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Glossary›Sogyal Rinpoche

Glossary

Sogyal Rinpoche

Tibetan Buddhist teacher (1947–2019) who authored The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying and founded Rigpa, later facing allegations of abuse.

What is Sogyal Rinpoche?

Sogyal Rinpoche (1947–2019) was a Tibetan Buddhist teacher who brought the teachings of the Nyingma school to Western audiences through his bestselling book The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying (1992) and the international organization Rigpa, which he founded in 1979. Recognized in childhood as the incarnation of Tertön Sogyal, a renowned master and teacher to the 13th Dalai Lama, he studied under prominent lamas including Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö. His work focused on death and dying, meditation, and Dzogchen (“Great Perfection”), the highest teachings in the Nyingma tradition. His legacy remains deeply contested: while his writings introduced millions to Tibetan Buddhist philosophy, his final years were marked by substantiated allegations of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse that led to his resignation in 2017 and sparked broader reckonings within Buddhist communities about teacher misconduct and institutional accountability.

Origins & Lineage

Born Lakar Sonam Gyaltsen in 1947 in Kham, eastern Tibet, he was recognized as the incarnation of Tertön Sogyal (1856–1926), a treasure revealer (tertön) and close teacher of the 13th Dalai Lama. He was raised and educated by Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö (1893–1959), one of the 20th century’s most influential Tibetan masters, at Dzongsar Monastery in Kham. Following the 1959 Tibetan uprising, he fled Tibet with his family and continued his education in India, eventually attending Catholic schools and later Cambridge University in England during the 1960s. He began teaching publicly in the West in the early 1970s, initially in England, and formally established Rigpa in London in 1979. The name “Rigpa” refers to the Dzogchen concept of pure awareness or knowing, the fundamental nature of mind. His 1992 book The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, which adapted and modernized The Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thödol) for contemporary readers, became an international bestseller translated into more than 30 languages, cementing his position as one of the West’s most recognized Tibetan Buddhist teachers.

How It’s Practiced

Sogyal Rinpoche’s teaching methodology combined traditional Tibetan Buddhist practices with Western pedagogical approaches. His core teachings centered on:

Meditation instruction: Shamatha (calm-abiding) and Dzogchen practices drawn from the Nyingma tradition, typically introduced progressively to students based on their readiness.

Death awareness: Contemplation of impermanence, preparation for death, and practices for recognizing the nature of mind during the dying process, including phowa (consciousness transference) and bardo teachings.

Retreat formats: Multi-day residential retreats featuring extended teaching sessions, meditation periods, and ritual practices including puja (devotional ceremonies) and tsok offerings.

Teacher-student relationship: Emphasis on devotion to the guru (guru yoga), a traditional Vajrayana element that in his case later became a site of significant criticism and abuse.

Rigpa centers offered regular sitting meditation groups, introductory courses on Buddhist philosophy, and trained students in end-of-life spiritual care through its Spiritual Care Education and Training program, which partnered with hospices and medical institutions.

Sogyal Rinpoche Today

Following the July 2017 publication of a letter by eight long-term students detailing decades of physical violence, sexual coercion, and emotional manipulation, Sogyal Rinpoche retired from his administrative and teaching roles. He died in Thailand on August 28, 2019. Rigpa continues to operate internationally with a reformed governance structure that separated spiritual authority from organizational management and implemented safeguarding policies. The organization commissioned an independent investigation (the Lewis Silkin report, 2018) that corroborated many allegations and identified systemic failures in accountability.

The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying remains widely read and assigned in death education, palliative care, and religious studies courses. Many students continue to value its accessible introduction to Tibetan Buddhist perspectives on mortality while grappling with its author’s conduct. The Dalai Lama and other senior lamas, including Mingyur Rinpoche and Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, have publicly addressed the case, with responses ranging from calls for accountability to nuanced discussions about separating teachings from teachers. The controversy has catalyzed broader conversations in Western Buddhism about power dynamics, trauma-informed teaching, and the adaptation of hierarchical Asian religious structures to Western contexts.

Common Misconceptions

“Sogyal Rinpoche is a title like ‘doctor’”: While “Rinpoche” (Tibetan: “precious one”) is an honorific applied to recognized reincarnate lamas (tulkus), it is not a professional credential with standardized training or oversight.

“His teachings are invalidated by his actions”: Buddhist communities hold diverse views on this. Some maintain that dharma teachings retain validity independent of a teacher’s behavior; others argue that ethical conduct is inseparable from authentic realization. This remains an unresolved philosophical and practical debate.

“He invented the teachings in his book”: The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying synthesizes traditional Nyingma teachings, particularly from Patrul Rinpoche’s The Words of My Perfect Teacher and the Bardo Thödol, adapted with extensive collaboration from Western editors. The book explicitly credits his teachers and the lineage.

“All guru-disciple relationships in Tibetan Buddhism involve abuse”: While the controversy highlighted risks inherent in power-imbalanced relationships, many Tibetan teachers maintain ethical boundaries. The issue concerns implementation and accountability, not the tradition itself.

How to Begin

For those interested in the teachings Sogyal Rinpoche transmitted—distinct from studying with him personally:

Read primary sources: The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying remains the most comprehensive entry point, though readers should approach it with awareness of its context. Patrul Rinpoche’s The Words of My Perfect Teacher offers traditional Nyingma teachings without the controversy.

Seek established teachers: For Dzogchen and Nyingma instruction, consider teachers such as Mingyur Rinpoche, Tsoknyi Rinpoche, or Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, who teach similar material with transparent organizational structures.

Explore death awareness independently: Frank Ostaseski’s work with the Zen Hospice Project, Joan Halifax’s teachings at Upaya Zen Center, and secular death positivity movements offer contemplative approaches to mortality outside Buddhist frameworks.

Engage critically: Resources such as Buddhist Teacher Abuse databases, Olive Branch’s survivor support network, and academic work on teacher misconduct provide necessary context for navigating contemporary Buddhist institutions safely.

Related terms

dzogchenrigpanyingmabardotulkuguru yoga
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