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The Succession of Lives of the Lhodrak Terton Kunzang Dechen Lingpa


This image replicates a wall painting at His Holiness Kunzang Dechen Lingpa’s<br />

Zangdokpalri temple in Arunachal Pradesh, India. It shows his succession of lives and<br />

features important figures from Tibetan Buddhist history. Each one of these figures<br />

warrant in-depth analysis and description of their lives. T<strong>here</strong>fore, for the benefit of<br />

those who would like to know more, I have included a list of further <strong>read</strong>ing at the end<br />

of this <strong>excerpt</strong>. Viewed as a sacred image this thangka has deep religious significance<br />

for followers of the Buddhist tradition and of HH Kunzang Dechen Lingpa Rinpoche. In<br />

the spirit of how the image is intended to be understood and received, what follows is a<br />

brief description, of each of the figures depicted, from a traditional Buddhist<br />

perspective.<br />

1. Desheg Rinchen or Ratnaśikhin the Jeweled Crown: Identified as the last or final<br />

Buddha of the first of the immeasurable eons. He is often included in the list of the first<br />

seven Buddhas.<br />

2. Drubchen Sarahapa, Saraha or Sarahapāda: Usually depicted holding an arrow,<br />

the Mahāsiddha Saraha is considered to be one of the founders of Buddhist Vajrayāna,<br />

<strong>part</strong>icularly of the Mahāmudrā tradition. His spiritual poetry and songs are gat<strong>here</strong>d in<br />

a manuscript entitled Dohakośa, ‘Treasury of Rhyming Couplets' Sarahapāda is<br />

generally believed to have born in Eastern India in the late 8th century or early 9th<br />

century CE to a Brahmin family and studied at the Indian Buddhist monastic university<br />

Nalanda.


3. Drubchen Kukuripa or Kukkuripa the Dog Lover: Well known in the Buddhist<br />

tradition is the story of how this Indian Mahāsiddha gained spiritual insight by caring<br />

for a stray dog. Kukkuripa was also known for his tantric songs of realization; <strong>three</strong> of<br />

his verses appear in an early East Indian compilation called Charyapada dating from the<br />

8th-12th centuries.<br />

4. Jampel Shenyen or Mañjuśrīmitra: An Indian Buddhist scholar considered to be<br />

one of the chief disciples of Garab Dorje, the first human teacher of the Great Perfection<br />

teachings (from whom Mañjuśrīmitra received direct transmission). The division of the<br />

Dzogchen teachings into <strong>three</strong> series of Sems sde, ‘mind class’, Klong sde ‘expanse class’<br />

and Ma ngag sde ‘pith instructions class’ is attributed to him. Mañjuśrīmitra is also<br />

thought to have transmitted the Dzogchen teachings to Sri Singha, who in turn, is<br />

believed to have been the teacher of Vimalamitra.<br />

5. Drimed Shenyen or Vimalamitra is regarded as one of the main fore-fathers of<br />

Dzogchen. Vimalamitra was one of the Indian masters, along with Padmasambhava who<br />

was invited to Tibet by emissaries of King Trisong Detsen in the 8 th century CE.<br />

Vimalamitra is a central figure in Tibetan Buddhist Vajrayāna; he concealed treasure<br />

teachings known as the Vima Nyingthig ‘Secret Heart Essence of Vimalamitra’ one of the<br />

seminal heart teachings of the ‘pith instruction class’ cycle of the Great Perfection teachings.<br />

Vimalamitra is also the spiritual fountainhead of the Melong Dorje lineage to which<br />

Longsel Nyingpo and Kunzang Dechen Lingpa Rinpoche are both connected.


6. Langdro Konchog Jungney was an 8th century minister at the court of King Trisong<br />

Detsen in Tibet; he later became one of Padmasambhava’s 25 disciples. The Nyingma<br />

treasure revealers, Ratna Ling pa (1403-1471) and Longsel Nyingpo (1625-1692) are<br />

considered to be among his emanations.<br />

7. King Ralpacan (9th century CE) One of the <strong>three</strong> Tibetan Dharma Kings and an<br />

important figure in the establishment of Buddhism in Tibet. In traditional histories, he<br />

was assassinated by anti- Buddhist ministers.<br />

8. Karma Düsum Khyenpa, The Knower of the Three Times (1110 – 1193) The First<br />

Karmapa was a disciple of Gampopa (1079 -1135) who received the oral transmission, (of<br />

teachings that were later to be known as those of the Kagyu lineage) from Tibet's great yogi,<br />

Milarepa (1052 - 1135). One of Düsum Khyenpa’s main disciples was Kadampa Desheg<br />

(1122-1192) founder of the Kathok Nyingma lineage. Düsum Khyenpa is also<br />

considered to be one the first recorded examples of a Tibetan reincarnate lama, as<br />

before his death he left a letter describing the conditions of his rebirth.<br />

9. Tsongkhapa (1357–1419) was a famous and pre-eminent Tibetan scholar and lama<br />

whose activities led to the formation of the Gelugpa tradition in the 14th century. He<br />

was believed to have received teachings from masters of all Tibetan Buddhist traditions.<br />

Tsongkhapa drew inspiration from the teachings of Atisha and placed great emphasis<br />

upon debate, the study of logic and the monastic moral code vinaya. He also taught<br />

extensively on how to bring the Sutra and Tantra teachings together as well as writing<br />

numerous commentaries and summarizations on philosophical Buddhist teachings


10. Longsel Nyingpo (1625-1692) was a treasure revealer influential in the rebuilding<br />

of one of the ancient Nyingma monasteries, Kathok (originally dating from the 12th<br />

century CE), in the eastern Tibetan region of Kham. In the mid 17th century CE, he<br />

became its head lama and brought about a profound transformation of its<br />

administrative and religious programs. Longsel Nyingpo was considered to be an<br />

emanation of one of Padmasambhava’s original 25 disciples, Langdro Konchog Jungnay.<br />

Kunzang Dechen Lingpa Rinpoche as a young boy was recognized as an incarnation of<br />

Longsel Nyingpo and t<strong>here</strong>fore is linked with all of this figure’s previous incarnations.<br />

11. Ratna Lingpa (1403-1478) was a prominent Tibetan Nyingma treasure revealer<br />

and one of the compilers of the Nyingma canonical texts known as ‘The Collected Tantra<br />

of the Ancients’ Nyingma Gyubum. He is also considered to be reincarnation of Langdro<br />

Konchog Jungnay.<br />

12. Jedrung Jampa Jungnay or Jedrung Rinpoche (1856-1922) was the 7th abbot of<br />

Riwoche Monastery in Kham. Jedrung Rinpoche was primarily known as a Kagyu lama,<br />

but he also was a master of the Nyingma tradition, and a renowned treasure revealer.<br />

At the beginning of the 20th century, when thousands of Tibetans fled Kham during the<br />

atrocities of the Chinese general Zhao Erfeng (1845-1911), Jedrung Rinpoche led<br />

approximately 2,000 followers in search of the mythical hidden land of Pemako; w<strong>here</strong><br />

he built a temple called Karmo Ling. However, the refugees experienced difficult<br />

relations with the local people and many of them eventually returned to Kham. Jedrung<br />

Rinpoche remained in Pemako with many disciples, and it was t<strong>here</strong> that he<br />

encountered the renowned Lama, scholar and treasure revealer, Dudjom Rinpoche<br />

(1904-1988), who became one of his closest disciples.


Amongst the thirteen volumes of Jedrung Rinpoche’s writings is a revealed longevity<br />

sādhana called The Secret Heart Drop of Padma, Pad ma gsang thig. In the 1950s the<br />

disciples of Jedrung Rinpoche in Pemako, offered the temple to Kunzang Dechen Lingpa<br />

before he escaped to India in 1962.<br />

Further Reading:<br />

Dowman, Keith 1986 Masters of Mahāmudrā: Songs and Histories of the Eighty-four<br />

Buddhist Siddhas. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.<br />

Dudjom Rinpoche (new edition) 2005 The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its<br />

Fundamentals and History. Wisdom Publications.<br />

Khenpo, Nyoshul 2005 A Marvelous Garland of Rare Gems: Biographies of Masters of<br />

Awareness in the Dzogchen Lineage. Padma Publishing: Junction City.<br />

Schaeffer, Kurtis R. 2005 Dreaming the Great Brahmin: Tibetan Traditions of the<br />

Buddhist Poet-Saint Saraha. Oxford University Press, USA.<br />

Stein, R. A. 1972 Tibetan Civilization Stanford University Press.<br />

Thondup, Tulku 2000 Masters of Meditation and Miracles: Lives of the Great Buddhist<br />

Masters of India and Tibet. Shambhala Publications: Boston.

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