Following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Ombadykow joined the Dalai Lama on his first visit to
Kalmykia, a region whose once-rich Buddhist heritage was destroyed in the 1930s by the dual Soviet policies of
collectivization and atheism. Upon arrival, the Dalai Lama named Ombadykow as the Šajin (Supreme) Lama of the Kalmyk people. As the spiritual leader, Ombadykow's role was to lead a Buddhist revival among the approximately 160,000 Kalmyks who live in Kalmykia. At Ombadykow's first visit to Kalmykia, Buddhist services were held in a private home outside of
Elista, which at a capacity of 30 to 40 people, stretching to 50 people on religious holidays. As the only Kalmyk person with proper Buddhist training, Ombadykow soon determined that his responsibility as the Šajin Lama was too great a burden for him to bear as a 22-year-old. Moreover, he found that his formal monastic training did not prepare him for the role he was assigned. He neither spoke
Kalmyk Oirat, nor was he familiar with the mentality of the people or the government. == Return to the USA ==