Kalu Rinpoche

Kalu Rinpoche

Kalu Rinpoche in 1987 at Kagyu Rintchen Tcheu Ling in Montpellier, France
Religion Tibetan Buddhism
School Kagyu
Lineage Shangpa Kagyu, Karma Kagyu
Personal
Nationality Tibetan
Born c. 1905
Kham, Eastern Tibet
Died May 10, 1989
(age 84)
[Sonada Monastery], Darjeeling West Bengal [India]
Religious career
Students

Kalu Rinpoche (1905 – May 10, 1989) was a Buddhist lama, meditation master, scholar and teacher. He was one of the first Tibetan masters to teach in the West.

Early life and teachers

Kalu Rinpoche was born in 1905 during the Female Wood Snake year of the Tibetan lunar calendar in the district of Treshö Gang chi Rawa in the Hor region of Kham, Eastern Tibet.

When Kalu Rinpoche was fifteen years old, he was sent to begin his higher studies at the monastery of Palpung, the foremost center of the Karma Kagyu school. He remained there for more than a decade, during which time he mastered the vast body of teaching that forms the philosophical basis of Buddhist practice, and completed two three-year retreats.

At about the age of twenty-five, Rinpoche left Palpung to pursue the life of a solitary yogi in the woods of the Khampa countryside. For nearly fifteen years, he strove to perfect his realization of all aspects of the teachings and he became renowned in the villages and among the nomads as a representative of the Bodhisattva path.

Teaching activity in Tibet

Kalu Rinpoche returned to Palpung to receive final teachings from Drupon Norbu Dondrup, who entrusted him with the rare transmission of the teaching of the Shangpa Kagyu. At the order of Situ Rinpoche, he was appointed Vajra Master of the great meditation hall of Palpung Monastery, where for many years he gave empowerments and teachings.

During the 1940s, Kalu Rinpoche visited central Tibet with the party of Situ Rinpoche, and there he taught extensively. His disciples included the Reting Rinpoche, regent of Tibet during the infancy of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.

Returning to Kham, Kalu Rinpoche became the abbot of the meditation center associated with Palpung and the meditation teacher of the Sixteenth Gyalwa Karmapa. He remained in that position until the situation in Tibet forced him into exile in India.

In exile

In the late 1960s Kalu Rinpoche began to attract Western disciples in India. By the 1970s, he was teaching extensively in the Americas and Europe, and during his three visits to the West he founded teaching centers in over a dozen countries. In France, he established the first retreat center to teach the traditional three-year retreats of the Shangpa and Karma Kagyu lineages to Western students.

Controversy

June Campbell, a former Kagyu nun who is an academic feminist, acted as Kalu Rinpoche's translator for several years. In her book Traveller in Space: Gender, Identity and Tibetan Buddhism[1] she writes that she consented to participate in what she realised later to be an abusive sexual relationship with him in which he told her was tantric spiritual practice. She raises the same theme in a number of interviews, including one with Tricycle magazine in 1996.[2] Since the book was published she has received "letters from women all over the world with similar and worse experiences" with other gurus.[3]

Second Kalu Rinpoche

Second Kalu Rinpoche

At 3:00 p.m., Wednesday, May 10, 1989, Kalu Rinpoche died at his monastery in Sonada. On September 17, 1990 Rinpoche's Tulku was born in Darjeeling, India to Lama Gyaltsen and his wife Drolkar. Lama Gyaltsen had served since his youth as his secretary.

Former kalu rinpoche, he himself choose his reincarnation. He did that by showing the mother, from whom he is going to talke a birth. Chamgon Tai Situ Rinpoche officially recognized Kalu Rinpoche’s yangsi (young reincarnation) on March 25, 1992, explaining that he had received definite signs from Kalu Rinpoche himself. Situ Rinpoche sent a letter of recognition with Lama Gyaltsen to the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, who immediately confirmed the recognition.[4]

On February 28, 1993, Yangsi Kalu Rinpoche was enthroned at Samdrup Tarjayling. Chamgon Tai Situ Rinpoche and Goshir Gyaltsap Rinpoche presided over the ceremony, assisted by Kalu Rinpoche’s heart-son, Bokar Rinpoche. Situ Rinpoche performed the hair-cutting ceremony and bestowed on the young tulku the name Karma Ngedön Tenpay Gyaltsen — Victory Banner of the Teachings of the True Meaning. He is now known as the Second Kalu Rinpoche. (In the USA Kagyu organization, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, recognizes Yangsi Kalu Rinpoche (1990 to present) as the third Kalu Rinpoche; and Kalu Rinpoche is listed as the second Kalu Rinpoche.[5])

In the fall of 2011, Kalu Yangsi gave a talk at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.[6] At the end of the talk, a student in the audience asked for his perspective on the sexual abuse and sexualisation of children in the west. Kalu disclosed he was abused, paused then broke down, revealing for the first time that he had been sexually abused at the age of 12 by older monks[7] from the monastery he attended. Shortly after that he posted a video on YouTube[8] so that the story would not become unsubstantiated gossip.

Bibliography

See also

Notes

  1. Campbell, June (1996). Traveler in Space: In Search of Female Identity in Tibetan Buddhism. New York: George Braziller. ISBN 0-485-11494-1.
    For a review of the book, see Lang, Karen (1997). "A Review of Traveler in Space: In Search of Female Identity in Tibetan Buddhism". Journal of Buddhist Ethics. ISSN 1076-9005. Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  2. The Emperor's Tantric Robes: An Interview with June Campbell on Codes of Secrecy and Silence
  3. Vallely, Paul (10 February 1999). "I was a Tantric sex slave". The Independent. Independent Digital News and Media Limited. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  4. "His Eminence Kalu Rinpoche". Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  5. Kagyu Lineage Teachers
  6. Program of Yangsi Kalu Rinpoche visit in Vancouver
  7. Mary Finnigan, The YouTube confessional sending shockwaves through the Buddhist world, guardian.co.uk, 9 March 2012
  8. Yangsi Kalu Rinpoche Confession on YouTube

References

Monasteries and centers founded by Kalu Rinpoche
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