
A Spiritual Biography of Marpa the Translator
Marpa was a Tibetan who risked his life three times to go to India and learn and practice the profound Buddhist teachings from the great yogi Naropa. This book tells the story of how he received these teachings and brought them back to Tibet, where he achieved enlightenment. Soon afterwards, the Muslim invasion of India began, and many of these teachings were destroyed and lost in the Noble Land.
The term spiritual biography in Tibetan (namthar) means "complete liberation," because it shows how lamas were able to achieve enlightenment. They encourage us by showing the conditions in which they began, how they were able to practice and accomplish liberation
During Marpa's training he transformed his defects, such as his short temper and arrogance into good qualities such as courage and compassion that could benefit others. By this process, the qualities expanded so that by the end, they actually became his experience and realization of completeness; he became a siddha (an enlightened being).
Marpa was a businessman with a family of nine children. His example and teachings remain alive today in the unbroken lineage of the Kagyu lineage, of which Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche was a recognized master. He realized these teachings directly so that when he was teaching about Marpa, he could convey not only the words but also their meaning.















