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Lhundub Sopa

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Template:Linkless Geshe Lhundub Sopa was born in 1923 in Tsang, western Tibet. He became a novice monk and entered Gaden Chokor Monastery in 1932. In 1941, he joined Sera Monastery in Lhasa. He was early considered a remarkable scholar, and even before completing his own geshe degree examinations, he was chosen as one of the Dalai Lama's debate examiners during the annual Prayer Festival in 1959.

Fleeing for the 1959 Chinese occupation of Tibet, Geshe Sopa sought political asylum in India. In 1962, he was awarded the degree of Lharampa Geshe. At the request of His Holiness the Dalai Lama , he moved to the USA with three other monks that same year to learn English and to study American culture.

In 1967, Geshe Sopa was invited by Professor Richard Robinson to join the faculty of the pioneer Buddhist Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. In 1985, he became Emeritus Professor in the Department of South Asian Studies. He taught Modern and Literary Tibetan as well as courses in Tibetan Literature, the History of Buddhist Thought, Buddhist Epistemology, Buddhist Logic, and Buddhist doctrinal systems.. During that time, Geshe Sopa trained many of the first generation of respected Buddhist scholars and translators in the USA, including Jeffrey Hopkins, José Cabezón and John Makransky. Geshe Sopa has retired since from his professorship.

To meet the request of students for Buddhist teachings, Geshe Sopa founded the Deer Park Buddhist Center in Wisconsin in 1979.

Geshe Sopa is a trustee on the International Committee for Peace Council.

Bibliography

  • Cutting through appearances: Practice and Theory of Tibetan Buddhism, co-authored with Jeffrey Hopkins
  • Wheel of Time: the Kalachakra in Context, co-authored with Roger Jackson and John Newman
  • Peacock in the poison grove: Two Buddhists Texts for Training the Mind
  • Steps on the path to enlightenment: A Commentary on the Lamrim Chenmo, Volume 1: The Foundation Practices
  • Teachings from tibet: Guidance from Great Lamas, co-authored