The Shadow of the Dalai Lama – Part I – 6. Kalachakra: The public
and the secret initiations
© Victor &
Victoria Trimondi
6. KALACHAKRA: THE PUBLIC
AND THE SECRET
INITIATIONS
The Kalachakra Tantra (Time
Tantra) is considered the last and most recent of all the revealed
tantra texts (c. tenth century), yet also as the “highest of all Vajrayana ways”, “the
pinnacle of all Buddhist systems”. It differs from earlier tantras
in its encyclopedic character. It has been described as the “most
complex and profound statement on both temporal and spiritual
matters” (Newman, 1985, p. 31). We can thus depict it as the summa theologia of Buddhist
Tantrism, as the root and the crown of the teaching, the chief
tantra of our “degenerate era” (Newman, 1985, p. 40). Tsongkhapa
(1357-1419), the significant reformer and founder of the Tibetan
Gelugpa order, was of the opinion that anybody who knew the Kalachakra Tantra mastered
all other secret Buddhist teachings without
effort.
Even though all Tibetan schools
practice the Kalachakra
Tantra, there have always only been individual experts who truly
command this complicated ritual. For the Yellow Hats (Gelugpa), these are
traditionally the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama. A small study
group from the Namgyal monastery are available to assist the Dalai
Lama in executing the ceremonies with technical
knowledge.
The ritual consists of a public
part and a secret part, staged by the participants behind closed
doors. Pupils with little prior knowledge or even people with none
may participate in the public initiations. In contrast, the secret
initiations are only accessible for the chosen
few.
Despite the elitist selection,
the texts sometimes suggest that the possibility of reaching the
highest level of enlightenment in the Kalachakra Tantra within a
single lifetime lies open to everybody. The reality is otherwise,
however. Of the hundreds who participate in a public event, one
commentary states, in the end only one will say his daily prayer. Of
the thousands just one will commence with the yoga praxis which
belong to this tantra and of these, only a handful will be initiated
into the most secret initiations (Mullin, 1991, p. 28). In the Vimalaprabha, the earliest
commentary upon the original text, it is stated in unmistakable
terms that laity (non-monks) may absolutely not set foot upon the
path to enlightenment (Newman, 1987, p. 422).
But even if the supreme goal
remains closed to him, every participant ought nevertheless to gain
numerous spiritual advantages for himself from the ritual mass
events. According to statements by the Dalai Lama, karmic stains may
thus be removed and new seeds for good karma begin to grow. The
eager are beckoned by the prospect of rebirth in Shambhala, a paradise
closely associated with the Kalachakra myth. At any rate
the pupil has “ the opportunity to bask in the bright rays of
spiritual communion with the initiating lama, in this case His
Holiness the Dalai Lama, and hopefully to absorb a sprinkling of
spiritual energy from the occasion” (Mullin, 1991, p. 28). Since,
according to the official version, the celebrant guru conducts the
Kalachakra ritual for,
among other things, the “liberation of all of humanity” and the
“maintenance of world peace”, both the masses present at the
spectacle and the individual initiates participate in this highly
ethical setting of goals (Newman, 1987, p.
382).
Fundamentally, the Buddhist
tantras are subdivided into father tantras, mother tantras, or
non-dual tantras. In father tantras it is principally the “method”
of creation of a divine form body (vajrakaya) with which the
yogi identifies which is taught. Hence the production of the self as
a divinity is central here. To this end the following negative
attributes of the adept need to be transformed: aggression, desire,
and ignorance.
The mother tantras primarily lay
worth upon the creation of a state of emptiness and unshakable
bliss, as well as upon the calling forth of the clear light. Here
the yogi exclusively employs the transformation of sexual desire as
a means.
The non-dual tantras are a
combination of father tantras and mother tantras. The “creation of a
divine form body” is thus combined with the “calling forth of the
clear light” and “blissful emptiness”. Thus, the yogi wants to both
appear as a powerful deity and attain the ability to rest
unconditionally in a state equivalent to nirvana and to bathe himself
in mystic light.
Since the Kalachakra Tantra promises
all these possibilities of enlightenment, the famous Tibetan scribe,
Buston (1290-1364), classified it as a non-dual tantra. His opinion
did not remain uncontested, however. Another outstanding expert on
the rituals, Kay-drup-jay (1385-1438) described it, as do the
majority of Gelugpa authors, as a mother
tantra.
A further classification
subdivides the “Time Tantra” into an external, internal, and
alternative section.
The “external” tantra describes
the formation and destruction of the universe, includes treatises on
astronomy and geography, and concerns itself with the history of the
world, with prophecies and religious wars. The reports on the magic
realm of Shambhala are of
great importance here. Emphasis is also placed upon astrology and
the mathematical calculations connected with it. The entire national
calendar and time-keeping methods of the Tibetans are derived from
the astronomical and astrological system in the Kalachakra.
In contrast, the “internal” Kalachakra treats the
anatomy of energy in the mystic body. From a tantric viewpoint, the
body of every person is composed of not just flesh and blood but
also a number of energy centers which are connected to one another
by channels. Fluids, secretions, and “winds” flow through and
pervade this complex network. Among the secretions, male semen and
female menstrual blood play an important role.
In the “alternative” Kalachakra we get to know
the techniques with which the yogi calls up, dissolves, or regulates
these inner energy currents as needed. Further, how these can be
brought into a magic relation to the phenomena of the external Kalachakra (sun, moon, and
stars ...) is also taught here.
Since the Time Tantra belongs to
the highest secret teachings (Anuttara Yoga Tantra), it
may only be practiced by a chosen few. In the introduction to a
contemporary commentary by Ngawang Dhargyey, we can thus read the
following: “Sale and distribution of this book is restricted. We
urgently request that only initiates into Highest Yoga Tantra and
preferably into the Kalachakra system itself
should read it. This caution is customary to the tradition, but to
disregard it can only be detrimental” (Dhargyey, 1985, p.
iii).
Such threatening gestures are a
part of occult show business, then these days it is no longer even
necessary to understand Tibetan or Sanskrit in order to dip into the
tantras, since numerous texts plus their commentaries have been
translated into European languages and are generally accessible.
Even Dhargyey’s “forbidden” text (A Commentary on the Kalachakra
Tantra) can be found in large public libraries. David
Snellgrove, an outstanding and incorruptible interpreter of Tibetan
religious history, snidely remarks of the widespread secretiveness
also promoted by the lamas that, “There is nothing particularly
secret about sexual yoga in the Highest Yoga Tantras; one merely has
to read the texts” (Snellgrove, 1987, vol. 1, p.
269).
This was in fact different in the
Tibet of old. The highest yoga teachings were not allowed to be
printed, and could at best be distributed in handwriting instead.
Even for monks it was very difficult to receive higher initiations,
and these afforded a much longer preparation time than is usual in
our day. Mass initiations were, in contrast to the present day,
extremely rare occasions.
The seven lower public
initiations and their symbolic
significance
Let us now turn to the various
stages of initiation treated in the Kalachakra Tantra and their
features and methods. What can be understood by the term initiation
(abhisheka)? It concerns
the transmission of spiritual energies and insights from a priest to
an individual who has requested this of him. The initiation thus
presupposes a hierarchical relationship. In its classic form, a
master (guru or lama) communicates his knowledge and mystic powers
to a pupil (sadhaka).
This master too once sat facing his own guru before the latter
likewise initiated him. The chains of the initiated, all of which
can be traced back to the historical Buddha, are known as
“transmission lines”. It is usual for the transmission to proceed
orally, from ear to ear. This is thus also known as the
“ear-whispered lineage” (Beyer, 1978, p. 399). But words are in no
sense a necessity. The initiation can also proceed without speech,
for example through hand gestures or the display of symbolic
images.
Both forms of transmission (the
oral and the nonverbal) still take place between humans. When,
however, the Buddhist deities initiate the pupil directly, without a
physical go-between, this is known as the “consciousness lineage of
the victors”. The transcendent Buddhas (Dhyani Buddhas) who approach
an earthly adept directly are referred to as “victors”. A subtype of
such communication from beyond is known as the “trust lineage of the
dakinis”. Here an adept discovers holy texts which were hidden for
him in caves and mountain clefts by the dakinis in times of yore in
order to instruct him following their discovery. Such “consciousness
treasures”, also known as
termas, generally provoked sharp criticism from the orthodox
lamas, as they called into question their privilege of being the
only source of initiation.
The Kalachakra Tantra is
explicitly modeled upon the traditional Indian coronation ceremony
(Rajasuya). Just as the
Rajasuya authorizes the
heir to the throne to take on the status of a king, so the tantric
initiation empowers the adept to function as the emanation of a
Buddhist deity. Of course, it is also not as a person that the lama
communicates the divine energies to the initiand, but rather as a
superhuman being in human form.
It is the pupil’s duty to imagine
his guru as a living Buddha (Tibetan Kundun) during the entire
initiatory process. So that he never forgets the superhuman nature
of his master, the Kalachakra
Tantra prescribes a Guruyoga liturgy, which is
to be recited by the initiand at least three times a day and three
times per night. Several of these liturgies are hundreds of pages
long (Mullin, 1991, p. 109). But in all of them words to the
following effect can be found, with which the lama demands the
pupil’s (sadhaka)
absolute obedience: “From henceforth I am your [deity] Vajrapani. You must do what
I tell you to do. You should not deride me, and if you do, ... the
time of death will come, and you will fall into hell” (Dalai Lama
XIV, 1985, p. 242).
Since it is the goal of every
tantric initiation that the sadhaka himself achieve a
transhuman status, right from the outset of the initiatory path he
develops a “divine pride” and, as the First Dalai Lama informs us,
is transformed into a “vessel” in which the supernatural energies
collect (Mullin, 1991, p. 102). This is also true for the Kalachakra
Tantra.
The self-sacrifice of the
pupil
But doesn’t a metaphysical
contest now arise between the deity which stands behind the guru and
the newly created pupil deity? This is not the case for two reasons.
On the one hand, the divine being behind master and pupil forms a
unity. One could even consider it characteristic of divine entities
that they are simultaneously able to appear in various forms. On the
other, it is not the pupil (sadhaka) who produces the
deity; in contrast, he absolutely and completely loses his human
individuality and transforms himself into “pure emptiness”, without
having to surrender his perceivable body in the process. This empty
body of the sadhaka is
then in the course of the initiation occupied by the deity or the
lama respectively. Chögyam Trungpa has expressed this in
unmistakable terms: “If we surrender our body to the guru we are
surrendering our primal reference point. Our body becomes the
possession of the lineage; it is not ours any more. ... I mean that
surrendering our body, psychologically our dear life is turned over
to someone else. We do not have our dear life to hold any more”
(June Campbell, 1996, p. 161). The pupil has completely ceased to
exist as an individual soul and mind. Only his body, filled by a god
or respectively by his guru, visibly wanders through the world of
appearances.
The Kalachakra Tantra describes
this process as an “act of swallowing” which the lama performs upon
the initiand. In a central drama of the Time Tantra which is
repeated several times, the oral destruction of the sadhaka is
graphically demonstrated, even if the procedure does only take place
in the imagination of the cult participants. The following scene is
played out: the guru, as the Kalachakra deity, swallows
the pupil once he has been melted down to the size of a droplet. As
a drop the initiand then wanders through the body of his masters
until he reaches the tip of his penis. From there the guru thrusts
him out into the vagina and womb of Vishvamata, the wisdom
consort of Kalachakra.
Within Vishvamata’s body
the pupil as drop is then dissolved into “nothingness”. The rebirth
of the sadhaka as a Buddhist deity takes place only after this
vaginal destruction. Since the androgyne vajra master simultaneously
represents Kalachakra and
Vishvamata within one
individual and must be imagined by the adept as “father–mother”
during the entire initiation process, he as man takes over all the
sex-specific stages of the birth process — beginning with the
ejaculation, then the conception, the pregnancy, up to the act of
birth itself. [1]
In a certain sense, through the
use of his pupil’s body the guru , or at least his superhuman
consciousness, achieves immortality. So long the master is still
alive he has, so to speak, created a double of himself in the form
of the sadhaka; if he dies then his spirit continues to exist in the
body of his pupil. He can thus reproduce himself in the world of samsara for as long as there
are people who are prepared for his sake to sacrifice their
individuality and to surrender him their bodies as a
home.
Accordingly, Tantrism does not
develop the good qualities of a person in order to ennoble or even
deify them; rather, it resolutely and quite deliberately destroys
all the “ personality elements” of the initiands in order to replace
them with the consciousness of the initiating guru and of the deity
assigned to him. This leads at the end of the initiatory path to a
situation where the tantra master now lives on in the form of the
pupil. The latter has de
facto disappeared as an individual, even if his old physical
body can still be apprehended. It has become a housing in which the
spirit of his master dwells.
The lineage
tree
The pupil serves as an empty
vessel into which can flow not just the spirit of his master but
also the lineage of all the former teachers which stretches back
behind him, plus the deities they have all represented. It is all of
these who now occupy the sadhaka’s body and through him are able to
function in the real world.
In Lamaism, once anyone counts as
part of the lineage of the High Initiates, they become part of a
“mystic tree” whose leaves, branches, trunk, and roots consist of
the numerous Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the Tibetan/tantric
pantheon. At the tip or in the middle of the crown of the tree the
Highest Enlightenment Being (the ADI BUDDHA) is enthroned, who goes
by different names in the various schools. The divine energy flows
from him through every part to deep in the roots. Evans-Wentz
compares this down-flow to an electric current: “As electricity may
be passed on from one receiving station to another, so ... is the
divine Grace ... transmitted through the Buddha Dorje Chang (Vajradhara) to the Line of
Celestial Gurus and thence to the Apostolic Gurus on earth, and from
him, to each of the subordinate Gurus, and by them, through the
mystic initiation, to each of the neophytes” (Evans-Wentz, 1978, p.
9, quoted by Bishop, 1993, p. 118).
All of the high initiates are
separated by a deep divide from the masses of simple believers and
the rest of the suffering beings, who either prostrate themselves
before the dynastic line tree in total awe or are unable to even
perceive it in their ignorance. Yet there is still a connection
between the timeless universe of the gurus and “normal” people,
since the roots of the mystic tree are anchored in the same world as
that in which mortals live. The spiritual hierarchy draws its
natural and spiritual resources from it, both material goods and
religious devotion and loving energy. The critical Tibet researcher,
Peter Bishop, has therefore, and with complete justification, drawn
attention to the fact that the mystic line tree in Lamaism takes on
the appearance of a bureaucratic, regulated monastic organization:
“This idealized image of hierarchical order, where everything is
evaluated, certified and allotted a specific place according to the
grade of attainment, where control, monitoring and authorization is
absolute, is the root-metaphor of Tibetan Buddhism” (Bishop, 1993,
p. 118).
The first seven
initiations
All together the Kalachakra Tantra talks of
fifteen initiatory stages. The first seven are considered lower
solemnities and are publicly performed by the Dalai Lama and open to
the broad masses. The other eight are only intended for a tiny,
select minority. The Tibetologist Alexander Wayman has drawn a
comparison to the Eleusian mysteries of antiquity, the first part of
which was also conducted in front of a large public, whilst only a
few participated in the second, secret part in the temple at night
(Wayman, 1983, 628).
The seven lower initiations ought
to be succinctly described here. They areas follows: the (1) the
water initiation;(2) the crown initiation; (3) the silk ribbon
initiation; (4) the vajra and bell initiation; (5) the conduct
initiation; (6) the name initiation; and (7) the permission
initiation. All seven are compared to the developmental stages of a
child from birth to adulthood. In particular they serve to purify
the pupils.
Before beginning the initiatory
path the neophyte swears a vow with which he makes a commitment to
strive for Buddhahood incessantly, to regret and avoid all misdeeds,
to lead other beings along the path to enlightenment, and to follow
absolutely the directions of the Kalachakra master. But above all he
must visualize his androgyne guru as the divine couple, Kalachakra
in union with his consort Vishvamata. With blindfolded eyes he must
imagine that he is wandering through a three-dimensional mandala (an
imaginary palace) which is occupied by the four meditation Buddhas
(Amitabha, Ratnasambhava, Amoghasiddhi, Vairochana) and their
partners.
After his blindfold has been
removed, he tosses a blossom onto a sacred image (mandala) spread
out before him, which has been prepared from colored sand. The place
where the flower comes to rest indicates the particular Buddha
figure with which the pupil must identify during his initiation
journey. In the following phase he receives two reeds of kusha
grass, since the historical Buddha once experienced enlightenment as
he meditated while seated on this type of grass. Further, the Lama
gives him a toothpick for cleansing, as well as a red cord, which he
must tie around the upper arm with three knots. Then he receives
instructions for sleeping. Before he goes to bed he has to recite
certain mantras as often as possible, and then to lay himself on his
right side with his face in the direction of the sand mandala.
Dreams are sent to him in the night which the guru analyzes another
day. It is considered especially unfavorable if a crocodile swallows
the pupil in his dream. The monster counts as a symbol for the world
of illusions (samsara) and informs the sadhaka that he is still
strongly trapped by this. But via meditation upon the emptiness of
all appearances he can dissolve all unfavorable dream images
again.
Further instructions and rites
follow which likewise concern purification. At the end of the first
seven stages the Vajra master then dissolves the pupil into
“emptiness” in his imagination, in order to then visualize him as
his own polar image, as Kalachakra in union with Vishvamata. We
should never forget that the androgynous tantric teacher represents
both time deities in one person. Since the pupil possesses
absolutely no further individual existence right from the beginning
of the initiation, the two time deities are doubled by this
meditative imagining — they appear both in the tantra master and in
the person of the sadhaka.
We can thus see that already in
the first phase of the Kalachakra initiation, the alternation
between dissolution and creation determines the initiatory drama.
The teacher will in the course of the rituals destroy his pupil many
times more in imagination, so as to replace him with a deity, or he
will instruct the sadhaka to perform the individual act of
destruction upon himself until nothing remains of his personality.
In a figurative sense, we can describe this destruction and
self-destruction of the individual as a continually performed “human
sacrifice”, since the “human” must abandon his earthly existence in
favor of that of a deity. This is in no sense a liberal
interpretation of the tantra texts; rather it is literally demanded
in them. The pupil has to offer himself up with spirit and mind,
skin and hair to the guru and the gods at work through him.
Incidentally, these, together with all of their divine attributes,
are codified in a canon, they can no longer develop themselves and
exert their influence on reality as frozen archetypal
images.
In the light of the entire
procedure we have described, it seems sensible to remind ourselves
of the thesis posed above, that the “production” of the deity and
the “destruction” of the person stand in an originally causal
relation to one another, or — to put it even more clearly — that the
gods and the guru who manipulates them feed themselves upon the life
energies of the pupil.
The first two initiations, the
water and crown initiations, are directed at the purification of the
mystic body. The water initiation (1) corresponds to the bathing of
a child shortly after its birth. The five elements (earth, water,
fire, air, and ether) become purified in the energy body of the
sadhaka. Subsequently, the guru in the form of Kalachakra imagines
that he swallows the initiand who has melted down to the size of a
droplet, then thrusts him out through his penis into the womb of his
partner Vishvamata, who finally gives birth to him as a deity. As
already mentioned above, in this scenario of conception and birth we
must not lose sight of the fact that the androgynous guru
simultaneously represents in his person the time god and the time
goddess. The complete performance is thus set in scene by him alone.
At the close of the water initiation the master touches the initiand
at the “five places” with a conch shell: the crown, the shoulder,
the upper arm, the hip and the thigh. Here, the shell is probably a
symbol for the element of water.
The crown initiation (2) which
now follows corresponds to the child’s first haircut. Here the
so-called “five aggregates” of the pupil are purified (form,
feeling, perception, unconscious structures, consciousness). By
“purification” we must understand firstly the dissolving of all
individual personality structures and then their “re-creation” as
the characteristics of a deity. The procedure is described thus in
the tantra texts; however, to be exact it is not a matter of a
“re-creation” but of the replacement of the pupil’s personality with
the deity. At the end of the second initiation the vajra master
touches the “five places” with a crown.
The third and fourth initiations
are directed at the purification of speech. In the silk ribbon
initiation (3), the androgynous guru once more swallows the pupil
and — in the form of Vishvamata — gives birth to him as a god. Here
the energy channels, which from a tantric way of looking at things
constitute the “mystic framework” of the subtle body, are purified,
that is dissolved and created anew. In the development of the human
child this third initiation corresponds to the piercing of the ears,
so that a golden ring can be worn as an
adornment.
The vajra and bell initiation (4)
follows, which is compared to the speaking of a child’s first words.
Now the guru cleanses the three “main energy channels” in the
pupil’s body. They are found alongside the spine and together build
the subtle backbone of the adept, so to speak. The right channel
becomes the masculine vajra, the left the feminine bell (gantha). In
the middle, “androgynous” channel both energies, masculine and
feminine, meet together and generate the so-called “mystic heat”,
which embodies the chief event in the highest initiations, to be
described in detail later. The pupil now asks the Kalachakra deity,
represented through the guru, to give him the vajra and the bell,
that is, to hand over to him the emblems of
androgyny.
Yet again, an act of swallowing
takes place in the fifth initiation. The conduct initiation (5)
corresponds to a child’s enjoyment of the objects of the senses.
Accordingly, the six senses (sight, hearing, smell, etc.) and their
objects (image, sound, scent, etc.) are destroyed in meditation and
re-created afterwards as divine characteristics. The vajra master
ritually touches the pupil’s “five places” with a thumb
ring.
In the name initiation (6) which
follows, the ordained receive a secret religious name, which is
usually identical with that of the deity assigned to them during the
preparatory rites. The guru prophecies that the pupil will appear as
a Buddha in the future. Here the six abilities to act (mouth, arms,
legs, sexual organs, urinary organs, and anus) and the six actions
(speech, grasping, walking, copulation, urination, and defecation)
are purified, dissolved and re-created. As seems obvious, the texts
compare the naming of a child with the sixth initiation. The fifth
and sixth initiations together purify the
spirit.
The permission initiation (7)
remains — which corresponds on the human level to the child’s first
lesson in reading. Five symbols (the vajra, jewel, sword, lotus, and
wheel) which act as metaphors for various states of awareness in
deep meditation are purified, dissolved and replaced. The
androgynous guru swallows the pupil once more and as Kalachakra in
union with his consort gives birth to him anew. He then hands him
the vajra and the bell, as well as the five symbolic objects just
mentioned, one after another. A river of mantras pours from the
lama’ mouth, flows over into the mouth of the pupil, and collects in
his heart center. With a golden spoon the master gives him an “eye
medicine”, with which he can cast aside the veil of ignorance. He
then receives a mirror as an admonition that the phenomenal world is
illusory and empty like a reflection in a mirror. A bow and arrow,
which are additionally handed to him, are supposed to urge him on to
extreme concentration.
The ritual lays especial weight
on the handing over of the diamond scepter (vajra). The guru says
“that the secret nature of the vajra is the exalted wisdom of great
bliss. Holding the vajra will recall the true nature of the ultimate
vajra, or what is called ‘method’” (Bryant, 1992, p. 165). Through
this closing remark the tantra master forcefully evokes the
masculine primacy in the ritual. In that the pupil crosses his arms
with the vajra in his right hand and the feminine bell in his left
(the Vajrahumkara gesture), he demonstrates his androgyny and his
tantric ability to control the feminine wisdom energies (prajna)
with “method” (upaya).
With this demonstration of
dominance the seven lower initiations are ended. The adept can now
describe himself as a “lord of the seventh level”. With immediate
effect he gains the right to disseminate the teaching of Buddha,
albeit only within the limits of the lower initiations described.
The vajra master thus calls out to him, “Turn the vajra wheel (teach
the Dharma) in or to help all sentient beings” (Bryant, 1992, p.
164).
In the truest sense of the word
the first seven solemnities are just the “foreplay” of the
Kalachakra initiation. Then only in the higher initiations which
follow does it come to sexual union with a real partner. The wisdom
consorts of the seven lower levels are of a purely imaginary nature
and no karma mudra is needed for their performance. Therefore they
can also be given in public, even in front of great
crowds.
The divine time
machine
So far, the vajra master and his
pupil appear as the sole protagonists on the initiatory stage of the
Time Tantra. Predominant in all seven initiation scenes is the
uninterrupted consolidation of the position of the master, primarily
depicted in the act of swallowing and rebirth of the initiand, that
is, in his destruction as a human and his “re-creation” as a god. We
can therefore describe the “death of the pupil” and his “birth as a
deity” as the key scene of the tantric drama, constantly repeated on
all seven lower initiation levels. The individual personality of the
sadhaka is destroyed but his visible body is retained. The guru uses
it as a living vessel into which he lets his divine substances flow
so as to multiply himself. The same gods now live in the pupil and
the master.
But is there no difference
between the guru and the sadhaka any more after the initiation? This
is indeed the case when both are at the same level of initiation.
But if the master has been initiated into a higher stage, then he
completely encompasses the lower stage at which the pupil still
finds himself. For example, if the initiand has successfully
completed all seven lower solemnities of the Kalachakra Tantra yet the
Kalachakra master is acting from the eighth initiation stage, then
the pupil has become a part of the initiating guru, but the guru is
in no sense a part of the pupil, since his of spiritual power skills
are far higher and more
comprehensive.
The initiation stages and the
individuals assigned to them thus stand in a classic hierarchical
relation to one another. The higher always integrate the lower, the
lower must always obey the higher, those further down are no more
than the extended arm of those above. Should, for example — as we
suspect — the Dalai Lama alone have attained the highest initiation
stage of the Kalachakra
Tantra, then all the other Buddhists initiated into the Time
Tantra would not simply be his subordinates in a bureaucratic sense,
but rather outright parts of his self. In his system he would be the
arch-god (the ADI BUDDHA), who integrated the other gods (or
Buddhas) within himself, then since all individual and human
elements of the initiand are destroyed, there are only divine beings
living in the body of the pupil. But these too stand in a ranked
relationship to one another, as there are lower, higher and supreme
deities. We thus need — to formulate things somewhat provocatively —
to examine whether the Kalachakra Tantra portrays a
huge divine time machine with the Dalai Lama as the prime mover and
his followers as the various wheels.
The four higher “secret”
initiations
The seven lower initiations are
supposed to first “purify” the pupil and then transform him into a
deity. For this reason they are referred to as the “stage of
production”. The following “four higher initiations” are considered
to be the “stage of perfection”. They are known as: (8) the vase
initiation; (9) the secret initiation; (10) the wisdom initiation;
and (11) the word initiation. They may only be received under
conditions of absolute secrecy by a small number of
chosen.
In all of the higher initiations
the presence of a young woman of ten, twelve, sixteen, or twenty
years of age. Without a living karma mudra enlightenment cannot,
at least according to the original text, be attained in this
lifetime. The union with her thus counts as the key event in the
external action of the rituals. Thus, as the fourth book of the Kalachakra Tantra says with
emphasis, “neither meditation nor the recitation of mantras, nor the
preparation, nor the great mandalas and thrones, nor the initiation
into the sand mandala, nor the summonsing of the Buddhas confers the
super natural powers, but alone the mudra” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra IV, p.
226).
Further, in the higher
initiations the adept is obliged to ritually consume the five types
of meat (human flesh, elephant meat, horseflesh, dog, and beef) and
drink the five nectars (blood, semen, menses
...).
In texts which are addressed to a
broad public the vase initiation (8) is euphemistically described as
follows. The vajra master
holds a vase up before the sadhaka’s eyes. The adept visualizes a
sacrificial goddess who carries the vase. The vessel is filled with
a white fluid (Henss, 1985, p. 51). In reality, however, the
following initiation scene is played out: firstly the pupil brings
the lama a “beautiful girl, without blemish”, twelve years of age.
He then supplicates to receive initiation and sings a hymn of praise
to his guru. “Satisfied, the master then touches the breast of the
mudra in a worldly
manner” (Naropa, 1994, p. 190). This all takes place before the
pupil’s watchful gaze, so as to stimulate the latter’s sexual
desire.
According to another passage in
the texts — but likewise in reference to the Kalachakra Tantra — the vajra master shows the
undressed girl to the sadhaka and requires him to now stroke the
breasts of the karma
mudra himself (Naropa, 1994, p. 188). “There is not actually any
vase or any pot that is used for this empowerment”, we are informed
by Ngawang Dhargyey, a modern commentator on the Time Tantra. “What
is referred to as ‘the pot’ are the breasts of the girl, which are
called the ‘vase that holds the white’” (Dhargyey, 1985, p. 8). We
have already drawn attention to the fact that this white substance
is probably the same magic secretion from the female breast which
the European alchemists of the seventeenth century enthusiastically
described as “virgin’s milk” and whose consumption promised great
magical powers for the adept.
The sight of the naked girl and
the stroking of her breasts causes the “descent” of the semen virile (male seed) in
the pupil. In the tantric view of things this originally finds
itself at a point below the roof of the skull and begins to flow
down through the body into the penis when a man becomes sexually
aroused. Under no circumstances may it come to the point of
ejaculation here! If the pupil successfully masters his lust, he
attains the eighth initiation stage, which is known as the
“immobile” on the basis of the fixation of the semen in the
phallus.
Let us now continue with the
euphemistic depiction of the next secret initiation (9): The pupil
is blindfolded. The master unites the masculine and feminine forces
within himself and subsequently lets the adept taste the “mystic
nectar”, which is offered to him in the form of tea and yogurt so
that he may experience great bliss (Henss, 1985, p. 52). In reality
something different is played out on this level: firstly the adept
hands valuable clothes and other sacrificial offerings over to the
master. Then he presents him with a young and gracile girl. The lama
demands that the sadhaka leave the room or blindfold himself.
Tantric dishes are served, the master venerates and praises the mudra with songs of
adulation, elevates her to the status of a goddess and then couples
with her “until her sexual fluids flow” (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p.
121). He then, exceptionally, allows his semen to flow into her
vagina.
The mixture of “red-white fluid”
thus created, that is, of the male and female seed, is scooped out
of the sexual organs of the wisdom consort with a finger or a small
ivory spoon and collected in a vessel. The master then summons the
pupil, or instructs him to remove his blindfold. He now takes some
of the “holy substance” with his finger once more and moistens the
tongue of the adept with it whilst speaking the words, “This is your
sacrament, dear one, as taught by all Buddhas ... “ — and the pupil
answers blissfully, “Today my birth has become fruitful. Today my
life is fruitful. Today I have been born into the Buddha-Family. Now
I am a son of the Buddhas” (Snellgrove, 1987, vol. 1, p. 272).
Concretely, this means that he has, through the consumption of the
female and the male seed, attained the status of an
androgyne.
But there are also other versions
of the second initiation. When we read that, “The pupil visualizes
the secret vajra of the
vajra masters in his own
mouth and tastes the white bodhicitta of the guru lama.
This white bodhicitta
sinks to his own heart chakra and in so doing generates bliss ...The
name ‘secret initiation’ is thus also a result of the fact that one
partakes of the secret substance of the vajra master” (Henss, 1985,
p. 53; Dhargyey, 1985, p. 8), then this in truth means that the guru
lays his sperm-filled penis in the mouth of the adept and the latter
tastes the semen, since the “white bodhicitta” and the “secret
substance” are nothing other than the semen virile of the
initiating teacher.
In the wisdom initiation (10)
which follows, the pupil is confronted with an even more sexually
provocative scene: “... he is told to look at the spreading vagina
of a knowledge lady. Fierce passion arises in him, which in turn
induces great bliss” (Dalai Lama I, 1985, p.155). The tantra master
then “gives” the sadhaka the girl with the words, “O great Being,
take this consort who will give you bliss” (Farrow and Menon, 1992,
p. 186). Both are instructed to engage in sexual union (Naropa,
1994, pp. 188, 190). During the ritual performance of the yuganaddha (fusion) the
adept may under no circumstances let go of his
semen.
The Kalachakra Tantra does not
give away all of the secrets which are played out during this scene.
It therefore makes sense to fall back upon other tantra texts in
order to gain more precise information about the proceedings during
the tenth initiation stage. For example, in the Candamaharosana Tantra, once
the master has left the room, the mudra now provokes the pupil
with culinary obscenities: “Can you bear, my dear,” she cries out,
“to eat my filth, and faeces and urine; and suck the blood from
inside my bhaga
[vagina]?” Then the candidate must say: “Why should I not bear to
eat your filth, O Mother? I must practice devotion to women until I
realize the essence of Enlightenment” (George, 1974, p.
55).
The final “word initiation” (11)
is in a real sense no longer an initiation by the guru, as its name
indicates it only exists in a literal form. It is thus also not
revealed in any external scenario, but instead takes place
exclusively within the inner subtle body of the former pupil, since
the latter has already made the switch to a perfected consciousness
and been transformed into a deity. A commentary upon the eleventh
higher initiation thus belongs in the next chapter, which concerns
the microcosmic processes in the energy body of the
practitioner.
Sperm and menstrual blood as
magic substances
But before we continue with a
discussion of the four highest initiations, we would like to make a
number of reflections on the topic of sperm gnosis, which so
decisively shapes not just the Kalachakra but rather all
tantras. The same name, bodhicitta, is borne by both
the male seed and the supreme mystic experience, that of the “clear
light”. This already makes apparent how closely interlaced the semen virile and
enlightenment are. The bodhicitta ("wisdom-mind”)
is characterized by the feeling of “supreme bliss” and “absolute
self-awareness”. A connection between both states of consciousness
and the male sperm seems to be a necessity for the tantric, since,
as we may read in the Hevajra
Tantra, “without semen there would be no bliss and without bliss
semen would not exist. Since semen and bliss are ineffective on
their own they are mutually dependent and bliss arises from the
union with the deity” (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p.
169).
In the tantras, the moon and
water are idiosyncratically assigned to the male seed, which is
idiosyncratic because both metaphors are of largely feminine
character in terms of cultural history. We will need to look into
this anomaly in Tantric Buddhism later. But a solar assignation of
sperm is likewise known (Bharati, 1977, p. 237). The exceptional
meaning which is accorded to the semen virile in Vajrayana has given rise to
the conception among the Tibetan populace that, rather than blood,
male seed flows in the veins of a high lama (Stevens, 1993, p.
90).
The retention of
sperm
For a Buddhist Tantric the
retention of the male seed is the sine qua non of the highest
spiritual enlightenment. This stands in stark opposition to the
position of Galen (129–199 C.E.), the highest medical authority of
the European Middle Ages. Galen was of the opinion that the retentio semenis would lead
to a putrefaction of the secretion, and that the rotten substance
would rise to the head and disturb the functioning of the
brain.
In contrast, the tantras teach
that the semen is originally stored in a moonlike bowl beneath the
roof of the skull. As soon as a person begins to experience sexual
desire, it starts to flow out, drop by drop, passing through the
five energy centers (chakras). In each of these
the yogi experiences a specific “seminal” ecstasy (Naropa, 1994, p.
191). The destination of the sperm’s journey within the body is the
tip of the penis. Here, through extreme meditative concentration,
the adept collects the lust: “The vajra [penis] is inserted
into the lotus [vagina], but not moved. When lust of a transient art
arises, the mantra hum
should be spoken. ... The decisive [factor] is thus the
retention of the sperm. Through this, the act obtains a cosmological
dimension. ... It becomes the means of attaining enlightenment (bodhi)” (Grönbold, Asiatische Studien, p. 34).
“Delight resides in the tip of the vajra [penis]", as is said
in a Kalachakra text
(Grönbold, 1992a).
With the topic of sperm retention
an appeal is made to ancient Indian sexual practices which date from
pre-Buddhist times. In the national epic poem of the Indians, the Mahabharata, we can already
read of ascetics “who keep the semen up” (Grönbold, Asiatische Studien, p. 35).
In early Buddhism a holy man (Arhat) is distinguished by
the fact that his discharges have been conquered and in future no
longer occur. From Vajrayana comes the striking
saying that “A yogi whose member is always hard is one who always
retains his semen” (Grönbold, Asiatische Studien, p. 34).
In contrast, in India the flowing of the male seed into “the fiery
maw of the female sexual organ” is still today regarded as a sacrificium and therefore
feared as an element of death (White, 1996, p.
28).
The in part adventurous
techniques of semen retention must be learnt and improved by the
adept through constant, mostly painful, practice. They are either
the result of mental discipline or physical nature, such as through
pressure on the perineum at the point of orgasm, through which the
spermatic duct is blocked, or one stops the seminal flow through his
breathing. If it nonetheless comes to ejaculation, then the lost
sperm should be removed from the mudra’s vagina with the
finger or tongue and subsequently drunk by the
practitioner.
Yet that which is forbidden under
penalty of dreadful punishments in hell for the pupil, this is not
by a long shot the case for his guru. Hence, Pundarika, the first
commentator upon the Kalachakra Tantra,
distinguishes between one “ejaculation, which arises out of karma
and serves to perpetuate the chain of rebirth, and another, which is
subject to mental control ...” (Naropa, 1994, p. 20). An enlightened
one can thus ejaculate as much as he wishes, under the condition
that he not lose his awareness in so doing. It now becomes apparent
why the vajra master in
the second higher initiation (9) of the Time Tantra is able to
without harm let his sperm flow into the vagina of the mudra so as to be able to
offer the mixture (sukra)
which runs out to the pupil as holy food.
The female
seed
As the female correspondence to
male sperm the texts nominate the seed of the woman (semen feminile). Among
Tantrics it is highly contested whether this is a matter of the
menstrual blood or fluids which the mudra secretes during the
sexual act. In any case, the sexual fluids of the man are always
associated with the color white, and those of the woman with red.
Fundamentally, the female discharge is assigned an equally powerful
magic effect as that of its male counterpart. Even the gods thirst
after it and revere the menses as the nectar of “immortality”
(Benard, 1994, p. 103). In the old Indian matriarchies, and still
today in certain Kali
cults, the menstruating goddess is considered as one of highest
forms of appearance of the feminine principle (Bhattacharyya, 1982,
pp. 133, 134). It was in the earliest times a widespread opinion,
taken up again in recent years by radical feminists, that the entire
natural and supernatural knowledge of the goddess was concentrated
in the menstrual blood.
Menstruating
Dakini
Outside of the gynocentric and
tantric cults however, a negative valuation of menstrual blood
predominates, which we know from nearly all patriarchal religions: a
menstruating woman is unclean and extremely dangerous. The magic
radiation of the blood brings no blessings, rather it has
devastating effects upon the sphere of the holy. For this reason,
women who are bleeding may never enter the grounds of a temple. This
idea is also widely distributed in Hinayana Buddhism. Menstrual blood is
seen there as a curse which has its origins in a female original
sin: “Because they are born as women,” it says in a text of the “low
vehicle”, “their endeavors toward Buddhahood are little developed,
while their lasciviousness and bad characteristics preponderate.
These sins, which strengthen one another, assume the form of
menstrual blood which is discharged every month in two streams, in
that it soils not just the god of the earth but also all the other
deities too” (Faure, 1994, p. 182). But the Tantrics are completely
different! For them the fluids of the woman bear Lucullan names like
“wine”, “honey”, “nectar”, and a secret is hidden within them which
can lead the yogi to enlightenment (Shaw, 1994, p.
157)
According to the tantric logic of
inversion, that precisely the worst is the most appropriate starting
substance for the best, the yogi need not fear the magical
destructive force of
the menses, as he can reverse it into its creative opposite
through the proper method. The embracing of a “bleeding” lover is
therefore a great ritual privilege. In his book on Indian ecstatic
cults, Philip Rawson indicates that “the most powerful sexual rite
... requires intercourse with the female partner when she is
menstruating and her ‘red’ sexual energy is at its peak” (Rawson,
1973, p. 24; see also Chöpel, 1992, p. 191).
Astonishingly, the various types
of menses which can be used for divergent magical purposes have been
cataloged. The texts distinguish between the menstrual blood of a
virgin, a lower-class woman, a married woman, a widow, and so on.
(Bhattacharyya, 1982, p. 136) The time at which the monthly bleeding
takes place also has ritual significance. In Tibet yiddams (meditation images)
exist which illustrate dakinis from whose vaginas the blood is
flowing in streams (Essen, 1989, vol. 1, p.
179).
In keeping with the Tantric’s
preference for every possible taboo substance, it is no wonder that
he drinks the menses. The following vision was in fact perceived by
a woman, the yogini Yeshe Tsogyal, it could however have been just
as easily experienced by pretty much any lama: “A red lady,
perfectly naked and wearing not even a necklace of bones, appeared
before me. She placed her vagina at my mouth and blood flowed out of
it which I drank with deep draughts. It now appeared to me that all
realms were filled with bliss! The strength, only comparable to that
of a lion, returned to me!” (Herrmann-Pfand,
1992, p. 281).
As has already been mentioned,
the monthly flow is not always recognized as the substance yearned
for by the yogi. Some authors here also think of other fluids which
the woman releases during the sexual act or through stimulation of
the clitoris. “When passion is produced, the feminine fluid boils”,
Gedün Chöpel, who has explored this topic intensively, tells us
(Chöpel, 1992, p. 59). From him we also learn that the women guard
the secret of the magic power of their discharges: “However, most
learned persons nowadays and also women who have studied many books
say that the female has no regenerative [?] fluid. Because I like
conversation about the lower parts, I asked many women friends, but
aside from shaking a fist at me with shame and laughter, I could not
find even one who would give me a honest answer” (Chöpel, 1992, p.
61).
The
sukra
In the traditional Buddhist
conception an embryo arises from the admixture of the male seed and
the female seed. This red-white mixture is referred to by the texts
as sukra Since the fluids
of man and woman produces new life, the following analogic syllogism
appears as obvious as it is simple: if the yogi succeeds in
permanently uniting within himself both elixirs (the semen virile and the semen feminile), then
eternal life lies in store for him. He becomes a “born of himself”,
having overcome the curse of rebirth and replaced it with the
esoteric vision of immortality. With the red-white mixture he
attains the “medicine of long life”, a “perfected body” (Hermanns,
1965, pp. 194, 195). Sukra is the “life juice” par excellence, the liquid
essence of the entire world of appearances. It is equated with amrta, the “drink of
immortality” or the “divine nectar”.
Even if many tantric texts speak
only of bodhicitta, the
male seed, at heart it is a matter of the absorption of both fluids,
the male and the female, in short — of sukra. Admittedly the mixing
of the sexual fluids does seem incompatible with the prohibition
against ejaculation, but through the so-called Vajroli method the damaging
consequences of the emission of semen can be reversed, indeed this
is considered a veritable touchstone of the highest yogic skill.
Here, the tantra master lets his bodhicitta flow into his
partner‘s vagina in order to subsequently draw back into himself
through his urethra the male-female mixture which has arisen there.
“After he has streamed forth,” Mircea Eliade quotes a text as
saying, “he draws in and says: through my force, through my seed I
take your seed — and she is without seed” (Eliade, 1985, p. 264).
The man thus steals the seed of the woman under the impression that
he can through this become a powerful androgynous being, and leaves
her without her own life energy.
Some of the “initiated” even
succeed in drawing up the semen feminile without
ejaculating any sperm so as to then produce the yearned-for sukra mixture in their own
body. The mastery of this method requires painful and lengthy
exercises, such as the introduction of small rods of lead and “short
lengths of solder” into the urethra (Eliade, 1985, p. 242). Here can
be seen very clearly how much of a calculating and technical meaning
the term upaya (method)
has in the tantras. Yet this does not hinder the Tantric Babhaha
from celebrating this thieving process in a poetic
stanza:
In the sacred citadel of the
vulva of
a superlative, skillful
partner,
do the praxis of mixing
white seed
with her ocean of red
seed.
Then absorb, raise, and
spread the nectar—
A stream of ecstasy such as
you’ve never known.
(quoted by Shaw, 1994,
p. 158).
Ejaculation
Now what happens if the yogi has
not mastered the method of drawing back? Fundamentally, the
following applies: “Through the loss of the bindu [semen] comes death,
through its retention, life” (Eliade, 1985, p. 257). In a somewhat
more tolerant view, however, the adept may catch the sukra from out of the vagina
in a vessel and then drink it (Shaw, 1994, p. 157). It is not rare
for the drinking bowl to be made from a human skull. The Candamaharosana Tantra
recommends sucking the mixture up with a tube (pipe) through the
nose (George, 1974, p. 75). If one sips the sukra out of his mudra’s genitals with his
mouth, then the process is described as being “from mouth to mouth”
(White, 1996, p. 200). Without exaggeration one can refer to this
drinking of the “white-red bodhicitta” as the great
tantric Eucharist, in which semen and blood are sacredly consumed in
place of bread and wine. Through this oriental “Last Supper” the
power and the strength of the women are passed over to the
man.
Already, centuries before
Tantrism ,the nightly ejaculations of the Buddhist Arhats (holy men) were a
topic of great debate. In Tantrism, a man who let his sperm flow was
referred to as a pashu,
an “animal”, whereas anyone who could retain it in the sexual
act was a vira, a “hero”,
and accorded the attribute divya, “divine” (Bharati,
1977, p. 1977 148).
We have already reported how
ejaculation is equated simply with death. This too we already learn
from the pre-Buddhist Upanishads. In fact, Indian culture is, in the
estimation of one of its best interpreters, Doninger O’Flaherty,
characterized by a deadly fear of the loss of semen far beyond the
limits of the tantric milieu: “The fear of losing body fluids leads
not only to retention, but to attempts to steal the partner's fluid
(and the fear that the partner will try the same trick) — yet
another form of competition. If the woman is too powerful or too old
or too young, terrible things will happen to the innocent man who
falls into her trap, a fact often depicted in terms of his losing
his fluids” (O'Flaherty, 1982/1988, p. 56). Agehananda Bharati also
shares this evaluation, when he writes in his book on the tantric
traditions that, “the loss of semen is an old, all-pervasive fear in
Indian tradition and probably the core of the strongest anxiety
syndrome in Indian culture” (Bharati, 1977, p.
237).
The drawing up of sperm by a
woman is viewed by a tantric yogi as a mortally dangerous theft and
a fundamental crime. Is this purely a matter of male fantasies? Not
at all — a gynocentric correspondence to the thieving
seed-absorption is, namely, known from the Kali cults to be a ritual
event. Here, the woman assumes the upper position the sex act and in
certain rites leaves the man whose life energies she has drained
behind as a corpse. According to statements by the Tibet researcher,
Matthias Hermanns¸ there were yoginis (female yogis) who received
instruction in a technique “through which they were able to forcibly
draw their partners’ semen from out of the penis”, and the author
concludes from this that, “It is thus the counterpart of the
procedure which the yogi employs to soak up the genital juices of
several women one after another through his member” (Hermanns, 1965,
p. 19). The theft of the male sperm in waking and in dream likewise
counts as one of the preferred entertainments of the
dakinis.
Alchemy and semen
gnosis
Before we continue with the
initiation path in the Kalachakra Tantra, we would
like to throw a brief glance over Indian alchemy and the sexual
substances it employs, because this half-occult science by and large
coincides with the tantric seed gnosis. The Sanskrit term for
alchemy is Rasa-vada. Rasa means ‘liquid’ or
‘quicksilver’. Quicksilver was considered the most important
chemical substance which was made use of in the “mystic”
experiments, both in Europe and in Asia. The liquid metal was
employed in the transformation of materials both in the east and the
west, in particular with the intention of producing gold. In the
Occident it bore the name of the Roman god, Mercury. The Kalachakra Tantra also
mentions quicksilver at several points. The frequency with which it
is mentioned is a result of its being symbolically equated with the
male seed (bodhicitta);
it was, in a manner of speaking, the natural-substance form of the
semen
virile.
It is a characteristic of
quicksilver that it can “swallow” other substances, that is,
chemically bind with them. This quality allowed the liquid metal to
become a powerful symbol for the tantric yogi, who as an androgyne
succeeds in absorbing — i.e., “swallowing” — the gynergy of his wisdom
consort.
The corresponding feminine
counterpart to mercury is sulfur, known in India as Rasa-vada, and regarded as a
chemical concentrate of menstrual blood. Its magic efficacy is
especially high when a woman has been fed sulfur twenty-one days
before her menses. Both substances together, mercury and sulfur,
create cinnabar, which,
logically, is equated with sukra, the secret mixture of
the male and female seed. In the Indian alchemic texts it is
recommended that one drink a mixture of quicksilver and sulfur with
semen and menstrual blood for a year in order to attain exceptional
powers (White, 1996, p. 199).
Just how fundamental the “female
seed” was for the opus of
the Indian alchemists can be deduced from the following story. The
yogi and adept Nagarjuna, highly revered by the Tibetans and a
namesake of the famous founder of Mahayana Buddhism with whom
he is often put on the same level, experimented for years in order
to discover the elixir of life. Albert Grünwedel has therefore
christened him the “Faust of Buddhism”. One day, fed up with his
lack of success, he threw his book of formulas into the river. It
was fished out by a bathing prostitute and returned to the master.
He saw this as a higher sign and began anew with his experimentation
with the assistance of the hetaera. But once more nothing succeeded,
until one evening his assistant spilt a liquid into the mixture.
Suddenly, within seconds, the elixir of life had been created, which
Nagarjuna had labored fourteen years in vain to
discover.
Anyone who knows the tantras
would be aware that the prostitute was a dakini and that the
wonderful liquid was either the female seed or menstrual blood.
Nagarjuna could thus only attain his goal once he included a mudra in his alchemical
experiments. For this reason, among the Alchemists of India a
“female laboratory assistant” was always necessary to complete the
“great work” (White, 1996, p. 6).
There are also European manuals
of the “great art” which require that one work with the “menstrual
blood of a whore”. In one relevant text can be read: “Eve keeps the
female seed” (Jung, 1968, p. 320). Even the retention of sperm and
its transmutation into something higher is known in the west. Hence
the seventeenth-century doctor from Brussels, Johannes Baptista
Helmont, states that, “If semen is not emitted, it is changed into a
spiritual force that preserves its capacities to reproduce sperm and
invigorates breath emitted in speech” (Couliano, 1987, p. 102).
Giordano Bruno, the heretic among the Renaissance philosophers,
wrote a comprehensive essay on the manipulation of erotic love
through the retention of semen and for the purposes of attaining
power.
“Ganachakra” and the four
“highest” initiations
The initiation path of the Kalachakra Tantra, to which
we now return following this detour into the world of seed gnosis,
now leads us on to the four highest initiations, or rather to the
twelfth to fifteenth initiation stages. The reader will soon see
that we are dealing with an extended copy of the four “higher
initiations” (8–11). They thus also bear the same names: (12) the
vase initiation; (13) the secret initiation; (14) the wisdom
initiation; and (15) the word initiation. The difference primarily
consists in the fact that rather than just one mudra, ten wisdom consorts
now participate in the ritual. All ten must be offered to the master
by the pupil (Naropa, 1994, p. 193). There are different rules for
monks and laity in this regard. It is required of a layman that the
mudras be members of his
own family — his mother, his sister, his daughter, his
sister-in-law, and so on (Naropa, 1994, p. 192). This makes it de facto impossible for him
to receive the Kalachakra
solemnity. Although the same commandment applies to a monk, it is
interpreted symbolically in his case. Hence, he has to deliver to
his guru numerous girls from the lower castes, who then adopt the
names and roles of the various female relatives during the ritual.
Among other things the elements are assigned to them: the “mother”
is earth, the “sister” water, the “daughter” fire, the “sister’s
daughter” is the wind, and so on (Grünwedel, Kalacakra III, p.
125).
After the pupil has handed the
women over to his master, he is given back one of them as a symbolic
“spouse” for the impending rites (Naropa, 1994, p. 193). There are
thus ten women present on the tantric ritual stage — one as the
“wife” of the sadhaka and nine as substitutes for the rest of his
female relatives. The master now chooses one of these for himself.
The chosen wisdom consort bears the name of Shabdavajra. It is
prescribed that she be between twelve and twenty years old and have
already menstruated. First the guru fondles the jewelry of the young
women, then he undresses her and finally embraces her. The tantric
couple are surrounded by the remaining eight women along with the
pupil and his “spouse” in a circle. All the yoginis have a
particular cosmic meaning and are assigned to among other things the
points of the compass. Each of them is naked and has let down her
hair so as to evoke the wild appearance of a dakini. In their hands
the women hold a human skull filled with various repulsive
substances and a cleaver (Naropa, 1994, p.
193/194).
The guru now moves to the center
of the circle (chakra)
and performs a magic dance. Subsequently he unites with Shabdavajra in the divine
yoga, by inserting “the jewel of his vajra” (his phallus) into
her (Naropa, 1994, p. 194). After he has withdrawn his member again,
in the words of Naropa, the following happens: “'He places his vajra [phallus], which is
filled with semen in the mouth [of the pupil]'. After that the
master gives him his own mudra, whom he has already
embraced” (Naropa, 1994, p. 1994,195). On the basis of the texts
before us we have been unable to determine whether or not the pupil
now couples with the girl. This part of the ritual is referred to as
the vase initiation and forms the twelfth initiation
level.
In the secret initiation (13)
which now follows, “the master must lay his own vajra [phallus] in the mouth
of the pupil’s wife and, whilst the pupil is blindfolded, he [the
guru]must suck upon the Naranasika of the wisdom
consort” (Naropa, 1994, p. 195). Translated from Sanskrit, naranasika means
‘clitoris’. “Then,” Naropa continues, “the master must give his own
mudra to the pupil with
the idea that she is his wife” (Naropa, 1994, p. 195). This passage
remains a little unclear, since he has already given a mudra to the pupil as “wife”
during the preceding vase initiation (12).
During the following wisdom
initiation (14), the sadhaka, surrounded by the remaining women,
unites firstly with the mudra which the guru has let
him have. But it does not remain just the one. “Since it is a matter
of ten mudras, the master
must offer the pupil as many of them as he is able to sexually
possess, and that in two periods of 24 minutes each, beginning from
midnight until the sun rises”, Naropa reports (Naropa, 1994, p.
195). He thus has tenfold sexual intercourse in the presence of the
master and the remaining women.
In contrast to his guru, the sadhaka may under no
circumstances express his semen during the ritual; rather he must
only bring his drops of bodhicitta to the tip of his
penis and then draw up the semen feminile of one yogini
after another (Naropa, 1994, p. 196). Should he not succeed, he is
condemned to hell. There is, however, still a chance for him to
escape divine judgment: “If, due to a weakness of the spirit, the bodhicitta [semen] is
spilled in the vulva, then it is advisable to collect with the
tongue that of it which remains outside of the lotus [vagina]"
(Naropa, 1994, p. 196).
The fourth, word initiation (15)
designates the “supreme state of perfection”. In the three prior
initiations the sadhaka has drawn off the gynergy of his partners and
reached a state of bliss. He has now become a vajra master himself. This
is the result of the inner energy processes in his mystic body,
which he has completed during the ritual and which we describe in
the next chapter.
What happens now, at the end of
this “disciplined” orgy, to the women who participated in the
“witches’ Sabbath”? The sources are scant. But we nonetheless have
access to a translation from the third chapter of the Kalachakra Tantra by Albert
Grünwedel. This is to be treated with great caution, but taking into
account the concreteness of the images the translator can not have
made many errors here. Grünwedel tells us that, “At the end of the
solemnity a breast-jacket, beneficial to her tender body, is to be
given to the blessed earthly formed [i.e., the karma mudras mentioned
above]. Holy yoginis are to be given another breast-jacket with a
skirt” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra
III, p. 201). And in the following section the tantra recommends
giving the girls scented flowers, fruit, and a scarf as mementos of
the unique rendezvous (Grünwedel, Kalacakra III, p.
202).
The four-stage ritual just
described is known as Ganachakra. It is the
deepest secret of the Kalachakra Tantras, but is
also known in the other Highest Tantras. Now, at which secret
locations are such Ganachakras carried out? The
famous (fourteenth-century) Tibetan historian, Buston, suggests
using “one’s own house, a hidden, deserted or also agreeable
location, a mountain, a cave, a thicket, the shores of a large lake,
a cemetery, a temple of the mother goddess” (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992,
p. 376). Not recommendable are, in contrast, the home of a Brahman
or noble, a royal palace or a monastery garden. The Hevajra Tantra is more
degenerate and less compromising regarding the choice of location
for the Ganachakra
ritual: “These feasts must be held in cemeteries, in mountain groves
or deserted places which are frequented by non-human beings. It must
have nine seats which are made of parts of corpses, tiger skins or
rags which come from a cemetery. In the middle can be found the
master, who represents the god Hevajra, and round about the
yoginis ... are posted” (Naropa, 1994, p. 46). With the guru in the
center these form a magic circle, a living mandala.
The number of participating
yoginis differs from tantra to tantra. It ranges from eight to
sixty-four. Numbers like the latter appear unrealistic. Yet one must
bear in mind that in the past Ganachakras were also
carried out by powerful oriental rulers, who would hardly have had
difficulties organizing this considerably quantity of women together
in one place. It is, however, highly unlikely that these tantra
masters copulated with all 64 yoginis in one
night.
Various ritual objects are handed
to the women during the ritual of which the majority, if not all,
are of an aggressive nature: cleavers, swords, bone trumpets,
skulls, skewers. As a cult meal the above-mentioned holy nectars are
served: excrement, human flesh, and the meat of various taboo
animals. To drink there is menstrual blood, urine, semen, and so
forth. The third chapter of the Kalachakra Tantra recommends
“slime, snot, tears, fat, saliva, filth, feces, urine, marrow,
excrement, liver, gall, blood, skin, flesh, sperm, entrails”
(Grünwedel, Kalacakra
III, p. 155).
The sacrificial flesh of the
“sevenfold born” which we mention above is, when available, also
offered as a sacred food at a Ganachakra. In the story
which frames a tantric tale, the Vajradakinigiti, several
dakinis kill a sevenfold-born king’s son in order to make a
sacrificial meal of his flesh and blood. Likewise, two scenes from
the life of the Kalachakra master Tilopa are
known in which the consumption of a “sevenfold born” at a dakini
feast is mentioned (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, pp.
393-394).
Albert Grünwedel believed that
the female partners of the gurus were originally sacrificed at the
Ganachakra and in fact
were burned at the stake like European witches so as to then be
resurrected as “dakinis”, as tantric demonesses. His hypothesis is
difficult to confirm on the basis of the available historical
evidence. Nonetheless, as far as the symbolic significance of the
ritual is concerned, we can safely assume that we are here dealing
with a sacrificial ceremony. For example, Buston (14th century), in
connection with the highest Kalachakra initiations and
thus also in relation to the Ganachakra, speaks of
“secret victims” (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, p. 386). The ten karma mudras present during the
ritual go by the name of “sacrificial goddesses”. One event in the
Ganachakra proceedings is
known as “sacrifice of the assembly”, which can only have meant the
sacrifice of the women present (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, p. 386). A
further interpreter of the tantras, Abhinavagupta, refers to the Ganachakra as the “sacrifice
of the wheel” (chakra
means ‘wheel’) or as the “highest sacrifice” (Naropa, 1994, p.
46).
Everything which we have said
about the “tantric female sacrifice” is without doubt also true for
the Ganachakra. There are
documents which prove that such sacrifices were really carried out.
In the eleventh century a group of the notorious “robber monks”
became prominent, of whom the following can be read in the Blue Annals: “The doctrine
of the eighteen [robber monks] consisted of a corrupt form of the
tantric praxis, they kidnapped women and men and were in the habit
of performing human sacrifices during the tantric feasts (ganacakra - puja)” (Blue Annals, 1995, p. 697).
Such excesses were criticized already by the traditional Tibetan
historians, albeit with a certain leniency. Thus the Fifth Dalai
Lama, who himself wrote a history of Tibet, exonerated the guru of
the eighteen robber monks, Prajnagupta by name, of all guilt, whilst
he condemned his “pupils” as the guilty party (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992,
p. 418, note 11).
Obviously, a Buddhist Ganachakra is always led by
a man. Yet, like much in Tantrism, this ritual also seems to have
had a matriarchal origin. The Indologist Marie-Thérèse de Mallmann
describes in detail such a gynocentric “circle feast” from the sixth
century. It was staged by a powerful oriental queen. In one document
it is said of her that, “through her [the queen], the circle king
was reduced to the role of a sacrifice which was performed in the
circle (chakra) of the
goddesses” (Mallmann, 1963, p. 172). It thus involved the carrying
out of a king sacrifice, found in many ancient matriarchal cultures,
in which the old king was replaced by a new one. The sacrificial
victim here is at any rate a man. In the Ganachakra of Buddhist
Tantrism precisely the opposite took place! The yoginis are
sacrificed and the guru elevates himself to the triumphant king of
the circle.
The gynocentric ritual was also
known under the names of “wheel of the goddesses”, “wheel of the
mother” or “wheel of the witches”. Its wide distribution in the
fifth and sixth centuries, above all in Kashmir, supports our above
hypothesis, that there was a powerful reawakening of old matriarchal
cults in India during this period.
Contemporary feminism has also
rediscovered the matriarchal origins of the Ganachakra. Adelheid
Herrmann-Pfand is able to refer to several somewhat ambivalent
Tibetan textual passages in which in her view Ganachakras were formerly
directed by women (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, pp. 379, 479). She
therefore reaches the conclusion that this ritual is a matter of a
“patriarchal usurpation” of a matriarchal
cult.
Miranda Shaw on the other hand,
can almost be said to revel in the idea of “female witch circles”
and takes every Ganachakra which is
mentioned in the tantras to be a purely female feast. She reverses
the proceedings outright: “Tantric literature”, the feminist writes,
“records numerous instances wherein yogis gain admittance to an
assembly of yoginis. Inclusion in a yogini feast is seen as a high
honor for a male practitioner. In the classic scenario, a yogi
unexpectedly finds himself in the presence of a convocation of
yoginis, perhaps in the depths of a forest, a deserted temple, or a
cremation ground. He seeks entry to their assembly circle and feasts
with them, receives initiation from them, and obtains magical lore
and tantric teachings” (Shaw, 1994, p. 82). Based upon what we have
analyzed to date, Shaw’s interpretation cannot be dismissed out of
hand. In Buddhist Tantrism women were indeed accorded all power, it
is just that at the end of the game the gynergy and power of the
woman have, through the accomplished use of method (upaya), landed in the hands
of the male guru.
As always, in this case too the
question emerges as to whether the Ganachakra is to be
understood as real or “just” symbolically. Texts by Sapan
(thirteenth century) and Buston (fourteenth century) leave no doubt
about its really being conducted. Alexandra David Néel nevertheless
concludes that the sacrificial feast in the described form have no
longer been practiced in our century. Symbolic stagings, in which no
real women participate and are replaced by substitutes such as
vases, are a different matter. According to statements by modern
lamas, such ersatz Ganachakras were widespread
up until the Chinese occupation (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, p.
416).
We would like to briefly discuss
whether we are dealing with an orgy in the case of the Ganachakra. Archaic people
understood an orgy to be indiscriminate sexual mixing within a
group. It was precisely the chaotic, ecstatic, and uncontrolled
behavior of the participants determined the course of events amid
the general promiscuity. Through the orgy ordered time was
suspended, there was no hierarchy among the participants. For a few
hours the “profane” state of established social order seceded to the
“holy” turbulence of chaos. Usually, this occurred so as to invoke
the fertility of the earth. It was agricultural and horticultural
societies who preferentially fostered the orgy as a high point of
their sacred rites. In contrast , the Buddhist Ganachakra must be seen as a
controlled performance from start to finish. Admittedly it does make
us of elements of the orgy (group sexuality and the wild dances of
the yoginis), but the tantra master always maintains complete
control over events.
Thus, at the end of this
presentation of the fifteen initiation stages of the Kalachakra Tantra we can
establish that all the essential features which we described in the
general section on Tantrism reemerge in this “highest” occult
teaching of Tibetan Buddhism: the absorption of gynergy, the alchemic
transmutation of sexual energy, indeed from sexual fluids into
androcentric power, the creation of androgyny, the sacrifice of the
mudra and the sadhaka, the destruction of
people to the benefit of the gods, and so on. To this extent the Kalachakra in essence does
not differ from the other tantric systems of teachings. It is simply
more comprehensive, magnificent and logically consistent.
Additionally, there is its political eschatology, which allowed it
to become the state tantra of Lamaism and which we still have to
explore.
All the events in the tantric
performance which we have described so far have been played out in
the external world, in the system of rituals, the sexual magic
practices and perceptible reality. The final goal of this visible
tantric endeavor is that the yogi absorb all of the energies set
free during the ritual (those of the mudra, the pupil, and the
evoked deities). Only thus can he become the ONE who concentrates
within himself the “many”, but above all the masculine and feminine
principles, so as to subsequently, in a still to be described second
phase, bring it all forth again. From here on he has first reached
his perfected form, that of the ADI BUDDHA (the Highest Buddha), who
in Tantrism is the ultimate cause of all
appearances.
Footnotes:
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