Our Teachers
Most Venerable Khenchen Rinpoché, Konchog Gyaltshen
Founder

Khenchen Rinpoché was born in the village of Tsari in
southwestern Tibet in 1946. Tsari is an important pilgrimage site in
Tibet, being the sacred place of the enlightened-mind of Vajravarahi
and Rinpoché lived there until 1959 when his family was forced
to flee to India due to the political unrest of the time. While in
India, Rinpoché attended school and eventually took the
complete monk's vows from Kyabjé Kalu Rinpoché in
1968. He was among the first batch of students to graduate from the
then newly established Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies in
Varanasi. Among the great teachers Rinpoché received
extended teachings from were the 16th Karmapa and Khunu Lama
Rinpoché. Subsequently, Rinpoché entered into the
traditional 3-year retreat with a group of young Drikung Kagyu lamas
(including His Holiness Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang Rinpoché)
under the guidance of Vajradhara Kyungka Rinpoché.
In the 1980s, Rinpoché arrived in the US and spent the next
twenty years building and supporting the TMC and other centers and
groups in the US. During these years, Khenchen Rinpoché
translated critical Drikung Kagyu practices, prayers and histories into
English and publishing several highly regarded books such as the
translation of Jewel Ornament of Liberation, Garland of Mahamudra Practices and Jewel Treasury of Advice. This priceless work formed the essential base from which the holy Dharma could be taught and practiced.
In recent years,
Khenchen Rinpoché spends a great deal of his time traveling
in order teach the Dharma, dividing his time between teaching at
traditional Tibetan monasteries in India, Nepal and Tibet and at
centers in Taiwan, Southeast Asia, Europe and the US. In 2007,
Rinpoché returned to the TMC to celebrate the 25th anniversary
of the founding of the center.
Click here for more on Khenchen Rinpoché.
Khenpo Tsultrim Tenzin
Spiritual director

Khenpo Tsultrim
Tenzin took his monk's vows at the age of 14 and a few years later was
selected from his home monastery to began his study Buddhist philosophy
at Samyé Monastery, the first monastery ever built in
Tibet. While there, he studied the Thirteen Major Texts with
Khenchen Nawang Gyalpo Rinpoché and other khenpos. Because of the strong
Sakya and Nyingma influence at Samyé, he also received the
entire Lamdré-cycle of
empowerments of the Ngor-Sakya lineage from Khensur
Khenchen Rinpoché and from Amdo Lama Togden Rinpoché
and Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoché he received many Nyingma
empowerments and teachings. In 1987, Khenpo Rinpoché arrived
at Drikung Kagyu Institute at Jangchub
Ling in Dehra Dun and there met His Holiness Drikung Kyabgön
Chetsang Rinpoché. The spontaneous devotion he felt for His
Holiness resulted in his request to His Holiness to join the monastery
there and continue his education.
Having already completed the first four years of his
studies at Samyé Monastery, Khenpo Rinpoché quickly
completed his education at Jangchub Ling. After three years
teaching lower classes in the monastic college, he was enthroned by His
Holiness Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang Rinpoché as as a
"Khenpo" in 1998 and spent three more years teaching Buddhist
philosophy at the Institute. In between his busy schedule first as
student and later as instructor, Khenpo Rinpoché completed
the Ngondro, Cakrasamvara and other practices while in retreat. In April
2001, Khenpo Rinpoché arrived at the TMC to assist Khenchen
Rinpoché and also to improve his mastery of the English language
so that he can be of more benefit to the spread of Dharma. He began
teaching at TMC in August of that year and was subsequently appointed
as co spiritual director of TMC by Khenchen Rinpoché.
Khenpo Rinpoché is known and loved for his engaging
teaching style as well as his complete lack of pretensions.
Drupön Thinley Ningpo
Spiritual director

Drupön Thinley Ningpo became a
monk at Drong Ngur Monastery, in
Nakchu, northern Tibet. At that time, he became a student of the
eminent scholar, Lama Kedrub Siddhi Rinpoché. During this
period, he also received instructions from Vajradhara Pachung
Rinpoché, the great retreat master of Drikung Thil. In 1988, he
went on a pilgrimage to the sacred places of Western Tibet and
performed prostrations around the entire circumambulation route at Mt.
Kailash several times. Later, he arrived at Jangchub Ling in Dehra Dun and requested
permission from His Holiness Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang
Rinpoché to stay at the monastery. His request was granted and he continued his training there.
While at
Jangchub Ling, he taught some Buddhist philosophy
and also served as the monastic disciplinarian for several years. In
order to deepen his understanding of the Dharma,
Drupön Rinpoché eventually entered and completed the
traditional
three-year retreat in 1999 at Almora, under the guidance of Gelong
Yeshé Rinpoché (a student of Vajradhara Pachung
Rinpoché and Vajradhara Gelong Rinpoché of Drikung Thil).
In this retreat, he studied and practiced the Five-fold Path of
Mahamudra and the Six Yogas of Naropa. Subsequently he was enthroned by
His Holiness Drikung Kyabgön Chetsang Rinpoché as
"Drupön" ("retreat teacher") based on these accomplishments.
In 2001, Khenchen Rinpoché brought him to the US to be one
of the two resident lamas at the the center. He has continued
Khenchen's schedule of retreats and teachings there and has taught at
other Drikung centers throughout the country. Subsequently, he was
appointed as a co-spiritual director of the
center. Drupön Rinpoché's grounding presence and
warm demeanor has inspired many to practice the Dharma so that they too
can actualize those same qualities.
Khenpo Choephel
Spiritual director

Khenpo Choephel
Rinpoché comes to us from Drikung Thil Monastery, the
head-monastery of the Drikung Kagyu lineage. In particular,
Khenpo Rinpoché's recent arrival marks the fulfilment of
Khenchen Rinpoché's wish that TMC functions as a branch of
Drikung Thil. It has been years since Khenchen Rinpoché publicly
announced the dedication of TMC to Drikung Thil (in 2000 during the
visit of Drubwang Rinpoché to TMC and again in 2001 when
Khenchen Rinpoché led a group of disciples to Drikung Thil and
Mt. Kailash).
Khenpo Rinpoché was ordained as a monk by Vajradhara
Pachung Rinpoché at a young age and thus has been a monk
most of his life. While at Drikung Thil, he received many teachings and
instructions first from Pachung Rinpoché and later
from Pachung Rinpoché's
successor, Gelong Rinpoché, Vajradhara Tenzin Nyima.
Aside from having received extensive teachings in Mahamudra from these
two great masters, he is also a master in the ritual-traditions of
Drikung Thil Monastery and has also received training in debate and
philosophy at Drepung Monastery in Tibet. Before he left Drikung Thil
for Nepal, Khenpo Rinpoché served as the chant-master of
the monastery. In 2007, he was appointed "Khenpo" by Drikung Thil
Monastery and sent as its representative to TMC.
Quiet, gentle and unassuming in
nature, Khenpo Rinpoché's teachings are incisive,
direct and heart-felt. His teachings on the Gongchig at TMC recently demonstrate his ability to not only present the philosophical import and significance of the points in the Gongchig
but also expound on the direct relevance of those points to one's
training on the path. As Khenpo Rinpoché slowly adjusts to
life in the West and outside of the context of a traditional monastery,
we anticipate that Khenpo Rinpoché will be playing a more
central role at the center in the near future.
Khenmo Trinlay Chödron
Dharma teacher

Khenmo Trinlay Chödron is one of Khenchen Rinpoché's
senior students as well as editor of several of Rinpoché's books.
She first met Rinpoché in 1990 and since then has devotedly
served Rinpoché and helped build TMC. In 1997 she renounced her
lay life and joined the monastic order, finally taking her bhikshuni vows
in 2005. In December 2006, she was honored with the title of
"Khenmo" in a letter from His Holiness Drikung Kyabgön
Chetsang Rinpoché. Khenmo Trinlay is only the second woman in
the lineage honored with this title. She was officially recognized and
celebrated
at the 25th anniversary of the founding of TMC in 2007.
Aside from TMC, Khenmo Trinlay has also been teaching at
affiliated centers in Florida, Virginia, Wisconsin, Illinois and
Sweden.
Click here to see a brief profile of Lama Gyaltsen and others.
Click here to see profiles of teachers who have taught in the past at TMC.
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