Difference between revisions of "Mewa Khenpo Tupten Özer"
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[[Image:Dzogchen Rinpoche with Khenpo Mewa Tupten small.JPG|frame|[[Khenpo Mewa Tupten]] with [[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] and family]] | [[Image:Dzogchen Rinpoche with Khenpo Mewa Tupten small.JPG|frame|[[Khenpo Mewa Tupten]] with [[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] and family]] | ||
− | [[Image:Khenpo Mewa Tupten and Khenpo Petse.JPG|frame|[[Mewa Khenpo Tupten]] with [[Khenpo Petse]] | + | [[Image:Khenpo Mewa Tupten and Khenpo Petse.JPG|frame|[[Mewa Khenpo Tupten]] with [[Khenpo Petse]])] |
'''[[Mewa Khenpo Tupten Özer]]''' (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རྨེ་བ་མཁན་པོ་ཐུབ་བསྟན་འོད་ཟེར་]]}}, Wyl. ''[[rme ba mkhan po thub bstan 'od zer]]'') (1928-2000) — an important [[Nyingma]] [[khenpo]] who spent much of his later [[life]] in {{Wiki|Manali}}, [[India]]. He was a student of the great [[Khenchen Thubten Chöpel|Khenpo Tubga]] and of [[Pöpa Tulku Dongak Tenpé Nyima]]. He was born in Mewa in Nyarong in [[Eastern Tibet]]. His father was Tsering [[Wangchuk]] and his mother was called Lhakyi. At the age of seven he entered [[Mewa monastery]] and received [[ordination]] from [[Khenpo Yeshe Dargye]] and was given the [[name]] [[Tupten Özer]]. He received teachings from his paternal uncle, [[Khenchen Tsewang Rigdzin]], who attained the [[rainbow body]], and from his maternal uncle, [[Khenpo Sonam Nyima]], as well as from [[Khenpo]] Tubga of Changma [[hermitage]], and in particular from his main [[teacher]], [[Pöpa Tulku]]. He arrived in [[India]] in 1959, and in 1964 he took up residence in [[Wikipedia:Manali, Himachal Pradesh |Manali, in Himachal Pradesh]], in a place called {{Wiki|Pagan}}. There he spent many years in [[retreat]] and taught extensively. His students include [[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] and [[Khenpo Könchok Mönlam]]. | '''[[Mewa Khenpo Tupten Özer]]''' (Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རྨེ་བ་མཁན་པོ་ཐུབ་བསྟན་འོད་ཟེར་]]}}, Wyl. ''[[rme ba mkhan po thub bstan 'od zer]]'') (1928-2000) — an important [[Nyingma]] [[khenpo]] who spent much of his later [[life]] in {{Wiki|Manali}}, [[India]]. He was a student of the great [[Khenchen Thubten Chöpel|Khenpo Tubga]] and of [[Pöpa Tulku Dongak Tenpé Nyima]]. He was born in Mewa in Nyarong in [[Eastern Tibet]]. His father was Tsering [[Wangchuk]] and his mother was called Lhakyi. At the age of seven he entered [[Mewa monastery]] and received [[ordination]] from [[Khenpo Yeshe Dargye]] and was given the [[name]] [[Tupten Özer]]. He received teachings from his paternal uncle, [[Khenchen Tsewang Rigdzin]], who attained the [[rainbow body]], and from his maternal uncle, [[Khenpo Sonam Nyima]], as well as from [[Khenpo]] Tubga of Changma [[hermitage]], and in particular from his main [[teacher]], [[Pöpa Tulku]]. He arrived in [[India]] in 1959, and in 1964 he took up residence in [[Wikipedia:Manali, Himachal Pradesh |Manali, in Himachal Pradesh]], in a place called {{Wiki|Pagan}}. There he spent many years in [[retreat]] and taught extensively. His students include [[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] and [[Khenpo Könchok Mönlam]]. | ||
Latest revision as of 22:22, 4 April 2016
[[Image:Khenpo Mewa Tupten and Khenpo Petse.JPG|frame|Mewa Khenpo Tupten with Khenpo Petse)] Mewa Khenpo Tupten Özer (Tib. རྨེ་བ་མཁན་པོ་ཐུབ་བསྟན་འོད་ཟེར་, Wyl. rme ba mkhan po thub bstan 'od zer) (1928-2000) — an important Nyingma khenpo who spent much of his later life in Manali, India. He was a student of the great Khenpo Tubga and of Pöpa Tulku Dongak Tenpé Nyima. He was born in Mewa in Nyarong in Eastern Tibet. His father was Tsering Wangchuk and his mother was called Lhakyi. At the age of seven he entered Mewa monastery and received ordination from Khenpo Yeshe Dargye and was given the name Tupten Özer. He received teachings from his paternal uncle, Khenchen Tsewang Rigdzin, who attained the rainbow body, and from his maternal uncle, Khenpo Sonam Nyima, as well as from Khenpo Tubga of Changma hermitage, and in particular from his main teacher, Pöpa Tulku. He arrived in India in 1959, and in 1964 he took up residence in Manali, in Himachal Pradesh, in a place called Pagan. There he spent many years in retreat and taught extensively. His students include Dzogchen Rinpoche and Khenpo Könchok Mönlam.