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[[Image:Luding_Khenchen.jpg|frame|'''Luding Khenchen Rinpoche''']]
[[Image:Luding_Khenchen.jpg|frame|'''Luding Khenchen Rinpoche''']]
'''Luding Khenchen Rinpoche Jamyang Nyima''' (Tib. ཀླུ་སྡིངས་མཁན་ཆེན་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་ཉི་མ་, [[Wyl.]] ''klu sdings mkhan chen rin po che <nowiki>'</nowiki>jam dbyangs nyi ma'') (1931-2023) was the 75th head of the [[Ngor]] tradition of the [[Sakya]] school.


Luding Khenchen Rinpoche (b. 1931)
The position of Head Abbot of [[Ngor Monastery]] was traditionally held for a three year period in which extensive teachings are given almost non-stop. The three year periods alternate between the four monastic Houses (Tib. ''[[labrang]]'')—Luding, Khangsar, Thartse and Phende. Due to the Chinese take-over of Tibet in 1959 and the disruption to the Ngor monastic system, His Eminence Luding Khenchen Rinpoche effectively led and maintained the Ngor school up to 16th March 2000. It was then that Luding Khenchen Rinpoche's nephew and the son of [[Jetsün Kushok Chimey Luding]]—Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche—was enthroned at Ngor Pal Ewam Choden Monastery, Manduwalla, India, as the 76th abbot of the line.  


The 75th head of the Ngor tradition of the Sakya school.
Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche is now known as 'His Eminence [[Luding Khen Rinpoche]]', while we address His Eminence as 'Luding Khenchen Rinpoche'.


==Internal Links==
*[[Throneholders of Ngor Monastery]]


The position of Head Abbot of [[Ngor]] was traditionally held for a three year period in which extensive teachings are given almost non-stop. The three year periods alternate between the four monastic Houses (ladrangs); Luding, Khangsar, Thartse and Phende. Due to the Chinese take-over of Tibet in 1959 and the disruption to the Ngor monastic system, His Eminence Luding Khenchen Rinpoche effectively led and maintained the Ngor School up to 16th March 2000. It was then that Luding Khenchen Rinpoche's nephew and the son of [[Jetsün Kushok Chimey Luding]] — Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche — was enthroned at Ngor Pal Ewam Choden Monastery, Manduwalla, India, as the 76th abbot of the line.
==External Links==
*[http://vajrasana.org/ludingkhenchen.htm Brief Autobiography]


Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche is now known as 'His Eminence [[Luding Khen Rinpoche]]', while we address His Eminence as 'Luding Khenchen Rinpoche'.
[[Category:Contemporary Teachers]]
[[Category:Sakya Teachers]]

Latest revision as of 17:33, 6 February 2023

Luding Khenchen Rinpoche

Luding Khenchen Rinpoche Jamyang Nyima (Tib. ཀླུ་སྡིངས་མཁན་ཆེན་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་ཉི་མ་, Wyl. klu sdings mkhan chen rin po che 'jam dbyangs nyi ma) (1931-2023) was the 75th head of the Ngor tradition of the Sakya school.

The position of Head Abbot of Ngor Monastery was traditionally held for a three year period in which extensive teachings are given almost non-stop. The three year periods alternate between the four monastic Houses (Tib. labrang)—Luding, Khangsar, Thartse and Phende. Due to the Chinese take-over of Tibet in 1959 and the disruption to the Ngor monastic system, His Eminence Luding Khenchen Rinpoche effectively led and maintained the Ngor school up to 16th March 2000. It was then that Luding Khenchen Rinpoche's nephew and the son of Jetsün Kushok Chimey Luding—Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche—was enthroned at Ngor Pal Ewam Choden Monastery, Manduwalla, India, as the 76th abbot of the line.

Luding Shabdrung Rinpoche is now known as 'His Eminence Luding Khen Rinpoche', while we address His Eminence as 'Luding Khenchen Rinpoche'.

Internal Links

External Links