CONVERSATION
by Jason Stern

Sakya Trizin
When His Holiness
the Dalai Lama, supreme head of the four main schools of Tibetan BuddhismNyigma,
Sakya, Kagyu, and Gelugfled Chinese-occupied Tibet in 1959 and
went into exile in India, he was quickly followed into exile by His
Holiness the Sakya Trizin, the fourteen-year old head of the second
oldest schoolthe Sakyas. This story of Tibetan resistance to Chinese
occupation and religious persecution continues even today with the escape
from Tibet of His Holiness the Gyalwa Karmapa, the fourteen-year old
head of the Kagyu school, recently capturing the worlds attention.
A member of the royal Khön family, one of the holy families
of Tibetan Buddhism, His Holiness the Sakya Trizin is the forty-first
descendant in a long line of spiritual masters dating to the eighth
century. One of the members of the Khön family was a close disciple
of Padmasambhavagenerally considered to be the founder of Buddhism
in Tibetand was one of the first seven Buddhist monks in Tibet.
He reached a high stage of spiritual realization and was responsible
for transmitting the profound Vajrakilaya teachings. In 1073, motivated
by the need to cultivate an infusion of new teachings from the Tibetan
disciples of the great Indian masters of the day, the Khön family
founded the Sakya (white earth) Monastery in Southern Tibet,
thus fulfilling a prophecy of both Padmasambhava and Atisha. Foremost
among the Sakya teachings was the Lam Dre (Path and Result) system,
which originated with the great adept Birwapa of Nalanda University
(c. 650 A.D.) and continues to be taught in the great monasteries of
Vikramashila and will be taught by His Holiness during this visit to
North America.
His Holiness will visit give teachings in New York City and Carmel,
New York, June 6 to June 12. For more information call 201-541-0007
or email info@vikrmasila.org.
Chronogram interviewed Lama Pema Wangdak, a student of His Holiness.
Jason Stern
Chronogram: His Holiness Sakya Trizin is coming to North America. Why
is he coming?
Lama Pema: He is coming to teach. He has many followers heremostly
American and British.
C: How is this the Sakya school different from the other three schools
of Tibetan Buddhism?
LP: Generally there is no difference. The Sakya was built in the 11th
century by a teacher named Konchog Gyalpo. The teaching itself goes
back 150 years before that. That was the beginning of the Sakya order.
C: Can you say something about the teachings that His Holiness Sakya
Trizin will be giving during his stay here?
LP: He will give very comprehensive teachings on the fundamentals of
Buddhism; on the moral and ethical commitments of individuals as the
foundation of spirituality. These will include a teaching called Great
Resolve. According to Buddhism spirituality starts with the individuals
resolution.
C: What is the nature of that resolution?
LP: It is the will to help all beings, including oneself.
C: And the means by which one helps all beings?
LP: One helps all beings by practicing compassion, practicing loving
kindness, and by practicing the disciplines associated with the fundamental
spiritual aspiration.
C: What is an example of these disciplines?
LP: Living a harmless life is an example. To support this a person undertakes
a lifestyle that is conducive to the realization of that basic aspiration.
Such a lifestyle has a foundation of living harmlessly.
C: It seems as though Tibetan Buddhism is a monastic tradition. The
teachings seem to be designed for renunciates. How do these teachings
translate for lay people who wish to practice and remain in life?
LP: Actually, the practices that are prescribed in the monastic life
are the same practices that are taught to all people. There is no difference.
At the same time there is a distinction. It is that the monastic life
is the life that is chosen by the monk to pursue the same idealism with
greater intensity. But there are not two teachings. For instance, the
monk and the layperson both follow the path of harmlessness. It is the
same. So likewise with all the precepts; harmlessness, helpfulness,
enlightenment, equanimity, kindness, the sameness of all beings in the
sense that all want happiness and all do not want unhappiness; respect
for all beings as beings that have Buddha nature. So the path for the
layperson and the monk is not a different path.
C: And so by penetrating deeper into the practice the monk or nun is
given more...
LP: Opportunities. More chances to learn. The monastic life is a lifestyle.
It does not distinguish you from me. But it is much better suited to
pursue the teaching of attaining enlightenment for all beings.
C: So these teachings of His Holiness Sakya Trizin are available to
anyone?
LP: Yes, they just have to register.
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