The basis of enlightenment is this compassion for oneself and all beings in the past, present and future. So, being an ongoing example of this causes all beings around a "Living Buddha" to change to something better each moment they spend around a "Living Buddha".
I first started to encounter this phenomenon when I first began meeting Tibetan Lamas who were "Tulkus" "Living Buddhas in the early 1980s.
As a natural intuitive since birth I realized from the beginning being around them that I might be a "Living Buddha" too.
A Living Buddha usually realizes what they are by age 40 to 45 years of age. Before this they are learning how to cope with being in a new body and Culture. Some "Living Buddhas" are more rarified and come in and even as babies know who and what they are and are able to live out their whole life as "Perfect Beings" as examples to mankind.
It depends upon the level of advancement of the soul how the soul manifests into a human body here on earth or on any planet in the universe where advanced souls incarnate into bodies.
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Tulku - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulku
A tulku (Tibetan: སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་, Wylie: sprulsku, ZYPY: Zhügu, also tülku, trulku) is a reincarnate custodian of a specific lineage of teachings in Tibetan Buddhism who is given empowerments and trained from a young age by students of his or her predecessor.
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A tulku (Tibetan: སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་, Wylie: sprulsku, ZYPY: Zhügu, also tülku, trulku) is a reincarnate custodian of a specific lineage of teachings in Tibetan Buddhism who is given empowerments and trained from a young age by students of his or her predecessor.
High-profile examples of tulkus include the Dalai Lamas, the Panchen Lamas, the Samding Dorje Phagmos, the Karmapas, Khyentses, and the Kongtruls.
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Nomenclature and etymology[edit]
The word སྤྲུལ or 'sprul' (Modern Lhasa Tibetan [ʈʉl]) was a verb in Old Tibetan literature and was used to describe the བཙན་པོ་ btsanpo ('emperor'/天子)[citation needed] taking a human form on earth. So the sprul idea of taking a corporeal form is a local religious idea alien to Indian Buddhism and other forms of Buddhism (e.g. Theravadin or Zen). Over time, indigenous religious ideas became assimilated by the new Buddhism; e.g. sprul became part of a compound noun, སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་'sprul.sku' ("incarnation body" or 'tülku', and 'btsan', the term for the imperial ruler of the Tibetan Empire, became a kind of mountain deity). The term tülku became associated with the translation of the Sanskrit philosophical term nirmanakaya. According to the philosophical system of trikaya or three bodies of Buddha, nirmanakaya is the Buddha's "body" in the sense of the bodymind (Sanskrit: nāmarūpa). Thus, the person of Siddhartha Gautama, the historical Buddha, is an example of nirmanakaya. In the context of Tibetan Buddhism, tülku is used to refer to the corporeal existence of enlightened Buddhist masters in general.[citation needed]
In addition to Tibetans and related peoples, Tibetan Buddhism is a traditional religion of the Mongols and their relatives. The Mongolian word for a tülku is qubilγan, though such persons may also be called by the honorific title qutuγtu (Tib: 'phags-pa and Skt: ārya or superior, not to be confused with the historic figure, 'Phags-pa Lama or the script attributed to him, (Phags-pa script), or hutagt in the standard Khalkha dialect. According to the Light of Fearless Indestructible Wisdom by Khenpo Tsewang Dongyal: the term tülku "designates one who is 'noble' (or 'selfless' according to Buddha's usage) and used in Buddhist texts to denote a highly achieved being who has attained the first bhumi, a level of attainment which is truly egoless, or higher."
The Chinese word for tülku is huófó (活佛), which literally means "living Buddha" and is sometimes used to mean tülku, although the Dalai Lama has said that this is a mistranslation, as a tülku isn't necessarily a realized being.[citation needed]
Meaning of "tulku"[edit]
Any Vajrayana practitioner can be reborn as a tülku, if they fail to reach Buddhahood or a Pure Land in the bardo of dying, bardo of dharmata or bardo of becoming.[1]
Valentine summarizes the shift in meaning of the word tülku: "This term that was originally used to describe the Buddha as a "magical emanation" of enlightenment, is best translated as "incarnation" or "steadfast incarnation" when used in the context of the tulku system to describe patriarchs that reliably return to human form."[2]
Finding a successor[edit]
Pamela Logan outlines a general approach for finding a successor:
Sometimes the search process will include "testing" the candidate. [1].
Training[edit]
Logan describes the training a tulku undergoes from a young age:
The academic atmosphere is balanced by unconditional love:
History[edit]
The tulku system of preserving Dharma lineages did not operate in India. The first tulku line of Tibet is the Karmapas. After the first Karmapa died in 1193, a lama had recurrent visions of a particular child as his rebirth. This child (born ca. 1205) was recognized as the second Karmapa, thus beginning the Tibetan tulku tradition.[citation needed]
Tulku lineages[edit]
Some examples:
- Dodrupchen tulkus are the main custodians of Longchen Nyingthig.
- Dudjom tulkus are the main custodians of Dudjom Tersar.
- Chokling tulkus are the main custodians of Chokling Tersar.
- Khyentse tulkus are the main custodians of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo
- Kongtrul tulkus are the main custodians of the Jamgon Kongtrul.
- Samding Dorje Pagmo tulkus are the highest female incarnation lineage in Tibet.
Tibetologist Françoise Pommaret estimates there are presently approximately 500 tulku lineages found across Tibet, Bhutan, Northern India, Nepal, Mongolia, and the southwest provinces of China.[6]
Criticism[edit]
In the 2009 documentary film Tulku, Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche states the tulku system may not work in present day:
Documentaries[edit]
See also[edit]
- Rebirth (Buddhist)
- Incarnation
- Reincarnation Application
- Avatar
- Bodhi
- Kumari — Nepalese Hindu goddess incarnation, similar determination process.
- Namarupa
References[edit]
- ^ Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang. A Guide to the Words of My Perfect Teacher. Boston: Shambhala. 2004. ISBN 978-1-59030-073-2. "This form of transference is practiced by beginners on the path of accumulating who have received empowerment and respected the samayas, have a good understanding of the view, and have practiced the generation phase as the path but have not mastered it. Although they lack the necessary confidence to be liberated in the clear light at the moment of death or in the intermediate state of absolute reality, by taking refuge and praying to their teacher in the intermediate state they can close the way to an unfavorable womb and choose a favorable rebirth. Propelled by compassion and bodhichitta, they depart to a pure buddhafield or, failing that, take birth as a tulku born to parents who practice the Dharma. In that next life they will be liberated."
- ^ Valentine, Jay (2013). "Lords of the Northern Treasures: The Development of the Tibetan Institution of Rule by Successive Incarnations". UVA Library | Virgo. Retrieved 2017-08-06.
- ^ Logan, Pamela (2004). "Tulkus in Tibet". Harvard Asia Quarterly 8 (1) 15-23.
- ^ Logan, Pamela (2004). "Tulkus in Tibet". Harvard Asia Quarterly 8 (1) 15-23.
- ^ Logan, Pamela (2004). "Tulkus in Tibet". Harvard Asia Quarterly 8 (1) 15-23.
- ^ Pommaret, Françoise. Bhutan. Passport Books (Odyssey), 1998 (ISBN 0-8442-9966-9)
- ^ Dzongsar Khyentse interviewed in the movie Khyentse Rinpoche, Dzongsar Jamyang. Tulku: Diving Birth, Ordinary Life part 4/4. 21 September 2010. Online Video Clip. Youtube. Accessed 16 May 2011.
Notes[edit]
Further reading[edit]
- Ray, Reginald A. 1986 "Some aspects of the Tulku tradition in Tibet." in The Tibet Journal 11 (4): 35-69
- Tulku, Thondup (2011).Incarnation:The History and Mysticism of the Tulku Tradition of Tibet Boston. Shambhala Publications.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tulkus. |
- Reincarnate Lamas: Tulkus and Rinpoches - section from Berzin, Alexander. 2000 The Traditional Meaning of a Spiritual Teacher
- Tulkus: Incarnate Lamas of Tibet - An Interview with His Holiness Sakya Trizin - An excerpt from Testimonies of Tibetan Tulkus; A Research among Reincarnate Buddhist Masters in Exile by Danial Barlocher, Opuscula Tibetana, Rikon-Zurich, August 1982.
- Tulkus: Incarnate Lamas of Tibet 2 - Interview with Sakya Gongma Dagchen Rinpoche - excerpted from Testimonies of Tibetan Tulkus; A Research among Reincarnate Buddhist Masters in Exile by Danial Barlocher, Opuscula Tibetana, Rikon-Zurich, August 1982. (Interview translator: Cyrus Stearns).
- Tulkus : Masters of Reincarnation - focus article at WisdomBooks.com
Tulku (film) - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulku_(film)
Tulku is a 2009 documentary film, written and directed by Gesar Mukpo. The film details the personal experiences of five young Western men who were ...
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Tulku: a "Reborn" Master of Tibetan Buddhism - ThoughtCo
https://www.thoughtco.com › ... › Buddhism › Origins & Development
Jul 24, 2017 - In Tibetan Buddhism, a tulku is a person who has been identified as the emanation of a deceased master. The lineages can be centuries long, and the system offers the principle means by which the teachings of various schools of Tibetan Buddhism.
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