'Karma Kagyu' () is the largest transmission lineage within the
Kagyu school, which in turn is one of the four major schools of
Tibetan Buddhism. The spiritual head of the Karma Kagyu is the Gyalwa
Karmapa. With more than 600 groups and centres the Karma Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism is by far the largest and fastest growing Buddhist School in the West.
The Karma Kagyu are sometimes called the 'Black Hat' in reference to the
Black Crown worn by the Karmapa.
Origins
The Karma Kagyu was founded by the first Karmapa, Je
Dusum Khyenpa. It is headed by the ''
Gyalwa Karmapa'', a
reincarnate lama. Followers believe that the Karmapa's appearance as the first historical
tulku (consciously reincarnate teacher) was predicted by the
Buddha in the ''
Samadhiraja Sutra'' (lit: ''Discourse on the Kings of Meditative Concentration'').
Teachings
The Karma Kagyu school belongs to the
Vajrayana branch of
Mahayana Buddhism. It is a
Triyana (all three turnings of the
Wheel of the Dharma) school (e.g.,
monks and
nuns keep the
vows of
Vinaya while
lay practitioners hold the
Upasaka vows) and a
Rime (non-sectarian) tradition.
The central teaching of the Karma Kagyu is the doctrine of
Mahamudra, also known as the "Great Seal". This doctrine focuses on four principal stages of
meditative practice (the
Four Yogas of Mahamudra), namely:
★ The development of single-pointedness of mind,
★ The transcendence of all conceptual elaboration,
★ The cultivation of the perspective that all phenomena are of a "single taste",
★ The fruition of the path, which is beyond any contrived acts of meditation.
It is through these four stages of development that the practitioner is said to attain the perfect
realization of Mahamudra.
Within the Karma Kagyu tradition, Mahamudra is practiced both independently and as the completion stage of Vajrayana practice. At the
Anuttarayogatantra level of practice, the principal
deities of the lineage are
Vajrayogini,
Chakrasamvara and
Kalachakra.
While one of the distinguishing characteristics of the Karma Kagyu is its emphasis on meditative practice, all forms and levels of Buddhist
history and
philosophy are also taught, most notably the
Shentong branch of
Madhyamaka philosophy.
Lamas
The supreme
Lama of the Karma Kagyu is the
Karmapa, who always presides as
lineage holder once he has reached his majority and received all the necessary training and
transmissions. From the death of one Karmapa until the next takes his seat as lineage holder, one (or more) of the previous Karmapa's principal
disciples holds the lineage. HH the 16th Gyalwa Karmapa left the lineage in the hands of four Eminent Lamas: HE the 14th
Shamar Rinpoche, HE the 12th
Tai Situ Rinpoche, HE the 3rd
Jamgön Kongtrül Rinpoche and HE the 12th
Goshir Gyaltsab Rinpoche (His Holiness also recognized HE the 2nd
Kalu Rinpoche as an Eminent Lama of the Karma Kagyu).
At the next level of precedence, all Kagyu Lamas who have been accorded by His Holiness the title
Rinpoche (Lit: precious one) are highly regarded as trustworthy teachers. Those who hold the
Khenpo degree have completed the equivalent of a
doctorate in Buddhist studies. (Many of the more notable Lamas of the lineage are listed in the article
Karmapa controversy under the heading "Split recognition of the present Karmapa.")
There are (both currently and historically) many female Kagyu Lamas. Probably the most well-known active female Kagyu Lama in the West is
Ani Pema Chödrön.
External links
★
Karma Kagyu Lineage: Official web site
★
The Karma Kagyu Institute
★
Karma Kagyu Tradition: Official web site
★
Diamond Way Buddhism Worldwide