The Caves of Milarepa (Part 1/3 Documentary)

Marpa told Milarepa to practice solitary meditation in caves and mountain retreats, which, according to the biography, after many years of practice resulted in “a deep experiential realization about the true nature of reality.“ Thereafter he lived as a fully realized yogi. Milarepa lived during the so-called second dissemination of Buddhism in Tibet (10th–12th century), when Buddhism was re-introduced. Three pivotal figures in this Tibetan Renaissance were Rinchen Zangpo (958–1055), who translated sutras, tantras and commentaries; Atiśa (982–1054), whose student Dromtön founded the Kadam school of Tibetan Buddhism; and Marpa Lotsawa, the teacher of Milarepa, and himself regarded as student of Naropa. Marpa introduced tantric texts and oral instructions from the Bengali siddha tradition into Tibet, and Marpa’s purported connection with Naropa established the lineage of the Kagyu school, thereby reaching back to the Buddha himself.[ “May I be far removed from arguing c
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