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Nāgārjuna Buddhist Alchemist

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Nagarjuna with 84 mahasiddha.jpg

The two most famous Buddhist alchemists of ancient India were the Mahasiddhas Nagarjuna and his student, Kharnaripa, who is also known as Aryadeva. From India, the mahasiddha tradition continued on into Tibet from the 8th Century A.C.E. onward, communicated through the rich lives of many saints too numerous to name here. A few of the more famous Buddhist alchemists known in Tibet were the Indian master Guru Padmasambhava and his lineage of saints called the tertons, or "treasure revealers." Of special mention are the tertons Thangtong Gyalpo and Nyala Pema Dudul. Many of the stories below are hard to believe, but tread carefully through these lines: there is an inverse relationship between cynicism and a sense of wonder...

Nagarjuna Nagarjuna's enlightenment experience is described in his brief biography, which is found in the Songs of the Eighty-Four Mahasiddhas. The account below is the oral tradition version of Nagarjuna's song, transmitted to Keith Dowman by Bhakha Rinpoche:

For many years Nagarjuna had been a famous scholar of the first Buddhist university, Nalanda, where he was the penultimate philosophy professor. But hungry for true wisdom instead of book learning, Nagarjuna began propitiating Tara, yearning for the attainment that would give him the power to actually benefit other beings.

The place he sought attainment was Rajgiri, near Vulture's Peak, a location blessed by Gautama Buddha. There he committed himself to a retreat intent upon connecting with the Twelve Consorts of the Supreme Elementals.

Nagarjuna

And so they came to challenge him. On the first day, there was an earthquake, which was the trial of the earth element goddess. The second day, a vast flood poured over his retreat spot; the trial of the water element. On the third day, a holocaust of fire burned through the place, the trial by fire. On the fourth day, violent tornadoes and whirlwinds blew, threatening him with a trial by wind. On the fifth day, a shower of weapons fell from the sky, threatening to pierce him. This was the trial of the space element, for weapons like spears knives and arrows kill by creating space in vital organs. On the sixth day, vajra thunderbolts fell on the spot where he sat in retreat, the unity of all the elemental energies together, but he remained unperturbed. On the seventh day, the Elemental Consorts gathered to attack him in person, but they failed to distract him from the great compassionate committment that he had set his heart on.

Defeated, they appeared before him saying, "What do you need? We will provide you with whatever you want." He asked them for enough food to sustain him during his retreat and spent twelve years at that spot, opening his heart to wisdom. During that time the Elemental Consorts provided him with four handfuls of rice and five handfuls of vegetables each day.

At the end of twelve years, he had one hundred and eight Elemental Consorts under his command, and he had the power to turn mountains into gold, although he was restrained from performing this miracle because of the strife it would have caused the locale.

Dowman writes that Nagarjuna's alchemical sadhana or meditation practice is called "The Alchemy of Mercury" (Sanskrit: Parada-rasayana). Nagarjuna was one of India's preeminent rasayana-siddhas, (rasa meaning "gold" and siddha meaning "master of miracles") the accomplishment of which can be described as the ability to apply the alchemical process at every level of his being. Nagarjuna's enlightenment reads as a symbolic tale that speaks of his reintegration of the five fundamental elemental energies. The only way these elements could have harmed him was if he was cut off from or in disharmony with the elemental powers that he encountered: for fire cannot burn fire, nor does water drown water, and so on. As he harmonized and integrated the pure elemental energies within his mindstream, the outer appearances of these elements could find nothing to smash, drown, burn, blow apart or explode. And as a result of this alchemical awakening he was able to manifest the outer sign of his realization, the capacity to transform earth and stone into gold.

Nagarjuna's work was well known in India before the Muslim invasion, which erased most traces of Tantric Buddhism that had not been transmitted via the Silk Road and by other means to practitioners in Nepal, Tibet and elsewhere. Al-buruni, a Muslim traveler and journalist of the eleventh century writes: "A famous representative of the science (of rasayana) was Nagarjuna, born at Fort Daihak, close to Somnath (in Sindh). He used to excel at the art and compiled a book which contains the essence of all literature on that subject and is very rare. He lived a hundred years before our epoch." (See Dowman's Masters of Mahamudra, p. 120)

Kharnaripa

Kharnaripa also spent many years at the monastic college Nalanda, where he became a preceptor to over a thousand monks and taught numerous scholars. But like Nagarjuna, he felt a great yearning for true wisdom beyond the intellect, so he left Nalanda in search of Nagarjuna. He met a fisherman along the way who was actually a great spiritual being, the Bodhisattva Manjusri in disguise, and asked him where Nagarjuna could be found. The fisherman told him that Nagarjuna lived nearby in the jungle, where he spent his time gathering the required ingredients for his elixir of immortality. Kharnaripa found him there, and asked to be taken as a disciple. After receiving much instruction, a tree nymph appeared to him and gave him delicacies, which he brought to Nagarjuna. But when Nagarjuna went to see the nymph for himself, he was only able to see her head and shoulder. When he asked why he was not able to see her whole form as Kharnaripa had, she told him that he still had some traces of lust, whereas his student had none.

At this point, Nagarjuna and Kharnaripa agreed it was time to take the alchemical medicine, and Nagarjuna drank some, passing it to his student. Kharnaripa threw the bowl of medicine on the ground, where a leaf miraculously sprouted before their eyes. "If you waste this precious medicine, you must prepare some more by yourself!" Nagarjuna told him. Kharnaripa then urinated into the bowl and handed it to Nagarjuna, causing Nagarjuna to burst out laughing. Nagarjuna threw this liquid onto a branch which immediately bloomed like before. At that moment, Nagarjuna turned to his student and said, "Now that you have bloomed, do not remain in the realms of suffering."


Kharnaripa's story of enlightenment is unique in the Eighty-Four Songs in that it involves the preparation and use of alchemical elixir. But Kharnaripa manifests wholeness beyond the need for any catalyst, which is the true accomplishment of alchemy; Kharnaripa does not drink the elixir, but throws it on the ground because he has finally recognized himself as whole and complete. The tale clarifies the fact that sacred ritual empowerment substances are merely reminders that stir our dormant or unrecognized innate completeness and awakeness, and not "holy things" that make us "clean" or "complete." Completeness is what we discover within, it is not something we manufacture or something given to us by holy beings.

At that point, Nagarjuna tests Kharnaripa one more time, scolding him about wasting the sacred substance. Although we can say completeness need only be discovered within, we also must acknowledge that this is something that cannot be faked; we cannot convince ourselves that we embody any degree of wisdom that only remains a concept, a set of adages that is not completely assimilated into our being. So along the way we must make use of catalysts such as practices and tools that our teacher shares with us. These instructions, items, and rituals that are shared must be treated with utmost respect or we can lose contact with our innate wakefulness along the way.

But Kharnaripa rises to the occasion and proves to Nagarjuna that he has completely assimilated the teachings and made them his own: he urinates into the bowl. Obviously, the color of the liquid is gold, and this is a good joke. But on another level, there is profound symbolism here: Kharnaripa is demonstrating the fact that he has gone beyond the concept of "waste" or "impurity." What was previously considered "impure" has now become an elixir that causes a barren branch to bloom miraculously. And this elixir is not just a copy of Nagarjuna's recipe, but a sign of the power of lineage: Nagarjuna's alchemical recipe has been drunk by Kharnaripa and becomes him, and he becomes the elixir, which is not rendered into waste, but emerges as a unique liquid that is potent and miraculously untainted.

Source

tealchemy.org