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- Published: 13 May 2007
- Uploaded: 04 Jul 2011
- Author: rabadeup
Name | Nechung Monastery |
---|---|
T | གནས་ཆུང་དགོན། |
W | gNas chung lcog |
Tc | 乃琼寺 |
Pushpin map | China Tibet |
Map caption | Location within Tibet |
Location country | China |
Location | Lhasa Prefecture, Tibet, China |
Sect | Gelug |
Lineage | Seat of the State Oracle of Tibet. |
It is also referred to as Sungi Gyelpoi Tsenkar, the "Demon Fortress of the Oracle King." It is about 10 minutes walk down from Drepung Monastery, and was the residence of the three-headed, six-armed Pehar, the chief protector of the Gelugs (Yellow Hat sect) and the seat of the State Oracle or Nechung Oracle. It is medium-sized temple which used to house about a hundred monks.
During the time of Lobsang Gyatso, the Fifth Dalai Lama (r. 1642-1682), Pehar was first moved from Samye to Tse Gugtang and then to the present site of Nechung Monastery.
Although the State Oracle is a Nyingma monk, he has been adopted by the Gelugpas and is now chosen for his receptivity to possession by Pehar during trance. He is considered to be the medium of Dorje Drakden, one of Pehar's aspects.
When the State Oracle is possessed by Pehar, he becomes very agitated, with tongue lolling, bloodshot eyes and displays superhuman strength, lifting heavy weights, twisting swords, etc. He mumbles words which are recorded and then interpreted by monks and also blesses grain which is thrown to the crowd. Unlike most Central Asian shamans, who are thought to leave their bodies when in a trance-like state and travel to the land of the spirits from where they bring back messages, Tibetan oracles act "as a mouthpiece for the gods or spirits who possess him and speak through him, very often without his own knowledge of what is being said, answering directly the questions of those who consult him." The tradition of oracles was inherited from the pre-Buddhist religion of Tibet, Bön. The "great" Fifth Dalai Lama was "the first to institutionalise the State Oracle of Nächung."
Nechung was almost completely destroyed during the Cultural Revolution and annexation of Tibet by China, though now, it has been largely restored and there is a huge new statue of Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) on the second floor. There is a college of debate to the east of Nechung which is once again attended by young students.
A new Nechung Monastery has been built in Dharamsala, India.
Category:Nyingma Category:Gelug Category:Buddhist monasteries in Tibet Category:Buddhist temples in Tibet Category:17th-century establishments
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