Career
Born in Eastern Tibet in Kham, in 1920, he was recognized by Khakyab Dorje, 15th Karmapa Lama as both the reincarnation of the Chowang Tulku and Nubchen Sangye Yeshe, one of the twenty-five principal students of Padmasambhava. Urgyen Rinpoche spent thirty three years at Nagi Gompa Hermitage where he spent two decades in retreat, and eventually established six monasteries and retreat centers in Nepal. This included a monastery close to the Great Jarung Khashor Stupa in Boudhanath (Ka-Nying Shedrub Ling monastery).
Another is the Tergar Osel Ling Monastery in Kathmandu, Nepal. Urgyen Rinpoche died on the morning of February 13, 1996. Tulku Urgyen was the author of the 2-volume series titled 'As It Is', which deals with the subject of emptiness.
His main transmissions were the Chokling Tersar and the pointing-out instruction. Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche's special quality was to begin with the view rather than end with it. To train in devotion, compassion, and renunciation, perfecting the accumulations, and removing obscurations, all within the framework of the view.
The practitioner was encouraged to see all these aspects of practice as the very expressions of the view itself. That was Tulku Urgyen's unique style. "The genius of Tulku Urgyen was that he could point out the nature of mind with precision and matter-of-factness of teaching a person how to thread a needle and could get an ordinary meditator like me to recognize that consciousness is intrinsically free of self.
I came to Tulku Urgyen yearning for the experience of self-transcendence, and in a few minutes he showed me I had no self to transcend. After a few minutes, Tulku Urgyen simply handed me the ability to cut through the illusion of the self directly, even in ordinary states of consciousness. This instruction was, without question, the most important thing I have ever been explicitly taught by another human being.
It has given me a way to escape the usual tides of psychological suffering - fear, anger, shame - in an instant.".