Rigpa Shedra Wiki: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 7: Line 7:
|}
|}


You can '''search the site''' using the upper ''search'' box to the left. A second ''Google Custom Search'' box can be used for searching related sites in addition to this one. Additionally you can select from some of the '''main categories''' included in the encyclopedia:
You can '''search the site''' using the upper ''search'' box to the right. Additionally you can select from some of the '''main categories''' included in the encyclopedia:


:*[[:Category:Buddhas_and_Deities|Buddhas & Deities]]
:*[[:Category:Buddhas_and_Deities|Buddhas & Deities]]

Latest revision as of 14:41, 25 March 2015

Khenchen Namdrol, who oversees the Rigpa Shedra in Nepal
Welcome to the Rigpa Shedra Wiki,
an online encyclopedia of Tibetan Buddhism
We currently have 11,465 articles

You can search the site using the upper search box to the right. Additionally you can select from some of the main categories included in the encyclopedia:

You might also want to subscribe to the recent changes to keep track of all the additions to the site as they happen.

  • If you are new to Wikis, consult the Help page.

Featured Pages

  • Padmasambhava (Skt.), or Padmakara (Skt. Padmākara; Tib. Pemajungné; Wyl. pad+ma 'byung gnas) means ‘Lotus-Born’, which refers to Guru Rinpoche's birth from a lotus in the land of Oddiyana. Guru Rinpoche, the ‘Precious Master’, is the founder of Tibetan Buddhism and the Buddha of our time. Whereas Buddha is known primarily for having taught the teachings of the sutra vehicle, Padmasambhava came into this world, and to Tibet in particular, in order to teach the tantras. While Buddha Shakyamuni exemplifies the buddha principle, the most important element in the sutrayana path, Padmasambhava personifies the guru principle, the heart of Vajrayana Buddhism, and he is therefore known as the ‘second Buddha’ (Tib. sangyé nyipa). (Read more...)