Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


History of Tibetan Buddhism

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Songsten023.JPG

Tibetan Buddhism is a syncretic mix of Mahayana Buddhism, Tantrism and local pantheistic religions, particularly the Bon Religion. Its organization, public practices and activities are coordinated mainly by Monasteries associated with temples. Religious authority is in the hands of priests called lamas.

"We in the West tend to project all our fantasies about Mystical spiritualism onto Tibetan Buddhism," Erik Curren, author of Buddha's Not Smiling: Uncovering Corruption at the Heart of Tibetan Buddhism Today , told the Los Angeles Times. "It's really like a civil War. There's lots of acrimony."

Tibetan Buddhism is the main Religion of Tibet. It is also practiced by Mongolians and tribal groups such as the Qiang and Yugur in Yunnan, Sichuan, Gansu, Qinghai and other provinces and by Tibetan- and Mongolian-related people in India, Nepal, Bhutan and Russia.

Religion is a daily, if not hourly practice. Tibetans spend much of their time in prayer or doing activities, such as spinning Prayer Wheels, that earn them Merit (Buddhist brownie points that move them closer to Nirvana). Like all Buddhists, Tibetans practice nonviolence, do good deeds, present gifts to Monks and aspire to have gentle thoughts.

History of Tibetan Buddhism

Before Buddhism was introduced to Tibet the people there practiced the Bon Religion. Tibetan Buddhism absorbed elements of Bon when it developed in the A.D. 8th century.

Tantric-buddha.jpg

Bon Religion is an ancient shamanist Religion with Esoteric Rituals, exorcisms, talismans, spells, incantations, drumming, sacrifices, a pantheon Gods and Evil Spirits, and a cult of the dead. Originating in Tibet, it predates Buddhism there, has greatly influenced Tibetan Buddhism and is still practiced by the Bonpo people. Prayer flags, prayers wheels, sky burials, festival Devil dances, Spirit traps, rubbing holy stones—things that are associated with Tibetan Religion and Tibetan Buddhism—all evolved from the Bon Religion. The Tibetan scholar David Snellgrove once said “Every Tibetan is a bonpo at Heart.” See Bon Religion

Buddhism developed out of Hinduism. Most Tibetan Buddhist pay homage to Gods found in both religions as well as animist and shamanist ones. Some Himalayan people say "the mountain Gods are Buddhists."

Early Tibetan tribes were warlike. It has been argued that Buddhism pacified them, making it easier for the Chinese and tribes from the north to conquer them.

The story of the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet is a mix of history and legends about religious heros and their conquest of local Gods and Spirits and converting them to Buddhism. Most of the religious heros are believed to have been real people put some of their achievements and characteristics are clearly legendary and supernatural.

Tibetan Buddhist heros are often regarded as manifestations or reincarnations of Gods, Spirits and Bodhisattvas and their “historical” achievements often involve fighting and defeating Evil Gods and Spirits and allying themselves with good Gods and Bodhisattvas and wrathful and vengeful ones.

Samantabhadra140.jpg

Arrival of Buddhism in Tibet

Buddhism was introduced into Tibet in the A.D. 3th century, about 700 years after Buddha's Death, by Indian missionaries, but the Religion didn't really take hold until the 7th and 8th century when Monks from India and Nepal appeared in large numbers. Buddhist scriptures from China also played a part in the spread of Buddhism in Tibet.

In the early days, Buddhism was practiced by the royal court of Tibet—particularly after King Songtsen Gampo took Nepali and Chinese wives in the 7th century—but was not practiced in the countryside where the Bon Religion prevailed and Buddhism was greeted with hostility. The Buddhist priests of this period were probably Indians or Chinese.

The kind of Buddhism introduced to Tibet was Tantrism, a sect within Buddhism and Hinduism that incorporates Esoteric Religion, Ritual magic and sophisticated philosophy (See Beliefs). Some of the Mystical and magical aspects of Tantrism dovetailed with Mystical and magical practices of the Bon Religion. After a period of resistance Buddhism replaced the Bon Religion and was firmly established in Tibet by the 11th century.

Guru Rinpoche and Milarepa

Guru Rinpoche is an Indian sage who is said to have introduced Buddhism to Tibet in the Earth Ox Year of A.D. 749 and is regarded as one of the founders of the Nyingmapa order. According to legend he emerged from a Lotus blossom when he was born in the Milk Ocean Land (present-day Swat, Pakistan) and began teaching in Tibet when he was 1,000 years old. Employing Tantric powers, he and his Monks purportedly converted thousand of demons to Buddhism, which is supposedly why Tibetan Buddhists worship so many Gods as well as follow the teachings of Buddha.

Padma-sculpture.jpg

Known in Sanskrit as Padmasambhava, Guru Rinpoche is regarded as the second Buddha by members of the Nyingmapa sect and a manifestation of the Amitbha Buddha. He is said to have lived on a copper-colored mountain paradise called Zangdok with a group of cannibalistic trolls. In paintings he wears a red Nyingmapa-style hat, a Ritual dagger in his belt and has a curly moustache. In his left hand is skull cup and a staff topped with three skulls and cross bolts of lightning known as vajas. In his right hand is a thunderbolt, symbolizing Compassion. Guru Rinpoche has eight manifestations which are known collectively as the Guri Tsengye.

Milarepa (“the Cotton Clad”) is one of Tibetan Buddhism's most well-known figures. Regarded as one of the founders of the Kagyupa (Red Hat) order, he was an 11th century Monk, poet, alchemist and magician who is famous for walking around in the cold with nothing on but a thin cotton shirt (hence his name) and subsisting on a diet of nettles. He purportedly wrote "one hundred thousand songs," some of which are still known to Tibetans today, and taught Tantric sexual techniques to mountain Goddesses.

Milarepa was a follower of the Marpa school, a popular Buddhist sect that emphasized yoga and Spiritual principals over philosophy. A sort of Buddhist version of St Francis of Assisi, he is said to have turned to Buddhism and spent six years mediating in cave to repent for trying to poison his uncle and attained the supreme Enlightenment of Buddhahood in one lifetime. Most paintings depict him smiling, holding his hands over his ears and singing. He is sometimes green to indicate that he lived on a diet of nettles.

Buddhism Takes Hold in Tibet

Gods-p a-b.JPG

In the late 8th century, under King Trisong Detsen, Tibetan Buddhism developed in an area that extends from Xigaze to Zetang on the Yarlung Zangpo river. Monasteries, temples and chapels were built; scriptures were translated into Tibetan; Buddhism became the Religion of the Tibetan court; and the Religion spread along the Central Asian trade routes that Tibet controlled.

Tibetan Buddhism evolved through a continuous process of debate and interpretation over the meaning of Buddhism between factions and sects with different beliefs. At the same time traditional Tibetan customs, Deities, incantations and ceremonial practices were absorbed. But the process was far from smooth, a number of competing sects were created and they vied for dominance and sometimes engaged in violent conflicts.

Buddhism in Tibet was dealt as severe blow when Tibet's control of the Central Asian trade routes faltered and the empire collapsed completely around A.D. 840. It experienced a revival in far western Tibet under the guidance of Ye-shes-'od, a regional ruler. In 985, Ye-shes-'od, renounced his throne and was ordained as a Buddhist monk and used his influence to spread the Religion. During the 10th and 11th century many temples and Monasteries were built. Western Tibet remained the center of Tibetan Buddhism for the next 500 years.

Tibet in the 10th century was in a state of anarchy. The Tibetan people were divided. Buddhism had been corrupted, ridden with misinterpretations and mixed with the shamanistic Bon Religion. There were reports of "robber Monks” who got drunk, engaged in sex and kidnaped and killed people and ate them.

The Sanskrit translator Rinchen Zangpo, and the legendary Indian master Atisha were also instrumental in reintroducing Buddhism to western Tibet. The 60-year-old Atisha was lured by small Fortune in gold to trek to Guge in Tibet in 1042. He helped bring order to Tibet and Tibet Buddhism by setting strict rules prohibiting sex, Alcohol, travel and possessions. These rules set the tone for the anti-materialist aspects of Tibetan Buddhism. Atisha's campaign was supported by Noble families, whose young men were recruited as lamas, teachers, administrators and teachers.

Establishment of the Buddhist Bureaucracy

Under Atisha’s system, sons for the highest ranking families were made the head lamas of Monasteries on their land. The offices were hereditary but because the lamas were celibate Monks Leadership positions were handed down from uncle to nephew.

Large numbers of Tibetans traveled to the great centers of Buddhist learning in the Pali Empire in India. They dominated entire colleges in Bengal and Bihar and copied libraries of texts which they brought back to Tibet.

By the 13th century, Monks in the Monasteries in Tibet were the equivalent of the Mandarins in Imperial China. They ran the bureaucracy and administered The country but were ultimately accountable to the kings and nobles. Over time the Monasteries grew in Power and maintained their hold on Power until the invasion by China in 1950.

Comeback of Tibetan Buddhism

After years of being brutally repressed by the Communists, especially during the Cultural Revolution, Tibetan Buddhism is making a comeback. Some nunneries have a waiting list of four or five years. The Religion is also flourishing outside Tibet, particularly in Sichuan Province, where there are large numbers of Tibetans.

Han Chinese and Tibetan Buddhism

Many middle class Han Chinese have taken an Interest in Tibetan Buddhism seemingly to fill a vacuum left by China’s increasingly materialist society, They are aided in their Spiritual quest by lots of Internet sites and blogs. Many followers are women and many follow a particular Lama.

Other Rituals include releasing fish in holes bored in ice-covered lakes and walking clockwise around a bonfire, while Chanting incantations against Evil Spirits ad throwing Food and cigarettes into the Fire.

Han Chinese practitioners of Tibetan Buddhism have traveled in mass to a frozen reservoir north of Beijing and released 53,000 fish in holes bored in the ice and participated in a Rituals in which they walk clockwise around a bonfire, while Chanting incantations against Evil Spirits and throwing Food and cigarettes into the Fire. When the Rituals were first held there were maybe a dozen participants. Now they arrive by the busload. [Source: Mareen Fan, Washington Post, February 21, 2009]

For the most part the government doesn’t bother them because their numbers are still relatively low. Sometimes security forces trail lamas with large followings to see what they are up to.

Some Chinese Buddhist temples invite Tibetan Monks in an effort to attract to more followers. A Tibetan Monk who has been in trouble with authorities for traveling to India to study at a religious college run by the Dalai Lama said he counted many Han from Beijing and Shanghai in his classes, ‘They are looking for meaning in their lives and find that we as Tibetan Buddhists can give it to them.”

Some Han Chinese deeply revere the Dalai Lama. One man from Jiangsu Province who was visiting the Dalai Lama’s birthplace told Reuters, “He is the holiest of them all. My Heart jumps a beat when I see his picture, he is the most important of all the living Buddhas.” A Han woman from Guangdong Province said, “They have more complex emotions than we do. I think we can learn from out Tibetan compatriots.”

Source

by Jeffrey Hays
factsanddetails.com