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  1. Norbulingka believes in the preservation and continuation of Tibetan art through self-sustaining means. Under the guidance of talented masters, we endow artists and craftspeople with ancestral knowledge, providing jobs to a community of over 300 Tibetans.

  2. Norbulingka Institute, founded in 1995 by Kelsang and Kim Yeshi at Sidhpur, near Dharamshala, India, is dedicated to the preservation of the Tibetan culture in its literary and artistic forms. Etymology. The institute is named after Norbulingka, the traditional summer residence of the Dalai Lamas, in Lhasa, Tibet.

  3. Norbulingka believes in the preservation and continuation of Tibetan art through self-sustaining means. Under the guidance of talented masters, we endow artists and craftspeople with ancestral knowledge, providing jobs to a community of over 300 Tibetans.

  4. May 11, 2024 · Norbulingka Institute is preserving Tibetan tradition through training, education, and employment for Tibetans, cultivating a supportive environment for community and family values. Balancing tradition with modernity, it promotes global awareness of Tibetan culture in art and literature.

  5. Norbulingka Institute believes in the preservation and continuation of Tibetan art through self-sustaining means. Under the guidance of talented masters, we endow artists and craftspeople with ancestral knowledge, providing jobs to a community of over 300 Tibetans.

  6. The keeper of culture and tradition of the region, the Norbulingka Institute is a popular tourist attraction. It is a unique, self-sustaining institute that has been maintaining traditions for generations.

  7. May 23, 2023 · Design and Architecture of the Institute | Norbulingka Institute. Kazuhiro Nakahara, a Japanese architect by profession practices as the official designer for the Tibetan government and the Dalai Lama; He designed the Norbulingka Institute in Dharmshala, India.

  8. Soothingly set amid bamboo, trees and flowing water, the delightful Norbulingka Institute, 6km southeast of Dharamsala, was established in 1988 to teach and preserve traditional Tibetan art forms.

  9. Norbulingka Institute, Sidhpur, Dharamsala. 15,474 likes · 17 talking about this. Norbulingka is the heart of Tibetan culture.

  10. Norbulingka Institute believes in the preservation and continuation of Tibetan art through self-sustaining means. Under the guidance of talented masters, we endow artists and craftspeople with ancestral knowledge, providing jobs to a community of over 300 Tibetans.