Khyongla Rato Rinpoche was born in 1923, in the village of Ophor, south of
Chamdo in the Dagyab province, Kham region, of what was then Tibet. In 1928, aged five, Norbu, as he was then known, was recognized as a
tulku, incarnate lama, the tenth incarnation of Khyongla, a lama born in 1510 renowned for his teaching, known as the "Lama from Khyong Yul" or "Khyongla". On his 6th birthday Khyongla Rinpoche was taken to his
labrang, a lama's residence. He became a monk and studied at "two of the most important Geluk monasteries in Tibet," first at
Rato Monastery, which specialized in
debate, later moving to
Drepung Monastery, where he received his
Geshe Lharampa degree (equivalent to
Doctor of Divinity), and finally to
Gyuto Tantric University, where he served as
abbot. Rinpoche studied with over seventy teachers, including Konchok Gyatso, Geshe Yeshe Loden, and from the age of 25 with
Kyabje Ling Rinpoche, the senior tutor of the
14th Dalai Lama. While Khyongla Rinpoche was still quite young, he attended a teaching from
Pabongkhapa Déchen Nyingpo, and this served as a significant inspiration to him. In 1958, "Highly esteemed even as a newly minted Geshe, Khyongla Rato was the youngest of the lamas charged with debating the Dalai Lama during His Holiness’s examinations for the Geshe degree," during
Monlam in Lhasa, Tibet. Altogether there were eighty challengers from ten monasteries. As Khyongla Rato says in his autobiography, on page 233, when it was his turn to debate, "For half an hour our thrilling interchange continued until the senior tutor, my good friend Ling Rinpoche, raised his hand and I returned to my place, exceedingly joyful and relieved." ==Exile and life in the west==