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Tulku
Director
Gesar Mukpo
Producer
Kent Martin
Synopsis
Gesar Mukpo was three when he became one of the first people born in the West
to be recognized as a tulku – the present-day reincarnation of
a Buddhist master. For his entire life, he's been trying to figure out what
that really means.
Starting in the mid-1970s, Tibetan teachers – including Gesar's father,
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche – began recognizing Western children as tulkus.
Suddenly, a system that had ensured stable spiritual power and authority in
Tibetan society for 800 years was transplanted into a completely different
culture.
In this intensely personal documentary, Gesar sets out to meet other tulkus
to find out how they reconcile modern and ancient, East and West. Journeying
through Canada, the United States, India and Nepal, he encounters four other tulkus
who struggle with the meaning of this profound dilemma.
What does it mean to carry on this ancient tradition designed for an old
world when you’re living in a completely new one? How will Gesar and other
Western tulkus fulfill their destiny?
Tulku was produced as part of the Reel
Diversity Competition for emerging filmmakers of colour. Reel Diversity is a
National Film Board of Canada initiative in partnership with CBC Newsworld.