A Tribute to Lama Thubten
Yeshe
by Father P. Bernard de Give
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This marvellous being who was all smiles, who simply
breathed goodness.
Father P. Bernard de Give
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So, he has left us, this marvellous being who was all smiles,
who simply breathed goodness. I believe that I express the
feeling of all those who knew him when I confess that I must
hold back tears when I think that never again will I see
that radiant face, filled both with a joy for life and awareness
of suffering that affects the inner soul of all human beings.
Others will tell of his past incarnations, the first stages
in his monastic life, his studies in Tibet and the responsibilities
that he took upon himself since exile. But please permit
this Christian monk to recall a few memories of one who was
for many both a master and a friend.
The first time we met was at La Sainte Baume in Provence,
where for ten days, from 23rd September to 3rd October 1978,
he gave his inspiration and energy to a Buddhist retreat
for around 200 people. He was accompanying Song Rinpoche
whose more traditional style of teaching seemed a little
distant. Of Lama Yeshe, however, one could only say that
he had his audience in his pocket. He triumphed with his
good satire of Western society. He was an incomparable stage
artist, one might almost say a clown of frequently comic
mimicry. And though he succeeded in laying bare the oddities
and foolish ways, the delusions of the masses dominated by
their passions, never did he hurt anyone. Rather, one felt
touched by his unbelievable compassion and utter confidence
in the inevitable victory of good. And when he gave himself
up to fits of laughter, everyone would follow him, as though
convinced that with this man at their side they were heading
towards liberation.
I saw him again the following year during a second retreat
at Viviers on the Rhone (l7th–3lst July 1979). Whilst Lama
Zopa Rinpoche explained to us with simplicity and conviction
the principal aspects of Mahayana philosophy, Lama Yeshe
was once again possessed of an undeniable spiritual radiance.
Since then, it has always been a joy and a great blessing
to meet him again. Whether on the poetic hill of Kopan beyond
Boudnath in Nepal, or at his favourite refuge, Tushita, in
the woods that rise above McLeod Ganj, not far from His Holiness
the Dalai Lama, but higher than the lively hubbub of the
Tibetan market. Thus he always placed himself close enough
to the crowd to be good for him, but loving solitude where
chosen disciples could follow him in initiations more secret
and more severe. He was so good natured, yet still he knew
how to keep to the demands of an arduous spiritual path.
He would not allow such advanced retreats to take place without
these conditions.
The fact that he made such an impression on the people he
met almost by chance would in itself be sufficient. But behind
those appearances of the benevolent father or sharp-witted
child, there was an organiser of first rank. This can be
judged simply by citing the large number of centres (more
than thirty) that he founded, in most of the Western countries,
for the ‘Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition’, from France
to the United States, in Holland or in England, Spain, Italy
and Australia. Wherever it was, he knew how to establish,
to organize and to preserve. His passing away will now be
mourned in all these many countries.
We know at what cost Lama Yeshe was able to persevere with
his inexhaustible apostleship around the world in those final
years. Considering the state of his heart, doctors would
have condemned him to rest with no hope of recovery. And
in addition to this, he suffered greatly from an ulcer in
his stomach. But being such an ardent bodhisattva, he continued
to give himself for welfare of all other beings.
And in addition to all this, may I, a Catholic monk, be
permitted to allude to one essential characteristic of his
being. He was a true ecumenist, knowing how to go beyond
the traditional confines that so often separate the great
religions. Need one recall what he did at Kopan for those
retreaters who had come to learn the Buddhist techniques
of meditation? One week before each Christmas, he delivered
a series of discourses, more profound than one can begin
to imagine, on the coming of Jesus to this world, the true
meaning and the ways of preparation.
And during the retreat at La Sainte Baume, not only did
he accompany a group of lamas to offer puja on top of the
hill, in the grotto of Marie-Madeleine, but on another morning,
he stole away with us to visit the church of Saint Maximin,
where he professed a true devotion to Mary, Mother of Jesus.
Everyone knows, however, how he remained the faithful propagator
of dharma and how he kept to his tradition. He would willingly
recall the days at Lawudo, on the side of Mount Everest,
where he educated his small monks so well.
Two years ago when he was finally able to undertake a pilgrimage
to Tibet, he returned to his original monastery, the monastic
university of Sera, where he had received his education in
the college of Sera-je. In its present state of delapidation,
the cell that he had formerly occupied no longer existed.
Nevertheless, Lama Thubten Yeshe sat himself down in full
lotus and remained there in meditation for many hours beneath
the open sky.
I don’t know if it is appropriate to offer condolences in
Buddhist circles. I think of his companion, so contemplative,
so discreet, Lama Zopa Rinpoche, who was his disciple and
who today must be feeling very lonely. |