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The '''Butön Gong Khukma''' (Tib. བུ་སྟོན་གོང་ཁུག་མ་, [[Wyl.]] ''bu ston gong khug ma'') or Chimé Tsedrup (འཆི་མེད་ཚེ་སྒྲུབ་, ''<nowiki>'</nowiki>chi med tshe sgrub'') is a [[terma]] revealed by [[Guru Chöwang]], and transmitted through the [[Shalu Monastery|Shalu]] and [[Sakyapa]] traditions via [[Butön Rinchen Drup]]—which is why it is known as the ''Butön'' Gongkugma in these traditions.  A "''gong khug''" is a small pouch worn around the neck or in the breast pocket of a shirt, close to the heart.  
The '''Butön Gong Khukma''' (Tib. བུ་སྟོན་གོང་ཁུག་མ་, [[Wyl.]] ''bu ston gong khug ma'') or Chimé Tsedrup (འཆི་མེད་ཚེ་སྒྲུབ་, ''<nowiki>'</nowiki>chi med tshe sgrub'') is a [[terma]] revealed by [[Guru Chöwang]], and transmitted through the [[Shalu Monastery|Shalu]] and [[Sakyapa]] traditions via [[Butön Rinchen Drup]]—which is why it is known as the ''Butön'' Gongkugma in these traditions.  A "''gong khug ma''" is a small pouch worn around the neck or in the breast pocket of a shirt, close to the heart.  


== Text ==
== Text ==

Revision as of 00:00, 29 June 2018

The Butön Gong Khukma (Tib. བུ་སྟོན་གོང་ཁུག་མ་, Wyl. bu ston gong khug ma) or Chimé Tsedrup (འཆི་མེད་ཚེ་སྒྲུབ་, 'chi med tshe sgrub) is a terma revealed by Guru Chöwang, and transmitted through the Shalu and Sakyapa traditions via Butön Rinchen Drup—which is why it is known as the Butön Gongkugma in these traditions. A "gong khug ma" is a small pouch worn around the neck or in the breast pocket of a shirt, close to the heart.

Text

  • Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye. rin chen gter mdzod chen mo. Kathmandu: Shechen Publications, 2007, vol. 6 p. 369-406.

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