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Ven. Geshe Ngawang DakpaBuddhist Daily Practice (Preliminaries) (December 17, 2006)


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Buddhist Daily Practice; the Prelinaires
Ven. Geshe Ngawang Dakpa

Ven. Geshe Ngawang Dakpa presents the fundamentals of setting up a daily practice; from cleaning the room, making offerings to visualization meditation techniques and prayers. All with the motivation to benefit others!

This item is part of the collection: Tse Chen Ling Buddhist Lectures

Author: Ven. Geshe Ngawang Dakpa
Date: 2006-12-17
Source: Lectures and Events
Keywords: Buddhism; Tibetan Buddhism; Lamrim; Stages of the Path; Daily Practice; Prayers; Meditation

Creative Commons license: Public Domain


Notes

The lectures are given in Tibetan and translated into English. Please note that the translations have not been checked.

For further information, please visit www.tsechenling.org

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Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_128kb.m3u128kbps M3UStream
Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_64kb.m3u64Kbps M3UStream
Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_64kb_mp3.zip64Kbps MP3 ZIP60.7M
Audio Files128Kbps MP3Ogg Vorbis64Kbps MP3
Buddhist Daily Practice (Preliminaries)121.5M53.9M60.7M
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Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_files.xmlMetadata2.9K
Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_meta.xmlMetadata1.5K
Tse_Chen_Ling_Geshe_Dakpa_Preliminary_Prayers_20061217_reviews.xmlMetadata1.2K

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Downloaded 542 times Average Rating: 2 out of 5 stars

Reviewer: Mr M.C Webster - 2 out of 5 stars - October 29, 2007
Subject: A pity I'm not fluent in Tibetan

Its frustrating and a shame to have to listen to the Tibetan teaching then the translators attempt the very difficult task of Retaining the essential meaning of the lamas teaching(Especially with esoteric teachings which are difficult enough to put into ones own language).
Without any disrespect to the lama or the Tibetan language,It would be much easier and less time consuming if the translation were played as an unbroken whole.
I am sure If I were able to understand Tibetan then this teaching would rate an easy five stars.Although I would not want the Tibetan language (and culture) to be damaged any more than it has already, with all the monks learning English & Chinese.


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