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 The History of Sakya begins with a race of celestial beings having  descended from the Clear Light heavens in the Realm of Form to take up  residence in the snow mountains of Tibet for the benefit of living  beings. This was ten generations before the arrival of Guru  Padmasambhava. At this time they were known as Lha Rig. After eight  generations, due to a dispute with a Yaksha leader, the Lha Rig also  became known as the Khon which means 'dispute' or 'strife.' In 750 A.D.  the Khon family became students of Guru Rinpoche Padmasambhava  receiving especially the Vajrakila empowerment. A Khon son received  novice monk ordination from Shantirakshita at Samye, becoming one of  the first seven monk translators in all of Tibet. For the next thirteen  generations (750-1073), the Khon family was a central pillar of the  Nyingmapa School in Tsang Province. In the eleventh century, due to the obscurations of beings, Dharma  practice became very lax in Tsang. It was decided by the head of the  family, Sherab Tsultrim, that it was time to seek out the new Tantras  from India. Guru Padmasambhava wrote; "an emanation of the Indian  Virupa - Drogmi Lotsawa will appear." The younger brother, Konchog  Gyalpo, went to study with Drogmi Lotsawa (992-1074). At an auspicious  location, below a white patch of earth (Tib.: sa skya), prophesied by  Guru Padmasambhava and Lord Atisha, Khon Konchog Gyalpo built the first  temple named the Gorum Zimchi Karpo in 1073. This marks the beginning  of the name "Sakya." The holy family, the hereditary leaders of this  precious lineage, are known by these three names, Lha Rig, Khon and  Sakya." Sachen Kunga Nyingpo (1092-1158), the son of Khon Konchog Gyalpo,  was a person of extraordinary skill and spiritual attainment, holding  all the lineages of Sutra and Tantra. His main teachers were first his  father from whom he received mainly the Vajrakila and Samputa Systems  of practice. From Bari Lotsawa he recieved namely Chakrasamvara,  Guhyasamaja, Vajrabhairava and others; from Shangton Chobar, the entire  Lamdre system over a period of four years along with the systems of  Mahamaya and Samayogadakinijala. From Mal Lotsawa Lodro Drag he  recieved the Chakrasamvara, Bhairava, the teachings of mahasiddha  Naropa namely the Vajrayogini, and of significant importance the  lineages of Panjarnata Mahakala. From Lama Nam Kaupa he received all  the instructions, outer, inner and secret of the Four-faced Protector  Chaturmukha. These were only the main teachers of Sachen Kunga Nyingpo.
  At the age of twelve while in a six month Manjushri retreat he  had a vision of Manjushri accompanied by two bodhisattvas who spoke to  him with the lines of the Separation From The Four Attachments;
 "With attachment to this life - there is no Dharma student; Attachment to the Three Realms - no renunciation;
 Attachment to self-purpose - no Enlightenment Thought;
 If grasping arises - there is no view."
  Sachen  Kunga Nyingpo received the Lamdre teaching first from Shangton Chobar  and secondly directly from Virupa in a series of visions that lasted a  month. This is known as the 'recent' or 'close' Lamdre lineage. Sachen  had four sons - Kunga Bar, Sonam Tsemo, Jetsun Dragpa Gyaltsen and  Palchen Rinpoche. The first died while studying at Nalanda in India.  The second son Sonam Tsemo (1142-82) became a learned scholar at the  early age of sixteen. At the age of forty-one he ascended bodily to  Khechara, the divine realm of Vajrayogini. He had visions of many  meditational deities and also produced many realised disciples. Jetsun  Dragpa Gyaltsen (1147-1216) received lay celibacy vows and showed  strong signs of spiritual maturity in his youth. At the age of eleven  he gave his first Hevajra teaching.
  The  main student of Jetsun Dragpa Gyaltsen was his nephew, son of Palchen  of Opoche the famous Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen (1182-1251). Studying  Buddhist and non-Buddhist philosophy, tantra, logic, Sanskrit, poetry,  astrology and art with countless Indian, Nepalese, Kashmiri and Tibetan  masters, he achieved mastery over all these subjects. When twenty-seven  years old, after meeting with the Kashmiri Pandita Shakya Shribhadra,  he became a fully ordained monk and maintained his vows without the  least infraction. His works such as the Treasury of Logic on Valid  Cognition (Tsad-ma rigs-gter) and the Discrimination of the Three Vows  (sDom-gsum rab-dbye) are famous to this day. In all he wrote 114  religious treatises. The Treasury of Logic on Valid Cognition (Tsad-ma  rigs-gter) was the only text of Tibetan origin ever to have been  translated into the Sanskrit language. The translation was rendered by  his Indian students at Nalanda University in Magadha, and was received  with much acclaim. "At the time of his mahaparinirvana, the earth shook  six times and birds throughout the kingdom cried in lament. Wondrous  signs were seen by the assembly of disciples and kings when the pyre  was lit, and all who were present experienced blissful peace. Having  attained perfect enlightenment by the grace of Manjunatha, he is known  to the world as the Buddha Vimalashri."
 In 1244, Godan Khan, grandson of Chingis Khan, intrigued by Sakya  Pandita's reputation, invited him to Mongolia to give  Buddhist  teachings. Later, in 1253, after both Sakya Pandita and Godan Khan had  passed away, the emperor, Sechen Kublai Khan invited Drogon Chogyal  Pagpa. nephew of Sakya Pandita to his court. Pagpa invented a new  script for the purpose of writing the Mongolian language. Kublai Khan  was so impressed by Pagpa's performance that he declared Buddhism the  state religion of Mongolia and presented him the rulership of the three  provinces of Tibet. Thus, Pagpa was the first person in Tibetan history  to gain religious and secular authority over the entire country. It was  at this time that the great temple Lhakang Chenmo was constructed at  Sakya. To this day it still stands and houses the greatest religious  library in Tibet, statues and religious objects of antiquity. Pagpa was  succeeded by his brother Chagna and altogether the Sakyapas ruled Tibet  for more than a hundred years.  Eventually, Tishri Kunglo (1299-1327), eldest of the fifteen grandsons  of Sakya Pandita's brother, founded four dynastic Palaces (Podrang):  Zhithog, Rinchen Gang, Lhakhang and Ducho of which only the last  survives. In the eighteenth century at the time of Sakya Trizin Wangdu  Nyingpo, the second Padmasambhava of this age, the Ducho Palace split  into two - the Drolma Podrang and Phuntsok Podrang. The present heads  of these two palaces are Khyabgon Holiness Sakya Trizin Ngawang Kunga  (b. 1945) of the Drolma Palace, the current head of the Sakya  tradition, the 4lst holder of the Sakya Throne and living in Dehra Dun,  India. He has two sons, Ratna Vajra and Gyana Vajra. He also has a  sister, Jetsunma Chimey Luding, that teaches extensively throughout the  world. Gongma Dagchen Rinpoche (b. 1929) of the Phuntsok Palace founded  Sakya Thegchen Choling in Seattle, Wash. U.S.A. He had one brother,  Gongma Thinley Rinpoche, a monk who past away recently. Dagchen  Rinpoche also has five sons. The second son, Ananda Vajra Rinpoche, an  accomplished lawyer, has assisted the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan refuge  governmnet with legal and constitutional matters. Succession to the  position of Sakya Trizin, head of the Sakya tradition, has been  hereditary since the time of Khon Konchok Gyalpo and recently -  alternates between the two palaces. 
 Amongst the principal holders of the Sakya tradition, Sachen Kunga  Nyingpo, Sonam Tsemo, Dragpa Gyaltsen, Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen and  Drogon Chogyal Pagpa are known as the Five Superiors of the Sakya  tradition, the Jetsun Gongma Nga. The first three are known as the  'Three White Ones' and the last two as the 'Two Red Ones.' After these  there were the Six Ornaments of Tibet: Yagton Sanggye Pal and Rongton  Mawe Sengge, who were famous for their knowledge of sutra teachings;  Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo and Dzongpa Kunga Namgyal - learned in the  tantras; Gorampa Sonam Sengge and Shakya Chogden - learned in both  sutras and tantras. These are the most important masters of the Sakya  tradition. Amongst them, Gorampa Sonam Sengge instituted the formal  study of logic. Like other traditions of Tibetan Buddhism, a number of branch lineages  emerged. The lineages which strictly hold to the teachings of Sakya  Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen are Sakya, Ngor and Tsar. Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo  (1382-1457) and successive masters such as Konchok Lhundrup, Thartse  Namkha Chime Palzang and Drubkhang Palden Dhondup founded the Ngor  lineage. Tsarchen Losal Gyatso (1502-56), followed by Jamyang Khyentse  Wangchuk and Mangto Ludrup Gyatso founded the Tsar lineage. Three other  traditions rooted in the Sakya lineage are the Bulug/Shalu founded by  Buton Rinchen Drub, the Jonang founded by Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen and  followed by Jonang Taranata and the Bodong founded by Bodong Panchen  Chogle Namgyal. The Dzongpa of Dzongpa Kunga Namgyal has also been  treated as a separate lineage. "But among all these [Sakya] traditions,  there are only a few minor differences which appear in their  explanations and theories of Sutra and Tantra," - Dzongsar Jamyang  Khyentse Chokyi Lodro. Concerning the view, in Tibet, three  interpretations of Madyamika have arisen; Nihilistic Madyamika,  Eternalistic Madyamika (shan tong) and Middle Way Madyamika. The  Sakyapa follow the Middle Way Madyamika as taught by Sakya Pandita and  ellucidated by Gorampa Sonam Sengge and others.  Within Sakya, of the hundreds of Indian Buddhist teachings assimilated  into the religious life of Tibet through the efforts of the Five  Founding Teachers the most famous were the Hevajra transmission  originating with Virupa, the Vajrakila of Padmasambhava, the  Vajrayogini of Naropa, the Mahakala of Vararuchi and the Guhyasamaja of  Nagarjuna. These five Indian Mahasiddhas are considered the most  renowned in Sakya. Aside from these preeminent lineages there is the  group of Four Tantras; Hevajra, Chakrasamvara, Guhyasamaja and  Vajrabhairava. Another important set is the Thirteen Golden Dharmas  comprised of the Three Red Ones, the Three Great Red Ones, the Three  Lesser Red Ones, Black Manjushri, Avalokiteshvara Simhanada, Sabala  Garuda and Red Jambhala. There are several different versions of  enumerating the thirteen, however the three sets of Three Red Ones have  remained consistent. These are only the main Anuttarayoga tantric  practices of Sakya, there are hundreds of other lineages of teachings  such as Hayagriva, Kalachakra, Mahamaya, Manjushri, Vajrapani, Tara and  the like. 
 In the Sakya monastic colleges eighteen major texts are thoroughly  studied. Currently there are only a few colleges, the main one in  Rajpur India and a second at Boudhanath in Kathmandu Nepal. A few still  remain open in Tibet such as Dzongsar Khamje Ling. The eighteen texts  teach the Perfection of Wisdom, Monastic Discipline (vinaya), Madyamaka  View, Phenomenology, Logic and Epistemology. Commentaries unique to the  tradition are the Discrimination of the Three Vows and the Treasury of  Logic on Valid Cognition by Sakya Pandita. Also, the works of Gorampa  Sonam Sengge are especially important, amongst others. On graduation, a  monk is granted the degree of Kazhipa, Kachupa and Rabjampa on the  basis of merit. The major Sakya monasteries in Central Tibet are Lhakhang Chenmo  founded by Khon Konchog Gyalpo (the main Sakya  monastery), Ngor Ewam  Choden founded by Ewam Kunga Zangpo (the main Ngorpa monastery), Dar  Drangmoche in Tsang founded by Tsarchen Losal Gyatso (the main Tsarpa  monastery), Nalanda in Phenpo built by Rongton Sheja Kunrig and Tsedong  Sisum Namgyal established by Namkha Tashi Gyaltsen. In Kham provence,  Dhondup Ling was founded by Dagchen Sherab Gyaltsen, Lhundrup Teng of  Dege founded by Tangtong Gyalpo, as well as Dzongsar monastery the home  of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and Chokyi Lodro; and Deur Chode built by  Chodak Sangpo in Amdo. In all, there were several thousand Sakya  Monasteries spreading from China and Mongolia to Western Tibet,  Kashmir, Nepal and India. Presently, Tsechen Tenpai Gatsal in Rajpur, U.P. and Sa Magon in  Puruwalla, H.P. are the two main Sakya Monasteries. Ngor Ewam Choden in  Maduwalla, Dehradun is the main Ngorpa monastery. Tashi Rabten Ling at  Lumbini, along with two other monasteries in Kathmandu, Nepal represent  the Tsarpa lineage. At present, Sakya Trizin Ngawang Kunga is the head  of the Sakya School and second in Tibetan religious protocol only to  H.H. the Dalai Lama. Luding Khen Rinpoche is the Head of the Ngor  School and Chogye Trichen Rinpoche is head of the Tsar School. Text  Jeff Watt -Copyright © 1996 - 2008 
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