Yushu Earthquake Emergency

Orphans in earthquake zone

Dear friends,

Click below for an update on the Yushu orphans that Wangdrak Rinpoche is taking care of (that you are all taking care of). There are many more children orphaned by the earthquake, but these photos show some of the 27 children that Rinpoche is directly able to reach.
It is because of your kind generosity that Rinpoche is able to give them their basic needs for now, and some education in the long run. You can see in the photos that their situation is very sad now. It will make a huge difference for these children to know that they are being watched over and cared for.

Rinpoche feels it is most important that these children get a solid education, for their futures. Later some may become monks and nuns, according to their wish. It will take time to find appropriate schools and homes for each of them – Yushu is of course still a disaster zone. But we will certainly keep you updated as plans unfold.

Please continue to keep these children and the other Yushu earthquake victims in your prayers.
With sincere thanks,
Ani Chozom, on behalf of Wangdrak Rinpoche
Click below for a PDF of images.
Posted in Latest News, Uncategorized, Wangdrak Rinpoche, Yushu Earthquake Orphans | Tagged , , , , | Comments closed

Wangdrak Rinpoche, U.S.A. visit 2010

“This is such a genuinely worthwhile cause, that any help and cooperation would be greatly appreciated” – Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo

Peace, compassion, and respect for the earth are all called for in our modern times. A model of commitment to these values comes from remote Eastern Tibet where the 400 nuns of Gebchak Gonpa devote their entire lives in spiritual practice for the sake of all beings.

In his first visit to the West, Wangdrak Rinpoche, Abbot of Gebchak Gonpa, shares stories of these extraordinary Yoginis and the world’s need for enlightened women.

Gebchak Gonpa is largely unrivaled in the training of Buddhist women practitioners, upholding rigorous meditation and yoga practices within the Rimey, non-sectarian tradition. The compassion, dedication and wisdom of the nuns radiates as a beacon of hope and a force of change to the rest of the world.

Join us for this timely exploration of women’s spiritual gifts and the blessings of Gebchak’s Yoginis.

May 30, Sunday, 2pm-5pm – Seattle Dharma Punx, All Pilgrim’s Church – Colonial Room, 500 Broadway East, Capitol Hill, Seattle. Rinpoche’s first “stepping out” in the western world – talk, meditation, video, art raffle launch.

June 1, Tuesday, noon-1pm, University of Washington, Seattle, Guthrie Annex 3, Room 120, informal lunch-time talk hosted by the Addictive Behavior Research Unit, Department of Psychology.

June 2, Antioch University, Seattle WA.

June 3, Thursday, 7pm, East West Bookshop, 6500 Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle.

June 4, Friday, 7:30pm, Women of Wisdom Foundation, Greenwood Senior Center, Seattle. Talk – “The Female Body: Vehicle for Wisdom”.

June 7, private gathering, supported by Karma Thegsum Choling, Seattle.

June 11, Google headquarters, San Francisco. Lunch-time talk.

June 11, SF Urban Dharma (also known as Dharma Punx) 7:30 to 9:00pm at 2650 Fulton Street, San Fransisco, CA.

June 14, talk at Readers Books, Sonoma, CA.

June 15-20, private venues, Napa, CA.

June 21, Rigdzin Ling Chagdud Gonpa, Junction City, CA.

June 22, Lecture on the Nuns of Tibet, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Humbolt State University, Arcata, CA.

June 23, 7pm, Guru Rinpoche Tsok, buddhist gathering at Chagdud Gonpa Amrita, Edmonds, WA.

June 24, Thursday, 7pm, Kirkland home gathering, WA.

June 25, Friday, 6:30pm, Major Event at Nalanda West, teaching on “Yoginis and the Nature of Mind”, Seattle.

June 27, Camp Brotherhood, in partnership with Northwest Interfaith Community Outreach (NICO) and The Sound Essence Project, presents “Honoring the Human Spirit in Diverse Cultures  Traditions – Inspired the Nuns of Gebchak Gonpa, Tibet”. Mount Vernon, WA.

Posted in Events, Nuns, Tour, Wangdrak Rinpoche | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Ani Lama Sherab Zangmo Passes Away

Ani Lama Sherab Zangmo, the Great Yogini of Gebchak, in 2007.

The great yogini of Gebchak Gonpa, Sherab Zangmo, passed away in the autumn of last year at the enlightened old age of 86 or so. She had been unwell for some time, but then seemed to recover and was strong and in high spirits for some days. During these days she gave meditation teachings to the nuns and often sang the prayer “Calling the Lama From Afar.”  Near the time of her death her complexion lightened, and her face and body became youthful and small like a child’s. She told those who were with her that she could see Jetsun Tara clearly before her, and that she was now going to Dewachen, the Pure Land of Amitabha. She counseled the nuns to serve their lamas well and to live in harmony with each other, and told them not to worry, and that all would go well for them in the future. The sky remained like a morning sky, bright and clear for the whole day of Sherab Zangmo’s death, and she remained in tukdam meditation for six days afterwards.

Forty-nine days after her passing, Sherab Zangmo was cremated at Gebchak Gonpa, with the great yogi Pema Drimey, Gebchak Wangdrak Rinpoche, and all the Gebchak nuns performing the ceremony. The sky was clear blue and the temperature unusually warm on this day, in a season of constant inclement weather. After the ceremony, many white crystalline relics of different shapes were found in her ashes.

Very sadly, four other nuns passed away as well at Gebchak Gonpa over the last year. Oser Chomtso, who was in her 50s, Choying Paldron, an elderly nun, Kunzang Jinpa, in her 20s, and Pema Palmo, also in her 20s, passed away from various sicknesses. Their deaths are a great loss, and more so of a tragedy because each of them likely could have survived had they had proper medical treatment.

The death of the young Pema Palmo, however, is another story with cause for inspiration. She passed away in the first year of a three-year retreat, in the small retreat house where 25 nuns live side by side in their meditation boxes. After her death, Pema Palmo remained for seven days in tukdam meditation and had other amazing occurrences accompanying her death, which the other nuns in the retreat all saw and experienced.

Being so remote and removed from easy access to proper medical care, the nuns at Gebchak Gonpa have always been resolved to bear with and sometimes die from illnesses that could be easily treatable in the modern world. This has been the way of life and death for most Tibetan people in the past.

With the help of the Gebchak lamas, the nuns, the local medical community, and sponsors like you, the aim now is to set in place a system of regular check-ups, providing health care training for a few of the nuns, recognizing the symptoms of disease, and monitoring that the nuns follow through with necessary treatment.

Please keep the Gebchak nuns in your mind and prayers, and remember their dedicated practice towards enlightenment for the sake of all beings. There are still places in this world where human beings reach their full spiritual potential, and the benefits very positively reach each one of us. However, these nuns need our continued support to be able to continue their practice.

Wangdrak Rinpoche and all the nuns at Gebchak Gonpa wish you a very blessed and joyful Tibetan New Year!

Very best wishes,

Tenzin Chozom

Donations for the Gebchak nuns can be made securely online here.

Posted in Gebchak Lamas, Latest News, Nuns, Uncategorized, Wangdrak Rinpoche | Tagged , , , | Comments closed