Monday, March 28, 2005

USA | New York | Skymermaid

It was Easter, and by what I am sure was just a coincidence also my birthday. I called the Skymermaid who I had met previously in Mongolia and we went out to celebrate in a Tibetan restaurant. Very nice place and very good momos, even if they were a bit small. Otherwise, just like Barkhor Square in Lhasa (but no Lhasa-brand beer).

View of the Empire State Building (left) from the enormous picture window of the Skymermaid's luxurious penthouse apartment on 14th Street, just off Union Square.

For a bibliophile this neighborhood around Union Station is paradisiacal. Within a five minute walk are a four-story Barnes and Noble Superstore, the Strand Used Book Store, which claims to be the largest used book store in the world, and the East-West Book Store, with a staggering assortment of books on Buddhism, Islam, and various esoteric subjects. The Skymermaid was kind enough to show me all of these places.

Sunday, March 27, 2005

USA | New York | Chingis Khan

From the Big Dumpling I took a grueling non-stop flight on Air China 13.5 hours to the Big Apple. Fortunately I had an emergency row seat to stretch out in and a good book on which to space out—The Baburnama: Memoirs of Babur, Prince and Emperor—and so arrived in New York only slightly discombobulated by the 12 hour time change.
I took a bus from the airport to the Hotel Pennsylvania across from Penn Station in Manhattan. This is a unbelievably horrible dump but I stayed here simply because the bus from the airport stops here and I was too tired and lazy to look for anyplace else. So the moment I got in my room I of course turned on the TV—I had not watched TV for at least four months—and the first thing I saw was a History Channel special on Chingis Khan. On the one hand this was very cheesy—the guy playing Chingis did not even look Mongolian and everyone spoke some very strange language which was definitely not Mongolian—but on the other hand the narrator mentioned several places where I had been in my travels in Mongolia. Here I was in a hotel room in New York and it was like I never left Mongolia. (By the way, Ganchimeg, a Mongolian living in NYC, insists that the Discovery Channel special on Chingis it much better than the History Channel version; I have not seen it.)


Broadway in the Big Apple (Note for those in Bruedersthal; this is Broadway in New York City, and not Broadway in Berlin, PA)

China | Beijing | Shopping | Snakes

Popped down from the Big Buutz to the Big Dumpling (Beijing). Was stunned when I stepped out the airport by 72 degree F. temperatures. Still snow on the ground in the Big Buutz. The Apple store on Wanfujing now has Mac-minis and iPod Shuffles in stock. Bought more tea, which was my real reason for coming to Beijing. Then went out to a strange Hui restaurant where a very louche-looking woman with red (I assume dyed) hair danced in stage with a five-foot long snake around her neck. She then enticed drunken Chinese businessmen in suits to join her on stage. She made them dance, as best they could, although their best would have shamed a dancing bear, and then hung the snake around their necks while they gyrated. All this accompanied by the cheers of their fellow diners, who were seriously into their cups. There must be some very esoteric symbolism to this but I am still trying to figure it out. All and all a very bizarre place . . . Then to the book store . . . bought a copy of Karen Armstrong’s Islam for my friend so she could read about her religion in English. Oddly enough, she also wanted a copy of Mario Puzo’s The Godfather.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Mongolia | Springtime in the Big Buutz

Winter is over in the Big Buutz. Temperatures up into the 40s F. in the afternoons and everyone is out enjoying the sunshine.

Sun worshippers at Gandan Monastery

Here is a new billboard

Man of the Millennium Temujin, a.k.a Chingis Khan, Genghis Khan, etc.

All this Chingisophilia is of course leading to the 800th Anniversary of the Founding of the Mongolia Empire scheduled for 2006. Book your hotel rooms now.

Mongolia | Zanabazar vs. School of Zanabazar

Zanabazar, or at least his school, is finally making the Big Time, in the Big Apple no less. From March 28 through April 4 there will be an exhibition and sale of Buddhist art works attributed to the “School of Zanabazar” at the Barbara Mathes Gallery on 57 Avenue in New York City. The sale is being organized by Rossi & Rossi, a big-time art leader out of London, with publicity by Sue Bond Public Relations, likewise hailing from the Sceptored Isle. According to the press release the exhibition and sale, called “Treasures from Mongolia: Buddhist Sculpture from the School of Zanabazar,” is “the first ever selling exhibition devoted to Mongolian sculpture . . . The exhibition comprises twenty-six gilded pieces dating from the 17th and 18th centuries. Formerly in a private collection, the sculptures are unpublished and have never before been exhibited. This exhibition offers an extraordinary opportunity to see a considerable number of outstanding Mongolian sculptures of various Buddhist subjects. The prices will range from $25,000 to over $150,000.”

I met the other night with Jamyang, a well-known Mongolian artist and fontographer, and also with the head of Erdene Zuu Monastery in Kharkhorin, and neither had any idea of whose private collection this might be.

The dealers are being very cagey as to the works they are selling are from the School of Zanabazar or by the Master himself. Here is a Sitasamara from the School of Zanabazar offered for sale:


Sitasamvara with his consort in the Yab-Yum position (Photo Courtesy of Sue Bond Public Relations)

I popped into the Choijin Lama Temple Museum for another look at Zanabazar’s Sitasamvara, widely regarded as one of the very best of his works.


Entrance to the Choijin Lama Temple Museum


Zanabazar’s Sitasamvara in the Choijin Lama Temple Museum



Details of Zanabazar’s Sitasamvara

For more see Zanabazar’s Art Works in the Choijin Lama Temple Museum

Here is a Sitatapatra from the School of Zanabazar being offered for sale:

Sitatapatra


Details of Sitatapatra (Photo Courtesy of Sue Bond Public Relations)
Compare this with Zanabazar’s Green Tara in the Winter Palace Museum;


Zanabazar’s Green Tara


Details of Zanabazar’s Green Tara


It would probably be best to view the "School of Zanabazar" works in situ in the Big Apple to get the best impression of them.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Mongolia | 24 Incarnations of Javzandamba

As you know, Zanabazar, the first Bogd Gegen of Mongolia, was the 16th Incarnation of Javzandamba. You may be aware of some but perhaps not all of the other 23 Incarnations of Javzandamba. Here’s the full list:
1. Lodoi-shindu-namdak — One of the Buddha’s original disciples
2. Barbizobo — head of the 500 pundits who dwelt at Nalanda Monastery in India, during the time of the Indian sage Nagarjuna (probably in the first century AD).
3. Narbujobdo — Born in India, biographical data lacking.
4. Radanchenbo — Born in India, biographical data lacking.
5. Ronsomchoisan — First incarnation to appear in Tibet, during the lifetime of the Bengal-born sage Atisha (982-1054 AD).
6. Dambabanchug — Born in Tibet, biographical data lacking.
7. Odserbal — Born in Tibet, biographical data lacking.
8. Brugdajantsan — Born in Tibet, biographical data lacking.
9. Sanjairaichen — Born in Tibet, biographical data lacking.
10. Samgabadra — Born in Tibet, biographical data lacking.
11. Jamyan Tsorj —Tashi Pelden in Tibetan; born in Tibet near Samye Monastery. A close disciple of Tsongkhapa, founder of the Gelug sect, he established Drepung Monastery in 1416 and more than one hundred other monasteries and hermitages all over Tibet.
12. Choijininjed — Born in Ceylon during the latter part of the life of the First Dalai Lama, Gendun Drubpa (1391-1474).
13. Gungaadolchog — Born in the Tibetan province of “Nari” (Ngari?) during the time of the Second Dalai Lama, Gendun Gyatso (1475-1542).
14. Gajedsajon — Born in India, the son of a Indian king. Died at the age of fourteen.
15. Jonanjavzandaranata — Taranatha (1575–1634), member of the Jonang sect, founder of Puntsokling Monastery in Tibet; prolific author whose works include the History of Buddhism in India and Origins of Tara Tantra; died in Mongolia in 1634.

Eight Bogd Gegens of Mongolia


Image of Zanabazar in the Zanabazar Art Museum, Ulaan Baatar

16. (1) Zanabazar (1635-1723)
17. (2) Lusandanbidonme (1724–1757) Born in Mongolia, son of Dondub, himself the son of Zanabazar’s nephew.
18. (3) Ishüvdennyam (1758–1773) Born in Tibet.
19. (4) Luvsanbanchujigmedjamts (1775–1813) Born in Tibet,cousin of the 7th Dalai Lama.
20. (5) Luvsantsültemjigmeddorj — (1815–1842) Born in Tibet.
21. (6) Luvsanbaldanbijantsan — (1842–1847?) Born in Tibet, died a young boy of small pox.
22. (7) Choijibanchugprinleijamts (1850–1868) Born in Tibet.


Portrait of the 8th Bogd Gegen in the Zanabazar Art Museum, Ulaan Baatar

23. (8) Luvsanchoijinimadanzinbanchug (1870–1924) Born in Tibet.

Current Incarnation of Javzandamba


Jampal Namdrol Chokye Gyaltsen

24. Jambalnamdolchoijijantsan — Jampal Namdrol Chokye Gyaltsen , born in Tibet, exactly date unknown; apparently in the late 1920s or early 1930s. Recognized as the incarnation of Javzandamba by the 14th Dalai Lama in 1991. Currently lives in India.

Since there were only fifteen incarnations of Javzandamba between the time of Buddha, generally recognized as about 2500 years ago, and the birth of Zanabazar, the first Bogd Gegen, in 1635, and given the average life span of human beings, there would appear to be long periods of time when there was no living representative of the line, and that it was in effect dormant. This is not precisely the case however. As learned lamas explained to the Russian ethnologist A, M. Podzneev in the 1890s, “during the rest of the time he [Javzandamba] was reborn in diverse parts of the universe with the purpose of benefit not only to people but to beings of other worlds; these reincarnations of him are unknown to anyone beside the Gegeen himself, and that is why there are no legends about them whatsoever.”

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Mongolia | News | Snowstorm

 ULAN BATOR, March 14 (Xinhuanet) -- A strong snowstorm hit Mongolia's northern Sukhbaatar province last week, killing three herdsmen and more than 3,000 heads of livestock, the government said Monday.

The nomads, who were herding their animals at the time when the storm happened, got lost in the blizzard which lasted for 6-12 hours. Their bodies were found two days later, the General Authority for Emergency Management (GAEM) said.

 The wind speed reached 20 meters per second and the snowfall was 50-60 centimeters in the province, about 300 km from the capital of Ulan Bator, GAEM spokeswoman Dulamsuran said.

Livestock raising is an important sector of Mongolia's economy, which is extremely vulnerable to bad weather due to the nomadic tradition.

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Mongolia | Tibetan Buddhism | Phagspa

More on Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia: While in Lanzhou Sakya Pandita had attached the attention of Köten’s cousin Khubilai, who sent the Tibetan monk an invitation to visit his own court, then apparently located in the Mongol capital of Kharkhorum. Unfortunately Sakya Pandita transmigrated before the invitation arrived. In his stead his nephew Phagspa was ordered to present himself to Khubilai. Like his uncle, Phagspa had been a child prodigy who could read and write almost from the cradle. At the age of three, to universal astonishment, he could recite the Hevajra Tantra from memory. This accomplishment led to the nickname “Phagspa,” meaning “Exceptional.” He arrived at the Mongol court (presumably at Kharkhorum) in 1253, at the age of eighteen and was soon presented to Khubilai.


Thangka of Phagspa in the Zanabazar Fine Arts Museum, Ulaan Baatar

Later the founder of the Yüan Dynasty in China, Khubilai was probably the greatest of the Mongol Khans after Chingis himself. He was one of four sons of Chingis’s youngest son Tolui, who upon Chingis’s death had inherited the so-called Three Rivers Region, the ancestral homeland of the Mongols centered around the headwaters of the Tuul, Onon, and Kherlen. At the time of Phagpa’s arrival in Mongolia his brother Möngke was Great Khan, but Khubilai’s star was on the ascendancy and he was already poising himself for his ultimate rise to power. As noted, Khubilai was probably already a Buddhist by this time. The Chinese Ch’an monk was already in Kharkhorum and had served as the head of Buddhism in the Mongol Empire under Möngke at least until 1252, and according to some accounts he had converted Khubilai to Buddhism as early as a decade before.

Although at the time he may have been professing Ch’an Buddhism Khubilai was still curious and open minded about other spiritual traditions. He himself came from an ecumenical background. His father Tolui was presumably a shamanist like his grandfather Chingis. His mother Sorqotani however was a Nestorian Christian, and she had taken over Tolui’s khanate when he died in 1233—apparently from alcoholism—and overseen the strict upbringing of her sons. She was renowned for both her wisdom—Khan Möngke regularly sought her counsel—and charity. “And her hand was ever open in munificence and benefaction,” intoned the Persian historian, Ata-Malik Juvaini. who was in Kharkhorum in 1252-53, “and although she was a follower and devotee of the religion of Jesus she would bestow alms and presents upon imams and shaikhs and strove to revive the sacred observances of the faith of Mohammed (may God bless him and give him peace!) . . . And always she would sent alms to all parts to be distributed among the poor and needy Moslems, and so she continued until [February or March of 1252], when the Destroyer of Delights sounded the note of departure.”

So Khubilai wasted no time in grilling the young lama about Tibetan Buddhism. Who was the model man in Tibet? he wanted to know (Milarepa, Phagspa replied); who was greatest teacher? (Sakya Pandita, an ocean compared to which, Phagspa claimed, he himself was “like the minutest measure of water). More to the point, Khubilai wanted to collect taxes and draft soldiers in Tibet for the Mongol Empire, and what did the young lama think about that? “Tibet is a small distance borderland. It cannot provide you with even the least amount of taxes and conscripts,” explained Phagspa. If this was the case, riposted Khubilai, then they were just wasting each other’s time and Phagspa would do better just to go back to Tibet. At this point, according to the Rosary of White Lotuses, Khubilai’s wife Zangmo stepped into the breach and exclaimed that even gray-haired monks were no match for the young Phagspa. “Do not send him to Tibet,” she “but enter into a Preceptor-Protector bond with him, learn from him, ask him questions about the Dharma!” She pointed out that Sakya lamas were especially proficient in secret Tantra teachings and perhaps to set an example asked that she and her circle of twenty-four female attendants be initiated into the Hevajra Tantra. Phagspa complied, and to show her appreciation for the initiation Zangmo gave Phagspa her ear-ring containing a huge pearl. Later Phagspa reportedly sold the pearl and used the funds to put a gold roof on one of the temples at Sakya Monastery in Tibet.

Following his wife’s lead Khubilai then asked to be initiated into the Hevajra Tantra. Phagspa said this was not possible because Khubilai was a king and a king would not be able to observe the vows necessary to take the initiation. First, Phagspa explained, Khubilai would have to take a seat lower than the presiding lama’s seat; second, he would have to recognize the Triple Jewel as his sole refuge; third, he must follow whatever order his teacher gave him. Khubilai agreed all this was impossible for a king. Again his wife stepped forward. The King holds supreme authority in China and Mongolia, she pointed out, why not give Phagspa supreme authority in Tibet and affairs of the Dharma? Although it did not fully address all the issues raised, Khubilai and Phagspa agreed to this conciliatory compromise, and a Hevajra initiation was given to the Mongolian ruler and twenty-four of his associates. In return he gave Phagspa an immense three-dimensional golden mandala encrusted with pearls “the size of sheep droppings” and granted the Sakya sect, with Phagspa at its head, both political and religious control over all of Tibet.

These events apparently took place in 1253. In 1254 Khubilai issued an edict ordering monks in Tibet to pay taxes. Heeding Phagspa’s objections, he finally excused Sakya monks from taxation. Going one step further, he proclaimed that no other sect except the Sakya be allowed to practice in Tibet. Phagspa protested that this would only inflame sectarian strife, not end it. Khubilai relented and had the final proclamation changed to read, “It is the wish of both the Preceptor and the Protector that each and every Dharma system should develop on its own,” thus granting a degree of freedom to the various other sects in Tibet. Having assumed the role of Khubilai’s chief spiritual advisor, over the next several years Phagspa “gave endless teachings for the benefit of others” and in 1258 he also engaged and defeated Taoist monks who came to Kharkhorum for debates on the relative merits of Buddhism and Taoism sponsored first by Möngke and then by Khubilai.

When Khubilai assumed the title of Great Khan in 1260, after the death of Möngke, he made Tibetan Buddhism the official religion of his empire and named Phagspa as his ti-shih, or “Imperial Preceptor.” In this role Phagspa had considerable authority and prestige, sitting always at the Great Khan’s side at court and received with great honors and ceremony wherever he traveled. His powers were increased even more In 1264 when he was appointed chief of the Tsung-chih-yüan, the department of the central government responsible for both Chinese and Tibetan Buddhism and the administration of Tibet.

Phagspa was also a remarkable scholar who developed an elaborate Buddhist religio-political theory of world rule based on the idea of chakravartin kings, a line of benevolent Buddhist rulers whose latest representative was none other than Khubilai himself. He also oversaw the development of a new script for the Mongolian language which in 1269 became the official writing system of the Mongol Empire, mandatory in all government documents. According to the edict issued by Khubilai:

“It is our opinion that writing is used to represent words, and words are used to record events. This has been the system from ancient times through to the present day. Our nation was founded in the North, and in those times our customs were as yet ancient and uncomplicated, and we had no time to create [our own script]. When we needed to write things down, then we used the Chinese or Uighur scripts in order to represent the language of this court. However, when we look at the Liao and Jin regimes, or other far distant countries, they all have their own scripts. Now the rule of the pen has come to replace the rule of the sword, but we yet lack a means of writing, which really is a failure in this dynasty's system of government. Therefore I expressly commanded the National Preceptor Phagspa to create the New Mongolian Script, which could be used to transcribe all other scripts, in the hope that words may easily be used to express events. Henceforth all official documents and imperial edicts will be written in the New Mongolian Script, together with a supplementary version of the text written in the local script."



Examples of Phagspa Script

In appreciation for his role in creating the new script Phagspa was granted the title of “The Great Precious Dharma King,” in addition to the title of "Supreme Lama, King of the Faith in Three Lands,” which Khubilai had already given him.

Although scholars still opine that the so-called Phagspa Script was the best script for the linguistic idiosyncrasies of the Mongolian language the Mongols later reverted back to the Uighur form of writing which had been adopted at the time of Chingis Khan. It continued to be used occasionally for decorative purposes, however, notably on the Gold Seal of 13th Dalai Lama, made in 1909, which had inscriptions in both the Tibetan and Phagspa scripts. As we shall see, Zanabazar, the first Bogd Gegen of Mongolia, may well of had this script in mind when he invented his own Soyombo script.

Phagspa remained in Mongolia until 1274, when he returned to Tibet, eventually taking up residence at Sakya Monastery. On the 22nd day of the 11th month of the Iron Dragon Year (1280) he announced, “Please make arrangements for a great offering.” According to the Rosary of White Lotuses, “Then he sat in the lotus posture, took a bell and a dorje, and passed away. This demonstration of the way out of all suffering was the final teaching for those of his disciples who still believed in the permanent nature of things.” Apparently worn out by his extensive labors on behalf of his Mongol masters and Buddhism, he was only forty-six at the time of his death.

Tuesday, February 22, 2005

Mongolia | Tibetan Buddhism | Sakya Pandita

The days are getting longer – the sun doesn’t set now until 6:25, nine minutes later than just a week ago. Still brutally cold though – a testicle tingling 36 below zero F. this morning.


I have been researching the early introduction of Buddhism into Mongolia, in particular the first encounter of Mongolians with Tibetan Buddhism. It seems that Chingis Khan’s armies had made preliminary raids into Tibet as early as 1205, a year before the founding of the Mongol Empire, and around the same time Chingis himself reportedly met with some Tibetan Buddhists and had been impressed by their doctrines. According to the Rosary of White Lotuses, the same year he sent an envoy with message to a prominent Sakya lama known as Sa-pan stating, “I have not finished the wars of my reign yet, but as soon as these are over, please come to Hor [Mongolia] with your disciples and spread the Teachings of the Lord Buddha. . . In these boundless crude wastes of the north the Buddha’s teachings should make their long-delayed appearance Not everyone accepts this account, however, in part because Sa-pan, who would become better known as the Sakya Pandita, would have been only twenty-three years old in 1205. In any case, the Rosary of White Lotuses goes on to claim that Chingis and Sakya Pandita eventually established between themselves the Preceptor-Protector relationship which as we shall see would become a standard feature of later interactions between Tibetan religious leaders and secular rulers both Mongolian and Chinese. There is little evidence, however, that Chingis himself ever embraced Buddhist teachings. Although evincing interest in various spiritual traditions, particularly Taoism, he apparently remained true to the shamanic beliefs of his ancestors to the end of his life.

More substantive contacts between Mongolians from north of the Gobi and Buddhism occurred in 1219 when the Mongol general Mukali overran the city of Lan Ch’eng in Shansi province and captured a monk by the name of Hai-yün, a follower of the Ch’an sect then prevalent in China and not a Tibetan Buddhist. Impressed by the spiritual presence of Hai-yün, Mukali asked to met the monk’s teacher, Chung-kuan. Mukali wrote a favorable report about the two men to Chingis Khan himself. The Great Khan replied:

“‘From what your messengers have told me, it appears that the Old Reverend One and the Young Reverend One are both true “Speakers to Heaven.“ Feed and clothe them well, and if you find any others of the same sort, gather them all in and let them “speak to Heaven” as much as they will. They are not be treated with disrespect by anyone . . .’”

Güyük Khan, grandson of Chingis who became Great Khan after the death of his father Ögedai, named Hai-yün chief of all monks in the Mongol realm, which by then included a large swath of China, and invited him to live in Kharkhorum. He held the same post under Möngke, Güyük’s successor. Hai-yün may have converted Khubilai, Möngke’s successor, to Buddhism as early as 1242, and he himself chose the name for Khubilai’s oldest son, Chen-chin (Pure Gold). By the time Hai-yün died in 1257, however, the Ch’an School of Buddhism from China had been superceded in the hearts and minds of the Mongol aristocracy by Buddhism as practiced in the Land of Snows, Tibet.

By 1239 Güyük’s brother Köten had occupied what is now Sichuan province in China. His gaze turning west to Tibet, he recalled the lama known as Sa-pan, or Sakya Pandita:

“In earlier days, our forefather King Chingis sent a letter of invitation to Sakya Pandita . . . However, even though they set up a Preceptor-Protector bond, the teaching could not spread. Now this lama, who’s known as Sakya Pandita . . . is well-versed in the five sciences, he has been been to India, and he could even defeat the wise infidel Chroje Gawo in a dispute! Therefore, if we could invite him, the Teaching would spread and bring welfare to all sentient being, as well as fulfill the designs of our Forefather.”

Thus the Rosary of White Lotuses tendentiously implies that Köten’s subsequent invasion of Tibet was motivated mainly by his desire to bring the Dharma back to Mongolia and not by what was by then the insatiable thirst for conquest on the part of the Mongols. The Rosary does not stint however in describing Köten’s bloody procession through Tibet. Setting out in 1240, he and his army “killed many Tibetan in the Sog River valley” and 500 monks at Reting Monastery, about 90 miles north of the Lhasa. Although the records of the invasion are scant, Köten and his army apparenty reached the Tibetan capital. At some point he sent a general (“Dorta the Black”) with the invitation to Sakya Pandita, who was at the time ensconced at Sakya Monastery, the headquarters of the Sakya sect, about 90 miles southwest of Shigatse.

According to the account proffered by the Rosary, Sakya Pandita—“The Great Wave of Dawning Faith that Sweeps Everything in it Wake,” as the author of the Rosary terms him—was overcome with joy at the arrival of the Mongolians, claiming that it fulfilled the prophecy of one Sonam Tsemo the Venerable who had proclaimed:

"King Gotan [Köten], the manifest Bodhhisvattva
Shall come to hear the sounds of your fame,
and shall send you a wrathful messenger with an invitation.
Dressed in eagle-like hat and snout-like shoes, after their manner,
the messenger — Dorta — shall arrive in haste.
Follow him willingly and without fear,
for to assist the Buddha’s teachings and all sentient beings."

“To help and benefit sentient beings; if this is what Bodhisattvas are there for,” concluded Sakya Pandita, “even the flames of hell shall turn into gardens of flowers.” Apparently this was a comment on venturing into the arms of the Mongolians.

In 1244, at the age of sixty-three, Sakya Pandita departed Tibet for Köten’s court near what is now the city of Langzhou in Gansu Province of China. To smooth the way he sent ahead his two nephews, Phagspa—who would eventually became famous in his own right—and Phyagna. The journey was arduous, and there were many followers of the Sakya sect to meet with along the way, but Sakya Pandita finally arrived at Langzhou in 1446 and on a day determined by astrologers was eventually presented, along with his nephews, to Köten in 1447.

There followed a curious incident. According to the Rosary of White Lotuses, Köten, wishing to test Sakya Pandita’s powers, had one of his resident magicians conjure up a image of a big city and then invited the Tibetan monk to step into it . Nonplussed, Sakya Pandita recited a prayer and threw some flowers at the mirage, whereupon it solidified into a real city. According to the Rosary, this “Phantom Town” became what is now the city of Lanzhou.

Duly impressed, Köten entered into a Preceptor-Protector relationship with Sakya Pandita and sought his counsel in matters both spiritual and temporal. The Tibetan guru’s standing was increased even more when Köten fell ill due to a plague of “earth demons” and Sakya Pandita succeeded in curing him by a technique known as the “Lion’s Roar.” Settling in at the new “Phantom Town” of Lanzhou, Sakya Pandita proceed to give teachings on various sutras and tantras and eventually initiated Köten and members of his court into the Hevajra Tantra, “opening anew for them the deepest path of Vajrayana.” Assisting the Pandita in his teachings was a sizable contingent of Uighur Buddhist monks from what is now Xinjiang province in the west of China.

In appreciation for these spiritual gifts we are told that Köten granted Sakya Pandita, and by extension the Sakya sect, political power over all of Tibet. “In this instance,” says historian of Buddhist in China Kenneth Ch’en, “one sees the first instance of that peculiar institution in Tibet, the assumption of political power by a religious leader.” Justifying his actions, he wrote to the heads of other monasteries:

“This king [Köten] is a bodhisattva, who has the greatest faith in the Buddhist teachings generally, and the three gems in particular. He protects the universe by good laws, and particularly he has a great attachment to me far above the others. He said to me, ‘Preach religion with a tranquil mind, I will give you what you wish. I know that you do good, heavens know if I do also.”

Thus through Sakya Pandita the Mongols achieved political control of Tibet, while the Sakya Pandita, for his part, gained a powerful patron for Buddhism. Köten and the Mongols may have first favored the Buddhist hierarchy in Tibet as a political expediency, but there is no doubt they were also attracted to Tibetan Buddhist teachings and doctrine. As Ch’en points out:

“The Mongols, on their side, were converted, partly through fear of the mysterious powers emanating from the formulas and charms of Lamaism [a term for Tibetan Buddhism no longer favored in scholarly circles] and partly because of the belief that Lamaism was better adapted to their temperament and habit, since both they and the Tibetans were hardy, accustomed to life in the open, and averse to agriculture.”

Other observers have averred the that Tibetan Buddhism was still at that time greatly influenced by the ancient shamanism and animism of Tibet, and thus may have been more compatible with the belief systems of the Mongols, many of whom remained faithful to the shamanism and nature worship of their own ancestors.

Sakya Pandita was never to return to Tibet. He died in Lanzhou in 1251. During his cremation images of Hevajra and Manjusri appeared on the crown of his skull and Heruka on his forehead, as well as numerous other manifestations. Among his ashes were found numerous “relic pills,” small hard pellets of uncertain composition which are often found in the remains of highly advanced lamas (indeed, this phenomenon continues to occur to the present day). Köten, was duly impressed, as least according to the Rosary of White Lotuses:

"Behold the Wonder! It is due to the merits of earlier lives,
that this Crown Jewel of the Buddha’s teaching is to manifest
in this Holy One, who was brought here by the power of my prayers . . ."

Having succeeded in bringing Tibet under the sway of the Mongols and pledging himself and his court to Buddhism, Köten died the same year, in 1651.

Numerous stupas were subsequently constructed in Lanzhou, including one to house Sakya Pandita’s remains. The eventual fate of this latter stupa is unknown. One of Sakya Pandita's written works, Ordinary Wisdom: Treasury of Good Advice, is still in print today.

Thursday, February 17, 2005

Mongolia | Ulaan Baatar | Iran | New York

Excerpt from a Story in the New York Times about the US drone planes which are supposedly flying over Iran gathering information on Iran’s nuclear facilities:
After news media reports today of a loud explosion in southern Iran caused by one of the planes' being fired on, stock prices in New York dipped. One government official said the noise was a fuel tank falling off an airplane. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards said the blast occurred during dam construction, but another government official, in a statement that added to the confusion, later said there had been a large bang but no explosion.
So the Iranian new media reports that there was an explosion caused by one of these drones being fired upon; a government official claims on the other hand it was fuel tank falling off an airplane; yet another an explosion at a dam construction site, while still another claims there was no explosion at all but just a loud bang, and all this causes stock prices on the New Year Stock Exchange to fall?

I hesitate to check my own retirement account after this, lest I suddenly discover that in my old age I will have to go out and join the street people rummaging through the trash dumpsters behind my apartment, all because of an unexplained bang in Iran.