Please join us, for a delightful day of teaching on
How to Practice Chenrezig, the Lord of Love and Compassion
by our resident lama, Lama Karma Chopal Zanpo, translated by Lama Zopa Jigme
WHERE
Herman Rednick Center
28 Lorien Rd, Questa NM
WHEN
Sunday June 28
10 am-12 noon. teaching
potluck lunch interim
2- 4 pm. teaching
tea and snack interim
4:30- 5:30 pm. Chenrezig practice
Lama Chopal’s instructions, brought into English by Lama Zopa, will provide an introduction to the Generation and Completion stages of Vajrayana Deity practice, specifically guiding us through the components of the Chenrezig practice. The teachings will explain the visualization & meaning of:
*The Supplication to the Lineage of Masters,
*Refuge and Bodhicitta (the compassionate wish to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all beings), *Generation Stage (visualization/imaginative practice of the deity),
* 7-Branch Prayer,
*Prayer for the 6 realms of suffering beings,
*Mantra recitation practice (OM MANI PADME HUM or OM MANI PEME HUNG),
*Completion Stage practice,
*Dedication.
COST
$30-50, given to the teachers
(no one turned away)
CONTACT
in**@**********ey.org
Gabrielle 575-770-1682
ABOUT LAMA CHOPAL
Lama Karma Chopal was born in east Tibet in 1965, became a monk, and studied thangka painting, mandala design and other Buddhist art forms. In India, he completed his monastic training, studied at HH Karmapa’s monastery at Rumtek, and accomplished the 3 year retreat at Sherab Ling under Mingyur Rinpoche, and studied with many accomplished Kagyu lamas in India and Nepal. In 2001, he came to the US. He travels widely doing sand mandalas, aiding with stupas, statues and paintings, and is the resident lama at Kagyu Mila Guru Stupa, NM.
ABOUT LAMA ZOPA
Lama Zopa Jigme is an American-born Buddhist practitioner and student of Kyabje Bokar Rinpoche. He has engaged in the study of Tibetan language and Buddhist philosophy, as well as the practice of intensive individual and group retreat, including traditional three-year cloistered meditation retreat in the Kagyu lineage, for more than 25 years.
