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THE SNOW LION NEWSLETTER
Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archives
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Nick Ribush was one of the first Westerners to be ordained a monk in
the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. A founder of Wisdom Publications, Ribush
is today the director of the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive, a collection of
thousands of teachings by Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche, who pioneered
the teaching of Tibetan Buddhism in the West. Journalist Lawrence Pintak
spoke with Ribush about his work and an ambitious new initiative launched
by the Archive to dramatically expand access to the teachings of these
important lamas.
Let's start with the basics, what is the
Archive?
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Since Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche started teaching
Westerners in the early 1970s, we've been recording their teachings, initially
by hand and then in the mid-70s we got electricity at Kopan Monastery [in Nepal]
and started taping. So we have more than 30 years of teachings, more than 10,000
hours of audio, and somewhere around 80,000-100,000 pages of transcripts that
have not been edited. A lot of effort has gone into collecting and transcribing
these teachings, but the bottleneck has been the lack of funds to support
qualified editors to prepare them for publication.
You have launched a new initiative to dramatically expand the work of the
Archive. Can you tell us about it? The goal is to raise $600,000 in order to
hire five editors for five years to really make a huge dent in our collection of
teachings, particularly Lama Zopa's lam-rim teachings. What we are trying to do
is get 600 people to join as life members of the Archive in return for a
donation of $1,000 each. The details and benefits of membership are posted on
our website, www.lamayeshe.com.
Why is it so important to make these teachings
available?
More than 50 percent of our tapes are Lama Zopa's lam-rim teachings, which
are fundamental to our tradition, to our organization (the FPMT) and to all
schools of Tibetan Buddhism. From the very beginning, the lamas' main form of
teaching was the one-month Kopan Monastery lam-rim meditation course, which
continues to this day. So these teachings play an important role in the
ongoing study of the lam-rim?
I see coming out of Lama Zopa's teachings the ultimate modern lam-rim
commentary. There are hundreds of lam-rim commentaries in all the Tibetan
traditions, some of which have been translated into English. But very few have
actually been taught and published in English.
What kind of response have you had so far to the
initiative?
Very good. We've had about 50 people come forward and join as life members
already. But I'm not waiting for the $600,000 to start the work. There are now
four people employed part-time working on Rinpoche's lam-rim teachings, starting
with the very first Kopan course recorded, going through each course and editing
each transcript, most of which run 400 to 500 pages, making them consistent and
editing them into one coherent document, which we are then putting onto the Lama
Yeshe Web site in a special members' area.
But at the same time, the editors are electronically chopping up the
transcripts and putting the relevant teachings into topic baskets, such as "the
perfect human rebirth," "impermanence and death," "refuge," "karma" and so on,
the main headings of the lam-rim. Then when we've been through all the
transcripts of teachings in that way, we're going to have to tackle each topic
basket and make one coherent commentary on that particular subject that includes
everything Rinpoche has said about it. To do this, we'll be following the
headings, sub-headings and sub-sub-headings of the main lam-rim text that the
Gelug teachers tend to follow these days, Pabongka Rinpoche's Liberation in the
Palm of Your Hand. So when we publish these commentaries, they will follow the
outline of that text. Of course, as well as lam-rim, there are many other
teachings, tantric commentaries and other texts given by the lamas, and we'll
also have people working on those.
Despite the lack of funds, the Archive has always
given away Dharma books. How did that come about?
Buddhists have created merit for centuries if not millennia by sponsoring the
publication of books that were given away free. And often this was done in the
memory of deceased relatives and loved ones. So I thought this would also be
good practice to try to introduce into the West. So we went out with this first
free book, by Lama Yeshe, sent it to a lot of people and said we have many more
teachings we would also like to distribute free if you would like to
contribute.
We had published four free booklets by the Dalai Lama at Wisdom and they were
well received, but the response to the Lama Yeshe book was just overwhelming;
the spontaneous, unsolicited positive reaction of people who'd received it just
blew me away. And people sent money, so that enabled us to publish another
couple of free books, Advice for Monks and Nuns and Virtue and Reality.
So over the years we've published about 15 free books including one by the
Dalai Lama, Illuminating the Path to Enlightenment, and some of these have been
reprinted many times. In all, we've printed and distributed more than 200,000
free books so far.
And you're on the Web.
Yes, we get some 3,000 visitors a week. Most of the teachings there are
available to everybody, but we have started a members' area where more detailed
specialized teachings will be available to members only. Which is part of the
new fundraising initiative.
Yes. If it works, it will make an enormous difference to the amount of
material we can make available for the benefit of all sentient beings. At the
moment we've barely scratched the surface. Since the teachings can't be made
available until they've been edited, getting the money will allow us to hire the
editors who are there waiting in the wings.
For more information, see www.lamayeshe.com.
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