Akong Tulku Rinpoche comes from East Tibet and founded Kagyu Samye Ling, the first and largest Tibetan Buddhist centre in Europe in the late 1960's.
Kagyu Samye Ling was founded to preserve the cultural and spiritual heritage of Tibetan Buddhism, creating conditions in the west for the study and practice of traditional Buddha Dharma, providing the highest teachings of the Kagyu lineage, four year retreat facilities and training and accommodation for both ordained and lay practitioners.
Akong Rinpoche's charity Rokpa Trust provides support through, therapy, income producing schemes, educational and cultural projects in Asia, Africa and Europe.
Akong Tulku's lineage is traditionally associated with healing and medicine. In his previous lifetime the second Jamgon Kongtrul recognized the first Akong as an emanation of the Medicine Buddha. In this lifetime Rinpoche has established Tara Tibetan Medicine and Therapy. This combines the traditional training and view of eastern and western traditions in both physical and psychological medicine. The Tara Therapy training has been followed by many trained western psychologists and its successful methods have spread throughout Europe, America Africa and Asia. A training in the theory and the practical basis of Tibetan Medicine has also been introduced to qualified physicians trained in conventional western medicine.
Akong Rinpche's original monastery Drolma Lhakang was strongly connected with Tara. Tara's influence has been recognized historically in European culture and particularly in the Irish Gaelic tradition. Drolma ( Tibetan for 'liberating mother') is one of the principal Tibetan names for Tara. Akong Rinpoche's monastery near Chamdo is called Drolma Lhakang, (The Holy place of Tara) because 21 different emanations of Tara appeared spontaneously in the rocks around the monastery. Drolma Lhakang is dedicated to the constant practice of prayers invoking Tara Drolma's healing energy and her protection for all beings and the planet as a whole. In Tibet Tara is seen to be a female manifestation of the Buddha's Enlightened Mind and Energy and to have the complementary female power of the Bodhisattva of Limitless Love and Compassion, All Seeing Chenrezig.
The Tara Healing Garden is dedicated to the 21 emanations of Tara and will preserve and propagate medicinal herbs native to Tibet that can be cultivated in the climate of the Scottish Borders. Each of the 21 emanations of Tara has the power and the qualities to overcome 21 different kinds of physical and mental disease. Therefore 21 different herbs connected with these different aspects will be planted in separate petal shaped beds around the central statue of Tara. This statue was consecrated at 7 o'clock in the morning on the seventh day of the seventh month of 2007.
A Place for Preparation, Processing and Studying Herbs and Herbal Medicine.