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May 24, 2023

Fall Semester 2022 Roundup

After a few years of remote events due to the pandemic, the Ho Centre for Buddhist Studies was happy to return to a vibrant schedule of in-person, hybrid, and online events this Fall semester.

Michael Ium, Pathbreakers: New Postdoctoral Research on South Asia at U of T

In September, our new postdoctoral fellow Michael Ium presented a paper for the “Pathbreakers: New Postdoctoral Research on South Asia at U of T” series, co-sponsored by the Ho Centre and the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy’s Asian Institute and Centre for South Asian Studies. The event was chaired by Christoph Emmrich with Rory Lindsay serving as discussant.

Michael’s paper offers a reevaluation of the early patronage of the Geluk tradition in Tibet in the fifteenth century, arguing that the influential Tibetan figure Tsongkhapa’s (1357-1419) status as a mahāsiddha or “great adept” of Buddhist Tantra was a primary (and thus far, overlooked) factor in his tradition’s gaining patronage from the political elites of the Tibetan Pakmodrupa Dynasty. Unfortunately, media from this event is not available, but a journal article on this topic has been published in the 45th volume of the Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies (2022). https://poj.peeters-leuven.be/content.php?url=issue&journal_code=JIABS&issue=0&vol=45

Himalayan Studies Conference

In October, the 6th Himalayan Studies Conference was organized and hosted by the University of Toronto on behalf of the Association for Nepal and Himalayan Studies (ANHS). Members of the U of T Conference Organization Team included HCBS faculty Christoph Emmrich, Frances Garrett, and Sarah Richardson. The conference was a great success, bringing together over a hundred panelists spread over eight sessions and three days.

Preceding the opening of the conference, Sarah Richardson organized an outing for attendees to see Tibetan art currently housed at the Royal Ontario Museum. This was a rare chance to see pieces that have not yet been displayed publicly, and which are in storage awaiting conservation, research, and future display. Collections Technicians Gwen Adams and Vitor Pavao hosted and answered questions about the collection’s history and current care practices. 

The conference programming showcased the diversity of current research in Himalayan Studies. Some studies focused on religion, with Christoph Emmrich sharing a paper on Newar menstrual rites for the panel “Controversies on Sacred and Impure Blood.” Others focused on issues of language, with Christoph Emmrich also sharing a paper on The Newar Online Dictionary Project—a collaborative SSHRC-sponsored project based at the University of Toronto and partnering with a team from the University of Virginia—that aims to provide an online Newar dictionary that is more accessible and comprehensive.

Others focused on issues of culture, such as the panel “Religion and Culture II: Environment and Sacred Geographies” chaired by Frances Garrett. Two presenters, Jenny Bentley (University of Zurich) and Minket Lepcha (Filmmaker), shared a paper describing the workshop and mentorship program they organized for the Lepcha community in the Sikkim and Darjeeling Hills, a program supported by the “Himalayan Borderland” project under Frances Garrett. The particular aim of this project was aiding indigenous Lepcha youth to reclaim their ancestral heritage, narratives, and knowledge systems in the contemporary world.

Elsewhere, Sarah Richardson was busy chairing two panels, “Representing Himalayan Pasts and Futures through Art and Literature” and another convened to honour the legacy of John C. Huntington (1937-2021), Professor of Art History at The Ohio State University. As one of his former students, Sarah Richardson shared a paper reflecting on her first Buddhist Art course as a new MA student in Art History with Prof. Huntington, an experience that was formative and continues to shape her own research and teaching to this day.

Lastly, one of the highlights of this conference was the inaugural meeting of the Canadian Himalaya Initiative, a project aiming to facilitate greater networking and collaboration among scholars working on diverse aspects of the Himalayan region in Canada. Members gathered to introduce themselves, get to know one another, and brainstorm together, followed by a hearty dinner and social outing.

Dr. Matthew King, A Book Talk for In the Forest of the Blind: The Eurasian Journey of Faxian’s Record of Buddhist Kingdoms

The last major event in Fall Semester was a book talk by Dr. Matt King, alumni of the DSR and now Director of Asian Studies and Associate Professor of Buddhist Studies at the University of California, Riverside. This talk was well-attended both in person and online, with a lively Q and A session. A recording of this event is available on our YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/yojSB1F34cU

The Record of Buddhist Kingdoms is a classic travelogue that records the Chinese monk Faxian’s journey in the early fifth century CE to Buddhist sites in Central and South Asia in search of sacred texts. In the nineteenth century, it traveled west to France, becoming in translation the first scholarly book about “Buddhist Asia,” a recent invention of Europe. This text fascinated European academic Orientalists and was avidly studied by Hegel, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche. The book went on to make a return journey east: it was reintroduced to Inner Asia in an 1850s translation into Mongolian, after which it was rendered into Tibetan in 1917. Amid decades of upheaval, the text was read and reinterpreted by Siberian, Mongolian, and Tibetan scholars and Buddhist monks.

Matthew King offers a groundbreaking account of the transnational literary, social, and political history of the circulation, translation, and interpretation of Faxian’s Record. He reads its many journeys at multiple levels, contrasting the textual and interpretative traditions of the European academy and the Inner Asian monastery. King shows how the text provided Inner Asian readers with new historical resources to make sense of their histories as well as their own times, in the process developing an Asian historiography independently of Western influence. Reconstructing this circulatory history and featuring annotated translations, In the Forest of the Blind models decolonizing methods and approaches for Buddhist studies and Asian humanities.

Filed Under: Emaho! Blog

May 24, 2023

Summer 2022 Roundup: Part Two

In the summer of 2022, the Ho Centre for Buddhist Studies offered numerous graduate students support for summer research and travel. Here is a roundup of some of their stimulating and enriching activities, ranging from North America, to Europe, to Nepal’s Kathmandu Valley. Emaho!

Andrew Dade, PhD Candidate in the Department for the Study of Religion

Earlier in the summer, Andrew was able to visit Northern Illinois University (a designated Center for Burma Studies by the Burma Studies Group of the Association for Asian Studies). There, he was able to locate texts relevant to his dissertation research, as well as to chat with the director of the Southeast Asian Digital Library concerning issues of equity in the use of a transliteration system for Burmese sources (rather than Burmese script itself). Today, there is a push by graduate students and librarians to make sources available for search with Burmese script metadata in order to allow Burmese speakers access to resources without having to learn an unintuitive transliteration system.

Jade Hui, MA Student in the Department for the Study of Religion

This summer, Jade engaged in a summer traineeship to consult Buddhist manuscripts in the British Library and British Museum in London. Along with their MA advisor Amanda Goodman, Jade examined a set of tenth-century Chinese Buddhist manuscripts from the Dunhuang cave library. These materials constitute important background research for their major research project into Buddhist interactions with queer theory and disability studies.

An image provided by Jade from her summer research

Prabhjeet Johal, PhD Candidate in the Department of Art History

Prabhjeet received a research travel grant this summer to visit numerous collections holding material objects stemming from Gandharan and Arsacid contexts. Visiting museums and libraries across Europe, she was able to gain access to and catalog hundreds of objects related to her interest in wine culture. Given many of these objects are scattered across Europe, seldom on display, or yet to be researched, her research allowed her to contextualize these objects and bring them into conversation with one another, in the service of her wider ambition to understand these objects in the context of their original cultures, whether Gandharan or Parthian.

An image provided by Prabhjeet from their summer research

Ian Turner, PhD Candidate in the Department for the Study of Religion

Ian received a Buddhist Studies Research Traineeship for summer research travel and language training from the Ho Centre, for which he was hosted by the Central Department of Nepāl Bhāṣā, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu. Notably, this is the only post-secondary institution devoted specifically to the study of Nepāl Bhāṣā anywhere in the world. For four months, he had the pleasure of meeting regularly with two instructors: Dr. Omkareshwor Shrestha, outgoing chair of the Department and specialist in ethnolinguistics; and Dr. Bajramuni Bajracharya, current instructor of general linguistics and specialist in traditional Newar Buddhist ritual and culture. With both figures, he was able to read works pertaining to his research focus on domestic religiosity, as well as to participate in the lively social and intellectual life of the department and local community.

Ian Turner on the left with Dr. Omkareshwor Shrestha

Andrea Wollein, PhD Candidate in the Department for the Study of Religion

Andrea has been conducting dissertation research in the Kathmandu Valley for much of 2022, collecting primary source material in Tibetan that was only available in the Rigon Tashi Choling Monastery in Dakshinkali, Nepal. Due to an extraordinary coincidence (or as Tibetans might say, an auspicious karmic connection), a cycle of teachings related to Andrea’s research was edited for publication (in Tibetan) by Dakpa Gyatso Acharya, an affiliate of the Ho Centre for Buddhist Studies. Meeting with Dakpa over Zoom, Andrea thus had an extremely valuable and enjoyable opportunity to improve her Tibetan translation skills and ability to understand the contexts of the texts.

Filed Under: Emaho! Blog

April 28, 2022

Phool Maya Chen Award 2021-22: Andrea Wollein and Andrew Dade

Congratulations to Andrea and Andrew for being awarded the 2021-22 Phool Maya Chen Scholarship!

Andrea Wollein is a PhD candidate at the Department for the Study of Religion. She holds an MA in Modern South Asian Studies and a BA in Tibetan and Buddhist Studies. Her dissertation explores innovations within the Newar Vajrayāna Buddhist tradition through two case studies of (non-celibate) monastic institutions (Skt. vihāra): (1) Yampi Mahāvihāra, Ī Bahī (in Tibetan known as e yi gtsug lag khang) in Lalitpur, Nepal and (2) Nṛtya Maṇḍala Mahāvihāra in Portland, Oregon, USA.

Andrew Dade is a PhD candidate in the Department for Study of Religion in collaboration with the Centre for South Asian Studies.  They completed their MLIS & MS Sociocultural Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee.  He is interested in the interpretations and varied work of sound and media for Buddhist traditions.  Their combination of ethnographic research and textual analysis follows devotional, philosophical, and ideological engagements of the Pali Abhidhamma, a Buddhist phenomenological-soteriological treatise, in Myanmar (Burma) and South/Southeast Asia more broadly.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: award, graduate students

January 14, 2019

Sacred Geography in the Himalaya

By Damien Boltauzer

In the summer of 2018 I set out to the Himalayan regions of Himachal Pradesh and Ladakh in north-west India. My aim was to investigate spaces and geographies sacred to the Buddhists of those regions. My approach was to be comparative: I would visit Rewalsar in central Himachal Pradesh, Keylong in the far north of that state, and Leh/Choglamsar in Ladakh.

mountain village above lake
Rewalsar
village and large mountain range
Keylong
prayer flags and village in arid mountain valley
Ladakh

Dharamshala and Tso Pema

The highway emptied out of Delhi and soon began to graduate into higher territories winding up to Dharamshala in the foothills Himachal, whilst I was dozing on a sleeper bus storming through the night. To start off my trip, I wanted to visit the seat of the Tibetan government in exile – a sacred space of its own within field of the 14th Dalai Lama. That week he was giving a teaching and a tantric empowerment of the Bodhisattva of wisdom and learning, Manjushri. Being a student and much in need such power, I took the empowerment before heading deeper into the mountains.

My next stop was the village of Rewalsar, a place that I read about in a travel guide for Ladakh which was described as “an interesting detour”[i] about an hour away from the large town of Mandi. I took the bus out from Dharamshala in the early morning and was in Mandi by mid-afternoon; there I got on a smaller bus which went down a bumpy dirt road into the hills for one more hour. I really had no idea what I would find, but it turned about to be most fulfilling. For a student of religion, Rewalsar is a magnificent place: a village surrounding a small green lake which is sacred within Vajrayana Buddhist, Sikh, and Saiva traditions. Another name for the place is Trisangam, meaning “three holy communities”[ii].

rewalsar-1
Rewalsar village surrounding the sacred lake.

Each of the traditions have their own texts and narratives in which the sanctity of the lake can be found. For Vajrayana Buddhists, this history takes place in the life story of Padmasambhava, the tantric master responsible for spreading the Dharma through the Himalaya and Tibet. In that text, Padmasambhava has recently met his consort Mandarava who is the daughter of Arshadhara, the king of the Sahor country. He and Mandarava go to the city to beg for alms:

While doing that the people became envious and said, “This is the stray foreign mendicant, who in the past killed the males and coupled with the females. He has carried off the king’s daughter and adulterated the royal caste. Again, he will create havoc; he must be corrected!”.

Saying this, the people gathered sandalwood with a dray of oil for each load of wood. After that, they burned Master Padma and his consort in the center of a village.

Normally, when people were burned, the smoke would cease after three days, but now even after nine days the smoke did not stop. As people came for a closer look, the fire blazed up, burning the entire royal palace. The oil had turned into a lake, with the inner part covered by lotus flowers. Upon an open lotus, in the middle of the lake, Master Padma and his consort sat fresh and cool. [iii]

‘Tso Pema’ (Lotus Lake) is the Tibetan name of the lake. It is an important site of pilgrimage for pious Buddhists, especially those of the Nyingma lineages. I was told that especially in the winter months pilgrims converge there in large numbers, waiting out the cold winter in the north. Presently there are at least five Buddhist monasteries around the lake, and the most dominating presence in the village is a gigantic statue of Padmasambhava which looms over the village. The lake is also sacred to Saiva Hindus, it is mentioned (along with many other Himalayan regions) in the Skandha Purana. That text also speaks of the visitation to the lake by the holy man Lomas. Similarly, the region was visited by Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Guru of Sikhism, and for that reason it is a pilgrimage site for those of certain Sikh traditions.

Guru Rinpoche looking over Tso Pema
Guru Rinpoche looking over Tso Pema

As soon as I arrived in Rewalsar I found a simple room at one of the Buddhist monasteries, and I began to absorb the multiple cultural layers and processes which thrived around the lake. The narrative elements of Rewalsar were one aspect of the site and its culture; there is also that which is not articulated in words but which endures within built and natural environment there. This material dimension of the site is practiced with the body and senses, as well as through iterations of stories; it murmurs in images and sounds. It might be said that the lake constitutes the ritual (as well as historical and mythological) center of the village: all day, pilgrims, tourists, and local people can be seen doing ‘kora’ – circumambulations around the lake. There are numerous religious structures: gompas (Buddhist monasteries), mandirs (Hindu temples), a large gurdwara (a Sikh space of worship), and a Jain temple built around the lake. Looming above the all the surrounding temples and residences is a gigantic statue of Padmasambhava. A rich conversation can be read in the multiple structures and their relationships to each other, speaking the story of the sacred space in an architectural code.

ornate monastery building
ornate monastery building
A ‘Gompa’ or Buddhist Monastery in Rewalsar
monastery courtyard

Part of my research was to do kora and speak with the circumambulators. To some, these walks were a  form of religious engagement with the lake. One or two pious Tibetans were doing full prostrations in their kora. Part of the kora process involves visiting shrines and making offerings, or turning prayer wheels and releasing mantras into the wind. Other people were simply ‘going for an evening walk’. An especially engaging element of the environment is what could be described as the ritual soundscape. Doing kora, one can hear a constant parade of hymns, bells, chimes, gongs, and the rich aural dimensions of Vajrayana liturgy. Bellow my room at the monastery were three large mani-wheels, the turning of which caused a bells to resound at variated intervals, creating interesting rhythms which can be heard here:

https://buddhiststudies.utoronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Wheels.mp3

 

Garsha

My next stop was in the far northern reaches of Himachal, in the high mountain region of Lahaul, a day and a half’s journey upon government busses from Rewalsar.

garsha
The high mountain landscape of Lahaul

I wanted to investigate an annual circumambulation event of a holy mountain near the village of Keylong. According to an article written in the 1990’s, this event occurred in June; it turned out that this year it was to happen in September and by then I would be elsewhere. Fortunately, I was able to interview the organizers of the annual circumambulation, the Young Drukpa Association, and to learn about the kora event which is publicised as an Eco Pad Yatra.

garsha-festival

This kind of event follows in the tradition of those organized by H.H. Gyalwang Drukpa, the head of the Drukpa lineage, who has been leading these kinds of ecological pilgrimage events for over ten years[iv]. The event held in Keylong was led by Kunga Rinpoche, who travelled with a group of monastic and lay Buddhists on a kora of the Holy mountain of Dribu Ri. This modest but holy mountain is revered as an abode of the tantric deity Chakrasamvara. There are many caves in which old masters and tantric heroes practiced, such as Nagarjuna and the Siddha Orgyenpa[v]. The mountain itself is named after the Mahasiddha Vajra-Ghantapa, who is Dorje-Drilbupa in Tibetan. It is said that Drilbupa meditated upon the mountaintop and reached the highest enlightenment there. The peak is now considered to be his “eternal residence” (26)[vi].

My days in Keylong were spent investigating the numerous places described in a book published by the Young Drukpa Association, entitled Garsha: Heartland of the Dakinis (2011). Pilgrimage guidebooks in Tibetan Buddhism are an old tradition; this particular book might be considered as part of this tradition – now in glossy coloured print form. The text provides detailed descriptions of the many sacred caves, relief sculptures, charnel grounds, and important ancient monasteries, shrines, and stupas in the region, as well as historical information on the whole sacred geography known colloquially as Garsha.

garsha-carved-images
Relief sculptures along the path in Keylong

The area is thought to be a potent land of spiritual power, an earthly locus of the sambhogakaya Heruka, and home to numerous Dakinis. The land is charged with the tantric practices of many old masters, and one’s own practice here can be accelerated by such presences.  One morning I rose early and, with a local guide, performed a circumambulation of the mountain. We passed through magnificent and stark terrain, rising higher and higher to the peak upon which was a shrine and many prayer flags.

garsha-mountain-kora

sacred site atop mountain covered in prayer flags and scarves
selfie of two men in sunglasses

After spending some time there eating sandwiches, we descended again, diagonally across the mountain so as to reach important mediation caves and a gompa on the other side. Another day I visited the Guru Ghantal Gompa, named after Mahasidda Ghantapa, in which one can find a unique shrine with ancient images. To get there, it is necessary to hitchhike on the highway south of Keylong back toward Manali for about 15 minutes until crossing the Bhagi river. Then you can walk ten minutes up the mountain to Tupchilling monastery at which you can ask a resident monk for the key to Guru Ghantal which is another hour up the mountain. When I was there, a local man had already taken the key and was up at the mysterious little gompa on the mountainside. He showed me around and explained his family’s tradition of visiting the shrine at times of confusion.

garsha-gompa

 

Ladakh

Journeying further north for one full day upon the grimy Himachal government bus, I finally reached the administrative center and tourist hub of Leh in the Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir. The road passed through vast, rugged beauty of the Himalayas and into the arid otherworld of Ladakh.

My plan was to study Tibetan whilst staying in community of Choglamsar, about 10 kilometers down the road, during which I would continue to investigate sacred places and landscapes around there. Choglamsar is home to native Ladakhis as well as many Tibetan refugees and Kashmiris. Around that town it was particularly interesting to observe the formations of a Buddhist environment in the gnarled desert landscape.

ladakh-2

Ladakhi and Tibetan Buddhists articulate their religious culture on a geographical level with no ambiguity: from any high point above the town, one can see multiple golden roofs of the monasteries, prayer flags like cobwebs binding the structures, and stupas dotting the environment in every direction.

ladakh-3

In Ladakh, a notable presence is that of ‘mani stones’ – large rocks or cliff faces with the carving and painting of a mantra, usually that of Om Mani Padme Hum, the mantra of Avalokitesvara. There are ‘mani walls’, which are long stone walls, three or four meters wide which might be described as monuments rather than walls. The tops of these structures serve as a platform for hundreds of small, hand carved mani stones which are often left as offerings. I was told by one informant that mani stones and walls are constructed with the hope that the souls of the dead will encounter the inscription of the mantra, thereby influencing them and neutralizing any potential harm upon the lives of the living. Just outside of Choglamsar there are hundreds of such carvings in the vicinity of a scraggly rock where the dead are cremated on platforms on the hill side.

ladakh-mani-stones-5

pile of mani stones
mani stones at base of rocky hill
Mani Stones
pile of mani stones

Perhaps the most dominant cultural element of the Ladakhi landscape is the stupa which is truly ubiquitous in Ladakh. On will see small stupas dotting the landscape, such as the vast field of them near the old palace of Shey, just south of Leh and Choglamsar. Stupas were originally built as monumental reliquaries for the bodily remains of the Buddha after his paranirvana. Since then, they have taken on various functions. Many of the stupas around Ladakh are votive stupas built in honour of the dead, or they might have been built by convicted criminals as part of their punishment. Stupas are erected at the entrances of any town or village for apotropaic purposes, and there are also many within the confines of settlements. In the midst of the town of Leh one will find several large stupas, the ritual engagement with which is a matter of daily life: the pious will pass them always on the right, or perform a few circumambulations as they go about their daily activities. In this sense, ‘sacred space’ is interwoven with that of the profane, prompting interesting theoretical speculation about the organization and nature of space in these cultural contexts. For pious Buddhists, stupas are objects of devotion to which prayers are offered; it is not uncommon to see people gazing with deep intent upon these presences.

stupas with mountain range in the distance
looking up at stupas
stupas with mountain range in the distance
stupa in mountain valley

They are also important fields of merit. Circumambulation for purposes of merit making is a normative element of daily Buddhist practice in Ladakh. In the park next to the Dalai Lama’s residence in Choglamsar, a friend of mine told me that if it were possible to do 108 koras around the stupa, then I might secure an auspicious re-birth. It is very common to see Ladakhis and Tibetans do exactly this, especially in morning and evening times, and often whilst reciting mantras and counting the beads upon a mala. Small stones are placed on the corner of the stupa to keep the count of passes. The stupa was described to me by this informant as ‘god’ – going around them, then, was an act of encircling god. They are commonly described as representations of the Buddha’s enlightened mind.


My trip to India in the summer of 2018 was a fantastic journey into the spaces of the Buddhists (and other religions) of that area. Through a comparative approach, I was able to notice the nuanced differences and similarities in manifestations of religious culture upon spatial terms as I travelled from site to site. I was also able to develop a deeper understanding of what ‘sacred space’ is: something expressed in multiple voices and material manifestations. The trip as enabled me to go deeper into this most rich of topics and to identify at least three sites which would be excellent for future research.

I would like to thank the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for the generous 2018 Excellence Award and to Frances Garrett for making the trip possible. Also, big thanks to Frances and Matt and the Himalayan Borderlands project for funds and support.

 

Damien Boltauzer is a fourth year Religion studies and Anthropology major. All photos and audio recordings in this article are his own.

 

 

 

[i] Partha S Banerjee. Ladakh, Kashmir, Manali: The Essential Guide. Calcutta: Milestone Books, 2014. 21,

[ii] http://www.rewalsar.com/

[iii] Yeshe Tsogyal. The Lotus-Born: The Life Story of Padmasambhava. Boston: Shambhala, 1999. 54-6.

[iv] See http://www.padyatra.org/

[v] Garsha Young Drukpa Association. Garsha, Heart Land of the Dakinis. Keylong: YDA, 2011. 29.

[vi] Ibid., 26.

Filed Under: Stories from Our Students

December 21, 2018

Welcoming New Tibetan Books from Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche

On Tuesday, December 18, 2018, a reception to celebrate the new donation of rare and previously unpublished Tibetan books by Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche was held at the Robert H.N. Ho Family Foundation Centre for Buddhist Studies. 

Our centre director (on leave 2018-19) Frances Garrett, Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche, and our interim centre director Sarah Richardson hold the newly donated books, surrounded by some of our Ho Centre community members.

Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche visited the University on a book donation trip from Nepal and India to grant Toronto a generous donation of newly published books. Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche, a high emanated reincarnate lama (or tulku) from the Tibetan Buddhist Kathog lineage has been working tirelessly for the past two decades to collect and publish rare and old texts from the Kathog lineage.

Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche hands newly published books to our centre director, Sarah Richardson.
Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche hands newly published books to the Ho Centre interim director, Sarah Richardson.

This difficult work began with travel to temple collections across the Tibetan cultural world, where he and his team gathered important books, many of which were only previously available in old manuscript or woodblock print format. He has collected these materials and made modern edited and digitally printed versions, and is now providing these books free of charge to Universities in North America where significant Tibetan studies research is taking place. Just the week before the gift was received in Toronto, another set of these books was welcomed to Columbia University in New York City.

The donation of nine multi-volume collections that contain the important texts and biographies of lineage masters of the Kathog tradition.
The donation of nine multi-volume collections that contain the important texts and biographies of lineage masters of the Kathog tradition.

This generous donation to the University library includes nine multi-volume collections that contain the important texts and biographies of lineage masters of the Kathog tradition, an important Nyingmapa group whose main temple is based in the eastern Tibetan region of Kham. These texts were welcomed at the Robert H.N. Ho Family Foundation Centre for Buddhist Studies by University faculty, students and staff, and will eventually be accessioned into the main collections of the University of Toronto’s central (Robarts) library system, where they will be housed in the Tibetan reading room of the East Asian library.

Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche talking with Ho Centre director, Sarah Richardson, and Tibetan teacher and PhD student, Kunga Sherab.
Kathog Trungpa Rinpoche talking with Ho Centre interim director, Sarah Richardson, and Tibetan teacher and PhD student, Kunga Sherab.

The U of T Libraries have the largest Tibetan language collection in Canada. The Library began purchasing subscriptions to the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center’s electronic text collections in 2008. In 2013, a collaboration between the University of Toronto and Columbia University’s research libraries was established to harness expertise in Tibetan collection services at both universities and increase the availability of Tibetan resources to a wider community of scholars in both Canada and the United States. The partnership provides for jointly sponsored acquisitions trips to enhance the Tibetan collections at both universities, and a shared point of service for research consultations. Since this collaboration began, the U of T’s Tibetan Collection has more than doubled in size.
For more on Tibetan Studies at U of T please visit https://buddhiststudies.utoronto.ca/programs/tibetan-studies/

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

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