Kunzig Shamar Rinpoche, Vienna, September, 1993.
Some Western practitioners
say that Tibetan Buddhism consists partly of Tibetan tradition and partly of
Dharma practice and that they cannot always distinguish between the two. It
is very important to know the difference.
In the biographies of Milarepa, Marpa, and Gampopa everything is pure Dharma.
Everything about these great Kagyu masters - the way they lived, the way they
taught, and so on - was pure Dharma. For example, Marpa brought the teachings
from India to Tibet where he taught as a Tibetan. He first studied Dharma in
India according to Indian tradition. Naropa, his teacher, was from India. Most
of the time Naropa was naked and sometimes he would wear the ornaments of Heruka,
but Marpa never told Tibetans that they should do the same. When Marpa taught
in Tibet, he did not try to introduce Indian customs there, like wearing saddhu
robes. He let the Tibetans wear their Chuba (Tibetan clothes). He taught the
Dharma in a very pure way.
In the West you have read a lot about "Tibetan lamas." Some Western
scholars traveled to Tibet for adventure. Later in America, Lobsang Rampa wrote
books full of fantasies, including stories of astral travels about one mind
traveling to some other mind and transmitting some messages. As a result of
meditation, highly realized Buddhist practitioners can understand such supernatural
things and can also read thoughts. When you develop a very, very good meditation,
you will be able to know unbelievable things. Buddha for instance, knows all
thoughts of every single sentient being. Lobsang Rampa presented these phenomena
quite differently. He made something mysterious out of it. It was his fiction
that somebody sends his mind to somebody else in order to read his thoughts.
His books influenced Western ideas about Tibet. When people were translating
biographies into Western languages, they of course translated all the "good
stuff." In this way, many erroneous ideas about Tibetan Buddhist saints
developed; for instance, that they could all fly around in the air.
You Westerners developed an idea that all Tibetan lamas are totally pure. Whatever
a lama would do, one would think, "Oh, there must be some deep meaning
behind it." When a lama seemed a little bit unusual one would give it a
special meaning and assume that the lama must have seen something about one's
mind. According to my experience, many Western students have ideas like that.
Then you want to bring all the traditions into the Dharma practice and think
that the system of monasteries had something to do with enlightenment. Today,
when we have better communication, when one can travel there and so on, sometimes
people are shocked when they see the differences between what they see and what
their ideas were. They think, "What is this? The lamas are like us, they
have similar problems." Some are then totally confused. But that is the
way it is. Lamas are just humans. In Kathmandu one can see monks going to casinos.
I can say this here because some of you have seen it yourselves. I do not have
to make it a secret.
What is this all about? A long time ago the system was introduced in Tibet that
very young children were brought to the monastery where they were taken care
of and fed for free. One very holy Tibetan king got a bit extreme. In today's
Afghanistan, there was a "Vajrayana Kingdom" Oddiyana. That king achieved
enlightenment and taught all his subjects. They all became enlightened themselves
and the kingdom disappeared. The Tibetan king wanted to do the same. He wanted
to end samsara by letting the kingdom of Tibet disappear so he introduced some
new rules, and monasteries for monks and nuns were erected all over the country.
All monks and nuns received food for free and the harvest from all farmers went
to the monasteries. As a result, the people became monks not only to become
enlightened but because there was free food. There were also enlightened ones,
but it was not the majority, maybe one in a million. Enlightened beings were
very rare there, because there were many distractions. There was enough to eat,
but not much to do. None of them practiced like Milarepa in earlier times. So
there was a monastery in every valley and all of Tibet was filled with monasteries
which had big administrations.
In the beginning one Kagyu master founded a monastery the right way by starting
a study program and a meditation center. His wish was that the teachings be
preserved and not simply vanish. At that time, there was no Tulku system (the
system of the recognition of consciously reborn Buddhist masters), so the master's
son took responsibility for the monastery after his father. In this way, many
Kagyu monasteries became large. But people are just people and as time passed,
things became worse. Monasteries became little kingdoms with very arrogant administrators.
They were often very cunning. They knew that spiritual leaders were necessary
to control the people so they would introduce a spiritual leader, but tried
to keep all the power in their own hands. It was very political - on the outside
spiritual, but on the inside political. The administrators wanted to control
the people.
Every monastery had land, sometimes extensive land. When monasteries bordered
one another, they each wanted to protect their own land. They also needed a
work force so the peasants became slaves of the monasteries, and administrators
reigned like dictators. Sometimes they would fight for bordering land. When
an animal from one monastery crossed the border of the other monastery's territory,
it would be kept there, and so on.
The actual ruler of the country had hardly any power because each monastery
became so powerful and they were constantly fighting. The government was completely
powerless. Later they won some influence and organized themselves like the monasteries
so that the country was controlled in a strictly religious manner. Good practitioners
were not a part of the administration. Good masters and good monks practiced
mainly alone. Almost nobody reached enlightenment in a monastery, because they
were organized so strictly by the administration. Religion and politics were
strongly mixed in Tibet. Politicians used religion in order to control people.
This was very difficult. The problem was not the enlightened ones, but the administrators.
Westerners have the idea that everything that happened there was Dharma. They
think a monastery is a big mandala and every monk a certain Buddha aspect and
the guru is Dorje Chang.
You also think that the thrones of the lamas are a part of the Dharma practice.
Actually they may also be a cause for problems. You have prepared a throne for
me and I am sitting on it now. If you do not do the same thing for somebody
else problems might start. This is the way of politics. If you had put a beautiful
Western chair here, nobody would have had any problem with it. Old Tibetan lamas,
even the good and friendly ones, have certain customs based on their culture.
When they come to the West and Tibetan musical instruments are not being used,
or the throne lacks beautiful brocade, they feel that something is missing.
They also will tell you that you should arrange everything in a certain way
and then you think this is part of the practice. In this way you are building
up Tibetan tradition in the West and I do not think this will last. If it does,
however, it will be a source for problems in the future. Who should have a higher
throne? Somebody will have a smaller throne and somebody else will have an even
smaller one. In this way you will have many problems.
You must see the difference between Dharma and tradition. When problems occur,
understand that they do not come from the enlightened ones, but from the administrators.
Even Chinese communists, who do not at all believe in religious things, use
religion from time to time for political reasons because it is so powerful and
so well established. In the West you do not have to take this administrative
part that is mixed with religion. I do not mean by that, that your teachers
should now sit somewhere on the floor and you should point your feet at them
when you sit, but there is simply no need for too much tradition.
Kagyu Life International,
No.3, 1995
Copyright ©1995 Kamtsang Choling USA