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Bon treasure

  Bon (bon) is often said to be the indigenous religion of the Himalayan region, preserving beliefs and practices that predate the introduction of Buddhism. The Bon teachings are said to have originally come from a land known as Tazik, introduced to human beings by the enlightened being Tonpa Shenrab, and flourished in the kingdom of Zhangzhung on the western Tibetan Plateau. During the Tibetan Empire, when Buddhism was adopted in Tibet, native priests lost their status, and their practices, some of which were later absorbed into some Tibetan Buddhist traditions, were suppressed. In the centuries following, the surviving adherents to the tradition organized monastic centers, and Bon revealed scriptures were produced that integrated altered versions of many of the ideas and practices brought to Tibet by the Buddhists, resulting in a tradition known as "New Bon." There remains today a pernicious prejudice against Bon in Tibet, and a tenacious belief that Bon is merely a form of...

Bodong Treasure

  The Bodong (bo dong) tradition has a long and complicated history. The seat of what would become the institutionally independent Bodong lineage was the monastery Bodong E, which was founded in 1049 by Geshe Mudrapa Chenpo. What teachings were current there is difficult to know, save that in the twelfth century  Kodrakpa Sonam Gyeltsen  invited the Nepali yogin  Vibhūticandra  to Tibet and received from him a new transmission of the six-branch practice of the Kālacakra. Kodrakpa also propagated a lineage of Lamdre which was later subsumed into the Sakya tradition by  Sonam Gyeltsen  and  Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo . Its greatest representative was  Bodong Paṇchen Chokle Namgyel , with whom the unique Bodong Tradition is commonly said to have begun. It is important to avoid confusing Bodong Panchen with  Jonang Chokle Namgyel , a teacher of  Tsongkhapa  and proponent of the  Zhentong  view.

Lam Drukpa Kuenley

  The numerous saints and scholars who visits bhutan in the course of the centuries, the tibetan Lama Drukpa Kuenley (1455 - 1529) is without doubt the most popular yogi in bhutanese history. Druk kuenley was born into the noble clan of Ralung monastery in western Tibet.