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Kadam (Tibetan Buddhism)

The Kadam school (Tibetan: བཀའ་གདམས་པ་, Wylie: bka' gdams pa) of Tibetan Buddhism was an 11th century Buddhist tradition founded by the great Bengali master Atiśa (982-1054) and his students like Dromtön (1005–1064), a Tibetan Buddhist lay master.[1] The Kadampa stressed compassion, pure discipline and study.[2]

Tibetan Portrait of Atiśa

The most evident teachings of that tradition were the graduated teachings on the Mahayana path. These special presentations became known as lojong (mind training) and lamrim (stages of the path).[3] Kadam masters like Atiśa also promoted the study of madhyamaka philosophy. According to Ronald M. Davidson, "Atiśa's coming to Tibet in 1042 was the threshold moment in the efflorescence of Buddhism and provided a stable foundation for monastic scholarship for the next thousand years."[4]

With the rise of new Tibetan Buddhist schools like Sakya and Gelug, Kadam ceased to exist as an independent school, and its monasteries, lineages and traditions were absorbed into all major schools of Tibetan Buddhism.[5] Because of this, Kadampa lineages remained strong long after the school disappeared.[2]

History of the Kadam tradition edit

The most important founding figure of the Kadam tradition is Atiśa Dīpankara Śrījñāna (982–1054), an Indian Buddhist master who was known as a great teacher at Vikramaśīla and traveled to Tibet in 1037 on the invitation of a princeling named Jangchub O.[6] Atiśa's poem, the Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment (Bodhipathapradīpa; Tib. Byang chub lam sgron) was an influential text which laid out the stages of the path to Buddhahood.[6] He also helped translate some texts into Tibetan, taught Buddhism and wrote on Vajrayana practice.[7] Atiśa's main teaching focus was on presenting a comprehensive Buddhist Mahayana system, and his numerous works explain basic topics such as bodhicitta, the six perfections, the two truths, dependent origination, karma, and Madhyamaka philosophy.[1]

Over time he drew several students around him, including the influential Dromtönpa Gyelwé Jungné, who convinced Atiśa to stay in Tibet indefinitely. This Buddhist circle was part of the "later diffusion" of Buddhism in Tibet.[8] The tradition became known as Kadampa over time. The name means those who teach the Buddhist scriptures (bka) through personal instructions (gdams).[9]

After the death of Atiśa in 1054, his main disciple Dromtön was the main leader of the Kadam tradition. He founded Radreng Monastery in 1056.[9] Another important student was Ngog Legpai Sherab, he founded Sangpu Neutog in 1071. According to Sam Van Schaik, "both monasteries followed Atiśa's principle of combining tantric meditation practice with a firm adherence to the monastic code and with rigorous scholarship."[9] Reting Monastery was located in Reting Tsangpo valley north of Lhasa. The nearby Phenpo Chu and Gyama Valleys were also home to many large Kadampa monasteries.[10]

Dromtön's three main students were Po to ba Rin chen gsal (Potowa), Spyan mnga’ ba Tshul khrims ’bar (Chen Ngawa), and Bu chung ba Gzhon nu rgyal mtshan (Bu chungwa). From these three come the main teaching lineages of Kadam: (1) the authoritative treatises (gzhung) lineage, (2) the essential instruction (gdams ngag) lineage, and (3) the oral instruction (man ngag) lineage, respectively.[11] These "three brothers" as they became known, traveled Central Tibet teaching and promoting the Kadampa order.[12]

During the 11th and 12th centuries especially, the monastery at Sangpu became the dominant Kadampa institution, known for its scholarship.[12] According to Van Schaik, "Sangpu became the centre of the renaissance in Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism." It maintained a curriculum which covered Prajñāpāramita, pramāṇa, vinaya and abhidharma.[9] Another influential Kadam monastery for Buddhist scholarship was Narthang Monastery, which was established in 1153 by Tumtön Lodrö Drak (ca. 1106-66). According to Thupten Jinpa, these two scholastic centers "came to dominate the study of classical Indian Buddhist learning, especially in epistemology, abhidharma psychology and phenomenology, the scholastic inquiry into the perfection of wisdom literature, and the Middle Way philosophy of emptiness."[13]

Due to influence and prominence of other Tibetan Buddhist schools like Sakya, Gelug and Kagyu, the Kadampa ceased to exist as an independent tradition by the end of the 16th century and their monasteries and lineages were absorbed into the other schools.[14]

Teachings and Study edit

 
An old Stupa on Reting Monastery grounds
 
An illustration of Narthang monastery

Authoritative Treatises Lineage edit

The Authoritative Treatises lineage of Putowa Rinchensél (1031–1106) emphasized the close study of six classic Indian Buddhist texts:[11]

  1. Asaṅga's "Bodhisattvabhūmi", a section of his Yogācārabhūmi Śāstra
  2. Maitreya-nātha's Mahāyāna-sūtrālamkāra-kārikā, a Yogacara work
  3. Shantideva's Śikṣāsamuccaya
  4. Shantideva's Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra
  5. The Jātakamālā of Aryaśura
  6. The Udānavarga

Furthermore, according to Thupten Jinpa, "the studies of these treatises are complemented with further Indian Buddhist classics like Nagarjuna’s (second century) Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way, his Seventy Stanzas on Emptiness, and Atisa’s Entry into the Two Truths and An Instruction on the Middle Way."[15]

Scholarship edit

Atiśa was a follower of the Madhyamaka school and he introduced the complementary study of the works of Candrakīrti and Bhāviveka.[16] Atiśa’s Madhyamaka philosophy was a synthesis which drew on the works of Bhāviveka and Candrakīrti. Atiśa taught Madhyamaka by using Bhāviveka's Tarkajvālā and Madhyamakaratnapradīpa as an introduction and then taught advanced students Candrakīrti’s Madhyamakāvatāra.[17]

Later Kadampas (especially at Sangpu) continued the scholastic study of Indian Buddhist philosophy. At Sangpu, Kadampas also studied Indian Buddhist pramāṇavāda philosophers like Dharmakirti. However, unlike Dharmakirti and other Tibetan Buddhists who followed the Yogacara-Madhyamaka of Śāntarakṣita (725–788), the Kadampas (following Candrakirti) instead defended a form of realism regarding conventional truth. Thus they accepted the existence of external objects conventionally.[18]

Kadam madhyamika philosopher-translators from Sangpu, like Ngog Loden Sherab (1059-1109) and Chaba Chokyi Senge (1109-1169) translated and produced works on madhyamaka and on epistemology (pramāṇa). These philosophical works were influential on later Tibetan Buddhist philosophy.[18] Their work had a lasting impact on Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism and by the 12th century, their study curriculum had become part of mainstream Buddhist study in Central Tibet.[19] It was also at Sangpu that Sonam Tsemo (1142–1182), one of the founders of the Sakya tradition, studied under Chapa Chokyi Senge.[20]

Another important commentator on madhyamaka, Patsab Nyima Drakpa (1055-1145?), was also a Sangpu monastery monk who had studied in Kashmir as well.[21][22] Patsab's commentary on Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika seems to be the first Tibetan commentary on this work. His interpretation was based on Candrakirti's method (which Patsab labeled thal 'gyur ba i.e. prāsaṅgika) and this differed from that of Ngog and Chaba's rang rgyud pa or svātantrika.[23][22] One of Patsab's students, Mabja Changchub Tsöndrü, became known for his influential commentary on Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika.[24]

Oral transmissions and essential instructions edit

Two other important early Kadampa lineages were the Kadam oral transmissions (man ngag) lineage entrusted to Phu-chungwa Shönu Gyaltsen (1031-1106) and the Kadam essential instructions (gdams ngag) lineage obtained by Chengawa Tsültrim Bar (1033-1103). According to Jinpa "Chengawa’s Kadam lineage of essential instructions emphasizes an approach whereby Atisa's essential instructions, rather than classical treatises, are the key basis for practice. These instructions include the guide on the four truths as transmitted through Chengawa, the guide on the two truths as transmitted through Naljorpa, and the guide on dependent origination as transmitted through Phuchungwa."[25]

Phu-chungwa's oral transmission lineage focused on studying the teachings found in The Book of Kadam.[25]

These instructions were passed down only to one student in each generation in a single transmission until the secrecy was lifted at the time of Narthang Shönu Lodrö. Later these teachings were incorporated into the Karma Kamtsang Kagyu lineage by Pal Tsuglak Trengwa and into the Gelug lineage by the 1st Dalai Lama.

Lamrim edit

The Kadam school was also known for their gradual step by step schema to the Mahayana Buddhist path, which are recorded in texts known as “steps of the path” (lam rim) or “stages of the doctrine” (bstan rim). They typically divided Buddhist practitioners into three types, culminating with tantra and Buddhahood. Atiśa’s Bodhipathapradīpa is the locus classicus for this genre, other works include the “Short Treatises of Atiśa” (Jo bo’i chos chung). Many later Kadampas composed various works on the graduated path.[26] These works usually begin with contemplations on the rarity of a human rebirth, impermanence, and karma.[26]

This genre was extremely influential in Tibet, and all schools of Tibetan Buddhism eventually developed their own Lamrim texts based on Atiśa’s Bodhipathapradīpa, such as Gampopa's Jewel Ornament of Liberation and Tsongkhapa's three Lamrim works.[26][27]

Lojong lineage edit

 
Chekawa Yeshe Dorje, a prolific author of Training the Mind in Seven Points which focuses on developing compassion and bodhicitta in one's life.

The Kadampa lineage was also known for an oral tradition called lojong ("mind training") which focused on developing bodhicitta through various contemplations and mental techniques, such as contemplatively taking all beings' suffering and giving them all of one's happiness (a meditation known as Tonglen).[26] One of the earliest examples of a lojong text is Atiśa's Bodhisattva’s Jewel Garland.[28]

Lojong teachings are also known as The Instructions for Training the Mind in the Mahayana Tradition (Wylie: theg chen blo sbyong). According to Gendun Druppa, Atiśa had received three lines of Lojong transmission, but there are conflicting accounts of from whom. It is agreed that he received teachings in Sumatra from Dharmakīrtiśrī (Wylie: gser gling pa),[29] and sometimes as Dharmarakṣita.[30] In the former case, Dharmarakṣita is identified as a scholar at the monastic university of Odantapuri. He is also known as the author of the Wheel of Sharp Weapons (Tib. blo-sbyong mtshon-cha 'khor-lo), another one of the earliest lojong works.[31] The final main Lojong teacher was the Indian master Maitriyogi. Atiśa secretly transmitted them to his main disciple, Dromtön, who passed them on to figures like Potowa, who in turn transmitted the lineage to Sharawa (1070–1141).

During the time of the Three Noble Kadampa Brothers (Dromtön's main students), many of these oral teachings were collected together and compiled into the Lamrim. Yet at the time the lineages from Suvarṇadvipi Dharmakīrti were still kept secret. When the time was sufficiently mature, the Lojong Teachings were publicly revealed. Kadam Lojong texts include Kham Lungpa's Eight Sessions for Training the Mind (Wylie: blo sbyong thun brgyad ma), Langri Tangpa's (1054–1123) Eight Verses for Training the Mind (Wylie: blo sbyong tshig brgyad ma), Sangye Gompa's A Public Explanation (Wylie: tshogs bshad ma) and Chekawa Yeshe Dorje's (1102–1176) Seven Points for Training the Mind (Wylie: blo sbyong don bdun ma).

From Khamlungpa, Langri Tangpa and Chekawa Yeshe Dorje onwards they became public and later they were integrated into all four Tibetan Buddhist Schools. (These Kadampa-Lojong texts were brought together into the anthology A Hundred Texts on Training the Mind (Wylie: blo byong brgya rtsa).

Tantric Practice edit

The Kadam practiced Vajrayana Buddhism and thus included tantric practices in their tradition, which were considered as an advanced practice for those of higher aptitude.[26] The Kadampa's higher yoga tantra practice was based on Guhyasamaja and Chakrasamvara.[1] Meanwhile, Tibetan sources mention that Atiśa’s main meditation deities were Śākyamuni, Avalokiteśvara, Acala, and Tārā.[26] The Kadam school also seems to have created their own tantric system called the “sixteen spheres” (thig le bcu drug), based on thousand-armed Avalokiteśvara as the central deity. This system is still practiced at Reting monastery.[26]

Popular Buddhism edit

 
Potowa Rinchen Sel

According to Ronald M. Davidson, the Kadampa masters pioneered popular strategies for integrating the Tibetan laity into daily Buddhist activities. These included

the promotion of popular teaching methods, the development of the cults featuring loving Buddhist divinities (especially Avalokitesvara and Tara), the spread of artistic representations teaching these ideals at sites available to all, and the generation of easily memorized verses set to song.[32]

Davidson further adds that the Kadampas promoted a more egalitarian ideal to counter "the elite bias of most forms of Buddhism spread throughout Tibet at the time". According to Davidson:

In their literature, they retain a teaching attributed to Atisa, that monks “from this day forward, pay no attention to names, pay no attention to clans, but with compassion and loving kindness always meditate on the thought of awakening (bodhicitta).” This ideal was widespread throughout Indian Buddhism and given lip service in eleventh-century Tibet, but its implementation meant a fundamental change of pedagogical method, for monks would have to deliver Buddhist ideas to the populace. Eventually the change was effected by Chennga and Potoba, who devised a style of teaching that included popular images and anecdotes in their presentations.[33]

Potoba (Putowa) in particular was known for being attentive to popular expressions and made use of stories and illustrative examples in his teaching which appealed to a mass audience. Several hundred stories and anecdotes were collected in Potoba's Teaching by Examples. A Profusion of Gems (dPe chos rin chen spungs pa).[33] Many of these examples remain in use today by Tibetan teachers.[34]

Popular fasting programs (smyung gnas) based on Avalokitesvara was also introduced by Kadampas.[34]

The Gelug school, the "New Kadampa" edit

 
Painting depicting the life of Tsongkhapa, the largest image on the left showing the dream he had of the great Indian scholars like Buddhapalita.

Je Tsongkhapa, a Tibetan reformer, collected all the three Kadam lineages and integrated them, along with Sakya, Kagyu and other teachings into a new synthesis. The Kadampas that followed him were known as "New Kadampas" or, more commonly, as Gandenpas or "Gelugpas".[14]

The three other Tibetan Buddhist schools (Nyingma, Sakya, Kagyu) also integrated the Lojong (Wylie: blo sbyong) teachings into their lineages. Gampopa (Wylie: sgam po pa), who studied for six years within the Kadam Tradition and became later the main disciple of Milarepa (Wylie: mi la ras pa), included the Lojong and Lamrim teachings in his lineage, the Karma Kagyu (Wylie: ka rma bka' brgyud).

Nowadays the Gelug tradition keeps and transmits the Kadam lineage of the Scriptural Traditions of the Six Canonical Texts. Together with Dagpo Kagyu Tradition they keep and transmit The Pith Instructions of the Sixteen Essences, and the Dagpo Kagyu Tradition keeps and transmits the Key Instructions of the Four Noble Truths.

One of the most important sayings of the Kadam masters is said to be

See harmony in all doctrines. Receive instructions from all teachings.[35]

The modern "New Kadampa Tradition" edit

In 1991, Kelsang Gyatso founded the "controversial"[36][37][38] new religious movement he named the New Kadampa Tradition (NKT).

Je Tsongkhapa referred to his monastic order as "the New Kadam."[39] The term Gelug came into use only after his death.[40] The NKT-IKBU explains that they are independent of other contemporary Tibetan Buddhist centers and Tibetan politics although they claim they are in the 'same tradition' as the Gelug. According to the NKT's own publicist, the purpose of using the term "New Kadampa Buddhism" to refer to their teachings is not to introduce confusion about their origins but to encourage students to emulate the purity and sincerity of the original Kadam school.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Silk, Jonathan A; von Hinüber, Oskar; Eltschinger, Vincent; Bowring, Richard; Radich, Michael (2015). Brill's Encyclopedia of Buddhism: Vol. II Lives, pp. 1145-1158. Brill.
  2. ^ a b Chokyi Dragpa (2015). Illuminating the Thirty-Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva, Glossary. Simon and Schuster.
  3. ^ (Buswell 2014, p. 123)
  4. ^ Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 108. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  5. ^ Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, p. 33. Yale University Press.
  6. ^ a b Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, pp. 30-31. Yale University Press.
  7. ^ Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, pp. 31-32. Yale University Press.
  8. ^ Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, p. 32. Yale University Press.
  9. ^ a b c d Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, p. 33. Yale University Press.
  10. ^ McCue, Gary (October 1999). Trekking in Tibet: A Traveler's Guide. Mountaineers Books. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-89886-662-9.
  11. ^ a b Buswell Jr., Robert E.; Lopez Jr., Donald S. (2013). The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, p. 123. Princeton University Press.
  12. ^ a b Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, pp. 278-79 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  13. ^ Jinpa, Thupten (2014) The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts, p. 5. Simon and Schuster.
  14. ^ a b Jinpa, Thupten (2008-07-15). The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts. Wisdom Publications. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-86171-441-4.
  15. ^ Jinpa, Thupten (2014) The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts, p. 9. Simon and Schuster.
  16. ^ Apple, James B. (2019). Atisa Dipamkara: Illuminator of the Awakened Mind, p. 3. Shambhala Publications.
  17. ^ Apple, James B. (2019). Jewels of the Middle Way: The Madhyamaka Legacy of Atisa and His Early Tibetan Followers, Introduction, pp 1-62. Simon and Schuster.
  18. ^ a b Emmanuel, Steven M. (2015) A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy, p. 405. John Wiley & Sons.
  19. ^ Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 114. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  20. ^ Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, pp. 339-40. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  21. ^ Van Schaik, Sam (2016). The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism, p. 79. Yale University Press.
  22. ^ a b Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 279. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  23. ^ Vose, Kevin A. (2015) Resurrecting Candrakirti: Disputes in the Tibetan Creation of Prasangika, p. 7
  24. ^ Mabja Jangchub Tsöndrü, Ornament of Reason: The Great Commentary to Nagarjuna's Root of the Middle Way, Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2011
  25. ^ a b Jinpa, Thupten (2014) The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts, p. 9. Simon and Schuster.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Roesler, Ulrike (2019). The Kadampa: A Formative Movement of Tibetan Buddhism. University of Oxford. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.568.
  27. ^ Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 288. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  28. ^ Jinpa, Thupten (2014) The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts, p. 4. Simon and Schuster.
  29. ^ Dhargyey, Geshe Ngawang (2001-01-01). An Anthology of Well Spoken Advice on the Graded Paths of the Mind (Volume 1). Dharamsala, India: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. Childhood and Renunciation of Princely Life. ISBN 978-81-86470-29-9.
  30. ^ Berzin, Alexander (December 1999). "General Explanation of Seven-Point Attitude-Training". Part One: The First Four Points. Study Buddhism. Retrieved 2016-06-04.
  31. ^ Thupten Jinpa. The Book of Kadam: The Core Texts. (Wisdom Publications: Boston, MA. 2008), 628nn129.
  32. ^ Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 249. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  33. ^ a b Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 251. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  34. ^ a b Davidson, Ronald M. (2008). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, p. 252. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
  36. ^ Bluck, R. (2006). British Buddhism: Teachings, practice and development. Routledge critical studies in Buddhism. London: Routledge. p. 129
  37. ^ The Dorje Shugden Conflict: An Interview with Tibetologist Thierry Dodin, 8 May 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2014. "The NKT can be described typologically as a cult on the basis of its organisational form, its excessive group pressure and blind obedience to its founder."
  38. ^ Mills, Martin (2003) Identity, Ritual and State in Tibetan Buddhism – The Foundations of Authority in Gelukpa Monasticism, p. 366, Routledge
  39. ^ Cozort, D.. quoted in Heine, S., & Prebish, C. S. (2003). Buddhism in the modern world: Adaptations of an ancient tradition. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 230.
  40. ^ Lopez, Donald S. (1998). Prisoners of Shangri-La: Tibetan Buddhism and the West. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 193
  41. ^ Belither, James. . Tara Buddhist Centre. Archived from the original on 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2008-09-16.

Buswell, Robert Jr., ed. (2014). Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691157863.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Lojong and Tonglen community website

kadam, tibetan, buddhism, kadam, school, tibetan, བཀའ, གདམས, wylie, gdams, tibetan, buddhism, 11th, century, buddhist, tradition, founded, great, bengali, master, atiśa, 1054, students, like, dromtön, 1005, 1064, tibetan, buddhist, master, kadampa, stressed, c. The Kadam school Tibetan བཀའ གདམས པ Wylie bka gdams pa of Tibetan Buddhism was an 11th century Buddhist tradition founded by the great Bengali master Atisa 982 1054 and his students like Dromton 1005 1064 a Tibetan Buddhist lay master 1 The Kadampa stressed compassion pure discipline and study 2 Tibetan Portrait of Atisa The most evident teachings of that tradition were the graduated teachings on the Mahayana path These special presentations became known as lojong mind training and lamrim stages of the path 3 Kadam masters like Atisa also promoted the study of madhyamaka philosophy According to Ronald M Davidson Atisa s coming to Tibet in 1042 was the threshold moment in the efflorescence of Buddhism and provided a stable foundation for monastic scholarship for the next thousand years 4 With the rise of new Tibetan Buddhist schools like Sakya and Gelug Kadam ceased to exist as an independent school and its monasteries lineages and traditions were absorbed into all major schools of Tibetan Buddhism 5 Because of this Kadampa lineages remained strong long after the school disappeared 2 Contents 1 History of the Kadam tradition 2 Teachings and Study 2 1 Authoritative Treatises Lineage 2 2 Scholarship 2 3 Oral transmissions and essential instructions 2 4 Lamrim 2 5 Lojong lineage 2 6 Tantric Practice 2 7 Popular Buddhism 3 The Gelug school the New Kadampa 4 The modern New Kadampa Tradition 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory of the Kadam tradition editThe most important founding figure of the Kadam tradition is Atisa Dipankara Srijnana 982 1054 an Indian Buddhist master who was known as a great teacher at Vikramasila and traveled to Tibet in 1037 on the invitation of a princeling named Jangchub O 6 Atisa s poem the Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment Bodhipathapradipa Tib Byang chub lam sgron was an influential text which laid out the stages of the path to Buddhahood 6 He also helped translate some texts into Tibetan taught Buddhism and wrote on Vajrayana practice 7 Atisa s main teaching focus was on presenting a comprehensive Buddhist Mahayana system and his numerous works explain basic topics such as bodhicitta the six perfections the two truths dependent origination karma and Madhyamaka philosophy 1 Over time he drew several students around him including the influential Dromtonpa Gyelwe Jungne who convinced Atisa to stay in Tibet indefinitely This Buddhist circle was part of the later diffusion of Buddhism in Tibet 8 The tradition became known as Kadampa over time The name means those who teach the Buddhist scriptures bka through personal instructions gdams 9 After the death of Atisa in 1054 his main disciple Dromton was the main leader of the Kadam tradition He founded Radreng Monastery in 1056 9 Another important student was Ngog Legpai Sherab he founded Sangpu Neutog in 1071 According to Sam Van Schaik both monasteries followed Atisa s principle of combining tantric meditation practice with a firm adherence to the monastic code and with rigorous scholarship 9 Reting Monastery was located in Reting Tsangpo valley north of Lhasa The nearby Phenpo Chu and Gyama Valleys were also home to many large Kadampa monasteries 10 Dromton s three main students were Po to ba Rin chen gsal Potowa Spyan mnga ba Tshul khrims bar Chen Ngawa and Bu chung ba Gzhon nu rgyal mtshan Bu chungwa From these three come the main teaching lineages of Kadam 1 the authoritative treatises gzhung lineage 2 the essential instruction gdams ngag lineage and 3 the oral instruction man ngag lineage respectively 11 These three brothers as they became known traveled Central Tibet teaching and promoting the Kadampa order 12 During the 11th and 12th centuries especially the monastery at Sangpu became the dominant Kadampa institution known for its scholarship 12 According to Van Schaik Sangpu became the centre of the renaissance in Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism It maintained a curriculum which covered Prajnaparamita pramaṇa vinaya and abhidharma 9 Another influential Kadam monastery for Buddhist scholarship was Narthang Monastery which was established in 1153 by Tumton Lodro Drak ca 1106 66 According to Thupten Jinpa these two scholastic centers came to dominate the study of classical Indian Buddhist learning especially in epistemology abhidharma psychology and phenomenology the scholastic inquiry into the perfection of wisdom literature and the Middle Way philosophy of emptiness 13 Due to influence and prominence of other Tibetan Buddhist schools like Sakya Gelug and Kagyu the Kadampa ceased to exist as an independent tradition by the end of the 16th century and their monasteries and lineages were absorbed into the other schools 14 Teachings and Study edit nbsp An old Stupa on Reting Monastery grounds nbsp An illustration of Narthang monastery Authoritative Treatises Lineage edit The Authoritative Treatises lineage of Putowa Rinchensel 1031 1106 emphasized the close study of six classic Indian Buddhist texts 11 Asaṅga s Bodhisattvabhumi a section of his Yogacarabhumi Sastra Maitreya natha s Mahayana sutralamkara karika a Yogacara work Shantideva s Sikṣasamuccaya Shantideva s Bodhisattvacaryavatara The Jatakamala of Aryasura The Udanavarga Furthermore according to Thupten Jinpa the studies of these treatises are complemented with further Indian Buddhist classics like Nagarjuna s second century Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way his Seventy Stanzas on Emptiness and Atisa s Entry into the Two Truths and An Instruction on the Middle Way 15 Scholarship edit Atisa was a follower of the Madhyamaka school and he introduced the complementary study of the works of Candrakirti and Bhaviveka 16 Atisa s Madhyamaka philosophy was a synthesis which drew on the works of Bhaviveka and Candrakirti Atisa taught Madhyamaka by using Bhaviveka s Tarkajvala and Madhyamakaratnapradipa as an introduction and then taught advanced students Candrakirti s Madhyamakavatara 17 Later Kadampas especially at Sangpu continued the scholastic study of Indian Buddhist philosophy At Sangpu Kadampas also studied Indian Buddhist pramaṇavada philosophers like Dharmakirti However unlike Dharmakirti and other Tibetan Buddhists who followed the Yogacara Madhyamaka of Santarakṣita 725 788 the Kadampas following Candrakirti instead defended a form of realism regarding conventional truth Thus they accepted the existence of external objects conventionally 18 Kadam madhyamika philosopher translators from Sangpu like Ngog Loden Sherab 1059 1109 and Chaba Chokyi Senge 1109 1169 translated and produced works on madhyamaka and on epistemology pramaṇa These philosophical works were influential on later Tibetan Buddhist philosophy 18 Their work had a lasting impact on Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism and by the 12th century their study curriculum had become part of mainstream Buddhist study in Central Tibet 19 It was also at Sangpu that Sonam Tsemo 1142 1182 one of the founders of the Sakya tradition studied under Chapa Chokyi Senge 20 Another important commentator on madhyamaka Patsab Nyima Drakpa 1055 1145 was also a Sangpu monastery monk who had studied in Kashmir as well 21 22 Patsab s commentary on Nagarjuna s Mulamadhyamakakarika seems to be the first Tibetan commentary on this work His interpretation was based on Candrakirti s method which Patsab labeled thal gyur ba i e prasaṅgika and this differed from that of Ngog and Chaba s rang rgyud pa or svatantrika 23 22 One of Patsab s students Mabja Changchub Tsondru became known for his influential commentary on Nagarjuna s Mulamadhyamakakarika 24 Oral transmissions and essential instructions edit Two other important early Kadampa lineages were the Kadam oral transmissions man ngag lineage entrusted to Phu chungwa Shonu Gyaltsen 1031 1106 and the Kadam essential instructions gdams ngag lineage obtained by Chengawa Tsultrim Bar 1033 1103 According to Jinpa Chengawa s Kadam lineage of essential instructions emphasizes an approach whereby Atisa s essential instructions rather than classical treatises are the key basis for practice These instructions include the guide on the four truths as transmitted through Chengawa the guide on the two truths as transmitted through Naljorpa and the guide on dependent origination as transmitted through Phuchungwa 25 Phu chungwa s oral transmission lineage focused on studying the teachings found in The Book of Kadam 25 These instructions were passed down only to one student in each generation in a single transmission until the secrecy was lifted at the time of Narthang Shonu Lodro Later these teachings were incorporated into the Karma Kamtsang Kagyu lineage by Pal Tsuglak Trengwa and into the Gelug lineage by the 1st Dalai Lama Lamrim edit The Kadam school was also known for their gradual step by step schema to the Mahayana Buddhist path which are recorded in texts known as steps of the path lam rim or stages of the doctrine bstan rim They typically divided Buddhist practitioners into three types culminating with tantra and Buddhahood Atisa s Bodhipathapradipa is the locus classicus for this genre other works include the Short Treatises of Atisa Jo bo i chos chung Many later Kadampas composed various works on the graduated path 26 These works usually begin with contemplations on the rarity of a human rebirth impermanence and karma 26 This genre was extremely influential in Tibet and all schools of Tibetan Buddhism eventually developed their own Lamrim texts based on Atisa s Bodhipathapradipa such as Gampopa s Jewel Ornament of Liberation and Tsongkhapa s three Lamrim works 26 27 Lojong lineage edit nbsp Chekawa Yeshe Dorje a prolific author of Training the Mind in Seven Points which focuses on developing compassion and bodhicitta in one s life The Kadampa lineage was also known for an oral tradition called lojong mind training which focused on developing bodhicitta through various contemplations and mental techniques such as contemplatively taking all beings suffering and giving them all of one s happiness a meditation known as Tonglen 26 One of the earliest examples of a lojong text is Atisa s Bodhisattva s Jewel Garland 28 Lojong teachings are also known as The Instructions for Training the Mind in the Mahayana Tradition Wylie theg chen blo sbyong According to Gendun Druppa Atisa had received three lines of Lojong transmission but there are conflicting accounts of from whom It is agreed that he received teachings in Sumatra from Dharmakirtisri Wylie gser gling pa 29 and sometimes as Dharmarakṣita 30 In the former case Dharmarakṣita is identified as a scholar at the monastic university of Odantapuri He is also known as the author of the Wheel of Sharp Weapons Tib blo sbyong mtshon cha khor lo another one of the earliest lojong works 31 The final main Lojong teacher was the Indian master Maitriyogi Atisa secretly transmitted them to his main disciple Dromton who passed them on to figures like Potowa who in turn transmitted the lineage to Sharawa 1070 1141 During the time of the Three Noble Kadampa Brothers Dromton s main students many of these oral teachings were collected together and compiled into the Lamrim Yet at the time the lineages from Suvarṇadvipi Dharmakirti were still kept secret When the time was sufficiently mature the Lojong Teachings were publicly revealed Kadam Lojong texts include Kham Lungpa s Eight Sessions for Training the Mind Wylie blo sbyong thun brgyad ma Langri Tangpa s 1054 1123 Eight Verses for Training the Mind Wylie blo sbyong tshig brgyad ma Sangye Gompa s A Public Explanation Wylie tshogs bshad ma and Chekawa Yeshe Dorje s 1102 1176 Seven Points for Training the Mind Wylie blo sbyong don bdun ma From Khamlungpa Langri Tangpa and Chekawa Yeshe Dorje onwards they became public and later they were integrated into all four Tibetan Buddhist Schools These Kadampa Lojong texts were brought together into the anthology A Hundred Texts on Training the Mind Wylie blo byong brgya rtsa Tantric Practice edit The Kadam practiced Vajrayana Buddhism and thus included tantric practices in their tradition which were considered as an advanced practice for those of higher aptitude 26 The Kadampa s higher yoga tantra practice was based on Guhyasamaja and Chakrasamvara 1 Meanwhile Tibetan sources mention that Atisa s main meditation deities were Sakyamuni Avalokitesvara Acala and Tara 26 The Kadam school also seems to have created their own tantric system called the sixteen spheres thig le bcu drug based on thousand armed Avalokitesvara as the central deity This system is still practiced at Reting monastery 26 Popular Buddhism edit nbsp Potowa Rinchen SelAccording to Ronald M Davidson the Kadampa masters pioneered popular strategies for integrating the Tibetan laity into daily Buddhist activities These includedthe promotion of popular teaching methods the development of the cults featuring loving Buddhist divinities especially Avalokitesvara and Tara the spread of artistic representations teaching these ideals at sites available to all and the generation of easily memorized verses set to song 32 Davidson further adds that the Kadampas promoted a more egalitarian ideal to counter the elite bias of most forms of Buddhism spread throughout Tibet at the time According to Davidson In their literature they retain a teaching attributed to Atisa that monks from this day forward pay no attention to names pay no attention to clans but with compassion and loving kindness always meditate on the thought of awakening bodhicitta This ideal was widespread throughout Indian Buddhism and given lip service in eleventh century Tibet but its implementation meant a fundamental change of pedagogical method for monks would have to deliver Buddhist ideas to the populace Eventually the change was effected by Chennga and Potoba who devised a style of teaching that included popular images and anecdotes in their presentations 33 Potoba Putowa in particular was known for being attentive to popular expressions and made use of stories and illustrative examples in his teaching which appealed to a mass audience Several hundred stories and anecdotes were collected in Potoba s Teaching by Examples A Profusion of Gems dPe chos rin chen spungs pa 33 Many of these examples remain in use today by Tibetan teachers 34 Popular fasting programs smyung gnas based on Avalokitesvara was also introduced by Kadampas 34 The Gelug school the New Kadampa edit nbsp Painting depicting the life of Tsongkhapa the largest image on the left showing the dream he had of the great Indian scholars like Buddhapalita Je Tsongkhapa a Tibetan reformer collected all the three Kadam lineages and integrated them along with Sakya Kagyu and other teachings into a new synthesis The Kadampas that followed him were known as New Kadampas or more commonly as Gandenpas or Gelugpas 14 The three other Tibetan Buddhist schools Nyingma Sakya Kagyu also integrated the Lojong Wylie blo sbyong teachings into their lineages Gampopa Wylie sgam po pa who studied for six years within the Kadam Tradition and became later the main disciple of Milarepa Wylie mi la ras pa included the Lojong and Lamrim teachings in his lineage the Karma Kagyu Wylie ka rma bka brgyud Nowadays the Gelug tradition keeps and transmits the Kadam lineage of the Scriptural Traditions of the Six Canonical Texts Together with Dagpo Kagyu Tradition they keep and transmit The Pith Instructions of the Sixteen Essences and the Dagpo Kagyu Tradition keeps and transmits the Key Instructions of the Four Noble Truths One of the most important sayings of the Kadam masters is said to be See harmony in all doctrines Receive instructions from all teachings 35 The modern New Kadampa Tradition editMain article New Kadampa Tradition In 1991 Kelsang Gyatso founded the controversial 36 37 38 new religious movement he named the New Kadampa Tradition NKT Je Tsongkhapa referred to his monastic order as the New Kadam 39 The term Gelug came into use only after his death 40 The NKT IKBU explains that they are independent of other contemporary Tibetan Buddhist centers and Tibetan politics although they claim they are in the same tradition as the Gelug According to the NKT s own publicist the purpose of using the term New Kadampa Buddhism to refer to their teachings is not to introduce confusion about their origins but to encourage students to emulate the purity and sincerity of the original Kadam school 41 See also editSchools of BuddhismReferences edit a b c Silk Jonathan A von Hinuber Oskar Eltschinger Vincent Bowring Richard Radich Michael 2015 Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism Vol II Lives pp 1145 1158 Brill a b Chokyi Dragpa 2015 Illuminating the Thirty Seven Practices of a Bodhisattva Glossary Simon and Schuster Buswell 2014 p 123 Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 108 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism p 33 Yale University Press a b Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism pp 30 31 Yale University Press Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism pp 31 32 Yale University Press Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism p 32 Yale University Press a b c d Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism p 33 Yale University Press McCue Gary October 1999 Trekking in Tibet A Traveler s Guide Mountaineers Books p 118 ISBN 978 0 89886 662 9 a b Buswell Jr Robert E Lopez Jr Donald S 2013 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism p 123 Princeton University Press a b Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture pp 278 79 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Jinpa Thupten 2014 The Book of Kadam The Core Texts p 5 Simon and Schuster a b Jinpa Thupten 2008 07 15 The Book of Kadam The Core Texts Wisdom Publications p 10 ISBN 978 0 86171 441 4 Jinpa Thupten 2014 The Book of Kadam The Core Texts p 9 Simon and Schuster Apple James B 2019 Atisa Dipamkara Illuminator of the Awakened Mind p 3 Shambhala Publications Apple James B 2019 Jewels of the Middle Way The Madhyamaka Legacy of Atisa and His Early Tibetan Followers Introduction pp 1 62 Simon and Schuster a b Emmanuel Steven M 2015 A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy p 405 John Wiley amp Sons Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 114 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture pp 339 40 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Van Schaik Sam 2016 The Spirit of Tibetan Buddhism p 79 Yale University Press a b Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 279 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Vose Kevin A 2015 Resurrecting Candrakirti Disputes in the Tibetan Creation of Prasangika p 7 Mabja Jangchub Tsondru Ornament of Reason The Great Commentary to Nagarjuna s Root of the Middle Way Ithaca Snow Lion 2011 a b Jinpa Thupten 2014 The Book of Kadam The Core Texts p 9 Simon and Schuster a b c d e f g Roesler Ulrike 2019 The Kadampa A Formative Movement of Tibetan Buddhism University of Oxford https doi org 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 568 Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 288 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Jinpa Thupten 2014 The Book of Kadam The Core Texts p 4 Simon and Schuster Dhargyey Geshe Ngawang 2001 01 01 An Anthology of Well Spoken Advice on the Graded Paths of the Mind Volume 1 Dharamsala India Library of Tibetan Works and Archives Childhood and Renunciation of Princely Life ISBN 978 81 86470 29 9 Berzin Alexander December 1999 General Explanation of Seven Point Attitude Training Part One The First Four Points Study Buddhism Retrieved 2016 06 04 Thupten Jinpa The Book of Kadam The Core Texts Wisdom Publications Boston MA 2008 628nn129 Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 249 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers a b Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 251 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers a b Davidson Ronald M 2008 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture p 252 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers The Rime Ris Med Movement Of Jamgon Kongtrul The Great by Ringu Tulku Archived from the original on 2014 07 15 Retrieved 2014 07 01 Bluck R 2006 British Buddhism Teachings practice and development Routledge critical studies in Buddhism London Routledge p 129 The Dorje Shugden Conflict An Interview with Tibetologist Thierry Dodin 8 May 2014 Retrieved 12 May 2014 The NKT can be described typologically as a cult on the basis of its organisational form its excessive group pressure and blind obedience to its founder Mills Martin 2003 Identity Ritual and State in Tibetan Buddhism The Foundations of Authority in Gelukpa Monasticism p 366 Routledge Cozort D quoted in Heine S amp Prebish C S 2003 Buddhism in the modern world Adaptations of an ancient tradition New York Oxford University Press p 230 Lopez Donald S 1998 Prisoners of Shangri La Tibetan Buddhism and the West Chicago University of Chicago Press p 193 Belither James Modern Day Kadampas The History and Development of the New Kadampa Tradition Tara Buddhist Centre Archived from the original on 2008 06 17 Retrieved 2008 09 16 Buswell Robert Jr ed 2014 Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691157863 Further reading editGendun Drup 1993 06 25 Training the Mind in the Great Way Translated by Mullin Glenn Snow Lion Publications ISBN 0 937938 96 3 Kongtrul Jamgon 2000 05 02 The Great Path of Awakening The Classic Guide to Using the Mahayana Buddhist Slogans to Tame the Mind and Awaken the Heart Shambhala Publications ISBN 1 57062 587 5 Atisha 2000 05 01 The Complete Works of Atisa The Lamp for the Path amp Commentary Translated by Sherburne Richard India Aditya Prakashan ISBN 81 7742 022 4 Rinchen Geshe Sonam Sonam Ruth 1997 09 25 Atisha s Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 082 4 Jinpa Thupten 2005 11 28 Mind Training The Great Collection Library of Tibetan Classics Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 440 7 Tulku Ringu 2007 10 09 The Ri me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet Shambhala Publications ISBN 1 59030 464 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kadam Lojong and Tonglen community website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kadam Tibetan Buddhism amp oldid 1162116991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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