The
Shadow of the Dalai Lama – Part II – 2. The Dalai Lama
(Avalokiteshvara) and the Demoness (Srinmo)
©
Victor & Victoria Trimondi
2.
THE DALAI LAMA (AVALOKITESHVARA)
AND
THE DEMONESS (SRINMO)
History
as understood in the Kalachakra Tantra is
apocalyptic salvational history, it is — as we have said — an
alchemic experiment aimed at producing an ADI BUDDHA. The
protagonists in this drama are no mere mortals but gods. History and
myth thus form a union. If we take the philosophy of Vajrayana literally then all
the events of the tantric performance ought to be able to be found
again in the history of Tibet. The latter should therefore be
interpreted as the expression of a sexual dynamic. Before we
ourselves begin to search for symbolic connections and mythic fields
behind the practical political facts of Tibetan history, we should
ask ourselves whether the Tibetans have not of their own accord
conducted such a sex specific and sexual magic interpretation of
their historical experiences.
We
know that the rules of the game demand two principal actors in every
tantric performance, a man and a woman, or, respectively, a god and
a goddess. In any case the piece is divided into three
acts:
1.
The sexual magic union of god and goddess
2.
The subsequent “tantric female sacrifice”
3.
The production of the cosmic androgyne (ADI
BUDDHA)
Let
us turn our attention, then, to the individual scenes through which
this cosmic theater unfolds on the “Roof of the World”. Here, the
country’s myths of origin are of decisive significance, then they
provide the archetypal framework from which, in an ancient
conception of history, all later events may be
derived.
The
bondage of the earth goddess Srinmo and the history of
the origin of Tibet
The
Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara is
considered the progenitor of the Tibetans, he thus determines events
from the very beginning. In the period before there were humans on
earth, the Buddha being was embodied in a monkey and passed the time
in deep meditation on the “Roof of the World”. There, as if from
nowhere, a rock demoness by the name of Srinmo appeared. The hideous
figure was a descendent of the Srin clan, a bloodthirsty
community of nature goddesses. “Spurred on by horniness” — as one
text puts it — she too assumed the form of a (female) monkey and
tried over seven days to seduce Avalokiteshvara. But the
divine Bodhisattva monkey withstood all temptations and remained
untouched and chaste. As he continued to refuse on the eighth day,
Srinmo threatened him
with the following words: “King of the monkeys, listen to me and
what I am thinking. Through the power of love, I very much love you.
Through this power of love I woo you, and confess: If you will not
be my spouse, I shall become the rock demon’s companion. If
countless young rock demons then arise, every morning they will take
thousands upon thousands of lives. The region of the Land of Snows
itself will take on the nature of the rock demons. All other forms
of life will then be consumed by the rock demons. If I myself then
die as a consequence of my deed, these living beings will be plunged
into hell. Think of me then, and have pity” (Hermanns, 1956, p. 32).
With this she hit the bullseye. “Sexual intercourse out of
compassion and for the benefit of all suffering beings” was — as we
already know — a widespread “ethical” practice in Mahayana Buddhism. Despite
this precept, the monkey first turned to his emanation father, Amitabha, and asked him for
advice. The “god of light from the West” answered him with wise
foresight: “Take the rock demoness as your consort. Your children
and grandchildren will multiply. When they have finally become
humans, they will be a support to the teaching” (Hermanns, 1956, p.
32).
Nevertheless,
this Buddhist evolutionary account, reminiscent of Charles Darwin,
did not just arise from the compassionate gesture of a divine
monkey; rather, it also contains a widely spread, elitist value
judgement by the clergy, which lets the Tibetans and their country
be depicted as uncivilized, underdeveloped and animal-like, at least
as far as the negative influence of their primordial mother is
concerned. “From their father they are hardworking, kind, and
attracted to religious activity; from their mother they are
quick-tempered, passionate, prone to jealousy and fond of play and
meat”, an old text says of the inhabitants of the Land of Snows
(Samuel, 1993, p. 222).
Two
forces thus stand opposed to one another, right from the Tibetan
genesis: the disciplined, restrained, culturally creative, spiritual
world of the monks in the form of Avalokiteshvara and the
wild, destructive energy of the feminine in the figure of Srinmo.
In
a further myth, non-Buddhist Tibet itself appears as the embodiment
of Srinmo (Janet Gyatso,
1989, p. 44). The local demoness is said to have resisted the
introduction of the true teaching by the Buddhist missionaries from
India with all means at her disposal, with weaponry and with magic,
until she was ultimately defeated by the great king of law, Songtsen
Gampo (617-650), an incarnation of Avalokiteshvara (and thus of
the current Dalai Lama). “The lake in the Milk plane,” writes the
Tibet researcher Rolf A. Stein, “where the first Buddhist king built
his temple (the Jokhang), represented the heart of the demoness, who
lay upon her back. The demoness is Tibet itself, which must first be
tamed before she can be inhabited and civilized. Her body still
covers the full extent of Tibet in the period of its greatest
military expansion (eighth to ninth century C.E.). Her spread-eagled
limbs reached to the limits of Tibetan settlement ... In order to
keep the limbs of the defeated demoness under control, twelve nails
of immobility were hammered into her” (Stein, 1993, p.34). A
Buddhist temple was raised at the location of each of these twelve
nailings.
Mysterious
stories circulate among the Tibetans which tell of a lake of blood
under the Jokhang, which is supposed to consist of Srinmo’s heart blood. Anyone
who lays his ear to the ground in the cathedral, the sacred center
of the Land of Snows, can still — many claim — hear her faint
heartbeat. A comparison of this unfortunate female fate with the
subjugation of the Greek dragon, Python, at Delphi
immediately suggests itself. Apollo, the god of light (Avalokiteshvara), let the
earth-monster, Python (Srinmo), live once he had
defeated it so that it would prophesy for him, and built over the
mistreated body at Delphi the most famous oracle temple in
Greece.
The
earth demoness is nailed down with phurbas. These are ritual
daggers with a three-sided blade and a vajra handle. We know these
already from the Kalachakra
ritual, where they are likewise employed to fixate the earth
spirits and the earth mother. The authors who have examined the
symbolic significance of the magic weapon are unanimous in their
assessment of the aggressive phallic symbolism of the phurba.
In
their view, Srinmo
represents an archetypal variant of the Mother Earth figure known
from all cultures, whom the Greeks called Gaia (Gaea). As nature and as
woman she stands in stark contrast to the purely spiritual world of
Tantric Buddhism. The forces of wilderness, which rebel against
androcentric civilization, are bundled within her. She forms the
feminine shadow world in opposition to the masculine paradise of
light of the shining Amitabha and his radiant
emanation son, Avalokiteshvara. Srinmo symbolizes the
(historical) prima
materia, the matrix, the primordial earthly substance which is
needed in order to construct a tantric monastic empire, then she
provides the gynergy, the
feminine élan vitale,
with which the Land of Snows pulsates. As the vanquisher of the
earth goddess, Avalokiteshvara triumphs in
the form of King Songtsen Gampo, that is, the same Bodhisattva who,
as a monkey, earlier engendered with Srinmo the Tibetans in myth,
and who shall later exercise absolute dominion from the “Roof of the
World” as Dalai Lama.
Tibet’s
sacred center, the Jokhang (the cathedral of Lhasa), the royal
chronicles inform us, thus stands over the pierced heart of a woman,
the earth mother Srinmo.
This act of nailing down is repeated at the construction of every
Lamaist shrine, whether temple or monastery and regardless of where
the establishment takes place — in Tibet, India, or the West. Then
before the first foundation stone for the new building is laid, the
tantric priests occupy the chosen location and execute the ritual
piercing of the earth mother with their phurbas. Tibet’s holy
geography is thus erected upon the maltreated bodies of mythic
women, just as the tantric shrines of India (the shakta pithas) are found on
the places where the dismembered body of the goddess Sati fell to
earth.
Srinmo
with different Tibetan temples upon her
body
In
contrast to her Babylonian sister, Tiamat, who was cut to
pieces by her great-grandchild, Marduk, so that outer space
was formed by her limbs, Srinmo remains alive
following her subjugation and nailing down. According to the tantric
scheme, her gynergy flows
as a constant source of life for the Buddhocratic system. She thus
vegetates — half dead, half alive — over centuries in the service of
the patriarchal clergy. An interpretation of this process according
to the criteria of the gaia thesis often discussed
in recent years would certainly be most revealing. (We return to
this point in our analysis of the ecological program of the Tibetans
in exile.) According to this thesis, the mistreated “Mother Earth”
(Gaia is the popular name
for the Greek earth mother) has been exploited by humanity (and the
gods?) for millennia and is bleeding to death. But Srinmo is not just a
reservoir of inexhaustible energy. She is also the absolute Other,
the foreign, and the great danger which threatens the Buddhocratic
state. Srinmo is — as we
still have to prove — the mythic “inner enemy” of Tibetan Lamaism,
while the external mythic enemy is likewise represented by a woman,
the Chinese goddess Guanyin.
Srinmo
survived — even if it was under the most horrible circumstances, yet
the Tibetans also have a myth of dismemberment which repeats the
Babylonian tragedy of Tiamat. Like many peoples
they worship the tortoise as a symbol of Mother Earth. A Tibetan
myth tells of how in the mists of time the Bodhisattva Manjushri sacrificed such a
creature “for the benefit of all beings”. In order to form a solid
foundation for the world he fired an arrow off at the tortoise which
struck it in the right-hand side. The wounded animal spat fire, its
blood poured out, and it passed excrement. It thus multiplied the
elements of the new world. Albert Grünwedel presents this myth as
evidence for the “tantric female sacrifice” in the Kalachakra ritual: “The
tortoise which Manjushri
shot through with a long arrow ... [is] just another form of the
world woman whose inner organs are depicted by the dasakaro vasi figure [the
Power of Ten]" (Grünwedel, 1924, vol. II, p.
92).
The
relation of Tibetan Buddhism to the goddess of the earth or of the
country (Tibet) is also one of brutal subjugation, an imprisonment,
an enslavement, a murder or a dismemberment. Euphemistically, and in
ignorance of the tantric scheme of things it could also be
interpreted as a civilizing of the wilderness through culture. Yet
however the relation is perceived — no meeting, no exchange, no
mutual recognition of the two forces takes place. In the depths of
Tibet’s history — as we shall show — a brutal battle of the sexes is
played out.
Why
women can’t climb the pure crystal
mountain
Even
the landscape is sexualized in Tibetan folk beliefs (this too
squares with the ideas of Tantrism). In mountain lakes, the water of
which has taken on a red color (probably because of mercury), the
lamas see the menstrual blood of the goddess Vajravarahi. In rivers,
lakes, and springs dwell the Lu, who resemble our nixies.
They are hostile towards we humans, yet they were nonetheless
preferred as spouses by the kings of the highlands in ancient times
and brought their magic abilities with them in the marriage. We
learn from the Fifth Dalai Lama that they leave no corpse behind
when they die.
The
myths have also divided the massive snow capped peaks along sexual
lines. It was hence not uncommon for particular mountains to marry
and the descendants of such alliances are supposed to have grounded
powerful royal houses. One of
the mountain goddesses is world famous, because it rises
above the other peaks of the planet as the highest mountain of all.
We know her under the name of Mount Everest, the Himalayan peoples,
however, pray to her as the “Mother of the Earth”, the “White
Heavens Goddess”, the “White Glacier Lady”, the “Goddess of the
Winds”, the “Lady of Long Life”, the “Elephant
Goddess”.
In
his study with the descriptive title of Why can’t women climb pure
crystal mountain?, the Tibet researcher Toni Huber describes an interesting mythic case
where a mountain goddess was deprived of her power by a tantric
Siddha and since then the location of her former rule may no longer
be visited by women. The case concerns the Tsari, a mountain which
was the seat of a powerful female deity in pre-Buddhist times. She
was defeated by a yogi in the twelfth century. The brutal battle
between her and the vajra
master displays clear traits of a tantric performance. As the yogi
entered the region under her control, the goddess let a series of
vaginas appear by magical manipulation so as to seduce her
challenger, yet the latter succeeded in warding off the magic
through a brutal act of subjugation. As she then, lying on the
ground, showed herself willing to sleep with her conqueror, she was
at first rejected on the grounds that she was of the female sex (!).
But after a while the yogi accepted her as a wisdom consort and took
away all her magic powers once they had united sexually (Huber,
1994, p. 352).
From
this point in time on, Tsari, which was among the most holy
mountains of the highlands, became taboo for women, both for
Buddhist nuns and for laity. This ban has remained in force until
modern times. Groups of pilgrims who visited the mountain in the
eighties sent their women back in advance. Toni Huber questioned
several lamas about he significance of this misogynist custom. The
majority of answers made reference to the “purity of the location”
which in the view of the monks formed a geographic mandala: “Because
it is such a pure abode, .... women are not allowed. ... The only
reason is that women are of inferior birth and impure. There are
many powerful mandalas on the mountain that are divine and pure, and
women are polluting” (Huber, 1994, p. 356).
But
there was also another justification for the exclusion of the female
pilgrims which likewise shows how and with what presumption the
androcentric power elite of the land seize possession of the
formerly feminine geography: “The reason why women can't go up there
is that at Tsari are lots of small, self-produced manifestations of
the Buddha genitals made of stone. If you look at them they just
appear ordinary, but they are actually miraculous phalluses of the
Buddha, so if women go there these miracles would become spoiled by
their presence, and the women would get many problems also. They
would get sick and perhaps die prematurely. It is generally harmful
for their health so that is why they stopped women going to the holy
place in the past, for their own benefit. The problem is that women
are low and dirty, thus they are too impure to go there” (Huber,
1994, p. 357). It is no wonder that in feminist circles the future
climbing of Tsari by a woman and its “re-conquest” has become a
symbol for female resistance against patriarchal
Lamaism.
Matriarchy
in the Land of Snows?
Siegbert
Hummel sees remnants of a long lost maternal cult in the Tibetan
female mountain deities and their attributes. These could have
already reached India and the Tibetan plateau from Mediterranean
regions in the late stone age (from 4000 B.C.E.). It is a matter of
one of the two contrary cultural currents, which may have embedded
themselves deeply in the Tibetan popular psyche thousands of years
ago: “The first is lunar in character and could be connected with
the Tibetan megalithic. ... Its world view is triadic, exhibits
chthonic, demonic and phallicist tendencies, snake and tree cults,
as well as the worship of maternal deities ... The other component
is markedly solar, dualist and heaven-related, primarily nomadic.
Shamanist elements, probably from an earlier solar, hunting basis,
are numerous” (Hummel, 1954, p. 128).
In
that he nominates the sexual discord which has kept the
civilizations of the Land of Snows in suspense since the earliest
times, Hummel speaks here with the vocabulary of Tantrism, probably
without knowing it. In his view then, the two heavenly orbs of moon
and sun already stood opposed as two polar, culture-shaping forces
in pre-Buddhist Tibet. Following the solar Bon cult Tantric Buddhism
has taken over the sunly role since the eighth century. In contrast,
the moon cults have been — the myth of the nailing down of Srinmo teaches us —
overthrown by the sun warriors.
According
to Hummel the lunar and solar cultural currents are graphically
demonstrated in the very popular garuda motif in Tibetan art.
The garuda is a mythical
sun-bird. Not infrequently it holds in its beak a snake, which must
be assigned to the lunar, matriarchal world. There was thus a
fundamental clash between the two cultures: “Since the garuda is thereby understood
as an enemy of the snakes, it seems natural to suspect that there
where the snake-killing garuda arose, the lunar and
solar cultures encountered and opposed one another as enemies”
Hummel writes (Hummel, 1954, p. 101).
There
are in fact numerous historically demonstrable matriarchal elements
in the old Tibetan culture. In this connection there are the still
unexplained and mysterious stone circles which have been brought
into connection with matriarchal cults and were already discovered
by Sven Hedin on his research trips. In contrast, numerous
prehistoric shrines found in caves offer us less ambiguous
information. It has been clearly proven that female deities were
worshipped at these chthonic sites. In this century such caves were
still considered as birth channels and a visit to them was seen as
an initiation and hence as a rebirth (Stein, 1988, pp.
2-4).
A
further secret concerns the mythic female kingdoms which are
supposed to have existed in Tibet — one in the West, another in the
East, and the third in the North of the Land of Snows. The in part
detailed reports about these stem from Chinese sources and may be
traced back to the seventh century C.E. We learn that these realms,
depicted as being very powerful, were ruled by queens who had
command over a tribal council of women (Chayet, 1993, p. 51). When
they died several members of court voluntarily joined the female
rulers in death. The female nobles had male servants, and women were
the head of the family. A child inherited its mother’s
name.
On
one of his first expeditions to Tibet, Ernst Schäfer encountered a
matriarchal tribe who distinguished themselves through their
cruelty. In his book, Unter
Räubern in Tibet [Among Robbers in Tibet], he reports: “As we
learn in Dju-Gompa, primitive matriarchy is still practiced by the
wild Ngoloks. A great queen, Adjung de Jogo by name, reigns
autocratically over the six main tribes that are governed by
princes. As the reincarnation of a heavenly being she enjoys divine
honors and at the same time is the spouse of all her tribal princes
on earth. She rules with a strong hand, is pretty and clever,
possesses a bodyguard of seven thousand warriors, and handles a gun
like a man. Once a year Adjung de Jogo proceeds up the God-mountain
with her seven thousand men in a grand procession in order to
meditate in the glacial isolation before she returns to the black
tents of her mobile residence.
It
is not just about the intrepid courage of the Ngoloks but also their
cruelty that people tell the most terrible stories. Of all the
Tibetan tribes they are supposed to have figured out the most
ingenious ways of despatching their victims off to join their
ancestors. Chopping off hands and splitting skulls are minor things;
they can be left to the others! But sewing [people] up in fresh yak
skins and letting them roast in the sun — disemboweling while alive,
or launching the entrails skywards on bent rods, these are the
methods that are loved in Ngolokland.
At
nearly all times of the year, but especially in early fall when the
marshes are dried out and the animals are best nourished, the
Ngoloks undertake their large-scale plundering raids to as far as
Barum-Tsaidam in the north, Sungpan in the south, and Dju-Gompa in
the West. Even for Chinese merchants they are the epitome of all the
terrible things that are said of the “Western barbarian country” in
the Middle Kingdom. (Schäfer, 1952, pp.
164-165)
In
the nineteen fifties, to the south of Bhutan a matriarchally
organized tribe by the name of “Garo” still existed, the members of
which were convinced that they had emigrated from a province in
Tibet in prehistoric times (Bertrand, 1957, p. 41). We may also
recall that in the Shambhala
travel books of the Third Panchen Lama there is talk of regions
in which only women live.
It
would certainly be somewhat hasty to conclude the existence of a
matriarchy across the whole Himalayas solely on the basis of the
material at hand. But at any rate, the male imagination has for
centuries painted the inaccessible highlands as a region under the
control of female tribes and their queens.
The
western imagination
As
early as the thirteenth century the myth of the Tibetan female
kingdoms had reached Europe. Speculation about this have had a hold
upon western travelers up until the present day. Likewise noteworthy
is the frequent allegorical connection of Tibet to something
enigmatically feminine, that is, a western imagining which is
congruent with the traditional Tibetan conception. Since the
nineteenth century European researchers, mountain climbers, and
followers of the esoteric have enthused about the Land of Snows as
if it were a woman who ought to be conquered, whose veil should be
lifted, and into whose secrets one wished to “penetrate”. The Tibet
researcher, Peter Bishop, has devoted a detailed study to this
occidental fantasy (Bishop, 1993, p. 36).
Probably
the most absurd depiction of a western encounter with the “Great
Mother Tibet” can be found in the travel report of the Englishman,
Harrison Forman, from the nineteen thirties. To offer the reader
some amusement, but above all to show how strongly the culture of
the Land of Snows can over-stimulate the masculine fantasy of a
westerner, we would like to present one of Forman’s lively recounted
experiences in detail.
The
Briton had heard of the Abbess Alakh Gong Rri Tsang (Krisang), a
living “female Buddha” who aroused his curiosity immensely. He
visited her convent and was given a most friendly reception. During
a tour he asked about a mysterious grotto, the entrance to which
could be seen on a mountainside. The Abbess gave him a sharp look
and announced she was prepared to show him the “shrine”. In that
moment Forman felt a painful bout of nausea, but was nonetheless
prepared to follow. Thus, after a difficult climb, they both — he
and the Abbess — reached the grotto. Alakh Gong Krisang lit two
torches and they entered the cave. They were met by a thick
darkness, a musty smell, and dancing shadows. Squeaking bats
fluttered through the stale air. The ghastly ambience made the
Briton nervous and he asked himself, “A
thought struck me. Good Lord! Just what was this woman Living
Buddha? Reason struggled with emotion. This was Tibet, where
millions believed in ever present evil spirits and their
capriciousness” (Forman, 1936, p. 179).
Without
looking back, and with a firm footstep, the Abbess proceeded further
into the grotto. „Do not be afraid, my friend!”, she calmed Forman.
They progressed deeper and deeper through passages filled with
stalactites and stalagmites. Then they came to a space in the center
of which four pyramids of human bones rose up, with a golden statue
in the middle of them. The Abbess smiled as if in a “hysterical
ecstasy”, writes Forman. Immobile, she stared at the golden
sculpture.
Alakh
Gong Rri Tsang, the woman Grand Buddha of Drukh Kurr
Gomba
And
now we should let the author speak for himself: „And as I watched
her, my jaw dropped. I stared as she began to disrobe. A shrug of
the shoulders her and her long toga slipped to the floor. Then she
loosened the silken girdle at her waist and let drop the voluminous
skirt-like garment. Her other garments followed, one by one, until
they formed a red pile at her feet. And I saw, what I am sure no
white man ever saw before me, or ever will see again, the nude body
of Alakh Gong Rri Tsang, the woman Grand Buddha of Drukh Kurr Gomba.
Her body was amazingly voluptuous, and, I suppose, beautiful. Her
breasts stood like those of a schoolgirl, firm and round – like
hemispheres of pure alabaster. Her figure was magnificent and of
sinuously generous proportions. I was minded of the substantial
nudes of Michelangelo and his school. And amid the ever-encircling
bats she stood there – still gazing ecstatically upward” (Forman,
1936, p. 183). If we examine the photo which Forman took of the
Abbess in the convent and in which she is not to be distinguished
from a portly male Abbot, one is indeed most amazed at just what is
supposed to be hidden beneath the clothes of the Living
Buddha.
But
there is better to come: „The bats had suddenly settled on her -
like vultures to a feast. In a moment she was covered from head to
foot. Like lustful vampires they sank their horrible libidinous
beaks into her flesh and the blood began to flow from a hundred
wounds” (Forman, 1936, pp. 183, 184). Forman turned to stone, but
then — even in the most hopeless of situations a gentleman — he came
to his senses, and began to shoot madly at the bloodsuckers with his
revolver. He emptied more than seven magazines before the Abbess, to
his great astonishment asked him with a smile to calm down. With a
majestic gesture she reanimated the bats which he had killed. There
was not the slightest trace of a wound to be seen on her body any
more. „And in that moment”, Forman reports further, „had she been
the loveliest woman in all the world [...] Nothing remained of the
grisly scene of a few moments before to prove t me that it had ever
happened at all, save the nude woman and the solid golden idol with
its four guardian pyramids of human bones. Somewhere off in the
blackness I could still hear faintly the obscene screaming of the
hordes of bats” (Forman, 1936, p. 185). As they left the grotto,
Forman commented upon the incident — typically British — with the
lapidary words: „It must bee the altitude!” (Forman, 1936, p.
186).
As
absurd as this story may seem, it nonetheless quite exactly hits the
visual world which dominates the tantric milieu, and it in no way
exaggerates the often still more fantastic reports which we know
from the lives of famous yogis.
Women
in former Tibetan society
How
then is the fate of Srinmo expressed in Tibetan society? We would
like to present the social role of women in old Tibet in a very
condensed manner, without considering events since the Chinese
occupation or the situation among the Tibetans in exile here. Their
role was very specific
and can best be outlined by saying that, precisely because of
her inferiority the Tibetan woman enjoyed a certain amount of
freedom. Fundamentally women were considered inferior creatures.
Appropriately, the Tibetan word for woman can be literally
translated as “lowly born”. Man, in contrast, means “being of higher
birth” (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, p. 76). A prayer found widely among
the women of Tibet pleads, “may I reject a feminine body and be
reborn [in] a male one” (Grunfeld, 1996, p. 19). The birth of a girl
brought bad luck, that of a son promised happiness and
prosperity.
The
institution of marriage itself is definitely not one of the Buddhist
virtues – the historical Buddha himself traded married life for the
rough life of a pilgrim. To be blessed with children was, because of
the curse which rebirth brought with it, something of a burden.
Shakyamuni thus fled his father’s palace directly following the
birth of his son, Rahula. With unmistakable and decisive words,
Padmasambhava also expressed this anti-family sentiment:
„When
practicing the Dharma of liberation, to be married and lead a family
life is like being restraint in tight chains with no freedom. You
may wish to flee, but you have been caught in the dungeon of samsara
with no escape. You may later regret it, but you have sunk into the
mire of emotions, with no getting out. If you have children, they
may be lovely but they are the stake that ties you to samsara”
(Binder-Schmidt, 1994, p. 131).
According
to the dominant teaching, women could not achieve enlightenment, and
were thus considered underdeveloped. A reincarnation as a female
being was regarded as a punishment. The consequence of all these
weaknesses, inabilities and inferiorities was that the patriarchal
monastic society paid little attention to the lives of women. They
were left, so to speak, to do what they wanted. Family life was also
not subject to strict rules. Marriages were solemnized without many
formalities and could be dissolved by mutual consent without
consulting an official institution. This disinterest of the clergy
led, as we said, to a certain independence among the women of Tibet,
often exaggerated by sensation-hungry western travelers.
Extramarital relationships were common, especially with servants. A
wife nevertheless had to remain faithful, otherwise the husband had
the right to cut off her nose. Of course such privileges did not
exist in the reverse situation.
The
much talked about polyandry, discussed with fascination by western
ethnologists, was also less of an emancipatory phenomenon than an
economical necessity. A wife served two men because this spared the
money for a further woman. Naturally, twice the work was expected of
her. Male members of the upper strata tended in contrast toward
polygyny and maintained several wives. This became quite a status
symbol and having more than one wife was consequently forbidden for
the lower classes. In the absence of cash, a husband could pay his
debts by letting his creditors take his wife. We know of no cases of
the reverse.
A
liberal attitude towards women on behalf of the clergy arises out of
Tantrism. Since the lamas were generally viewed to be higher
entities, women and girls never resisted the wishes of the embodied
deities. The
Austrian, Heinrich Harrer, was amazed at the sexual freedom found in
the monasteries. Likewise, the Japanese monk, Kawaguchi Eikai,
wondered on his journey through Tibet about „the great beauty
possessed by the young consorts of aged abbots” (quoted by Stevens,
1990, p. 80).
A proportion of the female tantric partners may have earned a living
as prostitutes after they had finished serving as mudras. There were many of
these in the towns, and hence a saying arose according to which as
many whores filled the streets of Lhasa as
dogs.
But
there was a married priesthood in Tibet. For members of a monastery
the relaxation of the oath of celibacy was nonetheless considered an
exception. These married lamas and their women primarily performed
“pastoral” work in the villages. As far as we can determine, in such
cases the wife was only very rarely the tantric wisdom consort of
her husband. In the Sakyapa sect the great abbots were married and
had children. A proper dynasty grew up out of their families. We
know of precisely these powerful hierarchs that they made use not of
their wives but rather of virgin girls (kumaris) for their
rites.
The
“freedom” of the Tibetan women was null and void as soon as sacred
boundaries were crossed — for example the gates of the monastery,
which remained closed to them. Only during the great annual
festivals were they sometimes invited, but they were never permitted
to participate actively in the performances. In the official mystery
plays the roles of goddesses or dakinis were exclusively performed
by men. Even the poultry which clucked around in the Dalai Lama’s
gardens consisted solely of roosters, since hens would have
corrupted the holy grounds with their feminine radiation. A woman
was never allowed to touch the possessions of a
lama.
The
Tibetan nuns do admittedly take part in certain rites, but have in
all much more circumscribed lives than those of lay women. Did not
the historical Buddha himself say that they stood in the way of the
development of the teaching, and long hesitate before ordaining
women? He was convinced that the “daughters of Mara” would
accelerate the downfall of Buddhism, even if they let their heads be
shaved. Still today the rules prescribe that a nun owes the lowliest
monk the greatest respect, whilst the reverse does not apply in any
sense . Rather than being praised for her pious decision to lead a
life in a convent, she is abused for being incapable of building up
an orderly family life. Despite all these degradations, to which
there have been no essential changes up to the present, the nuns
have , without concern for life and limb, stood at the head of the
emergent protest movement in Tibet since 1987.
The
alchemic division of the feminine: The Tibetan goddesses Palden
Lhamo and Tara
In
our explanation of Buddhist Tantrism we repeatedly mentioned the
division of the feminine into a gloomy, repellant, and aggressive
aspect and a bright, attractive, and mild one. The terrifying and
cruel dakini is counterpointed by the sweet and blessing-giving “sky
walker”. Femininity vacillates between these two extremes (the
Madonna and the whore) and can be kept under control because of this
inner turmoil. In the same context, we drew attention to parallels
to Indian and European alchemy, where the dark part is described as
the prima materia and the
bright as the feminine elixir (gynergy) yearned for by the
adept. Does such a splitting of the feminine also find expression in
the mythical history of the Land of Snows?
Palden
Lhamo — The Dalai Lama’s protective
goddess
A
monumental dark and wrathful mother par excellence is Palden Lhamo, who, like her
“sister” Srinmo, was a
wild, free matriarch in pre-Buddhist times, but then, brought under
control by a vajra
master, began to serve the “true doctrine” — but in contrast to Srinmo she does so actively.
She is the protective deity of the Dalai Lama, the whole country,
and its capital, Lhasa. This grants her an exceptionally high
position in the Tibetan pantheon. The Fifth Dalai Lama was one of
her greatest worshippers, the goddess is supposed to have appeared
to him several times in person; she was his political advisor and
confidante (Karmay, 1988, p. 35). One of her many names, which evoke
both her martial and her tantric character, is „Great
Warrior Deity, the Powerful Mother of the World of the Joys of the
Senses” (Richardson, 1993, p. 87).
After the “Great Fifth” had repeatedly recited her mantra for a
while, he dreamt “that the ghost spirits in China [were] being
subdued” (Karmay, 1988, p. 35). Since then she has been considered
to be one of the chief enemies of Beijing.
In
examining a portrait of her, one becomes convinced that Palden Lhamo would be among
the most repulsive figures in a worldwide gallery of demons. With
gnashing teeth, bulging eyes and a filthy blue body, she rides upon
a wild mule. Beneath its hooves spreads a sea of blood which has
flowed from the veins of her slaughtered enemies. Severed arms,
heads, legs, eyes and entrails float around in it. The mule’s saddle
is made from the leather of a skinned human. That would be repulsive
enough! But the horror overcomes one when one discovers that it is
the skin of her own (!) son, who was killed by the goddess when he
refused to follow her example and adopt the Buddhist faith. In her
right hand Palden Lhamo
swings a club in the form of a child’s skeleton. Some
interpreters of this scene claim that this is also the remains of
her son. With her left hand the fiendess holds a skull bowl filled
with human blood to her lips. Poisonous snakes are entwined all
around her. [1]
Like
the Indian goddess, Kali,
she appears with a
loud retinue. One can encounter her of a night on charnel fields
together with her noisy flock. Just what unbridled aggression this
army of female ghosts kindled in the imaginations of the monks is
best shown by a poem which the lamas of the Drepung monastery sing
in honor of their protective lady, Dorje Dragmogyel, who is one
of Palden Lhamo’s
horde:
You
glorious Dorje Dragmogyel ...
When
you are angry at your enemies,
Then
you ride upon a fiery ball of
lightning.
A
cloud of flames — like that at the end of all time
-
Pours
from your mouth,
Smoke
streams from your nose,
Pillars
of fire follow you.
Hurriedly
you collect clouds from the firmament,
The
rumble of thunder pierces
through
the ten regions of the world.
A
dreadful rain of meteors
and
huge hailstones hurtles down,
And
the Earth is flooded in fire and
water.
Devilish
birds and owls whir around,
Black
birds with yellow beaks float past,
one
after another.
The
circle of Mnemo goddesses spins,
The
war hordes of the demons throng
And
the steeds of the tsen spirits race galloping
away.
When
you are happy,
then
the ocean beats against the sky.
If
rage fills you, then the sun and moon
fall,
If
you laugh, the world mountain collapses into dust
....
You
and your companions
Defeat
all who would harm the Buddhist
teaching,
And
who try to disrupt the life of the monastic
community.
Wound
all those of evil intent,
And
especially protect our monastery,
this
holy place ....
You
should not wait years and months,
drink
now the warm heart’s blood of the
enemies,
and
exterminate them in the blink of an
eye.
(Nebesky-Wojkowitz,
1955, 34)
In
our presentation of the tantric ritual we showed how the terror
goddesses or dakinis, whatever form they may assume, must be brought
under control by the yogi. Once subjugated, they serve the
patriarchal monastic state as the destroyers of enemies. Hence, to
repeat, the vajra master
is — when he encounters the dark mother — not interested in
transforming her aggression, but rather much more in setting her to
work as a deadly weapon against attackers and non-Buddhists. In the
final instance, however — the tantras teach us- the feminine has no
independent existence, even when appears in its wrathful form. In
this respect Palden Lhamo
is nothing more than one of the many masks of Avalokiteshvara, or — hence
-of the Dalai Lama himself.
We
know of an astonishing parallel to this from the kingdom of the
pharaohs. The ancient Egyptians personified the wrath of the male
king as a female figure. This was known as Sachmet, the flaming goddess
of justice with the face of a lioness (Assmann, 1991, p. 89). Since
the rulers were also obliged to reign with leniency as well as
justly wrath, Sachmet had
a softer sister, the cat goddess Bastet. This goddess was
also a characteristic of the king pictured in female form.
Correspondingly, in Tibetan Buddhism the mild sister of the Palden Lhamo is the divine
Tara.
Even
if the dreadful demoness is in the final instance an imagining of
the Dalai, this does not mean that this projection cannot become
independent and one day tear herself free of him, assume her own
independent form and then hit back at her hated “projection father”
as an enemy. Such radical “emancipations” of Tibetan protective
deities are not at all rare and the collected histories of Tibet are
full of reports, where submissive servants of the lamas free
themselves and attempt to revolt against their lords. Right now, the
Tibetan exile community is being deeply shaken by such a rebellious
protective spirit by the name of Dorje Shugden, who has at
any rate managed to disfigure the until now completely pure image of
the Kundun in the West
with some most persistent stains. We shall return to report on this
often. From Shugden
circles also comes the suspicion that Palden Lhamo has failed
completely as the spiritual protector of Tibet, Lhasa, and the Dalai
Lama, and has delivered the country into the hands of the Chinese
occupiers. Whatever opinion one may have of such speculations, the
extreme aggression of the demoness and the practical political facts
do not exclude such a view of the matter.
In
the life story of Palden
Lhamo her relationship to her son is particularly cruel and
numinous. Why a woman who is revered as the supreme protective
spirit of Tibet and the Dalai Lama must be the slaughterer of her
own child, may seem monstrous even to one who has become accustomed
to the atrocities of the tantras. If we interpret the case
psychologically we must ask ourselves the following questions: As a
mother, is Palden Lhamo
not driven by constant horror? Is her bottomless hate not the
expression of her abominable deed? Must she not in her heart be the
arch-enemy of Buddhism, the cause of her
infanticide?
Is
this repellant cult even more murderous than it already appears? Is
the goddess perhaps offered sacrifices which simultaneously appease
and captivate her? Since the demoness had to slaughter the utmost
which a mother can give, namely her child, for Tibetan Buddhism, the
sacrifice which is to fill her with satisfaction must also be the
highest which Lamaism has to offer.
In
fact, the early deaths of the Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Twelfth
Dalai Lama give rise to the question of whether a deliberately
initiated sacrificial offering to Palden Lhamo could be
involved here? All four god-kings died at an age before they were
able to take over the business of government. In each case, the
regents who were exercising real power until the new Dalai Lamas
came of age were suspected with good reason of being the murderer.
In the Tibet of old poisonings were a regular occurrence. There is
even said to have been a morbid belief that whoever poisoned a
highly respected man would obtain all the happiness and privileges
of his victim.
These
are the historical facts. But there is a mysterious event to be
found in the brief biographies of the four unhappy “god-kings” which
could lend their fate a deeper, symbolic meaning. We mean the visit
to a temple about a hundred miles southeast of Lhasa which was
dedicated to one of the emanations of Palden Lhamo. We must
imagine such shrines (gokhangs), dedicated to the
wrathful deities, to be a real cabinet of horrors. Stuffed full of
real and magic weapons, padded out by all manner of dried human body
parts, they aroused absolute repugnance among visitors from the
West.
In
order to test the psychological hardiness of the young Kunduns, at least once in
their lives the children were locked in the morbid temple mentioned
and probably exposed to the most terrible performances of the
goddess. “Young as they were, they had insufficient knowledge to
persuade her to turn away the wrath, which came so easily to her,
and, accordingly, they died soon after the meeting”, Charles Bell
wrote of this cruel rite of initiation (Bell, 1994, p. 159).
Whatever may have taken place within this gokhang, the children
emerged from this hell completely disturbed and were all four close
to madness.
The
lot of the young Twelfth was particularly tragic. His chamberlain,
one of his few intimates, was caught thieving from the Potala on a
large scale. He fled upon discovery of the deed, was caught up with,
and killed. The body was strapped astride a horse as if it were
alive. The dead man was thus led before the young Kundun. Before the eyes of
the fifteen year old, the head, hands and feet of the wrongdoer were
struck off and the trunk was tossed into a field. The god-king was
so horrified by the spectacle of the body of his “best friend” that
he no longer wanted to see anyone at all any more and sought refuge
in speechlessness. Nevertheless, the visit to the horrifying temple
of Palden Lhamo was still
expected of him afterwards. In contrast the “Great Thirteenth” did
not visit the shrine of the demoness before he was 25 years old and
came away unscathed. Even the Chinese were amazed at this. We do not
know if the Fourteenth Dalai Lama has ever set foot in the
shrine.
If
one pursues a Tibetan/tantric logic, it naturally makes sense to
interpret the premature deaths of the four Dalai Lamas as sacrifices
to Palden Lhamo, since
according to tradition it is necessary to constantly palliate the
terror gods with blood and flesh. The demoness’s extreme cruelty is
beyond doubt, and that she desires the sacrifice of boys is
revealing of her own tragic history. Incidentally, the slaughter of
her son may be an indicator of an originally matriarchal sacrificial
cult which the Buddhists integrated into their own system. For
example, the researcher A. H. Francke has discovered rock
inscriptions in Tibet which refer to human sacrifices to the great
goddess (Francke, 1914, p. 21). But it could also– in light of the
tantric methods — be that Palden Lhamo, converted to
Buddhism not from conviction but because she was magically forced to
the ground, was compelled by her new lords to murder her son and
that she revenged herself through the killings of the young Dalai
Lamas.
Even
an apparently paradoxical interpretation is possible: as a female,
the demoness stands in radical confrontation to the doctrine of Vajrayana, and she may have
sold her loyalty and subjugation for the highest possible price,
namely that of the sacrifice of the god-kings. Such sadomasochist
satisfactions can only be understood from within the tantric scheme,
but there they are — as we know — not at all seldom. Hence, if one
set a limit on the sacrifice of the boys in terms of time and
headcount, then they may have been of benefit to later incarnations
of the god-king, specifically, that is, to the Thirteenth and
Fourteenth Dalai Lamas. The exceptionally long reign of the last two
Kunduns would, according
to tantric logic, support such an
interpretation.
Tara
—Tibet’s Madonna
In
the mytho-historical pantheon of Tibetan Buddhism, the gentle
goddess Tara represents
the exact counterimage of the terrible Palden Lhamo. Tara is — in the words of
European alchemy — the “white virgin”, the ethereal-feminine supreme
source of inspiration for the adept. In precisely this sense she
represents the positive feminine counterpart to the destructive Palden Lhamo, or hence to
the earth mother, Srinmo.
The divided image of femininity found in every phase of Indian
religious history thus lives on in Tibetan culture. “Witch” and
“Madonna” are the two feminine archetypes which have for centuries
dominated and continue to dominate the patriarchal imagination of
Tibet just like that of the west. If all the negative attributes of
the feminine are collected in the witch, then all the positive ones
are concentrated within the Madonna.
The
Tara cult is probably
fairly recent. Although legends recount that the worship of the
goddess was brought to the Land of Snows in the seventh century by
one of the women of the Tibetan king, Songtsen Gampo, it is
historically more likely that the Indian scholar Atisha first
introduced the cult in the eleventh century.
Unlike
the many repellant demonic gods who attack the tormented Tibetans,
Tara has become a place
of refuge. Under her, the believers can cultivate their noble
sentiments. She grants devotion, love, faith, and hope to those who
call upon her. She exhibits all the characteristics of a merciful
mother. She appears to people in dreams as a guardian angel. She
takes care of all private interests and needs. She can be trusted
with one’s cares. She helps against poisonings, heals illnesses and
cures obsessions. But she is also the right one to turn to for
success in business and politics. Everyone prays to her as a
“redemptress”. In translation her name means “star” or “star of
hope”. It can be said that outside of the monasteries she is the
most worshipped divinity of the Land of Snows. There is barely a
household in Tibet in which a small statue of Tara cannot be
found.
A
number of colors are assigned to her various appearances. There is a
white, green, yellow, blue, even a black Tara. She often holds a
lotus with 16 petals whish is supposed to indicate that she is
sixteen years old. Her body is adorned with the most beautiful
jewels. In a royal seated posture she looks down mildly upon those
who ask pity of her. Naturally, one gains the impression that she is
not suitable for tantric sexual practices. The whole positive aspect
of the motherly appears to have been concentrated within her. She is
experienced by Europeans as a Madonna untouched by sexuality. This
is, however, not the case, then in contrast to her occidental sister
with whom she otherwise has so much in common, the white Tara is also a wisdom
consort. [2]
Sometimes,
as is also known of the European worship of Mary, her cult tips over
into an undesirable (for the clergy, that is) expansion of the
goddess’s power which could pose a danger to the patriarchal system.
Tara is known, for
example, as the “Mother of all Buddhas”. A legend in which she
refuses to appear as a man is also in circulation and is often cited
these days: when she was asked by some monks whether she did not
prefer a male body, she is said to have answered: “Since there is no
such thing as a 'man' or a 'woman', this bondage to male and female
is hollow. ... Those who wish to attain supreme enlightenment in a
man's body are many, but those who wish to serve the aims of beings
in a woman's body are few; therefore may I, until the world is
emptied out, serve the aim of beings with nothing but the body of a
woman” (Beyer, 1978, p. 65). Such statements are downright
revolutionary and are in direct contradiction to the dominant
doctrine that women cannot attain any enlightenment at all, but must
first be reborn in a male body.
Tantric
Buddhism’s first protective measure against the potential feminine
superiority of Tara is
the story of her origin. Firstly, she does not have the status of a
Buddhas, but is only a female Bodhisattva. Her head is adorned by a
small statue of Amitabha,
an indicator that she is subject to the Highest Lord of the Light
(who allows no women into his paradise) and is considered to be one
of his emanations.
Furthermore,
Tara is nothing more or
less than the personified tears of Avalokiteshvara. One day as
he looked down filled with compassion upon all suffering beings he
had to weep. The tear from his left eye became the green Tara, that which flowed from
his right became her white form. Even if, as according to some
tantric schools, Chenrezi
selects both Taras as
wisdom consorts, they nevertheless remain his creation. He gave
birth to them as androgyne, as
“father-mother”.
Green
Tara
An
even cleverer taming of the goddess consists in the fact that she
incarnates in the bodies of men. Countless monks have chosen Tara as their yiddam and
then visualize themselves as the goddess in their meditative
practices. “Always an in all practices, he must visualize himself as
the Holy Lady, bearing in mind that the appearance is the deity,
that his speech is her mantra, and that his memory and mental
constructs are her knowledge” (Beyer, 1978, p. 465). Her role as the
“mother of all Buddhas” is also taken on by the male meditators, who
thus say the following words: “[I am] the mother who gives birth to
the Conquerors and their sons; I possess all her body, speech, mind,
qualities, and active functions” (Beyer, 1978, p. 449). In one of
his works, Albert Grünwedel reproduces the portrait of a
high-ranking Mongolian lama who is revered as an incarnation of Tara. Even modern western
followers of Buddhism would like to see the Sixteenth Karmapa as the
green Tara.
Like
Palden Lhamo, Tara also plays a role in
Tibetan realpolitik, then
the latter is — in their own view — played out by gods, not human
agents. Hence, the official opinion from out of the Potala was that
the Russian Czars were supposed to be an embodiment of Tara. Such image
transferences are naturally very well suited to exciting the global
power fantasies of the
lamas. Then, since the goddess arose from a tear of Avalokiteshvara, the Czar as
Tara must also be a
product of the Dalai Lama, the highest living incarnation of Avalokiteshvara. Further to
this there is the idea derived from the tantras that the Czar (and
thus Russia) as Tara
could be coerced via a sexual magic act. This appears downright
fantastic, but — as we know — the tantra master does use his karma mudra as symbols for
the elements, planets, and also for countries.
In
the nineteenth century the idea likewise arose that the British
Queen, Victoria, was a reincarnation of Tara, yet on occasion Palden Lhamo was also
nominated as being the goddess functioning behind the facade of the
English Queen. It was thus more natural for the Dalai Lama to
cooperate with the British or the Russians — since the Chinese had
been possessed for centuries by a “nine-headed demoness” with whom
it was impossible to reach an accord. The China-friendly Panchen
Lama, however, saw this differently. For him, the Chinese Emperors
of the Manchu dynasty, who professed to the Buddhist faith, were
incarnations of the Bodhisattva, Manjushri, and could thus be
considered as acceptable negotiators.
Tara
and Mary
A
comparison of the Tibetan Tara with the Christian
figure of Mary has by now
become a commonplace in Buddhist circles. The Fourteenth Dalai Lama
also makes liberal use of this cultural parallel with pious
emotionalism. For the “yellow pontiff” Mary represents the inana mudra (the “imagined
female”) so to speak of Catholicism. „Whenever
I see an image of Mary,” — the Kundun has said — „I feel
that she represents love and compassion. She is like a symbol of
love. Within Buddhist iconography, the goddess Tara occupies a similar
position” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1996c, p. 83). Not all that long ago, the
„god-king” undertook a pilgrimage to Lourdes and afterwards
summarized his impressions of the greatest Catholic shrine to Mary
with the following moving words. „There — in front of the cave — I
experienced something very special. I felt a spiritual vibration, a
kind of spiritual presence there. And then in front of the image of
the Virgin Mary, I prayed” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1996 c, p. 84).
The
autobiographical book with the title of Longing for Darkness: Tara and
the Black Madonna by the American, China Galland, reports on the
attempt to incorporate the Catholic cult of Mary via the Tibetan cult of
Tara. After the author’s
second marriage failed, she returned to the Catholic Church and
devoted herself to an excessive Mary worship with feministic
undertones. The latter was the reason why Galland felt herself
attracted above all to the black Madonnas worshipped in Catholicism.
The “Black Virgin” has already been worshipped for years by
feminists as an apocryphal mother deity.
One
day the author encountered the Tibetan goddess, Tara, and the American was
instantly fascinated. Tara struck her as a pioneer
of “spiritual” women’s rights. The goddess had — this author
believed –proclaimed that contrary to Buddhist doctrine
enlightenment could also be attained in a female body. The author
felt herself especially attracted to figure of the “green Tara”, whom she equates with
the black Kali of
Hinduism at one point in her book: “The darkness of this female gods
comforted me. I felt like a balm on the wound of the unending white
maleness tha we had deified in the West. They were the other side of
everything I had ever
known about God. A dark female God. Oh yes!” (Galland, 1990, p.
31).
In
Galland we are thus dealing with a spiritual feminist who has
rediscovered her original black mother and is seeking traces of her
in every culture. In the Buddhist Tara cult this author thus
also sees archetypal references to the many-breasted Artemis of Ephesus, to the
Egyptian Isis, to the
Phoenician Alma Mater,
Cybele, to the Mesopotamian goddess of the underworld, Ishtar. Once more her trail
leads from the dark Tara
to the “black Madonnas” of Europe and America. From there the next
link in the chain is the Indian terror goddess Kali (or Durga). “Was the blackness
of the virgin a connecting thread of connection to Tara, Kali or Durga, or was it a mere
coincidence?” asks Galland (Galland, 1990, p. 50). For her it was no
coincidence!
With
one word Galland activates the gynocentric world view which is
familiar enough from the feminist literature. She sees the great
goddess at work everywhere (Galland, 1993, p. 42). The universal
position which she grants herself as the first creative principle is
depicted unambiguously in a poem. The author found it in a Gnostic
Christian text. There a female power, who sounds “more like Kali than the Mother of
God”, says the following words:
For
I am the first and the last.
I
am the honored and the scorned one.
I
am the whore and the holy one.
I
am the wife and the virgin
...
I
am the silence that ist
incomprehensible
(quoted
by Galland, 1990, p. 51)
In
spite of her unmistakable pro-woman position, the feminist met her
androcentric master in October 1986, who transformed her black Kali (or Tara or Mary) into a pliant Tantric
Buddhist dakini. During her audience, for which she feverishly
waited for several days in Dharamsala, she asked His Holiness the
Fourteenth Dalai Lama: “Did it make sense to link Tara and Mary?” — “Yes,” — the Kundun answered her — “Tara and Mary create a good bridge.
This is a direction to go in” (Galland, 1990, p.
93).
He
then told the feminist how pro-woman Tibetan Buddhism is. For
example, the Sakya Lama, the second-highest-ranking hierarch of the
Land of Snows, had a wife and daughter. Somewhere in Nepal there
lived a 70-year-old nun who was entitled to teach the Dharma. When
he was young there was a famous female hermit in the mountains of
Tibet. For him, the Dalai Lama, it made no difference along the path
to enlightenment whether a person had a male body or a female one.
And then finally the climax: “Tara” — the Kundun said — “could
actually be taken as a very strong feminist. According to the
legend, she knew that there were hardly any Buddhas who had been
enlightened in the form of a woman. She was determined to retain her
female form and to become enlightened only in this female form. That
story had some meaning in it, doesn’t it?” — he said with “an
infectious smile” to Galland (Galland, 1990, p.
95).
"Smiling”
is the first form of communication with a woman which is taught in
the lower tantras (the Kriya
Tantra). The next tantric category which follows is the “look”
(Carya Tantra), and then
the “touch” (Yoga
Tantra). Galland later reported in fascination what happened to
her during the audience: “He [the Kundun] got up out of his
chair, came over to me as I stood up, and took me firmly by the arms
with a laugh. The Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is irrepressibly
cheerful. His touch surprised me. It was strong and energetic, like
a black belt in aikido.
The physical power in his hands belied the softness of his
appearance. He put his forehead to mine, then pulled away smiling
and stood there looking at me, his hands holding my shoulders. His
look cut through all the words exchanged and warmed me. I sensed
that I was learning the most about him and that I was being given
the most by him, right then, Though wat it was could not be put into
words. This was the real blessing” (Galland, 1990, p.
96).
From
this moment on, the entire metaphysical standpoint of the author is
transformed. The revolutionary dark Kali becomes an obedient
“sky walker” (dakini), the radical feminist becomes a pliant “wisdom
consort” of Tantric Buddhism. With whatever means, the Dalai Lama
succeeded in making a devout Buddhist of the committed follower of
the great goddess. From now on, Galland begins to visualize herself
along tantric lines as Tara. She interprets the
legend in which the goddess offers to help her tear-father, Avalokiteshvara (Tara arose from one of the
Bodhisattva’s tears), lead all suffering beings on the right path,
as her personal mission.
The
“initiation” by the Kundun did not end with this
first encounter, it found its continuation later in a dream of the
author’s. There Galland sees how the Dalai Lama splashes around in a
washtub, completely clothed, and with great amusement. She herself
also sits in such a tub. Then suddenly the Kundun stands up and looks
at her in an evocative silence. “There was nothing between us, only
pure being. It was a vivid and real exchange. — Suddenly a blue
sword came out of the crown of the Dalai Lama’s head over an across
the distance between us and down to the crown of my head, all the
way down my spine. I felt as though he had just transmitted some
great, wordless teaching. The sword was made of blue light. I was
very happy. Then he climbed into the third tub, where I was now
sitting alone. We sat side by side in silence. I was on the right.
Our faces were were next to one another, faintly touching” (Galland,
1990, p. 168). The Dalai Lama then climbs out of the tub. She tries
to persuade him to explain the situation to her, and in particular
to interpret the significance of the sword. “But every time I asked
him a question, he changed forms, like Proteus, the old man of the
sea, and said nothin” (Galland,1990, p. 169). At the end of the
dream he transformed himself into a turquoise scarab which climbed
the wall of the room.
Even
if both of the dream’s protagonists (the Dalai Lama and China
Galland) are fully clothed as they sit together in the washtub, one
does not need too much fantasy to see in this scene a sexual magic
ritual from the repertoire of the Vajrayana. The blue sword is
a classic phallic symbol and reminds us of a similar example from
Christian mysticism: it was an arrow which penetrated Saint Theresa
of Avila as she experienced her mystic love for God. For China
Galland it was the sword of light of the supreme Tibetan tantra
master.
Soon
after the spectacular dream initiation, the “pilgrimages” to the
holy places at which the black Madonnas of Europe and America are
worshipped described in her book began. Instead of Marys she now only sees
before her western variations upon the Tibetan Tara. The tear (tara) of Avalokiteshvara (the Dalai
Lama) becomes an overarching principle for the American woman. In
the dark gypsy Madonna of Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer (France), in her
famous black sister of Czestochowa (Poland), in the copy of the
latter in San Antonio (Texas), but above all in the Madonna of
Medjugorje, whom she visits in October 1988, Galland now only sees
emanations of the Tibetan goddess.
Whilst
she reflects upon Mary
and Tara in the (former)
Yugoslavian place of pilgrimage, a prayer to the Tibetan deity comes
to her mind. “In it she is said to come in what ever form a person
needs her to assume in order for her to be helpful. True compassion.
Buddha Tara, indeed all Buddhas, are said to emanate in billions of
forms, taking whatever form is necessary to suit the person. Who can
say that Mary isn’t Tara appearing in a form that is useful and
recognizable to the West? When the Venerable Tara Tulku [Galland’s
Buddhist Guru, a male emanation of Tara] came [...], we spoke
about this. From the Buddhist perspective, one cannot say that this
isn’t possible, he assured me: 'If there is a person who says
definitely no, the Madonna is not an emanation of Tara, then that
person has not understood the teaching of Buddha'. Christ could be
an emanation of Buddha” (Galland, 1990, p.
311).
What
lies behind this flowery quotation and Galland’s eccentric Mary-worship can also be
referred to as the incorporation of a non-Buddhist cult by Vajrayana. Then Mary and Tara are both so
culture-specific that a comparison of the two “goddesses” only makes
sense at an extremely general level. Neither does Tara give birth to a
messiah, nor may we imagine a Mary who enters sexual magic
union with a Christian monk. Despite such blatant differences,
Tantrism's doctrine of emanation allows the absorption of foreign
gods without hesitation, yet only under the condition that the
Tibetan deity take the original place and the non-Buddhist one be
derived from it. In this connection, the report of a Catholic
(Benedictine) nun who participated in the Kalachakra initiation in
Bloomington (1999). For her, the rite set off a Christian
experience: “I’m Christian. Never before has that meant so much.
This past month I sat at the Kalachakra Initiation Rite in
Bloomington with HH the Dalai Lama as the master teacher, a tantric
gure. I have never felt so Christian. […] I was sitting in the VIP
section on the stage very near the Dalai Lama. The Buddhist audience
seemd like advanced practitioners. The audience was nearly 5,000
people under this one huge tent. When dharma students would know
that I was a nun they’d ask me what was in my mind as the ritual
progressed through the Buddhist texts, recitations, deity
visualizations and gestures. At the time, I must confess, I sat with
as much respect, openness and emptiness as possible. My Christain
heart was simply at rest being there with ‘others’. […] There’s no
one to one correspondence with Buddhist’s rituals especially one as
complex and esoteric as the Kalachakra, but there is a way that we
live tha creates the same feel, the same attitude and dispositions.
(Funk,. HPI 001) The literature in which Buddhist authors present
Christ as a Bodhisattva and as an emanation of Avalokiteshvara grows from
year to year. We shall come to speak about this in the chapter on
the ecumenical politics of the Dalai Lama.
The
lament of Yeshe Tshogyal
The
tantric partner of Padmasambhava, the founding father of Tibetan
Buddhism, is frequently offered as the historical example of a
female figure who is supposed to have integrated all the
contradictory powers of the feminine within herself. She goes by the
name of Yeshe Tshogyal and is said to have achieved an independence
unique in the history of female yoginis. Some authors even say
(contrary to all doctrines) that she attained the highest goal of
full Buddhahood. For this reason she has currently become one of the
rare icons for those, primarily western, believers who keep a
lookout for emancipated female figures within Tantric
Buddhism.
The
legend reports that Yeshe Tshogyal married the Tibetan king Trisong
Detsen (742–803) at the age of thirteen. Three years later, he gave
her to Padmasambhava as his karma mudra. Such generous
gifts of women to gurus were, as we know, normal in Tantrism and
taken for granted.
Yeshe
Tshogyal became her master’s most outstanding pupil. When
she was twenty years old, he initiated her in a flame ritual. During
the ceremony the guru, in the form of a terror deity „took command
of her lotus throne [the vagina] with his flaming diamond stalk [the
penis]“ (quoted by Stevens, 1990, p. 70). This
showed that she had to suffer the fate of a classic wisdom consort;
she was symbolically burnt up.
Later
she practiced Vajrayana
with other men and subsequently underwent a long ascetic period as
an “ice virgin” in the coldest mountains of Tibet. Like the
historical Buddha she was also tempted by lecherous beings, it was
just that in her case these were no “daughters of Mara” but rather
handsome young devils. She
recognized their lures as the work of Satan and resolutely rejected
them. But out of compassion she subsequently slept with all manner
of men and gave „her sexual parts to the lustful” (quoted by
Stevens, 1990, p. 71). Her
devotion in love is so convincing that she could convert seven
highwaymen who raped her to Buddhism.
Padmasambhava
is supposed to have said to her: „The basis for realizing
enlightenment is a human body. Male or female, there is no great
difference. But if she develops the mind bent on enlightenment the
woman’s body is better” (quoted by Stevens, 1990, p. 71).
This
statement is admittedly revolutionary, but nevertheless we can
hardly accept that Yeshe Tshogyal traveled an essentially different
path to the countless anonymous yoginis who were “sacrificed” on the
altar of Tantrism. [4]
Through
constantly visions she was repeatedly urged to offer herself up
completely to her master — to sacrifice her own flesh, her blood,
her eyes, nose, tongue, ears, heart, entrails, muscles, bones,
marrow, and her life energy. One may also begin to seriously doubt
her privileged position within Tibetan Buddhism, when one hears her
impressive and resigning lament at her woman’s
lot:
I
am a woman
I
have little power to resist danger.
Because
of my inferior [!] birth, everyone attacks
me.
If
I go as a beggar, dogs attack me.
If
I have wealth and food, bandits attack
me.
If
I do a great deal, the locals attack
me.
If
I do nothing, gossips attack me.
If
anything goes wrong, they all attack
me.
Whatever
I do, I have no chance for happiness.
Because
I am a woman it is hard to follow the
Dharma.
It
is hard even to stay alive.
(quoted
by Gross, 1993, p. 99)
Many
centuries after her earthly death, Yeshe Tshogyal became for the
Fifth Dalai Lama a constant companion in his visions and advised him
in his political decisions. During a meeting, “Tshogyal appears in
the form of a white lady adorned with bone ornaments. She enters
into union with him. The white and the red bodhicitta [seed] flow to
and fro” (Karmay, 1988, p. 54). Such scenes of union with her are
mentioned several times in the Secret Visions of the “Great
Fifth”. Some of these are described so concretely that they probably
concern real human mudras
who assumed the role of Yeshe Tshogyal. Once His Holiness saw in
her heart “the mandala of the Phurba [ritual dagger] deity” (Karmay,
1988, p. 67). Perhaps she wanted to remind him with this vision of
the agonizing fate of Srinmo, the Mother of Tibet,
in whose heart a ritual dagger is also stuck. In another vision she
appeared together with the goddess Candali and three further
dakinis. They danced and sang the words “Phurba is the essence of
all tutelary deities.” (Karmay, 1988, p. 67). [5]
Even
if, as is claimed by many contemporary tantra masters and feminists,
Yeshe Tshogyal is supposed to be the most prominent historical
representative of an “emancipated” Vajrayana female Buddhist,
her unhappy fate shows just how degradingly and contemptuously the
countless unknown and unmentioned karma mudras of Tibetan
history must have been treated. The example she provides should be
more a deterrent than a positive one, then she was more or less an
instrument of Padmasambhava’s. Her current rise in prominence is
exclusively a product of the contemporary Zeitgeist, which needs to
generate counterimages to an essentially androcentric Buddhism so as
to gain a foothold in the western world.
The
mythological background to the Tibetan-Chinese
conflict:
Avalokiteshvara
versus Guanyin
We
would now like to point out that, in the historical relationship
between Tibet and China, the latter played and continues to play the
feminine part, as if the sky-high mountains of the Himalayas and the
Chinese river plains were a man and a woman in stand-off, as if a
battle of the sexes had been being waged for centuries between
“masculine” Lhasa and “feminine” Beijing. This is not supposed to
imply that, in contrast to the patriarchal Land of Snows, a
matriarchy has the say in China. We know full well how the “Middle
Kingdom” has from the outset pursued a fundamentally androcentric
politics and how nothing has changed in this regard up until the
present. Hence, what we primarily wish to say here is that from a Tibetan viewpoint the
conflict between the two countries is interpreted as a gender
conflict. We hope to demonstrate in this chapter that the Dalai Lama
is opposed by the threatening and ravenous “Great Female”, the
terror dakini which is China and which he must conquer and subjugate
along tantric lines.
The
reverse cannot be so simply stated: the Chinese Emperor admittedly
saw the rulers of Potala as powerful spiritual opponents, but
understood himself thus only in a very few cases to be the
representative of a “womanly power”. Yet such historical exceptions
do exist and we would like to consider these in more detail. There
is also the fact that China’s androcentric culture has been
repeatedly limited and relativized by strong female elements. Real
feminine influences can be recognized in Chinese mythology, in
particular national philosophies (especially Taoism), and sometimes
also in the politics, far more than was ever the case in the
masculine Tibetan monastic empire. For example, Lao-tzu, the great
proclaimer of the Dao De
Jing, clearly stresses the feminine factor ( or rather what one
understood this to be at the time) in his practical “theory of
power”:
Nothing
is weaker than water,
But
when it attacks something hard
Or
resistant, then nothing withstands it,
And
nothing will alter its way.
[...] weakness
prevails
Over
strength and
[...] gentleness
conquers
The
adamant [...]
it
says in the 78th chapter of the Dao De Jing. Among Chinese
Buddhists the greatest reverence is up until the present day
reserved for a goddess (Guanyin), a female Buddha
and no god. China’s few yet famous/notorious female rulers in
particular showed a unique tension in dealings with the kings and
hierarchs of the Tibetan “Land of Snows”. For this reason we shall
consider these in somewhat more detail. But let us first turn to the
Chinese goddess, Guanyin.
China
(Guanyin) and Tibet (Avalokiteshvara)
How
easily the ambivalent gender role of the male androgyne Avalokiteshvara could tip
over into the feminine is demonstrated by “his” transformation into
Guanyin, the “goddess of
mercy”, who is still highly revered in China and Japan. Originally,
Guanyin had no
independent existence, but was solely considered to be a feminine
guise of the Bodhisattva (Avalokiteshvara). In memory
of her male past she sometimes in older portrayals has a small
goatee. How, where, and why the sex change came about is considered
by scholars to be extremely puzzling. It must have taken place in
the early Tang dynasty from the seventh century on, then before this
Avalokiteshvara was all
but exclusively worshipped in male form in China
too.
Guanyin
There
is already in the early fifth century a canon in which 33 different
appearances of the “light god” are mentioned and seven of these are
female. This proves that the incarnation of a Bodhisattva in female
form was not excluded by the doctrine of Mahayana Buddhism. To the
benefit of all suffering beings — it says in one text — the
“redeemer” could assume any conceivable form, for example that of a
holy saying, of medicinal herbs, of mythical winged creatures,
cannibals, yes, even that of women (Chayet, 1993, p. 154). But what
such exceptions do not explain is why the masculine Avalokiteshvara was
essentially supplanted and replaced by the feminine Guanyin in China. In the
year 828 C.E. each Chinese monastery had at least one statue of the
goddess. The chronicles report the existence of 44,000
figures.
There
is more or less accord among orientalists that Guanyin is a syncretic
figure, formed by the integration into the Buddhist system imported
from India of formerly more powerful native Chinese goddesses. A
legend recounts that Guanyin originally dwelled
among the mortals as the king’s daughter, Miao Shan, and that out of
boundless goodness she sacrificed herself for her father. This pious
tale is, however, somewhat lacking in vibrancy as the genesis of
such an influential religious lady as Guanyin, but nonetheless
interesting in that it once more offers us a report of a female
sacrifice in the interests of a patriarch.
We
find the suggestion often put forward by the Tibetan side, that the
worship of Guanyin is a
Chinese variant of the Tibetan Tara cult, similarly
unconvincing, since the latter was first introduced into Tibet in
the eleventh century, 400 years after the transformation of Avalokiteshvara into a
goddess. In view of the exceptional power which the goddess enjoys
in China it seems much more reasonable to see in her a descendant of
the great Taoist matriarchs: the primordial mother Niang Niang, or the great
goddess Xi Wangmu, or Tianhou Shengmu, who is
worshipped as the “sea star”.
If
Avalokiteshvara
represents a “fire deity”, then Guanyin is clearly a “water
goddess”. She is often pictured upon a rock in the sea with a water
jug or a lotus flower in her hand. The “goddess on the water lily”,
who sometimes holds a child in her arms and then resembles the
Christian Madonna, fascinated the royal courts of Europe in the
seventeenth century already, and the first European porcelain
manufacturers copied her statues. Her epithets, “Empress of Heaven”,
“Holy Mother”, “Mother of Mercy”, also drew her close to the cult of
Mary for the West. Like Mary then, Guanyin is also called upon
as the female savior from the hardships and fears of a wretched
world. When worries and suffering make one unhappy, then one turns
to her.
The
transformation of Avalokiteshvara into a
Chinese goddess is a mythic event which has deeply shaped the
metapolitical relationship between China and Tibet. Historical
relations of both nations with one another, although they both
exhibit patriarchal structures, may thus be described through the
symbolism of a battle of the sexes between the fire god Chenrezi and the water
goddess Guanyin. What is
played out between the gods also has — the tantras believe — its
correspondences among mortals. Via the fate of the three most
powerful female figures from China’s past, we shall examine whether
the tantric pattern can be convincingly applied to the historical
conflicts between the two countries (Tibet and
China).
Wu
Zetian (Guanyin) and Songtsen Gampo
(Avalokiteshvara)
Following
the collapse of the Han kingdom in the third century C.E., Mahayana Buddhism spread
through China and blossomed in the early Tang period (618–c. 750).
After this a renaissance of Confucianism begins which leads from the
mid-ninth century to a persecution of the Buddhists. In the Hua-yen Buddhism of the
seventh century (a Chinese form of Mahayana with some tantric
elements), especially in the writings of Fa-Tsang, the cosmic “Sun
Buddha”, Vairocana, is
revered as the highest instance.
At
the end of the seventh century, as the Guanyin cult was forming in
China, a powerful woman and Buddhist reigned in the “Middle
Kingdom”, the Empress Wu Zetian (c. 625–c. 705). Formerly a
concubine of two Emperors, father and son — after their deaths Wu
Zetian took, step by step and with great skill, the “Dragon Throne”
in the year 683. She conducted a radical shake-up of the country’s
power elite. The ruling Li family was systematically and brutally
replaced by members of her own Wu lineage. Nonetheless, the
matriarch did not recoil from banishing her own son even on the
basis of power political concerns nor from executing other family
members when these opposed her will. Her generals were engaged with
varying success in the most bloody battles with the Tibetans and
other bordering peoples.
Probably
because she was a woman, her unscrupulous and despotic art became
proverbial for later historians. The outrageousness which radiated
out from this “monstrous” Grande Dame upon the Dragon Throne still
echoes today in the descriptions of the historians. The German
Sinologist, Otto Franke, for example, characterizes her with what is
for an academic exceptionally strong emotions: “Malicious, vengeful,
and cruel to the point of sadism, thus she began her career,
unbridled addiction to power, insensitivity even to the natural
maternal instinct, and a unquenchable desire for murder accompany
her on the stolen throne, grotesque megalomania combined with
religious insanity distorts her old age, childish helplessness in
the face of every form of charlatanism and complete lack of
judgement in administration and politics lead finally to her fall
and bring the state to the edge ... A demoness in her unbridled
passion, Wu Zetian allied herself with the dark figures of Chinese
history” (Franke, 1961, p. 424).
Wu
Zetian supported Buddhism fanatically, so as to establish it as the
state religion in place of Doism. “The Empress who takes God as her
example”, as she called herself, was a megalomaniac not just about
political matters but also in religious ones, especially because she
let herself be celebrated as the incarnation of the Buddha Maitreya, of the ruler of
the of the coming eon. Her she appealed to prophecies from the mouth
of the historical Buddha. In the Great Cloud Sutra it could
be read that, 700 years after his death, Shakyamuni would be reborn
in the form of a beautiful princess, whose kingdom would become a
real paradise. “Having planted the germs of the Way during countless
kalpas [ages], [she as Maitreya] consents to the
joyous exaltation by the people”, it says of the Empress in one
contemporary document. (Forte, 1988, p. 122). According to other
sources, Wu Zetian also allowed herself to be worshipped as the
Bodhisattva, Avalokiteshvara, and as the
Sun Buddha, Vairocana.
As
Buddhist she oriented herself to the Abhidharmakosa’s cyclical
conception of the four ages of the world we have described above,
and which we also find in the Kalachakra Tantra. Thus, at
end of the dark and at the dawn of the new age to come, stood this
Chinese Empress in the salvational figure of the Buddha Maitreya. Her chiliastic
movement, which she led as a living Buddhist messiah, had no small
following among the people, yet came into hefty conflict with
established Buddhism and the Confucian powers at court, above all
because this savior was also a woman.
From
the Buddhist teachings Wu Zetian also adopted the political doctrine
of the Chakravartin, the
wheel turner who reigns over the entire globe. She would lead her
people, we may read in a prophesy, by “turning the golden wheel”
(Forte, 1988, p.122). One of her titles was “The Golden Wheel of
Dominion Turning God-Emperor”. (Franke, 1961, p. 417). But even this
was not enough for her. Two years later she intensified her existing
epithet and let herself be known as “ The Holy God-Emperor
Surpassing The Former Golden Wheel Turning God-Emperor” (Franke,
1961, p. 417). The “golden wheel”, along with the other appropriate
emblems of the Chakravartin were hung in
her hall of audience.
So
as to visibly demonstrate and symbolically buttress her control of
the world, she ordered the entire kingdom to be covered with a
network of state temples. Each temple housed a statue of the Sun
Buddha (Vairocana). All
of these images were considered to be the emanations of a gigantic
Vairocana which was
assembled in the imperial temple of the capital and in which the
Empress allowed herself to be worshipped.
Among
the sacred buildings erected at her command was to be found what was
referred to as a time tower (tiantang). According to
Antonino Forte, the first ever mechanical clock was assembled there.
The discovery of a “time machine” (the clock) is certainly one of
the greatest cultural achievements in the history of humankind.
Nevertheless we today see such an event only from its technical and
quantitative side. But for people with an ancient world view this
“mechanical” clock was of far greater significance. With its
construction and erection a claim was made to the symbolic and real
control over time as such. Hence, following the assembly of the tiantang (time tower), Wu
Zetian allowed herself to be worshipped as the living time
goddess.
Alongside
the “time tower” she built a huge metal pillar (the so-called
“heavenly axis”). This was supposed to depict Mount Meru, the center
of the Buddhist universe. Just as the tiantang symbolized control
over time, the metallic “heavenly axis” announced the Empress’s control of space.
Correspondingly her palace was also considered to be the microcosmic
likeness of the entire universe. She declared her capital, Liaoyang,
to be not just the metropolis of China, but also the domicile of the
gods. Space and Time were thus, at least
according to doctrine, firmly in Wu Zetian’s
hands.
It
will already have occurred to the reader that the
religious/political visions of Wu Zetian correspond to the spirit of
the Kalachakra Tantra in
so many aspects that one could think it might have been a direct
influence. However, this ruler lived three hundred years before the
historical publication date of the Time Tantra. Nevertheless, the
influence of Vajrayana
(which has in fact been found in the fourth century in India) cannot
be ruled out. Hua-yen Buddhism, from the ideas of which the Empress
derived her philosophy of state, is also regarded as “proto-tantric”
by experts: “Thus the Chou-Wu theocracy [of the Empress]) is the
form of state in China which comes closest to a tantric theocracy or
Buddhocracy: the whole world is considered as the body of a Buddha,
and the Empress who rules over this sacramentalized political
community is considered to be the highest of all Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas” (Brück and Lai, 1997, p. 630). [6]
Although
no historical conection between the Kalachakra Tantra and the
“proto-tantric” world view of Wu Zetian can be proved, striking
parallels in the history of ideas and symbols exist. For example,
alongside the claim to the “world throne” as Chakravartin, the implied
control over time and space, we find a further parallel in Wu
Zetian’s grab for the two heavenly orbs (the sun and moon) which is
characteristic of the Time Tantra. She let a special Chinese
character be created as her own name which was called “sun and moon
rising up out of the emptiness” (Franke, 1961, p.
415).
But
the final intentions of the two systems are not compatible. The
Empress Wu Zetian is hardly likely to have striven towards the
Buddhocracy of an androcentric Lamaism. In contrast, it is probable
that gynocentric forces were hidden behind her Buddhist mask. For
example, she officially granted her female (!) forebears bombastic
titles and epithets of “Mother Earth” (Franke, 1961, p. 415). In the
patriarchal culture of China this feminist act of state was
perceived as a monstrous blasphemy. Hence, with reference to this
naming, we may read in a contemporary historical critique that,
“such a confusion of terms as that of Wu had not been experienced
since records began” (Franke,1961, p. 415).
The
unrestrained ruler usurped for herself all the posts of the
masculine monastic religion. In her hunger for power she even denied
her femininity and let herself be addressed as “old Buddha lord” —
an act which even today must seem evilly presumptuous for the
androcentric Lamaists. At any rate it was seen this way by an exile
Tibetan historian who, a thousand years after her death, portrayed
the Chinese Empress as a monstrous, man-eating dragon obsessed with
all depravities. “The Empress Wu,” K. Dhondup wrote as recently as
1995 in the Tibetan
Review, “one of the most frightening and cruel characters to
have visited Chinese history, awakened her sexual desire at the ripe
old age of 70 and pursued it with such relentless zeal that the
hunger and voracity of her sexual fulfillment into her nineties
became the staple diet of street whispers and gossips, and the
powerful aphrodisiacs that she medicated herself gave her youthful
eyebrows ...” (Tibetan
Review, January 1995, p. 11).
Did
Wu Zetian stand in religious and symbolic competition with the
cosmic ambitions of the ruler of the great Tibetan kingdom of the
time? We can only speculate about that. Aside from the fact that she
was involved in intense wars with the dreaded Tibetans, we know only
very little about relations between the “world views” of the two
countries at the time of her reign. It is, however, of interest for
our “symbolic analysis” of inner-Asian history that the Lamaist
historians posthumously declared the Tibetan king, Songtsen Gampo,
who died forty years before the reign of Wu Zetian in the year 650,
a Chakravartin. It was
Songtsen Gampo (617-650) — the reader will recall — who as the
incarnation of Avalokiteshvara nailed the
mother of Tibet (Srinmo)
to the ground with phurbas (ritual daggers) so
as to build the sacred geography of the Land of Snows over
her.
Behind
the life story of Wu Zetian shines the archetypal image of Guanyin as the female,
Chinese opponent to the male, Tibetan Avalokiteshvara. She herself
pretended to be the incarnation of a Buddha (Vairocana or Maitreya), but since she was
a female it is quite possible that she was the historical phenomenon
which occasioned Avalokiteshvara’s
above-mentioned sex change into the principal goddess of Chinese
Buddhism (Guanyin).
At
any rate Songtsen Gampo and Wu Zetian together represent the cosmic
claims to power of Avalokiteshvara and Guanyin. We can regard them
as the historical projections of these two archetypes. Their
metapolitical competition is currently completely overlooked in the
conflict between the two countries (China and Tibet), which leads to
a foreshortened interpretation of the Tibetan/Chinese
“discordances”. In the past the mythical dimensions of the struggle
between the “Land of Snows” and the “Middle Kingdom” have never been
denied by the two parties; it is just the western eye for
“realpolitik” cannot perceive it.
Wu
Zetian was not able to realize her Buddhist gynocentric visions. In
the year 691 the tiantang
(time tower) and the clock within it were destroyed in a “terrible”
storm. Her reign was plunged into a dangerous crisis, then, as
several influential priests claimed, this “act of God” showed that
the gods had rejected her. But she retained sufficient power and
political influence to be able to reassemble the tower. However, in
694 this new Tiantang was
also destroyed, this time by fire. The court saw a repetition of the
divine punishment in the flames and concluded that the imperial
religious claim to power had failed. Wu Zetian had to relinquish her
messianic title of “Buddha Maitreya” from then
on.
Ci
Xi (Guanyin) and the Thirteenth Dalai Lama
(Avalokiteshvara)
One
thousand years later, the cosmological rivalry between China (Guanyin) and Tibet (Avalokiteshvara) was
tragically replayed in the tense relation between the Thirteenth
Dalai Lama and the Empress Dowager Ci Xi
(1835-1908).
Ci
Xi appeared on the political stage in the year 1860. Like her
predecessor, Wu Zetian, she started out as a noble-born concubine of
the Emperor, and even as a seventeen year old she had worked her way
up step by step through the hierarchy of his harem and bore the sole
heir to the throne. The imperial father, Emperor Xian Feng, died
shortly after the birth, and the ambitious mother of the new son of
heaven took over the business of governing the country until he came
of age, and de facto
beyond that. When her son died suddenly at the age of 18 she
adopted her nephew, who ascended the Dragon Throne as Emperor
Guangxu but likewise remained completely under her influence until
his death.
Officially,
Ci Xi supported Confucianism, but privately, like many members of
the Manchu dynasty (1644-1911) before her, she felt herself
attracted to the Lamaist doctrine. She was well-versed in the
canonical writings, wrote Buddhist mystery plays herself, and had
these performed by her eunuchs. Her apartments were filled with
numerous Buddha statues and she was a passionate collector of old
Lamaist temple flags. Her favorite sculpture was a jade statue of Guanyin given to her by a
great lama. She saw herself as the earthly manifestation of this
goddess and sometimes dressed in her robes. „Whenever
I have been angry, or worried over anything,” she said to one of her
ladies in waiting, „by dressing up as the Goddess of Mercy it helps
me to calm myself and to play the part I represent ... by having a
photograph taken of myself dressed in this costume, I shall be able
to see myself as I ought to be at all times” (Seagrave, 1992., p.
413).
Ci
Xi and attendants
Such
dressings-up were in no sense purely theatrical, rather Ci Xi
experienced them as sacred performances, as rituals during which the
energy of the Chinese water goddess (Guanyin) flowed into her.
She publicly professed herself to be a Buddhist incarnation and
likewise affected the male title of “old Buddha lord” (lao fo yeh), a label which
became downright vernacular. We are thus dealing with a gynocentric
reversal of the androgynous Avalokiteshvara myth here,
as in the case of the Empress Wu Zetian. Guanyin, the Chinese goddess
of mercy, makes an exclusive claim for masculine control, and thus
has, within the body of a woman, the gender of a male Buddha at her
disposal. In the imperialist, patriarchal West, Ci Xi was, as the
American historian Sterling Seagrave has demonstrated, the victim of
a hate-filled, defamatory, sensationalist press who insinuated she
was guilty of every conceivable crime. „The
notion,” Seagrave writes, „that the corrupt Chinese were dominated
by a reptilian woman with grotesque sexual requirements tantalized
American men” (Seagrave, 1992, p. 268). Just like her predecessor,
Wu Zetian, she became a terrible „dragoness”, a symbol of aggressive
femininity which has dominated masculine fantasies for thousands of
years: „By universal agreement the woman who occupied China’s Dragon
Throne was indeed a reptile. Not a glorious Chinese dragon — serene,
benevolent, good-natured, aquarian – but a cave-dwelling,
fire-breathing Western dragon, whose very breath was toxic. A dragon
lady” (Seagrave, 1992, p. 272).
Thus,
in mythological terms the two Bodhisattvas, Avalokiteshvara and Guanyin, met anew in the
figures of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama and the Empress Dowager. From
the moment Ci Xi realized her claim to power the two historical
figures thus faced one another in earnest competition and a discord
which extended far beyond questions of practical politics. The chief
imperial eunuch, Li Lien Ying, foresaw this conflict most clearly
and warned Ci Xi several times against meeting the Tibetan god-king
in person. He even referred to an acute mortal danger for both the
Empress and her adoptive son, the Emperor Guangxu. The following
words are from him or another courtier: “The great lama incarnations
are the spawn of hell. They know no human emotion when matters
concern the power of the Yellow Church” (Koch, 1960, p.
216).
But
Ci Xi did not want to heed such voices of warning and peremptorily
required the visit of the Hierarch from the “roof of the world”, so
as to discuss with him the meanwhile internationally very complex
question of Tibet. Only after a number of failed attempts and many
direct and indirect threats was she able to motivate the mistrustful
and cautious prince of the church to undertake the troublesome
journey to China in the year 1908.
The
reception for the Dalai Lama was grandiose, yet even at the start
there were difficulties when it came to protocol. Neither of the
parties wanted with even the most minor gesture to make it known
that they were subject to the other in any way whatsoever. In the
main, the Chinese maintained the upper hand. It was true that the
Hierarch from Lhasa was spared having to kowtow, then after lengthy
negotiations it was finally agreed that he would only have to
perform those rituals of politeness which were otherwise expected of
members of the imperial family — an exceptional privilege from
Beijing’s point of view, but from the perspective of the god-king
and potential world ruler an extremely problematic social status.
Did the Thirteenth Dalai Lama revenge himself for this
humiliation?
On
October 30, Ci Xi and Guangxu staged a banquet in the “Hall of
Shining Purple”. The Dalai Lama was already present when the Emperor
cancelled at the last minute due to illness. Three days later, on
the occasion of her 74th birthday, the Empress Dowager
requested that the ecclesiastical dignity conduct for her the
“Ceremony for the Attainment of Long Life” in the “Throne Hall of
Zealous Government”. This came to pass. The Dalai Lama offered holy
water and small cakes which were supposed to grant her wish for a
long life. Afterwards tea was served and then Ci Xi distributed her
gifts. At midday she personally formulated an edict in which she
expressed her thanks to the Dalai Lama and promised to pay him an
annuity of 10,000 taels. Additionally he was to be given the title
of “Sincerely Obedient, through Reincarnation More Helpful, Most
Excellent through Himself Existing Buddha of the Western
Heavens”.
This
gift and the bombastic title were a silk-clad provocation. With them
Ci Xi did not at all want to honor the Dalai Lama, rather, she
wished in contrast to demonstrate Tibet’s dependency upon the
“Middle Kingdom”. For one thing, by being granted an income the
god-king was degraded to the status of an imperial civil servant.
Further, in referring to the incarnation of Avalokiteshvara as a
“Sincerely Obedient Buddha”, she left no doubt about to whom he was
in future to be obedient. Just how important such “clichés” were for
the participants is shown by the reaction of the American envoy
present, who interpreted the granting of the title as marking the
end of the Dalai Lama’s political power. The latter protested in
vain against the edict and “his pride suffered terribly” (Mehra,
1976, p. 20). All of this took place in the world of political
phenomena.
From
a metaphysical point of view, however, as Guanyin Ci Xi wanted to make
the powerful Avalokiteshvara her servant.
The actual “match of the gods” took place on the afternoon of the
same day (November 3) during a festivity to which the “Obedient
Buddha” was once again invited by Her Imperial Highness. Ci Xi, as
the female “old Buddha lord” dared to appear before the incarnation
of the humiliated fire god, Avalokiteshvara (the
Thirteenth Dalai Lama), in the costume of the water goddess Guanyin, surrounded by
dancing Bodhisattvas and sky walkers played by the imperial eunuchs.
There was singing, laughter, fooling around, boating, and enormous
enjoyment. There had been similar such “divine” appearances of the
Empress Dowager before, but in the face of the already politically
and religiously degraded god-king from Tibet, the mocked patriarchal
arch-enemy, the triumphal procession of Guanyin became on this
occasion a spectacular and provocative climax.
The
Empress Dowager probably believed herself to be protected from any
attacks upon her health by the longevity ceremony which she had
cajoled from the Dalai Lama the day before. In the evening, however,
she began to feel unwell, and became worse the next day. Forty-eight
hours later the Dalai Lama came to the Empress and handed her a
statuette of the “Buddha of Eternal Life” (a variant of Avalokiteshvara) with the
instruction that she erect it over the graves of the emperors in
China’s east. Prince Chong, although he objected strongly because of
premonition, was with harsh words entrusted by Ci Xi to do so
nonetheless. When he returned to the imperial palace on November 13,
the female “old Buddha lord” felt herself to be in a good mood and
was fit again, but the Emperor (her adoptive son) now lay dying and
passed away the next day. He had been prone to illness for years,
but the fact that his death was so sudden was also found most
mysterious by his personal doctors and hence they did not exclude
the possibility that he had been poisoned. [7]
But
the visit of His Holiness brought still more bad luck for the
imperial family, just as the chief eunuch, Li Lien Ying, had
prophesied. On November 15, one day after the death of the regent,
the Empress Dowager Ci Xi suffered a severe fainting fit, recovered
for a few hours, but then saw her end drawing nigh, dictated her
parting decree, corrected it with her own hand and died in full
possession of her senses.
It
should be obvious that the sudden deaths of the Emperor and his
adoptive mother immediately following one another gave rise to wild
rumors and that all manner of speculations about the role and
presence of the Dalai Lama were in circulation. Naturally, the
suspicion that the “god-king” from Tibet had acted magically to get
his cosmic rival out of the way was rife among the courtiers, well
aware of tantric ideas and practices. On the basis of the still to
be described voodoo practices which have been cultivated in the
Potala for centuries, such a suspicion is also definitely not to be
excluded, but rather is probable. At any rate, as Avalokiteshvara the Hierarch
likewise represents the death god Yama. Even the current,
Fourteenth Dalai Lama sees — as we shall show — with pride a causal
connection between a tantric ritual he conducted in 1976 and the
death of Mao Zedong. Even if one does not believe in the efficacy of
such magical actions, one must concede an amazing synchronicity in
these cases. They are also, at least for the Tibetan tradition, a
taken-for-granted cultural element. The Lamaist princes of the
church have always been convinced that they can achieve victory over
their enemies via magic rather than weapons.
What
is nonetheless absolutely clear from the events in Beijing is the
result, namely the triumph of Avalokiteshvara over Guanyin, the patriarch
destroying the matriarch. Perhaps Guanyin had to lose this
metaphysical battle because she had not understood the fine details
of energy transfers in Tantrism? As Ci Xi she had grasped masculine
power, as water goddess, fire, and then in her superhuman endeavors
she allowed herself to be set alight by the flames of ambition.
Perhaps she played the role of the ignited Candali (of the “burning
water”), without knowing that it was the tantra master from the Land
of Snows who had set her alight ?
But
the Dalai Lama’s political plans did not work out at all. The new
Regency held him in Beijing until he agreed to the Chinese demand
that Tibet be recognized as a province of the Chinese Empire.
England and Russia has also given the Chinese an undertaking that
they would not interfere in any way in their relations with Tibet,
so as to avoid a conflict with each other. Only in 1913, two years
after the final disempowerment of the Manchu dynasty (1911) did it
come to a Tibetan declaration of independence, and that with an
extremely interesting justification. The Thirteenth Dalai Lama
issued a proclamation which said literally that the Manchu throne,
which had been occupied by the legal Emperor as “world ruler” (Chakravartin), was now
vacant. For this reason the Tibetan had no further obligations to
China and worldly power now automatically devolved to him, the
Hierarch in the Potala — reading between the lines, this means that
he himself now performs the functions of a Chakravartin (Klieger, 1991,
p. 32).
Jiang
Qing (Guanyin) and the Fourteenth Dalai Lama
(Avalokiteshvara)
There
is an amazing repetition of the problematic relation of the
Thirteenth Dalai Lama (Avalokiteshvara) to the
Empress Dowager Ci Xi (Guanyin) in the 1960s. We
refer to the relation of Jiang Qing (1913–1991), the wife of Mao
Zedong, to His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. To this day the
Kundun remains convinced
that the chairman of the Communist Party of China was not completely
informed about the vandalistic events in Tibet in which the “Red
Guard” ravaged the monasteries of the Land of Snows, and that he
probably would not have approved of them. He sees the Chinese
attacks against the Lamaist clergy as primarily the destructive work
of Jiang Qing. Mao’s companion did in fact drive the rebellion the
young to a peak without regard for her own party or the populace,
significantly worsening the chaos in the whole country. In this
assessment the Tibetan god-king agrees, completely unintentionally,
with the official criticism from contemporary China: “During the
cultural revolution the counter-revolutionary clique around ...
Jiang Qing helped themselves to the left error under concealment of
their true motives, and thus deliberately kicked at the scientific
theories of Marxism-Leninism as well as the thoughts of Mao Zedong.
They rejected the proper religious politics which the Party pursued
directly following the establishment of the PR China. Thereby they
completely destroyed the religious work of the Party” — it says in a
Chinese government document from 1982 (MacInnis, 1993, p.
46).
In
these contemporary events, so significant for the history of the
Land of Snows, the feminine also appears- in accordance with the
tantric pattern and the androcentric viewpoint of the Dalai Lama —
as the radical and hate-filled destructive force which (like an
uncontrollable “fire woman”) wants to destroy the Lamaist monastic
state. Then in the view of the Tibetans in exile the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution is regarded as the beginning of the
“cultural genocide” which is supposed to have threatened Tibet since
this time. Not without bitterness, the current god-king thus notes
that the Red Guard gave Mao’s wife the chance, “to behave like an
Empress” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1993a, p. 267).
In
the case of Jiang Qing it is nevertheless not as easy to see her as
an incarnation of Guanyin
and an opponent of Avalokiteshvara (the Dalai
Lama) as it is with Ci Xi, who deliberately took on this divine
role. With her Marxist-Leninist orientation, the Communist Jiang
Qing can only unconsciously or semiconsciously have become a
“vessel” of the Chinese water goddess. Publicly, she projected an
atheist image — at least from a western viewpoint. But this
fundamentally anti-religious attitude must — more and more
historians are coming to agree — be exposed as a pretence. Maoism
was — as we shall later discuss at length — a deeply religious,
mythic movement, located totally within the tradition of the Chinese
Empire. The Dalai Lama’s suspicion that Jiang Qing felt like an
Empress is thus correct.
Incidentally,
she did so quite consciously, then she openly compared herself to
the Empress Wu Zetian, who — as we have shown — tried as a female
Buddha to seize control of the world, and who symbolically preempted
the ideas of the Kalachakra
Tantra in the construction of a time tower. Jiang Qing also
wanted to seize the time wheel of history. In accordance with the
Chinese predilection for all manner of ancestral traditions, she
(the Communist) had clothes made for her in the style of the old
Tang ruler (Wu Zetian).
“Jiang
Qing, who had previously taken little interest in Chinese history,
became an avid student of the career of Wu [Zetian] and the careers
of other great women near the throne. Her personal library swelled
with books on the subject. Teams of writers from her fanatically loyal
faction scurried to prepare articles showing that Empress Wu, until
then generally regarded as a lustfull, power-hungry shrew, was
‘anti-Confucian’ and hence ‘progressive’. ‘ Women can become
emporer,’ Jiang would say to her staff members. ‘Even under
communism there can be a woman ruler.’ She remarked to Mao’s doctor that England
was not feudal as China because it was ‘often ruled by
queens.’“
(Ross, 1999, p. 273) - “Jiang Qing was deeply interested in the
ideas and methods of Emperess Dowager Ci Xi. But it was impossible
for her to praise Ci Xi publicly because ultimately Empress Dowager
Ci Xi failed to keep the West at bay and because she was too vivid a
part of the ancien régime
that the Communist Party had gloriously buried.” (Ross, 1999, p.
27)
But
can we conclude from Jiang Qing’s preference for the imperial form
of power that she is an incarnation of Guanyin? On the basis of her
own view of things, we must probably reject the hypothesis. But if —
like the Buddhist Tantrics — we accept that deities represent force
fields which can be embodied in people, then such an assumption
seems natural. The only question is whether it is in every case
necessary that such people deliberately summon the gods or whether
it is sufficient when their spirit and energy “inspire” the people
in their possession to act. What counts in the final instance for a
Tantric is a convincing symbolic interpretation of political events:
The mythic competition between China and Tibet, between the Chinese
Emperor and the Dalai Lama, between the Empress Wu Zetian and the
Tibetan kings, between the Empress Dowager Ci Xi and the Thirteenth
Dalai Lama, all give the conflict between the Fourteenth Dalai Lama
and Jiang Qing a metapolitical meaning and render it comprehensible
within a tantric scheme of things. The parallels between these
conflicts are so striking that from an ancient viewpoint they can
without further ado been seen as the expression of a primordial,
divine scenario, the dispute between Avalokiteshvara and Guanyin over the world
throne of the Chakravartin.
Before
we in conclusion compare the religious-political role of the three
“Empresses” with one another, we would like to once more emphasize
that it is not us who see in China a matriarchal power which opposes
a patriarchal Tibet. In contrast — we plan in the rest of this study
to report several times upon Chinese androcentrism. What we
nonetheless wish to convey is the fact that from a Lamaist/tantric
viewpoint the Chinese-Tibetan conflict is perceived as a battle of
the sexes. Tantrism does not just sexualize landscapes, the
elements, time, and the entire universe, but likewise politics as
well.
From
a Chinese (Taoist, Confucian, or Communist) viewpoint this may
appear completely different. But we must not overlook that two of
the female rulers we have introduced were fanatic (!) Buddhists with
tantric (Ci Xi), or proto-tantric (Wu Zetian) ideas. Both will thus
have perceived their political relationship to Tibet through Vajrayana spectacles, so to
speak.
Wu
Zetian let herself be worshipped as an incarnated Buddha and a
Buddhist messiah. Her religious-political visions display an
astonishing similarity to those of the Kalachakra Tantra, although
this was first formulated several centuries later. As Chakravartin she stood in
mythically irreconcilable opposition to the Tibetan kings, who,
albeit later (in the 17th century), were entitled to the
same designation. Admittedly, one cannot speak of her as an
incarnation of Guanyin,
since the cult of the Chinese goddess first crystallized out in her
time. But there are a number of indications that she was the
historical individual in whom the transformation of Avalokiteshvara into Guanyin took place. She was
— in her own view — the first “living Buddha” in female form, as is
likewise true of Guanyin.
Most
unmistakably, Guanyin is
“incarnated” in Ci Xi, since the Empress Dowager openly announced
herself to be an embodiment of the goddess. There are many
indications that the Chinese autocrat was deeply familiar with the
secrets of Lamaist Tantrism. She must therefore have seen her
encounter with the Thirteenth Dalai Lama as an elevated symbolic
game for which in the end she had to pay for with her
life.
With
Jiang Qing, the statement that she was a incarnation of Guanyin is no longer so
convincing. The fanatical Communist was no follower of Buddha like
her tow predecessors and maintained an atheist image. But in her
“culturally revolutionary” decisions and “proletarian” art rituals,
in her contempt for all clergy, she acted and thought like a “raging
goddess” who revolted with hate and violence against patriarchal
traditions. Her radical nature made her into an avenging Erinnye (or
an out-of-control dakini) in a tantric “match of the gods” (as the
Tantrics saw history to be). There is no doubt that high-ranking
Tibetan lamas interpreted the historical role of Jiang Qing thus.
All three “Empresses” failed with their politics and religious
system.
Wu
Zetian had to officially renounce her title as “Coming Buddha”.
After her death, Confucianism regained its power and began a
countrywide persecution of the Buddhists.
Ci
Xi died during the visit of her “arch-enemy” (the Thirteenth Dalai
Lama). Within a few years of her death the reign of the Manchu
dynasty was over (1911).
Jiang
Qing was condemned to death by her own (Communist) party as a “left
deviationist”, and then pardoned. Even before she died (in 1991),
the Maoist regime of “the Red Sun” had collapsed once and for
all.
Starting
once more from a tantric view of things, one can speculate as to
whether all three female historical figures (who as incarnations of
Guanyin are to be
assigned to the element of “water”) had to suffer the fate of a
“fire woman”, a Candali.
Then in the end, like the Candali, they founder in
their own flames (political passion). All three, although staunch
opponents of a purely men-oriented Buddhism, deliberately grasped
the religious images and methods of the patriarchally organized
world. Wu Zetian and Ci Xi let themselves be addressed with a male
title as “old Buddha lord”; Jiang Qing drove all feminine, erotic
elements out of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution and issued
the young women of the Red Guard with male uniforms. In light of the
three Chinese “Empresses” the thought occurs that an emancipatory
women’s movement cannot survive when it seizes and utilizes the
androcentric power symbols and attitudes for itself. We turn to a
consideration of these thoughts in the chapter which follows.
Feminism
and Tantric Buddhism
Once
the majority of the high-ranking Tibetan lamas had to flee the Land
of Snows from the end of the 1950s and then began to disseminate
Tantric Buddhism in the West, they were willingly or unwillingly
confronted with modern feminism. This encounter between the women’s
movement of the twentieth century and the ancient system of the
androcentric monastic culture is not without a certain delicacy. In
itself, one would have to presume that here two irreconcilable
enemies from way back came together and that now “the fur would
fly”. But this unique relation — as we shall soon see — took on a
much more complicated form. Yet first we introduce a courageous and
self-confident woman from Tibetan history, who formulated a clear
and unmistakable rejection of Tantric
Buddhism.
Tse
Pongza — the challenger of
Padmasambhava
Shortly
after Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche), the founder of Tibetan
Buddhism, entered the “Land of Snows”, a remarkable woman became his
decisive opponent. It was no lesser figure than Tse Pongza, the
principal wife of the Tibetan king, Trisong Detsen (742–803), and
the mother of the heir apparent. The ruler had brought the famous vajra master into the
country from India in order to weaken the dominant Bon religion and
the nobility. With his active assistance the old priesthood (of the
Bon) were banished and the cult was suppressed by drastic measures.
A proportion of the Bonpo (the followers of Bon) succumbed to the
pressure and converted, another division fled the country, some were
decapitated and their bodies thrown into the river. Yet during the
whole period of persecution Tse Pongza remained a true believer in
the traditional rites and tried by all means to drive back the
influence of Guru Rinpoche.
To
throw a bad light on her steadfastness, later Buddhist historians
accused her of acting out of unrequited love, because Padmasambhava
had coldly rejected her erotic advances. Whatever the case, the
queen turned against the new religion with abhorrence. “Put an end
to these sorcerers” — she is supposed to have said — “... If these
sort of things spread, the people’s lives will be stolen from them.
This is not religion, but something bad!” (Hermanns, 1956, p. 207).
The following open and pointed rejection of Tantrism from her has
also been preserved:
What
one calls a kapala is a human head placed upon a
stand;
What
one calls basuta are spread-out
entrails,
What
one calls a leg trumpet is a human
thighbone
What
one calls the ‘Blessed site of the great
field’
is a human skinlaid
out.
What
one calls rakta is blood sprinkled upon sacrificial
pyramids,
What
one calls a mandala are shimmering, garish
colors,
What
one calls dancers are people who wear garlands of
bones.
This
is not religion, but rather the evil, which India has taught
Tibet.
(Hoffmann,
1956, p. 61)
With
great prophetic foresight Tse Pongza announced: “I fear that the
royal throne will be lost if we go along with the new religion”
(Hoffmann, 1956, p. 58). History proved her right. The reign of the
Yarlung dynasty collapsed circa one hundred years after she spoke
these words (838) and was replaced by small kingdoms which were in
the control of various Lamaist sects. But it was to take another 800
years before the worldly power of the Tibetan kings was combined
with the spiritual power of Lamaism in the institution of the Dalai
Lama, and a new form of state arose which was able to survive until
the present day: the tantric
Buddhocracy.
As
far as we are aware, Tse Pongza, the courageous challenger of the
Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava), has not yet been discovered as a
precursor by feminism. In contrast, there is not a feminist text
about Tibetan Buddhism in which great words are not devoted to the
obedient servant of the guru, Yeshe Tsogyal (the contemporary of Tse
Pongza and her counterpole). Such writings are also often full of
praise for Padmasambhava. This is all the more surprising, because
the latter — as the ethnologist and psychoanalyst, Robert A. Paul,
has convincingly demonstrated and as we shall come to show in detail
— must be regarded as a sexually aggressive, women and
life-despising cultural hero.
Western
feminism
We
can distinguish four groups in the modern western debate among women
about tantric/Tibetan Buddhism and Tibetan
history:
- The
supporters, who have unconditionally subjected themselves to the
patriarchal monastic system.
- The
radical feminists, who strictly reject it and unconditionally damn
it.
- Those
women who strive for a fundamental reform so as to attain a
partnership with equal rights within the Buddhist
doctrine.
- The
feminists who have penetrated the system so as to make the power
methods developed in Tantrism available for themselves and other
women, that is, who are pursuing a gynocentric
project.
Outside
of these groups one individual towers like a monolith and is highly
revered and called as a witness by all four: Alexandra David-Neel
(1868–1969). At the start of this century and under the most
adventurous conditions, the courageous French woman illegally
traversed the Tibetan highlands. She was recognized by the Tibetans
as a female Lama and — as she herself notes — revered as an
incarnation from the “Genghis Khan race”. (quoted by Bishop, 1989,
p. 229).
In
1912 she stood before the Thirteenth Dalai Lama as the first western
woman to do so. Despite her fascination with Tibet and her in depth
knowledge of the Lamaist culture she never allowed herself to become
completely captivated or bewitched. When it appeared there would be
a second audience with His Holiness, the Frenchwoman, the daughter
of a Calvinist father and a Catholic mother, said : “I don't like
popes. I don't like the kind of Buddhist Catholicism over which he
presides. Everything about him is affected, he is neither cordial
nor kind” (Batchelor, 1994, p. 311).
Alexandra
David-Neel had both a critical and an admiring attitude towards
Lamaism and the tantric teachings. She was also repulsed by the
dirty and degrading conditions under which the people of Tibet had
to live, and thus approved of the Chinese invasion of 1951. On the
other hand, she was so strongly attracted to Tibetan Buddhism that
she proved to be its most eager and ingenious student. We are
indebted to her for the keenest insights into the shady side of the
Lamaist soul. Today the author, who lived to be over 100, has become
a feminist icon.
Let
us now take a closer look at the four orientations of women towards
Lamaism described above:
1.
The supporting group first crystallized out of a reaction to the
other three positions mentioned. It has solely one thing in common
with a “feminist” stance, namely that it’s proponents dare to speak
out in matters of religion, which was very rarely permitted of
Tibetan women in earlier times. The group forms so to speak the
female peace-keeping force of patriarchal Buddhism. Among its
members are authors such as Anne Klein, Carole Divine, Pema Dechen
Gorap, and others. Their chief argument against the claim that woman
are oppressed in Vajrayana
is that the teaching is fundamentally sexually neutral. The
Dharma is said to be neither masculine nor feminine, the sexes forms
of appearance in an illusionary world. Karma Lekshe Tsomo, a
Buddhist nun of western origin, thus reacts to modern radical
feminist current with the following words of rejection: “A growing
number of women and also some men feel the need to identify
enlightenment with a feminine way. I reject the idea that
enlightenment can be categorized into gender roles and identified
with these at all. ... Why should the awareness be so intensely
bound to a form as the genitals are?” (quoted by Herrmann-Pfand,
1992, p. 11). With regard to the social situation of women in the
Tibet of old, the authors of the first group proclaim, in comparison
with those in other Asian countries they enjoyed the greatest
freedoms.
2.
The discrimination against the female sex in all historical phases
of Buddhism is, however, so apparent that it has given rise to an
extensive, in the meantime no longer surveyable, literature of
feminist critiques, which very accurately and without holding back
unmask and indict the system at all levels. For early Buddhism, it
is above all Diana Y. Paul who has produced a sound and significant
contribution. Her book, Women
in Buddhism, has become a standard work in the
meantime.
The
sexual abuse of women in the modern Buddhist centers of the West has
been made public by, among others, the American, Sandy Boucher. In
many of these feminist critiques social arguments — one the one side
an androcentric hierarchy, on the other the oppressed woman — are as
frequent as theological and philosophical
ones.
The
points which the neo-shaman and Wicca Witch, Starhawk, brings
against the Buddhist theory of suffering seem to us to be of such
value that we would like quote them at length. Starhawk sees herself
as a representative of the witch (Wicca) movement, as a feminist
dakini: “Witchcraft does not maintain, like the First Truth of
Buddhism, that 'all life is suffering'. On the contrary, life is a
thing of wonder. The Buddha is said to have gained this insight
[about suffering] after his encounter with old age, disease and
wealth. In the Craft [i.e., the witch movement], old age is a
natural and highly valued part of the cycle of life, the time of
greatest wisdom and understanding. Disease, of course, causes misery
but it is not something to be inevitably suffered: The practice of
the Craft was always connected with the healing arts, with herbalism
and midwifery. Nor is death fearful: It is simply the dissolution of
the physical form that allows the spirit to prepare for new life.
Suffering certainly exists in life — it is part of learning. But
escape from the wheel of Birth and Death is not the optimal cure,
any more than hara-kiri
is the best cure of menstrual cramps.” (quoted by Gross, 1993,
p. 284).
This
radical feminist critique naturally also extends to Vajrayana: the cynical use
of helpless girls in the sexual magic rituals and the exploitation
of patriarchal positions of power by the tantric gurus stand at the
center of the “patriarchal crimes”. But the alchemic transformation
of feminine energy into a masculine one and the “tantric female
sacrifice”, both of which we discussed so extensively in the first
part of our study, are up until now not a point of contention. We
shall soon see why.
3.
The authors Tsultrim Allione, Janice Willis, Joana Macy, and Rita M.
Gross can be counted among the third “reform party”. The latter of
these believes it possible that a new world-encompassing vision can
develop out of the encounter between feminism and Buddhism. She thus
builds upon the critical work of the radical feminists, but her goal
is a “post-patriarchal Buddhism”, that is, the institutionalization
of the equality of the sexes within the Buddhist doctrine (Gross,
1993, p. 221). This reform should not be imposed upon the religious
system from outside,
but rather be carried through in “the heart of traditional Buddhism,
its monasteries and educational institutions” (Gross, 1993, p. 241).
Rita Gross sees this linkage with women as a millennial project,
which is supposed to continue the series of great stages in the
history of Buddhism.
For
this reason she needs no lesser metaphor to describe her vision than
the “turning of the wheel”, in remembrance of Buddha’s first sermon
in Benares where, with the pronouncement of the Four Noble Truths, he set
the “wheel of the teaching” in motion. If, as is usual in some
Buddhist schools, one sees the first turning as the “lesser vehicle”
(Hinayana), the second as
the “great vehicle” (Mahayana), and the third as
Tantrism (Tantrayana),
then one could, like Gross, refer to the connection of Buddhism and
feminism as the “fourth vehicle” or the fourth turning of the wheel.
“And with each turning,” this author says, “we will discover a
progressively richer and fuller basis for reconstructing androgynous
[!] Buddhism” (Gross, 1993, p. 155). Many of the fundamental
Buddhist doctrines about emptiness, about the various energy bodies,
about the ten-stage path to enlightenment, about emanation concepts
would be retained, but could now also be followed and obeyed by
women. But above all the author places weight on the ethical norms
of Mahayana Buddhism and
gives these a family-oriented twist: compassion with all beings,
thus also with women and children, the linking of family structures
with the Sangha (Buddhist
community), the sacralization of the everyday, male assistance with
the housework, and similar ideas which are drawn less from Buddhism
as from the moderate wing of the women’s
movement.
Like
the Italian, Tsultrim Allione, Gross sees it as a further task of
hers to seek out forgotten female figures in the history of Buddhism
and to reserve a significant place for them in the historiography.
She takes texts like the Therigatha, in which women
in the Hinayana period
already freely and very openly discussed their relationship to the
teachings, to be proof of a strong female presence within the early
phase of Buddhism. It is not just the lamas who are to blame for the
concealment of “enlightened women”, but also above all the western
researchers, who hardly bothered about the existence of female
adepts.
She
sees in Buddhist Tantrism a technique for overcoming the gender
polarity, in the form of an equality of rights of course. One can
say straight out that she has not understood the alchemic process
whereby the feminine energy is sucked up during the tantric ritual.
Like the male traditionalists she seizes upon the image of an
androgyny (not that of a gynandry), of which she erroneously
approves as a “more sexually neutral” state.
4.
Fourthly, there are those women who wish to reverse the complex of
sexual themes in Buddhism exclusively for their own benefit. The
American authors, Lynn Andrews and, above all, Miranda Shaw, can be
counted among these. In her book, Passionate Enlightenment — Women
in Tantric Buddhism, she speaks openly of a “gynocentric”
perspective on Buddhism (Shaw, 1994, p. 71). Shaw thus stands at the
forefront of western women who are attempting to transform the
tantric doctrine of power into a feminist intellectual edifice. With
the same intentions June Campbell subtitles her highly critical
book, Traveller in Space,
as being “In Search of Female Identity in Tibetan Buddhism”. She
too renders tantric practices, which she learned as the pupil of the
Kagyu master, Kalu Rinpoche, over many years, useful for the women’s
movement. Likewise one can detect in the German Tibetologist,
Adelheid Herrmann-Pfand’s study about the dakinis the wish to detect
female alternatives within the tantric scheme of
things.
But
of all of these Miranda Shaw has the most radical approach. We shall
therefore concentrate our attention upon her. Anybody who reads her
impassioned book must gain the impression that it concerns the
codification of a matriarchal religion to rival Vajrayana. All the feminine
images which are to be found in Tantrism are reinterpreted as power
symbols of the goddess. The result is a comprehensive world view
governed by a feminine arch-deity. We may recall that such a
matriarchal viewpoint need not differ essentially from that of an
androcentric Tantric. He too sees the substance of the world as
feminine and believes that the forces which guide the universe are
the energies of the goddess. Only in the final instance does the vajra master want to have
the last say.
For
this reason the “tantric” feminists can without causing the lamas
any concern reach into the treasure chest of Vajrayana and bring forth
the female deities stored there, from the “Mother of all Buddhas”,
the “Highest Wisdom”, the goddess “Tara”, to all conceivable kinds
of terror dakinis. These formerly Buddhist female figures — the
nurturing and protective mother, the helper in times of need, and
the granter of initiations — apparently stand at the center of a new
cult. Shaw can rightly draw attention to numerous cases in which
women were inducted into the secrets of Tantrism as the dakinis of
Maha Siddhas. It was they who equipped their
male pupils with magic abilities. Their powers, the legends teach
us, vastly exceeded those of the men. The tantra texts are also said
to have originally been written by women. The ranks of the 84
official Maha Siddhas
(great Tantrics) at any rate include four women, one of whom,
Lakshminkara, is considered to be the founder of a teaching
tradition of her own. In the more recent history of Vajrayana as well,
“enlightened women” crop up again and again: the yoginis Niguma,
Yeshe Tshogyal, Ma gcig, and others.
As
evidence for the hypothesized power of women in Buddhist Tantrism
the feminist side likes to parade the Candamaharosana Tantra with
those passages in it in which the man is completely subordinate to
the dictates of the woman. But the hymn to the goddess quoted in the
following is still no more a sequence in the tantric inversion
process, despite its depiction of the servitude of the male lover:
as usual, in this case too it is not the female deity but rather the
central male who is the victor in the guise of a guru. Here are the
words, which the goddess addresses to her
partner:
Place
my feet upon your shoulders and
Look
me up and down
Make
the fully awakened scepter (Phallus)
Enter
the opening in the center of the lotus
(Vagina)
Move
a hundred, thousand, hundred thousand
times
in
my three-petaled lotus
of
swollen flesh.
(Shaw,
1994, pp. 155-156)
Shaw
comments upon this erotic poem with the following revealing
sentences: “The passage reflects what can be called a 'female gaze'
or gynocentric perspective, for it describes embodiment and erotic
experience from a female point of view. ... [The man] is instructed
not to end the worship until the woman is fully satisfied. Only then
is he allowed to pause to revive himself with food and wine — after
serving the woman and letting her eat first, of course! Selfish
pleasure-seeking is out of the question for him, for he must serve
and please his goddess” (Shaw, 1994, p. 156). But the tantra is in
fact dedicated to a wrathful and extremely violent male deity and
differs from other texts solely in that the adept has set himself
the difficult exercise of being completely sexually subordinate to
the woman so as to then — in accordance with “law of inversion” — be
able to celebrate an even greater victory over the feminine and his
own passions. The woman’s role as dominatrix, which Shaw proudly
cites, must also be seen as an ephemeral moment along the masculine
way to enlightenment.
Yet
Miranda Shaw sees things differently. For her it was women who
invented and introduced Tantrism. They had always been the bearers
of secrets. Thus nothing in the tantras must be changed in the
coming “age of gynandry” other than that the texts once more lay the
foundations for the supremacy of the woman, so that she can take up
her former tantric post as teacher and grasp anew the helm which had
slipped from her hands. From now on the man has to obey once more:
“Tantric texts “, Shaw says, “specify what a man has to do to appeal
to, please and merit the attention of a woman, but there are no
corresponding requirements that a woman must fulfill” (Shaw, 1994,
p. 70). At another point we may read that, “the woman may also see
her male partner as a deity in certain ritual contexts, but his
divinity does not carry the same symbolic weight. She is not
required to respond to his divinity with any special deference,
respect, or supplication or to render him service in the same way
that he is required to serve her.” (Shaw, 1994, p. 47). In place of
the absolute god, the absolute goddess now strides across the cosmic
stage alone and seizes the long sought scepter of world
dominion.
Such
feminist rapprochements with Vajrayana Buddhism, however,
prove on closer inspection to walk right into a well-disguised
tantric trap. Precisely in the moment where the modern emancipated
woman believes she has freed herself from the chains of the
patriarchal system, she becomes without noticing even more deeply
entangled in it. This effect is caused by the tantric “law of
inversion”. As we know, within the logic of this law, the yogini
must be elevated to a goddess before her defeat and domination at
the hands of the guru, and the vajra master is under no
circumstances permitted to recoil if she comes at him in a furious
and aggressive form. In contrast, he is — if he takes the “law of
inversion” seriously — downright obliged to “set fire to” the
feminine, or better, to bring it to explosion. The hysterical terror
dakinis of the rituals are just one of the indicators of the
“inflaming” of female emotions during the initiations. In our
analysis of the feminine inner fire (the Candali) as a further
example, we showed how the “fire woman” ignited by the yogi stands
in radical confrontation to him who has set fire to her, since she
is supposed to burn up all of his bodily aggregates. On the astral
plane the tantra master likewise uses the feminine “apocalyptic fire”
(Kalagni) to reduces the
cosmos to smoking rubble. The aggressively feminine, which can find
its social expression in the form of radical gynocentric feminism,
is thus a part of the tantric project. Who better represents a
flaming, wrathful, dangerous goddess than a feminist, who furiously
turns upon the fundamental principles of the teaching (the Dharma)?
If
we consider the feminist craving for fire as an element of power in
the work of such a prominent figure as the American cultural
researcher Mary Daly, then the question arises whether such radical
women have not been outwitted by the Tibetan yogis into doing their
work for them. Daly even demands a “pyrogenetic ecstasy” for the new
women and calls out to her comrades: „Raging,
Racing, we take on the task of
Pyrognomic Naming of Virtues. Thus lightning, igniting the Fires of Impassioned Virtues, we
sear, scorch, singe, char, burn away the demonic tidy ties that hold
us down in the Domesticated State, releasing our own
Daimons/Muses/Tidal Forces of creation ... Volcanic powers are
unplugged, venting Earth’s Fury and ours, hurling forth Life-lust,
like lava, reviving the wasteland, the World” (Daly, 1984, p. 226).
Such
an attitude fits perfectly with the patriarchal strategy of a fiery
destruction of the world such as we find in the Buddhist Kalachakra Tantra and
likewise in the Christian Book of Revelations. In
their blind urge for power, the “pyromaniac” feminists also set
Mother Earth, whom they claim to rescue, on fire. In so doing they
carry out the apocalyptic task of the mythic Indian doomsday mare,
from whose nostrils the apocalyptic fire (Kalagni) streams and who
rises up out of the depths of the oceans. They are thus unwilling
chess pieces in the cosmic game of the ADI BUDDHA to
come.
Let
us recall Giordano Bruno’s statements about one of the fundamental
features of a manipulator: the easiest person to manipulate is the
one who believes he is acting in his own egomaniac interests, whilst
he is in fact the instrument of a magician and is fulfilling the
wishes of the latter. This is the “trick” (upaya) with which the yogi
dazzles the fearsome feminine, the “evil mother”, and the dark Kali. The more they gnash
their razor-sharp teeth, the more attractive they become for the
tantra master. According to the “law of inversion” they play out a
necessary dramaturgical scene on the tantric stage. As magic
directors, the patriarchal yogis are not only prepared for an attack
by radical feminism, but have also made it an element in their own
androcentric development. Perhaps this is the reason why Miranda
Shaw was allowed to conduct her studies in Dharamsala with the
explicit permission of the Dalai Lama.
There
are internal and external reasons for this unconscious but effective
self-destruction of radical feminism. Externally, we can see how in
contest with patriarchy they grasp the element of fire, which is
also seen as a synonym of the term “power” by the followers of the
great goddess. The element of water as the feminine counterpart to
masculine fire plays a completely subordinate role in Daly’s and
Shaw’s visions. Thus the force under which the earth already suffers
is multiplied by the fiery rage of these women. Avalokiteshvara and Kalachakra are — as we have
shown — fire deities, i.e., they feed upon fire even if or even
precisely because it is lit by “burning”
women.
The
internal reason for the feminist self-destruction lies in the
unthinking adoption of tantric physiology by the women. If such
women practice a form of yoga, along the lines Miranda Shaw
recommends, then they make use of exactly the same techniques as the
men, and presume that the same energy conditions apply in their
bodies. They thus begin — as we have already indicated — to destroy
their female bodies and to replace it with a masculine structure.
This is in complete accord with the Buddhist doctrine. Thanks to the
androcentric rituals her femininity is dissolved and she becomes in
energy terms a man.
Between
March 30 and April 2, 2000, representatives from groups three and
four convened in Cologne, Germany at a women-only conference.
Probably without giving the matter much thought, the Buddhist
journal Ursache & Wirkung
[Cause and Effect] ran its report on the meeting at which 1200
female Buddhists participated under the title of “Göttinnen
Dämmerung” [Twilight of the Goddesses] — which with its reference to
the götterdämmerung
signified the extinction of the goddesses (Ursache & Wirkung, No.
32, 2/2000).
Now
whether the yogis can actually and permanently maintain control over
the women through their “tricks” (upaya) is another question.
This is solely dependent upon their magical abilities, over which we
do not wish to pass judgement here. The texts do repeatedly warn of
the great danger of their experiments. There is the ever-present
possibility that the “daughters of Mara” see through the tricky
system and plunge the lamas into hell. Srinmo, the fettered earth
mother, may free herself one day and cruelly revenge herself upon
her tormentors, then she too has meanwhile become a central symbol
of the gynocentric movement. Her liberation is part of the feminist
agenda. „One
senses a certain pride”, we can read in the work of Janet Gyatso,
„in the description of the presence of the massive demoness. She
reminds Tibetans of fierce and savage roots in their past. She also
has much to say to the Tibetan female, notably more assertive than
some of her Asian neighbours, with an independent identity, and a
formidable one at that. So formidable that the masculine power
structure of Tibetan myth had to go to great lengths to keep the
female presence under control. […. Srinmo] may have been pinned
and rendered motionless, but she threatens to break loose at any
relaxing of vigilance or deterioration of civilization” (Janet
Gyatso, 1989, p. 50, 51).
The
Fourteenth Dalai Lama and the question of women's
rights
The
relationship of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama to the female sex appears
sincere, positive, and uninhibited. Leaving the tantric goddesses
aside, we must distinguish between three categories of women in his
proximity: 1. Buddhist nuns; 2.Tibetan women in exile; 3. Western
lay women.
Buddhist
nuns
At
the outset of our study we described the extremely misogynist
feelings Buddha Shakyamuni exhibited towards ordained female
Buddhists. In a completely different mood, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama
succeeded in becoming a figure of hope for all the women assembled
at the first international conference of Buddhist nuns in 1987 in
Bodh Gaya (India). It was the Kundun and not a nun (bhiksuni) who launched
proceedings with his principal speech. It surely had a deep
symbolic/tantric significance for him that he held his lecture
inside the local Kalachakra temple. There, in
the holiest of holies of the time god, the rest of the nuns’ events
also took place, beginning each time with a group meditation. It is
further noteworthy that it was not just representatives of Tibetan
Buddhism who turned to the god-king as the advocate of their rights
at the conference but also the nuns of other Buddhist schools. [8]
In
his speech the Kundun
welcomed the women’s initiative. First up, he spoke of the high
moral and emotional significance of the mother for human society. He
then implied that according to the basic principles of Mahayana Buddhism, no
distinction between the sexes may be made and that in Tantrayana the woman must be
accorded great respect. The only sentence in which the Kundun mentioned Tantrism in
his speech was the following: “It is for example considered an
infringement when tantra practitioners do not bow down before women
or step around them during their accustomed practice of the yoga [in
their meditations]" (Lekshe Tsomo, 1991, p. 34). The Buddhist women
present would hardly have known anything about real women (karma mudras) who
participate in the sexual magic practices, about the ceremonial
elevation of the woman by the lama so as to subsequently absorb her gynergy, or about the
“tantric female sacrifice”.
The
Dalai Lama continued his speech by stressing the existence of
several historical yoginis in the Indian and Tibetan traditions in
order to prove that Buddhism has always offered women an equal
chance. In conclusion he drew attention to the fact that the
negative relationship to the female sex which could be found in so
many Buddhist texts are solely socially conditioned.
When
the decisive demand was then aired, that women within the Buddhist
sects be initiated as line-holders so that they would as female
gurus be entitled to initiate male and female pupils, the Kundun indicated with regret
that such a bhiksuni
tradition does not exist in Tibet. However, as it can be found in
China (Hong Kong and Taiwan), it would make sense to translate the
rules of those orders and to distribute them among the Tibetan nuns.
In answer to the question — “Would they [then] be officially
recognized as bhiksunis
[female teachers]?” — he replied evasively — “Primarily, religious
practice depends upon one’s own initiative. It is a personal matter.
Now whether the full ordination were officially recognized or not, a
kind of social recognition would at any rate be present in the
community, which is extremely important” (Lekshe Tsoma, 1991, p.
246). But he himself could not found such a tradition, since he saw
himself bound to the traditional principles of his orders (the Mulasarvastivada school)
which forbade this, but he would do his best and support a meeting
of various schools in order to discuss the bhiksuni question. Ten years
later, in Taiwan, where the “Chinese system” is widespread, there
had indeed been no concrete advances but the Kundun once again had the
most progressive statement ready: “I hope”, he said to his
listeners, “that all sects will discuss it [the topic] and reach
consensus to thoroughly pass down this tradition. For men and women
are equal and can both accept Buddha's teachings on an equal basis.”
(Tibetan Review, May
1997, p. 13).
Big
words — then the reformation of the repressive tradition of nuns
dictated to by men is fiercely contested within Lamaism. But even if
in future the bhiksunis
are permitted to conduct rituals and are recognized as teachers in
line with the Chinese model, this in no way affects the tantric
rites, which do not even exist within the Chinese system and which
downright celebrate the discrimination against women as a cultic
mystery.
Tibetan
women in exile
As
far as their social and political position is concerned, much has
certainly changed for the Tibetan women in exile in the last 35
years. For example, they now have the right to vote and to stand as
a candidate. Nonetheless, complaints about traditional mechanisms of
suppression in the families are a major topic, which thanks to the
support of western campaigners for women’s rights do not seldom
reach a wider public. Nonetheless, here too the Kundun plays the reformer
and we earnestly believe that he is completely serious about this,
then he has had for many years been able to experience the
dedication, skillfulness, and courage of many women acting for his
concerns. All Tibetan women in exile are encouraged by the Kundun to participate in the
business of state. The Tibetan Women's Association, extremely active
in pursuing societal interests, was also founded with his
support.
Despite
these outwardly favorable conditions, progress towards emancipation
has been very slow. For example, the three permanent seats reserved
for women in the parliament in exile could not be filled for a long
period, simply because there were no candidates. (There are 130,000
Tibetans living in exile.) This has improved somewhat in the
meantime. In 1990 the Kundun induced his sister,
Jetsun Pema, to be the first woman to take up an important office in
government. In 1996 eight women were elected to the public
assembly.
Sometimes,
under the influence of the western feminism, the question of women’s
rights flares up fiercely within the exile Tibetan community. But
such eruptions can again and again be successfully cut off and
brought to nothing through two arguments:
1.
The
question of women’s rights is of secondary nature and disrupts the
national front against the Chinese which must be maintained at all
costs. Hence, the question of women’s rights is a topic which will
only become current once Tibet has been freed from the Chinese
yoke.
2.
The
chief duty of the women in exile is to guarantee the survival of the
Tibetan race (which is threatened by extinction) through the
production of children.
The
Kundun’s encounters with western
feminism
In
the West the Dalai Lama is constantly confronted with emancipation
topics, particularly since no few female Buddhists originally hailed
from the feminist camp or later — the wave has just begun — migrated
to it. As in every area of modern life, here too the god-king
presents an image of the open-minded man of the world, liberal and
in recent times even verbally revolutionary. In 1993, as critical
voices accusing several lamas of uninhibited excessive and degrading
sexual behavior grew louder, he took things seriously and promised
that all cases would be properly investigated. In the same year, a
group of two dozen western teachers under the leadership of Jack
Kornfield met and spoke with His Holiness about the meanwhile
increasingly precarious topic of “sexual abuse by Tibetan gurus”.
The Kundun told the
Americans to “always let the people know when things go wrong. Get
it in the newspapers themselves if needs be” (Lattin, Newsgroup
17).
In
1983, at a congress in Alpach, Austria, His Holiness came under
strong feminist fire and was attacked by the women present. One of
the participants completely overtaxed him with the statement that,
“I am very surprised that there is no woman on the stage today, and
I would have been very glad to see at least one woman sitting up
there, and I have the feeling that the reason why there are no
female Dalai Lamas is simply that they are not offered enough room”
(Kakuska, 1984, p. 61). Another participant at the same meeting
abused him for the same reasons as “Dalai Lama, His Phoniness!” (Kakuska,
1984, p. 60).
The
Kundun learned quickly
from such confrontations, of which there were certainly a few in the
early eighties. In an interview in 1996, for example, he described
with a grin the goddess Tara as the “first feminist
of Buddhism” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1996b, p. 76). In answer to the
question as to why Shakyamuni was so disdainful of women, he
replied: „2500
years ago when Buddha lived in India he gave preference to men. Had
he lived today in Europe as a blonde male he would have perhaps
given his preference to women” (Tibetan Review, March 1988,
p. 17).
His Holiness now even goes so far as to believe it possible that a
future Dalai Lama could be incarnated in the form of a woman. “In
theory there is nothing against it” (Tricycle, 1995, V (1), p.
39; see also Dalai Lama XIV, 1996b, p. 99). In 1997 he even
enigmatically prophesied that he would soon appear in a female form:
“The next Dalai Lama could also be a girl” (Tagesanzeiger, June 27,
1995).
According
to our analysis of Tantrism, we must regard such charming flattery
of the female sex as at the very least a non-committal, albeit
extremely lucrative embellishment. But they are more likely to be a
deliberately employed manipulation, so as to draw attention away
from the monstrosities of the tantric ritual system. Perhaps they
are themselves a method (upaya) with which to
appropriate the “gynergy”
of the women so charmed. After all, something like that need not
only take place through the sexual act . There are descriptions in
the lower tantras of how the yogi can obtain the feminine “elixir”
even through a smile, an erotic look or a tender touch
alone.
It
has struck many who have attended a teaching by the Dalai Lama that
he keeps a constant and charming eye contact with women from the
audience, and is in fact discussed in the internet: “Now it is quite
possible”, Richard P. Hayes writes there regarding the “flirts” of
the Kundun, “that he was
making a fully conscious effort to make eye-contact with women to
build up their self-esteem and sense of self-worth out of a
compassionate response to the ego crushing situations that women
usually face in the world. It is equally possible that he was
unconsciously seeking out women's faces because he finds them
attractive. And it could well be the he finds women attractive
because they trigger his Anima complex in some way” (Hayes,
Newsgroup 11). Hayes is right in his final sentence when he equates
the female anima with the
tantric maha mudra (the
“inner woman”). With his flirts the Kundun enchants the women
and at the same time drinks their “gynergy”.
The
role of women in the sacred center of Tibetan Buddhism can only
change if there were to be a fundamental rejection of the tantric
mysteries, but to date we have not found the slightest indication
that the Kundun wants to
terminate in any manner his androcentric tradition which at heart
consists in the sacrifice of the feminine.
Nevertheless,
he amazingly succeeds in awakening the impression — even among
critical feminists — that he is essentially a reformer, willing and
open to modern emancipatory influences. It seems the promised
changes have only not come about because, as the victim of a
traditional environment, his hands are tied (Gross, 1993, p. 35).
This pious wishful notion proves nothing more than the fascination
that the great “manipulator of erotic love” from the “roof of the
world” exercise over his female public. His charming magic in the
meantime enables him to enthuse and activate a whole army of women
for his Tibetan politics in the most varied nations of the
world.
The
“Ganachakra” of Hollywood
Relaxed
and carefree, with a certain spiritual sex appeal, the Kundun enjoys all his
encounters with western women. As the world press confirms, the
“modest monk” from Dharamsala counts as one of the greatest charmers
among the current crop of politicians and religious leaders.
„Any
woman”, Hicks and Chogyam write in their biography of the Dalai
Lama, „who has had been fortunate enough ton be granted an audience
will tell you what a charming host he is” (Hicks and Chogyam, 1990,
p. 66). But
Alexandra David-Neel had a completely different opinion of his
previous incarnation, the Thirteenth Dalai Lama, whom she described
as stiff, obsessed by power, and heartless.
Just
as a major film star is surrounded by enthusiastic fans, so too the
Dalai Lama — at a higher level — attracts a crowd of enthusiastic
male and female film stars. The proportion of world-famous actresses
and singers in his “retinue” has notably increased in the meantime,
and among them are to be found many of the most well-known faces:
Sharon Stone, Anja Kruse, Uma Thurman, Christine Kaufmann, Sophie
Marceau, Tina Turner, Doris Dörrie, Koo Stark, Goldie Hawn, Meg
Ryan, Shirley MacLaine and a number of others count among them.
“Even Madonna has ‘come out’ spiritually”, the Spiegel reflects, “The
'Material Girl' soon possibly a Tibet sister?” (Spiegel, 16/1998, p. 109).
“In Hollywood the leader of Tibet is currently revered like a god”,
writes Playboy (Playboy [German edition],
March 1998, p. 44).
But
what motivates these international celebrities to join the Kundun and his tantric
Buddhist teachings with such enthusiasm? We shall speak later about
the male stars who are followers in particular, and thus in this
section caste a glance at the famous women who have adopted the
Buddhist faith in recent years. Bunte, a high-circulation
German magazine, has attempted to identify the female stars’ motives
for their change of faith. Alongside the usual descriptions of
peace, calm, and quiet, we can also read the
following:
"More
and more women are turning to Buddhism, both in Europe and America.
And when you look at them, you might think: hello, looks like she’s
had a facelift? — No, it’s the teaching of Buddha which is making
her desirable and attractive. Buddhism ... gives them peace — and
peace is the basis of the harmony from which alone erotic love can
grow. ... In the great religions of the world people, in particular
women, are constantly under siege: from commandments, bans, taboos,
guilt complexes and mystic visions of purgatory, Judgment Day, and
hell. But Buddhism does not threaten, does not punish, does not
damn. ... And then — the “boss”: Buddha is no invisible, punitive,
wrathful or even loving god. He is a visible person ... a person,
who has found his way and is therefore constantly smiling in
likenesses of him. But you don’t have to pray to him — you’re
supposed to follow him. For women, Buddha is not the omnipotent
patriarch in heaven, but rather a living guru [!]. This makes him
especially appealing to women. In Buddhism women do not have to deny
their sensuality”. Goldie Hawn, Hollywood sex comedian, rapturously
claims, “I meditate and I feel sexy, I am sexy”. Anja Kruse, a
German film star, enthuses that through Buddhism she has “gained
more positive energy and erotic radiance”. The singer Laurie
Andersen believes “ Buddhism is so antiauthoritarian that it is
attractive”. The actress Shirley MacLaine knows that “You learn that
you are also god” (all quotations are from Bunte, no. 46, November 6,
1997, pp. 20ff.).
The
manipulation of the feminine sense of the erotic can hardly be
better demonstrated than through such articles. Here, the whole
misogynist history of Buddhism is transformed into its precise
opposite with a few snappy words. This is only one of the
deceptions, however. The other is the fact that according to such
statements Buddhism holds the dolce vita of the “rich and
the beautiful” to be an elevated “spiritual” goal. “For Christians
and Moslems”, it says further in Bunte, “paradise beckons
from the beyond. Celebrities already have it on earth — completely
in accord with the beliefs of Buddhism” (Bunte, no. 46, November 6,
1997, p. 22). The historical Buddha’s rejection of the comforts of
life — an important dogma for his salvational way — is turned into
its blatant opposite here: Buddhism, the stars would like us to
believe, means luxury and complete
independence.
This
is deliberate and very successful manipulation. The western press is
certainly not responsible for this alone. In that the Tibetan lamas
further intensify the egocentricity and the secret wishes of the
celebrity women and guarantee their fulfillment through Buddhism,
they bring them under their control with a similar method (upaya = trick) to that with
which they elevate the karma
mudras (real women) to goddesses in their tantric rituals. Who
as woman would not reach out for the offers which are promised them,
according to Bunte, by
the monks in orange robes: “Buddhism is eternal life. If one is
lucky, eternal youth as well” (Bunte, no. 46, November 6,
1997, p. 22).
In
light of the hells, the taboos, the day of judgement, the
homelessness, the apocalyptic battle, the absolute obedience, the
unconditional worship of the gurus, the patriarchal authority, the
disdain for women and for life and much more of the like, with which
the “true” doctrine is traditionally weighed down, the temptations
offered by Bunte magazine
are purely illusory, especially when we consider the harsh
discipline and the strictness which must be borne in the Buddhist
lamaseries. Perhaps one of the most famous Buddha legends has now
been reversed: A future Buddha who wishes to attain enlightenment
will no longer be tempted by the “daughters of Mara” (the daughters of the
devil), rather, the “daughters of Mara” (the female stars of
Hollywood) who are prepared to step out along the path to
enlightenment are tempted by Buddha (the Dalai Lama). It only
remains to hope that they like the historical Shakyamuni succeed in
seeing through the sweet and charming “devil ghost” of the “sincere”
and smiling Kundun.
If
we adopt a tantric viewpoint then we may not rule out that all these
famous women have in a most sublime manner been made a part of the
worldwide Kalachakra
project by the lamas. They form — if we may exaggerate slightly
— a kind of symbolic ganachakra which is supposed
to support the apotheosis of the Dalai Lamas (Avalokiteshvara) into the
ADI BUDDHA. With the example of the pop singer Patty Smith we would
like to demonstrate how finely and “cleverly” feminine energies can
be steered by the Kundun
in the meantime.
Patty
Smith and the Dalai Lama
Already
anticonventional to the point of radicalism in her youth, a great
fan of the poètes maudits
— Arthur Rimbaud, Frederico Garcia Lorca, Jean Genet, William S.
Burroughs and others, Patty Smith grew up in the Factory of Andy Warhol,
where she learned her “antiauthoritarian” attitude to life.
Anarchist and libertarian, she built a career upon a repertoire
which opposed every social norm. Outside of society is where I
want to be is the name of one of her most famous pieces. In the
eighties her spouse and several of her closest friends died
suddenly, which affected her deeply. In order to overcome her pain
she turned to Tibetan Buddhism. She remembered having wept and
prayed as a twelve-year-old girl at the fate of the Dalai Lama. But
she first met the god-king in September 1995 in Berlin and was
spellbound: “"I learned quite a bit from that man”, she later said,
“he had to be constantly putting things into balance” (Shambhala Sun, July
1996).
The
antiauthoritarian Patty Smith had met her master, in the face of the
smiling Kundun she would
hardly have thought that she had before her a pontiff whose history,
ideology and visions opposed all of her libertarian and anarchic
freedoms as their exact opposite. No — like a compliant mudra this social rebel
bowed to the omnipotent tantra master, without asking where he came
from, who he is, or where he is headed. In a poem she wrote about
His Holiness she shows how unconditionally she as a woman submits to
the divine guru and coming ADI BUDDHA. It opens with the
lines
May
I be nothing but the peeling of a lotus papering the
distance for You underfoot
In
this poem the entire sexual magic dramaturgy of Tantrism is played
out in an extremely fine way. “Peeling” can suggest “peeling off” in
the sense of “stripping naked so as to make love”. The “lotus” is a
well-known symbol for the “vagina”. Underfoot also connotes
being “under (his) control”. Patty Smith, the social rebel and poet
of freedom has become an obedient dakini of the Tibetan
god-king.
All
these beautiful singers and actresses have forgotten or never even
known about the heart of their nailed down sister, Srinmo, which still bleeds
beneath the Jokhang (the sacred center of Tibetan Buddhism). The
lamentations of the Tibetan earth mother, waiting to be rescued and
freed from the daggers which nail her down, do not reach the ears of
the unknowing film stars. Also forgotten are all the anonymous girls
who over the course of centuries have had to surrender their
feminine energies to the tantric clergy, so that the latter could
construct its powerful Buddhocracy. Palden Lhamo, who still
rides through a sea of boiling blood, driven by the terrible trauma
of having murdered her son, is forgotten. The apocalyptic future
which threatens us all if we follow the way to Shambhala is forgotten.
These women — as many say of them — believe they have escaped the
Christian churches and the “white pontiff” but have run directly
into the net (in Sanskrit: tantra) of the “yellow
pontiff”.
Footnotes:
[1]
A terrible sister of the Palden Lhamo is the goddess
Ekajati, the “Protector
of the Mantra”.
One-eyed and with only one tooth she dances on bodies covered
in scratches, swinging a human corpse in one hand, and placing a
human heart in her mouth with the other. As adornment she wears a
chain of skulls. She is
a kind of war goddess and is thus also worshipped under the name of
“Magic Weapon Army”.
[2]
But Tara like all Tibetan
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas also has her terrible side. If this breaks out, she is
known as the red Kurukulla, who dances upon
corpses and holds aloft various weapons. A rosary of human bones
hangs around her neck, a tiger skin covers her hips. In this form
she is often surrounded by several wild dakinis. She is invoked in her cruel
form to among other things destroy political
opponents.
I
prostrate to She crowned by a crescent
moon
Her
head ornament dazzlingly bright
From
the hair-knot Buddha Amitabha
Constantly
beams forth streams of light.
(Dalai
Lama I, 1985, p. 130)
we
can read in a poem to the wrathful Tara by the first Dalai
Lama. Above all it is
the Sakyapa sect who worships her in this wrathful form. She is considered to be the
specific protective patroness of this order. It is most revealing
that the “flesh-eating and horny” rock demoness, Srinmo, who seduced Avalokiteshvara and with him
parented the Tibetan people, is also supposed to be an embodiment of
Tara.
[3]
To see Mary the Mother of
God as an emanation of Tara is not historically
justified; rather, the opposite would be more likely the case since
the Tara cult is more recent than the cult of Mary. It was first introduced to
Tibet in the eleventh century C.E. by the scholar
Atisha.
[4]
How closely enmeshed Yeshe Tshogyal was with the tantric dakini cult
is revealed by the scenario of her “being called to her maker”. They
are no angels to bring her to paradise following her difficult life,
rather “huge flocks of flesh-eating dakinis, a total of twelve
different types, who each consume a part of her human body: breath
takers, flesh eaters, blood drinkers, bone biters, and so forth —
followed by beasts of prey” (Herrmann-Pfand, 1992, pp. 460, 461).
Then spirits and demons appear. The queen of the night sings a song
in honor of the yogini’s merits. This goes on for some nine days
until she disappears as a blue light into a rainbow on the tenth day
and leaves her ghostly flock to its sorrow.
[5]
The names and life stories of a number of other yoginis from Tibetan
history are known, and these biographies can be read in a book by
the Italian, Tsultrim Allione.
All these “practicing” women form so much of an exception in
the total culture of Tibet that they primarily act to confirm the
misogynist rule. The
current intensive engagement with them is solely due to western
feminism which is eagerly endeavoring to “win back” the tantric
goddesses. Hence we
refrain from presenting the Tibetan yoginis individually. In a detailed analysis of
their lives we would at any rate have to return again and again to
the tantric exploitation mechanisms which we described in the first
part of our analysis.
[6]
Hua-yen Buddhism, which
propagates a Buddhocratic/totalitarian state structure, today enjoys
special favor among American academics. The two religious studies
scholars, Michael von Brück and Whalen Lai, see it as a none too
fruitful yet exotic playing around, and in fact recommend turning
instead to the “totalistic paradigm” of the Dalai Lama, which is
said to be the living model of a Buddhocratic idea. This
recommendation is meant in a thoroughly positive manner: “Yet
Hua-yen is n longer a living tradition. ... This does not mean that
a totalistic paradigm could
not be repeated,” — and now one would think that the two western
authors were about to pronounce a warning. But no, the opposite is
the case — “but it seems more sensible to seek this in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition,
then the Tibetan Buddhists have a living memory of a real
'Buddhocracy' and a living Dalai Lama who leads the people as
religious and political
leadership figure” (Brück and Lai, 1997, p.
631).
[7]
In connection with the relationship between the retention of semen
and tantric power obsessions which we have dealt with at length in
our book, it is worth mentioning that the weak willed Guangxu
suffered from constant ejaculations. Every stress, even loud noises,
made him ejaculate.
[8]
In Bodh Gaya the nuns who attended founded the so-called Sakyadhita movement
("Daughters of Buddha”). This has in the meantime led to an
international organization representing women from over 26
countries.
Next
Chapter:
3. THE FOUNDATIONS
OF THE TIBETAN BUDDHOCRACY
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