The July-August issue of Mandala
Magazine included a series of articles on Ven.
Choden Rinpoche, from his early years at Sera Je Monastery
in Tibet, through his years as a "hidden meditator" after
the Tibetan uprising in 1959, to his emergence to India
in 1985:
The Life of
a Hidden Meditator
Debating with
the Dalai Lama
In Meditation
for Nineteen Years
The Benefit
of Learning Poetry and Grammar
A Subtle
Form of Revoluion
Meditation:
Making the Mind Positive
You may also learn more about
Ven. Choden Rinpoche by visiting the FPMT
website, and you can listen to some of his teachings
on Lam
Rim radio.
Born in 1933 in eastern Tibet, Choden Rinpoche was recognized
at age three as the reincarnation of the previous
Choden Rinpoche, who had been a candidate for the Twelfth
Dalai Lama. At eight he entered Rabten Monastery, and at fifteen he
went to Sera Je Monastery near Lhasa. Choden Rinpoche was one of
the two Sera Je lamas selected to debate with the Dalai Lama during
His Holiness's geshe exams.
Following the Communist Chinese takeover of Tibet in 1959,
Choden Rinpoche stayed on in Tibet, going into solitary retreat for
nineteen years. He never left his tiny, dark room in Lhasa from 1965
to 1985, pretending to be an invalid and thereby avoiding the ravages
of the Cultural Revolution. All the while, without texts, ritual implements,
or an altar, he meditated, profoundly deepening his realizations
of Buddhism's core insights. In 1985 he was allowed to leave
Tibet for India, where he has since taught thousands of students at
Sera Je Monastery in South India. Regarded as one of the foremost
experts on the Vinaya (the monastic discipline), Rinpoche has inspired
many Tibetans and Westerners to ordain. Choden Rinpoche has visited
the United States previously to give teachings and lead retreats.
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