Medicine Buddha Jang wa puja on 30 August 2020 led by H.E. Kundor Rinpoche la and Geshe Lobbsang Tenzin through online

Jangwa puja can be done for both the late ones and living. “The tantric practice of Jangwa is a skillful tantric practice of purification used when somebody has passed away. Even when a person is in the intermediate state on the way to the lower realms, the practice of Jangwa can change the direction of the person’s reincarnation. Due to the power of mantra, the power of concentration, and the power of Buddha’s words of truth the Jangwa practice can cause the person to reincarnate in a pure land or in a deva or human realm. ==================== The Origin of Ullambana Offerings According to the “Ullambana Sutra”, Maudgalyayana, one of the Buddha’s chief disciples, thought of his parents and wondered

Program Schedule Apr to Aug 2021

Dear Dharma brothers and sistersHere’s to hoping that you are all doing well, we have been expecting the situation will be getting better but still it is not possible to visit the centre therefore we thought we could at least go on with the virtual session so yes, the coming online program go through zoom meeting from April to August 2021 The topics we have planned to focus on Introduction to Buddhist Psychology and Introduction to Buddhism. The introduction to Buddhism includes the following 1-Four noble truths 2-Sixteen characteristics, 3-Cause and effect,Law of karma, 4- Twelve links interdependent origination. Please confirm if any of you wish to attend these programs. contact no whatsup no+918928373189

རབ་གནས་ལྕགས་གླང་ལོའི་གནམ་ལོ་གསསར་ཚེས།Tibetan Losar, Metal-Ox Tibetan New Year 2021

Lo-sar1 means New Year in Tibetan. It is the first day of the first month of the Tibetan lunar calendar. This year’s Tibetan Losar, Metal-Ox Tibetan New Year, falls on 12 February. Losar celebration is one the most festive periods of the year observed with a lot of religious, cultural and merrymaking events for a week or two. Losar celebration is the time when one could witness and taste the best of the Tibetan culture and delicacies. Men, women, and children are in the best of their traditional attires. Colourful prayer flags flutter from the top of the houses, monasteries and the hills around.  The Monlam prayer festival 2021 The Monlam prayer festival is actually almost a two week event. The

Prayer (Puja)

A puja in my Buddhist tradition is a ceremony that includes reflection, chanting and offerings that deepen appreciation of The Buddha and his teachings.  It moves through seven stages which include gratitude, confession and reverence.The Sanskrit word puja simply “reverence, honour, homage, adoration, or worship”, so a Puja is a ceremony that enables us to create the highest merit by making actual and visualized offerings, with the bodhicitta motivation, to the highest objects of offering, the Guru and the Triple Gem – the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. That merit is the basis for achieving every good thing up to and including enlightenment. According to Buddhism, the world in which we live and all that happens to us is a result of our

The Medicine Buddha

The Medicine Buddha is a healing Buddha from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition he is surrounded by various herbs and medicine, with halos of healing energy radiating from his head and body. As the Medicine Buddha’s vow was to help heal all the sick and the injured, he is often called upon to help eliminate sickness. Usually portrayed seated with a jar of medicine in his left hand, often blue-colored, the Medicine Buddha’s right hand is resting on his knee in the mudra of blessings, with a stem of a healing plant in between his thumb and forefinger.Sometimes the Medicine Buddha is also called the Blue Buddha, or the Lapis Lazuli Light Buddha. The Medicine Buddha is a profound practice for healing physical,

Menlhai Jamtse Centre has done Animal liberation as releasing fishes in Powai lake on Lhabab Duchen Festival on 19 Nov 2019

Animal liberation on Lhabab Duchen festival. Lhabab Duchen Festival or Buddha Sakyamuni’s Descent Day from the Trāyastriṃśa heaven down to earth. Buddha’s mother Mayadevi was reborn heaven. To repay her kindness and to liberate her, and also to benefit the gods, Buddha spent three months teachings in the realm of the gods. The Lhabab Duchen is great holy days of the Buddhist calendar, takes place this year on Tuesday, November 19/ 2019. As merit is multiplied million times on this holy day, therefore we provide you an excellent opportunity to create merit and postive karma in your life. “ Where there is a mind, there are feelings such as pain, pleasure, and joy. No sentient being wants pain; instead all

དགའ་ལྡན་ལྔ་མཆོད། Ganden Ngamchoe,

Dear dharma brothers and sistersWe would like to invite you all to join Gaden Ngamchoe Festival དགའ་ལྡན་ལྔ་མཆོད། Ganden Ngamchoe, is a celebration of the anniversary of Lama Tsongkhapa’s parinirvana. It is celebrated on the 25th day of the 10th month on the Tibetan calendar. This year, Gaden Ngamchoe festival falls on Tuesday, December 10. GURU PUJA WITH TSOG AND EXTENSIVE LIGHT OFFERINGS Led by H.E. Kundor Rinpoche la and Geshe Lobsang Tenzin 10 Dec 2020 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm IST Through zoom meeting Meeting ID: 836 382 1100 Passcode: GN2020 Light offerings are traditionally associated with Ganden Ngamchoe. Now we can safely multiply them by using LED lights in place of lamps or candles. We will be chanting Migtsema

Je Tsongkhapa Lobsang Drakpa

Tsongkhapa (1357–1419) is a well-known Tibetan religious philosopher. In his iconic form, wearing a tall yellow hat, he is the center of the Gelugpa (Tib. dge lugs pa) sect that was dominant in Tibet until the Chinese takeover in 1951, and whose de facto leader is the Dalai Lama. The historical Tsongkhapa flourished in the period immediately following the final redaction of the Buddhist canon in Tibetan translation (Tib. bKa’ ‘gyur, pronounced Kanjur). He propounds a distinctive Middle Way (Sk. madhyamaka, Tib. dbu ma pa) philosophy by differentiating between Candrakīrti’s (fl. ca. 600) correct Consequentialist (Tib. thal ‘gyur pa, Sk. *prāsaṅgika) interpretation of the works of the Indian philosopher Nāgārjuna (third-fourth century), and an incorrect Autonomist (Tib. rang rgyud pa, Sk. *svātantrika) interpretation by Bhāviveka (also known