- published: 06 Jul 2014
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The Jonang (Tibetan: ཇོ་ནང་, Wylie: Jo-nang ) is one of the schools of Tibetan Buddhism. Its origins in Tibet can be traced to early 12th century master Yumo Mikyo Dorje, but became much wider known with the help of Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen, a monk originally trained in the Sakya school. The Jonang school was widely thought to have become extinct in the late 17th century at the hands of the 5th Dalai Lama, who forcibly annexed the Jonang monasteries to his Gelug school, declaring them heretical.
The Jonang re-established their religio-political center in Golok, Nakhi and Mongol areas in Kham and Amdo centered at Dzamthang Monastery and have continued practicing uninterrupted to this day. An estimated 5,000 monks and nuns of the Jonang tradition practice today in these areas and at the edges of historic Gelug influence. However, their teachings were limited to these regions until the Rimé movement of the 19th century encouraged the study of non-Gelug schools of thought and practice.
ཇོ་ནང་པའི་བྱུང་རབས་དང་དར་འཕེལ། ཉམས་རྒུད་དང་སླར་གསོ། Kunleng discusses the rise of the Jonang religious tradition, how it became caught between Tibet's political power struggle in the 17th century,
Majiglavdon burhanaas Daranata bogdoor damjij irsen Jonang yosnii luijin. Jabge rinbuchi shavi nariin hamtaar unshij baina.
11th Jonang monlam Chenmo for long life World peace in Buddh gaya 2013 ཇོ་ནང་སྨོན་ལམ་ཆེན་མོ་འཛམ་གླིང་ཕན་བདེའི་གྲུ་ཆར་ཐེངས་བཅུ་གཅིག་པ་གནས་མཆོག་རྡོ་རྗེ་གདན་དུ་ཚོགས་པ། ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་གཟིགས་པར་བཀའ་དྲིན་ཆེ། thank you for your seen this video. 长期生活世界的和平Buddh格雅2013年第11届觉囊派祈愿法会 感谢您对您见过这个视频。
I am not a Jonang Pa but, I consider the Jonang Sect is equally Important Buddhist Sect which carries Teachings of Kalachakra and Jortuk teachings. Some politicians knowingly making the people confuse denying the fact and equal rights of Jonang people for the political gains and interest in Tibetan Parliament in Exile. This should be consider very carefully.
A group debate demonstration at Jonang Monastery Kathmandu Nepal.
Tashi Gyaltsan Rinpoche established the 1st Tibetan Buddhist monastery of Jonang tradition in Kathmandu, Nepal in spring of 2006. The full name is Palgyalwa Jonangpa Takten Shadrup Choeling. The mission of Jonang Buddhist Monastery is to teach traditional Tibetan Buddhism while helping poor Himalayan mountain children by providing them with adequate food, clothing and shelter.
Words and Music by Alan O'Day
Well you are such an easy evil
Such a sensuous sin
Sometimes I don't know where I'm going
'Till I've been taken in
Such an easy evil
Such a promise of fun
Sometimes I don't know what I'm doing
Till I'm done, you're a sneaky one
Here she comes now touching me, calling my name again
Here I go now, like a moth to a flame
I'm a sucker for you baby
Such an easy evil
Such a sensuous sin
Sometimes I don't know where I'm going
"Till I've been taken in
I've been taken in