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Difference between revisions of "Dorjé Pün, or Vajra Siblings"

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The practice of making dorjé pünsing relationship is believed to have started during the time of Drogön [[Tsangpa Gyaré]] (1161-1211), founder of the [[Drukpa Kagyü]] [[Buddhist tradition]]. It is said that when [[Tsangpa Gyaré]] was [[meditating]] under a [[tree]] [[in Tibet]], [[seven Buddhas]] (Sanggyé Rapdün) appeared and revealed to him the [[sacred]] Temdrel Rapdün ({{BigTibetan|རྟེན་འབྲེལ་རབ་བདུན་}}), or the Seven [[Auspicious]] Teachings on [[Dependent Origination]]. This is when the [[tradition]] of concluding every important [[religious]] [[teaching]] with a dorjé pünsing, or [[adamantine]] brother/sisterhood {{Wiki|ceremony}}, is said to have started.
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The practice of making [[dorjé pünsing]] relationship is believed to have started during the time of [[Drogön Tsangpa Gyaré]] (1161-1211), founder of the [[Drukpa Kagyü]] [[Buddhist tradition]]. It is said that when [[Tsangpa Gyaré]] was [[meditating]] under a [[tree]] [[in Tibet]], [[seven Buddhas]] ([[Sanggyé Rapdün]]) appeared and revealed to him the [[sacred]] [[Temdrel Rapdün]] ({{BigTibetan|[[རྟེན་འབྲེལ་རབ་བདུན་]]}}), or the [[Seven Auspicious Teachings]] on [[Dependent Origination]]. This is when the [[tradition]] of concluding every important [[religious]] [[teaching]] with a [[dorjé pünsing]], or [[adamantine brother]]/sisterhood {{Wiki|ceremony}}, is said to have started.
  
In this kind of {{Wiki|ceremony}}, seven {{Wiki|individuals}} who follow the same [[guru]] and are [[initiated]] into the same [[mandala]] ({{BigTibetan|དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་}}), are united as [[spiritual]] brothers and sisters through the [[blessings]] of the [[guru]]. In [[Vajrayāna]], the [[guru]] represented the father, the [[mandala]], the mother and receiving teachings and [[empowerment]] from [[guru]] in the presence of the [[mandala]] [[symbolizes]] one's [[rebirth]] as a [[spiritual]] [[practitioner]]. Keeping one’s [[samaya]] (pledge) is a successful [[spiritual practice]], because maintaining one's [[samaya]] not only boosts [[spiritual development]] but also promotes [[harmony]] within the [[sangha]].
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In this kind of {{Wiki|ceremony}}, seven {{Wiki|individuals}} who follow the same [[guru]] and are [[initiated]] into the same [[mandala]] ({{BigTibetan|[[དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་]]}}), are united as [[spiritual brothers]] and sisters through the [[blessings]] of the [[guru]]. In [[Vajrayāna]], the [[guru]] represented the father, the [[mandala]], the mother and receiving teachings and [[empowerment from guru]] in the presence of the [[mandala]] [[symbolizes]] one's [[rebirth]] as a [[spiritual practitioner]]. Keeping one’s [[samaya]] (pledge) is a successful [[spiritual practice]], because maintaining one's [[samaya]] not only boosts [[spiritual development]] but also promotes [[harmony]] within the [[sangha]].
  
The practice of dorjé pünsing could also be seen as a method of promoting [[harmony]] and [[spiritual]] growth through keeping [[samaya vows]]. It is believed that, once [[people]] take part the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, it binds the relationship into {{Wiki|future}} [[incarnations]].
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The practice of [[dorjé pünsing]] could also be seen as a method of promoting [[harmony]] and [[spiritual]] growth through keeping [[samaya vows]]. It is believed that, once [[people]] take part the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, it binds the relationship into {{Wiki|future}} [[incarnations]].
  
 
During the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, the crowd will [[form]] groups of seven with the [[blessing]] from the [[Jé Khenpo]] and they become dorjé brothers and sisters. Thus, often seven strangers unite in the presence of [[His Holiness]] to become [[spiritual]] brothers and sisters across lifetimes.
 
During the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, the crowd will [[form]] groups of seven with the [[blessing]] from the [[Jé Khenpo]] and they become dorjé brothers and sisters. Thus, often seven strangers unite in the presence of [[His Holiness]] to become [[spiritual]] brothers and sisters across lifetimes.
  
After [[people]] become dorjé brothers and sisters, they treat each other as [[spiritual]] siblings and often carry {{Wiki|social}} connections even deeper than {{Wiki|biological}} siblings.
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After [[people]] become [[dorjé brothers]] and sisters, they treat each other as [[spiritual siblings]] and often carry {{Wiki|social}} connections even deeper than {{Wiki|biological}} siblings.
  
 
   
 
   
  
 
   
 
   
[[Phub]] [[Dorji]] Wang is a freelance writer on [[Bhutanese]] [[religion]] and {{Wiki|culture}}.
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[[Phub Dorji Wang]] is a freelance writer on [[Bhutanese]] [[religion]] and {{Wiki|culture}}.
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{{E}}
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[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
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[[Category:Vajrayana]]
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[[Category:Bhutan]]
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[[Category:Drukpa Kargyu]]

Latest revision as of 22:29, 3 August 2022






The practice of making dorjé pünsing relationship is believed to have started during the time of Drogön Tsangpa Gyaré (1161-1211), founder of the Drukpa Kagyü Buddhist tradition. It is said that when Tsangpa Gyaré was meditating under a tree in Tibet, seven Buddhas (Sanggyé Rapdün) appeared and revealed to him the sacred Temdrel Rapdün (རྟེན་འབྲེལ་རབ་བདུན་), or the Seven Auspicious Teachings on Dependent Origination. This is when the tradition of concluding every important religious teaching with a dorjé pünsing, or adamantine brother/sisterhood ceremony, is said to have started.

In this kind of ceremony, seven individuals who follow the same guru and are initiated into the same mandala (དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་), are united as spiritual brothers and sisters through the blessings of the guru. In Vajrayāna, the guru represented the father, the mandala, the mother and receiving teachings and empowerment from guru in the presence of the mandala symbolizes one's rebirth as a spiritual practitioner. Keeping one’s samaya (pledge) is a successful spiritual practice, because maintaining one's samaya not only boosts spiritual development but also promotes harmony within the sangha.

The practice of dorjé pünsing could also be seen as a method of promoting harmony and spiritual growth through keeping samaya vows. It is believed that, once people take part the ceremony, it binds the relationship into future incarnations.

During the ceremony, the crowd will form groups of seven with the blessing from the Jé Khenpo and they become dorjé brothers and sisters. Thus, often seven strangers unite in the presence of His Holiness to become spiritual brothers and sisters across lifetimes.

After people become dorjé brothers and sisters, they treat each other as spiritual siblings and often carry social connections even deeper than biological siblings.



Phub Dorji Wang is a freelance writer on Bhutanese religion and culture.