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Heart Advice of the Karmapa, §@ªÌ: ²Ä¤Q¤C¥@¤jÄ_ªk¤ý¾¿º¿¤Ú The 17th Gyalwang Karmapa ¥Xª©: Altruism Press ´¶³qª© Paperback ¶¼Æ: 188 ¶ ¥Xª©®É¶¡: 2008¦~ ¸Ô±¡:³sµ² |
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®Ñ¦W: Deer Park Calligraphies §@ªÌ: ²Ä¤Q¤C¥@¤jÄ_ªk¤ý¾¿º¿¤Ú The 17th Gyalwang Karmapa ¥Xª©: Karma Triyana Dharmachakra ºë¸Ëª© Booklet, 8.5" x 8.5" ¶¼Æ: ¦@ 19 ´T ªk¤ý¾¿º¿¤Ú®Ñµe§@«~ ¥Xª©®É¶¡: 2004¦~ ¥»ºô¯¸µû»y: ¦L¨êºë¬ü, ¬Æ¨ã¦¬ÂûùÈ |
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Author: 16th Karmapa Format: DVD / NTSC Publication Date: October 2006 50 Minutes This is the masterful portrait of the late 16th Gyalwa Karmapa, the great Tibetan Buddhist master known as the Black Hat Lama. The Karmapa is the head of the Karma Kagyu lineage, one of the four great lineages of Tibetan Buddhism. His line of successive reincarnations has its origins in the 13th century when it was the first to identify tulkus, reincarnations of Buddhist teachers. He is recognized as the embodiment of the teachings of his lineage, one that traces its source from teacher to disciple through Tibet‘s great teachers Milarepa and Marpa to India‘s Naropa and Tilopa all the way back to the Shakyamuni Buddha. Rangjung Rigpe Dorje, the 16th Gyalwa Karmapa, was born in Tibet in 1924. During the 1959 invasion by the People‘s Republic of China, the Karmapa left Tibet and settled in Rumtek, Sikkim, India. The construction of his new Rumtek monastery was completed in 1966. In 1974, the Karmapa set out on his first world tour; he undertook a second tour in 1977. While traveling in 1981, he died in Zion, Illinois, north of Chicago. He was returned to Rumtek for cremation. The film journeys with him in North America where he visited the Hopi Nation, offered teachings and performed the Black Crown Ceremony (Vajra Makut), enjoyed everything from zoos to video arcades, and initiated the construction of Karma Triyana Dharmachakra in Woodstock, New York, the seat of his lineage in North America. His cremation in Rumtek is vividly documented. The narration script was written by the late Rick Fields, the well-known author of How the Swans Came to the Lake and a founding editor of Tricycle and The Vajradhatu Sun. |
¥u¦³ ^¤åª© | ·s¨ì³f ´ä¹ô198 |
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Author: Holmes Ken Format: Paperback ISBN: 0952455544 Publication Date: 1995 -Many people have heard of the Dalai Lama, but fewer are aware of the unique role of the Gyalwa Karmapa, Tibet's very first 'reincarnate' lama. in June 1985, among the nomads of Eastern Tibet, the Karmapa took birth again for the 17tn time in this millennium, fulfilling the hopes and prayers of millions of Buddhists of the Kagyu tradition worldwide.- Like so many of his fellow lamas, the previous Karmapa, the 16th, left Tibet at the time of the Chinese invasion in the l950s, bringing with him a treasury of Buddhist teachings which had been preserved for more than 800 years in the isolated beauty of 'the land of the snows'. Since that time these teachings have taken root in many countries around the world. After the 16th Karmapa's death in 1981 his followers had to wait until 1992 to discover his reincarnation. He was found exactly in accordance with instructions left in a letter he himself had concealed in an amulet given to one of his chief disciples, the 12th Tai Situpa. The Dalai Lama subsequently gave his offical approval and the 17th Karmapa was enthroned in his tradidonal seat at Tsurphu, not far from Lhasa, in Tibet. Drawing on a quarter-century of experience close to the senior lamas of the Kagyu tradidon, including the 16th Karmapa, Ken Holmes presents extremely useful and not always widely available information on topics such as the Karmapa's uniqueness, his lineage, reincarnation, the land of Tibet and Tibetan Buddhism itself-particularly that branch of it that the Karmapa embodies so perfectly. He has created this book as 'simple advice from a friend' in the hope that it will help those who meet the Karmapa to gain more benefit from their experience and others to discover someone who will doubtless be an important figure in the coming century. H.H. Holiness the 17th Gyalwa Karmapa Urgyen Trinley Dorje Altea, Paperback, 1995, 152 Pages |
Ken Holmes ¥u¦³ ^¤åª© ¤º¦³¦h´Tªk¤ý¦¦~¬Ã¶Qªk·Ó |
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The Karma Lekshey Ling School has published this charming picture book about the early years of His Holiness the XVII Gyalwang Karmapa's life, from the details of his search and discovery through 1992. Large and colorful photos with commentary are supplemented with a concise biography of the Karmapa's early years. This book provides an pleasurable introduction to the Karmapa's life, valuable for reference on an ongoing basis. His Holiness the XVIIth Gyalwang Karmapa, Paperback, 9x14 inch, 18 pages, |
Karma Lekshey Ling ÂÃ¤å ©M ^¤å |
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On June 26, 2006, followers of the Karma Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism gathered at Gyuto Tantric University in Dharamsala, India to celebrate the 21st birthday? and coming of age of His Holiness, the 17th Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje. This DVD provides a visually beautiful and spiritualyy meaningful forty-five minute documentary of this wonderful occasion. The documentary includes scenes from Karmapa’s discovery, enthronement and education, a mandala offering and long life puja perfromed for His Holiness by the Gyuto monks, colorful images of the afternoon folk festival, an excerpts from a teaching by Karmapa on generating Bodhicitta. Celebrating Karmapa’s birthday is a celebration of the birth of the Karma Kagyu lineage which began with the 1st Karmapa, Dusum Khyenpa in 1110 C.E. The birth of each Karmapa represents the birth of enlightened mind, the enlightened mind practitioners aspire to realize for the benefit of all. The birth of Karmapa means the birth of an enlightened master capable of bringing enlightenment to countless beings. Celebrating Karmapa’s birthday, therefore, celebrates both enlightenment and the cause of enlightenment. Coming of Age, The 21st Birthday Celebration of His Holiness the 17th Gyalwang Karmapa, Vajra Echoes, 2006, DVD-R/ NTSC, 45 min. |
¥u¦³ ^¤åª© | ¦³²{³f ´ä¹ô168 |
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Music in the Sky Snow Lion, Paperback, 40 color plates, 351 pages As the second millennium drew to a close, the Seventeenth Karmapa leapt from a roof of his monastery in Tibet. Evading his Chinese guards, the 14-year-old spiritual leader began a grueling, dangerous journey to India. The Karmapa's picture has appeared all over the world since then -- yet his own words are hard to find. Now, for the first time in print, Music in the Sky offers a series of the Karmapa's profound teachings, an extensive selection of his poetry, and a detailed account of his life and flight from his homeland. The amazing teaching and writing skills evident in this work -- particularly in light of the fact that the Karmapa is still only 17 years old -- will captivate readers. Music in the Sky concludes with brief biographies of all sixteen previous Karmapas, specially composed for this collection by the highly respected Seventh Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche. Here, the reader will discover the compelling histories of the first Tibetan masters to be recognized as reincarnate lamas. Music in the Sky presents a definitive portrait of the Seventeenth Karmapa, strengthened and illuminated by an authoritative depiction of his place in the world's most revered lines of spiritual teachers. |
Michele Martin | ¦³²{³f ´ä¹ô228 |
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Dance of 17 Lives Bloomsbury, Paperback, 2005, 304 pages The extraordinary story of the exiled Tibetan teenager who has been hailed as one of the greatest spiritual leaders of the coming age. In January 2000, an Ambassador taxi twisted its way up the narrow road leading towards Dharamsala in the Himalayan foothills of northern India - the home in exile of the Dalai Lama. In this aging car was a fourteen-year-old boy: the 17th Karmapa, one of the most important figures in Tibetan Buddhism. The boy's arrival in Dharamsala was the culmination of a breathtaking escape. He had journeyed nine hundred miles across the Himalayas, in conditions of high danger, from the monastery in Tibet where he had lived since he was identified as the 16th reincarnation at the age of eight. His arrival took everybody by surprise: far-flung devotees, the world's press, the Chinese government, even the Dalai Lama himself, who was reminded of his own escape into exile more than forty years earlier. Fascinated by this charismatic young figure, British writer Mick Brown traveled to Dharmasala to meet him, and found himself drawn into a web of intrigue. Amid a feud of Byzantine complexity concerning the boy's succession, Mick Brown gained access to both sides. In The Dance of 17 Lives, the author reveals what he uncovered: tales of miracles and allegations of murder, the settling of two-hundred-year old scores, and the enduring spirit of Tibetan Buddhism in the face of all adversity. |
Mick Brown | ¦³²{³f ´ä¹ô268 |
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