- This event has passed.
Tulku Migmar Tsering: The 37 Bodhisattva Practices
May 15, 2022 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am UTC+0
Samye Institute is pleased to announce that Tulku Migmar Tsering will begin a new teaching series dedicated to Gyalse Tokme Zangpo’s 37 Bodhisattva Practices. This teaching series has been generously sponsored by the Vietnamese Sangha. This beautiful text encapsulates the bodhisattva ideal in a series of 37 pith aphorisms relating to all elements of the Mahayana view, meditation, and conduct. This teaching series is scheduled to take place over ten sessions, where Tulku-la will gently guide us through the text, explaining the deep and subtle meanings of this profound work.
You can access the root text of the 37 Bodhisattva Practices at Lotsawa House here. This text does not require transmission or empowerment to read and study. Students can catch up on any teachings they missed through recordings posted on Samye Institute.
Tulku-la will be teaching in Tibetan, with live translation into English, Vietnamese, Thai, and Indonesian. Recordings of Tulku-la’s teachings will be made available on YouTube and on the Samye Institute website after each session.
Please register for this teaching here.
If you would like to make an offering to support these teachings, please click here.
Related Events
Become a Samye Institute Patron
Create an auspicious connection and join us in our activities of spreading the Dharma and supporting the practice of Dharma students.
- Access to all courses
- Access to our library of video & audio teachings
- Support from Phakchok Rinpoche & Senior Instructors
- Practice Resources
Related Events
About Samye Institute
Samye is a place where students from all corners of the globe explore how to work with their minds in order to lead meaningful lives. Drawing from authentic Buddhist wisdom traditions, our online platform offers live teachings, structured courses, interactive forums, and community for the digital Dharma sangha. Samye Institute aims to be to the digital world what Nalanda was to India and what Samye was to Tibet.