For the World: Our First Shared Kora and Guru Yoga in Kathmandu

During the month of July, over 108 practitioners from around the world joined together for Karmapa Center 16’s first shared walk or “kora” (circumambulation) practice at the Boudha Stūpa (Jarung Kashor) in Kathmandu, Nepal.

Preparing for Our Walks

Before our practice began, Dilyak Drupon Rinpoche kindly shared some personal reflections on pilgrimage. Through the generosity of several organizations, we prepared a small bag with practical items to support participants on their walks around the Stūpa. Each bag also included a calligraphy card by the 17th Gyalwang Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje, as well as caring instructions for kora practice from Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche.

The Experience of Walking Around the Boudha Stūpa

Some participants began their walks in the quiet hours before dawn, while others came during the day or evening, joining the continuous stream of devoted Dharma practitioners walking around the Stūpa. In just a few days—or slowly, over the span of several weeks—everyone completed at least 108 circumambulations around this sacred place.

The practice was deeply felt by everyone. One participant shared the following heartfelt words:

“Since I could feel this practice was for the benefit of all living beings,
Every step became charged with mindfulness.
While we are circumambulating the Stūpa in this way,
I felt our aspirations could reverse the wheel of karma.
Slowly removing all obstacles,
Alleviating disasters,
Big things become small,
Small things become nothing.
So, when feeling tired
I encouraged myself to continue.
Circumambulating as much as I could.
Since the more I walk,
The more sentient beings could benefit.”

Many described feeling the gaze of the Buddha above them, and spoke about the inspiration and support they found through this shared practice. The experience of walking kora held an extra layer of significance for many, as this period also coincided with the Parinirvana Anniversary of Khenpo Tsültrim Gyamtso Rinpoche—a direct student of His Holiness the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa and a great Kagyü master. This alignment further deepened our practice and strengthened our resolve to walk in their footsteps, inspired by their lives and teachings. 

It was heartwarming to hear their stories and how they felt joining the kora practice during this time was a real support on their spiritual path and encouragement to continue practicing the Dharma after returning home. 

16th Karmapa’s Guru Yoga and Tshok Offering

During this month of July, On July 6, 2025, Karmapa Center 16 organized its first Guru Yoga practice and Tshok offering at the sacred Boudha Stupa (Jarung Kashor) in Kathmandu, Nepal, with the kind support of our friends at Dilyak Monastery—located near the Stupa and the residence of His Holiness the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa during his pilgrimages and teachings in Nepal.

A large tent was set up with a thangka of His Holiness at the center of a beautiful mandala. Under the gaze of the Buddha’s eyes from the Stupa, everyone—onsite and online—came together to practice the 16th Karmapa’s Guru Yoga, Rainfall of Nectar, with heartfelt devotion. We chanted the mantra together, invoking the blessings of the guru for our path and awaken the enlightened qualities from within—Karmapa Khyenno!

Soon after completing the practice and tshok offering, a heavy rain began to fall, as if blessing the gathering.

Walking the Path of Freedom for the Benefit of All

We extend our deep gratitude to all who participated and all who supported our kora and guru yoga practice in countless ways. The funds raised, and the merit generated through our collective effort, will help advance our ongoing Stūpa Project, and we hope it may inspire many more to walk the path of freedom, for the benefit of all.

Karmapa Khyenno!

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A Personal Note on Pilgrimage from Dilyak Drupon Rinpoche

གཤམ་གྱི་བོད་ཡིག་ལ་གཟིགས། 见以下中文

Dear dharma friends,

When embarking on a pilgrimage to sacred sites, the most important thing is to first understand the reasons and significance behind visiting these holy places—their historical background, the benefits they offer, and how to maintain proper motivation throughout the journey.

Begin by taking refuge and generating bodhicitta, the wish to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all beings. Then, make efforts to accumulate merit and purify obscurations. Finally, conclude the pilgrimage with dedication and aspiration prayers; these steps are essential.

During the pilgrimage, make a personal commitment—such as, “From today onward, I will maintain a five-minute daily meditation practice without interruption.” Carrying this intention throughout your pilgrimage will make the entire journey extraordinarily meaningful and powerful.

Sending heartfelt blessings,
Dilyak Drupon

P.S. This July, 2025, Karmapa Center 16 is organizing for the first time a month-long practice of walking around (“doing kora”) the Boudha Stupa in Kathmandu (Nepal). If you are in Kathmandu and would like to join in this practice, please visit us at Dilyak Monastery (near Boudha Stupa). 

༈ རྣམ་པ་ཚོ་གནས་སྐོར་ལ་ཕེབས་པའི་སྐབས་སུ།  གནས་སྐོར་དུ་འགྲོ་བའི་དགོས་པ་རྒྱུ་མཚན།  གནས་དེ་དག་གི་ཁུངས་ལུང་ལོ་རྒྱུས་དང་ཕན་ཡོན། འགྲོ་སྐབས་ཀུན་སློང་ཁྱེར་ཚུལ་མཁྱེན་དགོས་རྒྱུ་གལ་ཆེ། 

ཐོག་མར་སྐྱབས་འགྲོ་དང་གཞན་ཕན་བྱང་ཆུབ་སེམས་བསྐྱེད་ཀྱི་རྩིས་ཟིན་པ།  བར་དུ་ཚོགས་བསགས་སྒྲིབ་སྦྱང་ལ་འབད་པ།  མཇུག་ཏུ་བསྔོ་བ་སྨོན་ལམ་བཟང་པོའི་མཐར་རྒྱན་པར་བྱ་རྒྱུ་ནི་གལ་ཆེ་བ་ཡིན།

གནས་མཇལ་སྐབས་རང་ཉིད་ནས། དཔེར་ན་དེ་རིང་ནས་བཟུང་ངེས་ཉིན་རེར་སྐར་མ་ལྔ་རེ་མ་ཆགས་པར་སྒོམ་བརྒྱབ་གི་ཡིན་བསམ་པའི་དམ་ཅ་མཁས་ལེན་རེ་ཙམ་བྱེད་ཐུབ་པ་ཡིན་ན་དཔེ་མེད་ཡག་པོ་ཡོད་རེད། 

གུས་དིལ་ཡག་སྒྲུབ་དཔོན་ནས་ཕུལ།

當大家前往聖地朝聖時,最重要的是,應當先了解前往這些聖地的必要性和原因、聖地的歷史緣由與利益,以及在前往時,又該如何持守正確的動機。

首先,要以皈依和為了利他而發起菩提心作為開始;其次,盡力積聚資糧、淨除罪障;最後,則以迴向祈願作為圓滿的結尾,這些非常重要。

在朝聖期間,如果自己能夠立下一些誓願,例如,「從今天開始,我每天一定會不間斷的保持五分鐘禪修練習。」,以這樣決心和誓願朝聖,這是非常善妙殊勝的。

諦雅竹奔 謹啟