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Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition

The Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition (FPMT) was founded in 1975 by Gelugpa Lamas Thubten Yeshe and Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, who began teaching Tibetan Buddhism to Western students in Nepal. The FPMT has grown to encompass over 138 dharma centers, projects, and services in 34 countries. Lama Yeshe led the organization until his death in 1984, followed by Lama Zopa until his death in 2023. The FPMT is now without a spiritual director; meetings on the organization's structure and future are planned.[1]

Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition
AbbreviationFPMT
Formation1975
FounderThubten Yeshe
Thubten Zopa Rinpoche
TypeTibetan Buddhism
HeadquartersPortland, Oregon
United States
President / CEO
Ven. Roger Kunsang
Websitefpmt.org

Location edit

The FPMT's international headquarters are in Portland, Oregon, United States. The central office has previously been located at:

As of 2023, the FPMT has 138 centers, projects, and services in 34 countries worldwide, of which about 85 are dharma centers (monasteries and retreat centers often have a public-teaching function, which would raise the count), some 18 are unincorporated "study groups," and the rest a mix of other projects, such as hospices or dharma presses.[2]

History edit

The name and structure of the FPMT date to 1975, in the wake of an international teaching tour by Lamas Yeshe and Zopa. However, the two had been teaching Western travelers since at least 1965, when they met Zina Rachevsky, their student and patron, in Darjeeling. In 1969, the three of them founded the Nepal Mahayana Gompa Centre (now Kopan Monastery). Rachevsky died shortly afterwards during a Buddhist retreat.

Lama Yeshe resisted Rachevsky's appeals to teach a "meditation course", on the grounds that in the Sera Monastery tradition in which he was educated, "meditation" would be attempted only after intensive, multi-year study of the Five Topics. However, he gave Lama Zopa permission to lead what became the first of Kopan's meditation courses (then semiannual, now annual) in 1971.[3] Lama Zopa led these courses at least through 1975, and sporadically thereafter.

During the early 1970s, hundreds of Westerners attended teachings at Kopan. Historical descriptions and recollections routinely characterize early Western participants as backpackers on the hippie trail (extended overland tours of Asia), to whom Lama Yeshe's style of discourse especially appealed.

Geoffrey Samuel finds it significant that Lamas Yeshe and Zopa had not yet attracted followings among the Tibetan or Himalayan peoples (Zopa's status as a minor tulku notwithstanding), and that their activities took place independently of any support or direction from the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamsala. On his reading, their willingness to reach out to Westerners was in large measure the result of a lack of other sources of support. Nevertheless, Samuel sees their cultivation of an international network as having ample precedent in Tibet.[4]

In December 1973, Lama Yeshe ordained fourteen Western monks and nuns under the name of the International Mahayana Institute. Around this time, Lama Yeshe's students began returning to their own countries. The result was the founding of an ever-increasing number of dharma centers in those countries. In his description of the FPMT, Jeffrey Paine emphasizes the charisma, intuition, drive, and organizational ability of Lama Yeshe. Paine asks us to consider how a refugee with neither financial resources nor language skills could manage to create an international network with more than a hundred centers and study groups.[5] David N. Kay makes the following observation:

Lama Yeshe's project of defining and implementing an efficient organizational and administrative structure within the FPMT created the potential for friction at a local level. The organization's affiliated centers had initially been largely autonomous and self-regulating, but towards the late-1970s were increasingly subject to central management and control. [6]

As a result, says Kay (and Samuel's analysis concurs), at the same time that the FPMT was consolidating its structure and practices, several local groups and teachers defected, founding independent networks. Geshe Loden of Australia's Chenrezig Institute left the FPMT in 1979, in order to focus on his own network of centers. More consequentially, Kelsang Gyatso and his students caused the Manjushri Institute, the FPMT's flagship center in England, to sever its FPMT ties. At issue was whether the centers and their students ought to identify primarily with Lama Yeshe, local teachers, the Gelugpa tradition, or Tibetan Buddhism as a whole. The FPMT now asks its lamas to sign a "Geshe Agreement" which make explicit the organization's expectations.[7] The latter rift widened in the wake of unrelated, post-1996 controversy over Dorje Shugden. Following the policy of the 14th Dalai Lama, the FPMT bans the worship of this deity from its centers.[8]

Lama Yeshe's death in 1984 led to his succession as spiritual director by Lama Zopa. In 1986, a Spanish boy named Tenzin Ösel Hita (a.k.a. Tenzin Ösel Rinpoche, or "Lama Ösel") was identified as the tulku of Lama Yeshe. As he came of age, Hita gave up his robes for a secular life, attending university in Spain, and became relatively inactive in the FPMT. In 2009, Hita was quoted in several media sources as renouncing his role as a tulku—remarks which he later disavowed.[9]

In 2019, a group of nuns called for an independent, third-party investigation into complaints of groping, sexual harassment, and sexual assault by Sera lama and FPMT teacher Dagri Rinpoche over a ten-year period. A petition to this effect attracted more than 4000 signatures. The FPMT International Office responded by suspending Dagri Rinpoche from its list of teachers, and commissioning FaithTrust Institute to conduct the requested investigation. Its 19 Sept. 2020 report found the allegations credible. By this time Dagri Rinpoche had been formally charged in connection with another groping incident, this time aboard an domestic Indian flight. [10] Five (out of eight) FPMT board members resigned amidst controversy over whether to release the report. A “draft” summary report was eventually published—so labeled by the FPMT in anticipation of revisions, but the FaithTrust Institute considered its work complete. Besides abuse, the summary also noted a pattern of "coercive or retaliatory behaviors" aimed at silencing complainants, and criticized the FPMT for its lack of any clear mechanism to handle such complaints (pp. 38-39). The FPMT objected that the FPMT centers where the abuse took place were legally independent; and that the report's criticism of remarks by Lama Zopa as unhelpful failed to take into account the core principle of guru devotion.[11] (Zopa had characterized Dagri Rinpoche as “a very positive, holy being—definitely not an ordinary person," and advised Dagri's students to see only his pure qualities.)[12] FPMT center leaders and registered teachers (but not Tibetan teachers) are now required to take a "Protection from Abuse" online training course. [13] [14] [15]

On the 2023 death of Lama Zopa, the FPMT board indicated that he would have no direct successor, and that the board would collectively assume his responsibilities, subject to the advice of the Dalai Lama. An "advisory council of teachers" is planned.[16]

Bei, Voulgarakis, and Nault use the FPMT to illustrate Arjun Appadurai's understanding of globalization in terms of (in Appadurai's words) "(a) ethnoscapes, (b) mediascapes, (c) technoscapes, (d) finanscapes, and (e) ideoscapes." The authors accordingly describe the FPMT as "an international network of Gelugpa dharma centers headquartered in Portland, Oregon, but founded by Tibetan and Sherpa monks in India and Nepal (one of whom has apparently reincarnated as a Spaniard), and whose funding comes disproportionately from ethnic Chinese communities in East / Southeast Asia."[17]

Structure edit

The FPMT is headed by a board of directors, with its spiritual director (presently vacant) an ex officio member. The FPMT International Office represents the board's executive function. The president / CEO of the FPMT is currently (2023) Ven. Roger Kunsang, in that office since 2005.[18]

As of 2023, there are 138 FPMT dharma centres, projects, services and study groups in 34 countries. Each affiliated center, project or service is separately incorporated and locally financed. There is no such thing as FPMT "membership" for individuals; rather, membership is held only by organizations (although several of these offer their own, local membership to individuals). In addition to its local board and officers, each FPMT center also has a spiritual program coordinator and in many cases, a resident geshe or teacher (and perhaps other Sangha as well).

The center directors and spiritual program coordinators from various countries meet every few years as the Council for the Preservation for the Mahayana Tradition (CPMT), in order to share experience and deliberate points of mutual concern.

The 14th Dalai Lama is credited with the honorary role of "inspiration and guide".[19]

Programs edit

Students often first encounter the FPMT via short courses and retreats held at the various centers. The prototype of these is Kopan Monastery's annual month-long meditation course, offered since 1971. Many FPMT centers have adopted standardized curricula,[20] whose modules may also be studied online. They range from short introductory courses like "Buddhist Meditation 101," to

  • Discovering Buddhism, a two-year, fourteen-module lamrim course.[21]
  • Living in the Path, a (so far) twenty-module course on practice, drawn from Lama Zopa's talks[22]
  • Exploring Buddhism, a (so far) seven-module course designed to prepare students for the Basic Program (vide infra)[23]

Students desiring more advanced study have a number of options including:

Students who complete any of the seven programs listed above may apply to become FPMT registered teachers.

Projects edit

FPMT maintains a number of charitable projects, including funds to build holy objects; translate Tibetan texts; support monks and nuns (both Tibetan and non-Tibetan); offer medical care, food and other assistance in impoverished regions of Asia; re-establish Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia; and protect animals.[27]

Perhaps the highest-profile FPMT project to date is the Maitreya Project. Originally a planned colossal statue of Maitreya to be built in Bodhgaya and/or Kushinagar (India), the project has been reconceived in the face of fund-raising difficulties and controversy over land acquisition, and now intends to construct a number of relatively modest statues.[28] Jessica Marie Falcone's Battling the Buddha of Love: A Cultural Biography of the Greatest Statue Never Built (Cornell University Press, 2018; based on her Ph.D. dissertation in cultural anthropology for Cornell) is about the controversy, and the meaning of the proposed statue to FPMT participants and Kushinagari protesters.

Also to note is the Sera Je Food Fund offering 3 meals a day to the 2600 monks who are studying at Sera Je Monastery since 1991.[29]

Publications edit

Wisdom Publications, now a well-known publisher of Buddhist books, originated at Kopan Monastery, Kathmandu, Nepal, in 1975 under editor Nicholas Ribush. Its first publication was Lama Yeshe's and Lama Zopa's Wisdom Energy.[30] Under Ribush, the publisher began formal operations in London in 1983 (after several years operating out of the Manjushri Institute), with Jeffrey Hopkins' Meditation on Emptiness (1983) as an early perennial. It moved to Boston in 1989, under director Timothy McNeill. The press offers both academic and popular Buddhist literature from all traditions of Buddhism, as well as translations of classic Buddhist literature. Especially noteworthy are its encyclopedia-style project, the 32-volume Library of Tibetan Classics (developed by Thupten Jinpa, English-language translator for the Dalai Lama); and the Teachings of the Buddha series of translations of the Pali Nikāyas.

Diamant Verlag (from 1984) and éditions Mahayana (from 2020) publish Buddhist books in German and French, respectively.

Since 1995, the FPMT has published a glossy magazine called Mandala (now quarterly).

The Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive, which holds copyright to the speeches and writings of Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa, is one of the FPMT's member organizations. The LYWA archives and transcribes teachings by these and other lamas, and produces edited books for free distribution and for sale. Its director is Nicholas Ribush.

Notable Followers edit

  • Lillian Too, Malaysian-Chinese author of 80 books on feng shui. She recounts the story of her contact with Lama Zopa and the FPMT in The Buddha Book (Element, 2003) .
  • Daja Wangchuk Meston, American Tibet activist and author of a memoir, Comes the Peace: My Journey to Forgiveness (Free Press, March 6, 2007). Meston grew up as a (white) boy monk at Kopan monastery--his mother having left him to become a Buddhist nun under Lama Yeshe. He took his own life in 2010.
  • Jan Willis, Professor of Religion at Wesleyan University and author of several Buddhist books including her memoir, Dreaming Me: An African American Woman's Spiritual Journey (Riverhead, 2001). Willis was one of the earliest students of Lama Yeshe, who reportedly encouraged her in her academic career.
  • Nick Ribush, an Australian ordained as a monk by Lama Yeshe, and the founder of several FPMT centers and projects.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://fpmt.org/updates-from-the-fpmt-inc-board/update-from-the-fpmt-inc-board-of-directors-august-24-2023/
  2. ^ "FPMT Centers, Projects and Services". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  3. ^ Jamyang Wangmo, The Lawudo Lama: Stories of Reincarnation from the Mount Everest Region (Wisdom Publications, 2005). p. 241
  4. ^ Geoffrey Samuel, "Tibetan Buddhism as a World Religion: Global Networking and its Consequences," ch. 13 of Tantric Revisionings: New Understandings of Tibetan Buddhism and Indian Religion (Motilal Banarsidass, 2005), p. 301 ff.
  5. ^ Jeffrey Paine, Re-Enchantment: Tibetan Buddhism Comes to the West (Norton, 2004), ch. 2.
  6. ^ David N. Kay, Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain (RoutledgeCurzon, 2004), pp. 61-62.
  7. ^ Kay, p. 65
  8. ^ The Shugden Issue 24 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine - policy statement by the FPMT, accessed 26 July 2012.
  9. ^ Van Biema, David (8 June 2009). "When a 'Chosen' Tibetan Lama Says No Thanks". Time. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  10. ^ Lobsang Wangyal, "Dagri Rinpoche speaks out, claims innocence," Tibet Sun (13 May 2019), https://www.tibetsun.com/news/2019/05/13/dagri-rinpoche-speaks-out-claims-innocence
  11. ^ FPMT Inc. Concerns Regarding Aspects of FTI’s Draft Summary Report, https://fpmt.app.box.com/s/8re7tem886wvz5pwecm12wvf4ps9e7pq
  12. ^ "Lama Zopa's Advice to Students of Dagri Rinpoche" (14 May 2019), https://fpmt.org/lama-zopa-rinpoche-news-and-advice/advice-from-lama-zopa-rinpoche/lama-zopa-rinpoches-advice-to-students-of-dagri-rinpoche/
  13. ^ "Update from FPMT Inc. (13 Nov. 2020), https://fpmt.org/fpmt-community-news/statement/nov-13-2020-update/
  14. ^ Tenpel (Tenzin Peljor, aka Michael Jäckel), "Fact-Finding Results in Response to Allegations of Sexual Misconduct by Dagri Rinpoche" (17 Nov. 2020), https://buddhism-controversy-blog.com/2020/11/17/fact-finding-results-in-response-to-multiple-allegations-of-sexual-misconduct-by-dagri-rinpoche/
  15. ^ Emily DeMaioNewton and Karen Jensen, “Buddha Buzz Weekly: Dagri Rinpoche Permanently Removed as FPMT Teacher” (Tricycle, 21 Nov. 2020), https://tricycle.org/article/dagri-rinpoche
  16. ^ https://fpmt.org/fpmt-community-news/an-update-from-the-fpmt-board-july-2023/
  17. ^ Bei Dawei, Evangelos Voulgarakis, and Derrick M. Nault, introduction to Nault et al. (eds), Experiencing Globalization: Religion in Contemporary Contexts (Anthem Press, 2013), p. 6. The authors are quoting Appadurai, "Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy," in Appadurai, Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization (University of Minnesota Press, 1996), p. 33.
  18. ^ FPMT Board of Directors https://fpmt.org/fpmt/international-office/board-of-directors/
  19. ^ "Spiritual Guides". FPMT.
  20. ^ "Study". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  21. ^ "Discovering Buddhism". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  22. ^ "Living in the Path". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
  23. ^ "Exploring Buddhism". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
  24. ^ "FPMT Basic Program". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  25. ^ "FPMT Masters Program". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  26. ^ "Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo Translator Program". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  27. ^ "FPMT Charitable Projects". Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website. Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  28. ^ "Maitreya Projects".
  29. ^ FPMT, Sera Je Food Fund
  30. ^ Ribush, Nicholas (11 October 2008). "Birth of a Buddhist Publishing Company". Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive website. Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  31. ^ De-Tong Ling Retreat Centre 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography edit

  • Cozort, Daniel. "The Making of the Western Lama". In Buddhism in the Modern World (Steven Heine & Charles S. Prebish, eds), Oxford UP: 2003, ch. 9. Focuses on the educational curricula of the FPMT and the New Kadampa Tradition.
  • Croucher, Paul. A History of Buddhism in Australia, 1848-1988. New South Wales UP, 1989. The FPMT is discussed on pp. 89–93, as well as on 112-113.
  • Eddy, Glenys. Western Buddhist Experience: The Journey From Encounter to Commitment in Two Forms of Western Buddhism. Ph.D dissertation for the Dept. of Studies in Religion, University of Sydney. 30 March 2007. Discusses the Vajrayana Institute (an Australian FPMT center) throughout, but especially in chapters 4,5, and 6.
  • Eddy, Glenys. . Global Buddhism no. 8, 2007. Extracted from her doctoral dissertation (see above).
  • Halafoff, Anna. "Venerable Robina Courtin: An Unconventional Buddhist?" In Cristina Rocha and Michelle Barker, Buddhism in Australia: Traditions in Change. Routledge, 2011. Courtin, a well-known FPMT nun, founded the Prison Liberation Project.
  • Hulse, Adele. Big Love: The Life and Teachings of Lama Yeshe. Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive, 2020. Two-volume biography / oral history by one of Yeshe's students.
  • Kay, David N. Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain. RoutledgeCurzon, 2004. The FPMT is discussed mainly on pp. 53–66, as background to the New Kadampa Tradition.
  • Magee, William. . Conference paper presented to the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission of the ROC, 2004. Discusses Magee's experience studying the Collected Topics at the University of Virginia and the Dialectics Institute in Dharamsala, as well as teaching portions of these for Australia's Chenrezig Institute (an FPMT center).
  • Meston, Daja Wangchuk. Comes the Peace: My Journey to Forgiveness. Free Press, 2007. Memoir. Meston, a white American, was raised as a boy monk at Kopan.
  • Moran, Peter. Buddhism Observed: Travelers, Exiles, and Tibetan Dharma in Kathmandu. RoutledgeCurzon, 2004. An anthropological / sociological look at "Western" Buddhist tourists / pilgrims to Boudhanath. Kopan receives periodic mention, but see especially pp. 70–74.
  • Ong, Y.D. Buddhism in Singapore—a Short Narrative History. Skylark Publications, 2005. The Amitabha Buddhist Centre is mentioned briefly, on pp. 175–177.
  • Paine, Jeffrey. Re-Enchantment: Tibetan Buddhism Comes to the West. Norton, 2004. Chapter two discusses the role of Lama Yeshe and the FPMT.
  • Samuel, Geoffrey. "Tibetan Buddhism as a World Religion: Global Networking and its Consequences". Chapter 13 of Tantric Revisionings: New Understandings of Tibetan Buddhism and Indian Religion. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2005. pp. 288–316. The FPMT is discussed sporadically, beginning on p. 301, along with other "Western" Tibetan Buddhist groups.
  • Wangmo, Jamyang. The Lawudo Lama: Stories of Reincarnation from the Mount Everest Region. Wisdom Pub., 2005. The second part of the book contains Lama Zopa's reminiscences about his life, including his first meeting with Lama Yeshe (p. 199 ff) and Zina Rachevsky (p. 202), and the first Kopan course (p. 241 ff).
  • Willis, Jan. Dreaming Me: An African American Woman's Spiritual Journey. Riverhead, 2001. Memoir. Willis, now an academic, was one of the earliest students of Lama Yeshe.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • FPMT Centers, Projects and Services
  • Diffi.cult: 'Will the FPMT stand by its Code of Ethics?'
  • Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo Translator Program
  • Land of Medicine Buddha
  • Choe Khor Sum Ling, Bangalore
  • Lama Zopa Rinpoche - How I Was Recognized as a Tulku
  • FPMT a Documentary (YouTube video)

foundation, preservation, mahayana, tradition, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, rely, excessively, sources, closely, associated, with, sub. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition FPMT was founded in 1975 by Gelugpa Lamas Thubten Yeshe and Thubten Zopa Rinpoche who began teaching Tibetan Buddhism to Western students in Nepal The FPMT has grown to encompass over 138 dharma centers projects and services in 34 countries Lama Yeshe led the organization until his death in 1984 followed by Lama Zopa until his death in 2023 The FPMT is now without a spiritual director meetings on the organization s structure and future are planned 1 Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana TraditionAbbreviationFPMTFormation1975FounderThubten YesheThubten Zopa RinpocheTypeTibetan BuddhismHeadquartersPortland OregonUnited StatesPresident CEOVen Roger KunsangWebsitefpmt org Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Structure 4 Programs 5 Projects 6 Publications 7 Notable Followers 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksLocation editThe FPMT s international headquarters are in Portland Oregon United States The central office has previously been located at 2000 2005 Taos New Mexico 1989 2000 Soquel California Land of Medicine Buddha 1984 1989 Pomaia Italy Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa 1975 1984 Kathmandu Nepal Kopan Monastery As of 2023 the FPMT has 138 centers projects and services in 34 countries worldwide of which about 85 are dharma centers monasteries and retreat centers often have a public teaching function which would raise the count some 18 are unincorporated study groups and the rest a mix of other projects such as hospices or dharma presses 2 History editThe name and structure of the FPMT date to 1975 in the wake of an international teaching tour by Lamas Yeshe and Zopa However the two had been teaching Western travelers since at least 1965 when they met Zina Rachevsky their student and patron in Darjeeling In 1969 the three of them founded the Nepal Mahayana Gompa Centre now Kopan Monastery Rachevsky died shortly afterwards during a Buddhist retreat Lama Yeshe resisted Rachevsky s appeals to teach a meditation course on the grounds that in the Sera Monastery tradition in which he was educated meditation would be attempted only after intensive multi year study of the Five Topics However he gave Lama Zopa permission to lead what became the first of Kopan s meditation courses then semiannual now annual in 1971 3 Lama Zopa led these courses at least through 1975 and sporadically thereafter During the early 1970s hundreds of Westerners attended teachings at Kopan Historical descriptions and recollections routinely characterize early Western participants as backpackers on the hippie trail extended overland tours of Asia to whom Lama Yeshe s style of discourse especially appealed Geoffrey Samuel finds it significant that Lamas Yeshe and Zopa had not yet attracted followings among the Tibetan or Himalayan peoples Zopa s status as a minor tulku notwithstanding and that their activities took place independently of any support or direction from the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamsala On his reading their willingness to reach out to Westerners was in large measure the result of a lack of other sources of support Nevertheless Samuel sees their cultivation of an international network as having ample precedent in Tibet 4 In December 1973 Lama Yeshe ordained fourteen Western monks and nuns under the name of the International Mahayana Institute Around this time Lama Yeshe s students began returning to their own countries The result was the founding of an ever increasing number of dharma centers in those countries In his description of the FPMT Jeffrey Paine emphasizes the charisma intuition drive and organizational ability of Lama Yeshe Paine asks us to consider how a refugee with neither financial resources nor language skills could manage to create an international network with more than a hundred centers and study groups 5 David N Kay makes the following observation Lama Yeshe s project of defining and implementing an efficient organizational and administrative structure within the FPMT created the potential for friction at a local level The organization s affiliated centers had initially been largely autonomous and self regulating but towards the late 1970s were increasingly subject to central management and control 6 As a result says Kay and Samuel s analysis concurs at the same time that the FPMT was consolidating its structure and practices several local groups and teachers defected founding independent networks Geshe Loden of Australia s Chenrezig Institute left the FPMT in 1979 in order to focus on his own network of centers More consequentially Kelsang Gyatso and his students caused the Manjushri Institute the FPMT s flagship center in England to sever its FPMT ties At issue was whether the centers and their students ought to identify primarily with Lama Yeshe local teachers the Gelugpa tradition or Tibetan Buddhism as a whole The FPMT now asks its lamas to sign a Geshe Agreement which make explicit the organization s expectations 7 The latter rift widened in the wake of unrelated post 1996 controversy over Dorje Shugden Following the policy of the 14th Dalai Lama the FPMT bans the worship of this deity from its centers 8 Lama Yeshe s death in 1984 led to his succession as spiritual director by Lama Zopa In 1986 a Spanish boy named Tenzin Osel Hita a k a Tenzin Osel Rinpoche or Lama Osel was identified as the tulku of Lama Yeshe As he came of age Hita gave up his robes for a secular life attending university in Spain and became relatively inactive in the FPMT In 2009 Hita was quoted in several media sources as renouncing his role as a tulku remarks which he later disavowed 9 In 2019 a group of nuns called for an independent third party investigation into complaints of groping sexual harassment and sexual assault by Sera lama and FPMT teacher Dagri Rinpoche over a ten year period A petition to this effect attracted more than 4000 signatures The FPMT International Office responded by suspending Dagri Rinpoche from its list of teachers and commissioning FaithTrust Institute to conduct the requested investigation Its 19 Sept 2020 report found the allegations credible By this time Dagri Rinpoche had been formally charged in connection with another groping incident this time aboard an domestic Indian flight 10 Five out of eight FPMT board members resigned amidst controversy over whether to release the report A draft summary report was eventually published so labeled by the FPMT in anticipation of revisions but the FaithTrust Institute considered its work complete Besides abuse the summary also noted a pattern of coercive or retaliatory behaviors aimed at silencing complainants and criticized the FPMT for its lack of any clear mechanism to handle such complaints pp 38 39 The FPMT objected that the FPMT centers where the abuse took place were legally independent and that the report s criticism of remarks by Lama Zopa as unhelpful failed to take into account the core principle of guru devotion 11 Zopa had characterized Dagri Rinpoche as a very positive holy being definitely not an ordinary person and advised Dagri s students to see only his pure qualities 12 FPMT center leaders and registered teachers but not Tibetan teachers are now required to take a Protection from Abuse online training course 13 14 15 On the 2023 death of Lama Zopa the FPMT board indicated that he would have no direct successor and that the board would collectively assume his responsibilities subject to the advice of the Dalai Lama An advisory council of teachers is planned 16 Bei Voulgarakis and Nault use the FPMT to illustrate Arjun Appadurai s understanding of globalization in terms of in Appadurai s words a ethnoscapes b mediascapes c technoscapes d finanscapes and e ideoscapes The authors accordingly describe the FPMT as an international network of Gelugpa dharma centers headquartered in Portland Oregon but founded by Tibetan and Sherpa monks in India and Nepal one of whom has apparently reincarnated as a Spaniard and whose funding comes disproportionately from ethnic Chinese communities in East Southeast Asia 17 Structure editThe FPMT is headed by a board of directors with its spiritual director presently vacant an ex officio member The FPMT International Office represents the board s executive function The president CEO of the FPMT is currently 2023 Ven Roger Kunsang in that office since 2005 18 As of 2023 there are 138 FPMT dharma centres projects services and study groups in 34 countries Each affiliated center project or service is separately incorporated and locally financed There is no such thing as FPMT membership for individuals rather membership is held only by organizations although several of these offer their own local membership to individuals In addition to its local board and officers each FPMT center also has a spiritual program coordinator and in many cases a resident geshe or teacher and perhaps other Sangha as well The center directors and spiritual program coordinators from various countries meet every few years as the Council for the Preservation for the Mahayana Tradition CPMT in order to share experience and deliberate points of mutual concern The 14th Dalai Lama is credited with the honorary role of inspiration and guide 19 Programs editStudents often first encounter the FPMT via short courses and retreats held at the various centers The prototype of these is Kopan Monastery s annual month long meditation course offered since 1971 Many FPMT centers have adopted standardized curricula 20 whose modules may also be studied online They range from short introductory courses like Buddhist Meditation 101 to Discovering Buddhism a two year fourteen module lamrim course 21 Living in the Path a so far twenty module course on practice drawn from Lama Zopa s talks 22 Exploring Buddhism a so far seven module course designed to prepare students for the Basic Program vide infra 23 Students desiring more advanced study have a number of options including The FPMT Basic Program five years nine modules 24 The FPMT Masters Program since 1998 7 years traditional study using compressed version of the Geshe curriculum Designed to produce credentialed FPMT teachers Its courses are mainly but not exclusively hosted by the Istituto Lama Tzong Khapa in Pomaia Italy and Nalanda Monastery France and are also offered online 25 Maitripa College in Portland Oregon founded 2005 formal program began in 2006 3 year MA in Buddhist Studies and M Div programs The school intends to apply for regional accreditation Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo Translator Program since 1996 2 years intensive Tibetan language study in Dharamsala followed by 2 years interpretation residency Designed to train FPMT interpreters 26 Students who complete any of the seven programs listed above may apply to become FPMT registered teachers Projects editFPMT maintains a number of charitable projects including funds to build holy objects translate Tibetan texts support monks and nuns both Tibetan and non Tibetan offer medical care food and other assistance in impoverished regions of Asia re establish Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia and protect animals 27 Perhaps the highest profile FPMT project to date is the Maitreya Project Originally a planned colossal statue of Maitreya to be built in Bodhgaya and or Kushinagar India the project has been reconceived in the face of fund raising difficulties and controversy over land acquisition and now intends to construct a number of relatively modest statues 28 Jessica Marie Falcone s Battling the Buddha of Love A Cultural Biography of the Greatest Statue Never Built Cornell University Press 2018 based on her Ph D dissertation in cultural anthropology for Cornell is about the controversy and the meaning of the proposed statue to FPMT participants and Kushinagari protesters Also to note is the Sera Je Food Fund offering 3 meals a day to the 2600 monks who are studying at Sera Je Monastery since 1991 29 Publications editWisdom Publications now a well known publisher of Buddhist books originated at Kopan Monastery Kathmandu Nepal in 1975 under editor Nicholas Ribush Its first publication was Lama Yeshe s and Lama Zopa s Wisdom Energy 30 Under Ribush the publisher began formal operations in London in 1983 after several years operating out of the Manjushri Institute with Jeffrey Hopkins Meditation on Emptiness 1983 as an early perennial It moved to Boston in 1989 under director Timothy McNeill The press offers both academic and popular Buddhist literature from all traditions of Buddhism as well as translations of classic Buddhist literature Especially noteworthy are its encyclopedia style project the 32 volume Library of Tibetan Classics developed by Thupten Jinpa English language translator for the Dalai Lama and the Teachings of the Buddha series of translations of the Pali Nikayas Diamant Verlag from 1984 and editions Mahayana from 2020 publish Buddhist books in German and French respectively Since 1995 the FPMT has published a glossy magazine called Mandala now quarterly The Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive which holds copyright to the speeches and writings of Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa is one of the FPMT s member organizations The LYWA archives and transcribes teachings by these and other lamas and produces edited books for free distribution and for sale Its director is Nicholas Ribush Notable Followers editNita Ing Taiwanese CEO of Taiwan High Speed Rail THSR Lillian Too Malaysian Chinese author of 80 books on feng shui She recounts the story of her contact with Lama Zopa and the FPMT in The Buddha Book Element 2003 Daja Wangchuk Meston American Tibet activist and author of a memoir Comes the Peace My Journey to Forgiveness Free Press March 6 2007 Meston grew up as a white boy monk at Kopan monastery his mother having left him to become a Buddhist nun under Lama Yeshe He took his own life in 2010 Jan Willis Professor of Religion at Wesleyan University and author of several Buddhist books including her memoir Dreaming Me An African American Woman s Spiritual Journey Riverhead 2001 Willis was one of the earliest students of Lama Yeshe who reportedly encouraged her in her academic career Gareth Sparham British born Tibetologist and translator of several Abhisamayalankara commentaries Thubten Gyatso Adrian Feldmann one of the first Westerners to become a Gelug monk 31 Nick Ribush an Australian ordained as a monk by Lama Yeshe and the founder of several FPMT centers and projects See also editKopan Monastery Tara Institute Maitreya Project Root Institute Lama Yeshe Lama Zopa Osel Hita Torres Land of Medicine Buddha Karuna HospiceReferences edit https fpmt org updates from the fpmt inc board update from the fpmt inc board of directors august 24 2023 FPMT Centers Projects and Services Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 June 2009 Jamyang Wangmo The Lawudo Lama Stories of Reincarnation from the Mount Everest Region Wisdom Publications 2005 p 241 Geoffrey Samuel Tibetan Buddhism as a World Religion Global Networking and its Consequences ch 13 of Tantric Revisionings New Understandings of Tibetan Buddhism and Indian Religion Motilal Banarsidass 2005 p 301 ff Jeffrey Paine Re Enchantment Tibetan Buddhism Comes to the West Norton 2004 ch 2 David N Kay Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain RoutledgeCurzon 2004 pp 61 62 Kay p 65 The Shugden Issue Archived 24 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine policy statement by the FPMT accessed 26 July 2012 Van Biema David 8 June 2009 When a Chosen Tibetan Lama Says No Thanks Time Retrieved 15 February 2020 Lobsang Wangyal Dagri Rinpoche speaks out claims innocence Tibet Sun 13 May 2019 https www tibetsun com news 2019 05 13 dagri rinpoche speaks out claims innocence FPMT Inc Concerns Regarding Aspects of FTI s Draft Summary Report https fpmt app box com s 8re7tem886wvz5pwecm12wvf4ps9e7pq Lama Zopa s Advice to Students of Dagri Rinpoche 14 May 2019 https fpmt org lama zopa rinpoche news and advice advice from lama zopa rinpoche lama zopa rinpoches advice to students of dagri rinpoche Update from FPMT Inc 13 Nov 2020 https fpmt org fpmt community news statement nov 13 2020 update Tenpel Tenzin Peljor aka Michael Jackel Fact Finding Results in Response to Allegations of Sexual Misconduct by Dagri Rinpoche 17 Nov 2020 https buddhism controversy blog com 2020 11 17 fact finding results in response to multiple allegations of sexual misconduct by dagri rinpoche Emily DeMaioNewton and Karen Jensen Buddha Buzz Weekly Dagri Rinpoche Permanently Removed as FPMT Teacher Tricycle 21 Nov 2020 https tricycle org article dagri rinpoche https fpmt org fpmt community news an update from the fpmt board july 2023 Bei Dawei Evangelos Voulgarakis and Derrick M Nault introduction to Nault et al eds Experiencing Globalization Religion in Contemporary Contexts Anthem Press 2013 p 6 The authors are quoting Appadurai Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy in Appadurai Modernity at Large Cultural Dimensions of Globalization University of Minnesota Press 1996 p 33 FPMT Board of Directors https fpmt org fpmt international office board of directors Spiritual Guides FPMT Study Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 June 2009 Discovering Buddhism Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 October 2023 Living in the Path Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 2 October 2023 Exploring Buddhism Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 2 October 2023 FPMT Basic Program Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 October 2023 FPMT Masters Program Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 October 2023 Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo Translator Program Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 October 2023 FPMT Charitable Projects Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition website Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition Retrieved 1 June 2009 Maitreya Projects FPMT Sera Je Food Fund Ribush Nicholas 11 October 2008 Birth of a Buddhist Publishing Company Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive website Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive Retrieved 1 June 2009 De Tong Ling Retreat Centre Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Bibliography edit Cozort Daniel The Making of the Western Lama In Buddhism in the Modern World Steven Heine amp Charles S Prebish eds Oxford UP 2003 ch 9 Focuses on the educational curricula of the FPMT and the New Kadampa Tradition Croucher Paul A History of Buddhism in Australia 1848 1988 New South Wales UP 1989 The FPMT is discussed on pp 89 93 as well as on 112 113 Eddy Glenys Western Buddhist Experience The Journey From Encounter to Commitment in Two Forms of Western Buddhism Ph D dissertation for the Dept of Studies in Religion University of Sydney 30 March 2007 Discusses the Vajrayana Institute an Australian FPMT center throughout but especially in chapters 4 5 and 6 Eddy Glenys A Strand of Contemporary Tantra Its Discourse and Practice in the FPMT Global Buddhism no 8 2007 Extracted from her doctoral dissertation see above Halafoff Anna Venerable Robina Courtin An Unconventional Buddhist In Cristina Rocha and Michelle Barker Buddhism in Australia Traditions in Change Routledge 2011 Courtin a well known FPMT nun founded the Prison Liberation Project Hulse Adele Big Love The Life and Teachings of Lama Yeshe Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive 2020 Two volume biography oral history by one of Yeshe s students Kay David N Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain RoutledgeCurzon 2004 The FPMT is discussed mainly on pp 53 66 as background to the New Kadampa Tradition Magee William Three Models of Teaching Collected Topics Outside of Tibet Conference paper presented to the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission of the ROC 2004 Discusses Magee s experience studying the Collected Topics at the University of Virginia and the Dialectics Institute in Dharamsala as well as teaching portions of these for Australia s Chenrezig Institute an FPMT center Meston Daja Wangchuk Comes the Peace My Journey to Forgiveness Free Press 2007 Memoir Meston a white American was raised as a boy monk at Kopan Moran Peter Buddhism Observed Travelers Exiles and Tibetan Dharma in Kathmandu RoutledgeCurzon 2004 An anthropological sociological look at Western Buddhist tourists pilgrims to Boudhanath Kopan receives periodic mention but see especially pp 70 74 Ong Y D Buddhism in Singapore a Short Narrative History Skylark Publications 2005 The Amitabha Buddhist Centre is mentioned briefly on pp 175 177 Paine Jeffrey Re Enchantment Tibetan Buddhism Comes to the West Norton 2004 Chapter two discusses the role of Lama Yeshe and the FPMT Samuel Geoffrey Tibetan Buddhism as a World Religion Global Networking and its Consequences Chapter 13 of Tantric Revisionings New Understandings of Tibetan Buddhism and Indian Religion Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 2005 pp 288 316 The FPMT is discussed sporadically beginning on p 301 along with other Western Tibetan Buddhist groups Wangmo Jamyang The Lawudo Lama Stories of Reincarnation from the Mount Everest Region Wisdom Pub 2005 The second part of the book contains Lama Zopa s reminiscences about his life including his first meeting with Lama Yeshe p 199 ff and Zina Rachevsky p 202 and the first Kopan course p 241 ff Willis Jan Dreaming Me An African American Woman s Spiritual Journey Riverhead 2001 Memoir Willis now an academic was one of the earliest students of Lama Yeshe External links editOfficial website nbsp FPMT Centers Projects and Services Diffi cult Will the FPMT stand by its Code of Ethics Lotsawa Rinchen Zangpo Translator Program Land of Medicine Buddha Choe Khor Sum Ling Bangalore Lama Zopa Rinpoche How I Was Recognized as a Tulku FPMT a Documentary YouTube video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition amp oldid 1186734612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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