The Buddhist teacher's decision to leave his monastery suggests a revival of the principles laid down by the Buddha
Bodhgaya, India -- On first impression, Mingyur
Rinpoche seemed to have everything well set up for a high profile career
as a globe-trotting meditation teacher in the Kagyu tradition of
Tibetan Buddhism. The youngest of three sons of the late, much venerated
Tulku Urgyen, by the age of 36 he had a bestselling book (The Joy of
Living) to his name, a monastery in India and Tergar, an international
organisation based in the US with branches worldwide.
<< Mingyur Rinpoche
Mingyur Rinpoche was living comfortably with a retinue of attendants.
He was in high demand as a teacher and admired by developed world
devotees in particular, for his interest in the scientific implications
of meditation – specifically its effect on brain function and the
nervous system. He already had 10 years of solitary meditation retreat
behind him and Tibetan Buddhist aficionados were impressed with his
personal qualities.
But Mingyur Rinpoche was not content to rest on his laurels. Nor was
he interested in becoming yet another celebrity guru, living in luxury
and spoiled by the adulation accorded to important lamas. One morning in
June this year his attendants knocked on the door of his room at his
monastery in Bodhgaya, India, and when there was no response they went
in to find it empty – except for a letter explaining that he had left
for an indeterminate period to become a wandering yogi, meditating
wherever he alighted in the Himalayas.
"He took no money, and no possessions," explained his brother Tsoknyi
Rinpoche. "He didn't take his passport, his mobile phone or even a
toothbrush."
In his letter Mingyur Rinpoche said that from a young age he had
"harboured the wish to stay in retreat and practise, wandering from
place to place without any fixed location". He advised his followers not
to worry about him, assuring them that in a few years they would meet
again. To this day no one has any idea of his whereabouts and he has not
been in touch with his family.
Mingyur Rinpoche (the title Rinpoche means Precious One) left on his
journey from Bodhgaya, the place where the historical Buddha Siddhartha
attained enlightenment.
"There's an interesting parallel with the Buddha," says Donald Lopez,
professor of Buddhist and Tibetan studies at the University of
Michigan. "Since the fall of the Tibetan monarchy in 842, incarnate
lamas have served as a kind of aristocracy in Tibet, so a high-ranking
tulku is not unlike a prince. Mingyur Rinpoche has renounced royal life,
just as Prince Siddhartha did. This radical step that he has taken is
essentially a return to the lifestyle that the Buddha prescribed for all
monks."
The life of a mendicant monk may have been a viable option for
followers of the Buddha in 400BC India and for Tibet's great yogi
Milarepa, but among Tibetan tulkus (incarnate lamas) it is virtually
unprecedented in the present day. Mingyur Rinpoche's disappearance was
greeted by the Tibetan Buddhist establishment with a mixture of
astonishment and awe, accustomed as they are to many young tulkus
heading off to America in search of fame, fortune and an extravagant
lifestyle. They follow precedents set by an older generation of lamas
like the late Trungpa Rinpoche, who made no secret of his fondness for
vodka and the pleasures of the flesh, and more recently by Sogyal
Rinpoche, a notorious womaniser.
Long retreats have become established among western Tibetan Buddhist
practitioners, but they usually take place at secure locations and are
conducted on a group basis. They are also expensive – especially for
people who have to put their careers on hold in order to take part. So
is it likely that more aspirant yogis and young lamas will follow
Mingyur Rinpoche's example?
"We see his decision as very positive," says Cortland Dahl, the
director of Mingyur Rinpoche's organisation Tergar. "It's an
inspiration. You read about people doing this in the past, but no one
seems to want to do it in this modern age."
Dahl points out that it must have taken some courage: "Rinpoche
suffered from panic attacks when he was a child and there he was,
heading off into the unknown in Bihar – one of the most bandit-ridden
states in India."
The British yogi-lama Ngakpa Chogyam, however, does not fear for Mingyur Rinpoche's wellbeing:
"Religious mendicancy is understood in the Himalayan regions – but it
is probably only viable for Tibetans and Indian sadhus. I imagine that
Mingyur Rinpoche would be likely to find sponsors wherever he went. The
main problem he might face would be people wanting to do too much for
him – and he would probably have to spend some time escaping from
generous benefactors."
Cortland Dahl says Mingyur Rinpoche is not only uninterested in fame
and money, he is also a "pure monk" who maintains vows that include
celibacy. He has this in common with a small number of young tulkus –
including Kalu Rinpoche and the 17th Karmapa Orgyen Trinley Dorje. It
seems as if Tibetan Buddhism might be at a turning point – away from
widespread allegations of corruption and towards a revival of the
principles laid down by the historical Buddha.
Source: http://www.buddhistchannel.tv