The Barom Kagyu Lineage.
There are four major schools within the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. Nyingma is the oldest of the four lineages. The others – Sakya, Kagyu and Geluk – emerged after the 11th century during what is called “the latter propagation” of Buddhism in Tibet.
Barom Kagyu is one of many sub-lineages within the Kagyu lineage. Founders of these schools or their teachers have had Indian mahasiddhas or panditas as their root gurus.
Tillipa (988 – 1069), who is more commonly known as “Tilopa”, is regarded as the founder of the Kagyupa lineage in India, because he was the first human teacher from whom Kagyu teachings can be traced. He received many instructions directly from Vajradhara and other deities through pure meditative visions. Prior to his becoming a mahasiddha, he used to make his living by crushing sesame seeds or other odd jobs as his name suggests.
Tilopa was succeeded by pandita Naropa. Naropa (1016 – 1100) became the most important Indian mahasiddha from whom Marpa (1012 – 1096) received the transmission of the Six Yogas and Mahamudra. Tilopa had already prophesied the importance of Marpa long before Naropa met Marpa. Being the first Tibetan teacher of the Kagyu lineage, Marpa first took Sanskrit lessons from Drogmi Lotsawa (992 – 1073/4) in Mugu-lung in Mangkhar region for several years but he left saying Drogmi’s fees were too expensive. However it was Drogmi’s influence which resolved Marpa to go to India. Marpa travelled in India three times and received the complete teachings of Mahamudra from Naropa and many others. Marpa, Drogmi and Ngok played a very important role in reviving the teachings of the Buddha in Tibet.
At the early stage of the formation of the Kagyupa lineage, it became known as “Marpa Kagyu” a name coined from Marpa’s own name. Another early Kagyu school was founded by Khyunpo Naljor Tshultrim Gompa (1002 – 1096) of Shang in Tsang region, who was a disciple of both Naropa and his sister, Niguma. This school was named “Shangpa Kagyu” as its founder came from Shang in Tsang province in central Tibet. It is worthwhile to note that these were the first two schools established in the Kagyupa lineage.
Marpa’s principal disciple was Milarepa (1052 – 1135). He is renowned as the great yogi of Tibet, and his incomparable perseverance in the practices he received from his teacher was, and still is a source of great inspiration especially for those fortunate enough to read his spontaneous songs. These are known as the “Hundred Thousand Songs of Milarepa” (Mila Gur-boom).
A Song About The Few
By Barom Dharma Wangchug
There are few people who act with devotion and respect,
For the guru who is inseparable from the three kayas.
There are few people who pay heed,
To the advice of the kind guru.
There are few people who keep,
The threefold samaya vows.
There are few people who put into practice,
The instructions that are the heart-essence of the (guru’s) mind.
There are few people who make efforts,
In their spontaneously present inner heat.
There are few people who gain mastery,
Over the “meditative concentration of the sky treasure.
There are few people who seriously engage,
In subtle and true actions and their results.
There are few people who cast away everything,
And practice for sentient beings.
There are few people who cultivate a mind of loving care,
For their late mothers, the sentient beings in the six migrations.
There are few people who realise,
That cyclic existence has the nature of suffering.
There are few people who have no bias,
With regard to the view, unchanging emptiness.
There are few people whose mind is nonreferential,
In meditation, unbound luminosity.
There are few people who have no pretense,
With regard to conduct, the equality of even taste.
There are few people who are without clinging,
To their experiences, this diversity arising from conditions.
There are few people who have neither hope nor fear,
With regard to the spontaneously present fruition.
There are few people who mentally disengage,
When it comes to the ultimate beyond mind.
There are few people who have no dualistic clinging,
To the nonduality of appearances and the mind free from reference points.
There are few people who are not distracted,
From uncontrived ordinary mind.
There are few people who are not attached,
To single-flavoured, undefiled bliss-emptiness.
There are few people who are not tainted,
With regard to naked awareness that is not a thing.
There are few people who unite,
The two streams of means and prajna.
There are few people who become weary,
Of this plethora of activities that can never be finished.
There are few people who understand,
That the seeming reflections of their latent tendencies are illusions.
There are few people who realise,
Unborn mind itself as just that.
There are few people who join meditative-equipoise and life in-between,
Within the unimpeded essence.
There are few people in whom these various random thoughts,
Are liberated in their own place.
There are few people in whom this thought-free, unborn nature,
Dawns as the dharmakaya.
There are few people for whom this illusory body, the mandala of the Victors,
Shines as sambhogakaya.
There are few people who realise,
This great emptiness-compassion as the nirmanakaya