His Holiness the Trizin Lungtok Tenpei Nyima is the world-wide spiritual leader of the Bon religion of Tibet Tibet 
When he was sixteen he entered the Dialectic   School Tibet Tibet Lhasa 
At the time of the conflict against the Chinese in 1959 he fled on foot from Tibet to Mustang, on the border of Tibet and Nepal, then to Pokhara, Nepal, and then to India. While in India  he got word that the Abbot of Yung Drung Ling monastery and many Bonpo lamas had reached the Bon monastery of Samling, a very old and important monastery in the Dolpo region of Nepal Nepal 
Later he went back to Samling monastery in order to borrow books so that they might be republished. The books of the Bonpo are very important to practice and study, and when the lamas had fled Tibet London  University New Delhi England England  for three years during which he lived and studied with Benedictine, Cistercian and other Christian monastic orders, and traveled to Rome 
In 1964 he returned to India  to found a school funded by sponsors in England Massori , India Manali , India India 
In 1965 Lopon Tenzin Namdak returned to India  and with help of the Catholic Relief Service purchased land in Himachal Pradesh , India 
On March 15, 1968 while in Norway  he received a telegram from India 
Each of the Geshe's names were written on a small piece of paper, each of which was enclosed in a small ball of ceremonial dough made from barley flour and holy medicine, and these balls were placed in a vase. After prayer and rituals lasting two weeks, the Abbot of Yung Drung Link shook the vase and three names came out, one by one, onto a special Mandala. All of the other names were removed from the vase and the three put back in, and the process began again. This time two names were shaken out, one after the other. The first held the name of who was to be the new Abbot, and this ball was used in initiation and rituals, and then opened in from of all the people present, who promised to honor him as the one true Abbot. The second man chosen would hold a very important position with the Bonpos as a lama and teacher.
On the night of March 14 in Norway 
So he returned to India Tibet , Nepal  and India 
Slowly over time he was able to build a new Menri monastery in Dolanji, and after that a Bon  Dialectic   School Welfare   Center 
Today there are approximately four hundred Tibetans living in Dolanji, along with one hundred orphans and one hundred monks. Two hundred and fifty Bonpo children from all over India  and Nepal 
 

 
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