Shukseb Jetsun Chönyi Zangmo
Appearance
Shukseb Jetsunma | |||||
Tibetan name | |||||
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Tibetan | ཤུགསེཔ་ཇེཙུན་མ་ཆོས་ཉིད་བཟང་མོ | ||||
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Shukseb Jetsunma Chönyi Zangmo (1865–1953) was the most well known of the yoginis in the 1900s, and was considered an incarnation of Machig Lapdron.[1] She was the abbess of Shukseb nunnery, and was a Nyingma Tibetan Buddhist teacher.[2] She made the nunnery once again into a center for the special teachings of the Shugseb Kagyu.[3] The nunnery still exists in Tibet today, and in fact is one of its most active nunneries.[4]
Family
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Life as a Chod Practitioner and Wandering Yogini
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Teachers
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Students
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Nunneries
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References
[edit]- ^ Allione, Tsultrim (2000-11-25). Women of Wisdom. ISBN 9781559398947.
- ^ Edou, Jérôme (1996-01-01). Machig Labdrön and the Foundations of Chöd. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 9781559390392.
- ^ "Gyergom Tsultrim Sengge". The Treasury of Lives. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
- ^ "Gyergom Tsultrim Sengge". The Treasury of Lives. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
Books and articles
[edit]- A full story of Shugsep Jetsun’s life is available as “The Story of a Tibetan Yogini: Shungsep [sic] Jetsun 1852-1953” prepared by Kim Yeshi and Acharya Tashi Tsering with the assistance of Sally Davenport and Dorjey Tseten, pp. 130-143, Chö Yang, 1991
- Shugsep Jetsun, the Story of a Tibetan Yogini https://tnp.org/shugsep-jetsun-the-story-of-a-tibetan-yogini/
- Havnevik, Hanna. (2005) “Ani Lochen”. Encyclopedia of Religion. Second Edition. Ed. Lindsay Jones. New York: Macmillan. http://www.hf.uio.no/ikos/english/people/aca/hannah/
- Havnevik, Hanna (1999) The Life of Jetsun Lochen Rinpoche (1865-1951) as Told in Her Autobiography. Acta Humaniora, Faculty of Arts, University of Oslo. Dissertation for the degree Dr. philos. 1999.
- Havnevik, Hanna (1998) “On Pilgrimage for Forty Years in the Himalayas. The Female Lama Jetsun Lochen Rinpoche’s (1865-1951) Quest for Sacred Sites.” In Pilgrimage in Tibet. Ed. Alex McKay. Richmond: Curzon Press. (pp. 85-107)