Captured Moments

A Date with Guru Rinpoche

This year’s Guru Bumtsok Ceremony was given a new direction so as to connect Guru Rinpoche with more people, and to build deeper connections with him. Thus, it was rebranded as ‘A Date with Guru Rinpoche’.

Led by Singha Rinpoche, we forged an intimate and passionate connection with Guru Rinpoche. We made offerings, from flowers to fragrant essential oils, all part of the rituals akin to going on a date with someone!

As we listened to Singha Rinpoche’s teachings and recited prayers and mantras, the energy in the room was electrifying and deeply moving. We are immensely grateful for this opportunity to deepen our spiritual connection to Guru Rinpoche and gain the blessings of a Singha Rinpoche on our path to awakening.

CNY 2024

Chinese New Year Celebrations

Our Chinese New Year Celebrations kicked off in high spirits as we ushered in the year of the Wood Dragon! Everyone was filled with joy as we celebrated with performances by the lion dancers and Chinese opera troupe that presented an excerpt from the ‘Eight Immortals’ to send Rinpoche and devotees well wishes of prosperity and longevity.

There were also many prayers conducted, such as the Prayers Before the 24 Heavenly Kings on Lord Indra’s Birthday. Amidst the teachings by Singha Rinpoche to help us set our direction in terms of our Dharma practice for the new year, we also had a guest speaker, Feng Shui Master Sherwin Tng, to come share his insights on all the animal signs for the new year.

We are grateful to everyone for embracing Thekchen Choling as part of your festivities and family tradition.  May we continue to spread positivity and imbue meaning to our Lunar New Year Celebrations!

Grand Sanctification Ceremony of Cundi

Our Cundi Ceremony this year welcomed a new rupa from India! Led by Singha Rinpoche, we had a Maha-Cundi Invocation and Consecration Grand Ceremony for the new Cundi rupa. There was a huge turnout and great blessings for everyone who attended.

This year’s Grand Sanctification Ceremony of Cundi also lasted for 3 days and 2 nights, from 18-20 October 2024. Each time slot was 2.5 hours, and the recitations were continuous, lasting day and night over the 3 days. A Vietnamese recitation session was added on one of the days, which is a new highlight of the event as it has never been done before!

We rejoice in the Lhamo Cundi practice being held in not just English, but also in Mandarin and Vietnamese for certain sessions. This move allows for more friends from all over the world to join us in the accumulation of prayers for the purpose of our own awakening and dedication of prayers for the good of the world.

Million Mani Night

This year, to celebrate Guanyin Bodhisattva’s birthday and Enlightenment Day, Thekchen Choling held a new mini event on both days — Million Mani Night! Singha Rinpoche led the recitation of Om Mani Padme Hung and gave teachings to deepen our connection and understanding of the mantra.

There was a huge turnout for both days and we witnessed many heartfelt recitations of the mantra. On each of these two occasions, our recitation count went over 1 million collectively! We are blessed and thankful for this opportunity to create vast merits for ourselves and for others. We dedicate the merits of the recitation to sentient beings of the six realms, and to world peace and harmony.

Qing Ming Festival

Our devotees came together during the Qing Ming to dedicate prayers to our dearly departed loved ones and those who are karmically linked to us.

During the Qing Ming Festival, devotees had the opportunity to send love and prayers through dedication tablets placed in our temple bearing the names of the departed. Our resident Sanghas conducted extensive daily prayers and made bountiful food offerings, praying for their swift rebirth in Amitabha’s Pureland.

These meritorious activities allow us to preserve our cultural traditions and support the Sangha community, while benefiting our dearly departed loved ones with the essence of Dharma.

Ullambana Festival

Our devotees came together during the Ullambana Festival to dedicate prayers to our dearly departed loved ones and those who are karmically linked to us.

Our Ullambana Festival had its highlights with the Recitation of One Hundred Thousand Buddha Names Sutra, performed by our Sangha in Tibetan. It was our very first time conducting the specially commissioned The Vairocana Dawning of Blessings Puja. Furthermore, we made offering of meals and necessities to more than 200 Venerables from Thekchen Choling Singapore, Shelkar Ceode Ganden Legshedling (Nepal), Namgyal Jyangchub Choeling Monastery (Nepal), and Chuwar Gadhen Drophen Ling Monastery (Nepal) on Buddha’s Joyful Day.
These meritorious activities allow us to preserve our cultural traditions and support the Sangha community, while benefiting our dearly departed loved ones with the essence of Dharma.

Vaidurya Healing Festival

This year, our highlights revolve around benefitting the Nagas. We made and offered Naga Healing Bags to benefit the Nagas, improve our delicate relationship with nature, and for the accumulation of merits. We also had a special Naga Puja led by Singha Rinpoche in English, and a Blessing the Ocean activity which had devotees going to the seaside to pray and make offerings to the Nagas along with our Sangha members. In addition, we had a unique Sutra recitation on the Naga King Sagara Sutra in Chinese for the benefit of all beings and their awakening.

We rejoice in all the merits accumulated in the preparation of offerings, the recitations and prayers, and the benefit of Nagas, Mother Nature, and all beings!

Vesak Prayer Festival

Our Vesak Prayer Festival this year had many highlights, with our Animal Blessing Night happening once again for the third time! We also brought back an activity that hasn’t happened for many years — Journey with Buddha! Devotees came together for a bonding session while blessing the whole island of Singapore for a day with our Shakyamuni Buddha Rupa. We even connected with Tao Bu Keng Temple during the blessing tour!
The Vesak Day Family carnival was also bustling with crowds of people in high spirits as we celebrated Buddha’s universal love for all beings. There was the iconic annual unveiling of our wish-fulfilling Shakyamuni Buddha thangka, which awed our spectators. It is also a reminder of the overflowing and boundless love that Buddha has for all beings for he – as Prince Siddhartha – relinquished his kingdom to seek the path of liberation so that he might teach us how to awaken our own Buddha nature.

Sacred Mirror

The Sacred Mirror represents consciousness and the element of space. Clear, pure and bright, the mirror reflects all phenomena objectively without bias, thereby reminding us to practice objectivity and to rise above our judgmental minds. On a more subtle level, it reflects the Buddha’s core teaching of emptiness – that nothing exists on its own side without a dependent arising cause.

Pinnacle of the mirror

The pinnacle of the mirror, formed by the white crescent moon, flaming red sun and an orange flame of fire, represents the completion stage of Vajrayana practice.

Light Rays

The light rays radiating from the Sacred Mirror represent the flourishing of the Buddha’s teachings, fanning out to the furthest reaches of the universe.

Full Moon Disc

The moon disc represents Bodhicitta, the aspiration to become a Buddha to benefit all sentient beings.

Blue Lotus

Divinely fragrant, blue lotuses bloomed only in the Buddha’s time. By incorporating it into the temple’s logo, it is symbolic of the ever-present Buddha in Thekchen Choling. Moreover, a lotus flower represents purity, perfection, compassion and renunciation, similar to how the beautiful lotus remains untainted even though it had arisen out from the muddy waters.

Nine Precious Jewels

These nine precious jewels represent the Guru, Buddha, Dharma, Sangha, yidam or mind-seal deity, Dharma protector, the sky, earth, and the human realm.

Two Dragons

The two dragons represent continuity and harmony and create the cause for the temple to enjoy the strong support of members and benefactors for Dharma to flourish.

Golden Khata

The flowing golden khata represents the auspicious increase of all Dharma activities.

The Seven Gems of the Chakravartin or a Wheel-Turning King

1. The precious horse represented by a unicorn’s horn

2. The precious elephant represented by its tusks

3. The precious queen represented by round golden earrings

4. The precious minister represented by square golden earrings

5. The precious general represented by a pair of crossed swords

6. The precious jewel represented by the triple-eyed gem

7. The precious Dharma wheel represented by a branch of coral