14th Sharmapa in Singapore Mar 3 - 6

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phantom59
Posts: 1485
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 7:30 am

14th Sharmapa in Singapore Mar 3 - 6

Post by phantom59 »

Event : 14th Sharmapa in Singapore
Date : Mar 3 - 6
Venue : Karma Kagyud Buddhist Centre
Website : http://www.karma-kagyud.org.sg/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Address : 38 Lorong 22 Geylang Singapore 398695
Map :
http://www.streetdirectory.com/asia_tra ... ite_51853/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Programme :

March 3 Thursday
Time to be advised
Receiving Rinpoche and Khata Offering
**Meeting members and devotees

March 4 Friday
2.00 pm to 5.00 pm
Refuge taking ceremony and conferring of Bodhisattva Vows
皈依仪式及授普萨诫
**Meeting members and devotees

March 5 Saturday
Tibetan New Year
10.30 am to 12.30 pm
Lhasang Puja, Buddha Shakyamuni Puja, and Khata offering
12.30 pm to 2.00 pm
Lunch with members and devotees(ticket required)
8.00 pm to 10.00 pm
Amitayus Empowerment

March 6 Sunday
10.30 am to 12.00 pm
Releasing lives
8.00 pm to 10.00 pm
Explanation of Buddha Amitabha & Phowa;Buddha Amitabha Empowerment

March 7 Monday
Departure

The 14th Shamar Rinpoche was born in 1952 and spent many years studying in India with Buddhist scholars. He began to travel and teach in various Buddhist centers throughout Asia and the west starting in 1980, and in 1982 went to U.C. Berkeley to study English for ten months. In 1996 he started to organize the Bodhi Path Buddhist Centers, a network of centers based on a non-sectarian approach to Buddhism. The curriculum of Bodhi Path centers is grounded in the teachings of the 11th century Indian Buddhist master Atisha, as they were transmitted by Gampopa. Atisha's methods are the most effective for taming the mind and deepening wisdom, and in addition can be taught and employed in a secular way.

Shamar Rinpoche does not encourage most of his students to become monks and nuns, instead emphasizing the ideal of being a lay person who studies and practices Buddhism. This is because becoming a monk or nun requires virtuosic dedication and discipline, and should not be undertaken by those unwilling to follow the full set of guidelines explained in the vinaya (the code of conduct). For monks that mean 253 rules, and for nuns 364. In order to provide a shining example of how the renounced followers of the Buddha are really supposed to live, in 2005 Shamar Rinpoche founded the retreat center of Shar Minub in Kathmandu, Nepal. At Shar Minub, twenty resident monks strictly maintain the full 253 vows of the vinaya. These monks are total renunciants and dedicated meditators. Shar Minub is at the present time the only monastery among the many in the Himalayan regions where the monks are fully committed to the Buddha's vinaya discipline.

Many of the Shamarpas were great scholars. In particular, the 1st Shamarpa Khedrup Trakpa Senge (1284-1349), 2nd Shamarpa Kachö Wangpo (1350-1405), 3rd Shamarpa Chöpel Yeshe (1406-1452), 4th Shamarpa Chökyi Trakpa Pal Yeshe (1453 -1526), 5th Shamarpa Könchog Yenlag, (1526-1583), 6th Shamarpa Chökyi Wangchuk, (1584-1629), 8th Shamarpa Palchen Chökyi Döndrup, (1695-1732) and 10th Shamarpa Chödrup Gyatso (1742-1792), stand out in terms of their intellectual contributions. The 4th Shamarpa even ruled Tibet for 12 years towards the end of his life.

Read more at :
http://www.shamarpa.org/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
sherabpa
Posts: 125
Joined: Mon Jan 31, 2011 8:26 pm

Re: 14th Sharmapa in Singapore Mar 3 - 6

Post by sherabpa »

'Sharmapa' in Tibetan means something like 'young woman man'.

Not to be confused with Shamarpa, i.e. zhva dmar ka rma pa, a.k.a. Shamar Karmapa, i.e. Red Hat Karmapa.

Shamarpa = correct
Sharmapa = incorrect
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