The Tibet HimalayaInitiative is putting CU 鶹ӰԺ on experts’ map
鶹ӰԺ, Colorado, became a focal point for Tibetan Buddhism and culture in 1974, when Rinpoche founded the school now known as Naropa University.
And for more than a decade, the 鶹ӰԺ has had more tenured and tenure-track faculty who specialize in the study of contemporary Tibet than any other university in North America. No wonder that the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of the world’s Tibetan Buddhists, spoke on campus during a brief U.S. tour in June 2016.
CU 鶹ӰԺ has been hosting Tibet-focused events, exhibits and conferences since 2006, and in 2015, three faculty members — Assistant Professor of Religious Studies Holly Gayley, Emily Yeh, Professor and Chair of the Department of Geography, and Associate Professor of Anthropology Carole McGranahan — decided to create the , with a small grant from the Office of the Chancellor.
“We realized we have quite a bit of expertise, and we already had a number of activities going on on campus,” Yeh says. “So we thought we should formalize it, to further highlight and develop our outreach efforts to the broader 鶹ӰԺ-Denver communities with their long-standing interest in Tibet, and to build ourselves as a center for research and outreach.”
Since its formation, the initiative has attracted associated CU 鶹ӰԺ faculty and graduate students, as well as visiting scholars with expertise in Tibet and the Himalayas.
Having brought Tibetan Buddhist teacher Ringu Tulku Rinpoche to speak at its September 2015 launch and sponsored Tibet Arts Week — which brought renowned Tibetan artists Gonkar Gyatso and Dorje Tsering Chenaktsang (Jangbu) to campus — on campus in April 2016, THI is poised to host four other major events over the next six months.
- On April 17, Jacob Dalton, Khyentse Professor of Tibetan Buddhism at the University of California, Berkeley, will speak on, The lecture will be held in the British Studies Room on fifth Floor of Norlin Library. A reception and exhibit on Tantric Ritual in Tibetan Buddhism will begin at 5 p.m., and the lecture will start at 5:30 p.m.
- The THI will co-sponsor the May 31-June 3 at the law school. Gayley serves on the steering committee and will lead a session at the conference, which features workshops and discussions for representatives from 78 Tibetan Buddhist communities, translation groups and universities.
- And Sept. 1-4, CU 鶹ӰԺ will host the , which is held every two years. Keynote speakers will be author Manjushree Thapa, whose works of fiction and non-fiction explore current events in Nepal and themes of war and peace, development and diaspora, and scholar and writer Lama Jabb, a research fellow at Oxford University, whose research focuses on modern Tibetan literature and its interface with oral traditions.
- As a pre-conference event, Charles Ramble of Oxford University and the Sorbonne will deliver the fifth annual Trungpa Lecture in Buddhist Studies, a collaboration between Naropa and CU 鶹ӰԺ. His lecture on Sacred Landscapes in the Himalaya will take place in the evening of Thursday, August 31st.
“When prominent people come to campus for these kinds of intensive and high-level events it brings a lot of attention to what CU 鶹ӰԺ offers in terms of Tibetan and Himalayan studies,” Gayley says.
Still in its infancy, the CU 鶹ӰԺ initiative has gratefully “piggybacked” on events held at Columbia University in New York, such as the visits of Khenpos Sodargye and Tsultrim Lodrö, prominent cleric-scholars from Larung Gar in eastern Tibet, who visited campus in 2014 and 2015.
“We don’t yet have the resources to bring people from overseas. But Columbia has money and has brought a lot of interesting people from Tibet, filmmakers, poets, authors, scholars, and artists,” Yeh says. “That’s given us an amazing opportunity to bring them here.”
Increasing repression within the People’s Republic of China has made it challenging for Tibetans to get passports and visas to visit the West, Yeh says, especially following a series of high-profile 2008 protests and self-immolations that began in 2009 in Tibet.
In 2016, the Chinese government began the demolition of buildings at the Larung Gar, one of the largest centers of Buddhist learning in Tibet, with the goal of reducing its population of monks and nuns, according to Radio Free Asia. (A 2015 photo essay by Gayley on Larung Gar can be found .)
“There is still a lot of religious repression in China. Tibetan Buddhist leaders are subject to many restrictions and are always in a precarious position ,” Yeh says. “Larung Gar was long a very exceptional space where 10,000 monks and nuns lived and studied.”
The Tibet Himalaya Initiative hopes to build on both past and upcoming events to raise its profile and expand Tibet-Himalaya studies—including Nepal, Bhutan and Himalayan areas of India—at CU 鶹ӰԺ. At the top of the wish list, Gayley and Yeh say, is hiring an instructor in contemporary Tibetan language. Currently, Naropa offers instruction in classical Tibetan and a native Tibetan speaker meets with THI graduate students weekly through the Directed Independent Language Study program at the Anderson Language Technology Center.
“We’d like to be able to offer colloquial modern Tibetan. That’s our biggest goal, along with continuing to bring high profile speakers and other guests” Yeh says. “We want to allow not just for teaching language, but also offer literature and other contemporary coursework offerings.”
A bit further down the road, the initiative’s founders hope it will lead to more formalized curricular offerings.
“We want to expand its reach in terms of the number of students,” Gayley says. “Eventually,we hopeto developa Tibetan and Himalayanstudies certificateor even program.”
THI is also working with the 鶹ӰԺ-based , which supports the work of Tibetan-language scholars and translators, to bring a master translator to 鶹ӰԺ a few weeks each year to work with CU 鶹ӰԺ and Naropa students, and the possibility of a translation institute of some kind is under discussion.
The library exhibit on Tantric Ritual in Tibetan Buddhism, in part, celebrates the collaboration of Tsadra and CU, since the iconography on display relate to a ritual found in texts recently donated to the University Libraries by Tsadra.
The exhibit, which opened this month on the second floor of Norlin, was designed by Eben Yonnetti, an MA student in Religious Studies and Provost Fellow for the University Libraries.
CU 鶹ӰԺ “is really emerging on the horizon as an important university where Tibet-Himalaya studies is happening,” Yeh says. “And it’s all coming together through the foundation of the Tibet-Himalaya Initiative.”