The Shadow of the Dalai Lama –
Part II – 1. The Dalai Lama: Incarnation of the Tibetan Gods
© Victor & Victoria
Trimondi
1.
THE DALAI LAMA:
INCARNATION OF THE TIBETAN
GODS
The two principal divine beings
who act through the person of the Dalai Lama are the Bodhisattva, Avalokiteshvara (in Tibetan,
Chenrezi), and the
meditation Buddha, Amitabha. Spiritually, Amitabha is on a higher
level (as a Buddha). He does not “lower” himself directly into the
“god-king” (the Dalai Lama), but appears first in the form of Avalokiteshvara. Only Chenrezi then takes on the
bodily form of the Dalai Lama.
Buddha Amitabha: The sun and
light deity
The meditation Buddha, Amitabha, rules –according
to a point of doctrine of Mahayana Buddhism — as
regent of the current age. Even the historical Buddha, Shakyamuni,
was considered his earthly emanation. The sun and light are assigned
to him and summer is his season. The peacock, a classic animal of
the sun, adorns his throne. The red color of Amitabha’s body also signals
his solar character. Likewise, his mantra, “HRIH”, is referred to as
a “sun symbol”: “It possesses not just the warmth of the sun, that
is, the emotional principle of kindness and of pity — but also the brilliance, the
quality of clarification, the discovery, the unmediated perception”
(Govinda, 1984, p. 277). Amitabha is the Buddhist god
of light par excellence
and his followers thus pray to him as the “shining lord “. As the
“unbounded light” he shines through the whole universe. His
luminance is described in ancient texts as “a hundred thousand times
greater than the radiance of gold” (Joseph Campbell, 1973, p.
315).
The opulent sun symbolism which
is so closely linked to the figure of this Buddha has led several
western oriented scholars to describe Buddhism in total as a solar
cult. For example, the tantra researcher, Shashibhusan Dasgupta,
even sees an identity between the historical Buddha (the incarnation
of Amitabha), the Dharma (the Buddhist
doctrine) and the Indian solar deity (Surya) (Dasgupta, 1946, p.
337). The Dharma (the
teachings) are also often referred to as the “sun” in traditional
Buddhist writings, since the words of Buddha “radiate like
sunshine”. Sometimes even the principle of “emptiness” is identified
with the sun: “Dharma is
Shunya [emptiness] and Shunya has the form of a
zero”, writes Dasgupta, “Therefore Dharma is of the shape of a zero;
and as the sun is also of the shape of a zero, Dharma is identified
with the sun. Moreover, Dharma moves in the void, and void is the
sky, and the sun moves in the sky and hence the sun is Dharma”
(Dasgupta, 1946, p. 337).
Amitabha and the historical Buddha are not just
associated with the sun, but also with the element of “fire”. “As
for the Fiery-Energy,” Ananda Coomaraswamy tells us, “ this is the
element of fire present as an unseen energy in all existences, but
preeminently manifested by Arhats [holy men] or the
Buddha” (Coomaraswamy, 1979, p. 10).
There are a number of depictions
of Gautama as a “pillar of fire” from as early as the third century
B.C.E. (Coomaraswamy, 1979, p. 210). The column of fire is both a
symbol for the axis of the world and for the human spine up which
the Kundalini ascends. It
further has a clear phallic character. A Nepalese text refers to the
ADI BUDDHA as a “linga-shaped [phallic] flame” which rises from a
lotus (Hazra, 1986, p. 30). This close relation of the Buddha figure
to fire has induced such discriminating authors as the Indian
religious studies scholar, Ananda Coomaraswamy, to see in Shakyamuni
an incarnation of Agni,
the Indian god of fire (Coomaraswamy, 1979, p.
65).
Yet the power of fire is not only
positively valued in Indian mythology. In the hot subcontinent,
destructive forces are also evoked by sun and flame. Notorious
demons, not just gods, laid claim to be descended from Surya, the sun god. Hence,
the Indologist, Heinrich Zimmer, recounted several traditional
stories in which demonic yogis reached for divine power through the
generation of inner heat. He calls this fiery yogic force tapas, which means roughly
“inner blaze”.
Throne and Foot of the Buddha with sun
symbols and swastikas
In contrast, Lama Govinda
completely represses the destructive force of the tapas and simply declares
them to be the main principle of Buddhist mysticism: “It is the
all-consuming, flaming power, the inner blaze which overwhelms
everything, which has filled the religious life of the people in its
thrall since the awakening of Indian thought: the power of the Tapas
... Here, Tapas is the creative principle, which functions in both
the material and the spiritual [domains] ... It is 'enthusiasm', in
its most lowly form a straw fire fed by blind emotion, in its
highest, the flame of inspiration nourished by unmediated
perception. Both have the nature of fire” (Govinda, 1991, p. 188).
With this citation Govinda leaves us with no doubt that Tantric
Buddhism represents a universal fire cult. [1]
Already in Vedic times fire was
considered to be the cause of life. The ancient Indians saw a fire
ritual in the sexual act between man and woman and compared it with
the rubbing together of two pieces of wood through which a flame can
be kindled. The spheres assigned to the “fire Buddha”, Amitabha, are thus also
those of erotic passion and sexuality. Of the sexual magic fluids,
the male seed is associated with him. This makes him the predestined
father of Tantric Buddhism. In his hand the “fire god” holds a
lotus, by which his affinity to the symbolic world of the feminine
is indicated. “The Lotus lineeage is that of Amitabha”, the Fourteenth
Dalai Lama writes in a commentary upon the Kalachakra Tantra,
“practitioners of which especially should keep the pledge of
restraining from, or abandoning, the bliss of emission, even though
making use of a consort” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1985, p.
229).
Amitabha rules as the sovereign of the western
paradise, Sukhavati.
After their deaths, upright Buddhists are reborn here from out of a
lotus flower. They all move through this hereafter in a golden body.
Women, however, are unwelcome. If they have earned great merit
during their earthly existence, then they are granted the right to
change their sex and they are permitted to enter Amitabha’s land after they
have been incarnated as men. [2]
Apart from this, the light Buddha
is worshipped as the “lord of language”. Analytic thought and
distinctions also belong to his area of responsibility. This induced
Lama Govinda to make him the patron of the modern (and western)
sciences. He is “differentiating”, “researching” and “investigative”
(Govinda, 1984, p.123).
Let us summarize then: Buddha Amitabha possesses the
character traits of a light, fire, and sun deity. His cardinal point
is the West. As founding father of the Lotus family he stands in a
deep symbolic connection to sexuality and through this to
Tantrism.
In the light of his qualities as
“fire god”, “lord of the West”, and “patron of science”, Amitabha could indeed be
regarded as the regent of our modern age, then the last two hundred
years of western civilization and technological development have
been predominantly dominated by the element of fire: electricity,
light, explosions, and the modern art of war count as part of this
just as much as the greenhouse effect and worldwide desertification.
The great inventions — the steam engine, dynamite, the automobile,
the airplane, rockets, and finally the atomic bomb — are also the
handiwork of “fire”. The fiery element rules the world as never
before in history.
Committed Buddhists — headed by
the Dalai Lama — describe our western civilization as decadent and
unbalanced, because it is no longer fair to spiritual values. But,
one could say, an elementary imbalance likewise determines the myth
of the “world dominion” of Amitabha, who as the Buddha
of a single (!) element ("fire”) controls our epoch. In terms of
cultural history, fire and the sun can be considered the classic
patriarchal symbols, whilst the moon and water represent the
feminine. Hence, Amitabha
is also a symbol for our global androcentric culture, which,
however, can only develop its complete purity when totally freed of
women in the paradise of Sukhavati.
The various masks of
Avalokiteshvara
As an emanation from the right
eye of his spiritual father, Amitabha, emerged his son,
Avalokiteshvara, with the
Tibetan name of Chenrezi.
He is the “Bodhisattva” of our age, the “chief deity” of Tibet and
the divine energy which functions directly behind the person of the
Dalai Lama. There is no figure in the Buddhist pantheon who enjoys
greater respect than he does. His name means “he who looks down
kindly”. He is identified by his chief characteristic of mercy and
compassion for all living creatures. This close linkage to emotional
life has won him the deep reverence of the
masses.
Avalokiteshvara can appear in countless forms, 108 of which
are iconographically fixed. In an official prayer, he is described
as a puer aeternus (an
eternal boy):
Generated from ten million
rays,
his body is completely
white.
His head is
adorned
and his locks reach down to
his breast. [...]
His kindly, smiling
features
are those of a sixteen year
old.
(Lange, n.d., p.
172)
His best known and most original
appearance shows him with eleven heads and a thousand arms. This
figure arose — the myth would have it — after the Bodhisattva’s head
split apart into countless fragments because he could no longer bear
the misery of this world and the stupidity of the living creatures.
Thereupon his “father”, Amitabha, took the remnants
with him to the paradise of Sukhavati and formed ten new
heads from the fragments, adding his own as the tip of the pyramid.
This self-destruction out of compassion for humanity and the
Bodhisattva’s subsequent resurrection makes it tempting to compare
this Bodhisattva’s tale of suffering with the Passion of Christ.
In some Mahayana Buddhist texts the
figure of Avalokiteshvara
is exaggerated so that he becomes an arch-god, who absorbs within
himself all the other gods, even the Highest Buddha (ADI BUDDHA). He
also already appears in India (as later in Tibet in the form of the
Dalai Lama) as Chakravartin, i.e., as a
“king of all kings”, as a “ruler of the world” (Mallmann, 1948, p.
104).
His believers prostrate
themselves before him as the “shining lord”. In one interesting
picture from the collection of Prince Uchtomskij he is depicted
within a circle of flame and with the disc of the sun. His epithet
is “one whose body is the sun” (Gockel, 1992, p. 21). He sits upon a
Lion Throne, or rides upon the back of a lion, or wears the fur of a
lion. Thus, all the solar symbols of Amitabha and the historical
Buddha are also associated with him.
Avalokiteshvara in the form of the Death God
Yama
In the face of this splendor of
light it is all too easy to forget that Avalokiteshvara also has his
shady side. Every Buddha and every Bodhisattva — tantric doctrine
says — can appear in a peaceful and a terrible form. This is also
true for the Bodhisattva of supreme compassion. Among his eleven
heads can be found the terrifying head of Yama, the god of the dead.
He and Avalokiteshvara
form a unit. Hence, as the “king of all demons” (one of Yama’s epithets), the “light
god” also reigns over the various Buddhist
hells.
Yama is depicted on Tibetan thangkas as a horned
demon with a crown of human skulls and an aroused penis. Usually he
is dancing wildly upon a bull beneath the weight of which a woman,
with whom the animal is copulating, is being crushed. Fokke Sierksma
and others see in this scene an attack on a pre-Buddhist (possibly
matriarchal) fertility rite (Sierksma, 1966, p.
215).
As god of the dead (Yama) and snarling monster
Avalokiteshvara also
holds the “wheel of life” in his claws, which is in truth a “death
wheel” (a sign of rebirth) in Buddhism. Among the twelve fundamental
evils etched into the rim of the wheel which make an earthly/human
existence appear worthless can be found “sexual love”, “pregnancy”
and “birth”.
In the
world of appearances Yama
represents suffering and mortality, birth and death. So much cruelty
and morbidity is associated with this figure in the tantric
imagination that he all but has to be seen as the shadowy brother of
the Bodhisattva of mercy and love. Yet both Buddha beings prove
themselves to be a paradoxical unit. It is self-evident according to
the doctrines of Tantrism that the characteristics of Yama can also combine
themselves with the person of the Dalai Lama (the highest
incarnation of Avalokiteshvara). This has
seldom been taken into consideration when meeting with the god-king
from Tibet who “looks down peacefully”.
A further striking feature of the
iconography of Avalokiteshvara are the
feminine traits which many of his portraits display. He seems, as an
enigmatic being between virgin and boy with soft features and
rounded breasts, to unite both sexes within himself. As it says in a
poem addressed to a painter:
Draw an
Avalokiteshvara,
Like a conch, a jasmine and
a moon,
Hero sitting on a white
lotus seat [...]
His face is wonderfully
smiling.
(Hopkins, 1987, p.
160)
Avalokiteshvara as
Androgyne
Shells, jasmine, and the moon are
feminine metaphors. The Bodhisattva’s epithet, Padmapani (lotus bearer),
identifies him (just like Amitabha) as a member of the
Lotus family and equally places him in direct connection with
feminine symbolism. All over Asia the lotus is associated with the
vagina. But since Chenrezi generally appears
as a masculine figure with feminine traits, we must refer to him as
an androgyne, a god who has absorbed the gynergy of the goddess
within himself. For Robert A. Paul, he therefore assumes a
“father-mother role” in Tibetan society (Paul, 1982, p. 140). The
two colors in which he is graphically depicted are red and white.
These correspond symbolically to the red and the white seed which
are mixed with one another in the body of the tantra
master.
His androgyny is most clearly
recognizable in the famous mantra with which Padmapani (Avalokiteshvara) is called
upon and which millions of Buddhists daily mumble to themselves: OM
MANI PADME HUM. There is an extensive literature concerned with the
interpretation of this utterance, from which the sexual magical ones
sound the most convincing. In translation, the mantra says, “Om,
jewel in the lotus, hum”. The jewel should be assigned to the
masculine force and the phallus, whilst the lotus blossom is a
symbol of feminine energy. The “jewel in the lotus blossom” thus
corresponds to the tantric union, and, since this takes place within
a male person, the principle of androgyny. The syllable OM addresses
the macrocosm. HUM means “I am” and signifies the microcosm. The
gist of the formula is thus: “In the union of the masculine and
feminine principles I am the universe”. Anyone who knows the magic
of the famous mantra “possesses control over the world” (Mallmann,
1948, p. 101). Trijang Rinpoche (1901-1981), an important teacher of
the current Dalai Lama, also offers a clear and unambiguous
translation “... mani
indicates the vajra jewel of the father, padma the lotus of the
mudra, and the letter hum
[indicates] that by joining these two together, at the time of the
basis, a child is born and at the time of the [tantric] path, the
deities emanate” (quoted by Lopez, 1998, p.
134).
The most famous living
incarnation of Avalokiteshvara is the Dalai
Lama. All the energies of the Bodhisattva are concentrated in him,
his androgyny as well as his solar and fiery qualities, his mildness
as well as his wrath as Yama,
the god of the dead. Within the Tibetan doctrine of incarnation
the Dalai Lama as a person is only the human/bodily shell in which
Chenrezi (Avalokiteshvara) is
manifest. It is — from a tantric point of view — the visions and
motives, strategies and tactics of the “mild downward-looking
Bodhisattva”, which determine the politics of His Holiness and
thereby the fate of Tibet.
The Fourteenth Dalai Lama as
the supreme Kalachakra master
Since the Tibetan god-king acts
as the supreme master of the Kalachakra Tantra, the
androgynous time god (Kalachakra and Vishvamata in one person) is
likewise incarnated within him. The goal of Time Tantra is the
“alchemic” production of the ADI BUDDHA. We have described in detail
the genesis, “art of functioning”, and the extent of the powers of
the Highest Buddha in the first part of our study, with special
attention to his position as Chakravartin, as “world
ruler”. This global power role is not currently assumed by the Dalai
Lama. In contrast — the western public sometimes refers to him as
the “most powerless politician on the planet”. Thus, in precisely
locating his position along the evolutionary path of the Kalachakra Tantra, we must
observe that the Kundun
has not yet reached the spiritual/real level of an ADI BUDDHA, but
still finds himself on the way to becoming a world ruler (Chakravartin).
All the “divine” and “demonic”
characteristics of Avalokiteshvara (and also
ultimately of Amitabha)
mentioned above are combined by the Tibetan “god-king” as the
highest vajra master with
the Kalachakra Tantra.
According to what is known as the Rwa tradition, the
Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara even stands
at the beginning of the Buddhist doctrine of time as the “root guru”
(Newman, 1985, p. 71). Now, what do we know about the performance of
the Kalachakra system by
the current incarnation of the Chenrezi, His Holiness the
Fourteenth Dalai Lama?
Almost nothing is known in public
about the eight “highest initiations” of the Time Tantra described
in the first part of our study, but all the more is known about the
seven lower initiations. They have been and continue to be conducted
by His Holiness — frequently, publicly, on a grand scale and
throughout the whole world. The ostentatious performance of a Kalachakra spectacle set in
scene by the monks of the Namgyal Institute [3] in colorful robes is meanwhile an
exotic sensation, which on each occasion attracts the attention of
the world’s press. Thousands, in recent years hundreds of thousands,
come flocking to experience and marvel at the religious
spectacle.
The Kalachakra Tantra, whose
aggressive and imperialist character we have been able to
demonstrate in detail, is referred to by the Dalai Lama without the
slightest scruple as a “vehicle for world peace”: “We believe
unconditionally in its ability to reduce tensions”, the god-king has
said of the Time Tantra, “The initiation is thus public, because in
our opinion it is suited to bringing peace, to encouraging the peace
of the spirit and hence the peace of the world as well” (Levenson,
1990, p. 304).
Interested westerners, who still
block out the magic-religious thought patterns of Lamaism, are
presented with the Kalachakra ritual and the
associated sand mandala as a “total work of art, in which sound and
color, gesture and word are linked with one another in a
many-layered, significance-laden manner” (Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung, 1 February 1986). For the Dalai
Lama, however, an assembly of the invoked gods actually takes place
during the rite.
In the year 1953 His Holiness was
initiated into the Kalachakra rites by Ling
Rinpoche for the first time. To what level is unknown to us.
Profoundly impressed by the beauty of the sand mandala, the young Kundun fell into a state of
dizziness. Shortly afterwards he spent a month in seclusion and was
internally very moved during this period. In saying the prayers the
words often stuck in his throat through emotion: “In hindsight I
understand this situation to have been auspicious, an omen that I
would conduct the Kalachakra initiation much
more often than any of my predecessors” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1993a, p.
118).
The Dalai Lama with the Kalachakra Mandala as
aureole
Strangely enough, the first
initiation into the Kalachakra Tantra he
performed himself (in 1954) was in his own words “at the wish of a
group of lay women” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1993a, p. 119). We can only
speculate as to whether this euphemistic phrase is used to disguise
a ganachakra with eight
or ten karma mudras (real
women). Yet this is to be strongly suspected, then how in the Tibet
of old where women did not have the slightest say in religious
matters should a “group of lay women” of all people have come to
enjoy the great privilege of motivating the nineteen-year-old
hierarch to his first Kalachakra ceremony? In
light of the strict court ceremonial which reigned in the Potala,
this was for those times completely unthinkable, and we must
therefore presume that we are dealing with a tactful reformulation
of a tantric ritual involving yoginis.
His Holiness celebrated two
further Kalachakra
initiations in Lhasa in 1956 and 1957. In 1970 the first public
initiation in exile (in Dharamsala) was staged. He himself had a
dream shortly before this: “When I woke up, I knew that in the
future I would perform this ritual many times. I think in my
previous lifetimes I had a connection with the Kalachakra teaching. It's a
karmic force” (Bryant, 1992, p. 112). This dream was in fact to come
true in the years which followed.
In the summer of 1981, the “iron
bird year” of the Tibetan calendar, the god-king granted a public Kalachakra initiation for
the first time outside of Asia. The date and the location
(Wisconsin, USA) of the initiation were drawn directly from a
prophecy of the Tibetan “religious founder”, Padmasambhava, who
introduced Vajrayana to
the Land of Snows from India in the eighth century: “When the iron
bird flies and the horses roll on wheels … the Dharma will come to
the land of the Red Man” (Bernbaum, 1982, p. 33). The iron birds —
in the interpretation of this vision — are airplanes, the wheeled
horses are automobiles, and the land of the Red Man (the American
Indians) is the United States. During the ritual a falcon with a
snake in its claws is supposed to have appeared in the sky. In it
the participants saw the mythic bird, garuda, representing the
patriarchal power which destroys the feminine in the form of a
snake. [4] Do we have here the
image of a tantric wish according to which the West is already
supposed to fall into the clutches of Tibetan Buddhism in the near
future?
Not more than 1200 people took
part in the first western initiation in Wisconsin. In1983 the Kalachakra ceremony was
performed in Switzerland and thus for the first time in Europe. Now
there were already 6000 western participants. In the same year more
than 300,000 people appeared at the initiation in Bodh Gaya (in
India). This grandiose spectacle was declared by the press to be the
“Buddhist event of the century” (Tibetan Review, January
1986, p. 4). Many very poor Tibetans had illegally crossed the
Chinese border in order to take part in the festivities. It is
certainly worth mentioning that at least fifty people died during
the ritual! (Tibetan
Review, January 1986, p. 6).
In 1991, in Madison Square
Gardens in New York City, there was a further Kalachakra ceremony in front
of 4000 participants which attracted much public attention. At the
same time a sand mandala was constructed in the Museum of Asian Art which
drew tens of thousands of visitors. By the beginning of 1998, the
Dalai Lama could look back over 25 public initiations into the Time
Tantra which he had conducted as the supreme vajra
master.
List
of Kalachakra Initiations given by the XIV Dalai
Lama |
S.No. |
Date |
Place |
Attendants |
1 |
May
1954 |
Norbulingka,
Lhasa, Tibet |
100,000 |
2 |
April
1956 |
Norbulingka,
Lhasa, Tibet |
100,000 |
3 |
March
1970 |
Dharamshala,
India |
30,000 |
4 |
May
1971 |
Bylakuppe,
Karnataka, India |
10,000 |
5 |
December
1974 |
Bodh
Gaya, Bihar, India |
100,000 |
6 |
September
1976 |
Leh,
Ladakh, India |
40,000 |
7 |
July
1981 |
Madison,
Wisconsin, USA |
1,500 |
8 |
April
1983 |
Bomdila,
Arunachal Pradesh, India |
5,000 |
9 |
August
1983 |
Tabo,
Spiti, Himachal Pradesh, India |
10,000 |
10 |
July
1985 |
Rikon,
Switzerland |
6,000 |
11 |
December
1985 |
Bodh
Gaya, Bihar, India |
200,000 |
12 |
July
1988 |
Zanskar, Jammu &
Kashmir, India |
10,000 |
13 |
July
1989 |
Los
Angeles, USA |
3,300 |
14 |
December
1990 |
Sarnath,
Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India |
130,000 |
15 |
October
1991 |
New
York, USA |
3,000 |
16 |
August
1992 |
Kalpa,
Kinnaur, Himachal Pradesh, India |
20,000 |
17 |
April
1993 |
Gangtok,
Sikkim, India |
100,000 |
18 |
July
1994 |
Jispa,
Keylong, Himachal Pradesh, India |
30,000 |
19 |
December
1994 |
Barcelona,
Spain |
3,000 |
20 |
January
1995 |
Mundgod,
Karnataka, India |
50,000 |
21 |
August
1995 |
Ulan
Bator, Mongolia |
30,000 |
22 |
June
1996 |
Tabo,
Spiti, Himachal Pradesh, India |
20,000 |
23 |
September
1996 |
Sydney,
Australia |
3,000 |
24 |
December
1996 |
Salugara,
West Bengal, India |
200,000 |
25 |
August
1999 |
Bloomington,
Indiana, USA |
3,500 |
26 |
August
2000 |
Key
Monastery, Spiti, Himachal Pradesh,
India |
15,000 |
27 |
January
2002 |
Bodh
Gaya, Bihar, India |
Postponed |
28 |
October
2002 |
Graz,
Austria (Europe) |
10,000 |
29 |
Januar
2003 |
Bodh
Gaya, Bihar, India |
200,000 |
The great significance which the
Dalai Lama accords the Kalachakra Tantra and its
worldwide distribution, demands that all of his political activities
be interpreted in the light of the visions and intentions of the
Time Tantra. The Kalachakra
Tantra is a major political event. It is the magic metapolitical
instrument with which the Kundun hopes to conquer the
West and the rest of the world. He himself, or rather the forces and
powers which operate behind him, wish(es) to become the ruler of
history and time itself. [5]
Statements of the Fourteenth
Dalai Lama on sexuality and sexual magic
We know almost nothing (publicly)
from the Kundun about the
eight highest initiations in the Kalachakra Tantra and the
associated sexual magic rites. Outwardly the god-king presents a
strictly asexual image. In answer to the question what he thought
about sex, he replied in Playboy: “My goodness! You
ask a 62-year-old monk who has been celibate his entire life a thing
like that. I don’t have much to say about sex — other than that it
is completely okay if two people love each other” (Playboy, German edition,
March 1998, p. 46). Or he resolves the delicate topic with
colloquial humor, as for example when he quotes the Indian scholar,
Nagarjuna, with a three-line thought on the question of erotic love:
If one is itchy, then one
scratches himself.
Better than any number of
scratches
However, is when one does
not itch at all.
(Dalai
Lama XIV, 1993a, p. 301)
Such sayings are reminiscent of
the philosophy of life of a humorous Mahayana Buddhist, but not
that of a Tantric. Whether the Kundun himself conducts are
has conducted sexual magic practices is a secret which is for
understandable reasons not betrayed. Only through incidental remarks
— the taboo topic would never be spoken about in public otherwise —
can it be gauged that the Dalai Lama is completely informed about
the consequences which proceed from the tantric
rites.
Thus, at an event in San
Francisco (in 1994) His Holiness was discussing the topics of
“sexuality and Buddhism” with students. When the talk came around to
the “wise fool” Drungpa Kunley, who became known through his erotic
escapades, his huge male member, and through the Tibetan literature,
the Kundun justified this
figure’s wild sex life: in Drungpa we are dealing with a highly
developed enlightened being, and his erotic activities — no matter
how bizarre they may seem to an ordinary person — were always
carried out for the benefit of all living beings. “He could”, the
Dalai Lama said with a smile, “enjoy excrement and urine just like
fine foods and wine” and then he joked of the modern Tibetan lamas
that, “If you put into their mouth some urine, they will not enjoy
it” (Arianna, Newsgroup 3). From this it can be logically concluded
that every enlightened one must pass the tantric “taste test” and
that contemporary lamas are not prepared to undergo this
test.
At an academic seminar on dream
research in Dharamsala the Kundun commented upon a
paper with the following sentence: “Such work with dreams by which
it comes to ejaculation could be important” (Dalai Lama XIV, 1996a,
p. 115). Anyone who knows about the tantric seed gnosis also knows
how fundamental the god-king’s interest in this topic must be. At
the same meeting he chatted about orgiastic encounters as if they
were a constant part of his world of experiences. A comparison of
the mystic clear lights with orgasm is also self-evident for him
(Dalai Lama XIV, 1996a, p. 116).
Some
years later, at the „Mind and Life” conference in Dharamsala (in
1992), he spoke in great detail about tantric practices and even
mentioned the offensive Vajroli method:”One training
method that can be used as a standard of measurement of the level of
one’s control entails inserting a straw into the genitals. In this
practice the Yogi first drwas water, and later milk, upt to the
straw. [Later again, we would add, the sukra from out of the vagina
of his sexual partner] That cultivates the the ability to reverse
the flow during intercourse (Varela, 1997, p. 172). With a somewhat
insinuating smile the Dalai Lama then explained the various
typologies of the mudras
to the western scholars who were attending: “In tantric literature,
four typs of women, or consorts (Skt. mudra) are discussed. These
four types are lotus-like,
deer-like, conch-shell-like, and the elephant-like.” He then
joked that: “If the classification had originated in Tibet instead
of India, they would have called it yak-like. These distinctions all
have primarily to do with the shape of the genitals, but they also
refer to differences in terms of bodily constitution. There are no
such categories for men” (Varela, 1997, p.
173).
Like all priests the Kundun’s attitude towards
marriage is benevolent and paternalistic, without granting it any
special spiritual significance. “At first glance married life
appears full and attractive and that of the celibate as miserable.
But I believe the life of a monk is more well balanced, there are
less extremes, less highs and lows. I also always tell this to my
young monks and nuns as consolation” (Zeitmagazin, no. 44, 22
October 1998, p. 24). It is nonetheless very important to him as
reproduction for the maintenance of the Tibetan race and he is not
at all happy when exiled Tibetans choose marriage partners of
another race. He finds it likewise repulsive when ordained monks
suddenly decide to marry. As his brother Lobsang Samten told him of
his marriage plans, the Kundun shouted at him in a
reference to the Chinese repression, “Even a dog doesn't copulate
while it's actually being beaten” (Craig,1997, p. 260). He later
excused himself for this uncontrolled
outburst.
In 1997 on his journey through
the USA, the Dalai Lama named oral and anal intercourse for both
hetero- and homosexuals as being sexually taboo, and masturbation as
well. The latter is condoned by the secret tantras when no real
partner is available. Fellatio and cunnilingus are — as we have
described in detail in Part 1 — even prescribed in the four highest
initiations of the Kalachakra
Tantra. But among common mortals both sexual practices are —
according to a relevant sutra — punished after death by the
destruction of the sexual organs in the Samghata hell. The Kundun declared sexual
relations with a monk or a nun who has made a vow of celibacy to be
especially reprehensible, naturally only when this takes place
outside of the tantric rites. Likewise, the sexual act is forbidden
in temples. In contrast, intercourse with a prostitute is allowed
when the customer himself pays and does not receive the money from a
third party.
Both male and female
homosexuality are allowed — according to the Kundun — as long as no oral
or anal contact is practiced. It was at least politically unwise
mistake to have made this statement in San Francisco, the Mecca of
the American gay movement. The sexual ban immediately led to the
strongest protests. “Many Americans” have been disappointed, a
statement from the homosexual scene said, since they “embraced
Buddhism because they thought it was not nonjudgmental in sexual
matters” (Peterson, Newsgroup 6). [6]
Footnotes:
[1] In light of this emphasis on the
solar and fiery nature which characterizes the historical Buddha,
his close connection to the symbolism of snakes is puzzling, above
all because snakes are associated with water and the feminine. They are known to every
student of Buddhism as nagas, and reign as kings of
the springs, brooks, streams, and lakes. In his book, The Sun and the Serpent, the
Englishman, C. F. Oldham, has attempted to prove that Buddhist snake
worship is a solar institution. During his lifetime, Buddha
already enjoyed widespread adoration as Maha Naga, the great serpent
(Oldham, 1988, p. 179).
Since he and his tribe belonged to the “sun race”,
conjectures this author, the snake gods also ought to be “solar”.
Among other sources, he makes reference to an old sutra, where we
can read of “The lord of the overpowering serpents belonging to Surya [the sun god]”
(Oldham, 1988, p. 66).
Nonetheless, we believe Oldham’s thesis, that the Buddhist
snake cult had an originally solar nature, to be a false conclusion.
The close connection of heliocentric Buddhism to the sphere of the
snake can therefore only be explained in that Buddha subjected the
nagas so as to
consolidate his supreme rule as patriarchal sun god with this
victory. This is precisely the procedure which we also know from
tantric practices, where the feminine, ignited by the masculine fire
energy, ultimately serves the androcentric yogi. The ignited
feminine element is, as we know, referred to as Kundalini, that is, fire
serpent.
[2] The “pilgrimage” of the soul to
the “pure land” of the light god has in Asia become — above all in
China and Japan — a widely distributed religious belief and has led
to the formation of various Buddhist schools.
[4] Garuda, the bird of prey, is presented in Tibetan
mythology as a powerful snake killer. It is the fire eagle, which
feeds upon the flesh of the nagas (snakes). We know already from the
Indian national epic, the Mahabharata, that it belongs
to the race of the sun, and that it was a totemic figure for tribes
which worshipped the sun as their highest deity. The garuda is also the
protective animal of the Dalai Lama and is mentioned in the Kalachakra Tantra. Does it represent the fiery
masculine power over the feminine snake world? Albert Grünwedel saw it in
these terms when he wrote: “We know the garuda-like, awful,
high-flying bird of prey which tears girls [nagis] apart ...”
(Grünwedel, 1924,
vol. II, p. 68).
The author is
further convinced that there is talk in the Kalachakra Tantra of a
transformation of the nagas into garudas (Grünwedel, 1924,
vol. II, p. 68; Kalacakra IV, p. 182).
Whatever one may
think of Grünwedel’s interpretation, it at any rate draws attention
to the tantric mystery which can be seen to sparkle behind the garuda myth: the
transformation of feminine water energy (the snake) by masculine
fire (the garuda), or the
absorption of the moon (the snake) by the sun (the garuda) as the
culmination of the development of patriarchal
power.
[5] Perhaps his role as supreme time
god has something to do with the fact that the Kundun has a very special
fondness for taking apart, repairing, and then reassembling modern
watches? A Swiss
organization of exiled Tibetans sells clocks featuring the main
symbol of the Kalachakra
Tantra (the dasakaro
vasi) and markets these via the Internet. The monk Daoxuan (596-667)
had already compared Buddhism to a clock. When a Buddha appears in
the world — we learn from him — then the clock also functions. If
the clock does not keep the time, this means that the people no
longer follow the Dharma. When Shakyamuni died, “the clockwork no
longer functioned” (Forte, 1988, p. 259).
[6] In this connection, a text on
homosexuality recently published by one of the most intimate of His
Holiness’s western
collaborators appears quite bizarre. The most recent book by Jeffrey
Hopkins, currently Professor of Tibetan Studies at the University of
Virginia, has the title of Sex, Orgasm and the Mind of
Clear Light: The 64 Arts of Gay Male Sex (Hopkins, 1996). In
reading through the text we naturally asked ourselves the question:
Can the tantric exchange of energies also take place between men? Is
a female wisdom consort necessary at all for the performance of the
sexual magic practices or may it also be a male consort? The book
does not offer an answer to this and must therefore, as Hopkins
himself stresses, not be regarded as a tantric text. It is much more
a matter of — as he himself puts it — a homosexual Kama Sutra, a guide to
erotic amusement. Quite a number of lecherous lines are devoted to
anal intercourse, which is one of the sexual taboos for His
Holiness. — One text in which homosexual tantric practices are
discussed by a guru is The
Dawn Horse Testament by Da Free John, the former spiritual
teacher of the American evolutionary theorist, Ken Wilber. The
author approves of homosexual rites to a limited degree, but
strongly emphasizes that during the sexual magic act strictly one
man must play the masculine role and the other should take the
feminine role (Da, 1991, p. 348). One of the men is thus is used in
terms of energy as a substitute woman, which only confirms the
fundamentally heterosexual orientation of
Tantrism.
Next Chapter:
2. THE DALAI
LAMA (AVALOKITESHVARA)
AND THE DEMONESS
(SRINMO)
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