gDams Ngag mDzod:About

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About the DNZ

This detailed catalog of the gdams ngag mdzod is a Tsadra Foundation Research Department Project
designed and created by Marcus Perman with the help of Tim Walton, Adam Krug and Cory Leistikow.

About Tsadra Foundation

Tsadra Foundation is a privately funded nonprofit trust established in New York City in 2000 in order to provide vital funding for the combined study and practice of Tibetan Buddhism in the west.

http://www.tsadra.org/

Our Vision

Tsadra Foundation envisions a flourishing community of Western scholar-practitioners who are fully trained in the traditions of Tibetan Buddhism. Grounded in wisdom and compassion, these individuals actively enrich the world through their openness and excellence.

Our Mission

Contributing to the ongoing development of wisdom and compassion in Western minds by advancing the combined study and practice of Tibetan Buddhism.

Our Policy

In seeking out candidates to support, Tsadra Foundation relies on referrals that come to us through an advisory panel of esteemed contemplatives, scholars and students. Please keep in mind that at the present time we do not accept unsolicited grant proposals; we only accept requests for scholarships as defined in the corresponding sections. For more information, please visit the Scholarships Program.

Tsadra: Our Name

The Foundation takes its name from Tsa’dra Rinchen Drak, Jamgön Kongtrul’s hermitage and principal seat in Eastern Tibet. Perched on a cliff face high above Palpung Monastery in the Dergé region of Kham, Tsa’dra is considered to be equivalent to Tsari, one of the twenty-four sacred places in India.

It was there, at his home, that Kongtrul established a traditional three-year retreat center that would be the seat of the Shangpa Kagyu tradition and in which the practice traditions of Shangpa, Kalachakra, and Dzogchen were transmitted. Many volumes of Kongtrul’s Five Treasuries, which comprise the theory and practice of all the main lineages of Tibetan Buddhism, were composed at Tsa’dra.

Our Inspiration

Jamgön Kongtrul was a remarkable figure in nineteenth century Tibet. Widely respected for his accomplishments in contemplation and scholarship, he spent much of his life in retreat while composing authoritative treatises. His life and activity embody perfectly the values of Tsadra Foundation, and as such are our primary source of inspiration.

Fully integrating the two facets of Buddhist teachings, Kongtrul worked continuously for the benefit of others through religious, social, and diplomatic efforts. A tireless advocate of the nonsectarian movement, he counteracted the religious fragmentation of his time by espousing respect for all authentic traditions. With this same belief at its core, Tsadra Foundation as an institution is not attached to a single tradition, nor does it adhere to or represent any single teacher’s activity. The directors of Tsadra Foundation acknowledge an infinite debt of gratitude to another great Tibetan master considered to be Kongtrul’s activity incarnation, Khyabje Kalu Rinpoché. With his profound wisdom, endless patience, and irrepressible humor, Kalu Rinpoché opened our hearts and minds. Most significantly, he founded the first three-year retreat center in the West, trusting students with the full and uncompromised transmission of the Buddhist teachings.