Gangteng Gompa

Gangteng Gompa
Gangteng Gompa

Gangteng Gompa is a historic

monastery in the Black Mountain region of Bhutan. Built in the early 17th century, the monastery was established by

Gyalse Rigdzin Pema Thinley

, the grandson of the canonized Bhutanese “treasure revealer,” Pema Lingpa. Today, Gangteng Gompa is the largest Nyingmapa monastery in Western Bhutan.

Buddhist mythology recalls the narrative of an ancient guru who hid

terma

(sacred treasures of Buddhist wisdom) for select

terton

(treasure finders) to reveal in the future when the time was right. The

terma

were hidden for their protection so that the

terton

could transmit Buddha’s teachings through the generations should his knowledge ever be lost or destroyed.

Pema Lingpa, the grandfather of the monastery’s founder, was understood as an incarnation of that ancient guru. Following a series of revelations, he astoundingly unearthed over 100

terma

across Bhutan in the mid-1470s. Rendered “King Terton,” Pema Lingpa made a pilgrimage to the imposing Black Mountain range, where he envisaged one of his descendants would build a monastery.

Gangteng Gompa was established in 1613 by Pema Lingpa’s grandson on a spur in the Black Mountains called the Gangteng Sang Nga Chöling, which translates to “summit for the teaching of the dharma.” Local timber was used for the temple’s beams, doors, pillars, and windows. Delep, a guardian deity, supposedly created a landslide in the mountains for better access to stones. A team of community artisans embellished the space with exquisite technicolor detail.

The monastery was restored between 2002 and 2008. Conservators worked to preserve the temple’s original detail with the addition of over 100 new pillars. Upon the temple’s completion, it was re-presented as Gangteng Sangngak Chöling, and consecrated by the nint

h

Gangteng Trulku,

who is

considered the current incarnation of Pema Lingpa.