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Lamas

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Dalai Lama
Tibetan Buddhist spiritual teacher
Lama
Lama () is a title bestowed to a realized practitioner of the Dharma in Tibetan Buddhism. Not all monks are lamas, while nuns and female practitioners can be recognized and entitled as lamas. The Tibetan word la-ma means "high mother", and reflects the qualities of the person who is called a lama.
Tsongkhapa
Tibetan Buddhist monk, philosopher, and guru (c. 1357–1419)
Zaya Pandita
Buddhist priest and writing system inventor
Sakya Trizin
Buddhist Lama
Dogsomyn Bodoo
Prime Minister of Mongolia
tulku tenzin delek
Tibetan Lama
Ja Lama
Russian Buddhist lama
Gyeltsabje Darma Rinchen
Tibetan Buddhist monk and scholar
Dambyn Chagdarjav
Mongolian revolutionary figure
Lui pa
Luipa or Luipada (c. 10th century) was a mahasiddha siddhacharya from Eastern India. He was a Buddhist saint from the Kãivartā community. He was a writer of a number of Buddhist texts and one of the early poets of Charyapada, a late Apabhraṃśa collection of poems.
Yuthog Yontan Gonpo
Tibetan lama
Tubten Jigme Norbu
Tibetan activist (1922–2008)
Yumo Mikyo Dorje
Tibetan Lama
Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche
Tibetan Lama
Pema Karpo
Buddhist religious leader
Lawapa
Lawapa or Lavapa () was a figure in Tibetan Buddhism who flourished in the 10th century. He was also known as Kambala and Kambalapada (Sanskrit: ). Lawapa, was a mahasiddha, or accomplished yogi, who travelled to Tsari. Lawapa was a progenitor of the Dream Yoga sādhanā and it was from Lawapa that the mahasiddha Tilopa received the Dream Yoga practice lineage.
Orgyen Tobgyal
Tibetan politician