalai Lama]] succeeds in destroying the [[practice of Dorje Shugden]], the entire [[Gelug tradition]] itself will be destroyed:
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
: “ If the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] is harmful then it follows that [[Je Phabongkhapa]] was not an [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[Buddhist master]],
 +
 
 +
and if he was not then there is no [[doubt]] that his [[heart]] [[disciples]], [[Kyabje]] [[Ling Rinpoche]] and [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] (the Senior and Junior Tutors of HH the [[Dalai Lama]]) were also not [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]].
 +
 
 +
These three [[Lamas]] are the most important [[Gelugpa]] [[Lama]]s of recent times.
 +
 
 +
If these three are not [[pure]] [[Teachers]] then there is no [[doubt]] that the entire practice of the [[Gelug Tradition]] is invalid.
 +
 
 +
This is the main issue that needs clarification.”
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] become critical of the [[Gelugpa]] hierarchy's attempts to prevent him from passing on [[Dorje Shugden]] teachings that he had received from his [[own]] [[teacher]].  
 +
 
 +
The distancing of [[Geshe Kelsang]] from the [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|hierarchy}} has also been underlined by a number of revisions made to later editions of his earlier publications.  
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang's]] dedications to the long [[life]] of the [[Dalai Lama]] found in earlier editions of [[Meaningful to Behold]] are omitted from the fourth edition (1994) onwards.
 +
 
 +
Also, [[Geshe Kelsang's]] students made revisions to the list of [[Mahamudra lineage]] [[gurus]] in the second edition of [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] published in 1992.
 +
 
 +
On this point, [[Kyabje]] Gehlek [[Rimpoche]] explains that "We have two [[lineage]] [[prayers]], one long and one slightly shorter one.
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]], who had the [[teaching]] from [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] at the same [[time]] when I was there, gives the shorter [[lineage prayer]] and I put in the longer one," and Belither confirms that "one of two [[existing]] [[lineages]] was removed to avoid possible {{Wiki|confusion}}."
 +
 
 +
Additionally, in the first edition of [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]], [[Phabongkha Rinpoche]] was followed by [[Trijang Rinpoche]] and [[Ling Rinpoche]], the [[latter]] being the 'current holder of the [[throne]] of [[Ganden]]'.
 +
 
 +
In the second edition, [[Ling Rinpoche]]'s [[name]] is omitted and replaced by '[[Dorjechang Kelsang Gyatso Rinpoche]]' ([[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]]).
  
Also, [[Geshe Kelsang's]] students made revisions to the list of [[Mahamudra]] [[lineage]] [[gurus]] in the second edition of [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]] published in 1992. On this point, [[Kyabje]] Gehlek [[Rimpoche]] explains that "We have two [[lineage]] [[prayers]], one long and one slightly shorter one. [[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]], who had the [[teaching]] from [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]] at the same [[time]] when I was there, gives the shorter [[lineage prayer]] and I put in the longer one," and Belither confirms that "one of two [[existing]] [[lineages]] was removed to avoid possible {{Wiki|confusion}}."
 
  
Additionally, in the first edition of [[Clear Light]] of [[Bliss]], [[Phabongkha Rinpoche]] was followed by [[Trijang Rinpoche]] and [[Ling Rinpoche]], the [[latter]] being the 'current holder of the [[throne]] of [[Ganden]]'. In the second edition, [[Ling Rinpoche]]'s [[name]] is omitted and replaced by '[[Dorjechang Kelsang Gyatso Rinpoche]]' ([[Geshe Kelsang Gyatso]]).
 
  
 
===[[Letter]] of expulsion from the [[Sera Je Monastery]]===
 
===[[Letter]] of expulsion from the [[Sera Je Monastery]]===
  
According to Michael von Brück, in 1996 [[Geshe Kelsang]] was expelled by a number of [[abbots]] and [[Geshes]] from the {{Wiki|community}} of [[Sera Je Monastery]] in a [[letter]] "calling him an 'apostate' and comparing him to '[[Mahmud of Ghazni]].'" Their [[letter]] of expulsion stated that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] outspoken [[criticism]] against the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban of the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] was not acceptable. A copy of this [[letter]] may be found [http://thedorjeshugdengroup.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/declaration-of-expulsion-of-kelsang-gyatso-from-sera-je-monastery1.doc here].
 
  
[[Geshe Kelsang]] is one of hundreds of other [[monks and nuns]] who have been expelled from their [[monasteries]] because of refusing to give up their practice of [[Dorje Shugden]]. [[Monks]] at [[Sera Je]] and [[Gaden]] [[monasteries]] silently demonstrated against the ban; a number of them were expelled for having "broken their [[vow]] of {{Wiki|obedience}} to the [[monastic]] authorities."
+
 
 +
According to [[Michael von Brück]], in 1996 [[Geshe Kelsang]] was expelled by a number of [[abbots]] and [[Geshes]] from the {{Wiki|community}} of [[Sera Je Monastery]] in a [[letter]] "calling him an 'apostate' and comparing him to '[[Mahmud of Ghazni]].'"
 +
 
 +
Their [[letter]] of expulsion stated that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] outspoken [[criticism]] against the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban of the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]] was not acceptable.
 +
 
 +
A copy of this [[letter]] may be found [http://thedorjeshugdengroup.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/declaration-of-expulsion-of-kelsang-gyatso-from-sera-je-monastery1.doc here].
 +
 
 +
[[Geshe Kelsang]] is one of hundreds of other [[monks and nuns]] who have been expelled from their [[monasteries]] because of refusing to give up their practice of [[Dorje Shugden]].  
 +
 
 +
[[Monks]] at [[Sera Je]] and [[Gaden]] [[monasteries]] silently demonstrated against the ban; a number of them were expelled for having "broken their [[vow]] of {{Wiki|obedience}} to the [[monastic]] authorities."
  
 
James Belither, former secretary of the NKT-IKBU and editor for [[Tharpa Publications]], asks what it means to expel someone from an establishment they graduated from forty years previously, and explained the {{Wiki|political}} circumstances surrounding [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[Gyatso's]] "expulsion":
 
James Belither, former secretary of the NKT-IKBU and editor for [[Tharpa Publications]], asks what it means to expel someone from an establishment they graduated from forty years previously, and explained the {{Wiki|political}} circumstances surrounding [[Geshe Kelsang]] [[Gyatso's]] "expulsion":
  
:“It is only now, when [[Geshe Kelsang]] has dared to face up to the [[Dalai Lama]] and the {{Wiki|Tibetan Government}} in Exile in refusing to accept the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban against the practice of [[Dorje]] Shugden—a practice given to him by his [[Spiritual Guide]] [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]]—that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] credentials as a [[Buddhist]] [[teacher]] have been called into question.
+
:“It is only now, when [[Geshe Kelsang]] has dared to face up to the [[Dalai Lama]] and the {{Wiki|Tibetan Government}} in Exile in refusing to accept the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban against the practice of [[Dorje Shugden]]—a practice given to him by his [[Spiritual Guide]] [[Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche]]—that [[Geshe Kelsang's]] credentials as a [[Buddhist]] [[teacher]] have been called into question.
 +
 
 +
:The campaign to discredit [[Geshe Kelsang]] is clearly an attempt to [[silence]] him and to act as a warning to others.  
  
:The campaign to discredit [[Geshe Kelsang]] is clearly an attempt to [[silence]] him and to act as a warning to others. As one [[Tibetan]] [[Lama]] living in {{Wiki|America}} said to another [[Lama]] living in {{Wiki|Germany}} who was planning to come out publicly against the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban 'No, you mustn't do that. They'll do to you what they've done to [[Geshe Kelsang]]."
+
As one [[Tibetan]] [[Lama]] living in {{Wiki|America}} said to another [[Lama]] living in {{Wiki|Germany}} who was planning to come out publicly against the [[Dalai Lama's]] ban 'No, you mustn't do that. They'll do to you what they've done to [[Geshe Kelsang]]."
  
 
{{W}}
 
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Revision as of 03:23, 22 February 2016

Geshe Kelsang Gyatso


Kelsang Gyatso is a Buddhist monk, "meditation master, scholar, and author" of 22 books based on the teachings of the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism.

He is the founder and former spiritual director of the New Kadampa Tradition - International Kadampa Buddhist Union (NKT-IKBU), a Western Buddhist order based primarily on the teachings of the Gelugpa tradition, albeit "not subordinate to Tibetan authorities other than Geshe Gyatso himself."

The NKT-IKBU has grown to become a global Buddhist organisation that currently lists more than 200 centres and around 900 branch classes/study groups in 40 countries.

Geshe Kelsang was born in Tibet in 1931 and ordained at the age of eight.

After leaving Tibet, he spent eighteen years in retreat in the Himalayas in India.

In 1976 he was invited by Lama Thubten Yeshe via their spiritual guide, Trijang Rinpoche, to become the resident teacher at the main FPMT center, Manjushri Institute in Ulverston, Cumbria in England.

Following a three-year retreat in Tharpaland, Dumfries, he founded the NKT-IKBU in 1991.

He retired as General Spiritual Director of the NKT-IKBU in August 2009 but continues to write books and practice materials.


Life and education in Tibet

Geshe Kelsang Gyatso was born on Dharmachakra Day (the 4th day of the 6th month of the Tibetan lunar calendar) 1931 in Yangcho Tang, eastern Tibet.

His lay name was Lobsang Chuponpa.

His ordination name "Kelsang Gyatso" means "Ocean of Good Fortune".

His mother made great sacrifices to enable her son to attend the Ngamring Jampa Ling Monastery because he showed interest and aptitude from an early age.

He joined the monastery when he was 8 years old and later described memorizing the Medicine Buddha Sutra:

In my first monastery, Jampa Ling, this was the principal practice.

The Tibetan translation of the Sutra is about fifty pages long.

I memorized this together with some additional prayers, because this was one of the commitments for being able to stay in the monastery.

(In November 1986, Geshe Kelsang oversaw the rebuilding of Ngamring Jampa Ling Monastery after its destruction, and it was fully restored and reopened by September 1988.)

According to Cozort, Kelsang Gyatso is "a highly trained geshe."

After studying on the Geshe training program at Jampaling, Geshe Kelsang passed two examinations at Tashilhunpo Monastery in Shigatse, and received his Geshe degree.

Later Geshe Kelsang continued his studies at Sera Monastery near Lhasa, one of the great Gelug monastic universities of Tibet.

At Sera Je, he successfully completed the full Geshe studies of five large philosophical texts.

He was a member of the Tsangpa Khangtsen, one of the fifteen houses at Sera Je monastery.

Contemporaries at Sera Je included Geshe Lhundub Sopa, Geshe Rabten, and Lama Thubten Yeshe.

Waterhouse cites three reasons, traditional in Tibetan Buddhism, why Geshe Kelsang is authorized to be a Spiritual Guide, saying "The combination of experience, lineage and knowledge makes Geshe Kelsang ideal as a teacher.

He has the credibility of a genuine Tibetan teacher and the vision to instigate an organization (the New Kadampa Tradition) to present that teaching to westerners.


Spiritual guide

Geshe Kelsang Gyatso's "Spiritual Father" was the great Gelugpa Master Kyabje Trijang Dorjechang (1900-1981 CE), who was also the "root guru" of the current Dalai Lama.

He describes his root Guru as "a vast reservoir from which all Gelugpa practitioners of the present day received 'waters' of blessings and instructions."

Trijang Rinpoche was also the Junior Tutor and Spiritual Guide of the 14th Dalai Lama for fifty years.

Geshe Kelsang has repeatedly talked about his complete indebtedness to and reliance upon his Spiritual Guide, describing him as more important than his life.

In 1978 Trijang Rinpoche wrote a prayer for Geshe Kelsang Gyatso's long life that is regularly recited at New Kadampa Tradition Centres.


Leaving Tibet and Life in India

After the exodus from Tibet in 1959, Geshe Kelsang escaped to India through Nepal and stayed at the initial location of his monastery, in Buxar.

All he took with him were two Buddhist scriptures -- Shantideva's Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life and a text by Je Tsongkhapa.

Later, after Prime Minister Nehru donated large tracts of land in South India to the community in exile, the monastery moved south.

At this time, Geshe Kelsang left the monastery at Buxar for Mussoorie (a hill station in the Indian state of Uttaranchal) where he taught and engaged in intensive meditation retreat for 18 years.


Journey to the West

Even before coming to the West, Geshe Kelsang was "by all accounts, a very well respected scholar and meditator" within the Tibetan exile community. Since then, "this diminutive and unassuming Tibetan has won the hearts and minds of people from all cultures and walks of life."

Kay remarks that Lama Yeshe's decision to invite his former classmate to be Resident Teacher at the FPMT's Manjushri Institute in England was advised by the Dalai Lama.

The invitation was extended by Trijang Rinpoche, the root Guru of Geshe Kelsang.

He arrived in August 1977 and gave his first teaching on Lamrim on September 10. Geshe Kelsang later recounted that Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche asked him to go to England, teach Shantideva's Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life, Chandrakirti's Guide to the Middle Way and Lamrim, and then “check whether there was any meaning in his continuing to stay."

In Geshe Kelsang's own words:

When I was in India I received an invitation from Manjushri Institute in England through Lama Yeshe, who was my very close friend in Tibet.

He and I were from the same monastery in Tibet and we had the same Teacher. He wrote to me and requested me please to go to England and give Dharma teachings.

I received this invitation but I didn’t answer for two months.

At that time it was difficult for me to say yes due to certain commitments to local Tibetan people, and also I thought how could I teach as I could not speak English?

I had no confidence. Lama Yeshe was very clever; he went to visit my root Guru Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche, and requested him to ask me to go to England to teach Dharma.

He knew if my root Guru asked me, then I would agree to go.


Under Geshe Kelsang's spiritual direction, Manjushri Institute "became a thriving training and retreat center."

Geshe Kelsang taught the General Program at Manjushri from 1977 to 1987.

At that time, the Geshe studies programme was taught by Geshe Jampa Tekchok and then Geshe Konchog Tsewang (1982–1990). (In 1990 the Geshe Studies Programme at Manjushri Institute was cancelled, as it had been in most of the other FPMT Centres where it had been established.)

On October 13, 1983, Geshe Kelsang became a naturalized British citizen: “I became a subject of the British Queen”.


Establishing Buddhist Centres

See also: Manjushri Institute

In 1979, Geshe Kelsang opened a Dharma Center (Madhyamaka Centre in Yorkshire) under his own spiritual direction and apparently without FPMT approval.

David Kay explained how many Geshes who happened to teach at FPMT Centers in the early years still considered themselves to be autonomous entities: "Not all of the geshes shared Lama Yeshe's vision of Gelug Buddhism in the West or understood themselves to be part of it."

Robert Bluck explained that as a consequence of opening Madhayamaka Centre, Lama Yeshe asked for Geshe Kelsang's resignation, "but his students petitioned him to remain, and a struggle ensued for control of Manjushri Institute, which eventually withdrew from the FPMT."

Although some FPMT students regarded Geshe Kelsang as a "rogue geshe" as a result of his separation from the FPMT, Bluck suggests an alternative view: "FPMT teachers became increasingly remote, with Geshe Kelsang's single-minded approach and personal example inspiring many students.


Creation of the NKT-IKBU

See also: New Kadampa Tradition

In 1987, Geshe Kelsang entered a 3-year retreat at Tharpaland Retreat Centre in Dumfries, Scotland.

During his retreat, he wrote five books and established the foundations of the NKT-IKBU.

After completing his retreat in the early months of 1991, Geshe Kelsang announced the creation of the NKT-IKBU, an event which was celebrated by his students in the NKT-IKBU magazine Full Moon as "a wonderful development in the history of the Buddhadharma."

Since that time, the NKT-IKBU has grown to comprise over 1100 Centres and groups throughout 40 countries.

Teachings

Geshe Kelsang Gyatso is a prolific writer and teacher of Buddhadharma in general, in particular the teachings of Je Tsongkhapa.

He has taught extensively on all aspects of Buddha's Sutras and Tantras both in regular courses for the first ten years at Manjushri Institute and then in International Festivals two or three times a year.

His teachings draw on the original texts of Buddha Shakyamuni and a number of Indian and Tibetan teachers and commentators.

They also draw on his own meditative experience acquired in his long 1959-1976 retreat.

Talking about his training at the monasteries, he explains that it mainly emphasized intellectual debate, and that he would therefore stay up all night to meditate on Lamrim (stages of the path), Lojong (training the mind) and Mahamudra in the meditative tradition of Je Tsongkhapa.

His teachings reflect this emphasis on practical teachings based on Lamrim, Lojong and Mahamudra. When he established the NKT-IKBU study programs he said:

"I wanted to encourage people to practice purely.

Just having a lot of Dharma knowledge, studying a lot intellectually but not practicing, is a serious problem.

This was my experience in Tibet. Intellectual knowledge alone does not give peace.”

Geshe Kelsang explained how he received his Guru Trijang Rinpoche's permission to present Dharma in a more practical way suitable to Westerners. Waterhouse commented that "He teaches in English with a strong Tibetan accent.

He is an endearing character to look at; petite with slightly downcast eyes which look about him as he walks or teaches his devoted students." Spanswick observes that "many of those who hear him speak are struck by his wisdom and sincerity."


Books

At the heart of the NKT-IKBU are its three study programs: the General Program, the Foundation Program, and the Teacher Training Program. In these programs people can study Geshe Kelsang's books with authorized NKT-IKBU Dharma teachers.

According to the NKT-IKBU, it "seeks not to offer a westernized form of Buddhism, but rather to make traditional Gelugpa Buddhism accessible to westerners."

To achieve this, Geshe Kelsang taught himself English and wrote 22 books that aim to provide Western Dharma practitioners with essential Buddhist texts.

His first book published in 1980 was a commentary to Shantideva's Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life called Meaningful to Behold.

This was followed by Clear Light of Bliss in 1982. His books were first published by Wisdom Publications.

In 1985, Tharpa Publications was founded, which since has been the exclusive publisher of his works worldwide.


A number of Geshe Kelsang's textbooks have received favourable reviews.

Bluck writes that "The three most popular works—Introduction to Buddhism, The New Meditation Handbook and Transform Your Life—have sold 165,000 copies between them, showing their appeal far beyond the movement itself."

Batchelor says that Geshe Kelsang's books are written with "considerable clarity." Braizer echoes this sentiment, saying that Geshe Kelsang writes "excellent" books that are "an important contribution to Western understanding of Buddhism and its traditions. They can stand on their own merit."

Guide to Dakini Land and Essence of Vajrayana have been described as "the most detailed and revealing commentary on specific tantric practices yet to be published in a Western language." In his book review of Guide to Dakini Land, Richard Guard said:

It is remarkable that the author has managed to give us so much information in only a few hundred pages.

The editors are to be commended for their skilful efforts in conveying Geshe Kelsang’s instructions in such simple and precise language...

By making this book available for Vajrayogini practitioners, Geshe Kelsang has truly brought a blessing into our lives.

Geshe Kelsang regards all his books as "coming from Je Tsongkhapa, with himself as being like a cassette recorder into which the Wisdom Buddha, the Dharma Protector Dorje Shugden, has placed the cassette of Je Tsongkhapa's teachings."

And in the preface of one of his books, Geshe Kelsang states:

“I have received these teachings from my Spiritual Guide, Trijang Dorjechang, who was an emanation of Atisha; thus the explanations given in this book, Joyful Path of Good Fortune, actually come from him and not from myself.”

Biography Research Guide describes Geshe Kelsang's books:

A Tibetan Buddhist monk and scholar; Geshe Kelsang has written twenty books that aim to provide Western Dharma practitioners with essential Buddhist texts; some are books for beginners such as Transform Your Life and How to Solve Our Human Problems, books about the Mahayana path like Universal Compassion (Lojong), and books on Vajrayana (Tantra) like Mahamudra Tantra; (born 1931, in Tibet).

Over a million copies of Geshe Kelsang's books have been sold, and "their popularity is increasing as more people become interested in the teaching of Buddhism."

His books include titles for beginners such as Introduction to Buddhism, Transform Your Life and How to Solve Our Human Problems, books about the Mahayana path like Universal Compassion (Lojong), The New Heart of Wisdom (Heart Sutra) and Joyful Path of Good Fortune (Lamrim), and books on Vajrayana (Tantra) like Mahamudra Tantra, Guide to Dakini Land and Essence of Vajrayana.

Two of his books are commentaries on Indian Mahayana texts: the book Ocean of Nectar is a commentary to Chandrakirti's Guide to the Middle Way, and Meaningful to Behold is a commentary to Shantideva's Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life or Bodhicharyavatara.

The books are also highly thought of within the Tibetan establishment.

Three of his published works contained forewords by previous Ganden Tripas and the Dalai Lama.

The Dalai Lama contributed a foreword to Buddhism in the Tibetan Tradition, while Trijang Rinpoche and Ling Rinpoche (who each held the position of Ganden Tripa) also provided forewords for his books Meaningful to Behold (which was dedicated to the long life of the Dalai Lama) and Clear Light of Bliss (which was dedicated to the late Trijang Rinpoche), respectively.

Kyabje Ling Rinpoche refers to Geshe Kelsang as "this most precious Spiritual Guide," while Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche refers to him as "The excellent expounder, the great Spiritual Master Kelsang Gyatso."

Tsem Tulku praised Geshe Kelsang and his publications: "The great master, the Kadampa Geshe, Kelsang Gyatso, you can see very clearly his works, his centers, his books, his pure vows, and how many thousands of people he affects."

The books are being translated into many other languages.

Bibliography

  • The Bodhisattva Vow: A Practical Guide to Helping Others, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1995)
  • Buddhism in the Tibetan Tradition: A Guide, Routledge & Kegan Paul (1984)
  • Clear Light of Bliss: Tantric Meditation Manual, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1992)
  • Eight Steps to Happiness: The Buddhist Way of Loving Kindness, Tharpa Publications (2000)
  • Essence of Vajrayana: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala, Tharpa Publications (1997)
  • Great Treasury of Merit: How to Rely Upon a Spiritual Guide, Tharpa Publications (1992)
  • Guide to Dakini Land: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Buddha Vajrayogini, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1996)
  • Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life: How to Enjoy a Life of Great Meaning and Altruism, a translation of Shantideva's Bodhisattvacharyavatara with Neil Elliott, Tharpa Publications (2002)

Geshe Kelsang has also translated and/or composed many sadhanas, or prayer booklets, for the practice of many of the Buddhist Tantras.


Emphasis on lineage

Kay says that NKT-IKBU practitioners practice their tradition exclusively, "eschewing eclecticism." Geshe Kelsang's "conservative and traditional presentation of Buddhism" is appealing to Westerners who "wish for a meaningful alternative to spiritual pluralism."

According to Geshe Kelsang in Understanding the Mind:


Every Teacher and every tradition has a slightly different approach and employs different methods.

The practices taught by one Teacher will differ from those taught by another, and if we try to combine them we shall become confused, develop doubts, and lose direction.


If we try to create a synthesis of different traditions we shall destroy the special power of each and be left only with a mishmash of our own making that will be a source of confusion and doubt.


Therefore, Geshe Kelsang has taught in Great Treasury of Merit that the most effective way to progress spiritually is by "following one tradition purely — relying upon one Teacher, practising only his teachings, and following his Dharma Protector.


If we mix traditions many obstacles arise and it takes a long time for us to attain realizations."

The lineage Geshe Kelsang follows is that taught to him by Trijang Rinpoche, his root Guru, and in turn by Pabongka Rinpoche, the root Guru of Trijang Rinpoche.

One of Geshe Kelsang's teachers, the highly respected Lharampa Geshe Zong Rinpoche, affirms Geshe Kelsang's view on the importance of lineage:


Kyabje Phabongka passed all of his lineages to Kyabje Trijang Dorje Chang.

He often said this in discourses.

The purpose of this detailed exposition is to affirm the power of the lineage.

If we lose faith in the lineage, we are lost. We should remember the biographies of past and present teachers.

We should never develop negative thoughts towards our root and lineage gurus.

If we do not keep the commitments after having received teachings, this is a great downfall.


Ordination of Westerners

There are currently 700 monks and nuns within the New Kadampa Tradition, all ordained by Geshe Kelsang. Geshe Kelsang says:

Western people are well educated; they do not have blind faith but immediately question and try to understand the truth. I cannot pretend with you.

We cannot be like a fully ordained monk who has taken 253 vows, but who is not even keeping one.

We should never do like this; we need to do everything correctly and purely.

The Kadampa ordination solves all these problems.

Practically speaking, all the 253 vows explained in the Vinaya Sutra are included within the ten commitments.”


That is to say, the vows of those ordained within the New Kadampa Tradition do not enumerate the multitude of details specified by the Indian and Tibetan Vinaya traditions.

Rather, the vows follow a pragmatic approach in which the ten global commitments held by Vinaya novices constitute full ordination.


The vows held by monks and nuns within the New Kadampa Tradition are as follows:

“Throughout my life I will abandon killing, stealing, lying or cheating, sexual activity, taking intoxicants and engaging in meaningless activities.


I will practice contentment, reduce my desire for worldly pleasures, maintain the commitments of refuge, and practice the three trainings of moral discipline, concentration and wisdom.”


Development of Western Dharma Teachers

Geshe Kelsang founded the New Kadampa Tradition "to bring pure Buddhist teachings to the west," where he would train equally four types of teacher: monks, nuns, lay men and lay women.

NKT-IKBU Dharma Centres are mixed communities of lay and ordained practitioners who are all on the same teaching programs.

He also promotes the development of local teachers in their own language.

This is a departure from most Tibetan Buddhist Centres where monastics take precedence over lay people, monks take precedence over nuns, and Tibetans take precedence over Westerners.

In a teaching called Training as a Qualified Dharma Teacher, Geshe Kelsang explained where the teachers of the NKT-IKBU come from:

We need qualified Teachers.

The New Kadampa Tradition cannot buy qualified Teachers, nor can we invite them from outside.

We need Teachers who can teach the twelve texts that we have chosen as our objects of study in the Teacher Training Programme and the Foundation Programme.

Other Teachers cannot teach these books because they have not studied them and they do not have the transmissions. Therefore, qualified Teachers within the New Kadampa Tradition can come only from our own students.


Retirement

Although he is in good health, in August 2009 he voluntarily stepped down as General Spiritual Director of the NKT-IKBU, in a democratic system of succession that he established in the NKT-IKBU's Internal Rules.

Geshe Kelsang engages in meditation retreat and continues to write Dharma books and to help to preserve and promote the Kadampa Buddhism of Je Tsongkhapa in accordance with the instructions of Trijang Rinpoche.

According to Richard Spanswick, "Since taking up residence at Conishead Priory, Geshe Kelsang has been working to produce a complete set of instructions for westerners wishing to set out on the path to enlightenment."

Continuing this task, a new book entitled Modern Buddhism: The Path of Wisdom and Compassion is slated for release in 2010, and its oral transmission will be given by Geshe Kelsang at the Fall 2010 NKT-IKBU Festival.


Relationship with Tibetan politics

Consistent with the lineage teachings he received from his root Guru, Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche, Geshe Kelsang believes that the practice of Dorje Shugden should continue to be practised by any Gelugpas who wish to do so.

This view differs from that held by the Dalai Lama XIV, who, despite having received the same lineage teachings, after long consideration has renounced this practice and actively discourages it as he considers it detrimental to the unity of the various Buddhist traditions of Tibet.

However, as it is an independent Western Buddhist organization, the Dalai Lama has no authority in terms of how the NKT-IKBU is organized and what practices are taught.


The controversy surrounding the Dalai Lama's ban of the practice of Dorje Shugden (in communities within his own jurisdiction) is described in the article on the Dorje Shugden Controversy.

Geshe Kelsang said at an NKT-IKBU Festival in 1995 that the Gelug tradition is in a state of "serious degeneration." In explaining this, Geshe Kelsang said that if the Dalai Lama succeeds in destroying the practice of Dorje Shugden, the entire Gelug tradition itself will be destroyed:


“ If the practice of Dorje Shugden is harmful then it follows that Je Phabongkhapa was not an authentic Buddhist master,

and if he was not then there is no doubt that his heart disciples, Kyabje Ling Rinpoche and Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche (the Senior and Junior Tutors of HH the Dalai Lama) were also not authentic.

These three Lamas are the most important Gelugpa Lamas of recent times.

If these three are not pure Teachers then there is no doubt that the entire practice of the Gelug Tradition is invalid.

This is the main issue that needs clarification.”

Geshe Kelsang become critical of the Gelugpa hierarchy's attempts to prevent him from passing on Dorje Shugden teachings that he had received from his own teacher.

The distancing of Geshe Kelsang from the Tibetan hierarchy has also been underlined by a number of revisions made to later editions of his earlier publications.

Geshe Kelsang's dedications to the long life of the Dalai Lama found in earlier editions of Meaningful to Behold are omitted from the fourth edition (1994) onwards.

Also, Geshe Kelsang's students made revisions to the list of Mahamudra lineage gurus in the second edition of Clear Light of Bliss published in 1992.

On this point, Kyabje Gehlek Rimpoche explains that "We have two lineage prayers, one long and one slightly shorter one.

Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, who had the teaching from Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche at the same time when I was there, gives the shorter lineage prayer and I put in the longer one," and Belither confirms that "one of two existing lineages was removed to avoid possible confusion."

Additionally, in the first edition of Clear Light of Bliss, Phabongkha Rinpoche was followed by Trijang Rinpoche and Ling Rinpoche, the latter being the 'current holder of the throne of Ganden'.

In the second edition, Ling Rinpoche's name is omitted and replaced by 'Dorjechang Kelsang Gyatso Rinpoche' (Geshe Kelsang Gyatso).


Letter of expulsion from the Sera Je Monastery

According to Michael von Brück, in 1996 Geshe Kelsang was expelled by a number of abbots and Geshes from the community of Sera Je Monastery in a letter "calling him an 'apostate' and comparing him to 'Mahmud of Ghazni.'"

Their letter of expulsion stated that Geshe Kelsang's outspoken criticism against the Dalai Lama's ban of the practice of Dorje Shugden was not acceptable.

A copy of this letter may be found here.

Geshe Kelsang is one of hundreds of other monks and nuns who have been expelled from their monasteries because of refusing to give up their practice of Dorje Shugden.

Monks at Sera Je and Gaden monasteries silently demonstrated against the ban; a number of them were expelled for having "broken their vow of obedience to the monastic authorities."

James Belither, former secretary of the NKT-IKBU and editor for Tharpa Publications, asks what it means to expel someone from an establishment they graduated from forty years previously, and explained the political circumstances surrounding Geshe Kelsang Gyatso's "expulsion":

“It is only now, when Geshe Kelsang has dared to face up to the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in Exile in refusing to accept the Dalai Lama's ban against the practice of Dorje Shugden—a practice given to him by his Spiritual Guide Kyabje Trijang Rinpoche—that Geshe Kelsang's credentials as a Buddhist teacher have been called into question.
The campaign to discredit Geshe Kelsang is clearly an attempt to silence him and to act as a warning to others.

As one Tibetan Lama living in America said to another Lama living in Germany who was planning to come out publicly against the Dalai Lama's ban 'No, you mustn't do that. They'll do to you what they've done to Geshe Kelsang."

Source

Wikipedia:Kelsang Gyatso