White Dakini Drub Chen
with Tulku Sang ngag Rinpoche & Lama Tsultrim Allione
August 23 - 31, 2009
For the first time in the West a
Drub Chen (Great Accomplishment
Ceremony) of the White Dakini
practice from Do Khyentse’s
Dzinpa Rangdröl (Self-Liberation
from Fixation) treasure cycle
will be performed. This lineage
comes directly from Dilgo
Khyentse Rinpoche to Tulku
Sang ngag who will be the Vajra
Master at the Drub Chen. We
will experience a traditional
empowerment given by Tulku
Sang ngag, and we will be lead
through an in depth process
of learning and practicing the
White Dakini mandala. This
White Dakini practice is the
union of Machig Labdron and
Yeshe Tsogyel surrounded by the dakinis of the five families. During
the retreat, in addition to the precious teachings from Tulku Sang gnag,
Lama Tsultrim will help frame the experience through discussion and
further teachings. The White Dakini practice will be established as a key
practice at Tara Mandala and links directly to Machig through Yeshe
Tsogyel, her previous incarnation. This is an opportunity to be in the
first group receiving this lineage transmission and is open to anyone
interested. In addition, it is a strictly closed retreat and requires intensive
practice and the ability to hold the container. During the Drub Chen
traditional instruments will be played, a mandala will be created, and
continual mantra recitation will occur. The participants will experience
deep immersion in the Vajra world. This is an exciting deepening of the
tradition at Tara Mandala and we encourage everyone drawn to be here
to come. Mipham Rinpoche said, ”One Drub Chen is equal to seven
years of solitary retreat.”
Price
Double: $1,553 - $965- SOLD OUT
Queen Double: $1,575 - $1,080 - SOLD OUT
Queen Single: $1,685 - $1,190 - SOLD OUT
Camping: $925 - $650
Suggested Dana: $160 - $320
Accommodation descriptions can be found here.
Sliding scale fees allow participants to pay according to individual means. Your payment above the
low end directly benefits our scholarship fund.
Sustaining Sangha discounts range from 10%-20% based on your membership level
and are calculated at registration.
Detailed information about retreats at Tara Mandala
Travel Information (booking flights, shuttles, hotels)
Register securely online: 50% of course cost due at registration
Financial aid available
Registration form (PDF)
Tulku Sang ngag Rinpoche, the sixth Gochen Tulku, is an incarnation of Gyalwa Chokyang, one of the close disciples of Padmasambhava. Recognized at the age of three, Rinpoche began learning religious rituals and liturgies, as well as traditional Tibetan medicine, at an early age. Rinpoche met his root guru, Tulku Orgyen Chemchok, in a Chinese prison where he was held for nine years. Here he received teachings and secret transmissions. Upon release, Rinpoche met his other root teacher, H.H. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, with whom he traveled, studied, and practiced intensively for nearly fourteen years. Rinpoche teaches worldwide and oversees his two retreat centers in Pharping: Yuloko Nunnery and Phurpaling, a dharma center in Taiwan and his U.S. retreat center, Ewam Sang-ngag Ling, located in Arlee, Montana.
Tsultrim Allione, M.A., was one of the first American women to be ordained as a Tibetan nun in 1970 by the 16th Karmapa. She is the author of Women of Wisdom, a groundbreaking book on the lives of great female Tibetan practitioners. Her newest book, Feeding the Demons: Ancient Wisdom for Resolving Inner Conflict, (2008, Little, Brown & Co), connects the ancient knowledge of Tibetan Buddhism with the modern psyche, addressing the major issues of our culture and the roots of our suffering. Based on her pioneering technique using five steps to feed your demons, this book offers a system to transform our inner demons by nurturing rather than fighting them.
After four years as a nun, Tsultrim returned her monastic vows, married, and raised a famity. She earned a masters degree in Buddhist Studies and Women’s Studies from Antioch University. Inspired by the vision of a Western retreat center while living in the Himalayas, and seeing the need to create a place for the reemergence of the sacred feminine, Tsultrim founded Tara Mandala in 1993 where she is now the resident teacher.
Tsultrim is collecting the lineage of Machig Labdrön, the 11th century Tibetan yogini who founded the Chöd lineage. As a long-time Chöd practitioner, Tsultrim has studied Machig’s teachings for decades and taught the practices all over the world. In 2007, Tsultrim was recognized as an emanation of Machig Labdrön by Karme Dorje Rinpoche, the resident Lama of Zangri Khangmar in Tibet (see article on opposite page).
In regards to the recognition Tsultrim has recently said, “I think [the recognition] is to make this new phase of collecting Machig’s lineage more empowered. Recognition allows more energy to flow, and Machig’s blessings can manifest more fully. It’s a kind of mirroring from the outside, validating our heartfelt intention to reinvigorate and spread Machig’s lineage in the West. It also felt very natural. We will keep doing what we have been doing already, but the recognition creates an auspicious interdependence for the teachings.”
Tsultrim’s skill at teaching arises from her dedication to the Dharma and the ways she has brought Dharma to the challenges of everyday life. She brings forth the vibrancy of the teachings in a way that makes them germane for accomplished practitioners and those new to the path.
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