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Kagyu

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The Kagyu (Tibetan: བཀའ་བརྒྱུད་; Wylie: Bka'-brgyud) school, also known as the "Oral Lineage" and "the Spotless Practice Lineage" school, is one of four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism, the other three being Nyingma (Rnying-ma), Sakya (Sa-skya), and Gelug (Dge-lugs).

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[edit] Origins

The Kagyu school traces its origins to the teachings of the Indian mystics Tilopa (988-1089) and Naropa (1016-1100), whose lineage was transmitted in Tibet by the great translator Marpa (1012-1097). He took over the mahamudra ("great seal") transmission lineage from Naropa. Moreover Marpa studied with the Indian Masters Maitripa and Kukuripa. On his third journey to India he met Atiśa (982-1054) and studied the teachings of the Kadampa masters (both Kagyu and Gelug schools trace their roots to the earlier Kadampa school). Marpa spent 17 years in India and is known as one of the great translators of the second translation period. Marpa's principal disciple was Milarepa (Mi-la-ras-pa) (1052-1135), arguably one of Tibet's great religious poets and meditators. Among Milarepa's many students were Gampopa (Sgam-po-pa) (1079-1153) - a great scholar who can be recognized as the real founder of Kagyu as a distinct school of Tibetan Buddhism - and Rechung Dorje Drakpa, also known as Rechungpa. Following Gampopa's teachings, there evolved the so-called "Four Major" schools, and from Gampopa's disciple Phagmogrupa the "Eight Minor" lineages of the Kagyu School.

[edit] Four Major Schools

[edit] Eight Sub-Schools of Pagdru Kagyu

The organization into four major schools and eight minor schools, while traditional, is not always helpful in understanding the history or influence of the schools. For instance, the Shangpa Kagyu predates Gompopa and thus is outside the framework. Another school is the Rechung Kagyud, founded by Gampopa's peer, Rechung Dorje Drakpa.

The only Kagyu schools with any significant following today are the Karma, Drukpa, Drikung, and Taklung.

[edit] Teachings

The central teaching of Kagyu is the doctrine of Mahamudra, "the Great Seal", as elucidated by Gampopa in his various works. This doctrine focuses on four principal stages of meditative practice (the Four Yogas of Mahamudra), namely:

  1. The development of single-pointedness of mind,
  2. The transcendence of all conceptual elaboration,
  3. The cultivation of the perspective that all phenomena are of a "single taste",
  4. The fruition of the path, which is beyond any contrived acts of meditation.

It is through these four stages of development that the practitioner is said to attain the perfect realization of Mahamudra. Important practices in all Kagyu schools are the tantric practices of Chakrasamvara and Vajravarahi.

[edit] External links

Sites associated with Urgyen Trinley Dorje

Sites associated with Trinley Thaye Dorje

es:Kagyu fr:Kagyu it:Kagyu pl:Kagyu pt:Kagyu ru:Кагью fi:Kagyu zh:噶举派

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