The First Kagyu
Monlam in North America: Day Three: Sacred Day, Smoke
Alarms, and Holy Rabbit!
july 15, 2010, KTD, USA,
Report
from
Blog 2010 North American Kagyu Monlam,
photos taken by
Stephanie Colvey,
A warm day dawned at Monlam today with more smiles, more
chanting and definitely more people!
Today was the sacred "center" day for the 5-day event, the holy
day known on the Tibetan calendar as Chokhor Duchen - "The Great
Time (duchen) of the First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma (Chokhor)."
The day commemorates the first teaching given by Shakyamuni
Buddha after his enlightenment - the teaching on The Four Noble
Truths given to the Buddha's first five disciples at Deer Park
in Varanasi.
The opening days of the Monlam saw about 300 people in
attendance daily, but this morning, with the program featuring
the empowerment of Akshobya Buddha, nearly 700 people filled the
courtyard tent at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra.
Monastics surrounded the throne of the Very Ven. Thrangu
Rinpoche before the event, and the rest of the crowd was perched
in row after row of folding chairs. Four large monitors
broadcast the webstreaming feed so even those in the back rows
could get a close look at the empowerment.
During his opening remarks, Very Ven. Thrangu Rinpoche remarked
about the significance of the empowerment.
"We are extremely fortunate to have this Kagyu Monlam at KTD,"
Thrangu Rinpoche said. Following the directions of His Holiness
the 17th Gyalwang Karmapa, Rinpoche added, the Kagyu Monlam
program includes the traditional purification empowerment of
Akshobya.
Akshobya's blessing, Rinpoche said, helps remove afflictive
states and karmic obscurations, obstacles and problems we may
experience in our daily lives.
Obstacles and obscurations impede us in our lives, Rinpoche
said, and if we recite the mantra of Akshobya, it has the power
to purify our obstacles. If the mantra is recited for others, it
will help them with the sufferings of illness and death.
Akshobya's blessing can even extend to our beloved pets,
Rinpoche said. "If we recite the mantras for them we can help at
death to protect them from falling into the lower realms."
At the conclusion of the empowerment, Rinpoche sat patiently at
the front of the stage in a chair, blessing each person with the
vase of water consecrated with the mandala of Akshobya.
One of the more interesting participants waiting in the line was
a large white rabbit, carried by a loving friend in a small
cardboard box. As the woman brought her rabbit to Rinpoche for
blessing, he smiled, touched the vase right between the rabbit's
ears, and trickled blessed saffron water on its head!
Following this, a group of children surprised Rinpoche with a
performance of songs of Milarepa in English, translated by Jim
Scott under the direction of Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso.
Ironically, as the empowerment came to a close, garbage trucks
rumbled onto the property near the empowerment tent. "It was
actually inspiring," said one participant. "It was as though the
garbageman was collecting our kleshas and obscurations and
taking them away!"
During the afternoon session, the Rinpoches and sangha performed
the blessing ritual of Akshobya for the living and the dead.
Large sheets of paper - white for the deceased, and pink for the
living - decorated the sides of the Shrine Room before the puja,
which lasted most of the afternoon.
After the prayers began, monks and nuns took the name sheets off
the walls and placed them in neat stacks on the shrine. Later in
the sadhana, the stacks of names - and the beings they
represented - were blessed by Thrangu Rinpoche.
The sadhana included torma offerings and a symbolic empowerment
for the deceased, plus a long-life puja for the living. At the
conclusion, both sets of names were burned in a purifying fire
outside the KTD Shrine Building.
There was a moment on unexpected excitement early on in the puja,
as the volunteer fire-makers performed their work were a little
too well, and created enough purifying smoke to set off the
monastery smoke alarms, even though the fire was outside!
Quick work by Shrinekeeper Michael Heaton and Technician Dan
Curtis silenced the alarms, and the chanters never missed a
beat.
As the pujas ended for the day, participants wended their way
back to their hotels, filled with happy memories of a very holy
day.










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