4. THE LAW OF INVERSION
Every type of passion (sexual pleasure,
fits of rage, hate and loathing) which is normally considered taboo by Buddhist
ethical standards, is activated and nurtured in Vajrayana with the goal of then transforming it into its
opposite. The Buddhist monks, who are usually subject to a strict,
puritanical-seeming set of rules, cultivate such “breaches of taboo” without
restriction, once they have decided to follow the “Diamond Path”. Excesses
and extravagances now count as part of their chosen lifestyle. Such acts
are not simply permitted, but are prescribed outright, because according to
tantric doctrine, evil can only be driven out by evil, greed by greed
alone, and poison is the only cure for poison.
Suitably radical instructions can be
found in the Hevajra Tantra: “A
wise man ... should remove the filth of his mind by filth ... one must rise
by that through which one falls”, or, more vividly, “As flatulence is cured
by eating beans so that wind may expel wind, as a thorn in the foot can be removed by another thorn, and as a
poison can be neutralized by poison, so sin can purge sin” (Walker, 1982,
p. 34). For the same reason, the Kalachakra
Tantra exhorts its pupils to commit the following: to kill, to lie, to
steal, to break the marriage vows, to drink alcohol, to have sexual
relations with lower-class girls (Broido, 1988, p. 71). A Tantric is freed
from the chains of the wheel of life by precisely that which imprisons a
normal person.
As a tantric saying puts it, “What
binds the fool, liberates the wise” (Dasgupta, 1974, p. 187), and another,
more drastic passage emphasizes that, “the same deed for which a normal
mortal would burn for a hundred million eons, through this same act an
initiated yogi attains enlightenment” (Eliade, 1985, p. 272). According to
this, every ritual is designed to catapult the initiand into a state beyond
good and evil.
This spiritual necessity to encounter
the forbidden, has essentially been justified via five arguments:
Firstly, through breaking a taboo for
which there is often a high penalty, the adept confirms the core of the
entire Buddhist philosophy: the emptiness (shunyata) of all appearances. “I am void, the world is void,
all three worlds are void”, the Maha
Siddha Tilopa triumphantly proclaims — therefore “neither sin nor
virtue” exist (Dasgupta, 1974, p. 186). The shunyata principle thus provides a metaphysical legitimization
for any conceivable “crime”, as it actually lacks any inherent existence.
A second argument follows from the
emptiness, the “equivalence of all being”. Neither purity nor impurity,
neither lust nor loathing, neither beauty nor ugliness exist. There is thus
“no difference between food and offal, between fruit juice and blood,
between vegetable sap and urine, between syrup and semen” (Walker, 1982,
p.32). A fearless maha siddha
justifies a serious misdeed of which he has been accused with the words: A fearless maha siddha justifies a serious
misdeed of which he has been accused with the words: “Although medicine and
poison create contrary effects, in their ultimate essence they are one;
likewise negative qualities and aids on the path, one in essence, should
not be differentiated” (quoted by Stevens, 1990, p. 69).
Thus the yogi could with a clear
conscience wander along ways on the far side of the dominant moral codex.
“By the same evil acts that bring people into hell the one who uses the
right means gains salvation, there is no doubt. All evil and virtue are
said to have thought as their basis” (Snellgrove, 1987, vol. 1, p. 174).
The third — somewhat ad hoc, but
nonetheless frequent — justification for the “transgressions” of the Vajrayana consists in the
Bodhisattva vow of Mahayana
Buddhism, which requires that one aid and assist every creature until it
attains enlightenment. Amazingly, this pious purpose can render holy the
most evil means. “If”, we can read in one of the tantras, “for the good of
all living beings or on account of the Buddha’s teaching one should slay
living beings, one is untouched by sin. ... If for the good of living
beings or from attachment for the Buddha’s interest, one seizes the wealth
of others , one is not touched by sin”, and so forth (Snellgrove, 1987,
vol. 1, p. 176). In the course of Tibetan history the Bodhisattva vow has,
as we shall show in the second part of our study, legitimated numerous
political and family-based murders, whereby the additional “clever”
argument was also employed, that one had “freed” the murder victim from the
world of appearances (samsara)
and that he or she thus owed a debt of thanks to the murderer.
The fourth argument, which was also widespread
in other magical cultures, is familiar to us from homeopathy, and states: similia similibus curantur (‘like
cures like’). In this healing practice one usually works with tiny
quantities, major sins can thus be expiated by more minor transgressions.
The fifth and final argument attempts
to persuade us that enlightenment per
se arises through the radical inversion of its opposite and that there
is absolutely no other possible way to break free of the chains of samsara. Here, the tantric logic of
inversion has become a dogma which no longer tolerates other paths to
enlightenment. In this light, we can read in the Guhyasamaja Tantra that “the most lowly-born, flute-makers and
so forth, such [people] who constantly have murder alone in mind, attain perfection
via this highest way” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 128). Yes, in some texts an
outright proportionality exists between the magnitude of the “crime” and
the speed with which the spiritual “liberation” occurs.
However, this tantric logic of
inversion contains a dangerous paradox. On the one hand, Vajrayana stands not just in radical
opposition to “social” norms, but likewise also to the original fundamental
rules of its own Buddhist system. Thus, it must constantly fear accusations
and persecution from its religious brethren. On the other there is the
danger mentioned by Friedrich Nietzsche, that anyone who too often looks
monsters in the face can themselves become a monster. Sadly, history —
especially that of Tibet — teaches us how many tantra masters
were not able to rid themselves of the demons that they summoned. We shall
trace this fate in the second part of our study.
The twilight language
In order to keep hidden from the public
all the offensive things which are implicated by the required breaches of
taboo, some tantra texts make use of a so-called “twilight language” (samdhya-bhasa). This has the
function of veiling references to taboo substances, private bodily parts,
and illegal deeds in poetic words, so that they cannot be recognized by the
uninitiated. For example, one says “lotus” and means “vagina”, or employs
the term “enlightenment consciousness” (bodhicitta)
for sperm, or the word “sun” (surya)
for menstrual blood. Such a list of synonyms can be extended indefinitely.
It would, however, be hasty to presume
that the potential of the tantric twilight language is exhausted by the
employment of euphemistic expressions for sexual events in order to avoid
stirring up offense in the world at large. In keeping with the magical world
view of Tantrism, an equivalence or interdependence is often posited
between the chosen “poetic” denotation and its counterpart in “reality”.
Thus, as we shall later see, the male seed does indeed effect enlightenment
consciousness (bodhicitta) when it
is ritually consumed, and the vagina does in fact transform itself through
meditative imagination into a lotus.
Of course, in such a metaphoric
twilight everything is possible! Since, in contrast to the extensive
commentaries, the taboo violations are often explicitly and unashamedly
discussed in the original tantric texts, modern textual exegetes have often
turned the tables. For example, in the unsavory horror scenes which are
recounted here, the German lama Govinda sees warning signs which act as a deterrent
to impudent intruders into the mysteries. To prevent unauthorized persons
entering paradise, it is depicted as a slaughterhouse. But this imputed
circumscription of the beautiful with the horrible contradicts the sense of
the tantras, the intention of which is precisely to be sought in the
transformation of the base into the sublime and thus the deliberate
confrontation with the abominations of this world.
The scenarios which are presented in
the following pages are indeed so abnormal that the hair of the early
Western scholars stood on end when they first translated the tantric texts
from Tibetan or Sanskrit. E. Burnouf was dismayed: “One hesitates to
reproduce such hateful and humiliating teachings”, he wrote in the year
1844 (von Glasenapp, 1940, p. 167). Almost a century later, even world
famous Tibetologists like Giuseppe Tucci or David Snellgrove admitted that
they had simply omitted certain passages from their translated versions
because of the horrors described therein, even though they thus abrogated
their scholarly responsibilities (Walker, 1982, p. 121). Today, in the age
of unlimited information, any resistance to the display of formerly taboo
pictures is rapidly evaporating. Thus, in some modern translation one is
openly confronted with all the “crimes and sexual deviations” in the
tantras.
Sexual desire
Let us begin anew with the topic of
sex. This is the axis around which all of Tantrism revolves. We have
already spoken at length about why women were regarded as the greatest
obstacle along the masculine path to enlightenment. Because the woman
represents the feared gateway to rebirth, because she produces the world of
illusion, because she steals the forces of the man — the origins of evil
lie within her. Accordingly, to touch a woman was also the most serious
breach of taboo for a Buddhist from the pre-tantric phase. The severity of
the transgression was multiplied if it came to sexual intercourse.
But precisely because most extreme
estrangement from enlightenment is inherent to the “daughters of Mara”, because they are considered
the greatest obstacle for a man and barricade the realm of freedom,
according to the tantric “law of inversion” they are for any adept the most
important touchstone on the initiation path. He who understands how to gain
mastery over women also understands how to control all of creation, as it
is represented by him. On account of this paradox, sexual union enjoys
absolute priority in Vajrayana.
All other ritual acts, no matter how bizarre they may appear, are derived
from this sexual magic origin.
Actually, the same tantric postulate —
that the overcoming of an opposite pole should be considered more valuable
and meritorious the more abnormal characteristics it exhibits — must also
be valid for sexuality:. According to the “law of inversion”, the more
gloomy, repulsive, aggressive and perverse a woman is, the more suitable
she must be to serve as a sexual partner in the rituals. But the preference
of the yogis for especially young and attractive girls (which we mention
above) seems to contradict this postulated ugliness.
Incidentally, the Kalachakra Tantra is itself aware of this contradiction, but is
unable to resolve it. Thus the third book of the Time Tantra has the
following suggestions to make: “Terrible women, furious, stuck-up,
money-hungry, quarrelsome...are to be avoided” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra III, p. 121). But then, a
few pages later, we find precisely the opposite: “A woman, who has
abandoned herself to a lust for life, who takes delight in human blood ...
is to be revered by the yogi” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra III, p. 146). The fourth book deals with the “law of
inversion” directly, and in verse 207 describes the karma mudra as a “gnarled hetaera”. Directly after this follows
the argument as to why a goddess must be hiding behind the face of the
hetaera, since for the yogi, “gold [can] be worth the same as copper, a
jewel from the crown of a god the same as a sliver of glass, if unheard of
masculine force can be received through the loving donations of trained
hetaeras ...” (Grünwedel, Kalacakra
IV, p. 209) — that is, the highest masculine can be won from the basest
feminine.
In this light, the Chakrasamvara Tantra recommends erotic praxis with haughty,
moody, proud, dominant, wild, and untamable women, and the yogini Laksminkara urges the reader to
revere a woman who is “mutilated and misshapen” (Gäng, 1988, p. 59). The Maha Siddha Tilopa also adhered
strictly to the tantric politics of inversion and copulated with a woman,
who bore the “eighteen marks of ugliness”, whatever they may be. His pupil
Naropa followed in his footsteps and was initiated by an “ugly leprous old
crone”. The later’s successor, Marpa, received his initiation at the hands
of a “foul-smelling ‘funeral-place dakini’ ... with long emaciated breasts
and huge sex organs of offensive odor” (Walker, 1982, p. 75).
Whilst the ugly “love partners”
threaten at the outset the way to salvation and the life of an adept, at
the end of the tantric process of inversion they shine like fairy-tale
beauties, who have been transformed from toads into princesses. Thus, after the
transmutation, a “jackal jaws” has become the “dakini of wisdom”; a “lion’s
gob” the honourable “Buddha dakini” with “a bluish complexion and a radiant
smile”; a “beak-face” a “jewel dakini” with an “pretty, white face” and so
forth (Stevens, 1990, p. 97). All these charming creatures are under the complete control of
their guru, who through the conquest of the demonic woman has attained the
qualification of sorcerer and now calls the tune for the transformed
demonesses.
For readily understandable reasons the
fact remains that in the sexual magic practices a preference is shown for
working with young and attractive girls. But even for this a paradoxical
explanation is offered: Due to their attractiveness the virgins are far
more dangerous for the yogi than an old hag. The chances that he lose his
emotional and sexual self-control in such a relationship are thus many
times higher. This means that attractive women present him with a even
greater challenge than do the ugly.
The tantras are more consistent when
applying the “law of inversion” to the social class of the female partners
than they are with regard to age and beauty. Women from lower castes are
not just recommendable, but rather appear to be downright necessary for the
performance of certain rituals. The Kalachakra
Tantra lists female gardeners, butchers, potters, whores, and
needle-workers among its recommendations (Grünwedel, Kalacakra III, pp. 130, 131). In other texts there is talk of
female pig-herds, actresses, dancers, singers, washerwomen, barmaids,
weavers and similar. “Courtesans are also favored”, writes the Tibet researcher Matthias Hermanns, “since
the more lecherous, depraved, dirty, morally repugnant and dissolute they
are, the better suited they are to their role” (Hermanns, 1975, p. 191).
This appraisal is in accord with the call of the Tantric Anangavajra to
accept any mudra, whatever nature
she may have, since “everything having its existence in the ultimate non-dual
substance, nothing can be harmful for yoga; and therefore the yogin should
enjoy everything to his heart’s content without the least fear or
hesitation” (Dasgupta, 1974, p. 184).
Time and again, so-called candalis are mentioned as the
Tantric’s sexual partners. These are girls from the lowest caste, who eke
out a meager living with all manner of work around the crematoria. It is
evident from a commentary upon the Hevajra
Tantra that among other things they there offered themselves to the
vagrant yogis for the latter’s sexual practices (Snellgrove, 1987, vol. 1,
p. 168). For an orthodox Hindu such creatures were considered untouchable.
If even the shadow of a candali
fell upon a Hindu, the disastrous consequences were life-long for the
latter.
Since it annulled the strict
prescriptions of the Hindu caste system with its rituals, a fundamentally
social revolutionary attitude has been ascribed to Tantric Buddhism. In
particular, modern feminists accredit it with this (Shaw, 1994, p. 62).
But, aside from the obvious fact that women from the lower classes are more
readily available as sexual partners, here too the “law of inversion” is
considered decisive for the choice to be made. The social inferiority of
the woman increases the “antinomism” of the tantric rituals. “It is the
symbol of the ‘washerwoman’ and the ‘courtesan’ [which are] of decisive
significance”, we may read in a book by Mircea Eliade, “and we must
familiarize ourselves with the fact that, in accordance with the tantric
doctrine of the identity of opposites, the ‘most noble and valuable’ is
precisely [to be found] hidden within the ‘basest and most banal’” (Eliade,
1985, p. 261, note 204).
Likewise, when women from the higher
castes (Brahmans, ‘warriors’, or rich business people) are on the Tantric’s
wish list, especially when they are married, the law of inversion functions
here as well, since a rigid taboo is broken through the employment of a
wife from the upper classes — an indicator for the boundless power of the
yogi.
The incest taboo
There is indisputable evidence from
archaic societies for the violation of the incest prohibition: there is
hardly a tantra of the higher class in which sexual intercourse with one’s
own mother or daughter, with aunts or sisters-in-law is not encouraged. Here
too the German lama Govinda emphatically protests against taking the texts
literally. It would be downright ridiculous to think “that Tantric
Buddhists really did encourage incest and sexual deviations (Govinda, 1991,
p. 113). Mother, sister, daughter and so on stood for the four elements,
egomania, or something similar.
But such symbolic assignments do not
necessarily contradict the possibility of an incestuous praxis, which is in
fact found not just in the Tibet of old, but also in totally independent
cultures scattered all around the world. Here too, it remains valid that
the yogi, who is as a matter of principle interested in a fundamental
violation of proscriptions, must really long for an incestuous
relationship. There is also no lack of historical reports. We present the
curse of a puritanically minded lama from the 16th century, who addressed
the excesses of his libertine colleagues as follows: “In executing the
rites of sexual union the people copulate without regard to blood relations
... You are more impure than dogs and pigs. As you have offered the pure
gods feces, urine, sperm and blood, you will be reborn in the swamp of
rotten cadavers” (Paz, 1984, p.95).
Eating and drinking impure substances
A central role in the rites is played by
the tantric meal. It is absolutely forbidden for Buddhist monks to eat meat
or drink alcohol. This taboo is also deliberately broken by Vajrayana adepts. To make the
transgression more radical, the consumption of types of meat which are
generally considered “forbidden” in Indian society is desired: elephant
meat, horsemeat, dogflesh, beef, and human flesh. The latter goes under the
name of maha mamsa, the ‘great
flesh’. It usually came from the dead, and is a “meat of those who died due
to their own karma, who were killed in battle due to evil karma or due to
their own fault”, Pundarika writes in his traditional Kalachakra commentary, and goes on to add that it is sensible
to consume this substance in pill form (Newman, 1987, p. 266). Small
amounts of tit are also recommended in a modern text on the Kalachakra Tantra as well (Dhargyey,
1985, p. 25). There are recipes which distinguish between the various body
parts and demand the consumption of brain, liver, lungs, intestines, testes
and so forth for particular ceremonies.
The five taboo types of meat are
granted a sacramental character. Within them are concentrated the energies
of the highest Buddhas, who are able to appear through the “law of
inversion”. The texts thus speak of the “five ambrosias” or “five nectars”.
Other impure “foods” have also been assigned to the five Dhyani Buddhas. Ratnasambhava is associated with
blood, Amitabha with semen, Amoghasiddhi with human flesh, Aksobhya with urine, Vairocana with excrement (Wayman,
1973, p. 116).
The Candamaharosana
Tantra lists with relish the particular substances which are offered to
the adept by his wisdom consort during the sexual magic rituals and which
he must swallow: excrement, urine, saliva, leftovers from between her
teeth, lipstick, dish-water, vomit, the wash water which remains after her
anus has been cleaned (George, 1974, pp. 73, 78, 79) Those who “make the
excrement and urine their food, will be truly happy”, promises the Guhyasamaja Tantra (quoted by Gäng,
1988, p. 134). In the Hevajra Tantra
the adept must drink the menstrual blood of his mudra out of a skull
bowl (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p. 98). But rotten fish, sewer water, canine
feces, corpse fat, the excrement of the dead, sanitary napkins as well as
all conceivable “intoxicating drinks” are also consumed (Walker, 1982, pp.
80–84).
There exists a strict commandment that
the practicing yogi may not feel any disgust in consuming these impure
substances. “One should never feel disgusted by excrement, urine, semen or
blood” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 266). Fundamentally, “he must eat and
drink whatever he obtains and he should not hold any notions regarding
likes and dislikes” (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p. 67).
But it is not just in the tantric
rites, in Tibetan medicine as well all manner of human and animal
excretions are employed for healing purposes. The excrement and urine of
higher lamas are sought-after medicines. Processed into pills and offered
for sale, they once played -and now play once more — a significant role in
the business activities of Tibetan and exile-Tibetan monasteries.
Naturally, the highest prices are paid for the excretions of the supreme
hierarch, the Dalai Lama. There is a report on the young Fourteenth
god-king’s sojourn in Beijing (in 1954) which recounts how His Holiness’s
excrement was collected daily in a golden pot in order to then be sent to
Lhasa and processed into a medication there (Grunfeld, 1996, p. 22). Even
if this source came from the Chinese camp, it can be given credence without
further ado, since corresponding practices were common throughout the
entire country.
The "feast on fæces
fallacy"
As damtsig has come into contact
with Western psychological materialism, self-defence tactics have taken a
variety of forms. The one that has most intrigued me is what I have dubbed
the "feast on fæces fallacy" - of which there appear to be two
variations. I encountered the first during my introduction to Vajrayana at
Vajradhatu Seminary - a three-month practice and study retreat designed by
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche. I attended this retreat after Trungpa Rinpoche's
death, when his son, Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, taught it. As the summer
progressed and the teachings grew more challenging, speculation about
samaya heated up. The speculation took on an odd repeating pattern. At some
point in every conversation on the topic, someone would inevitably say,
"I heard that samaya means that if the Sakyong tells you to eat shit,
you have to do it." The conversation would then devolve into everyone
deciding whether they would eat shit or not. After puzzling over it for a
while, my eventual response to this statement was, "How likely is it
that the Sakyong would ask you to eat shit?" The whole discussion was
a scare tactic, however unconscious it may have been. It presented one with
an extreme, reductio ad absurdum proposition from which one could
quite justifiably turn away in disgust. In the process, it just so happened
that one also cut oneself off from finding out what samaya actually did
mean. That version of the Feast on Fæces Fallacy operates by the student
scaring himself or herself away from damtsig.
The second variation on this theme
operates to discredit the Lama with whom the student might make the vow. A
good example of this was in a report on the first conference of Western
Buddhist teachers with HH Dalai Lama in Dharamsala in 1993. At one of the
conference sessions, Robert Thurman reportedly said that anyone who allowed
himself or herself to be called a vajra master should be presented with a
plate of excrement and a fork. If he or she was not capable of eating it,
based on the principle of rochig (ro
gcig - one taste), then he or she was a fraud and should take up
knitting. This politically devious perspective is one which seeks to neuter
every Lama who is not invested with the correct degree of current western
adulation. Evidently a Lama who denies being a vajra master but who is
nonetheless regarded as a vajra master is exempt from the offer of Robert
Thurman's fæcal feast.
From: The "Feast on Fæces
Fallacy" Or - how not to scare oneself away from liberation - by Nora
Cameron in: http://www.damtsig.org/articles/faeces.html
Necrophilia
In a brilliant essay on Tantrism, the
Mexican essayist and poet Octavio Paz drew attention to the fact that the
great fondness of the Mexicans for skeletons and skulls could be found
nowhere else in the world except in the Buddhist ritual practices of the
Tibetans and Nepalese. The difference lies in the fact that in Mexico the
death figures are regarded as a mockery of life and the living, whilst in
Tantrism they are “horrific and obscene” (Paz, 1984, p. 94). This
connection between death and sexuality is indeed a popular leitmotiv in Tibetan art. In scroll
images the tantric couples are appropriately equipped with skull bowls and
cleavers, wear necklaces of severed heads and trample around upon corpses
whilst holding one another in the embrace of sexual union.
A general, indeed dominant necrophiliac
strain in Tibetan culture cannot be overlooked. Fokke Sierksma’s work
includes a description of a meditation cell in which a lama had been
immured. It was decorated with human hair, skin and bones, which were
probably supplied by the dismemberers of corpses. Strung on a line were a
number of dried female breasts. The eating bowl of the immured monk was not
the usual human skull, but was also made from the cured skin of a woman’s
breast (Sierksma, 1966, p. 189).
Such macabre ambiences can be dismissed
as marginal excesses, which is indeed what they are in the full sweep of
Tibetan culture. But they nonetheless stand in a deep meaningful and
symbolic connection with the paradoxical philosophy of Tantrism, of
Buddhism in general even, which since its beginnings recommended as
exercises meditation upon corpses in the various stages of decomposition in
order to recognize the transience of all being. Alone the early Buddhist
contempt for life, which locked the gateway to nirvana, is sufficient to understand the regular fascination
with the morbid, the macabre and the decay of the body which characterizes
Lamaism. Crematoria, charnel fields, cemeteries, funeral pyres, graves, but
also places where a murder was carried out or a bloody battle was fought
are considered, in accord with the “law of inversion”, to be especially
suitable locations for the performance of the tantric rites with a wisdom
consort.
The sacred art of Tibet also revels in macabre subjects. In
illustrations of the wrathful deities of the Tibetan pantheon, their
hellish radiation is transferred to the landscape and the heavens and
transform everything into a nature
morte in the truest sense of the word. Black whirlwinds and greenish
poisonous vapors sweep across infertile plains. Deep red rods of lightning
flash through the night and rent clouds, ridden by witches, rage across a
pitch black sky. Pieces of corpses are scattered everywhere, and are gnawed
at by all manner of repulsive beasts of prey.
In order to explain the morbidity of
Tibetan monastic culture, the Dutch cultural psychologist Fokke Sierksma
makes reference to Sigmund Freud’s concept of a “death wish” (thanatos). Interestingly, a
comparison to Buddhism occurs to the famous psychoanalyst when describing
the structure of the necrophiliac urge, which he attributes to, among other
things, the “nirvana principle”. This he understand to be a general desire
for inactivity, rest, resolution, and death, which is claimed to be innate
to all life. But in addition to this, since Freud, the death wish also
exhibits a concrete sadistic and masochistic component. Both attitudes are
expressions of aggression, the one directed outwards (sadism), the other
directed inwardly (masochism).
Ritual murder
The most aggressive form of the
externalized death wish is murder. It remains as the final taboo violation
within the tantric scheme to still be examined. The ritual killing of
people to appease the gods is a sacred deed in many religions. In no sense
do such ritual sacrifices belong to the past, rather they still play a role
today, for example in the tantric Kali
cults of India. Even children are offered up to the
cruel goddess on her bloody altars (Time,
August 1997, p. 18). Among the Buddhist, in particular Tibetan, Tantrics
such acts of violence are not so well-known. We must therefore very
carefully pose the question of whether a ritual murder can here too be a
part of the cult activity.
It is certain at least that all the
texts of the Highest Tantra class verbally call for murder. The adept who
seeks refuge in the Dhyani Buddha Akshobya
meditates upon the various forms of hate up to and including aggressive killing.
Of course, in this case too, a taboo violation is to be transformed in
accordance with the “law of inversion” into its opposite, the attainment of
eternal life. Thus, when the Guhyasamaja
Tantra requires of the adept that “he should kill all sentient beings
with this secret thunderbolt” (Wayman, 1977, p. 309), then — according to
doctrine — this should occur so as to free them from suffering.
It is further seen as an honorable deed
to “deliver” the world from people of whom a yogi knows that they will in
future commit nasty crimes. Thus Padmasambhava, the founder of Tibetan
Buddhism, in his childhood killed a boy whose future abominable deeds he
foresaw.
Maha Siddha Virupa and an impaled human
But it is not just pure compassion or a
transformatory intent which lies behind the already mentioned calls to
murder in the tantras, above all not then when they are directed at the
enemies of Buddhism. As, for example, in the rites of the Hevajra Tantra: “After having
announced the intention to the guru and accomplished beings”, it says
there, “perform with mercy the rite of killing of one who is a non-believer
of the teachings of the Buddha and the detractors of the gurus and Buddhas.
One should emanate such a person, visualizing his form as being
upside-down, vomiting blood, trembling and with hair in disarray. Imagine a
blazing needle entering his back. Then by envisioning the seed-syllable of
the Fire element in his heart he is killed instantly” (quoted by Farrow and
Menon, 1992, p. 276). The Guhyasamaja
Tantra also offers instructions on how to — as in voodoo magic — create
images of the opponent and inflict “murderous” injuries upon these, which
then actually occur in reality: “One draws a man or a woman in chalk or
charcoal or similar. One projects an ax in the hand. Then one projects the
way in which the throat is slit” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 225). At another
point the enemy is bewitched, poisoned, enslaved, or paralyzed. Corresponding
sentences are to be found in the Kalachakra
Tantra. There too the adept is urged to murder a being which has
violated the Buddhist teachings. The text requires, however, that this be
carried out with compassion (Dalai Lama XIV, 1985, p. 349).
The destruction of opponents via
magical means is part of the basic training of any tantric adept. For
example, we learn from the Hevajra
Tantra a magic spell with the help of which all the soldiers of an
enemy army can be decapitated at one stroke (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p.
30). There we can also find how to produce a blazing fever in the enemy’s
body and let it be vaporized (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p. 31). Such magical
killing practices were — as we shall show –in no sense marginal to Tibetan
religious history, rather they gained entry to the broad-scale politics of
the Dalai Lamas.
The destructive rage does not even shy
away from titans, gods, or Buddhas. In contrast, through the destruction of
the highest beings the Tantric absorbs their power and becomes an arch-god.
Even here things sometimes take a sadistic turn, as for example in the Guhyasamaja Tantra, where the murder
of a Buddha is demanded: “One douses him in blood, one douses him in water,
one douses him in excrement and urine, one turns him over, stamps on his
member, then one makes use of the King of Wrath. If this is completed eight
hundred times then even a Buddha is certain to disintegrate” (quoted by
Gäng, 1988, p. 219).
In order to effectively perform this
Buddha murder, the yogi invokes an entire pandemonium, whose grotesque
appearance could have been modeled on a work by Hieronymus Bosch: “He
projects the threat of demons, manifold, raw, horrible, hardened by rage.
Through this even the diamond bearer [the Highest Buddha] dies. He projects
how he is eaten by owls, crows, by rutting vultures with long beaks. Thus
even the Buddha is destroyed with certainty. A black snake, extremely
brutish, which makes the fearful be afraid. ... It rears up, higher than
the forehead. Consumed by this snake even the Buddha is destroyed with
certainty. One lets the the perils and torments of all beings in the ten
directions descend upon the enemy. This is the best. The is the supreme
type of invocation” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 230). This can be
strengthened with the following aggressive mantra: “Om, throttle, throttle,
stand, stand, bind, bind, slay, slay, burn, burn, bellow, bellow, blast,
blast the leader of all adversity, prince of the great horde, bring the
life to an end” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 230).
We encounter a particularly interesting
murder fantasy in the deliberate staging of the Oedipus drama which a
passage from the Candamaharosana
Tantra requires. The adept should slay Aksobhya, his Buddha father,
with a sword, give his mother, Mamaki,
the flesh of the murdered father to eat and have sexual intercourse with
her afterwards (George, 1974, p. 59; Filliozat, 1991, p. 430).
Within the spectrum of Buddhist/tantric
killing practices, the deliberately staged “suicide” of the “sevenfold
born” represents a specialty. We are dealing here with a person who has
been reincarnated seven times and displays exceptional qualities of
character. He speaks with a pleasant voice, observes with beautiful eyes
and possesses a fine-smelling and glowing body which casts seven shadows.
He never becomes angry and his mind is constantly filled with infinite
compassion. Consuming the flesh of such a wonderful person has the greatest
magical effects.
Hence, the Tantric should offer a
“sevenfold born” veneration with flowers and ask him to act in the
interests of all suffering beings. Thereupon — it says in the relevant
texts — he will without hesitation surrender his own life. Afterwards pills
are to be made from his flesh, the consumption of which grant among other
things the siddhis (powers) of
‘sky-walking’. Such pills are in fact still being distributed today. The
heart-blood is especially sought after, and the skull of the killed blessed
one also possesses magical powers (Farrow and Menon, 1992, p. 142).
When one considers the suicide request
made to the “sevenfold born”, the cynical structure of the tantric system
becomes especially clear. His flesh is so yearned-for because he exhibits
that innocence which the Tantric on account of his contamination with all
the base elements of the world of appearances no longer possesses. The
“sevenfold born” is the complete opposite of an adept, who has had dealings
with the dark forces of the demonic. In order to transform himself through
the blissful flesh of an innocent, the yogi requests such a one to
deliberately sacrifice himself. And the higher being is so kind that it
actually responds to this request and afterwards makes his dead body
available for sacred consumption.
The mystery
of the eucharist, in which the body and blood of Christ is divided among
his believers springs so readily to mind that it is not impossible that the
tantric consumption of a “sevenfold born” represents a Buddhist paraphrase
of the Christian Last Supper. (The tantras appeared in the 4th century C.E.
at the earliest.) But such self-sacrificial scenes can also be found
already in Mahayana Buddhism. In
the Sutra of Perfected Wisdom in
Eight Thousand Verses a description can be found of how the Bodhisattva
Sadaprarudita dismembers his own body in order to worship his teacher.
Firstly he slits both his arms so that the blood pours out. Then he slices
the flesh from his legs and finally breaks his own bones so as to be able
to also offer the marrow as a gift. Whatever opinion one has of such
ecstatic acts of self-dismemberment, in Mahayana
they always demonstrate the heroic deed of an ethically superior being who
wishes to help others. In contrast, the cynical sacrifice of the “sevenfold
born” demonstrates the exploitation of a noble and selfless sentiment to
serve the power interests of the Tantric. In the face of such base motives,
the Tibet researcher David Snellgrove with some
justification doubts the sevenfold incarnated’s imputed preparedness to be
sacrificed: “Did one track him down and wait for him to die or did one
hasten the process? All these tantras give so many fierce rites with the
object of slaying, that the second alternative might not seem unlikely ...”
(Snellgrove,
1987, vol. 1, p. 161).
Symbol and reality
Taking Snellgrove’s suspicion as our starting
point, the question arises as to whether the ritual murder of a person is
intended to be real or just symbolic in the tantric scripts. Among Western
interpreters of the tantras opinions are divided. Early researchers such as
Austine Waddell or Albert Grünwedel presumed a literal interpretation of
the rituals described in the texts and were dismayed by them. Among
contemporary authors, especially those who are themselves Buddhists, the
“crimes” of Vajrayana are usually
played down as allegorical metaphors, as Michael M. Broido or Anagarika
Govinda do in their publications, for example. This toned-down point of
view is, for readily understandable reasons, today thankfully adopted by
Tibetan lamas teaching everywhere in the Western world. It liberates the
gurus from tiresome confrontations with the ethical norms of the cultures
in which they have settled after their flight from Tibet. They too now see themselves called to
transform the offensive shady sides of the tantras into friendly bright
sides: “Human flesh” for example is to be understood as referring to the
own imperfect self which the yogi “consumes” in a figurative sense through
his sacred practices. “To kill” means to rob dualistic thought patterns of
their life in order to recreate the original unity with the universe, and
so forth. But despite such euphemisms an unpleasant taste remains, since
the statements of the tantras are so unequivocal and clear.
It is at any rate a fact that the
entire tantric ritual schema does not get by without dead body parts and
makes generous use of them. The sacred objects employed consist of human
organs, flesh, and bones. Normally these are found at and collected from
the public crematoria in India or the charnel fields of Tibet.
But there are indications which must be
taken seriously that up until this century Tibetans have had to surrender
their lives for ritualistic reasons. The (fourteenth-century) Blue Annals, a seminal document in
the history of Tibetan Buddhism, already reports upon how in Tibet the so-called “18 robber-monks”
slaughtered men and women for their tantric ceremonies (Blue Annals, 1995, p. 697). The
Englishman Sir Charles Bell visited a stupa on the Bhutan-Tibet border in
which the ritually killed body of an eight-year-old boy and a girl of the
same age were found (Bell, 1927, p. 80). Attestations of human sacrifice in
the Himalayas recorded by the American
anthropologist Robert Ekvall date from the 1950s (Ekvall, 1964, pp.
165–166, 169, 172).
In their criticism of lamaism, the
Chinese make frequent and emphatic reference to such ritual killing
practices, which were still widespread at the time of the so-called
“liberation” of the country, that is until the end of the 1950s. According
to them, in the year 1948 21individuals were murdered by state sacrificial
priests from Lhasa as part of a ritual of enemy destruction, because
their organs were required as magical ingredients (Grunfeld, 1996, p. 29).
Rather than dismissing such statements in advance as evil communist
propaganda, the original spirit of the tantra texts would seem to afford
that they be investigated conscientiously and without prejudice.
The morbid ritual objects on display in
the Tibetan
Revolutions
Museum established by the Chinese in Lhasa, certainly teach us something about horror:
prepared skulls, mummified hands, rosaries made of human bones, ten
trumpets made from the thigh bones of 16-year-old girls, and so on. Among
the museum’s exhibits is also a document which bears the seal of the
(Thirteenth or Fourteenth?) Dalai Lama in which he demands the contribution
of human heads, blood, flesh, fat, intestines, and right hands, likewise
the skins of children, the menstrual blood of a widow, and stones with
which human skulls had been staved in, for the “strengthening of holy order”
(Epstein, 1983, p.138). Further, a small parcel of severed and prepared
male sexual organs which are needed to conduct certain rituals can also be
seen there, as well as the charred body of a young woman who was burned as
a witch. If the tantra texts did not themselves mention such macabre
requisites, it would never occur to one to take this demonstration of
religious violence seriously.
That the Chinese with their accusations
of tantric excesses cannot be all that false, is demonstrated by the
relatively recent brutal murder of three lamas, which deeply shook the
exile-Tibetan community in Dharamsala. On 4 February 1997, the murdered bodies of the
70-year-old lama Lobsang Gyatso, head of the Buddhist-dialectical school,
and two of his pupils were found just a few yards from the residence of the
Fourteenth Dalai Lama. The murderers had repeatedly stabbed their victims
with a knife, had slit their throats and according to press reports had
partially skinned their corpses (Süddeutsche
Zeitung, 1997, no. 158, p. 10). All the observers and commentators on
the case were of the unanimous opinion that this was a case of ritual
murder. In the second part of our analysis we examine in detail the real
and symbolic background and political implications of the events of 4
February.
At any rate, the supreme demands which
a yogi must make of himself in order to expose a “crime” which he “really”
commits as an illusion speaks for the likelihood of the actual staging of a
killing during a tantric ritual. In the final instance the conception that
everything is only an illusion and has no independent existence leads to an
indifference as to whether a murder is real or “just” allegorical. From
this point of view everything in the world of Vajrayana is both “real” and “symbolic”. “We touch symbols,
when we think we are touching bodies and material objects”, writes Octavio
Paz with regard to Tantrism, “And vice versa: according to the law of
reversibility all symbols are real and touchable, ideas and even
nothingness has a taste. It makes no difference whether the crime is real
or symbolic: Reality and symbol fuse, and in fusing they dissolve” (Paz,
1984, pp. 91–92).
Concurrence with the demonic
The excesses of Tantrism are
legitimated by the claim that the yogi is capable of transforming evil into
good via his spiritual techniques. This inordinate attempt nonetheless give
rise to apprehensions as to whether the adept does in fact have the
strength to resist all the temptations of the “devil”? Indeed, the “law of
inversion” always leads in the first phase to a “concurrence with the
demonic” and regards contact with the “devil” as a proper admission test
for the path of enlightenment. No other current in any of the world
religions thus ranks the demons and their retinue so highly as in Vajrayana.
The image packed iconography of Tibet literally teems with terrible deities
(herukas) and red henchmen. When
one dares, one’s gaze is met by disfigured faces, hate-filled grimaces,
bloodshot eyes, protruding canines. Twisted sneers leave one trembling — at
once both terrible and wonderful, as in an oriental fairy-tale. Surrounded
by ravens and owls, embraced by snakes and animal skins, the male and
female monster gods carry battle-axes, swords, pikes and other murderous
cult symbols in their hands, ready at any moment to cut their opponent into
a thousand pieces.
The so-called “books of the dead” and
other ritual text are also storehouses for all manner of zombies,
people-eaters, ghosts, ghouls, furies and fiends. In the Guhyasamaja Tantra the concurrence
of the Buddhas with the demonic and evil is elevated to an explicit part of
the program: “They constantly eat blood and scraps of flesh ... They drink
treachery like milk ... skulls, bones, smokehouses, oil and fat bring great
joy” (quoted by Gäng, 1988, pp. 259–260). In this document the Buddhist
gods give free rein to their aggressive destructive fantasies: “Hack to
pieces, hack to pieces, sever, sever, strike, strike, burn, burn” they urge
the initands with furious voices (quoted by Gäng, 1988, p. 220). One could
almost believe oneself to be confronted with primordial chaos. Such horror
visions are not just encountered by the tantric adept. They also, in
Tibetan Buddhist tradition, appear to every normal person, sometimes during
a lifetime on earth, but after death inevitably. Upon dying every deceased
person must, unless he is already enlightened, progress through a limbo (Bardo) in which bands of devils
sadistically torment him and attempt to pull the wool over his eyes. As in
the Christian Middle Ages, the Tibetan monks’ fantasies also revel in
unbearable images of hell. It is said that not even a Bodhisattva is
permitted to help a person out of the hell of Vajra (Trungpa, 1992, p. 68).
Here too we would like to come up with
a lengthier description, in order to draw attention to the
anachronistic-excruciating world view of Tantric Buddhism: “The souls are
boiled in great cauldrons, inserted into iron caskets surrounded by flames,
plunge into icy water and caves of ice, wade through rivers of fire or
swamps filled with poisonous adders. Some are sawed to pieces by demonic
henchmen, others plucked at with glowing tongs, gnawed by vermin, or wander
lost through a forest with a foliage of razor sharp daggers and swords. The
tongues of those who blasphemed against the teaching grow as big as a field
and the devils plow upon them. The hypocrites are crushed beneath huge
loads of holy books and towering piles of relics” (Bleichsteiner, 1937, p.
224). There are a total of 18 different hells, one more dreadful than the
next. Above all, the most brutal punishments are reserved for those
“sinners” who have contravened the rules of Vajrayana. They can wait for their “head and heart [to] burst”
(Henss, 1985, p. 46).
A glance at old Tibetan criminal law
reveals that such visions of fear and horror also achieved some access to
social reality. Its methods of torture and devious forms of punishment were
in no way inferior to the Chinese cruelties now denounced everywhere: for
example, both hands of thieves were mutilated by being locked into
salt-filled leather pouches. The amputation of limbs and bloody floggings
on the public squares of Lhasa, deliberately staged freezing to
death, shackling, the fitting of a yoke and many other “medieval” torments
were to be found in the penal code until well into the 20th century.
Western travelers report with horror and loathing of the dark and damp
dungeons of the Potala, the official residence of the Dalai Lamas.
This clear familiarity with the
spectacle of hell in a religion which bears the banners of love and
kindness, peace and compassion is shocking for an outsider. It is only the
paradoxicalness of the tantras and the Madhyamika
philosophy (the doctrine of the ‘emptiness’ of all being) which allows the
rapid interplay between heaven and hell which characterizes Tibetan
culture. Every lama will answer that, “since everything is pure illusion,
that must also be the case for the world of demons”, should one ask him
about the devilish ghosts. He will indicate that it is the ethical task of
Buddhism to free people from this world of horrors. But only when one has
courageously looked the demon in the eye, can he be exposed as illusory or
as a ghostly figure thrown up by one’s own consciousness.
Nevertheless, that the obsessive and
continuous preoccupation with the terrible is motivated by such therapeutic
intentions and philosophical speculations is difficult to comprehend. The
demonic is accorded a disturbingly high intrinsic value in Tibetan culture,
which influences all social spheres and possesses a seamless tradition.
When Padmasambhava converted Tibet to Buddhism in the eighth century, the
sagas recount that he was opposed by numerous native male and female
devils, against all of whom he was victorious thanks to his skills in
magic. But despite his victory he never killed them, and instead forced
them to swear to serve Buddhism as protective spirits (dharmapalas) in future.
Why, we have to ask ourselves, was this
horde of demons snorting with rage not transformed via the tantric “law of
inversion” into a collection of peace-loving and graceful beings? Would it
not have been sensible for them to have abandoned their aggressive
character in order to lead a peaceful and dispassionate life in the manner
of the Buddha Shakyamuni? The opposite was the case — the newly “acquired”
Buddhist protective gods (dharmapalas)
had not just the chance but also the duty to live out their innate
aggressiveness to the full. This was even
multiplied, but was no longer directed at orthodox Buddhists and
instead acted to crush the “enemies of the teaching”. The atavistic
pandemonium of the pre-Buddhist Land of Snows survived as a powerful faction within
the tantric pantheon and, since horror in general exercises a greater power
of fascination than a “boring” vision of peace, deeply determined Tibetan
cultural life.
Many Tibetans — among them, as we shall
later see, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama — still believe themselves to be
constantly threatened by demonic powers, and are kept busy holding back the
dark forces with the help of magic, supplicatory prayers, and liturgical
techniques, but also recruiting them for their own ends, all of which
incidentally provides a considerable source of income for the professional
exorcists among the lamas. Directly alongside this underworldly abyss — at
least in the imagination — a mystic citadel of pure peace and eternal rest
rises up, of which there is much talk in the sacred writings. Both visions
— that of horror and that of bliss — complement one another and are in
Tantrism linked in a “theological” causal relationship which says that
heaven may only be entered after one has journeyed through hell.
In his psychoanalytical study of
Tibetan culture, Fokke Sierksma conjectures that the chronic fear of
demonic attacks was spread by the lamas to help maintain their power and,
further to this, is blended with a sadomasochistic delight in the macabre
and aggressive. The enjoyment of cruelty widespread among the monks is
legitimated by, among other things, the fact that — as can be read in the
tantra texts — even the Highest Buddhas can assume the forms of cruel gods
(herukas) to then, bellowing and
full of hate, smash everything to pieces.
These days a smile is raised by the
observations of the Briton Austine Waddells, who, in his famous book
published in 1899, The Buddhism in
Tibet, drew attention to the general fear which then dominated every
aspect of religious life in Tibet: “The priests must be constantly called
in to appease the menacing devils, whose ravenous appetite is only
sharpened by the food given to stay it” (quoted by Sierksma, 1966, p. 164).
However, Waddell’s images of horror were confirmed a number of decades
later by the Tibetologist Guiseppe Tucci, whose scholarly credibility
cannot be doubted: “The entire spiritual life of the Tibetans”, Tucci
writes, “is defined by a permanent attitude of defense, by a constant
effort to appease and propitiate the powers whom he fears” (Grunfeld, 1996,
p. 26).
There is no need for us to rely solely
on Western interpreters in order to demonstrate Tantrism’s demonic
orientation; rather we can form an impression for ourselves. Even a
fleeting examination of the violent tantric iconography confirms that
horror is a determining element of the doctrine. Why do the “divine” demons
on the thangkas only very seldom take to the field against one another but
rather almost exclusively mow down men, women, and children? What motivates
the “peace-loving” Dalai Lama to choose as his principal protective goddess
a maniacal woman by the name of Palden
Lhamo, who rides day and night through a boiling sea of blood? The
fearsome goddess is seated upon a saddle which she herself personally
crafted from the skin of her own son. She murdered him in cold blood because
he refused to follow in the footsteps of his converted mother and become a
Buddhist. Why — we must also ask ourselves — has the militant war god Begtse been so highly revered for
centuries in the Tibetan monasteries of all sects?
One might believe that this
“familiarity with the demonic” would by the end of the 20th
century have changed among the exile Tibetans, who are praised for their
“open-mindedness”. Unfortunately, many events of which we come to speak of
in the second part of our study, but most especially the recent and already
mentioned ritual murders of 4 February 1997 in Dharamsala, illustrate that the
gates of hell are by no means bolted shut. According to reports so far, the
perpetrators were acting on behalf of the aggressive protective spirit, Dorje Shugden. Even the Fourteenth
Dalai Lama has attributed to this dharmapala
(protective deity) the power to threaten his life and to bewitch him by
magical means.
If horror is acceptable, then death is
cheap. It is true that in Tantrism death is considered to be a state of
consciousness which can be surmounted, but in Tibetan culture (which also
incorporates non-tantric elements) like the demons it has also achieved a
thriving “life of its own” and enjoys general cult worship. There — as we
shall often come to show — it stands at the center of numerous macabre
rites. Sigmund Freud’s problematic formulation, that “the goal of all life
is death” can in our view be prefaced to Lamaism as its leitmotiv.
The aggression of the divine couple
Does this iconography of horror also
apply to the divine couple who are worshipped at the heart of the tantric
rituals? On the basis of the already described apotheosis of mystic sexual
love as the suspension of all opposites, as a creative polarity, as the
origin of language, the gods, time, of compassion, emptiness, and of the
white light we ought to assume that the primal couple radiate peace,
harmony, concord, and joy. In fact there are such blissful illustrations of
the love of god and goddess in Tantrism. In this connection the primal
Buddha, Samantabhadra, highly
revered in the Nyingmapa school, deserves special mention; naked he sits in
the meditative posture without any ritual objects in his hands, embracing
his similarly unclothed partner, Samantabhadri.
This pure nakedness of the loving couple demonstrates a powerful vision,
which breaks through the otherwise usual patriarchal relation of dominance
which prevails between the sexes. All other images of the Buddhas with
their consorts express an androcentric gesture of dominance through the
symbolic objects assigned to them. [1]
The implements of the deity Kalachakra and
his consort Vishvamata
Peaceful images of the divine couple
are, however, exceptional within the Highest Tantras and in no way the
rule. The majority of the yab–yum
representations are of the Heruka type,
that is, they show couples in furious, destructive and violent positions.
Above all the Buddha Hevajra and
his consort Nairatmya. Surrounded
by eight “burning” dakinis he performs a bizarre dance of hell and is so
intoxicated by his killing instinct that he holds a skull bowl in each of
his sixteen hands, in which gods, humans, and animals are to be found as
victims. In her right hand Nairatmya
threateningly swings a cleaver. Raktiamari,
Yamantaka, Cakrasamvara, Vajrakila or whatever names the clusters of
pairs from the other tantras may have, all of them exhibit the same
striking mixture of aggressiveness, thanatos, and erotic love.
Likewise, the time god, Kalachakra, is of the heruka type.
His wildness is underlined by his vampire-like canines and his hair which
stands on end. The tiger pelt draped around his hips also signalizes his
aggressive character. Two of his four faces are not peaceful, but instead
express greed and wrath. But above all his destructive attitude is
emphasized by the symbols which the “Lord of Time” holds in his twenty-four
hands. Of these, six are of a peaceful nature and eighteen are warlike.
Among the latter are the vajra, vajra hook, sword, trident, cleaver,
damaru (a drum made from two
skull bowls), kapala (a vessel
made out of a human skull), khatvanga
(a type of scepter, the tip of which is decorated with three severed human
heads), ax, discus, switch, shield, ankusha
(elephant hook), arrow, bow, sling, prayer beads made from human bones as
well as the severed heads of Brahma.
The peaceable symbols are: a jewel, lotus, white conch shell, triratna (triple jewel), and fire,
so long it is not used destructively. Finally, there is the bell.
His consort, Vishvamata, also fails to make a pacifist impression. Of the
eight symbolic objects which she holds in her eight hands, six are
aggressive or morbid, and only two, the lotus and the triple jewel, signify
happiness and well-being. Among her magical defense weapons are the
cleaver, vajra hook, a drum made
from human skulls, skull bowls filled with hot blood, and prayer beads made
out of human bones. To signalize that she is under the control of the
androcentric principle, each of her four heads bears a crown consisting of
a small figure who represents the male Dhyani Buddha, Vajrasattva. As far as the facial expressions of the time
goddess can be deciphered, above all they express sexual greed.
Both principal deities, Kalachakra and Vishvamata, stand joined in union in the so-called at-ease
stance, which is supposed to indicate their preparedness for battle and
willingness to attack. The foundation is composed of four cushions. Two of
these symbolize the sun and moon, the other two the imaginary planets, Rahu and Kaligni. Rahu is
believed to swallow both of the former heavenly bodies and plays a role
within the Kalachakra rituals
which is just as prominent as that of Kaligni,
the apocalyptic fire which destroys the world with flame. The two planets
thus have an extremely aggressive and destructive nature. Beneath the feet
of the time couple two Hindu gods are typically shown being trampled, the
red love god Kama and the white
terror god Rudra. Their two
partners, Rati and Uma, try in vain to rescue them.
Consequently, the entire scenario of
the Kalachakra Tantra is warlike,
provocative, morbid, and hot-tempered. In examining its iconography, one
constantly has the feeling of being witness to a massacre. It is no help
against this when the many commentaries stress again and again that
aggressive ritual objects, combative body postures, expressions of rage,
and wrathful deeds are necessary in order to surmount obstacles which block
the individual’s path to enlightenment. Nor, in light of the pathological
compulsiveness with which the Tantric attempts to drive out horror with
horror, is the affirmation convincing, that Buddha’s wrath is compensated
for by Buddha’s love and that all this cruelty is for the benefit of all
suffering beings.
The aggressiveness of both partners in
the tantras remains a puzzle. To our knowledge it is not openly discussed
anywhere, but rather accepted mutely. In the Highest Tantras we can all but
assume the principle that the loving couple as the wrathful- warlike and
turbulent element finds its counterpoint in a peaceful and unmoving Buddha
in meditative posture. In the light of this tantric iconography one has the
impression that the vajra master
prefers a hot and aggressive sexuality with which to effect the
transformation of erotic love into power. Perhaps the Dutch psychologist,
Fokke Sierksma, did not lie so wide of the mark when he described the
tantric performance as “sadomasochistic”, whereby the sadistic role is
primarily played by the man, whilst the woman exhibits both compulsions
together. At any rate, the energy set free by “hot sex” appears to be an
especially sought-after substance for the yogis’ “alchemic” transformative
games, which we will come to examine in more detail later in the course of
our study.
The poetry and beauty of mystic sexual
love is far more often (even if not at all consistently) expressed in the
words of the Highest Tantra texts, than in the visual representations of a
morbid tantric eroticism. This does not fit together somehow. Since at the
end of the sexual magic rituals the masculine principle alone remains, the
verbal praise of the goddess, beauty and love could also be manipulative,
designed to conjure up the devotion of a woman. Bearing in mind that the
method (upaya) of the yogis can
also be translated as “trick”, we may not exclude such a possibility.
Western criticism
In the light of the unconcealed
potential for violence and manifest obsessions with power within Tantric
Buddhism it is incomprehensible that the idea has spread, even among many
Western authors and a huge public too, that Vajrayana is a religious practice which exclusively promotes
peace. This seems all the more misled since the whole system in no way
denies its own destructiveness and draws its entire power from the
exploitation of extremes. In the face of such inconsistencies, some keen
interpreters of the tantras project the violent Buddhist fantasies
outwards, by making Hinduism and the West responsible for aggression and
hunger for power.
For example, the Tibetologist of German
origins, Herbert Guenther (born 1917), who has been engaged in an attempt
to win philosophical respectability for Vajrayana
in Europe and America since the 60s, sharply attacks the Western and Hindu
cultures: “this purely Hinduistic power mentality, so similar to the
Western dominance psychology, was generalized and applied to all forms of
Tantrism by writers who did not see or, due to their being steeped so much
in dominance psychology, could not understand that the desire to realize
Being is not the same as the craving for power” (Guenther, 1976, p. 64).
The sacred eroticism of Buddhism is completely misunderstood in the west
and interpreted as sexual pleasure and exploitation. “The use of sexuality
as a tool of power destroys its function”, this author tells us and
continues, “Buddhist Tantrism dispenses with the idea of power, in which it
sees a remnant of subjectivistic philosophy, and even goes beyond mere
pleasure to the enjoyment of being and of enlightenment unattainable
without woman” (Guenther, 1976, 66).
Anagarika Govinda (1898-1985), also a
German converted to Buddhism whose original name was Ernst Lothar Hoffmann
and who believed himself to be a reincarnation of the German romantic
Novalis, made even greater efforts to deny a claim to power in Tibetan
Buddhism. He even attempted, with — when one considers the print run of his
books — obviously great success, to cleanse Vajrayana of its sacred sexuality and present it as a pure,
spiritual school of wisdom.
Govinda also gives the Hindus the blame
for everything bad about the tantras. Shakti
— the German lama says — mean power. “United with Shakti, be full of power!”, it says in a Hindu tantra (Govinda,
1984, p. 106). “The concept of Shakti,
of divine power,” — the author continues — “plays absolutely no role in
Buddhism. Whilst in tantric Hinduism the concept of power lies at the
center of concern” (Govinda, 1984, p. 105). Further, we are told, the
Tibetan yogi is free of all sexual and power fantasies. He attains union
exclusively with the “eternal feminine”, the symbol for “emotion, love,
heart, and compassion”. “In this state there is no longer anything ‘sexual’
in the time-honored sense of the word ...” (Govinda, 1984, p. 111).
Yet the feminist critique of Vajrayana, which Miranda Shaw
presented in her book on “Women in Tantric Buddhism” published in 1994, appears even more odd. With reference to
Herbert Guenther she also judges the interpretation of authors who reveal
Tantrism to be a sexual and spiritual exploitation of the woman, to be a
maneuver of “western dominance psychology”. These “androcentric” scholars
reiterate a prejudice embedded deeply within western culture, which says
that men are always active, women in contrast passive victims; men are
power conscious, women are powerless; men are molded by intellect, women by
emotion. It was suggested that women did not posses the capacity to
practice tantric Yoga (Shaw, 1994, p. 9).
It is no surprise that the “militant
Tantric” Miranda Shaw argues thus, then from the first to the last line of
her committed book she tries to bring the proof that women were in no way
inferior to the great gurus and Maha
Siddhas. The apparently meager number of “yoginis” to be found in the
history of Vajrayana, compared
that is to the literally countless assembly of tantric masters, are built
up by the author into a spiritual, female super-elite. The women from the
founding phase of Tantrism — we learn here — did not just work together
with their male partners as equals, rather they were far superior to them
in their knowledge of mysteries. They are the actual “masters” and Tantric
Buddhism owes its very existence to them. This radical feminist attempt to
interpret Tantrism as an originally matriarchal cult event, is however, not
entirely unjustified. Let us briefly trace its footsteps.
Footnotes:
[1]
In the usual yab–yum representation of the Dhyani Buddhas, the male Buddha
figure always crosses both of his arms behind the back of his wisdom consort, forming what is known as the Vajrahumkara gesture. At the same time he holds a vajra (the supreme symbol of
masculinity) in his right hand, and a gantha
(the supreme symbol of femininity) in his left. The symbolic possession of both ritual
objects identifies him as the lord of both sexes. He is the androgyne and
the prajna is a part of his self.
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5. PURE
SHAKTISM, TANTRIC FEMINISM, AND ALCHEMY
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