The Questions of the Kimnara King Druma: Difference between revisions
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The [[sutra]], '''The Questions of the Kimnara King Druma''' (Skt. ''Drumakinnararājaparipṛcchā''; Tib. མི་འམ་ཅིའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་སྡོང་པོས་ཞུས་པ།, [[Wyl.]] ''mi ‘am ci’i rgyal po sdong pos zhus pa''), presents a series of teachings focusing on the doctrine of [[emptiness]] and the [[bodhisattva]]s’ [[six paramitas|perfections]], presented in a rich narrative framework in which Druma, the king of the [[kimnara]]s, is the protagonist. Although the questions that bring forth the sutra’s doctrinal content are not in fact posed by Druma, but instead by the bodhisattva Divyamauli, who is the primary interlocutor throughout this sutra. As such Druma assumes the role of the teacher who over the course of the text displays a profound understanding of the doctrine of emptiness. | The [[sutra]], '''The Questions of the Kimnara King Druma''' (Skt. ''Drumakinnararājaparipṛcchā''; Tib. མི་འམ་ཅིའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་སྡོང་པོས་ཞུས་པ།, [[Wyl.]] ''mi ‘am ci’i rgyal po sdong pos zhus pa''), presents a series of teachings focusing on the doctrine of [[emptiness]] and the [[bodhisattva]]s’ [[six paramitas|perfections]], presented in a rich narrative framework in which Druma, the king of the [[kimnara]]s, is the protagonist. Although the questions that bring forth the sutra’s doctrinal content are not in fact posed by Druma, but instead by the bodhisattva Divyamauli, who is the primary interlocutor throughout this sutra. As such Druma assumes the role of the teacher who over the course of the text displays a profound understanding of the doctrine of emptiness.<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref> | ||
==References== | |||
<small><references/></small> | |||
==Text== | ==Text== |
Latest revision as of 10:01, 25 November 2020
The sutra, The Questions of the Kimnara King Druma (Skt. Drumakinnararājaparipṛcchā; Tib. མི་འམ་ཅིའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་སྡོང་པོས་ཞུས་པ།, Wyl. mi ‘am ci’i rgyal po sdong pos zhus pa), presents a series of teachings focusing on the doctrine of emptiness and the bodhisattvas’ perfections, presented in a rich narrative framework in which Druma, the king of the kimnaras, is the protagonist. Although the questions that bring forth the sutra’s doctrinal content are not in fact posed by Druma, but instead by the bodhisattva Divyamauli, who is the primary interlocutor throughout this sutra. As such Druma assumes the role of the teacher who over the course of the text displays a profound understanding of the doctrine of emptiness.[1]
References
- ↑ 84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.
Text
The Tibetan translation of this sutra can be found in the General Sutra section of the Tibetan Kangyur, Toh 157.
- English translation: The Questions of the Kimnara King Druma