Posts Tagged ‘Dolpopa’
Tags: Dolpopa
Dolpopa’s Song of Auspiciousness in Translation
We are happy to make a new translation of a song of auspiciousness by Dolpopa available to download and share.
Read MoreNew Texts and Catalog of the Dolpopa Collection
An annotated listing of each Tibetan title in the 2011 edition of Dolpopa’s Collected Writings is attached below, including a list of the thirteen titles that are not included in either of…
Read MoreDolpopa’s Collected Writings New Edition
A new edition of the Tibetan language collected writings (gsung ’bum) of Dolpopa was published in 13 volumes in 2011, though it did not become available until 2013. It was…
Read MoreFinding the Original Jonang Monastery
The Jonangpa have longstanding historical and cultural ties to locality.[1] So much so that their very identity is derived from and enmeshed within their place of origin. The term “Jonang”…
Read MoreKalachakra on Tibet Pilgrimage
At Jonang Foundation, we host pilgrimages to power places in Tibet. These pilgrimages are fundraisers for our educational and preservation initiatives. The summer 2011 journey was the second of its…
Read MoreDolpopa on Emptiness
The following post is titled, Emptiness of Self-nature and Emptiness of Other by Cyrus Stearns, a contributing author to the Jonangpa blog. It is an excerpt from the reprint of…
Read MoreReflecting ‘The Crystal Mirror’
Maybe its the dark magnetism of impending all hallows’ eve, but I’m feeling a mischievous urge to rile up all the ghouls and goblins of unapologetic dogmatism and have them…
Read MoreRongton’s Praise to Dolpopa
Over the summer, I was browsing through a Tibetan book shop and I happened upon the recently reproduced collected works of Rongton Shakya Gyaltsen (1367-1449). As I opened the first…
Read MoreAt the Great Stupa of Jonang
The following is a transcript of a talk, The Legacy of the Jonangpa by Michael Sheehy at the Great Stupa of Jonang in Tibet on July 17, 2009. So, the…
Read MoreTsoknyi Gyatso on Zhentong
Without jumping the gun (as we continue to set the text), I thought to write a post with the hope to help contextualize a forthcoming publication in the Tibetan language…
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