The Shadow of the Dalai Lama –
Part II – 13. The doomsday guru Shoko Asahara and the XIV. Dalai
Lama
© Victor &
Victoria Trimondi
13. THE JAPANESE DOOMSDAY GURU SHOKO ASAHARA AND THE XIV. DALAI
LAMA
On March 20, 1995 there was a
poison gas attack in Tokyo’s underground system that killed a number
of people and injured around 5,500 further victims and shook the
world public. It was a sect leader, Shoko Asahara, who gave the
command. Asahara was born in 1955 as the son of a large Japanese
family. As he could barely see, he had to attend a school for the
blind. After finishing school he tried without success to gain
admittance to Tokyo University. In the following years he became
involved in Asian medicine and started to practice various yoga
exercises. He married in 1978. This marriage produced six children.
The first spiritual group, which he founded in 1984,was known as AUM Shinsen-no-kai, that is,
“AUM — Group of the mountain ascetics”.
Shoko Asahara’s relationship
to the Fourteenth Dalai Lama
The
„mystic” history of the AUM sect began in India in 1986. Shoko
Asahara had wandered through the southern slopes of the Himalayas
for weeks visiting Buddhist monasteries. This journey was supposed
to mark the end of years of pilgrimage through the most varied
esoteric landscapes: „I tried all kinds of practices such as Taoism,
Yoga, Buddhism, incorporating their essence into my training. My
goal was supreme spiritual realization and enlightenment. I
continued the austere practices with Buddhist texts as my only
resort. Finally, I reached my goal in the holy vibration of the
Himalayas. I attained supreme realization and enlightenment. […] I
also acquired supernatural powers” (Asahara, 1991, vol. 2, p. 13).
Upon returning to Japan he changed the name of his yoga group and
called it AUM Shinrikyo,
which means roughly „AUM — Doctrine of the absolute truth”. From
this point on, Asahara’s world view was shaped by the compassionate
ethos of Mahayana
Buddhism: „I could not bear the fact that only I was happy and the
other people were still in the world of suffering. I began to think:
I will save other people at the sacrifice of my own self. I have
come to feel it is my mission. I am to walk the same path as Buddha
Shakyamuni” (Asahara, 1991, vol. 2, p. 13).
But the Himalayas did not yet
loose their hold over him. Almost a year later, in February 1987,
Shoko Asahara stood before the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. He was
received by the supreme Kalachakra master in person.
He probably first met him in the year 1984, as His Holiness
conducted a ceremony in Tokyo at the invitation of the Agon-shu
sect. Asahara was at this stage still a member of this religious
community.
The Japanese would later report
the following of his meeting in Dharamsala: “Imagine my delight at
being able to meditate with His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, … And in
His Holiness’s private meditation room! ‘I’ll sit here where I
always sit; you sit there,’ he instructed me. ‘Let me give you a
Buddha image.’ … After a few minutes of loud, deep breathing, all
traces of the Dalai Lama vanished. He must have completely stopped
his breath. At that moment, the astral vision of the golden face of
Shakyamuni Buddha radiated from my ajuna chakra. The vision
persisted steadily, without a flicker. ‘Ah, this is the Buddha image
the Dalai Lama was talking about,’ I thought. I continued my
meditation” (Bracket, 1996, p. 68). Smiling, the Dalai Lama then
took his leave of him after an intensive exchange of ideas with the
following words: “Dear friend, … Look at the Buddhism of Japan
today. It has degenerated into ceremonialism and has lost the
essential truth of the teachings. … If this situation continues, …
Buddhism will vanish from Japan. Something needs to be done” (Kaplan
and Marshall, 1996, p. 13). Thereupon the god-king entrusted him
with a spiritual mission: “You should spread real Buddhism there [in
Japan]. … You can do that well, because you have the mind of a
Buddha. If you do so, I shall be very pleased. It will help me with
my mission” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 13). Asahara was indeed
more than happy. Afterwards, His Holiness blessed him with water and
posed for a photo with him. Eight years later this photo was to
appear in all the newspapers of the world. From now on, the Japanese
guru referred to himself as a pupil of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.
The god-king’s final version of affairs is different. He never
commissioned the Japanese to do anything at all, nor established any
special relation with him, and definitely did not take him on as a
sadhaka. For him Asahara
was just one of the many hundreds of worshippers and visitors whom
he met with in the course of a year. After the fact, His Holiness
made a critical pronouncement with reference to the Japanese guru,
which he obviously took to apply to others, but not himself: “I am
suspicious of miracles and supernatural powers. Believers in
Buddhism should not rely to much on a specific leader. This is
unhealthy” (Tibetan
Review, May 1995, p. 9).
But Asahara was not a complete nobody for the god-king.
According to the German magazine, Stern, they had met five
times since 1987 (Stern
36/95, p. 126). Amazingly, weeks after the first poison gas attack,
His Holiness still called the guru a “friend, although not
necessarily a perfect one” (Stern 36/95, p. 126). Then a
document from 1989 came to light in which the Kundun thanked the AUM sect
for donations and confirmed that they “encouraged public awareness
through religious and social activities” (Focus 38/95, p. 114). On
January 21, 1989 Asahara had sent the sum of $100,000 to Dharamsala
for the assistance of Tibetan refugees. As a kind of service in
return he received an official note from the Council for religious and
cultural affairs of His Holiness the Dalai Lama in which one can
read: “To the best of our knowledge, AUM attempts to promote public
well-being through various religious and social activities, for
example through instruction in Buddhist doctrines and yoga” (Focus 38/95, p.
116–117).
On February 8, Asahara wrote
back: “It is my fervent wish that Tibet will return to the hands of
the Tibetans in the near future. I am willing to do whatever I can
to be of help” (Shimatsu, I). The Japanese guru’s gratitude is only
too easy to understand, then with the aforementioned note in his
hand he succeeded in being recognized as a religious body by the
Japanese administration and thus exempt from
taxes.
Admittedly there was a certain
cooling of relations between the two religious leaders before the
poison gas attack, since Tibetans in exile from Japan had sharply
criticized Asahara’s public appearances. Yet he simply ignored such
criticisms. This is shown by his spectacular letter to the Kundun of February 24, 1995,
which was sent about a month before the events in Tokyo. The letter
leaves no room for doubt about how deeply the Japanese sect leader
felt himself to be connected to the Tibetan religious sphere. In it
Asahara not without pride announces that his son, Gyokko, is the
reincarnation of the Panchen Lama who died in 1989: “May I report to
His Holiness most humbly that I am convinced that Gyokko is a
reincarnation of Panchen Rinpoche” (Shimatsu, I, HPI
008).
As evidence for this suspicion
Asahara appeals to synchronicities and miraculous signs. Like the
Panchen Lama, his son was also deaf in one ear. Yet the vision which
appeared to the child’s mother was even more unambiguous: “A boy
flying in spurts over a snowy mountain range with his legs crossed
in a full Lotus posture. A low male voice said: 'Panchen Lama'. The
voice continued, 'Tibetan Buddhism is finished. I have come to
rebuild it ...'" (Shimatsu, I).
Asahara also met with other high
Tibetan tantra masters — Khamtrul Rinpoche, for example, an
important Nyingmapa teacher, and Kalu Rinpoche, the Kalachakra specialist of the
Kagyupas whose multifarious activities we have already considered.
There is supposed to have been a meeting between the Tibetan
scholar, Khamtrul (who the Kundun had prophesied to be
the future Rudra
Chakrin), the Dalai Lama, and a member of the AUM sect (Hisako
Ishii) at which the publication of esoteric teachings of
Padmasambhava in Japanese was discussed. According to statements by
Asahara, Khamtrul Rinpoche confirmed his “perfect, absolute, divine
wisdom” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 18). On May 24, 1989, the Tibetan
is supposed to have issued the Japanese guru with the following
letter of recommendation:
“Teacher Asahara is my old
friend, and I consider it an honor to be able to say the following
in favor of him and of his religious
activities:
- I am filled with boundless
admiration for Teacher Asahara’s innate Buddhist traits, like
enthusiasm for his work, goodliness, generosity, and
selflessness.
- He is an experienced and
qualified meditation; tantra; and yoga
instructor.
- On the condition that he
receives fitting recognition, Teacher Asahara can become a truly
well-known teacher of Buddhism, who is capable of re-establishing
the true doctrine of the Dharma in Japan.
- I also know that AUM Shinrikyo,
Teacher Asahara’s religious organization, is a religious
association that distinguishes itself through discipline and good
organization and wide-ranging activities in order to suitably
further social well-being.
- Teacher Asahara’s sympathy and
assistance in regard to the people and culture of Tibet is an
example of generosity and concern for the poor.
- It is painful for me to see
that AUM, with no regard for its good intentions and activities,
has up until now not found the recognition and support it is due
from the Japanese government.
- I emphatically recommend that
AUM be accorded the justly deserved status of a tax-free
organization, and that it likewise receive all necessary
governmental and social privileges. Many thanks, Khamtul Giamjang
Dontup Rinpoche.” (AUM Shinrikyo, HPI 013)
In Sri Lanka, the land of
Therevada Buddhism, he was additionally praised as the “greatest
religious person in Japan” and “the only one who can save the world”
(also quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 18). The Prime Minister gave him a
Shakyamuni relic, thus equipping him with an important symbol of
authority. Then, in the foreword to one of his books it also says
“The Buddha of our times is Shoko Asahara” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p.
18). And the guru preaches to his followers “You ought to become
Buddhas yourselves. You should preach my teachings, or rather the
cosmic truth, and should produce many Buddhas. Spread the AUM system
of training on a global scale and scatter Buddhas around the whole
world. If we accomplish this, all battles and conflicts shall come
to an end” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 35).
In light of the in hindsight
extremely embarrassing meetings of the Kundun and high Lamaist
dignitaries with Shoko Asahara, His Holiness’s representative in
Japan (Karma Gelek Yuthok) issued a interesting communiqué some
weeks after the attack. Before the world press Karma Gelek Yuthok
explained that “Whatever little relationship Asahara had with His
Holiness the Dalai Lama and other Tibetan lamas fell purely under
the religious domain in spirit and deed. I had nothing to do with
the world-shocking criminal acts known and alleged to have been
committed by the AUM cult. It is unthinkable that His Holiness the
Dalai Lama is related with the criminal acts of AUM simply because
of his casual spiritual relationship with Asahara”
(Samdup).
We see this in a completely
different light, however. It was precisely because of these spiritual encounters with
the god-king and his “viceroys” and his intensive study of the
Tibetan/tantric esoterica and apocalyptica that the inexorable
madness developed in Asahara’s mind which made him become the doomsday guru of the western
press.
The staged Shambhala
war
Let us begin, then, to present
the “spiritual” evidence and incriminating material piece by piece:
there is no doubt that Asahara believed himself to be the
incarnation of a Shambhala warrior and was
absolutely convinced that he was acting as a delegate of the mythic
kingdom. “There will be a final battle between Rudra Chakrin, the
king of Shambhala, and a
foolish being called Vemacitta. The war at the
end of this century is the last event seen by many prophets for the
past several thousand years. When it happens, I want to fight
bravely”, the guru had proclaimed via his radio station four (!)
months before the Tokyo assassination (on December 4, 1994)
(Archipelago, I, HPI 003). Rudra Chakrin (“the terrible wheel
turner”), the militant doomsday king of Shambhala, is also an
epithet of the Indian god, Shiva. The destroyer god and the Buddha
blend into one figure for Asahara, just as they merge into one as
the final Shambhala king, Rudra Chakrin, in the Kalachakra Tantra. As his
followers were called upon “to have the purest faith in the guru,
the Great Lord Shiva, or the Buddhas”, Asahara declared in December
1990 that “Here, the Buddhas and the Great Lord Shiva mean the guru
[Asahara], who is their incarnation” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 18).
Or, even more succinctly: “The first thing you should do is to
understand the Great Lord Shiva, the Buddhas, and the guru as one,
as the embodiment of truth and to take refuge in them. Refuge means
to learn their teachings, to make sacrifices, and perform services
for them (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 30). As early as in spring 1985,
whilst meditating on the beach at Miura, south of Tokyo, he was
visited by a vision of Shiva “the god of light who leads the armies
of the gods” who “charged him with building an ideal society made up
of those who had attained psychic powers, a society called the
Kingdom of Shambhala. … Asahara’s seaside epiphany was the origin of
his claim to be a messiah and his leadership role in Armageddon, or
final war, which would destroy Japan” (Brackett, 1996, p. 66). A
sect pamphlet suggests that Asahara himself came from Shambhala and
had descended to earth in order to direct and save it: “This kingdom
(Shambhala), ruled by the god Shiva, is a world where only those
souls which have attained the complete truth of the universe can go.
In Shambhala, the ascetic practices of messianic persons have made
great advances in order to lead souls to gedatsu (emancipation) and
save them. Master Asahara has been reborn from there into the human
world so that he might take up his mission as a messiah. Therefore,
the Master’s efforts to embody truth throughout the human world have
been sanctioned by the great will of the god Shiva” (quoted by
Brackett, 1996, 70).
In his own words, Asahara drew up
a “Japan Shambhalization Plan . This was said to be “the first step
to Shambhalizing the world. … If you take part,” he explained to his
readers, “you will achieve great virtue and rise to a higher world”
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 18). IN the pamphlet already quoted
above, it says, “For that reason Aum Shinri Kyo’s plan to transform
Japan into Shambhala was presented. This plan is without equal in
its scope, as it wants to extend Aum’s sacred sphere throughout all
of Japan, making Japan the base for the salvation of the whole world
by fostering the development of multitudes of holy people. This plan
cannot be realized without the help of our believers. Please come
and join us!” (quoted by Brackett, 1996, p. 70). The two
journalists, David E. Kaplan and Andrew Marshall, with somewhat too
little fantasy and far too restrictively see this “Shambhala project” as a plan
“to open AUM offices and training centers in every major Japanese
city and establish a 'Lotus Village' or utopian community where AUM
members would survive Armageddon” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p.
18). But whatever Asahara may have understood by this, Shambhala was for him the
guiding star that led him into the abyss and that he deliberately
followed. One of the songs the members of the sect had to listen to
daily on headphones goes “Shambhala,
Shambhala!”
The sect’s system of rituals is
Tantric Buddhist
Asahara became familiar with the
teachings of Tantric Buddhism at a very early stage. In the early
1980s he joined a religious group by the name of Agon Shun (founded
by Seiyu Kiriyma), which among other things employed sexual magic
rites to attain rapid enlightenment. Asahara, despite having been a
keen pupil, left the group and turned to the preferred teachings of
Mahayana Buddhism. HE saw himself as an orthodox Buddhist who wanted
to anchor afresh the “Four Noble Truths”, the “Bodhisattva vow”, and
the system of monks and nuns in decadent Japan. After his contacts
with the Tibetan lamas, however, this pure Mahayana orientation
became increasingly complemented by tantric practices and
viewpoints. In the spring of 1990 he introduced what he called the
Tantra-Vajrayana System of
Practice as a discipline of AUM Shinrikyo. Some time later a
journal by the title of Vajrayana Sacca appeared.
Shoko Asahara in Front of a Tantric
Deity
From this point on the gateway to
the legitimation of any crime lay open. In accordance with the
tantric “law of inversion” the low was from now on inverted into the
high. „Bad deeds”, the
young tantra master wrote, „instantly change into good deeds. This
is a tantric way of thinking” (Asahara, 1991, vol. 1, p. 65).
At another point it
says, “If the guru possesses a crystal clear spirit, if a being can
see through everything, then for him there are no lies; lies no
longer mean anything to him. […] Good and evil also change according
to their circumstances. Somebody who has lied so as to motivate
another to follow the practice of truth, for instance. The fact that
he has lied will certainly bring him bad karma, but the fact that he
led somebody to the truth brings him merit. Hence, what one chooses
to stress depends upon what one is aiming for. In the practice of
Mahayana, this kind of exercise is not used. From a tantric point of
view it is seen as good, then you will be of use to others because
of your self-sacrifice” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 32).We also learn
of Asahara’s commitment to the “crimes” of Tantric Buddhism from the
charges laid against him by the state prosecutor: “The teachings of
esoteric Buddhism from Tibet were really quite horrible”, he is
supposed to have said, “If, for example, a guru ordered a pupil to
kill a thief, the pupil did so, and treated the deed as a virtuous
one. In my previous existence I myself killed somebody at the guru’s
command” (Quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 33).
True to the tantric doctrine,
Asahara explained the sexual magic symbolism of his system as
follows: “For normal Japanese sensibilities it is a very obscene
image. A man and a woman in sexual embrace. But the facts of the
matter are quite different […] This consort can be Parvati [Shiva’s
wife] or Dakini, and if one practices guru yoga the union is the
holy union to create our astral bodies. It is the union of yin and
yang” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p. 27). He regularly held public
lectures about Kundalini
Yoga, he even spoke about the “fire serpent” in the Moscow sport
stadium — naturally without going into the sexual magic practices of
his Tantra-Vajrayana
System. As the highest guru, all the women of the
organization were at his disposal both on the basis of divine
benevolence and de facto,
and he made frequent use of this right, but it did not prevent him
from granting his wife (Tomoko Ishii) the highest spiritual rank in
the sect aside from his own. Just as in Tibet’s monasteries, the
tantric union with a karma
mudra was for him exclusively the privilege of the highest
initiates. In contrast, the main body of AUM members had to submit
to a strict commandment of sexual abstinence. Anyone who was caught
masturbating had to spend several days in solitary
confinement.
This, however, was only the case
— and here too we can see how strictly Asahara adhered to Vajrayana laws — if it came
to ejaculation; other than that he recommended the exact opposite to
his male pupils: “Masturbate daily, but do not ejaculate! … Continue
this for ten days. Then start masturbating twice a day ... Find a
picture of your favorite entertainment star, preferably nude. Use
the photo to activate your imagination and start masturbating four
times a day” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 159). The number of
daily masturbations is increased further in the course of the
initiatory path.
By the sixth week the time has
come. A female partner is found and given a little alcohol to drink.
Then the couple withdrew together and began first with “some
petting” in which the adept stroked the nipples of his mudra and stimulated her
clitoris. Afterwards he copulated with the girl according to a
predetermined rhythm that was always derived from factors of the
number nine: keeping still for 81 breaths, moving the phallus in and
out nine times; keeping still for another 81 breath units, 27 times
in and out, and so forth. It is not clear from the translation by
Kaplan and Marshall whether here too the seed is retained. At any
rate they had to “always let her come first” (Kaplan and Marshall,
1996, p. 160).
The offering up of the wisdom
consort to the guru necessary in the high tantras was likewise
practiced by the AUM sect. A pupil who made his girlfriend available
justified this offertory act as follows: “If she and the guru fuse
together her mental level rises. … By sacrificing himself, he pours
his energy into a woman. It’s better [for her] than fusing with me”
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 161). Asahara also made use of this
reason: “This is a Tantric initiation. Your energy will rise quickly
and you’ll achieve enlightenment faster”, he is said to have told a
reluctant female pupil whilst he tore the clothes from her body
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 158).
Asahara also worked with the
tantric fluids of blood and sperm. He had his own blood drawn off
and offered it, often for high prices, to the members of the sect as
a cure-all. His hair was boiled and drunk as a kind of tea. Even his
bathwater is supposed to have been sold as a holy substance. Such
practices were also widespread in Tibet’s monasteries, for example
the excrement of the great lamas was considered to be a medicine and
sold well when manufactured into pills with other
substances.
The science department of AUM, it
was said one day, had discovered that the “DNA of the master”
possessed magic characteristics and would grant anyone who drank it
supernatural powers (siddhis). This was about
Asahara’s sperm, a small flask of which went for the price of $7000
according to Kaplan and Marshall. Here too there is an allusion to
the sperm gnosis of the Kalachakra Tantra, where the
master gives the pupil to taste during the “secret
initiation”.
Likewise the horror scenarios the
members of the sect had to go through in order to practice
fearlessness are also tantric. “Delinquents” who transgressed the
rules of the order were locked up in small chambers and had to watch
videos of one horror film after another. Via a loudspeaker they were
inundated with constant death threats.
Already after his first trip to
India Asahara believed himself to be in possession of “supernatural
powers” (siddhi). He
claimed he could make contact with the dead and read the thoughts of
others. Like the “maha
siddhas” he was said to be able to walk through walls. “In the
future … I will be able to fly freely through the sky” (Kaplan and
Marshall, 1996, p. 7), he prophesied. He Later he developed the
“Divine Ear” and was, on his own account, in a position “to hear the
voices of the gods and humans” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p.
199).
Asahara’s
gods
The metaphysics and spiritual
practices of the sect were primarily dominated by Tibetan Buddhist
images and exercise. Basically, “AUM Supreme Truth”, we learn from
Kaplan and Marshall, “became a familiar New Age blend of Eastern
religion and mysticism. Its beliefs and rituals were drawn heavily
from Tibetan Buddhism, its physical rigor from yoga” (Kaplan and
Marshall, 1996, p. 15). He himself referred to his rituals as
“Tibetan Buddhism” (Tibetan
Review, May 1995, p. 9).
Of
course, this is rejected by Dharamsala with protestation, in that
the blame for the Japanese’s practices is (as often happens) pinned
on the Hindu competition: „The rituals he teaches his disciples
include practice of yoga, levitation and other acts that are neither
Tibetan nor Buddhism and are more akin to ritual of Indian
sadhus (Hindu ascetics). The teacher as well as the disciples
wear flowing white robes, something that no practitioner of Buddhism
does” (Tibetan Review,
May, 1995, p. 9). This too is not entirely correct — in
certain scenes from the Kalachakra ritual white
robes are worn, and all the priests of Shambhala are dressed in
white.
Asahara regarded himself as an
incarnation of Buddha Shakyamuni. Publicly he declared that he was
“at the same level as Buddha” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 25). In
Bihar in India he sat upon the sacred seat and announced to those
present, “I am Buddha” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 67). “The
Buddha in our times is Master Shoko Asahara”, was the praise of his
pupils (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 67). Many of the members of
the sect were given Buddhist names. His closest collaborator, the
sect’s éminence grise,
Kiyohide Hayakawa, was called “Tiropa” (i.e., Tilopa) after the
great Kalachakra master.
The guru recognized him as “a Bodhisattva in his past life” and
declared that “without Master Tiropa’s efforts there would be no AUM
Supreme Truth” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 75). It was Asahara’s
proclaimed intention to Buddhize the planet. “Spread the training
system of AUM on a global scale”, the guru preached, “and scatter
Buddhas over the world” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p.
16).
We have discussed in detail the
description of Tantric Buddhism as a solar cult. Asahara also made
appearances like a sun priest and like the prophet of a coming
empire of light: “After insubstantial religions with pseudo-light,
there will be a religion which produces light as the sun does, and
it will change the future” (Archipelago, I, NPI
003).
Although his system of rituals
was decisively influenced by Tibetan mysticism, this was not
universally true of the gods. Here, in accordance with the guru’s
world concept, the deities of other religions were also invoked.
Since these were, according to the laws of Tantrism, nothing more
than the yogi’s projections the doctrine was able to easily overcome
the cultural hurdles.
Behind Asahara’s decision to
carry out his act of destruction lay the Indian god, Shiva, the lord of
destruction. The latter appeared to him a number of times, the guru
said, and confirmed his enlightenment in his own words. The members
of the sect were from now on expressly required to replace their own
wills with the will of Shiva. One epithet of this
god who lays waste to the world so as to subsequently produce it
anew in the violent cycle of death and rebirth, is Rudra. Translated from the
Sanskrit it means the “terrible one “, the “wild one “, the “violent
one”. As the Rudra of the
apocalyptic fire (Kalagni
Rudra) he destroys the universe and time itself (White, 1996, p.
232). “Once it has consumed the waters of the ocean,” it says in a
tantric text, “it will become the Kalagni Rudra, the fire that
consumes time” (White, 1996, p. 232). There can be no doubt that
Asahara adopted Rudra’s
will to destroy from Tantric Buddhism. This is probably also true of
the name: Rudra Chakrin,
the 24th Shambhala king
who contests the final battle, undoubtedly combines the
characteristics of Buddha and of the wrathful Shiva in his person. That is
exactly what Asahara sought to do. Incidentally, the region around
Dharamsala, the seat of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in
Exile, is from a Hindu point of view dedicated to the god Shiva.
The Japanese guru does not stop
at making loans from Christianity either. After his first reading of
the Bible he already announced: “I hereby declare myself to be the
Christ” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 67). Afterwards he wrote a
book on this topic and in it drew attention to his similarities to
Jesus of Nazareth: “Jesus changed water to wine, I changed ordinary
water to the water that emits light” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p.
18). Here, Asahara is referring to a transformatory miracle he
performed in the presence of his pupils. From his own lips we learn
“I am the last messiah in this century” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996,
p. 67).
“The guru’s most insistent megalomanic claim
was to deity. In addition to declaring himself an avatar of Shiva,
he professed to have achieved ‘the state of a Buddha who has
attained mirror-like wisdom’ and to be the ‘divine emperor’ of Japan
and the world; the declared Christ, who will ‘disclose the meaning
of Jesus’ gospel’; the ‘last twentieth-century savior’; the ‘holiest
holy man’, one ‘beyond the Bible’; and the being who will inaugurate
the Age of Aquarius and preside over a ‘new era of supreme truth’.
For disciples transfixed by guruism, he could indeed be all these
things (Lifton, 2000, p. 167)
The fantasy worlds of certain
comics also had an influence upon him. It is a fact that Asahara and
members of the sect took the virtual reality of the comic strips for
real. The same is true of science fiction novels. Isaac Asimov’s
famous Foundation epic
was declared to be a kind of holy book. In it we can read the
following sentences: “The Empire will vanish and all its good with
it. Its accumulated knowledge will decay and the order it has
imposed will vanish” (quoted by Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 29).
Additionally Asahara was convinced that extraterrestrials constantly
visit our planet. He was, however, not on a friendly footing with
them, as he believed among other things that they fed themselves
with human flesh. From the world of “esoteric fascism” he had his
reverence for Adolf Hitler, who was said to be still alive and be
landing with an escort of UFOs in the near
future.
The Japanese
Chakravartin
Within his group the “Buddha of
our times” had an absolute power monopoly. He was lord over life and
death in the truest sense of the word, the there were cases where
members who resisted his will were tormented to death. In accordance
with the absolutification of the teacher drawn from the tantras, he
demanded that his pupils replace their own will with his
own.
But for Asahara power was not
just spiritual in nature. He combined practical political concepts
with it very early on. When as a younger man he applied albeit
unsuccessfully for admission to Tokyo University, he wanted to
become the prime minister of Japan. Later he saw himself at the head
of a Japanese Buddhocracy. He prophesied that he would soon ascend
the imperial throne and created a shadow cabinet from among his
people. Yet the guru was not even to be content with this role as a
Tennos. Asahara intended
to establish a “millennial kingdom” (!) which was to span the entire
planet. He called his political model the “Supreme State”. Kaplan
and Marshall comment that this description “leaves no doubt about
who would inherit the world. And on top of the great empire, ruling
serenely over the cosmos, sat Shoko Asahara, now deemed the Holy
Monk Emperor” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 157). The claim to the
world throne of the Chakravartin was thus a
political program: “I intend to become a spiritual dictator … A
dictator of the world”, the doomsday guru openly
proclaimed (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 25).
The financial motivations which
Kaplan and Marshall attribute to him were thus not his first
priority. He considered them to be only means to an end. A Japanese
expert on the sect has expressed this most clearly: “Asahara
distinguished himself from the other cult leaders in that he did not
spend large sums of money upon himself. ... His primary goal was to
attain power” (Repp, 1996b, p. 195).
Murder, violence, and
religion
Only a few months before it came
to an explosion of violence, Shoko Asahara attempted to gain power
via legal means — he founded a party (the Truth Party) and stood for
election. Even this short sequence in his religious political career
demonstrates how deeply allied to Buddhism in general and Tibetan
Buddhism in particular he felt himself to be. He formed a shadow
cabinet from among the members of his sect and gave these the names
of either pupils of the historical Buddha or of high Tibetan lamas.
[1] The ostentatious election campaign ended in a disastrous defeat.
It is said that not even all the members of the sect voted for him.
Soon afterwards he turned to the tactics of
terror.
Asahara’s aggression arose from
its opposite. Everything began with his proclaimed self-sacrifice in
the sense of Mahayana Buddhism. One of the mantras which the members
of the sect had to repeat constantly went as follows: “I make a joy
of my suffering; I make the suffering of others my own suffering”
(Repp, 1996a, p. 45). Completely in the Buddhist tradition, the guru
wanted “to rescue people from their suffering” and “to lead the
world to enlightenment”.(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, pp. 14-15).
Thus, in this early phase the rejection of violence was one of his
highest ethical principles: “Nonviolence”, Asahara said, “means to
love every living creature”, and at another point he declaimed that
“killing insects means accumulating the bad karma of killing”
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 50).
But in accordance with the
tantric “law of inversion”, and thanks to the fact that the Buddha
can also appear in his terrible form as Heruka, this nonviolence
soon became transformed into its exact opposite — cold-blooded
terrorism. We spare ourselves the details of the sect’s numerous
crimes. These include cases of imprisonment, extortion, bodily harm,
child abuse, torture and all kinds of murder. The police charged
Asahara’s followers with a total of 27
murders.
The murder of certain individuals
was legitimated by a ritual which Asahara called phowa and which he had also
imported from Tibetan cultural circles. This was understood to
involve the deliberate leading of a soul to a higher spiritual level
so that it could be freed from the harmful karma which clung to it
in this current life. From a Tibetan point of view phowa practices can also
include the murder of an individual. Asahara committed his followers
to murder through an oath in the form of a prayer known as the
“Vajrayana Vow” that required complete subjugation to the guru and
the practice of phowa. It
was recommended that the following prayer be recited “a thousand, a
million, a billion times” (Brackett, 1996, p. 96).
I take refuge in the Tantra
Vajrayana!
(repeated four
times)
What is the first
law?
To be mindful of the
Buddha.
And in Tantra
Vajrayana,
the Buddha and the Guru are
identical.
I take refuge in the
Guru!
(repeated four
times)
What is the
Guru?
The Guru is a life form born
to phowa all
souls.
Any method that leads to
salvation is acceptable.
My life will come to an end
sometime.
It makes no difference if
the end comes in twenty years,
thirty years, or eighty
years,
It will come
regardless.
What’s important is
how I give my
life.
If I give it for
salvation,
eliminating all the evil
karma I have accumulated,
freeing myself from all
karma, the Guru and Shiva
and all winners of
truth
will without fail lead me to
a higher realm.
So I practice the Vajrayana
without fear.
The Armageddon taught in the
Bible approaches,
The final battle is upon
us.
I will be among the holy
troops of this last great battle
And phowa the evil
ones.
I will phowa one or two evil
ones.
Phowa is the highest
virtue
And phowa is the path to the highest
level of being.
(Brackett, 1996, pp.
96-97)
In the end, the Tibetan phowa ritual became the
guiding principle behind the acts of terrorism and also played a
significant role in the prosecution’s case against Asahara. There,
the following incriminating quotations from the guru were also
tabled: “If your guru commands you to take somebody’s life it is an
indication that this person’s time is already up. With other words
you are killing this person at precisely the right time and making
possible the phowa of
this person. […] The end justifies the means. Take the example of a
person who is burdened by so many sins that he is certain to go to
hell. If an enlightened person decides that it would be best to put
an end to his life and to really kill him, this act would generally
be seen by society as a straightforward murder. But in the light of
our teachings the killing comes to the same thing as making his phowa possible for this
person. Every enlightened person would see at once that both the
murderer and the murdered benefit from the deed” (quoted by Repp,
1997, p. 33).
The guru justified all of his
orders to kill by appealing to the Tibetan practice of phowa, even in the case of
the one-year-old son of the lawyer, Sakomoto, who took the sect on
legally: “The child ended up not being raised by Sakomoto, who tried
to repeat bad deeds”. It would be “born again in a higher world”
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 42). According to Kaplan and
Marshall, the guru is also supposed to have said that “it is good to
eliminate people who continue to do bad things and are certain to go
to hell” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 50). This was primarily
directed at the immediate opponents of the sect, like the parents of
members, lawyers and journalists.
“Within Aum, Asahara’s attack guruism was
anchored in what was called the mahamudra. In Tibetan
Buddhism, the term refers to a state in which a devotee achieves
‘the unity of emptiness and luminosity’ and, thereby, ‘the
purification ... [of] the transitory contamination of confusion.’
The concept was sometimes conceived in this way in Aum, and a few of
of Asahara’s closest disciples were described as achieving mahamudra. But given Aum’s
atmosphere, attaining mahamudra came largely to
mean the overcoming of all resistances to an absolute and
unquestioned dedication to the guru himself” (Lifton, 2000, p.
63).
The Japanese
Armageddon
Asahara made himself familiar
with the “theologies of destruction” early on. A year after his
visit to the Dalai Lama (in 1988) he began with his study of the Apocalypse of St. John. The
Prophecies of Nostradamus
followed soon after. This French prophet became a leading light
for the sect. On the basis of inspirations whispered to him by the
terror gods, the guru now developed his own apocalyptic
prognostications.
At first they concerned rescue
plans. The planet was supposed to be in danger and AUM had been
chosen to secure world peace. But then the prognoses became
increasingly gloomy. The planetary countdown was said to be in the
offing: „In my opinion”
Asahara said, „the realm of desire by the law of this universe, has
already entered the process of going back to its original form to
where it all started. In short, we are heading for Armageddon”
(Asahara, 1996, vol. 2, p. 103). He actually used the Hebrew word
“Armageddon”. But even now there was still talk of compassion and
assistance and Asahara believed that “If AUM tries hard , we can
reduce the victims of Armageddon to a fourth of the world’s
population. … However, at present, my rescue plan is totally
delayed. The rate of survivors is getting smaller and smaller”
(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 31). “And what will happen after
Armageddon?”, he asked in one of his sermons, “After Armageddon the
beings will be divided into two extreme types: the ones who will go
to the Heaven of Light and Sound, and the ones who will go to
Hell”(Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, pp. 48-49).
His apocalyptic visions are dated
precisely: in one of his prophecies from 1987, the year of
enlightenment, he says that “Japan will rearm herself in 1992.
Between 1999 and 2003, a nuclear war is sure to break out. I,
Asahara, have mentioned the outbreak of nuclear war for the first
time. We have only fifteen years before it” (Kaplan and Marshall,
1996, p. 16).
“Any imagined Armageddon is violent, but the
violence tends to be distant and mythic, to be brought about by evil
forces that leave God with no other choice but total cleansing of
this world. With Aum’s Armageddon the violence was close at hand and
palpable. Aum was always an actor in its own Armageddon drama,
wheter as a target of world-destroying enemies or as a fighting
force in a great battle soon to begin or already under way. As time
went on, however, Aum increasingly saw itself as the initiator, the
trigger of the final event” (Lifton, 2000, p.
59).
Somewhat later, in his book Day of Annihilation, there
was no longer so much time left. According to this text, Japan would
sink into the ocean already in 1996. The end of the world would
begin in 1998/99. A pupil saw in a vision how a branch of AUM would
move to Jerusalem in 1998 and that members of the sect would be
imprisoned there and then tortured. In a triumphant campaign the
fellow believers would be freed. Asahara, this prophecy predicted,
would die the death of a martyr during the liberation and set off a
final world war.
In order to introduce his
“Shambhalization of the world”, it was only natural that Asahara
would want to lead a great apocalyptic army, then that is integral
to the script of the tantric myth. Hence, as he was meditating on
the Japanese Pacific coast, one day a powerful voice told him, “I
have chosen you to lead God’s army” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p.
12). From this point in time on the sect’s music also changed; in
place of the old harmonic New
Age music of the spheres, military marches now sounded over the
loudspeakers. “The time has come … We have to fight ... Defeat means
death for the guru”, Asahara’s closest intimate wrote in his
notebook (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 154). The connection between
the destruction of the world and emptiness invoked by the Kalachakra Tantra also had a
decisive influence on Shoko Asahara, and even found expression in
the title of one of his writings, From Destruction to Emptiness: A
Sequel to the Day of Destruction.
Religion and chemical
laboratories
The final war could not be fought
without effective weapons. Asahara recruited a small group of highly
qualified scientists, all university graduates in the natural
sciences: chemists, biochemists, electronic engineers. They were
commissioned to establish large laboratories for the manufacture of
chemical and biological weapons. According to Kaplan and Marshall
colonies of all sorts of deadly bacteria were cultivated there,
anthrax, influenza, and even the notorious Ebola virus. The young
people dreamed of gigantic laser cannons. “When the power of this
laser is increased,” Asahara says, “a perfectly white belt, or sword
can be seen. This is the sword referred to in the Book of
Revelations. This sword will destroy virtually all life” (Kaplan and
Marshall, 1996, p. 207). He was especially fascinated by a
“microplasm” weapon with which all living things could be vaporized
in seconds. “The weapons used in World War III” he wrote in 1993,
“will make the atomic and hydrogen bombs look like toys. At present,
the centerpiece of the Russian arsenal is called the star-reflector
cannon. The United States has the Strategic Defense Initiative and
the extension of this is 'microplasma’" (Archipelago, I, HPI
003).
In particular, Asahara’s
ingenious scientist, Hideo Murai reveled at the idea of all kinds of
apocalyptic weapons of destruction. He was a specialist in
electromagnetic (EM) phenomena. For him too, and for his work, the
tantric law of inversion would one day take effect. At first Murai
began by constructing weapons to defend the cult against the
military apparatus of the superpowers. For years his paranoid guru
believed himself to be the target of electromagnetic and chemical
attacks by the most varied worldly and religious secret services. It
was only thanks to his elevated spirituality that he was still alive
at all. As redeemer of the world he wanted to rescue humanity from
an imminent war of destruction and hence he devoted his thoughts to
what countermeasures could be developed. But then came the moment
when defense turned into attack. Hideo Murai was commissioned by his
guru to develop miraculous weapons that were no longer defensive,
but would rather accelerate the end of the
world.
The sect now focused on the
physical theories and experiments of the famous Serbo-Croatian
inventor, Nikola Tesla (1846-1943), who had undertaken extensive
research into the enormous electromagnetic (EM) energy fields that
are said to span the globe. Tesla believed that influence could be
gained over these and that earthquakes could thus be triggered or
the weather changed. He is supposed to have designed appropriate
machines and conducted successful experiments. In the course of his
investigations he reached the conclusion that it would be possible
to split the world into two halves like an apple with an “EM
experiment”. This tempting apocalyptic conception motivated the
young scientists at AUM to write to the Tesla Society in New York
and to visit the Tesla Museum in Belgrade so as to be able to
examine his notes.
In March 1994 Hideo Murai went to
Australia with several assistants and carried out electromagnetic
(EM) experiments on a sheep station bought by the sect. He is
supposed to have built an all
round machine, which could both evoke earthquakes and act as a
shield against nuclear warheads. This apparatus proved to be the
ideal weapon of mass destruction for the “final war” (Archipelago,
I). There are speculations that the Japanese earthquake in Kobe (in
1995) had an artificial origin and was staged by the technicians of
the AUM sect. This may well sound just too fantastic, but on this
occasion one of Asahara’s prophesies, which were otherwise very
rarely fulfilled, came true. Nine days before the big earthquake
which shook the Hanshin region, on January 8, 1995 the guru
announced on a radio program that “Japan will be attacked by an
earthquake in 1995. The most likely place is Kobe” (Archipelago, II,
HPI 004). After the event AUM announced that the infrastructure of
the province of Kobe with its skyscrapers and major bridges had been
“the best place for simulating an earthquake-weapon attack against a
big city such as Tokyo. Kobe was the appropriate guinea pig”
(Archipelago, II, HPI 004).
But at the foot of the holy Mount
Fuji conventional weapons were also being mass produced. Members of
the sect there were producing Russian automatic rifles (the AK-47)
in factories disguised as spiritual centers. Sources purchased a
military helicopter in Russia that was then dismantled and shipped
to Japan piece by piece.
But, as should be self-evident,
the tantra master Asahara saw the explosive force of his own mind as
the most dangerous weapon of all. “In Tantrayana vows,” we hear
from the man himself, “ there is one that prohibits attainers from
destroying villages and towns. This means that the power to destroy
a town or village is obtained through Tantrayana and Vajrayana practice”
(Archipelago, I, HPI 003). In accordance with the tantric logic of
inversion that we have described in detail, the guru believed he was
thoroughly justified in breaking this vow.
Fundamentally, Asahara’s
factories corresponded conceptually to the alchemical laboratories
of the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe, although they were
incomparably more technical. In both cases scientists did not just
experiment with chemical substances, rather they combined their
findings with religious concepts and symbols. Let us recall how the
couple, Nicholas and Helena Ivanovna Roerich, described the temple
structures of Shambhala
as “laboratories” and glorified the monastic priests of the
wonderland as “adepts of a sacred alchemy”.
Asahara also gave his chemical
factory holy names and called it the “Clear Stream Temple” or
“Supreme Science” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 87). Several altars
were to be found in the three-story building in which the poison
gases were created. Shortly after entering one reached a mezzanine
and came face to face with a golden figure of the destroyer god Rudra Shiva. To the left of this
stood a small devotional shrine which according to Asahara housed
some of the bones of the historical Buddha. He had brought them back
with him from Sri Lanka to Japan. The room in which a wide variety
of tinctures for the production of poisonous gases were stored was
referred to as the “Room of Genesis”. Things were more matter of
fact on the ground floor, there were tanks, extruders, reactors,
ducting systems, circulating pumps. The main hall was called Satian 7, which meant “Truth
7". But it also had a nickname. The young scientists referred to it
simply as “the magician”. In the last days before the fateful attack
on the underground a gigantic statue of Buddha was erected
there.
The Song of
Sarin
Since it is not difficult to
manufacture and the ingredients were easy for AUM to obtain,
research and production were concentrated upon a highly effective
nerve gas by the name of Sarin. This poison had been developed by
the German national socialists in the Second World War. Asahara’s
relation to the deadly substance proved to be very multi-layered. It
followed a fiendish three-stage cycle. At first there was constant
talk of how the sect itself was the victim of poison gas attacks.
“Wherever I go,” the Guru announced, “I have been sprayed from
helicopters or planes. The hour of my death has been foretold. The
gas phenomenon has already happened. Next time it might be an atomic
bomb” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 125). As a consequence of this
paranoia it was decided to hit back with the same weapon. In the
third phase the poison became independent and developed into a
quasi-divine substance. It was given half-ironic names like “Magic,
Witch, and Sally” (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 121) and sung about
in the following hymn:
It came from Nazi Germany, a
dangerous little chemical weapon,
Sarin!
Sarin!
If you inhale the mysterious
vapor, you will fall with bloody vomit
from your
mouth,
Sarin! Sarin! Sarin — the
chemical weapon.
Song of Sarin, the
brave.
In the peaceful night of
Matsumoto City
People can be killed, even
with our own hands,
Everywhere there are dead
bodies,
There!
Inhale Sarin, Sarin,
Prepare
Sarin! Prepare Sarin!
Immediately poisonous gas weapons
will fill the
place.
Spray! Spray! Sarin, the
brave Sarin
(Kaplan and Marshall,
1996, pp. 212-213)
The original plan was to spray
the poison gas over the parliament and government buildings with a
helicopter so as to paralyze the Japanese apparatus of state. The
attack on the underground system was therefore regarded as only a
preparatory exercise.
Interestingly, 60 years before
the events in Tokyo the Russian whom we have already portrayed in
detail, Nicholas Roerich, had linked the Shambhala myth to poison
gases. He was convinced that the wonderland was protected from
invaders by a gaseous substance that he called “sur”. Here is his
story, told to him on his travels through Central Asia in search of
Shambhala by a Buddhist
monk: “A lama, leader of a caravan, covers his mouth and nose with a
scarf. He is asked why, since it is not cold. He reports: 'Caution
is needed now. We are approaching the forbidden zone of Shambhala. We shall soon
notice 'sur', the poisonous gas that protects the border of Shambhala. Konchok, our
Tibetan, rides up to us and says in a subdued voice: 'Not far from
here, as the Dalai Lama was traveling to Mongolia, all the people
and animals in the caravan began to tremble and the Dalai Lama
explained that they should not be alarmed since they had entered the
forbidden zone of Shambhala and the vibrations
of the air were strange to them” (Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 73). A plume of toxic gas is also supposed to have streamed
out of one of the famous Indian crematoria, the meeting place of
many Maha Siddhas. It was
assimilated by the submarine fire of the doomsday mare (Kalagni) also mentioned in
the Kalachakra Tantra
(White, 1996, p. 234).
Since Auschwitz , the terror of
gas is also associated with the fate of the Jews and it is not
surprising that Asahara as an admirer of Hitler integrated an
aggressive anti-Semitism into his system. In a special issue of the
AUM journal, Vajrayana
Sacca, entitled “Manual of Fear”, war is declared on the Jewish
people: “On behalf of the world’s 5.5 billion people, Vajrayana Sacca hereby
declares war on the ‘world shadow government’ that murders untold
numbers of people and, while hiding behind sonorous phrases and
high-sounding principles, plans to brainwash and control the rest.
Japanese awake! The hidden enemy’s plot has long since torn our
lives to shreds” (Brackett, 1996, pp.
.107-108).
The international
contacts
AUM Shinrikyo was not a purely
Japanese phenomenon but rather an international one that spread
explosively through several countries, principally Russia. The
starving nation, hungry for any spiritual message after so many
years of communist dictatorship, became a paradise on earth for the
guru from the Far East. In 1992 he stood in front of St. Basil’s
Cathedral in Moscow with 300 of his followers, smiling and giving
the victory salute. The pose had its effect. Within just a few
months AUM was experiencing an unbroken rise in popularity across
all of Russia. At its peak the number of members exceeded 30,000.
Asahara enjoyed a surprisingly broad public recognition. He held a
sermon on “Helping The World to Happiness with the Truth” before a
packed crowd at the University of Moscow. He was introduced to the
nascent capitalist power elite as “Japan’s representative Buddhist
leader (Kaplan and Marshall, 1996, p. 70).
The guru even gained influence
over leading Russian politicians. He maintained an especially warm
relationship with the influential chairman of the Russian Security
Council, Oleg Ivanovich Lobov, at this stage one of Boris Yeltsin’s
close friends. Lobov is said to have done not a little to assist the
spread of the sect. Asahara also knew how to cultivate contacts with
well-known scientists. Things were similarly successful on the
propaganda front: in 1992, the government station Radio Moscow
broadcast his program “The Absolute Truth of Holy Heaven” twice a
day.
Of course, Asahara was not
tightfisted when it came to donations, a gesture which at that time
in Russia opened all doors. But that doesn’t explain the large
influx of enthusiasts who received nothing other than the pretty
words of the “last messiah”. One gains the impression that here an
heir of Agvan Dorjiev’s Shambhala vision- where the
hidden kingdom was to be sought in Russia — was at
work.
AUM Shinrikyo was the first
religious sect from a highly industrialized country which with
deliberate terror tactics turned on humanist society as such. It
came from a religious milieu which espoused like no other the
principle of nonviolence — that of Buddhism. Until then, people had
known only occult groups like the 900 followers of Jim Jones in
Jonestown, or the Sun Temple in Switzerland and Canada or the Branch
Davidians from Waco, who had exterminated themselves but not
uninvolved bystanders. Because of this new quality of religious
violence, the events in Tokyo caused much dismay all around the
world.
One might have thought that this
would provoke global research into and discussion of the causes of
and background to the Asahara phenomenon. If so one would have been
forced to recognize the major influence Vajrayana had had upon the
system of the doomsday
guru. One would also have discovered the close connection
between the Shambhala
myth and the Kalachakra
Tantra. Although such links are overt, since Asahara refers to
them explicitly in his writings, both the Western and the Eastern
public have chosen to act blind and passively await the next
catastrophe. In the press of the world the event has already been
forgotten repressed. In Japan too, nobody wants to look behind the
scenes, although Asahara’s trial is currently in progress: “In
general this contradiction between religion and violence is resolved
here by simply saying that AUM is not a religion at all” writes
Martin Repp, and continues, “One cannot make it so easy for oneself,
then AUM Shinrikyo is in its own understanding and in its practice
[a] religion and has an essentially Buddhist creed” (Repp, 1996b, p.
190).
The two different
brothers
In the light of our study one
could rightly say that the AUM sect was a consistent and true to the
letter pupil of the tantric teachings. The occult magic world view,
kundalini yoga, sexual
magic, the linkage of power and seed retention, the grasping for the
Siddhis, the invocation
of the gods, the hastening of the end of the universe, the
glorification of destruction, the great fascination with fantastic
machines of destruction, the military obsessions, the idea of
redemption, hope for a paradise, the claim to world domination, the
Shambhala myth — all of
these leitmotifs that
were so significant for Asahara are melodies from the repertoire of
Tibetan Buddhism, in particular that of the Kalachakra Tantra. For
Asahara, the tantric path to enlightenment began in the Himalayas
and was supposed to also end there. In 1988 he wrote that “After the
United States we will go to Europe. Finally we will establish a
center in the Himalayas, the origin of Buddhism and yoga. At this
point my mission will be at an end” (quoted by Repp, 1997, p.
27).
The story of Asahara demonstrates
clearly that Vajrayana
and the Shambhala myth
contain an extremely demonic potential that can be activated at any
moment. For the Asian side, especially for the Mongolians (as we
have seen), the aggressive warrior ethos nascent in the idea of Shambhala has never been
questioned and still continues to exist today in the wishful
thinking of many. There is a definite danger — as we shall show in
the next chapter — that it could develop into a pan-Asian vision of
fascist-like character.
Things are different with Tibetan
Buddhism in the West: there the lamas play only the pacifist card
with much success. It is almost the highest trump with which His
Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama wins the hearts of the people. He
is thus revered all over the planet as the “greatest prince of peace
of our time”.
What is the Kundun’s position on Shoko
Asahara now? The Dalai Lama needs the support of religious groups in
Japan since the majority of Buddhist schools in the country are
friendly to China and foster frequent changes with Chinese
monasteries. It is said of the very influential Soka Gakkai sect
that they are in constant contact with the Chinese leadership. The
Agon Shun sect (to which Asahara originally belonged) which was
formerly friendly to the Dalai Lama has also switched loyalties and
is now oriented towards Beijing (Repp 1997, p. 95). Additionally,
Asahara had transferred large sums of money to the Tibetans in exile
— official sources put the total at US $1.7 million. All of these
are factors in the political calculations which might help explain
the contact between the Dalai Lama and the Japanese guru. If,
however, we regard the meeting (with Asahara) from a tantric point
of view, we are forced to conclude that at one of their meetings the
Dalai Lama, as the supreme master of the Time Tantra, initiated the
doomsday guru directly
into the secrets of his “political mysticism” (the Shambhala myth). The reports
of people who have because of his magical aura experienced an
audience with the Kundun
as a kind of initiation are by now legion. Indeed, how could it be otherwise in
the light of an “omnipotent” and “omniscient deity” in the figure of
a “simple Tibetan monk”. Hence, in interpreting the encounter
between the two gurus in tantric terms, we have to assume it was an
occult relation between a “god” (the Dalai Lama) and a “demon”
(Asahara).
Now, in what does the
relationship between these two unequal brothers consist? From a
symbolic point of view the two share the duties laid out in the
tantric world view: the one plays the compassionate Bodhisattva (the Dalai
Lama), the other the wrathful Heruka (Asahara); the one
the “mild” Avalokiteshvara who “looks
down from above” (the Dalai Lama), the other the god of death and
prince of hell, Yama
(Asahara). The anthropologist and psychoanalyst, Robert A. Paul, has
been able to demonstrate with convincing arguments how profoundly
this two-facedness of the “good” and the “evil” Buddha has shaped
Tibetan culture. The two Buddha beings (the light and the dark) are
considered to be the counterposed forms of appearance of the one and
the same divine substance which has both a light and a shadowy side.
We may recall that Palgyi Dorje wore a white/black coat when he
carried out the ritual murder of King
Langdarma.
On this basis then, is Asahara
the outwardly projected shadow of the Dalai Lama? His two most
important predecessors also had such “shadow brothers” in whom
cruelty and criminality were concentrated. Under the Fifth Dalai
Lama it was the Mongol, Gushri Khan. This counterpart transformed
Tibet into a “sea of boiling blood”. The thirteenth hierarch was
accompanied by the bloodthirsty Kalmyk “Vengeful Lama”,
Dambijantsan. Is it really only a coincidence that the Fourteenth
Dalai Lama appeared on the world stage together with the Japanese doomsday guru, Shoko
Asahara?
Footnotes:
[1] The names
of the other members of the shadow cabinet aside from Shoko Asahara
were Maha Kheema, Maitreya, Maha Angulimala, Milarepa, Sakula, Kisa
Gotami, Punna.mantaniputta Saitama 3rd, Machig Lapdrön,
Manjushrimitra, Mahakasappa, Kankha-Revata, Marpa, Naropa,
Uruvela-kasappa, Siha, Vangisha, Sukka, Jivaka, Ajita, Tissa,
Dharmavajiri, Vajiratissa, Bhaddakapilani, Sanjaya (Bracket, 1996,
p. 80).
Next
Chapter:
14. CHINA’S
METAPHYSICAL RIVALERY WITH TIBET
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