Sonam Tsemo (1142 -1182)
Sonam Tsemo was born in 1142. His father was the Sakya patriarch Sachen Kunga Nyingpo (10920-1158). His mother was called Machik Wodron. Like his father he remained a layman throughout his life, although he never married or had children. He was identified as the reincarnation of the Indian scholar Durgachandra (or Durjayachandra) who was the master of Viravajra. In turn, Viravajra was the teacher of Drokmi Śākya Yeshe (992-1070). During his childhood, Sonam Tsemo’s main teacher was his father Sachen Kunga Nyingpo (k1092-1158). His studies with his father focused on esoteric topics, and it is said that he could recite fourteen esoteric scriptures, including the Hevajra and Samvara tantras by the age of sixteen. He received oral Lamdre instructions from Sachen during this time.
After Sachen passed away, Sonam Tsemo’s education was strongly inflected by the Indian monastic model. At seventeen he went to the Kadampa monastery Sangpu Neutog to study Madhyamaka philosophy and epistemology with the great master Chapa Chokyi Sengge (1109-1169). This teacher had disciples from several of the most prominent families in U-Tsang. Sonam Tsemo’s biography claims that he became the most accomplished of all the students. He studied with this master on and off for eleven years and became well versed in Mahāyāna texts such as Pramanaviniscaya and Bodhicharyavatara. Sonam Tsemo also received some instruction from the Indian or Nepali Acarya Sri Anandagharba. Sonam Tsemo’s work Chola jugpai go, which he composed at the age of twenty-six at Nalatse, was extremely influential on the work of his nephew Sakya Paṇḍita Kunga Gyeltsen (1192-1251), the fourth Sakya patriarch and a widely renowned scholar. Sonam Tsemo’s written works address topics including the Bodhicharyavatara, a schematization of the tantra; an explanation of the last two chapters of the Hevajra root tantra; a commentary on the Samputa tantra; instructions for reading Sanskrit, and commemorative texts for his main teachers.Sonam Tsemo first gave the Lamdre teachings in Sakya at the age of twenty-eight. Many famous masters attended the teaching, and he became renowned as a clear and skilled teacher, but his biographical data reflect a career more focused on study, practice and composition of texts than on teaching. His few close disciples included his brother Drakpa Gyeltsen (1147-1216), Ngodrup, Chagkyi Dorje, and Tsugtor. He was the active Sakya throne holder for only three years, after which he passed the responsibility on to his younger brother Drakpa Gyeltsen (1147-1216), in order to devote the rest of his life to study and retreat. Sonam Tsemo passed away in 1182 at the age of forty. The details of his death are unclear, but it is recorded that his body disappeared and he left nothing but his robe and a footprint behind.
Source: https://treasuryoflives.org
Author: Professor, Dominique Townsend.
མ་འོངས་པའི་ཆོས་ཚོགས་ཀྱི་མཛད་འཆར་དང་དུས་ཆེན་ཁག་མཁྱེན་འདོད་ཡོད་རིགས་ནས་གློག་འཕྲིན་གྱི་ཞལ་བྱང་གནང་རོགས།།