Karma Thinley Rinpoche

Karma Thinley Rinpoche ཀརྨ་འཕྲིན་ལས་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་ (born 1931),[1][2] is an important master of the Kagyu[2] Mahamudra, Sakya Lamdré[2] and Chod traditions of Tibetan Buddhism active in the west and Nepal.[2] Karma Thinley Rinpoche left Tibet for India in 1959[1] and during the 1960s was abbot of the Young Lamas Home School[1] and Karma Drubgyu Thargay Ling nunnery[2] both founded by Freda Bedi in Dalhousie, HP.[2] In 1982, Karma Tinley Rinpoche was able to visit his homeland Nangchen for the first time since leaving a quarter of a century earlier.[1] Returning several times since then he has established a temple in Shorda, capital of Nangchen District and a school for nomad children in the Sangshung valley.In 1988, he also established a nunnery, Tekchen Lekshay Ling, at Boudhanath Nepal and subsequently a small meditation retreat center at Pharping.
NangchenCanadianTibetan BuddhismMahamudraLamdréXVIth Gyalwa KarmapaDilgo KhyentseKhunu Lama Tenzin GyaltsenLing RinpocheTorontoOntarioReincarnationscholarartistQinghaiTsurphu MonasteryKarmapa16th KarmapaYoung Lamas Home SchoolFreda BediDalhousieBoudhanathPharpingLama Jampa ThayeBuddhismOutlineGlossaryFoundationsFour Noble TruthsThree JewelsBuddhaDharmaSanghaNoble Eightfold PathNirvanaMiddle WayThe BuddhaTathāgataBirthdayFour sightsEight Great EventsGreat RenunciationPhysical characteristicsLife of Buddha in artFootprintRelicsIconography in Laos and ThailandMiraclesFamilySuddhodāna (father)Māyā (mother)Mahapajapati Gotamī (aunt, adoptive mother)Yaśodharā (wife)Rāhula (son)Ānanda (cousin)Devadatta (cousin)Bodhi TreePlaces where the Buddha stayedBuddha in world religionsBodhisattvasAvalokiteśvaraGuanyinMañjuśrīMahāsthāmaprāptaĀkāśagarbhaKṣitigarbhaSamantabhadraVajrapāṇiSkandaTārāMetteyya/MaitreyaKaundinyaAssajiSāriputtaMahamoggallānaĀnandaMahākassapaAṅgulimālaAnuruddhaMahākaccanaSubhūtiPuṇṇa MantānīputtaUpāliMahapajapati GotamīUppalavannaChannaKey conceptsAvidyā (Ignorance)BodhicittaBuddha-natureDhamma theoryEnlightenmentFive hindrancesIndriyaKleshasMental factorsMindstreamParinirvanaPratītyasamutpādaRebirthSaṃsāraSaṅkhāraSkandhaŚūnyatāTaṇhā (Craving)TathātāTen FettersThree marks of existenceAniccaDukkhaAnattāTwo truths doctrineCosmologyTen spiritual realmsSix PathsDeva realmHuman realmAsura realmHungry Ghost realmAnimal realmNarakaThree planes of existenceBranchesMahayanaChinese ChanJapanese ZenKorean SeonVietnamese ThiềnPure LandTiantaiHuayanRisshūNichirenMadhyamakaYogacharaVajrayanaChinese Esoteric BuddhismShingonDzogchenTheravadaNavayanaEarly Buddhist schoolsPre-sectarian BuddhismBasic points unifying Theravāda and MahāyānaSouthern, Eastern and Northern BuddhismBhavanaBodhipakkhiyādhammāBrahmaviharaMettāKaruṇāMuditaUpekkhaBuddhābhiṣekaDevotionDeity yogaDhyānaFive StrengthsIddhipadaMeditationKammaṭṭhānaRecollectionSmaranaAnapanasatiSamatha-vipassanāVipassana movementShikantazaTukdamGananaMandalaTonglenTantraTertönMindfulnessMindful YogaSatipatthanaNekkhammaNianfoPāramitāParittaOfferingsProstrationRefugeSādhuSeven Factors of EnlightenmentDhamma vicayaPassaddhiŚīlaFive preceptsEight preceptsBodhisattva vowPratimokṣaThreefold TrainingSamadhiPrajñāVīryaFour Right ExertionsTwenty-two vows of AmbedkarBodhisattvaBuddhahoodPratyekabuddhayānaFour stages of awakeningSotāpannaSakadagamiAnāgāmiMonasticismBhikkhuBhikkhunīŚrāmaṇeraŚrāmaṇerīAnagārikaSayadawZen masterRōshiRinpocheWestern tulkuKappiyaDoncheeHouseholderUpāsaka and UpāsikāŚrāvakaTen principal disciplesShaolin MonasteryMajor figuresNagasenaAśvaghoṣaNagarjunaAsangaVasubandhuKumārajīvaBuddhaghosaBuddhapālitaDignāgaBodhidharmaEmperor Wen of SuiSongtsen GampoXuanzangShandaoPadmasambhavaSarahaAtiśaNaropaHōnenShinranDōgenShamarpaDalai LamaPanchen LamaAjahn MunB. R. AmbedkarAjahn ChahThích Nhất HạnhEarly Buddhist textsTripiṭakaMahayana sutrasPali CanonChinese Buddhist canonTibetan Buddhist canonDhammapadaVinayaMadhyamakālaṃkāraAbhidharmadīpaCountriesAfghanistanBangladeshBhutanCambodiaIndonesiaMalaysiaMaldivesMongoliaMyanmarPakistanPhilippinesRussiaBuryatiaKalmykiaSingaporeSri LankaTaiwanThailandVietnamAfricaSenegalSouth AfricaCentral AsiaUzbekistanMiddle EastSaudi ArabiaWestern countriesArgentinaAustraliaBrazilCanadaCosta RicaCzech RepublicFranceGermanyMexicoNew ZealandNorwayPolandSwedenSwitzerlandUkraineUnited KingdomUnited StatesVenezuelaHistoryTimelineAshokaKanishkaBuddhist councilsHistory of Buddhism in IndiaDecline of Buddhism in IndiaHuichang persecution of BuddhismGreco-BuddhismGandharan BuddhismMenander IBuddhism and the Roman worldBuddhism in the WestSilk Road transmission of BuddhismPersecution of BuddhistsIn AfghanistanIn VietnamRimé movementBanishment of Buddhist monks from NepalDalit Buddhist movementChinese invasion of Tibet1959 Tibetan uprisingSinhalese Buddhist nationalismBuddhist modernism969 MovementEngaged BuddhismWomen in BuddhismPhilosophyAbhidharmaAtomismBuddhologyCreatorBuddhism and democracyEconomicsEight ConsciousnessesEschatologyEthicsEvolutionHumanismRealitySecular BuddhismSocialismThe unanswerable questionsCultureArchitectureTempleVihāraKyaungOrdination hallPagodaBurmese pagodaDzong architectureList of Buddhist architecture in ChinaJapanese Buddhist architectureBuddhist temples in KoreaThai temple art and architectureTibetan Buddhist architectureGreco-BuddhistBuddha in artCalendarCuisineFuneralHolidaysUposathaMāgha PūjāAsalha PujaJaya Sri Maha BodhiKasayaMahabodhi TempleMantraOm mani padme humPilgrimageLumbiniMaya Devi TempleBodh GayaSarnathKushinagarPoetryPrayer beadsHama yumiPrayer wheelSymbolismDharmachakraBhavacakraSwastikaThangkaTemple of the ToothVegetarianismMiscellaneousAbhijñāAmitābhaBrahmāDharma talkHinayanaKoliyaLineageSiddhiSacred languagesPāḷiSanskritBaháʼí FaithChristianityInfluencesComparisonEast Asian religionsGnosticismHinduismJainismJudaismPsychologyScienceTheosophyViolenceWestern philosophyBuddhasBuddhistsSuttasSutrasTemplesFestivalsAjahn AmaroAcharya BuddharakkhitaBhikkhu AnalayoBalangoda Ananda Maitreya TheroCharles Henry Allan BennettṬhānissaro BhikkhuBhikkhu BodhiSylvia BoorsteinVidyamala BurchP. D. PremasiriAnagarika DharmapalaGil FronsdalS. N. GoenkaJoseph GoldsteinHenepola GunaratanaJack KornfieldStephen LevineNoah LevineNyanatilokaWalpola Rahula TheroSharon SalzbergSangharakshitaRahul SankrityayanAjahn SucittoAjahn SumedhoBhante SujatoÑāṇavīra TheraKatukurunde Nyanananda TheraNyanaponika TheraChin KungTanaka ChigakuDaisaku IkedaNikkyō NiwanoYin ShunKenneth K. TanakaGyomay Kubose Alfred BloomKenryu Takashi TsujiMarvin HaradaPema ChödrönSurya DasAnagarika GovindaKelsang GyatsoTenzin GyatsoNamkhai NorbuThinley NorbuOle NydahlMatthieu RicardDzongsar Jamyang Khyentse RinpocheSogyal RinpocheThrangu RinpocheYongey Mingyur RinpocheRobert ThurmanChögyam TrungpaReb AndersonTaisen DeshimaruSteve HagenHsuan HuaNan Huai-ChinHoun Jiyu-KennettPhilip KapleauDainin KatagiriDavid LoyTaizan MaezumiKitaro NishidaShōhaku OkumuraPaul RepsSeungsahnDaewonSeongcheolSheng-yenD. T. SuzukiShunryū SuzukiBrad WarnerHakuun YasutaniHan Yong-unHsing YunStephen BatchelorRobert WrightAlexander BerzinRobert Chalmers, 1st Baron ChalmersLokesh ChandraEdward ConzeHeinrich DumoulinNalinaksha DuttWalter Evans-WentzRichard GombrichHerbert V. GüntherRed PineGeorge de RoerichCaroline Rhys DavidsThomas Rhys DavidsFyodor ShcherbatskoyLucien StrykB. Alan WallaceDavid KalupahanaK. N. JayatillekeWesterners influenced by BuddhismEdwin ArnoldHelena BlavatskyFritjof CapraLeonard CohenAlexandra David-NéelHeinrich HarrerHermann HesseCarl JungJon Kabat-ZinnFriedrich NietzscheHenry Steel OlcottHelena RoerichErnest Reinhold RostJ. D. SalingerArthur SchopenhauerGary SnyderAlan WattsAlfred North WhiteheadWestern philosophy and BuddhismBuddhism and psychologyList of modern writers on Eastern religionsList of writers on Buddhism