Lobsang Choekyi Gyaltse]]n as the
Panchen (
Great Scholar)
Lama of
Tashilhunpo Monastery (
Bkra-shis Lhung-po) in
Shigatse (
Gzhis-ka rtse). With this appointment,
Lobsang Choekyi Gyaltsen's three previous
incarnations were posthumously recognised as
Panchen Lamas. The
Fifth Dalai Lama also
recognized Panchen Lobsang Yeshe (
Blo-bzang Ye-shes) as the
Fifth Panchen Lama. The
Seventh Dalai Lama recognized the Sixth
Panchen Lama, who in turn
recognized the Eighth
Dalai Lama. Similarly, the Eighth
Dalai Lama recognised the Seventh
Panchen Lama.
Choekyi Gyaltsen, the
10th Panchen Lama, became the most important
political and
religious figure in
Tibet following the 14th
Dalai Lama's escape to
India in 1959. In April, 1959 the
10th Panchen Lama sent a telegram to
Beijing expressing his support for suppressing the 1959 rebellion. “He also called on
Tibetans to support the
Chinese government.” However, in 1964, he was imprisoned. His situation worsened when the
Cultural Revolution began. The
Chinese dissident
Wei Jingsheng wrote in March 1979 a
letter denouncing the inhumane
conditions of the
Chinese Qincheng Prison where the late
Panchen Lama was imprisoned. In October 1977, he was released but held under house arrest in 1982. In 1979, he
married a
Han Chinese woman and in 1983 they had a daughter, which is not unusual as several
Gelug high
lamas (
Gelek Rinpoche in the US and
Dagyab Rinpoche in
Germany, among others) have chosen a layman's
lifestyle, both inside
China and in exile; also, the
6th Dalai Lama, also a
Gelugpa, renounced his
monk vows and led not only a layman's but a playboy's
lifestyle, but still is highly revered by
Tibetans. In 1989, the [[10th Panchen Lama]]
died suddenly in
Shigatse,
Tibet, at the age of 51, shortly after giving a
speech critical of the
Chinese neglect for the
religion and
culture of the
Tibetans. His daughter, now a young woman, is
Yabshi Pan Rinzinwangmo, better known as "
Renji".
In the
lineage of the
Tibetan Panchen Lamas there were considered to be four
Indian and three
Tibetan incarnations of
Amitabha Buddha before
Khedrup Gelek Pelzang, who is recognised as the
1st Panchen Lama. The
lineage starts with
Subhuti, one of the original
disciples of
Gautama Buddha.
Gö Lotsawa is considered to be the first
Tibetan incarnation of
Amitabha Buddha in this line. The
Panchen Lama's political significance
Monastic figures had historically held important roles in the
social and
political makeup of
Tibet, and though these roles have diminished since 1959, many
Tibetans continue to regard the
Panchen Lama as a significant
political, as well as
spiritual figure due to the role he
traditionally plays in selecting the next
Dalai Lama. The
political significance of the role is also utilised by the
Chinese state.
Tibet support groups have argued that the
Chinese government seeks to install its
own choice of
Dalai Lama when
Tenzin Gyatso, the current
Dalai Lamas and that for this
reason the
Dalai Lama's choice of
Gedhun Choekyi Nyima went missing at the age of six, to be replaced by the
Chinese state's choice,
Gyancain Norbu. If this
tactic is accurate, the announcement made by the
Dalai Lama on 10 March 2011 that he will step down from his
political role may result in a change of policy regarding the two disputed candidates.
Source
Wikipedia:Panchen Lama [Category:Tibetan Buddhist titles