Biography of Lama Tsong Khapa
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Tsongkhapa
was born in 1357 in the Tsongkha valley of Amdo province
in northeast Tibet. The miraculous
events that
occurred at his birth aroused the interest
of the master Chöje Döndrup Rinchen (Chos rje Don grub rin chen),
who had studied and lived in central Tibet and who founded two monasteries
in Amdo after his return there. When Tsongkhapa was three this master gave
a gift of livestock to his father and requested that he should be put
in charge of Tsongkhapa's education. At the age of seven Tsongkhapa went to
live
with I Chöje Döndrup Rinchen, from whom he received many teachings
and tantric empowerments. Having learned to read and write with great ease,
Tsongkhapa
both studied and practiced meditation from a very early age. When he was eight
years
old he received ordination as a novice monk and was given the name Losang Drakpa (Blo bzang grags pa).
At the age of sixteen Tsongkhapa left Amdo to pursue his
quest for knowledge in central and southern Tibet, where
he studied with more than fifty prominent teachers. Between
1374 and 1376 he concentrated on the Perfection of Wisdom
sutras and on the five treatises of Maitreya along with the
many commentaries devoted to them. He gained a rigorous intellectual
training and a wide knowledge of both sutra and tantra during
this period. Tsongkhapa was already determined to combine
scholarship with the practice of both sutra and tantra and
he continued to receive tantric empowerments from a number
of important masters belonging to different traditions.
He was dedicated to developing the correct understanding
of reality and at this time had a significant experience
of entering a profound state of meditation during a ceremony when
the assembled monks were reciting a Perfection of Wisdom
sutra. He remained deeply absorbed long after the cer emony
was over and the other monks had left
the hall. From his twenty-second year he began to study intensively the works
on valid cognition by Dignaga and Dharmakirti and was deeply impressed and
moved by the efficacy of Dharmakirti's system of reasoning.
For the next eleven years Tsongkhapa travelled from one
monastic college to another deepening his philosophical knowledge
and giving teachings. His main teacher and close friend during
this period was the Sakyapa (Sa skya pa) master
Rendawa Shönu Lodrö (Red mda' ba gZhon nu Blo
gros).
At the age of thirty-three he met with the remarkable Lama
Umapa (dBu ma pa), who came to Tsang (gTsang)
with the intention of studying with Tsongkhapa. Umapa had
had a vision of Manjushri,
the embodiment of enlightened wisdom, which had changed his
life from that of a simple cowherd. As a result of this vision
he took up practices related to Manjushri
and eventually experienced Manjushri's constant presence.
Lama Umapa became
Tsongkhapa's direct line of communication with Manjushri.
They spent periods of retreat together during
which Umapa conveyed to Tsongkhapa Manjushri's advice
and responses to questions concerning the correct understanding
of reality. Eventually Tsongkhapa himself experienced visions of Manjushri,
who bestowed empowerments on him and gave him teachings. During the winter of 1392-1393 in accordance with Manjushri's
instructions he stopped teaching and withdrew from other
public activities to concentrate on a period of intense meditation.
He was joined by a group of eight carefully chosen students.
Living austerely, they began practices for purification and
the accumulation of merit reciting purificatory mantras,
making prostrations and offerings of the mandala many hundred
thousand
times. Tsongkhapa simultaneously
continued to study the most important texts
dealing with the nature of reality.
In 1394 he and the others moved to Wölka ('Ol
kha)
and while they were there they all experienced visions of
deities
associated with the practices in which they were engaged.
In 1395 they decided to break this retreat to refurbish and
reconsecrate a famous and venerated statue of the future
Buddha Maitreya which had fallen into disrepair. This generated much interest and many craftsmen and benefactors
offered their help for the project, which was successfully
completed.
For the next three years Tsongkhapa and his companions
continued to practice in Lodrak (IHo brag) and then
in 1397 they began a final year of retreat again in the Wölka
area.
In the late spring of 1398 these concerted and extraordinary
efforts finally bore fruit. One night Tsongkhapa dreamed
that he was present at a gathering of famous Indian masters
discussing the subtleties of the Madhyamika view. One of
them, who was dark-skinned and tall and whom Tsongkhapa recognized
in the dream as Buddhapalita, rose and, holding a volume
in his hands, approached Tsongkhapa and joyfully blessed
him by touching his head with the book. Tsongkhapa woke as
it was getting light and opened his own Tibetan translation
of Buddhapalita's commentary at the page which he had been reading the day before. When he reread the passage
he at once experienced a seminal insight into the nature
of reality, which brought him the understanding that he had
been seeking.
Among Tsongkhapa's many beneficial activities
four are mentioned in particular. The first was the renovation
of the statue of Maitreya and the subsequent great
festival he organized during the Tibetan New Year in 1400 at Dzingji ('Dzingji)
temple, which housed the statue. The second was an extensive teaching on the
code of discipline for the ordained which he, Rendawa and Kyapchok Pel Zangpo
(sKyabs mchog dPal bzang po) gave for several months at Namtse Deng
(gNam
rtse Ideng), thereby revitalizing the tradition of monasticism.
The third deed was his establishment of the Great Prayer
Festival in Lhasa in 1409, beginning a tradition that has
continued until now of devoting the first two weeks of the
Tibetan new year, culminating on the day of the full moon,
to prayers for universal well-being. Tsongkhapa donated everything
he himself had received from benefactors to support this
event and offered ornaments made of gold and precious stones
to the famous statue of the Buddha in the main temple in
Lhasa.
The fourth deed was the construction of Ganden Monastery
(dGa' Idan) near Lhasa. "Ganden" means "The
Joyous" and is the Tibetan name given to the pure land
of Maitreya. The monastery was completed and consecrated
in 1410. In 1415 special halls were built to house selected mandalas.
Under Tsongkhapa's guidance skilled craftsmen created these
mandalas and images of the relevant deities, which were installed
in 1417. All of this was destroyed after the Chinese occupation
of Tibet in 1959.
During his last years Tsongkhapa devoted much of his energy
to giving extensive teachings. He passed away in 1419. Personally
and through his students he made an extremely significant
impact on the development of Buddhism in Tibet and his
influence extended to Mongolia and China. He wrote prolifically
and
lucidly on topics connected with both sutra and tantra,
and thanks to his clear and elegant style these great works
remain
illuminating, relevant and accessible to this day.
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