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Halifax Chronicle Herald
The Epoch Times
From the National Film Board of Canada
In many ways, Gesar Mukpo leads an ordinary life. He’s
working to build a career as a filmmaker, he's had trouble in
his marriage, and he struggles to pay his bills.
But there is more to Gesar’s story. Tibetan Buddhists recognize
him as a tulku – a reincarnated Buddhist master.
Gesar was three when he became one of the first people born
in the West to be recognized as a tulku. For his entire life, he's
been trying to figure out what that really means.
Tibetan teachers – including Gesar's father, Chögyam Trungpa
Rinpoche – began making their way to the West in the 1960s.
By the mid-1970s, they began to recognize Western children
as tulkus. Suddenly, a system that had ensured stable
spiritual power and authority in Tibetan society for 800 years
was transplanted into a completely different culture. And
individual tulkus like Gesar were caught in the middle.
In this intensely personal documentary, Gesar sets out to
meet other Western tulkus and to find out how they reconcile
modern and ancient, East and West. Journeying through
Canada, the United States, India and Nepal, he encounters
four other tulkus who struggle with the meaning of this
profound dilemma.
Ashoka channels his efforts into working for human rights
in New York. Dylan, whose parents met at a Jimi Hendrix
concert, spends half the year in solitary retreat. Wyatt grew up
in California and recently moved to India to pursue Tibetan
Buddhist studies at a monastery. Meanwhile, Reuben, who
was born in Amsterdam and spent three years in a monastery
in India, has become cynical about the tulku system and
Tibetan Buddhism in general.
Tulku also includes interviews with some of the greatest living
Tibetan Buddhist teachers. One of them, the renowned
Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, asks whether it might be time
to abandon the practice of recognizing tulkus.
As he gathers impressions from others, Gesar reveals his
own poignant story of living in the West with this unique label
and legacy — endlessly scrutinized as someone supposed to
be special and monumental. What does it mean to carry on
a role designed for an old world when you’re living in a
completely new one? How will Gesar and other Western
tulkus fulfill their destiny?
Gesar Mukpo, filmmaker
Gesar Mukpo is a filmmaker who lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The son of the great Tibetan Buddhist teacher Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche and his British wife, Mukpo was recognized as the reincarnation of his father’s beloved teacher at the age of three. He developed his film and video craft through commercial work and study with Buddhist teacher and filmmaker Khyentse Norbu. Buddhist themes provide the motivations for his most recent work, including the music video What About Me?.
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