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The visit of His Holiness the 17th Gyalwang Karmapa


An open page for thoughts, recollections, aspirations, and comments


Barbara Elizabeth blogs the visit in NYC


Offerings
,
April Fourth, 2008


Exploring the teachings of Chögyam Trungpa
,
by James Gimian


Chögyam the Translator


Remembering Dorje Chokyi Lewis


Images and words from Losar/Shambhala Day 2008


Shambhala Day Address,
1984: Year of the Wood Rat


Stories from Kham


Open pages

Red Pine's Heart Sutra


Dharma art with CTR,

a slideshow with Jack Niland


Such Thunderstorm
,
a calligraphy
by Barbara Bash

For more stories, articles, blogs, tributes, interviews, etc, visit
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Letters of support

The Druk Sakyong Wangmo, Lady Diana Mukpo

Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche



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Tributes

The tributes below were posted between April 4 and May 26, 2007 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Trungpa Rinpoche's parinirvana.


Sangha tribute blog

Tribute from

posted

Dilgo Khyentse

May 26

Jetsun Kushok

May 26

Yongey Mingyur

May 26

Traleg Kyabgon

May 26

James Gimian

May 26

Martin Janowitz

May 26

Robin Kornman

May 26

Denault Blouin

May 25

Susan Edwards -audio

May 24

Walker Blaine

May 23

Vajra Regent

May 22

Dzogchen Ponlop

May 21

Diana Torbert

May 20

Greg Smith

May 19

Tessa Pybus

May 18

Reggie Ray

May 17

Joshua Zim

May 16

Ashoka Mukpo

May 15

Tenzin Wangyal

May 14

Bill Douglas

May 13

Peter Volz

May 12

Ani Pema Chödrön

May 11

Shenpen Hookham

May 9

Tsoknyi Rinpoche

May 8

Barry Boyce

May 7

Tulku Thondup

May 6

Steve Gorn

May 5

HH Dalai Lama

May 4

Sam Bercholz

May 3

Wendy Friedman

May 2

Jakusho Kwong Roshi

May 1

Fabrice Midal

April 30

B Bash/S Gorn

April 29

Sherab Chodzin Kohn

April 28

Chokyi Nyima

April 27

Joan Halifax Roshi

April 26

A Waldman/D Rome

April 25

Clarke Warren

April 24

Kanjuro Shibata

April 23

CTR Talk, 1975

April 22

Jigme Phuntsok

April 21

Tom Coburn

April 20

Tania Leontov

April 19

Leonard Hortick

April 18

Richard John

April 17

Anne Burchardi

April 16

Bardor Tulku

April 15

Jerry Granelli

April 14

Michael Chender

April 13

Douglas Penick

April 12

Carolyn Gimian

April 11

Ato Rinpoche

April 10

Eido Roshi

April 9

Gina Stick

April 8

Rigdzin Shikpo

April 7

Gesar Mukpo

April 6

Francesca Fremantle

April 5

CTR Talk, 1979

April 4

Sakyong Mipham

April 4

Lady Diana Mukpo

April 4

Thrangu Rinpoche

April 4

Dzongsar Khyentse

April 4

Khenpo Rinpoche

April 4

Richard Reoch

April 4

Susan Edwards

April 4

Peter Lieberson

April 4

Peter S. Volz

A lifelong Shambhala diplomat, Peter Volz served within the Vajradhatu office of External Affairs starting in 1978, and continues today as the Director of the Shambhala Office of International Affairs. Until recently, Peter was also the Director of International and Intercultural Education for Naropa University. However, he left his post at Naropa in February 2007 to begin his new life as a full-time gardener. Peter farms an acre and a half of small-grower vegetables, which he sells at the Boulder Farmers Market and to local restaurants. He also works with the Boulder County community garden program.

One of the characteristics of a bodhisattva is an absence of self-interest and self-importance. The Vidyadhara Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche was a fully accomplished bodhisattva, and his teachings and life example can be contemplated and viewed as a display about how to live one's life outside the thick walls of personal and cultural fabrication, and free from the sometimes bizarre political machinations of ego.

In the field of intercultural studies and anthropology, an often-used term is ethnocentrism. This refers to the common human trait of valuing one's own culture above all others, and viewing one's cultural assumptions and constructs as natural, correct and normal. Although such a tendency may be seen as somewhat harmless, the next logical extension of this habit of culture is that the "other," and their customs and mores, can be seen as unnatural and abnormal. This impulse diminishes one's ability to communicate and connect with those who are different from us, and is one of the root causes of aggression and small-mindedness.

The Vidyadhara grew up in a remote region within a remote country. He had very little contact with other cultures beyond his own, until he fled Tibet at age 20, and came to India and the West. But even though his contact with other cultures was very limited during his years in Tibet, he somehow broke free of his cultural heritage as he began teaching in the West. He managed to relate and connect with people in the West—and in Asia—on their own ground, and within the particular context of their cultural norms and values, not just his own.

This unusual intercultural competence is one of the key reasons why the Vidyadhara was able to communicate so completely and skillfully with people from many different backgrounds. Although he never ceased to take pride in his Tibetan ancestry and lineage, his particular cultural package—his "Tibetan-ness"—did not burden him as excess baggage. In taking on students in the West, he did not impose his own culture upon them, and try to get them to be neo-Tibetans in Western clothing. Although he drew from the deep well of his own cultural experience and background, he was free of cultural constraints, and was able to connect with the wisdom and richness in the many different cultures he encountered.

In his book, Magic Dance, Thinley Norbu Rinpoche has a verse that artfully illustrates this broad and unbiased cultural understanding and view:

There is no communication in relative truth
without understanding everyone's system and idea,
so may I adapt to everyone's system, wishing everyone's benefit.

There is no liberation in absolute truth
without release from everyone's system and idea,
so may I adapt to no one's system,
beyond benefit's wish.

In December 1981, the Vidyadhara was in India, with a delegation from Shambhala, for the funeral ceremonies of His Holiness the Sixteenth Gyalwang Karmapa. Following the party's visit to the rites at Rumtek Monastery in Sikkim, we had a day or two to catch our breath in New Delhi before coming home. One night after dinner, the Vidyadhara and friends were strolling through the hotel, when he spotted a Hindu wedding ceremony in progress. He took a keen interest in the ceremony (a fire puja) and spent more than an hour sitting and just watching the proceedings. He said very little, but it was clear that he found deep enjoyment and appreciation in the Hindu rites, and had the highest respect for the culture of India.

This appreciation of cultures manifested in many different ways, and included intense and deep connections with Native Americans, as well as Japanese and British cultures. Each year when we were preparing to send out personal Tibetan New Year's greetings from the Vidyahara to his friends around the world, he would always remind us: "Don't forget to send a card to my old mailman in Scotland." This deep affection and personal interest in others and their cultures was a striking example of how a bodhisattva engages the world without pretense and without rigid boundaries.

This genuine interest in how humans lived their lives—combined with an irreverent sense of humor about their foibles and eccentricities—gave the Vidyadhara the ability to communicate and connect with almost anyone at almost any time. I am grateful for this example, and celebrate and contemplate this aspect of the glorious guru on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of his Parinirvana.

© 2007 Peter Volz




© 2007 The Chronicles of CTR
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