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Message of Milarepa:
Talk 6
[Video 1:04:35]
With commentary by Robert Walker



Tribute to Chris Keyser



Boudha Blog: "He never lost his smile,"
Posted by Gesar Mukpo: 5 May



Message of Milarepa:
Talk 5 [Video 58:40]
With commentary by Robert Walker



Cooking Rice:
Marty Janowitz talks
with Jeff Torbert: Part two
[Audio 28:12]


What if they gave a party and everyone came?
New Comments: 28 April



Marty Janowitz
talks with
Meg Wheatley
on Cooking Rice
[Audio 24:13]



Chronicles Parinirvana Day Edition



Updated: Tribute to Tenga Rinpoche



Recollections: April 4, 1987



The Passing of Tenga Rinpoche



Video tribute to CTR, from Gesar Mukpo



Photo by Denault Blouin
His Final Home: Denault Blouin reviews the GES Exhibit



The Chronicles Onion: It's Never Too Late



Traleg Rinpoche Remembers Thinley Norbu Rinpoche



Updated roundup of projects, plans, and programs marking 25th

Shambhala Ball 2012, a report from Colin Stubbert

A Living Space: A Chögyam Trungpa exhibit at the Canadian Museum of Immigration


Touch And Go, The Journey Continues: Next Stop Kathmandu


The Journey East, a clip from Iron Bird [Video 3:35]


The First Shambhala Day Address [Audio 9:15]


Tour the Great Eastern Sun exhibit in Halifax [Video 8:36]

Photo by Marvin Moore


Enter the Dragon


Touch and Go Now Screening at Culture Unplugged Film Festival



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Jakusho Kwong-roshi: On Becoming a Teacher, from Bill Scheffel



That Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche and Shunryu Suzuki-roshi shared a close friendship is familiar lineage lore for many and a central story in the history of Buddhism coming to the West. It is also part of the living memory of those who knew both teachers. Perhaps Jakusho Kwong-roshi stands as a premier witness of this friendship. Kwong-roshi became one of Suzuki-roshi's dharma heirs and drew inspiration and guidance from Trungpa Rinpoche after Suzuki-roshi's death. Perhaps not a lot of people know that Kwong-roshi erected a stupa on his land, Sonoma Mountain Zen Center, in honor of Trungpa Rinpoche - that is how deep the gratitude and lineage exchange goes.

Stupa for Chögyam Trungpa at Sonoma Mountain Zen Center

This video is taken from footage I gathered at Sonoma Mountain Zen Center during two trips I made in 2008 and 2009. My initial intention was to interview Kwong-roshi about his relationship with Chögyam Trungpa and about the drala principle. But Roshi went on to discuss many other subjects - and in the handful of days I spent during my visits I received an intimate glimpse of life at SMZC (one that added to times I did retreat there in the 1980s). Roshi was very generous with his time, as was his wife Shinko, his son Nyoze, and the other residents.

In this footage, Kwong-roshi talks about what it means to become a teacher, for having to become a teacher was the position Kwong-roshi found himself in in 1971, the year Suzuki-roshi died. In this interview, Kwong-roshi shares many aspects of this journey, and also gives us glimpses into what it meant to know and study with Suzuki-roshi and Chögyam Trungpa.

Please see previous postings from 2010 on my blog, The Drala Principle blog, for additional footage of Kwong-roshi as well as for more of his biography. - Bill Scheffel