The Shadow of the Dalai Lama – Part I – 9.
The ADI Buddha: The mandala principle and the world
ruler
© Victor &
Victoria Trimondi
9. THE ADI BUDDHA: THE
MANDALA
PRINCIPLE AND THE WORLD
RULER
We have described how the “starry
body” of the tantra master (ADI BUDDHA) indexes the time, but his
mystic body likewise embraces all of space and everything we have
said about the heavenly bodies is basically also true for the
spatial arrangement of the universe. The ADI BUDDHA incorporates the
entire Buddhist cosmos. This is to be understood most concretely in
a tantric point of view, and means that the structural elements of
the “great world” must be able to be found again as structural
elements in the body (the “small world”) of the yogi (ADI BUDDHA).
We thus begin with a look at the construction of the Buddhist
cosmos.
The Buddhist mandala
cosmos
As soon as we have gained some
insight into the cosmography of Buddhism it becomes apparent how
fundamentally different it is from our modern scientific world view.
It is primarily based upon the descriptions of the Abhidharmakosa, a written
record from the Mahayana
scholar Vasubhandu (fifth century C.E.). The Kalachakra Tantra has
largely adopted Vasubhandu’s design and only deviates from it at
particular points.
At the midpoint of the Buddhist
universe rises Meru, the world mountain, which towers above
everything else and on which heaven and earth meet. It is round like
the “axle of a wheel”. In a passage in the Kalachakra Tantra it is
compared to the vajra and
described as a gigantic “thunderbolt” (Newman, 1987, p. 503). The
Swiss mandala expert, Martin Brauen, sees in it a “dagger-like
shape” and therefore calls it the “earth dagger” (Brauen, 1992, p.
127). According to Winfried Petri the world mountain has the form of
the “inverted base of a cone”. All of these are phallic
metaphors.
Five circles of different sizes
surround the gigantic “phallus” like wheels; they are each assigned
to an element. Starting from the outermost they are the circle of
space, the circle of air, the circle of fire, the circle of water,
the circle of earth. Air and fire, however, permeate the entire
cosmic architecture. “In all directions are wind [air] and fire”,
the Kalachakra Tantra
says (Newman, 1987, p. 506). These two elements are the spirit,
so to speak, which blows through the entire construction, but they
also form the two forces of destruction which shall obliterate the
world structure at the end of time, exactly as the breath (air,
wind) and the flames (fire, candali) together burn down
the old bodily aggregates in the yogi’s mystic body. The circle of
the earth consists of a total of twelve individual continents which
swim on the circle of water like lotus blossoms. It thus forms a
discontinuous, non-homogenous circular segment. One of these
continents is our world, the “earth”. It bears the name Jambudvipa, which means
“rose apple tree continent”.
In Vasubandhu’s original
account, Meru is not
surrounded by the five elements, but rather by seven ring-like
chains of mountains, which lie like wheels around the world axis.
Huge oceans are found between these wheels. The last of these seas
is also the largest. It is called Mahasa Mudra, the Great Mudra.
Thus, in the Buddhist concept of
the world Meru forms the vertical, which is divided into three
segments — from bottom to top: (1) hell, (2) earth, and (3)
heaven.
At its roots, (1), the seven main
hells are found, each more horrific than the last. In contrast to
Western beliefs about the under world, in Buddhism there are “cold
hells” in addition to the hot, where souls are tormented not with
fire but with ice. Watery hells can also be found there, in others
only smoke. The precise description of the torments in these
dreadful places has been a favorite pastime of Tibetan monks for
centuries. Above the underworld, at the foot of Meru, live the
so-called hunger spirits (pretas),a restless horde of
humanoid beings, who are driven by constant
desire.
In the middle segment of the
mountain, (2), we encounter the twelve continents, and among them Jambudvipa, the earth.
Since the continents are surrounded by ocean, there is no natural
land bridge to the world axis. We humans live on the “rose apple
tree continent” (Jambudvipa). This continent
is also called the “land of karma”, since the beings who live there
are still burdened with karma (stains as a
consequence of bad deeds). But we inhabitants of Jambpudvipa have
the chance to work off such karmic stains for good, by following the
teachings of the Buddha. This is a great privilege which is not as
readily available to the inhabitants of other spheres or the other
continents.
Above the earthly world rises the
segment of the heavens, (3), and here we find ourselves in the realm
of the stars and planets. Beyond this one can wander through various
divine circles, which become ever more powerful the higher one goes.
The “divine” ascent begins in regions inhabited by deities who have
not yet freed themselves from their desires. Then we enter the
victorious residences of the thirty-three deities of the “realm of
forms”, which we can regard as “Forms” in the platonic sense, that
is, as immobile, downward radiating energy fields. Among them are to
be included, just as with Plato, the higher entities which represent
the pure essence of the five elements.
We now leave behind Mount Meru as
a geographically describable region and “fly” through a “zone of
intersection”, in which the realm of the form gods and the even more
powerful, more grandiose, and more holy imperium of formlessness can
be found. The “inhabitants” of this sphere are no longer
personalities at all and cannot be visualized, rather, they bear the
names of general terms. The Abhidharmakosa calls them
“Without sorrow”, “Nothing greater”, “Great success”, Stainless”,
and so forth. Even higher up we encounter a sphere, which has names
such as “Infinite consciousness “ and “ Nothing whatever” (Tayé,
1995, p.155). The Kalachakra
Tantra has completely incorporated this model of the world from
Mahayana Buddhism.
From this staged symbolism of the
world mountain we can easily recognize that it embodies not just a
cosmic model, but also, homologously, the likeness of an initiatory
way. Now whether this way begins down in hell or from the middle of
the continent of earth, it should in any case lead, via a
progression through various earthly and heavenly spheres, to the
highest regions of the formless realm.
The cosmos and the energy
body of the yogi
As we have already indicated a
number of times, a homology exists between the Buddhist cosmogram
and the bodily geography of the yogi. Microcosm and macrocosm are
congruent, the world and the mystic body of a practicing yogi form a
unity. The ADI BUDDHA, as the perfected form of the highest tantra
master, and the cosmos are identical.
"Everything is in the body” —
this famous occult correspondence is of fundamental significance for
Tantrism too. The parallel to the world axis (Meru) is formed, for
example, by the middle channel (avadhuti) in the mystic body
of the yogi. The texts then also refer to it simply and
straightforwardly as “Meru”. Just as the realm of formlessness is to
be sought above Mount Meru in the cosmos, so the yogi (ADI BUDDHA)
experiences the highest bliss of the “emptiness of all forms” above
his head in the “thousand-petaled lotus”. The forehead chakra and
the throat chakra correspond to the residences of various of the
thirty-three form gods (Forms) mentioned above. Humanity lives in
the heart of the yogi and below this it goes on to the genitals,
where the realms of hell are situated.
Correspondingly, it says in the
Kalachakra Tantra:
“Earth, wind, gods, seas, everything is to be recognized amidst the
body” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra
II, p. 2). All the parts of the “small” body correspond to the
parts of the “great” body: The yogi’s (ADI BUDDHA’s) rows of teeth
form the various lunar houses; the veins the rivers. Hands and feet
are islands and mountains, even a female louse hidden in the pubic
hair of a Tantric has a “transcendent” significance: It counts as
the dangerous vulva of a demoness from a particular region in hell
(Grünwedel, Kalacakra II,
p. 34). This bodily homology of the cosmos is the great secret which
Buddha revealed to King Suchandra as he instructed
him in the Kalachakra
Tantra: “As it is without, so it is in the body.” (Newman, 1987,
pp. 115,104, 472, 473, 504, 509). At the same time as the secret was
exposed, the “simple” recipe with which the yogi could attain and
exercise absolute control over the whole universe was also revealed:
in that he controls the energy currents within his mystic body he
controls the cosmos; on the scale in which he lets bliss flow
through his veins (wind channels), on that scale he brings delight
to the universe; the turbulence which he calls forth in his insides
also shakes the external world through storms and earthquakes.
Everything happens in parallel: when the yogi burns up his body
during the purification the very same procedure reduces the whole
universe to rubble and ash.
Chakravala or the iron
wheel
Just as the androgynous body of
the ADI BUDDHA or of the enlightened yogi concentrates within itself
the energies of both sexes, so Buddhist cosmography is also based
upon a gender polarity. Meru, the world mountain, has a most
obviously phallic character and is therefore also referred to as Vajra or, more directly, as
Lingam (phallus). The
great oceans which surround the masculine symbol represent — as a
circle and as water — the feminine principle.
Oddly, the outermost chain of
mountains within the cosmic model are forged from pure iron. This
iron crown must have a deep symbolic significance since the whole
system is named after it; its name is Chakravala ("iron wheel”).
We thus have to ask ourselves why the Buddhist universe is framed by
a metal which is seen all over the world as a symbol of injury,
killing, and war. The image naturally invites a comparison to the
“iron age” to which in Greco-Roman mythology humanity is chained
before its cyclical downfall. The Indian idea of the Kali yuga and the European
one of the “iron age” are congruent in a surprising number of
aspects. In both cases it comes to an increasingly rapid
degeneration of the law, cusstoms, and morality. In the end only a
war of all against all remains. Then a savior figure appears and the
whole cosmic game begins afresh.
Modern and Buddhist world
views
The reader may have already asked
him or herself how contemporary Tibetan lamas reconcile their
traditional Buddhist cosmology with our scientific world view. Do
they reject it outright, have they adopted it, or do they seek for a
way to combine both systems? Someone who knew the Kalachakra Tantra well, the
Kagyupa guru, Kalu Rinpoche, who died in 1989, gave a clear and
concise answer to all three questions: “Each of these cosmologies is
perfect for the being whose karmic projections cause them to
experience their universe in this manner. ... Therefore on a
relative level every cosmology is valid. At a final level, no
cosmology is absolutely true. It cannot be universally valid as long
as there are beings in fundamentally different situations” (Brauen,
1992, p. 109). According to his, the cosmos is an apparition of the
spirit. The world has no existence outside of the consciousness
which perceives it. If this consciousness changes then the world
changes to the same degree. For this reason the cosmography of
Buddhism does not describe nature but solely forms of the spirit. Such an
extreme idealism and radical relativism helps itself to the power to
undermine with a single dry statement the foundations of our
scientific world view. But if nothing is final any more, it follows
that everything is possible, even the cosmology of the Abhidharmakosa. Yet, the
lamas argue, only at the point in time where all of humanity have
adopted the Buddhist paradigm can they also perceive the gigantic
Meru mountain in the middle of their universe. Today,
Tibetan gurus claim, only the few “chosen” have this
ability.
In the second part of our study,
we shall examine the intensive and warm relationship between the
Fourteenth Dalai Lama and modern Western scientists and show that
the radical relativism of a Kalu Rinpoche is also distributed in
such circles. Similar philosophical speculations by Europeans can be
found, even from earlier times. Heinrich Harrer, who traveled
extensively through Tibet tells in an anecdote of how Westerners
readily — even if purely out of coquetry — take on the Tibetan world
view. Harrer was assigned to impart to the Tibetans, but in
particular the young Dalai Lama, the modern scientific world view.
In the year 1948, as he tried to explain to a group of Tibetan
nobles at a party that our earth is round and is neither flat nor a
continent, he called upon the famous Italian Tibetologist, Giuseppe
Tucci, who was also present, to be his witness and support his
theory. “To my greatest surprise”, says Harrer, “he took the side of
the doubters, since he believed that all sciences must constantly
revise their theories and one day the Tibetan teaching could just as
well prove to be right” (Harrer, 1984, p.
190).
Thus, following a Buddhization of
our world there would be no need for the “converted” population of
the world to do without the traditional cosmic “map” of the Abhidharmakosa, since in
accordance with the Buddhist theory of perception the “map” and the
territory it describes are identical. Both, the geography and its
likeness in consciousness, ultimately prove themselves to be
projections of one and the same spirit.
The downfall of the tantric
universe
The mystic bodily structure of
the yogi (ADI BUDDHA) duplicates the cosmogram of the Chakravala. Correspondingly,
the fate of his energy body proves to be identical to the fate of
the universe. Just as the fore woman in the form of the candali burns up all the
coarse elements inside the tantra master step by step, so at the end
of time the whole universe becomes the victim of a world fire, which
finds its origin at the roots of Mount Meru in the form of Kalagni. Step by step, Kalagni set the individual
segments of the world axis aflame and arises flickering up to the
region of the form gods (the Forms). Only in the highest heights, in
the sphere of formlessness, does the destructive fire come to a
standstill. When there is nothing more to burn the flame is
extinguished from alone. That which remains of the whole of Chakravala are atomic
elements of space ("galactic seeds”), which provide the building
blocks for the construction of a new cosmos, and which, in
accordance with the law of eternal recurrence, will look exactly the
same as the old one and share the same fate as its
predecessor.
The mandala
principle
The Buddhist universe (Chakravala) takes the form
of a mandala. This
Sanskrit word originally meant ‘circle’ and is translated into
Tibetan as kyl-khor,
which means, roughly ‘center and periphery’. At the midpoint of the
Chakravala we find Mount
Meru; the periphery is formed by the gigantic iron wheel we have
already mentioned.
There are round mandalas, square
mandalas, two- and three-dimensional mandalas, yet in all cases the
principle of midpoint and periphery is maintained. The four sides of
a square diagram are often equated with the four points of the
compass. A five-way concept is also characteristic for the tantric
mandala form — with a center and the four points of the compass. The
whole construction is seen as an energy field, from which, as from a
platonic Form, tremendous forces can flow out.
A mandala is considered to be the
archetype of order. They stand opposed to disorder, anarchy and
chaos as contrary principles. Climatic turbulence, bodily
sicknesses, desolate and wild stretches of land, barbaric peoples
and realms of unbelief all belong to the world of chaos. In order to
seize possession of such regions of disorder and ethnic groupings or
to put an end to chaotic disturbances (in the body of a sick person
for instance), Tibetan lamas perform various rites, which ultimately
all lead to the construction of a mandala. This is imposed upon a
“chaotic” territory through symbolic actions so as to occupy it; it
is mentally projected into the infirm body of a patient so as to
dispel his or her illness and the risk of death; it is “pulled over”
a zone of protection as a solid fortification against storm and
hail.
Like a stencil, a mandala pattern
impresses itself upon all levels of being and consciousness. A body,
a temple, a palace, a town, or a continent can thus as much have the
form of a mandala as a thought, an imagining, a political structure.
In this view, the entire geography of a country with its mountains,
seas, rivers, towns and shrines possesses an extraterrestrial
archetype, a mandala-like prototype, whose earthly likeness it
embodies. This transcendent geometry is not visible to an ordinary
eye and conceals itself on a higher cosmic
level.
Hidden behind the geographical
form we perceive, the country of Tibet also has, the lamas believe,
a mandala structure, with the capital Lhasa as its center and the
surrounding mountain ranges as its periphery. Likewise, the street
plan of Lhasa is seen as the impression of a mandala, with the
holiest temple in Tibet, the Jokhang, as its midpoint.
The architectural design of the latter was similarly based on a
mandala with the main altar as its center.
The political structure of former
Tibet also bore a mandala character. In it the Dalai Lama formed the
central sun (the mandala center) about which the other abbots of
Tibet orbit as planets. Up until 1959 the Tibetan government was
conceived of as a diagram with a center and four sections (sides).
“The government is founded upon four divisions”, wrote the Seventh
Dalai Lama in a state political directive, “These are (1) the court
of law, (2) the tax office, (3) the treasury, and (4) the cabinet.
They are all aligned to the four points of the compass along the
sides of a square which encloses the central figure of the Buddha”
(Redwood French, 1985, p. 87).
The prototype of the highest
Buddha and the emanations surrounding him was thus transferred to
the state leadership and the various offices which were subordinate
to it. Of course, the central figure of this political mandala is
intended to be the Dalai Lama, since he concentrates the entire
worldly and spiritual power in his person. Every single monastery
reiterates this political geometry with the respective abbot in the
middle.
But the mandala does not just
structure the world of appearances; in Buddhist culture it likewise
determines the human psyche, the spirit and all the transcendental
spheres. It serves as an aid to meditation and as an imaginary
palace of the gods in the tantric exercises. On a microcosmic level
the energy body of the yogi is seen as the construction of a
three-dimensional mandala with the middle channel (avadhuti) as the central
axis. The whole cosmic-psychic anatomy of the ADI BUDDHA (tantra
master) is thus a universal mandala. For this reason we can
comprehend Buddhist culture in general (not just the Tibetan
variant) as a complicated network of countless mandalas. Further,
since these exist at different levels of being, they are
encapsulated within one another, include one another, and overlap
each other.
Quite rightly one aspect of the
Buddhist/tantric mandalas has been compared in cross-cultural
studies with the magic circles used by the medieval sorcerers of
Europe to summon up spirits, angels, and demons. Then a mandala
("magic circle”) can also be used to conjure up Buddhas, gods and asuras
(demons).
The Kalachakra sand
mandala
Mandalas are employed in all
tantric rituals, yet in the Kalachakra Tantra it plays
an extremely prominent role. Before the seven lower solemnities of
the Time Tantra even begin a mandala –a very lavish one indeed — is
constructed in the visible external world. Specially trained monks —
for the Dalai Lama a special unit from the Namgyal institute — are
entrusted with its construction. The “building materials” consist
primarily of colored sand, lines and figures of which are applied to
a sketch in a complicated process lasting several days. Every line,
every geometric form, every shading, every object inserted has its
cosmic significance. Since the mandala is built from sand, we are
dealing with a very vulnerable work of art, which can easily be
destroyed; and this, astonishingly — and as we shall see — is the
final goal of the entire complicated
procedure.
The sand mandala of the Time
Tantras can be deciphered as the visual representation of the whole
Kalachakra ritual by
anyone who understands the symbols depicted there. Such an
interpreter would once again come across all the semantic content we
have encountered in the above description of the tantric initiatory
way.
The Kalachakra sand
mandala
For this reason, we must regard
this external image in sand as just the visible reflection of an
inner-spiritual construction which (in another sphere) the yogi
imagines as a magnificent palace built upon the peak of Mount Meru.
[1] As the center and the two
regents of the imagined temple palace we encounter Kalachakra and his wisdom
consort, Vishvamata. They
are enthroned as the divine couple in the midpoint of the holy of
holies.
This Buddhist “Versailles” is
inhabited by a total of 722 deities, the majority of whom represent
the individual segments of time: the gods of the twelve-year cycles,
the four seasons, twelve months, 360 days, twelve hours, and sixty
minutes all dwell here. In addition there are the supernatural
entities who represent the five elements, the planets, the 28 phases
of the moon and the twelve sensory regions. Very near to the center,
i.e., to the divine couple Kalachakra and Vishvamata, the four
meditation Buddhas can be found in union with their partners, then
follow a number of Bodhisattvas.
The architecture of the Kalachakra palace
encompasses five individual mandalas, each enclosing the next.
Segments which lie closer to the center (the divine couple) are
accorded a higher spiritual evaluation than those which are further
away. The fivefold organization of the building complex is supposed
to reflect, among other things, the five rings (the five elements)
which lie around Mount Meru in Buddhist cosmography. Likewise the
height and breadth of the palace are in their relation to one
another a copy of the proportions of the cosmos. Thus the Kalachakra mandala is also a
microcosmic likeness of the Buddhist universe.
Anyone entering the Kalachakra palace from
outside progresses through a five-stage initiation which culminates
in the inner sanctum where the primordial couple, Kalachakra and Vishvamata, are in union.
But seen from within, each of the individual mandala segments and
the deities dwelling within them represents an outward radiation
(emanation) of the divine first couple.
Just as the macrocosmic mandala of the
universe with Mount Meru as its axis can be rediscovered in the microcosmic body of the yogi
(ADI BUDDHA), so too the Kalachakra palace is
identical with his mystic body. We must never lose sight of this.
For this reason, the detailed description of the Kalachakra sand mandala
which now follows must also be regarded as the anatomy of the tantra
master (ADI BUDDHA). The anatomical “map” of the ADI BUDDHA thus
exhibits a number of different images: on one occasion it possesses
the structure which corresponds to that of the entire universe, on
another it forms that of the Kalachakra palace, or it
corresponds to the complicated construction of the dasakaro vasi ("the Power of
Ten”) described above. But in all of these models the basic
mandala-like pattern of a center and a periphery is always the
same.
The structure of the
Kalachakra palace
The primordial divine couple, the
time god Kalachakra and
the time goddess Vishvamata, govern from the
center of the Kalachakra
palace. They are depicted in the visible world of the sand mandala
by a blue vajra (Kalachakra) and an orange
dot (Vishvamata).
Directly beneath them a yellow layer of sand which represents Kalagni, the destructive
fire, is found; beneath this there is a blue layer, symbol of the
apocalyptic planet, Rahu.
Layers for the sun, the moon, and for a lotus flower follow. The
destruction of the primordial couple is thus, through the presence
of Kalagni and Rahu, already preprogrammed
in the center of the sand mandala, or rather of the palace of time.
Kalachakra and Vishvamata are surrounded by
eight lotus petals (all of this is made from colored sand). Now
these do not — as one might assume — represent eight further
emanation couples, but rather– in the official interpretation — we
encounter the eight shaktis here. We are thus
dealing with eight female beings, eight energy bearers (or eight
“sacrificial goddesses”). They correspond to the eight karma mudras who surround the
tantra master in union with his partner in the ganachakra, the twelfth
level of initiation (the vase initiation). However, when we think
back, there was talk of ten Shaktis before. We reach the
number “ten” by counting two feminine aspects of Vishvamata (the central
goddess) in addition to the eight “sacrificial goddesses” (lotus
petals). Together they signalize the ten chief winds (the dasakaro vasi) with which
the tantra master controls all the microcosmic energies in his
mystic body.
The center of the Kalachakra sand
mandala
Thus, within the innermost
segment of the palace of time the whole tantric sacrificial scenario
is sketched out using only a very few symbols, since the ten shaktis (originally ten
women) are, as we have described in detail above, manipulated and
eradicated as autonomous individuals in the ganachakra ritual so that
their feminine energies can be transferred to the tantra master.
This central segment of the sand mandala bears the name of the
“mandala of great bliss” (Brauen, 1992, p.
133).
The second, adjacent complex is
called the “mandala of enlightened wisdom”. Here there are sixteen
pillars which symbolize different kinds of emptiness and which
divide the space into sixteen different rooms. The latter are
occupied by couples who are in fact peaceful deities. They are
represented in the mandala by small piles of colored sand. In this
part of the palace ten (!) vases (kalashas) can also be found.
These are filled with revolting substances like excrement, urine,
blood, human flesh, and so on, which are transformed into
bliss-conferring nectars during the ritual by the tantra master.
These vessels symbolize once again the ten “sacrificial goddesses”
or the ten mudras of the
ganachakra. In the first
precise description of a Kalachakra ritual by a
Western academic (Ferdinand Lessing), reference is made to the
feminine symbolic significance of the vases: the “lamas ... proceed
to the podium, each with a large water pot (kalasha). They move it to
and fro. It symbolizes the young lady of the initiation, who plays
such a great role in this cult” (Wayman, 1973, p. 62). Yet again,
the kalashas correspond
to the ten winds or the “Power of Ten” (dasakaro vasi) and thereby
to the diamond body of the ADI BUDDHA.
On our tour of the palace of
time, the third segment with the name of “the mandala of enlightened
mind” follows. This is the house of the Bodhisattvas and Buddhas.
The latter, the Dhyani or meditation Buddhas, reside here in close
embrace with their consorts: to the East, the black Amoghasiddhi with Locana; to the South, the
red Ratnasambhava with Mamaki; to the North, the
white Amitabha with Pandara; to the West, Vairocana in the arms of Tara. The areas between the
points of the compass are likewise occupied by Buddha couples. All
the Bodhisattvas who dwell the in the “mandala of enlightened mind”
are also portrayed in the yab-yum posture (of sexual
union). This third segment demonstrates most vividly that Tantrism
derives the emanation of time from the erotic love of divine
couples.
The fourth “mandala of
enlightened speech” follows. Within it are found eight lotus
flowers, each of which itself has eight petals. Once again the
pattern of the ganachakra, which we have
already encountered in the center of the sand mandala, is repeated
in this bouquet. In the middle of each of the eight lotuses a couple
sits in close embrace and on each of the eight surrounding petals we
can discern a goddess. This makes a total of eighty deities (64 shaktis, 8 female partners,
and 8 male deities).
The large number of shaktis, “daughters” of the
mudras “sacrificed” in the ganachakra, is an indicator
of how fundamentally the idea of the tantric female sacrifice
determines the doctrine of time and its artistic representation. At
the gates which lead out from the fourth segment into the third
“mandala of enlightened mind”, we are once again confronted with the
symbolic representation of “sacrificial goddesses”. Aside from this,
36 further shaktis, who
represent the root syllables of the Sanskrit alphabet and thereby
the building blocks of language, live in this building
complex.
As the final and outermost
segment of the mandala palace we enter the “body mandala”. There we
meet the 360 deities of the days of the year. Here too we encounter
the basic pattern of the ganachakra. There are twelve
large lotuses, each with 28 petals. In the center of each flower a
god and a goddess embrace one another, all around them sit 28
goddesses grouped into three rows. Each lotus thus exhibits 30
deities, multiplying by twelve we have the 360 day gods (five days
are not calculated). In addition we meet in the body mandala twelve
pairs of wrathful deities and 36 goddesses of
desire.
We have nonetheless not yet
described all the grounds of the palace. The five square
architectural units already mentioned are namely bordered by six
circular segments. Numerous symbols of bliss like wheels,
wish-granting jewels, shells, mirrors, and so on, rest in the arcs
(quadrants) which are formed between the last square and the first
circle. The five subsequent circles symbolize the elements in the
following order: earth, water, fire, wind, and space. Cemeteries are
to be found on circles three and four, depicted in the form of
wheels. In the imagination they are inhabited by ten horrifying
dakinis with their partners. From a Buddhist point of view this
“ring of the dead” signifies that only he who has surmounted his
bodily existence may enter the mandala palace.
The fifth circle of space is
represented by a chain of golden vajras. The whole mandala is
surrounded by a circle of flames as a sixth ring. According to a
number of commentator this is supposed to represent the wisdom of
Buddha; however, if we further pursue the fate of the sand mandala,
it must be associated with the “world fire” (Kalagni) which in the end
burns down the palace of the time gods.
As aesthetic and peaceful as the
sand mandala may appear to be to a Western observer, it still
conceals behind it the frozen ornament of the sacrificial ritual of
Tantrism. Every single female figure which inhabits the palace of
time, be she a dakini, shakti, or a “sacrificial
goddess”, is the bearer of the so sought after “gynergy” which the yogi has
appropriated through his sexual magic practices so as to then let it
flow as the power source of his androgynous mystic body. The Kalachakra palace is thus an
alchemic laboratory for the appropriation of life energies. In the
ritual fate of the sand mandala we shall unmistakably demonstrate
that it is a gigantic sacrificial altar. It is not just the shaktis who are sacrificed,
but the erotic couples as well, who delight the temple with their
untroubled pleasures of love, indeed the time god (Kalachakra) and the time
goddess (Vishvamata)
themselves. The downfall of them all is preordained, their fate is
sealed.
The construction of the
Kalachakra sand mandala
The construction of the Kalachakra sand mandala is a
complex and multilayered procedure which is carried out by a number
of specially trained lamas. The “master builder “ of the diagram and
the spiritual leader of the Kalachakra initiation need
not always be the same person. They are so to speak the assistants
of the tantra master. Nonetheless, at the outset the latter makes
the following appeal to the time god: “Oh, victorious Kalachakra, lord of
knowledge, I prostrate myself to the protector and possessor of
compassion. I am making a mandala here out of love and compassion
for my disciples and as an offering in respect to you. Oh Kalachakra, please be kind
and remain close to me. I, the vajra master, am creating
this mandala to purify the obstructions of all beings. Therefore,
always be considerate of my disciples and me, and please reside in
the mandala” (quoted by Bryant, 1992, p. 141).
The grounds sought out for the
ritual are now subjected to a rigorous examination, the so-called
“purifying of the site”. Monks investigate the ground, measurements
are taken, mantras and sutras are quoted. Subsequently it comes to a
highly provocative scene, in which the local spirits and the earth
goddess are violently forced to agree to the construction of the
mandala.
Vajravega – the terrifying emanation of
Kalachakra
For this purpose one of the lamas
takes on the appearance of Vajravega, that is, he
visualizes himself as this deity. Vajravega is blue in color,
has three necks and 24 hands. As clothing he wears a tigerskin
skirt, decorated with snakes and bones. He is considered to be the
terrifying emanation of the time god Kalachakra. He can evoke
sixty wrathful protective deities from out of his inscrutable heart,
who then storm out through his ears, nostrils, eyes, mouth, urethra,
anus, and from an opening in the top of his skull. Among these are
found zombies, vampires and dakinis with the heads of
animals.
In the imaginations of the lamas
who conduct the ritual, this monster now drags in the impeding local
spirits with iron hooks and, once they have been bound in chains,
nails them down in the ten directions with ritual daggers. A further
ten wrathful deities are projected into each of these daggers (phurbas). There are
indications which must be regarded seriously that in the performance
of the Kalachakra rituals
it is not just the local spirits, but likewise the earth mother (Srinmo) who embody the
nailed down victims. This myth of the nailing of Srinmo played a central
“national” role in the construction of Tibetan temples, which
actually represent nothing more than three-dimensional mandalas. We
shall come to speak of this in detail in the second part of our
study.
Now the tantra master solemnly
circles the mandala location in a clockwise direction, and sprinkles
it with various substances and holy water. After this the monks who
participate in the ritual imagine in their spirits that this
location is covered in numerous small vajras.
Afterwards there is a significant
demonstration of power: The tantra master sits down on his own in
the center of the mandala space, faces the East and says the
following: “I shall build on this place a mandala in the manner in
which I have imagined it” (quoted by Brauen, 1992, p. 77). With this
act of occupation he makes it unmistakably clear who the lord of the
ritual action is. Further liturgical actions
follow.
The tantra master evokes the
terrifying deity, Vajravega, anew, and once
again drives potential disruptive spirits out of the mandala
grounds. He is so filled with wrathful deities that horror figures
who are supposed to protect the mandala even emanate from out of the
soles of his feet. Afterwards the place is occupied by the symbols
of the five Dhyani Buddhas. On the table top, the lama lays a lotus,
a sword, a wish-granting jewel, a wheel and, in the middle, a vajra. This centrally placed
“thunderbolt” demonstrates yet again the masculine control of the
earth.
This dominating, patriarchal
behavior has not always been present in the history of Buddhism. In
a famous scene from the life of the historical Buddha, he calls upon
the earth to bear witness to his enlightenment by touching it with
his right hand (Bhumisparsha
mudra). Tantric Buddhism has preserved this scene among its
Buddha legends, but has added a small change; here Shakyamuni makes
the gesture of stroking the earth with a vajra, the scepter of
phallic power. “This instrument is indispensable for the liturgy of
the Great Path”, Giuseppe Tucci writes, “The earth transformed by
the vajra becomes
diamond” (Tucci, 1982, p. 97). As spiritually valuable a symbol as
the diamond may appear to be, it is not just an image of purity but
is also a metaphor for sterility. Between the vajra and the earth lies the
opposition between spirit and life, or — as the American Buddhist
Ken Wilber would express it — the “noosphere” (the realm of the
spirit) and the “biosphere” (the realm of nature). In that the earth
is transformed into a diamond by the tantric gesture of the Buddha,
nature is symbolically transformed into pure spirit and woman into a
man.
But let us return to the script
which describes the construction of the sand mandala. After the
fixation of the earth spirits or the earth mother, the “procession
of the ten vases” which are filled with nectars follows. These are
carried by monks around the ritual table upon which the sand mandala
will be built. Yet again the number ten! The ten vases, the ten
powers, the ten winds, the ten shaktis — they are all
variations on the ten mudras, who participated and
were “sacrificed” in the highest initiation of the ganachakra
ritual.
All their energies flow into Vishvamata, the chief
consort of the Kalachakra
deity. The time goddess is symbolized by a seashell which the monks
lay in the middle of the ritual table and which is to be filled with
the essences from all ten vessels (vases). Here the shell represents
the feminine element at its highest
concentration.
The tantra master now ties a
golden vajra to a thread.
He puts the other end of the thread to his heart and then lays the
“thunderbolt” with emphasis on the central shell. The
sovereignty of the masculine principle (vajra) over the feminine
principle (the shell)
could not be demonstrated more unequivocally. Afterwards, all the
ritual objects are removed from the mandala.
The time has now come to begin
with the preparatory sketches of the sand mandala. The monks
commence with the “snapping of the wisdom string”. Here we are
dealing with five different threads which symbolize the five Dhyani
Buddhas with their consorts. Through a ritual “plucking” of these
strings, the texts tell us, the mandala site becomes occupied by
these five supreme beings. [2]
After many recitations the monks
now begin with the actual artistic work, surrounded by numerous
containers filled with the colored sand. This is carefully applied
to the preliminary sketch with a type of funnel. This requires
extreme precision, since the sand must form hair-thin lines, and
there are even a number of drawings of figures to be rendered in
sand. Work begins in the middle and proceeds outwards, that is, the
center of the mandala is created first and one then works step by
step towards the periphery. It takes another five days before the
artwork is completed.
At the end, the complete work is
surrounded by ten (!) ritual daggers (phurbas) which act as
protective symbols. Likewise, ten (!) vases which are supposed to
represent the ten shaktis
are arranged around the mandala. Since all the tenfold symbols in
the Kalachakra Tantra
stand in a homologous relation to the “sacrificed” mudras (shaktis, dakinis, yoginis)
of the ganachakra ritual
described above, the mandala, with- we repeat — its numerous
sequences of ten, is an ornamental demonstration of the “tantric
female sacrifice” also described above.
Once the vases and daggers have
been put in place, the whole artwork is hidden behind a curtain, as
if the sacrificial scenario concealed behind the sacred work ought
to be masked. To close, the monks perform another dance. Anyone who
has up till now doubted whether the Kalachakra sand mandala
concerns the visual portrayal of a sacrificial rite, actually ought
to be convinced by the name of this dance. It is called the “ritual
dance of the sacrificial goddesses”.
The destruction of the
mandala
The sand mandala accompanies the
seven lower levels of the public Kalachakra ritual as the
mute and earthly likeness of a transcendental tantric divine palace.
It is supposed to help the initiand create a corresponding
architectural work with all its inhabitants within his imagination
and to thus give it a spiritual existence. As in the real
construction, within the imagination work also begins at the center
of the mandala, in which Kalachakra and Vishvamata are united.
Starting from there, the initiand visualizes step by step the
construction of the whole palace of time with its 722 gods. He thus
commences at the inner sanctum, and then imagines every mandala
segment which follows, ending with the periphery of the ring of
flame, which blazes around the entire architectural
construct.
During the imaginary construction
of the mandala, the initiand is suddenly required to imagine an
extremely puzzling scene which we would like to examine more
closely: “Out of the
syllable HUM”, it says in the Kalachakra Tantra, “Vajravega emanates in the
heart of the medititator [the initiand], the wrathful form of Kalachakra — grinning and
with gnashing teeth Vajravega stands upon a
chariot drawn by a fabulous being; he thrusts a hook into the navel
of Kalachakra, ties his
hands up, threatens him with weapons and drags him before the
meditator, in whose heart he finally dissolves himself” (Brauen,
1992, p. 114).
What is happening? Vajravega, the wrathful
emanation of the time god, suddenly turns against his own “emanation
father”, Kalachakra, and
brutally drags him before the meditating adept. In this scene a
distinction is thus drawn between Kalachakra and Vajravega. Is this — as
Martin Brauen suspects — to be interpreted as the symbolic
repetition of the act of birth, which is indeed also associated with
pain?
Such an interpretation does not
seem convincing to us. It seems far more plausible to recognize a
somewhat obscure variant of the dark demon Rahu in the Vajravega figure, who
destroys the sun and the moon in the Kalachakra Tantra so as to
claim power over time in their stead. Brauen also indirectly
concedes this when he compares the aggressive emergence of Vajravega with the
activation of the “middle channel” (avadhuti) in the mystic body
of the yogi and the associated destruction of both energy streams
(the sun and moon). The same procedure is also regarded to be the
chief task of Rahu, and
likewise, as we have described above, the middle channel bears the
name of the dark planet (Rahu). Be that as it may,
the destructive arrival of Vajravega heralds the fate
of the whole sand mandala and of the palace of time hidden behind
it.
During the seven lower
solemnities of the Kalachakra
Tantra, the mandala artwork is left standing. At the end of the
whole performance the tantra master recites a number of prayers and
certain mantras. He then circles the sand mandala, removing with his
fingers the 722 gods who were scattered across it in the form of
seeds and laying them on a tray. At the same time he imagines that
they enter his heart. He thus absorbs all the time energies and
transforms them into aspects of his own mystic body. He then grasps
a vajra, symbol of his
diamond masculinity, and begins to destroy the sandy “divine palace”
with it. The whole impressive work dissolves into colorful heaps and
is later swept together. The monks tip the colored mixture into a
vase. The master sprinkles a little of this in his head, and gives a
further mini-portion to his pupils. With prayers and song a
procession carries the sandy contents of the vase to a river and
surrenders it there to the nagas (snake gods) as a
gift.
But an important gesture is still
to come. The tantra master returns to the site of the mandala and
with water washes off the white basis lines remaining on the site.
Then he removes the ten ritual daggers. Facing the East he now seats
himself on the cleansed mandala site, vajra and bell in his hands,
the absolute lord of both sexes (Kalachakra and Vishvamata), of time and of
the universe.
This destruction of the sand
mandala is usually seen as an act which is supposed to draw
attention to the transience of all being. But this forgets that the
palace of time is only destroyed as an external construction and
that it continues to exist in the interior of the highest
tantra master (as ADI BUDDHA). In his mystic body, Kalachakra and Vishvamata live on as the
two polar currents of time, albeit under his absolute control. At
the end of the ritual, the yogi (ADI BUDDHA) has transformed himself
into a divine palace. Then his microcosmic body has become
identical to the Kalachakra palace; we can
now rediscover all the symbols which we encountered there as forces
within his energy body.
The world ruler: The
sociopolitical exercise of power by the ADI
Buddha
In his political function the ADI
BUDDHA is a world ruler, a “universal sovereign”, a “world king” (dominus mundi), an “emperor
of the universe”, a Chakravartin. The early
Buddhists still drew a distinction between a Buddha and a Chakravartin. Hence we can
read in the legends of Buddhism’s origins how a holy man prophesied
to Shakyamuni’s father that his wife, Maya, would soon bear an
enlightened one (a Buddha) or a world ruler (Chakravartin), depending
upon which this son would as a young man later decide to be. Gautama
chose the way of the “spiritual” Buddha and not that of the
“worldly” Chakravartin,
who in the customs of his time also had to act as military leader
alongside his political duties.
In Mahayana Buddhism this
distinction between a dominus
mundi and an enlightened being increasingly disappears, yet the
Chakravartin possesses
exclusively peaceful characteristics. All his “conquests”, reports
the scholar Vasubandhu (fourth or fifth century C.E.), are
nonviolent. The potentates of the world voluntarily and
unresistingly subject themselves on the basis of his receptive
radiation. They bow down before him and say: “Welcome, O mighty
king. Everything belongs to you, O mighty king!” (quoted by Armelin,
n.d., p. 21). He is mostly incarnated as an avatar, as the reincarnation
of a divine savior, who should lead humanity out of its earthly
misery and into paradise.
In Vajrayana Buddhism,
especially in the Kalachakra
Tantra, the Chakravartin is the
successful result of the sexual magic rites we describe above. The
“asocial” yogi, who during his initiatory phase hangs around
cemeteries and with prostitutes like an outlaw has become a radiant
king whose commands are obeyed by nations. The Time Tantra thus
reveals itself to be a means of “conquering” the world, not just
spiritually but also in power political terms; in the end the
imperial idea of a Chakravartin includes the
whole universe. Boundlessly expanding energies are accumulated here
in a single being (the “political” ADI
BUDDHA).
The eminently political character
of the Indian Chakravartin makes him an
ideal for Tibetan Lamaism, which could first be realized, however,
in the person of the Fifth Dalai Lama (1617-1682). Before the “Great
Fifth” ascended the throne, the arch-abbots of the individual
Lamaist sects — whether voluntarily or by necessity aside — accorded
the title of world ruler only to the mighty Chinese Emperors or,
depending on the political situation, to individual Mongolian Khans.
The Tibetan hierarchs themselves “only” claimed the role of a
Buddha, an enlightened being, whom they nonetheless considered
superior to the Chakravartin. The Fifth
Dalai Lama, who combined in his person both worldly and spiritual
power for the first time in the history of Tibet, was also still
careful about publicly
describing himself as Chakravartin. This could
have provoked his Mongolian allies and the “Ruler on the Dragon
Throne” (the Emperor of China). Such restraint was a part of the
diplomacy of the Tibet of old; or rather, since the Dalai Lamas were
during their enthronement handed the highest symbol of universal
rule — the “golden wheel” — they were the “true”, albeit hidden,
rulers of the world, at least in the minds of the Tibetan clergy.
The worldly potentates of neighboring states were at any rate
accorded the role of a protector.
We shall come to speak in detail
about whether such cosmocratic images still excite the imagination
of the current Fourteenth Dalai Lama in the second part of our
study. In any case, the Kalachakra Tantra which he
has placed at the center of his ritual politics contains the phased
initiatory path at the end of which the Lion Throne of a Chakravartin rears
up.
The “golden wheel” (chakra) is regarded as the
world ruler’s coat of arms and gave him his name, which when
translated from Sanskrit means “wheel turner”. Already at birth a Chakravartin bears a signum
in the form of a wheel on his hand and feet as graphic proof of his
sovereignty. In Buddhism the wheel symbol was originally understood
to be the “teaching” (the Dharma) and the first “wheel
turner” was no lesser than the Buddha himself, who set the “wheel of
Dharma” in motion by
distributing his truths among the people and among the other beings.
Later, in Mahayana
Buddhism, the golden wheel already indicated “The Great Circle of
Power and Rule” (Simpson, 1991, p. 45). The Chakravartin was referred to
as the “King of the Golden Wheel”. This is the title given to the
“Emperor of Peace”, Ashoka (273–236 B.C.E.), after he had united
India and with great success converted it to Buddhism; but is also a
name which the Dalai Lama acquires when the “golden wheel” is
presented to him during his enthronement.
A Buddhist world ruler grasps the
“wheel of command”, symbol of his absolute force of command. In the
older texts the stress is primarily on his military functions. He is
the supreme commander of his superbly armed forces. As “king and
politician”, the Chakravartin is a sovereign
who reigns over all the states on earth. The leaders of the tribes
and nations are subordinate to him. His epithet is “one who rules
with his own will, even the kingdoms of other kings” (quoted by
Armelin, n.d., p. 8). He is thus also known as the “king of kings”.
His aegis extends not just over humanity, but likewise over Buddhas,
Bodhisattvas, wrathful kings, gods, demons, nagas (snake gods),
masculine and feminine deities, animals and spirits. Of his
followers he demands passionate devotion to the point of
ecstasy.
The seven “valuable treasures”
which are available to a Chakravartin are (1) the
wheel, (2) the wish-granting jewel, (3) the wonder horse, (4) the
elephant, (5) the minister, (6) the general, and (7) the princess.
Sometimes, the judge and the minister of finance are also mentioned.
[3]
Opinions differ from text to text
about the spatial expansion of power of the Chakravartin. Sometimes he
“only” controls our earth, sometimes — as in the Kalachakra Tantra — the
entire universe with all its suns and planets. This is — as we have
already shown — described in the Abhidharmakosha, the
Buddhist cosmology, as a gigantic wheel with Meru the world mountain
as its central axis. The circumference is formed by unscaleable
chains of mountains made of pure iron, from whence the name of this
cosmic model is derived — Chakravala, that is, ‘iron
wheel’. The Chakravartin
is thus sovereign of an “iron wheel” of astronomical
proportions.
In terms of time, the Buddhist writings
nominate varying lengths of reign for the Chakravartin. In one text,
as a symbol of control the supreme regent carries in his hand a
golden, silver, copper, or iron wheel depending upon the eon
(Simpson, 1991, p. 270). This corresponds to the Indo-European
division of the ages of the world in which these become increasingly
short and “worse” nearer the end. For this reason, world rulers of
the golden age reign many millions of years longer than the ruler of
the iron age. The Chakravartin also represents
the Kalachakra deity, he
is the bearer of the universal “time wheel” and hence the “Lord of
History”.
As lawmaker, he monitors that
human norms stay in keeping with the divine, i.e., Buddhocratic
ones. “He is the incarnate representation of supreme and universal
Law”, writes the religious studies scholar, Coomaraswamy
(Coomaraswamy, 1978, p. 13, n. 14a). As a consequence, the world
ruler governs likewise as “protector” of the cosmic and of the
sociopolitical order.
As a universal guru he sets the
“wheel of the teaching” (Dharmachakra) in motion, in
memory of the famous sermon by the historical Buddha in the deer
park of Benares, where the “first turning of the Wheel of the Word”
took place (Coomaraswamy, 1979, p. 25). As a consequence, the Chakravartin is the supreme
world teacher and therefore also holds the “wheel of truth” in his
hands. As cosmic “wheel turner” he has overcome the “wheel of life
and death” through which the unenlightened must still
wander.
In the revolutionary milieu of
the tantras (since the fourth century C.E.), the political, war-like
aspects of the “wheel turner” known from Hinduism became current
once more, to then reach — as we shall see — their most aggressive
form in the Shambhala myth
of the Kalachakra
Tantra. The Chakravartin now leads a
“just” war, and is both a Buddha (or at least a Bodhisattva) and the
glorious leader of an army in one person. The “lord of the wheel”
thus displays clear military political traits. As the emblem of
control the “wheel” also symbolizes his chariot with which he leads
an invincible army. This army conquers and subjugates the entire
globe and establishes a universal Buddhocracy. The Indian religious
scholar, Coomaraswamy, also makes reference to the destructive power
of the wheel. Like the discus of the Hindu god Vishnu, it can shave off the
heads of the troops of entire armies in
seconds.
Destruction and resurrection are
thus equally evoked by the figure of the Chakravartin. He therefore
also appears at the intersection of two eras (the iron and the
subsequent golden age) and represent both the downfall of the old
and the origin of the new eon. This gives him marked apocalyptic and
messianic characteristics. He is incarnated as both world destroyer
and world redeemer, as universal exterminator and universal
savior.
Profane and spiritual
power
The history of India, just like
that of medieval Europe, is shaped by the clash between spiritual
and worldly power. “Pope” and “Emperor” also opposed one another on
the subcontinent in the form of Brahman and King, the battle between
sacerdotium
(ecclesiastical rule) and regnum (kingly rule) was
also a recurrent political topic in the India of old. Interestingly,
this dispute is regarded in both the Occident and in Asia as a
gender conflict and the two sex roles are transferred onto the two
pretenders to power. Sometimes the king represented the masculine
and the priest the feminine, on other occasions it was the reverse,
depending on which political party currently had the
say.
This long-running topic of the
“political battle of the sexes” was picked up by the intellectual
elite of European fascism in the thirties of this century. The
fascists had an ideological interest in conceding the primary role
in the state and in society to the warrior type and thus the
monarchy. It was a widespread belief at that time that the
hypocritical and cunning priestly caste had for centuries impeded
the kings in their exercise of control so as to seize power for
themselves. Such warrior-friendly views of history influenced the
national socialist mythologist, Alfred Rosenberg, just as they did
the Italian Julius Evola, who for a time acted as “spiritual”
advisor to Mussolini. Both believed the masculine principle to be
obviously at work in the “king” and the inferior feminine
counterforce in the “priest”. “The monarchy is entitled to
precedence over the priesthood, exactly as in the symbolism [where]
the sun has precedence over the moon and the man over the woman “,
Evola wrote (Evola, 1982, p. 101).
The Indian philosopher of
religion, Ananda Coomaraswami, answers him with a counter-thesis:
originally the king was “unquestionably feminine” and the priest
masculine: “The sacerdotium and the man are
the intellectual, and the regnum and the woman the
active elements in what should be literally a symphony”
(Coomaraswamy, 1978, p. 6). Thus we find here the conception,
widespread in India, that the feminine is active, the masculine
passive or contemplative, and that control can be exercised through
meditation (such as through holding the breath). In this we are
confronted with the view that the practice of yoga is transferable
to politics. Such a conception is in fact characteristic of
Hinduism. In Tantric Buddhism, however, the order is reversed, as it
is in the West: the goddess is passive and the god active. For this
reason the fascist, Julius Evola, for whom the heroic masculine
principle is entitled to the royal throne, was much more strongly
attracted to Buddhist Vajrayana than to the Hindu
tantras.
But when the sacerdotium unites with the
regnum in one person, as
in the case of the Dalai Lama, then the two celebrate a “mystic
wedding”. The powers of the two forces flow together in a great
current out of which a universal “wheel turner”, a Chakravartin arises, who has
condensed within himself the masculine and feminine principle,
worldly and priestly power, and is thus capable of exercising
supreme control. Ananda Coomaraswamy has emotionally described this
exceptional situation with the following words: “It is, then, only
when the priest and the king, the human representatives of sky and
earth, God and his kingdom, are ‘united in the performance of the
rite’, only when ‘thy will is done on earth as it is in heaven’,
that there is both a giving and a taking, not indeed an equality but
a true reciprocity. Peace and prosperity, and fullness of life in
every sense of the words, are the fruits of the ‘marriage’ of the
temporal power to the spiritual authority, just as they must be of
the marriage of the ‘woman’ to the ‘man’ on whatever level of
reference. For ‘verily, when a mating is effected, then each
achieves the other’s desire’; and in the case of the ‘mating’ of the
sacerdotium and the regnum, whether in the outer realms or within
you, the desire of the two partners are for ‘good’ here and
hereafter” (Coomaraswamy, 1978, p. 69). The marriage of the
masculine and the feminine principle, which here forms the
foundation for absolute political power, shows the Chakravartin to be an
androgyne, a bisexual superhuman.
Neither Coomaraswamy nor Evola
appear to have the slightest doubts about according feminine
energies to masculine individuals and institutions in their
theories. For this reason, the patriarchal power visions of Tantrism
are as obvious in the two authors’ interpretations of history as
they otherwise only are in the original Tibetan texts. Since for
Coomaraswamy the feminine is incarnated in the “king”, and as such
may never rule alone, the religious philosopher considers the
autonomous power of the kings to be the origin of evil: “But, if the
King cooperating with and assimilated to the higher power is thus
the Father of his people, it is none the less true that satanic and
deadly possibilities inhere in the Temporal Power: When the Regnum
pursues its own devices, when the feminine [!] half of the
Administration asserts its independence, when Might presumes to rule
without respect for Right, when the ‘woman’ demands her ‘rights’[!],
then these lethal possibilities are realised; the King and the
Kingdom, the family and the house, alike are destroyed and disorder
prevails. It was by an assertion of his independence and a claim to
‘equal rights’ that Lucifer fell headlong from Heaven and became
Satan, the ‘enemy’” (Coomaraswamy, 1978, p. 69). The equation of the
feminine with the epitome of evil is here no less clear and crass
than it is in the work of the fascist, Julius Evola, who interprets
our “unhappy” age as the result of a “gynocracy” which was prepared
by the priests of the various religions.
That the role of the Chakravartin is reserved
exclusively for men must be a self-evident assumption in the light
of what has been said above. In a very early Buddhist text we
already find this succinct formulation:
It is impossible and can not
be
that the woman a Holy One, a
Completely Awakened [One]
or a King World-Conqueror
[Chakravartin] may
embody:
such a case does not
occur.
(quoted by Herrmann-Pfand, 1992,
p. 172)
Footnotes:
[1] As we
have already seen , the world mountain itself with its surrounding
cosmic circles possesses the form of a huge mandala.
[3] Where
his golden wheel, (1),
appears on the horizon the Buddhist teaching is spread. “This wheel has a thousand
rays. The monarch who
possesses it is called ‘the Holy King who causes the wheel to turn’,
because from the moment of his possessing it, the wheel turns and
traverses the universe according to the thoughts of the king”
(Simpson, 1991, p. 269).
Thanks to the wish-granting jewel, (2),
the world ruler need only raise his hand and gold coins start to
rain down (Coomaraswamy, 1979, fig. 19). The wonder horse, (3),
transports him anywhere in next to no time. The elephant, (4), is obedient
and represents the workforce among his subjects. The minister, (5), has no
ulterior motives and stands by him with moral and tactical
support. The general, (6), has the power
to defeat all enemies.
The body of the princess, (7), smells of
sandalwood and from her mouth comes the scent of the blue lotus. She
performs the functions of a royal mother: “Contact with her provokes
no passions; all men regard her as their mother or sister. ... She
gives birth to many sons [!].
When her husband is absent (she maintains chastity) and never
succumbs to the pleasures of the five senses” (Tayé, 1995, p. 136).
— With the following seven “semi-valuable” treasures it becomes even
clearer how the magic political objects of the Chakravartin coincide with
those of the tantric Maha
Siddha (Grand Sorcerer): (1) the sword, which defends the
king’s laws; (2) a tent
which withstands any weather; (3) a palace full of goddesses
playing music; (4) a robe
impenetrable for any weapon and immune against fire; (5) a garden of paradise full of
wondrous plants and animals; (6) a sleeping place which repels
all false emotions and dreams and produces a clear awareness; and
(7) a pair of seven league
boots with which any point in the universe can be reached in a
flash.
Next
Chapter:
10. THE AGGRESSIVE MYTH OF
SHAMBHALA
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