Brief
visit of Sharmar Rinpoche ( May 27th, 2002)
Sharmar
Rinpoche arrived in Kundrol
Ling on Monday 27th May at 3.30 pm. He came to ensure that the
preparations for Gyalwa Karmapa's entry into retreat went smoothly,
and he was accompanied by Lama
Jigme Rinpoche. He was welcomed by the Sangha and all the community
who received his blessing.
Kunzig
Shamar Rimpoche left Kundrol Ling the following day at about 10 o'clock.
Shamar Rimpoche's speech in Dhagpo Kundrol Ling, France
Monday 27th
May 2002
Even
though I am only here for a very short time, I am really very happy
to be with you and to be able to meet you again in this particular,
exceptional situation, in which His Holiness the Karmapa is preparing
to begin a period of retreat.
Our situation
is a very fortunate one. In fact, even though I travel widely in the
world I meet few situations where all the conditions are present,
where at any one time the location and the teachings are excellent,
and where a number of great masters can come regularly to teach. Furthermore,
masters and lamas live here quite naturally, and teach inside the
retreat centers to help the retreatants, and also outside the retreat
centers so that everybody can benefit from the dharma. All the conditions
present here represent something extremely rare. It is a privileged
and fortunate situation due to the fact that, on one hand, the masters
are present and they teach, and on the other hand everyone is very
diligent in applying these instructions in their practice.
All this
is made possible by the conjunction of different factors: firstly,
the wishes of the XVIth Gyalwa Karmapa, as well as those
of Gendun Rinpoche, and also the wishes and aspirations born of the
karma of all those who gather here to practice.
The conditions
for a very stable practice are in place and these must be completed
by it being possible to study the theory which underlies the practice.
It is for this reason that I have asked the Khenpos to come here and
teach different lamas, texts such as The Profound Inner Meaning,
which explains in detail the philosophical view which supports the
practice. I wish everybody to deepen their study to support the practice
in such a way as to both preserve the living aspect of the Dharma
for generations to come, and not just for the present or the immediate
future, and also to ensure the quality of teaching, so that there
is a reliable source where all beings can come and where they can
receive the instructions and apply them.
All aspects
of the Dharma should be present and available here. One important
aspect of the Dharma already exists with the oral and individual instructions:
all the most profound commentaries and practices of the Karma Kagyu
tradition were transmitted here by Lama Gendun Rinpoche, they have
been preserved and are now being transmitted to those who wish to
put them into practice. These commentaries, explanations, oral instructions
and key instructions really explain the deeper meaning; but a more
theoretical, philosophical approach should also be developed with
even more profound teachings. And these aspects of study should be
available so that everybody can benefit permanently from the teaching.
Everybody
contributes to the development of all this in one way or another:
by study, reflection and meditation, by supporting effort and action,
or by contributing knowledge or financial support. I can see numerous
people gathered here who are already contributing to this work, by
living here or in the immediate neighbourhood or even a little further
away. This work must be strengthened and supported now, because it
is a long-term effort. It must be understood that the benefits of
this approach and spreading the Dharma, whether by study, reflection
and meditation or by some sort of material or logistic support are
immeasurable and infinite. It must really be considered that without
the least doubt all the effort that everyone makes to this end accomplishes
good for all beings. The proof of this is that even His Holiness the
Gyalwa Karmapa has come here to practice the six yogas of Naropa,
to contribute to this work and the initiative for the future preservation
and diffusion of the Dharma.
Since
the last visit of His Holiness the Gyalwa Karmapa, I myself have transmitted
numerous initiations and lungs in this place, and we have had the
infinite privilege of receiving an authentic, immensely realised being
of great holiness: Chogye Tritchen Rinpoche came here; he made wishes
and he also transmitted numerous texts and initiations. Thus this
place is a receptacle which has been perfectly blessed by all those
masters which consecrated it, and to some extent it has become a place
of strength and blessing, a place of pilgrimage. I myself try my best
to come here to teach frequently and continuously.
Now I
would like to explain what is happening at the moment in the field
of Karma Kagyu activities.
As you
must be aware, our Karma Kagyu tradition has been going through a
crisis for about nine years. Last year I received an e-mail from Tseten,
a Tibetan, who asked me the following question: "If you have
found your guru, if you are satisfied with him and if you address
your prayers to him, why are you not simply content with that? Why
don’t you abandon everything else and just occupy yourself with celebrating
and praying to your guru? Why do you have to engage in this rivalry
or the confrontation with the politics and the choices and decisions
of the Dalai Lama?"
From
the style of the letter I could see that it must have come from a
young Tibetan, or from a Tibetan of the new generation which has Tibetan
roots but whose education has mostly taken place either in India or
abroad, and whose culture is somehow a mixture as it comprises some
elements of Tibetan culture with a strong influence of those countries
which received these refugees born outside their mother country.
And I
replied: "But you are absolutely right, and if I was in your
place, and had no responsibility, I would do just that. But in my
position, with my responsibility for the Karma Kagyu lineage, I can’t
do it. My intention is not just to find a master, a guru whom I can
venerate; my intention is to fulfil my function and to assume my responsibility
within the Karma Kagyu tradition. From my position as holder of this
lineage, it is my duty to do everything possible to preserve this
tradition. I find myself in the position where, to some extent, the
tradition has been betrayed and it is my duty to do all I can to protect
it."
A number
of factors have come together and placed the tradition in danger:
from outside the tradition there is strong political pressure, inside,
collaboration with this external political influence, and there is
also a financial influence, which is not negligible, which has an
economic aim; and all these different interests have come together
in a movement which puts the authenticity of the tradition in danger.
My duty is to do my utmost to keep this tradition intact, this authentic
institution of the Karma Kagyu Lineage.
So I
replied to this young Tibetan that it was true that opposing these
manoeuvres aimed at destroying the essence and the soul of the Karma
Kagyu tradition had kept me enormously busy during the past nine years.
Now the
result is excellent. The situation is developing in a most favourable
way since, for example, in the problems relating to the ownership
of the Indian seat of the tradition, that is the monastery at Rumtek,
we are practically assured of complete victory. Our rights have been
recognised and are on the way to being absolutely and totally recognised.
In order to assert our claims and to maintain the legitimacy of our
tradition, we have actually had to take legal action. This has been
a long fight in the courts, but now we have reached a point of eighty
percent success, and we can hope that the success will be total before
long. The result is that the administrative team, which until now
has been unable to act, can now fulfil its functions sensibly and
calmly and work for the management of the monastery.
I decided
to explain this happy development of events to the community of lamas
and monks as well as the lay community attached to the monastery at
Rumtek, the seat of His Holiness in India. Last Monday I called them
all to a meeting where I explained that during all these years I have
indeed been fighting for our rights to be respected, and that now,
at the end of all the administrative steps and the legal battle, we
are about to achieve a total victory and my work is complete.
Now the
administrative team can manage the running of the monastery in freedom
and serenity, as the danger has been fought off. And so I announced
that I was placing all my responsibilities in the hands of the council
of administration, and that, as a master, in terms of the dharma,
and as a teacher, I no longer wished to be involved in the management
and administration of the monastery, other than in exceptional circumstances.
The danger having been overcome, and my function as protector of the
tradition having been fully accomplished, they could take charge of
the running of the monastery.
With
the support of a large number of people I have also been able to establish
a large college of monastic studies, a Shedra, in the town of Kalimpong,
on a piece of land which was given to me a number of years ago by
Mr Gyan Jyoti. Numerous people from the Taiwanese Buddhist community
living in Los Angeles have supported me financially and have very
generously contributed to the development of the Shedra, where sixty
students and sixty children from primary classes will be able to receive
a complete education in the curriculum of studies of our tradition.
There
too my function as protector of the tradition having been completed,
I don't wish to be further involved in the administration and financial
management of the Karmapa's monastery and I have completely handed
over these functions to its administrative team, the administrative
council attached to the person of the Karmapa, which now has full
charge and responsibility for its management. Financially, administratively
and legally the situation is assured, and I no longer need to be there,
since my function, which was to protect the tradition in a difficult
time against internal betrayal and external pressure, has been completed,
and therefore I have handed over my responsibilities and all that
weighed on me to the teams which are going to run them.
A lot
of people supported me in this work but all the same I was alone before
these very powerful people and under a great deal of pressure, and
it was truly a very intensive task. But I always held on to the essence
of Buddhism, even in those times of great pressure and enormous difficulties,
and I always handled everything in a Buddhist spirit to show to the
world outside that Buddhists, when faced with adversity, bear their
difficulties with determination and serenity but without aggression.
My concern has been to maintain the authenticity of the tradition,
and to carry out this work, this fight which sometimes demanded a
lot of strength and determination, with Buddhist dignity to show the
whole world what Buddhists do when faced with such problems.
Now that
the result has been achieved and that I no longer have to assume this
aspect of my responsibilities as lineage holder, as things are now
secure and at peace, and the administration can function freely, I
will be able to take up my own personal work.
As Shamarpa
I also have a job to do, things to do which have to some extent been
on hold during these years of actively preserving the essence of the
tradition. I expected to dedicate a few years to the task, but in
fact it has taken me twenty years to effectively ensure the future
of the Kagyupa lineage. Now it is done. I have transmitted all responsibilities,
such as the administration of the different places and different centres,
to the Karmapa, and now it is for him to develop his activity on this
healthy and stable base. And he will do it in the years to come. I
can begin to take up my personal activity again, my work as Shamarpa,
as I am free of the duty of protecting the tradition.
Historically
the Shamarpas have always been very active on both sides of the Himalayas,
that is to say in Tibet itself and also with the Nepalese people,
and more particularly with the ethnic group of the Newary tradition,
with whom they have a Dharma link. Several thousand of these people
follow the teachings of the masters, from incarnation to incarnation,
and have done from the time of the tenth Shamarpa. The Newaries from
the valley of Kathmandu have been waiting for twenty years for me
to have time to dedicate to them and to take up this historic link
and continue the work which was instituted and developed by my predecessors.
Now that my obligations have been fulfilled, I am going to have a
little more free time to work on some major Dharma projects for the
Newary community, but also, of course, to maintain and deepen my links
with all my disciples around the world, in Europe, in the United States
or elsewhere; for it is one tradition, and, whatever the geographical
position, I will continue to dedicate more time to deepening my relations
with my disciples.
The region
of Kathmandu, and Nepal in general, is a natural point of convergence
for people the world over. It is quite easy to reach from Europe and
Asia, and to find oneself in a sort of central point where the Dharma
can be practised in a readily accessible geographical region. So it
is important to develop structures for the Karma Kagyu tradition in
particular to flourish in this country, and for the teachings to be
available there.
Of course
there have been some tragic events in the past months, a sort of latent
civil guerrilla war, but things are calming down and the years to
come will certainly be more peaceful and so it will be easier to develop
such Dharma projects in this region of the world.
However,
as far as this concerns me, this does not change my involvement here
at all, in this place particularly and in France in general. I will
continue to come here regularly and fully assume my responsibilities
as a teacher and inspiration.
So this
is the way I have restructured the monastic administration which supports
the Karmapa’s activity: on the same basis as it existed formerly in
Tibet, that is to say the traditional structure that used to exist
at the seat of the Karmapa’s activity. The XVIth Karmapa
had to make some minor modifications to adapt to the legal and administrative
demands of India. We have been able to return to something more traditional
and more authentic, with the Gyalwa Karmapa himself as supreme head
of the administration. I have made operation of this possible, I have
re-created the structure, I have established it, strengthened it and
protected it from attacks which placed it in peril, and now I am giving
it back to the Karmapa, I am giving it back to the members of the
administration who will carry out their task.
In addition,
having re-established the proper tradition in Karmapa’s administration,
I am giving my own contribution, which is the construction and organisation
of a college of monastic studies; and now, having freed myself from
all that, I can return to more personal activities.
In the
future I will send you a copy of the structure of the monastic administration
directed by the Karmapa himself, so that you can see the constitution
for yourselves.
According
to the European calendar, the Karmapa is now nineteen years old, and
according to Tibetan astrology he is twenty. You could say that there
are still one or two years to go before he reaches his majority, but
a number of people at only twenty run banks, and the Karmapa has such
a spiritual level that directing all of this will pose no problems
for him.
I allowed
myself to suggest to the Karmapa, in front of members of his council
of administration, that perhaps in the coming years his life could
be divided between retreats and teachings, since he is still young:
he could sometimes be in retreat and sometimes teach .. and that is
what he is going to do!
So there
you are. I have spoken to you because I was here, very briefly in
passing. I ask you to pass the message on to your friends, to explain
all I have said this evening so that everyone knows the situation
as it is now.
Thank
you very much.
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