Karmapa means "the one who
carries out buddha-activity" or "the embodiment of all the
activities of the buddhas." In the Tibetan tradition, great enlightened
teachers are said to be able to consciously arrange to be reborn as a teacher
who can carry on the teachings of a predecessor in a prior life. Pursuant to
this tradition, the Karmapas have incarnated in this form of manifestation
body (Skt.nirmanakaya), for seventeen lifetimes, as of the present,
and all have played the most important role in preserving and propagating the
Buddhist teachings of Tibet.
In 1985 a male infant was born into a
nomad family in the Lhatok region of Eastern Tibet. In the months prior to
his birth, his mother had wonderful dreams during her pregnancy. On the day
of his birth, a cuckoo landed on the tent in which he was born, and a
mysterious conch-like sound was heard by many throughout the valley in which
the family of the infant lived.
In Tibet, such events are considered
auspicious portents of the birth of an enlightened teacher. The young nomad was called Apo Gaga.
While his early years seemed, to his family, full of blessing, Apo Gaga did
not talk of any connection to the Karmapas. However, in 1992, he asked his
family to move the location of their nomadic home to another valley, and told
them to expect a visit from traveling monks. Soon after setting up their home
in the new location, followers of the Sixteenth Karmapa came to that valley
pursuant to the secret instructions of the Sixteenth Karmapa, contained in
his letter of prediction. The birth and the other details of Apo Gaga's life
matched the predictions of the letter. Apo Gaga was discovered to be the
Seventeenth Karmapa, Ogyen Drodul Trinley Dorje.
In addition to his letter of
prediction, the Sixteenth Karmapa wrote many poems, or songs, predicting that
though he would leave his traditional main seat in Tsurphu, Tibet, he would
soon return to Tsurphu again, that his root teacher would be HE Situ
Rinpoche, and that he would study in India. After the death of the 16th Karmapa,
it became clear that these predictions applied to his successor. Furthermore,
the 19th Century master Chogyur Lingpa made a number of predictions about the
lives of the Karmapas, and for the 17th, Chogyur Lingpa's predictions matched
the details of His Holiness's birth. Since these predictions were to be
fulfilled in themselves without recognition by any other master, it is
traditionally said that the Karmapa is "self-recognized."
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