Kyabje (His Holiness) 3rd Drubwang Padma Norbu Rinpoche | |
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![]() Penor Rinpoche at Namdroling, 1981 | |
Title | Kyabje, 11th Throne-Holder of Palyul Lineage, The 3rd Padma Norbu, The 3rd Supreme Head of Nyingma Tradition |
Personal life | |
Born | Tenzin January 30, 1933[1] |
Died | March 27, 2009 | (aged 77)
Nationality | Tibetan |
Parents |
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Other names | Penor, Thubten Legshed Chokyi Drayang, Do-ngag Shedrub Tenzin Chog-lei Namgyal |
Religious life | |
Religion | Tibetan Buddhism |
Temple | Padmasambhava Buddhist Vihara, the "Golden Temple of Namdroling Monastery" |
Institute | Ngagyur Nyingma Institute, Ngagyur Nyingma Nunnery Institute |
Founder of | Namdroling Monastery, Ngagyur Tsogyal Shedrupling Nunnery, Tsepal Topkyed Day Care Medical Center, Palyul Changchub Dargyeling, The Palyul Retreat Centre, Thubten Lekshey Ling |
School | Nyingma |
Lineage | Palyul |
Dharma names | འཇིགས་མེད་ཐུབ་བསྟན་བཤད་སྒྲུབ་ཆོས་ཀྱིས་སྒྲ་དབྱངས་དཔལ་བཟང་པོ། 'Jigs-med-thub-bstan-bshad-sgrub-chos-kyi-sgra-dbyangs-dpal-bzang-po |
Ordination | Gelong (monk), 1952, by Khenpo Chogtrul Chokyi Dawa Supreme Head of Nyingma, 1993, by the 14th Dalai Lama |
Senior posting | |
Teacher | 5th Dzogchen Rinpoche Thubtan Choskyi Dorje, Khenpo Ngawang Pelzang, Thubten Chokyi Dawa, Karma Thegchog Nyingpo |
Predecessor | Karma Thegchog Nyingpo |
Successor | Karma Kuchen,[2] 12th Throne-Holder of Palyul Lineage |
Reincarnation | Drubwang Palchen Düpa |
Website | http://www.palyul.org/, http://www.namdroling.net/ |
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Kyabjé 3rd Drubwang Padma Norbu, Lekshe Chokyi Drayang widely known as Penor Rinpoche (Tibetan: པདྨ་ནོར་བུ་, Wylie: pad ma nor bu, 30 Jan 1933 – 27 Mar 2009), was the 11th throneholder of the Palyul Lineage of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism, and the 3rd Drubwang Padma Norbu.[1] He is recognized as the incarnation of Vimalamitra, an 8th century Buddhist Monk. By the age of 17, he had received the corpus of Payul lineage teachings including Dzogchen teachings,[1] and became a renowned Dzogchen master. He began his escape from Tibet in 1959 with 300 people, and only 30 arrived in India. While working alongside laborers, he rebuilt Palyul Monastery in Karnataka, India, where more than 5,000 Nyingma school monks and nuns study.
He was one of a very few teachers left from his generation who received all his traditional training in Tibet under the guidance of fully enlightened masters.[citation needed] His rebuilding of the Palyul tradition in exile has grown to include monasteries, nunneries, and retreat centers in Tibet, India, and Nepal with numerous western projects such as the Palyul Retreat Center in New York state. [3]
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