Background The term "tulku" in Tibetan Buddhism corresponds to the Sanskrit "nirmāṇakāya" and represents the physical form in which a Buddha appears to ordinary beings. A related concept, "yangsi," denotes an enlightened master who has returned to earthly existence for the benefit of sentient beings. The tulku system emerged during a historical period marked by a political vacuum in Tibet following the assassination of Ralpachen. Initially rooted in political and mercantile motives, it later acquired significant spiritual significance. Despite its political origins, the tulku system possesses essential ideological and religious dimensions, deeply connected to the bodhisattva concept. Tulkus have traditionally been associated with ruling power in Tibetan society, supplanting earlier systems of monastic governance. Foreign tulkus have been identified since at least the sixteenth century, when the grandson of the Mongol Altan Khan was recognized as the 4th Dalai Lama.
Western interest and globalization In the late 19th century,
Laurence Waddell, an early Western explorer, dated the tulku system to a purely Tibetan innovation in the fifteenth century, although "purposefully obscured so as to give the appearance of antiquity", and distinguished it from the "orthodox Buddhist theory of rebirth as the result of
karma." Such opinions are typical of orientalist writers who are averse to perceived superstition, seen as an aberration on an originally
rationalist tradition.
Giuseppe Tucci traced the origin of tulku to
Indian Vajrayana, particularly in a fragmentary biography of
Maitripada he discovered in
Nepal. The
Chinese annexation of Tibet in 1959 created massive social upheaval. This intensified during the
Cultural Revolution which brought irreparable damage to the institutions and traditions which constitute Tibetan Buddhism as one of the
Four Olds. As a result, Tibetan Buddhism has flourished in areas of Tibetan culture not under Chinese rule, such as
Nepal,
Bhutan, and parts of
North India. In India, the traditional monastic system is largely intact and the tulku system remains politically relevant. Compounded with the inherent transnational character of
proselytizing religions, Tibetan Buddhism is "pulled between the need to adapt itself and the need to preserve itself" in the face of Chinese occupation and Western fascination with Tibet (
cf. Shangri-La). The mass exodus of Tibetans following the failed 1959 uprising led Tibetan refugees to search for reincarnate masters outside of Tibet. The first Western tulku were
expatriate Tibetans, Tibetans of
mixed heritage, or members of related ethnic groups, such as
Erdne Ombadykow (
Kalmyk) or the sons of
Chögyam Trungpa (Mongol-Tibetan and
English-Tibetan). Native
Westerners began converting to Tibetan Buddhism during the
counterculture of the 1960s, and Tibetan Buddhism became popular among "elite" western Buddhists and they began to be recognized as incarnations of Buddhist masters around this time. The first recognized white tulku was Dylan Henderson, an American boy identified as his father's teacher, or alternatively Ossian MacLise (born in
Kathmandu, Nepal). Initially,
white Western tulkus were not recognized by the wider Tibetan diaspora. == Notable examples ==