PEMA WANGYAL (b. 1945), the first son of Kangyur Rinpoche, is the main resident master of the three-year Nyingmapa retreats in Dordogne, France, director of the Association du Centre d'Etudes de Chanteloube, and founder of the Padmakara Translation Group. Under the guidance of Kyabje Kangyur Rinpoche, Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Kyabje Dudjom Rinpoche, and other great masters of Tibetan Buddhism, Pema Wangyal Rinpoche has studied extensively, his learning confirmed by years of intensive practice. At the request of Dharma groups and institutions around the world, Rinpoche has been active as a teacher since 1975, giving public talks, leading seminars, and providing individual guidance. Since 1980, Rinpoche has personally supervised the traditional three-year retreat of intensive study and practice in Dordogne, France. In 1999, he inaugurated a series of retreats in parallel with the three-year retreat, thus enabling Buddhist practitioners with family responsibilities to engage in serious and sustained practice.
“In this precious work of pure intention, Pema Wangyal Rinpoche
touches deeply the fundamental practices of Vajrayana Buddhism as
expressed in the well-known concise text by His Holiness Dudjom
Rinpoche, The Preliminary Practice of the New Treasure (Dudjom
Tersar Ngöndro). Speaking from his own profound personal experience
as well as the ancient timeless teachings, he explains how to enter
the direct path to enlightenment, which is available to anyone open
to the joyous diligence of meditation practice. I am absolutely
confident that whoever reads, understands, and contemplates the
lessons of this book will have everything needed to journey the
entire path laid out by the buddhas; their heirs, the bodhisattvas;
and the great masters of perfect awareness.”
—Orgyen Chowang Rinpoche, author of Our Pristine Mind
“Pema Wangyal Rinpoche grew up as the heart son of some of the
greatest masters of the past century. He is also one of the most
uncompromising and stubborn upholders of the Dharma. I can’t
imagine him saying any word just for the sake of speaking. Every
word comes from the depth of his heart. May all readers benefit by
hearing them.”
—Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche, author of Living Is Dying
“From his earliest years in Tibet, Pema Wangyal Rinpoche showed a
keen interest in the Dharma and wished only to serve his father and
teacher, Kangyur Rinpoche. As a young child, on the arduous flight
into exile, he completed his first preliminary practices guided by
Kangyur Rinpoche. Later in India, while studying at Varanasi
University, where he was particularly active in helping other
disadvantaged students, he spent his vacations serving Kangyur
Rinpoche and helping his father’s first Western students make a
connection. Subsequently he served and studied with other
extraordinary masters—Dudjom Rinpoche, Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche,
Trulshik Rinpoche, Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche, Tenga Rinpoche, and more
recently, Sakya Gongma Trichen Rinpoche and others—who transmitted
to him the teachings that had come down to them in master-disciple
lineages that had remained unbroken since Guru Padmasambhava
introduced Buddhism to Tibet in the eighth century. He continues to
work tirelessly to preserve the teachings and benefit beings and
relieve their suffering, saving the lives of countless animals
destined for slaughter. He has also devoted a large part of his
life to patiently and tirelessly guiding practitioners in numerous
traditional three-year retreats and continues to do so. The
instructions in this book are not his own invention but the outcome
of both a lifetime spent practicing these very instructions and a
deeply felt wish to help others. Every word here is imbued with the
wisdom that comes from listening, reflecting, and meditating.”
—Jigme Khyentse
“I cannot but wholeheartedly recommend these concise yet essential
instructions given by one of my most respected teachers, Pema
Wangyal Rinpoche, whom I was greatly fortunate to meet in 1967 in
the presence of his father, Kyapje Kangyur Rinpoche. These
teachings are the very foundation of the whole spiritual path. As a
great master Drigung Kyopa said, ‘Other teachings consider the main
practice profound, but here it is the preliminary practices that we
consider profound.’”
—Matthieu Ricard, author of Enlightened Vagabond
“[A] concise, motivating introduction to Tibetan Buddhist
practices.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Impressively well-written, organized and thoroughly
reader-friendly in presentation, Awakening Wisdom is exceptionally
informative and highly recommended.”
—Midwest Book Review
“Warm and friendly, contemplative, insightful and yet perfectly
pithy. . . . Ought to be on every practitioner’s shelf.”
—Buddhistdoor Global
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