Twenty One Tara Practice
with Lama Wangdu Rinpoche
SUNDAY OCTOBER 18TH, 2020
11:30AM LOS ANGELES | 2:30PM NEW YORK
7:30PM LONDON | 8:30PM ROME | 9:30PM MOSCOW
Join us for a very special practice of the Twenty One Taras (Tibetan: drolma nyerchik སྒྲོལ་མ་ཉེར་གཅིག) guided by Lama Tsering Wangdu Rinpoche.
Tara (Tibetan: Jetsun Drolma) is the female Buddha, the “mother of liberation” known as the Buddha of action, and the perfect embodiment of compassion. Lama Wangdu has recommended Tara practice as the most suitable practice to do to protect the environment from wildfires.
This practice is especially dedicated to the all those affected by the wildfires in California and beyond. We invite you all to join us in making aspirations for the swift alleviation of these fires.
About Lama Wangdu Rinpoche:
Lama Tsering Wangdu Rinpoche is a lineage holder of the Longchen Nyingthig, Shije, and Chod traditions. Born in 1935 in Tingri Langkor, Tibet, he received transmission and training from his root Lama, Naptra Rinpoche, and completed the traditional 108 charnel ground Chod pilgrimage before he was twenty. Naptra Rinpoche sent Lama Wangdu to Nepal on pilgrimage shortly before the Chinese closed the border in 1959. A well-trained and experienced yogi, he has lived in Nepal ever since, spending much of his life in retreat and serving the Tibetan refugee community.
In Nepal, Tibet, and China, Rinpoche is well known as an accomplished Chod practitioner and healer. Until 2018, he was the Abbot of Pal Gyi Langkor Jangsem Kunga Ling Monastery in Boudha, Nepal, which he founded in 2000. Today he is mostly in retreat or teaching and leading practice communities in the United States.
Rinpoche’s style is, in the yogic tradition, simple and direct. Though he often teaches by telling stories of yogis and yoginis, he encourages people to focus on practice rather than discussion and his retreats reflect his confidence in experiential realization. Chöd is Rinpoche’s heart practice. He received the empowerment to practice Chöd soon after meeting Naptra Rinpoche and spent many years practicing in retreat in Nepal and Tibet. Machik Labdron and Padampa Sangye, the founders of this tradition, lived and practiced in the same valleys and mountains and left behind a rich tradition that he now holds.