His Holiness the Seventh Dalai Lama Kelsang Gyatso

His Holiness the Seventh Dalai Lama Kelsang Gyatso

In retrospect, the Tibetans believe that the Sixth Dala Lama Tsangyang Gyatso predicted his own rebirth at Lithang in Kham when he wrote this song:

White crane, lend me your wings,
I go no farther than Lithang,
And thence, return again.

Sure enough, the Seventh Dalai Lama was born in 1708 to Sonam Dargya and Lobsang Chotso in Lithang, two years after the disappearance of the Sixth. Thupten Jampaling Monastery, which was founded in Lithang by the Third Dalai Lama, was astonished by the wonders of the child. Also the state oracles of Lithang had predicted that the newborn child would be the reincarnation of the late Dalai Lama. However due to the turbulent political situation, they could not escort the new Dalai Lama to Lhasa, and he was taken to Kumbum monastery, where he was ordained by Ngawang Lobsang Tenpai Gyaltsen.

In 1720, he was enthroned in the Potala Palace and he took the novice vows of monk-hood from Panchen Lobsang Yeshi, who gave him the name Kelsang Gyatso. In 1726, during the auspicious month of Saka Dawa, he took the Gelong vows (fully ordination) from Panchen Rinpoche. He sought the tutor of Panchen Lobsang Yeshi, the Abbot of Gyumey and the Abbot of Shalu, Ngawang Yonten from whom he studied the entire major Buddhist philosophical treatises became a master in both sutra and tantra.

In 1751, at the age of forty-three, he constituted the “Kashag” or council of ministers to administer the Tibetan government and the abolished the post of Desi, as it placed too much power in one man’s hand and the Dalai Lama became the spiritual and political leader of Tibet. At the age of forty-five, he founded the Tse-School in the Potala Palace and built the new palace of Norling Kalsang Phodrang at Norbu Linka, the summer palace of Dalai Lama. The Seventh Dalai Lama was a great scholar and wrote many books, especially on the tantra. He was also a great poet who, unlike Tsanyang Gyatso, dwelt on spiritual themes. His simple and unblemished life won him the hearts of all-Tibetan and he died in 1757.

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