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Taraloka |
In Praise of Dependent OriginationLed by Kulaprabha Friday 05 September - Friday 12 September For OMs, Mitras and FWBO practitioners who have a regular meditation practice and are familiar with the seven-fold puja Kulaprabha writes: "Seeing and speaking of dependent arising, The poem will enable us to express our devotion to the Buddha and also provide a comprehensive Mahayana framework for deepening our understanding of his core teaching. Tsongkhapa lived in the 14th century and was a great re-discoverer and systematiser of the Dharma for Tibetans of his time. Earlier this year I came across a volume of his devotional writings, called "The Splendour of the Autumn Moon" translated by Gavin Kilty (Wisdom Publications, ISBN 0-86171-192-0). This poem in particular spoke to me - reminding me that reading devotional poetry is a delight in itself and, in hard times, helps us regain something of our original inspiration to practise the Dharma. When I read Gavin Kilty's introduction, it not only revealed an aspect of Tsongkhapa I hadn't known about but also gave me a better perspective of why he is one of the Teachers of the Past on the WBO Refuge Tree. In 14th century Tibet there were so many texts available that the core message of the Buddha was in danger of becoming lost sight of. Kilty describes how Tsongkhapa Perhaps this monk, scholar and poet can serve to give inspiration to the rather similar situation which exists in the West today, where so many teachings, books and texts are available from so many different Buddhist sources and traditions; how do we discriminate between them? The poem shows the way: go back to the core teaching, the heart of the Buddha's doctrine and use that to examine everything else. Code: 200843 Suggested donation: £270/200/155 |