The Tibet Center

This article is about the Tibetan Buddhist center in Manhattan. For the Tibetan cultural center, see Tibet House.
Khyongla Rato Rinpoche teaching at The Tibet Center in September 2014 (with his translator, Tenzin Gelek, on the right)
A view of a Tibet Center meeting with Khyongla Rato Rinpoche teaching

The Tibet Center, also known as Kunkhyab Thardo Ling, in New York City, is a center for the study of Tibetan Buddhism, a dharma center. The Tibet Center was founded by Venerable Khyongla Rato Rinpoche in 1975,[1] and is currently directed by Khen Rinpoche, Nicholas Vreeland, who is the abbot of Rato Dratsang. The primary teachers at The Tibet Center are Khyongla Rato Rinpoche, Geshe Nicholas Vreeland, and Anthony Spina.

The Tibet Center, in partnership with the Gere Foundation, has invited and hosted the 14th Dalai Lama for six teaching events in NYC since 1991. Numerous other religious teachers, both Buddhist and non-Buddhist, have taught at The Tibet Center.

As well as meeting in downtown Manhattan on a weekly basis, The Tibet Center has a retreat home in New Jersey.

Name

The dharma name of the center is Kunkhyab Thardo Ling (translation: Land Pervaded with Seekers of Liberation), a name given to the center by the 6th Ling Rinpoche, who was the 97th Gaden Tripa, and like many of the previous Ling Rinpoches, was the senior tutor of the Dalai Lama.

Tibet Center teachers

The Tibet Center has three main teachers: the founder Venerable Khyongla Rato Rinpoche, who is a Tibetan incarnate lama, Venerable Khen Rinpoche, Geshe Nicholas Vreeland, and Anthony Spina, another one of Khyongla Rinpoche's long-time students.

Over the years many other Tibetan Buddhist teachers have taught at The Tibet Center. As The Tibet Center website explains, these have included, "Venerable Kyabje Ling Rinpoche, the Senior Tutor of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Venerable Tsenshab Serkong Rinpoche, who served as the official debating partner of H. H. the Dalai Lama, Sakya Trizin Rinpoche, the hereditary head of the Sakya order of Tibetan Buddhism, Venerable Trulshik Rinpoche of the Nyingma tradition, and Venerable Tenga Rinpoche of the Kagyu tradition."[2]

Buddhist teachers from the Chan, Theravadan and Zen traditions have also taught at The Tibet Center. In addition, teachers from the Jain, Hindu and Christian religions, as well as scientists and philosophers, have taught there.[3]

Khyongla Rato

Main article: Khyongla Rato

Khyongla Rinpoche is a Tibetan incarnate lama who was born in Tibet in 1923. He left Tibet in 1959 and has lived in New York (and subsequently in New Jersey) since 1968. Khyongla Rato has taught at the Tibet Center for almost 40 years.[4]

Geshe Nicholas Vreeland, Khen Rinpoche

Main article: Nicholas Vreeland
Khen Rinpoche Nicholas Vreeland in front of the temple at Rato Dratsang, January 2015

Geshe Nicholas Vreeland, Khen Rinpoche, the current director of The Tibet Center, is the first westerner to be made abbot of a major Tibetan Buddhist monastery, Rato Dratsang, which was re-established in Karnataka, India. Khen Rinpoche holds a Ser Tri Geshe Degree from Rato. As well as being a fully ordained monk, he is also a photographer. He is the grandson of Diana Vreeland, and is the subject of the biographical documentary film, Monk with a Camera.

Dalai Lama events

Since 1979, the Tibet Center, primarily in partnership with the Gere Foundation, has been instrumental in inviting and hosting the 14th Dalai Lama for seven teaching events in NYC:[3]

Location

As of 2014 and 2015, The Tibet Center is meeting each Monday at 7 pm at the University Settlement Society of New York Houston Street Center, which is located on the Bowery, in Manhattan, just south of Houston Street. The Tibet Center also currently offers, on many Saturday afternoons, White Tara retreats at the Kunkhyab Thardo Ling Retreat Home, in South Orange, New Jersey.

See also

External links

References

  1. Jamyang Centre website accessed 2014-6-1
  2. The Tibet Center website, History & Mission, accessed 2014-6-1
  3. 1 2 The Tibet Center website, History & Mission, accessed 2014-5-31
  4. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Teachings website, Teachers, Lineage Lamas, Lama Zopa Rinpoche's Teachers, Khyongla Rato Rinpoche Accessed 2014-5-31
  5. Lama, HH Dalai (5 September 2002). Open Heart: Practising Compassion in Everyday Life. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-84894-053-6.
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