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Ngagpa is an alternative phonetic transcription; the Wylie is sngags pa. These terms are grammatically masculine; the feminine equivalent is Ngakma or Ngakmo. Ngakphang is a gender neutral word that covers ngakpa and ngakmo, though this may be of relatively recent construction.
Traditionally, ngakpas wear uncut hair and white robes. From this they are referred to as gö kar chang loi de or "the white-robed and matted-haired group" (gos dkar lcang lo'i sde).
There are family lineages of Ngagpa, with the practice of a particular yidam being passed through family lineages. That said, a Ngagpa (inclusive of both sexes) may also be deemed anyone thoroughly immersed and engaged in the practice of the teachings and under the guidance of a lineage-holder, and who has taken the appropriate vows or samaya and had the associated empowerments and transmissions.
Significant lineage transmission is through oral lore.
While Ngagpas may perform many different rituals and energetic workings; many are rites of passage, they are particularly known for performing birth rituals, weddings, funerals, divinations, and pacification of ghosts or nature spirits and exorcisms. Typically, Ngagpas live with their families in villages; but many Ngagpas also congregate in Bönpos, the Ngagpa equivalent of a monastery. Some Ngagpa are comparable in practice to the Mahasidda; indeed, the Mahasidda may be correctly referred to as Ngagpa.
As scholar Sam van Schaik describes, "the lay tantric practitioner (sngags pa, Skt. māntrin) became a common figure in Tibet, and would remain so throughout the history of Tibetan Buddhism." Scholar Gyurme Dorje defines ngakpas as "a practitioner of the mantras, who may live as a lay householder rather than a renunciate monk."
Kunga Gyaltsen, the father Dalai Lama II Gendun Gyatso, was a non-monastic ngakpa, a famous Nyingma tantric master. His mother was Machik Kunga Pemo, they were a farming family. Their lineage transmission was by birth.
Category:Buddhist terms Category:Tibetan Buddhism Category:Bön
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