His
Holiness Drikung Kyabgon Tchetsang Toulkou Rinpoche,
His
Holiness the Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang, the 37th throne holder
of the Drikung Kagyu Lineage anKyabgönd 7th reincarnation of
the Chetsang Rinpoche is a manifestation of Chenrezig (Avalokiteshvara).
The Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang, Konchog Tenzin Kunsang Thrinle
Lhundrup, was born on the 4th day of the 6th Tibetan month of
the Fire-Dog-Year 1946 into the aristocratic family of Tsarong
in Lhasa. This auspicious day marks the anniversary of the Buddha’s
first turning of the Wheel of Dharma. Many prodigious signs
and visions accompanied his birth. His grandfather, Dasang Damdul
Tsarong (1888-1959), has been the favorite of the 13th Dalai
Lama (1876-1933), Commander General of the Tibetan army and
one of the most influential political figures in the early 20th
century in Tibet. Chetsangs father, Dundul Namgyal Tsarong,
held a high office in the Tibetan Government and he was still
active in important positions for the Exile Government in Dharamsala
after the escape of the Dalai Lama and the cabinet ministers.
His mother, Yangchen Dolkar, is from the noble house of Ragashar,
which descended from the ancient royal dynasty. Few years after
the passing of the previous Drikung Kyabgön, Shiwe Lodro (1886-1943),
two parties began to look for his reincarnation throughout Tibet.
Based on a vision of the Drikung regent Tritsab Gyabra Rinpoche
(1924-1979) at the oracular lake Lhamo Latso and on many additional
divinatory signs, in 1950 the son of the Tsarong family was
recognized as the reincarnation of the Drikung Kyabgön. The
boy subsequently passed numerous tests, such as identifying
religious items and ritual objects of his former incarnations.
His incarnation was further confirmed by divinations performed
by Taktra Rinpoche (the Regent of Tibet), H.H. the 16th Karmapa
Rangjung Rigpe Dorje, and H.H. Taklung Matrul. In the fall of
1950 the formal enthronement as Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang took
place at Drikung Thil, the main monastery of the Drikung Kagyu
order. Immediately thereafter the first Chinese invasion of
Tibet took place. Rinpoche was allowed to travel to Kalimpong
in Northern India with his family, in order to stay in a safe
place. His older brother and his two sisters were attending
boarding-schools in Darjeeling. After some months Rinpoche was
met by a delegation from the Drikung monastery and brought back
to Tibet. According to ancient tradition, Chetsang Rinpoche
resided in turns in one of the four main monasteries: In the
spring in Drikung Tse, during the summer in Yangrigar, in autumn
in Drikung Thil, and during the winter in Drikung Dzong, which
also served as the administrative center of Drikung. His spiritual
instructors (yongzin), Tritsab Gyabra Rinpoche and Ayang Thubten
Rinpoche (1899-1966), were responsible for his education. His
curriculum included reading, writing, memorizing, astrology,
and grammar. From his yongzin and from Bhalok Thupten Chodrak
Rinpoche, Lho Bongtrul Rinpoche, and Nyidzong Tripa he received
the basic empowerments, transmissions, and teachings of the
Kagyu tradition and the Drikung Kagyu tradition in particular.
At the age of eleven, the Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang gave his
first public teaching and transmission, a long-life empowerment,
during the 1956 Monkey Year ceremonies of the Great Drikung
Phowa. Subsequently he began his philosophical studies at the
Nyima Changra monastic college of Drikung. Although he was four
years younger he studied together with the second Drikung lineage
holder, Chungtsang Rinpoche. His instructor was Bopa Tulku Dongag
Tenpa (1907-1959), introducing him to the philosophy of Madhyamaka.
He first studied basic texts, like The 37 Practices of a Bodhisattva
by Ngulchu Thogme Zangpo and Introduction to the Bodhisattva's
Way of Life (Bodhicharyavatara) by Shantideva. Soon thereafter
Tibet underwent a great upheaval. In the wake of the Tibetan
uprising of 1959, as many Tibetans
fled the country, among them the Dalai Lama, the cabinet ministers
and a host of spiritual dignitaries, several attempts were launched
to bring Chetsang
Rinpoche
and Chungtsang Rinpoche out of Tibet into safety. These attempts
failed because of the inexorable resistance of the monastery
manager. Rinpoche’s family had already fled to India in 1956.
Chetsang Rinpoche excelled in his studies, especially in Chinese.
He also became a keen athlete and a passionate and brilliant
soccer player. When the Red Guards infiltrated the schools at
the onset of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, Chetsang Rinpoche
found himself caught up in the midst of the factional fighting
of two opposing groups of Red Guards. Classes and business came
to a halt. Many aristocrats and Rinpoches had to undergo brutal
“people’s tribunals” known as struggle sessions. Chetsang Rinpoche
could no longer stay with Tritsab Gyabra, who had fallen from
grace. He lived at the school, where he cooked for the few remaining
schoolmates and studied the books he found in the school’s library.
Lhasa sank into chaos. In this atmosphere of anarchy Rinpoche
several times was saved by a fraction from certain death. In
1969, he was assigned to a commune in the countryside, where
he had to carry out the hardest physical labor. A partly decayed
verminous shack on top of a sheep pen was his shelter. He did
not own more than a pot and a cup and some slats to sleep on.
An uncle, who came to visit him one day, struggled against his
tears, stunned that his nephew was living in such squalor. But
Chetsang Rinpoche always reacted with great equanimity to all
the many upheavals in his live. When the uncle became aware
of the serene calmness pervading every aspect of Chetsang’s
being, he compared him with Milarepa, who lived in comfortless
caves and outwardly austere, but inwardly excessively rich spiritual
life. In the spring and in summer Chetsang Rinpoche drudged
on the fields of the work unit. In autumn he had to climb high
mountains to cut firewood for the commune and carry home heavy
loads. In the winter he had to shovel out the sewage from the
cesspits in Lhasa and carry it to the farm. Despite the strenuous
labor, Chetsang Rinpoche helped others, whenever he could. Nobody
knew that he was the Drikung Kyabgön, but his extraordinary
deeds amazed many. For many years in occupied Tibet and in the
USA, the Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang had outwardly led the life
of a layman. Nonetheless he had always strictly kept his monk’s
vows. Now he resumed his monastic lifestyle once again and took
up residence at Phyang Monastery in Ladakh. Instantly he entered
a traditional three year retreat at Lamayuru Monastery under
the guidance of the stern meditation master Kyunga Sodpa Gyatso
(1911-1980). The Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang studied with numerous
highly accomplished lamas and Rinpoches of different traditions
and received from them teachings and initiations. He regards
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche (1910-1991) as one of his most important
teachers. He received from him the essential teachings of the
Eight Practice Lineages of Tibetan Buddhism (Dam Ngag Dzo),
the highest Dzogchen teachings (Nyingtig Yashi), as well as
the collected writings of Jamgon Kongtrul (Gyachen Kadzo) and
the treasury of the oral Kagyu transmissions (Kagyu Ngag Dzo).
In addition he received precious teachings and empowerments
from H.H. the Dalai Lama (Chakrasamvara, Kalachakra, and Yamantaka),
from H.H. the 16th Karmapa (Six Yogas of Naropa and Milarepa),
from H.H. Taklung Shabdrung Rinpoche (transmission of the Taklung
Kagyu teachings) and from H.H. Taklung Tsetrul the Northern
Treasures. He studied Buddhist philosophy under Khenpo Noryang
in the Drukpa Kagyu monastery Sangnag Choling in Bhutan, who
gave him teachings on the Bodhicharyavatara by Shantideva, the
Madhyamakavatara by Chandrakirti and on the Uttara Tantra. Khenpo
Noryang also transmitted to him teachings of the general Kagyu
tradition and the particular teachings of the Drukpa Kagyu on
Mahamudra. Moreover Chetsang Rinpoche received important Drikung
Kagyu empowerments and teachings on Mahamudra from H.E. Garchen
Rinpoche and Drubwang Konchog Norbu. In 1985, His Holiness the
Drikung Kyabgön Cheetsang received full monk's ordination from
His Holiness the Dalai Lama, during the Kalachakra initiation
in Bodhgaya. He mastered all challenges with remarkable ease.
Since 1987 Chetsang Rinpoche began to give teachings in many
countries throughout the world. At the same time he started
to rebuild the weakened Drikung Lineage with great energy. In
Dehra Dun, India, he established a monastery and an educational
center, attracting many monks from Tibet and Buddhist practitioners
from many countries: the Drikung Kagyu Institute. In the beginning
it consisted of the monastery Jangchubling and the retreat center
and nunnery Samtenling. The Drikung Kagyu Institute is an education
center, which emphasizes both the traditional monastic education,
as well as present-day training to meet the needs of these times.
Special consideration is also placed on discipline, meditation
practice and the specialties of the Drikung Kagyu teachings.
In 2003, Chetsang Rinpoche established near his monastery a
magnificent edifice: the Songtsen Library, a center for Tibetan
and Himalayan studies. A building epitomizing in content, function
and form the essence of his vision as a treasury and think tank
for the cultural and spiritual identity of the peoples of the
Himalayan region and of the Drikung Lineage in particular. It
contains rare texts about all subjects of the Himalayan region,
works on Tibetan culture, tradition and geography, and of course
the Buddhist texts of all schools. It houses an important collection
about the famous Dunhuang manuscripts unearthed along the Silk
Road. There, an unimaginable wealth of texts in various languages
dating from the 4th to the 11th centuries was discovered. The
Tibetan corpus alone includes thousands of manuscripts of all
kinds, including the earliest Tibetan medical drawing known
at present. Thus these ancient texts provide the researcher
with a vast array of source material on the earliest period
of Tibet, which Chetsang Rinpoche would like to make accessible
in its entirety, as his scope encompasses the preservation of
Tibetan culture and religion.
His Holiness will be soon in France for teachings...
contact : drikung.kagyu.france@gmail.com