|
Stephen Batchelor |
This unpublished essay is a brief biography of the Tibetan lama Tsongkhapa (1357-1419). It was originally drafted as a chapter of Buddhism Without Beliefs but rejected as too digressive and experimental.
So sacred was the shrine on Nomad Mountain that even Dalai
Lamas were refused permission to worship there. No wonder the
Red Guards were so keen to smash it to bits. When the last monks
had been evicted or killed, the cultural revolutionaries hacked
through the gilded silver casing to find what was concealed at the
core. Some were local men and deep down were afraid. It was dark
and cold. In the flicker of lamplight they unwound the embalming
cloth. They uncovered the body and fled with inhuman cries. The
hair and nails were still growing after five hundred and fifty years.
Han Shan-t'ng belonged to the White Lotus Society, a terrorist
organisation popularly known as the Incense Army. At this time the
Central Empire was in great confusion. It had suffered a hundred
years of foreign rule. Han Shan declared the time ripe for
Buddha Maitreya to be born on Earth. The Mongol rulers captured
and executed him in the year of the Wood Sheep. His followers
declared his son Lin-erh "Emperor" of a restored Sung Dynasty, that
ruled a strip of territory along the northern borders from Manchuria
to Tibet.
Two years later, in the
first month of the year of the Fire Bird, a woman in the Onion Valley
on the northern Tibetan border dreamed of a statue of the
compassionate Avalokiteshvara. It was the size of a mountain but
penetrated her through the crown of her head. Nine months later, as
Venus appeared in the dawn sky, she painlessly gave birth to a boy.
In the following year of
the Earth Dog, the head of the Sakya order, which had ruled the
Centre under the Mongol Empire for a hundred years, was
murdered. A monk, Jangchub Gyeltsen, assumed control of the land
and inaugurated the Dynasty of the Man from Sow ferry.
In the year of the Earth
Pig, when the Onion Valley boy was three, the Fourth Karmapa, en
route to the court of Toghan Tem, the last Mongol Emperor, came
to see him. The lama gave him the vows of a layman before
proceeding to Beijing. Shortly afterwards, a Dharma teacher returned
to the East from the Centre and presented horses, sheep and other
gifts to the family, requesting the boy to be placed in his care.
When he was six, in the
year of the Water Tiger, the boy was initiated and given a secret
name. In the same year Lin-erh was defeated by the Mongols, ending
the doomed restoration of the Sung.
When he was seven, in
the year of the Water Hare, the boy became a novice monk and was
given the name Lozang Drakpa.
When the boy reached
eleven, in the year of the Earth Monkey, Hung-wu, a former monk of
the Huang-ch Temple and officer in the White Lotus Society, led a
rebellion that succeeded in overthrowing Mongol rule. Inspired to
create an enlightened realm to prepare for the descent of Buddha
Maitreya from Tushita, Hung-wu inaugurated the Dynasty of Light
and encouraged the ordination of monks.
At the age of sixteen, in
the year of the Water Ox, Lozang Drakpa left his home in the Onion
Valley and departed for the Centre. He was never to return.
For seventeen years he
wandered from monastery to monastery, where he studied, debated,
meditated, taught and wrote until, in the year of the Iron Horse, he
met Umapa.
A strange man, Umapa.
An illiterate cowherd from the East, he was one day physically
overwhelmed by syllables reverberating from his heart. When he
awoke, he had a vision of Manjushri in the form of a young god with
blue skin, wielding a sword. Henceforth he lived in mystic
communion with Manjushri. To understand what was happening, he
went to hear a renowned young monk called Lozang Drakpa lecture
on emptiness: the focus of Manjushri's wisdom.
The student became the
teacher. Lozang Drakpa, the Onion Valley boy, now thirty-three
years old, forsook his formal studies of philosophy and went into the
mountains with Umapa. Every afternoon over tea he asked
Manjushri about emptiness with Umapa serving as his medium.
Two years later, in the
year of the Water Monkey, together with eight companions, he began
an extended period of meditation. Within the year he received a
vision in which Majushri's sword pierced his heart, injecting it with
rainbow-colored ambrosia.
Six years passed.
One night in the late
spring of the year of the Earth Tiger, he dreamt he was seated in
Tushita before Nagarjuna and his followers. Buddhapalita, a tall, blue
man, came forward and placed a Sanskrit text on his head. When
Lozang Drakpa awoke he turned to the passage he had been reading
in Buddhapalita's commentry to Nagarjuna's verse:
His confusion was dispelled. He said that his world had been
turned upside down. He was forty-two years old. In the same year,
Hung-wu, founder and first Emperor of the Dynasty of Light, died.
The next year, that of
the Earth Hare, the Emperor's grandson, the gentle Chien-wen,
ascended the throne. Civil war broke out as Prince Yun-lo, the fourth
son of the Emperor, sought to depose his nephew and claim the
throne for himself.
In the following year,
that of the Iron Dragon, Lozang Drakpa convened a great festival to
celebrate the restoration of a giant statue of Maitreya, which he and
his companions had completed during their retreat. The entire land
was drawn to this event to herald the dawning of the age of a future
Buddha. This is the first of his four great deeds.
Three years later, in the
year of the Water Sheep, he convened a council of monks from all
over the land to affirm the value of adherence to the monastic rule.
This is the second of his four great deeds.
In the same year,
Prince Yun-lo killed his nephew Chien-wen, overthrew his regime,
and ascended the throne as third Emperor of the Dynasty of Light.
Next year, that of the
Wood Monkey, Tamerlane assembled an army of 200,000 in Ortrar,
on the steppes of Central Asia. His plan was to invade the Central
Empire through Bishbalik, overthrow the Dynasty of Light and
establish an Islamic state. He died before the invasion could be
launched.
Three years later, in the
first month of the year of the Fire Pig, the Fifth Karmapa was
received at the court of Emperor Yun-lo in Nanjing. It is recorded
that for twenty-two days he produced apparitions of lions and
cranes, flowers falling from the sky, and sweet dew in the Imperial
gardens.
The same year, Lozang
Drakpa, the Onion Valley boy, reached the age of fifty. By now his
name had spread through the Centre and the East all the way to the
Central Empire. With his secretary Sonam Lodr he retired to the
Sera Dharma Centre, a hermitage in the hills north of Lhasa, to write
a commentary to Nagarjuna's the intelligence: Poems from the Centre.
As he composed the work, twenty golden letter "A"s hovered above
him in space. Commenting on the last two lines of the eighteenth
verse of chapter twenty-four, he wrote:
At the end of the text he
describes himself as "a monk from Tsongkha in the East known as
Lozang Drakpa, a practitioner of the great centre free from extremes,
who has heard a great deal." The twenty letter "A"s fell to ground
below the hermitage and embedded themselves in a rock.
As the year turned into that of the Earth Rat, an envoy reached the Centre to invite Lozang Drakpa to the court of Emperor Yung-lo. By the time the envoy arrived at Sera, Lozang Drakpa had left for the hermitage at Rakha Rock. He sent down a message declining the invitation on grounds of advancing age and the need for solitary retreat. He subsequently sent a disciple three years older than himself in his place. In the following year,
that of the Earth Ox, he inaugurated a great prayer festival in Lhasa
to which people flocked from all over Tibet. This is the third of his
four great deeds. It became a yearly event, celebrated in the first
days of each new year, until it was forbidden by Chairman Mao of
the People's republic five hundred and fifty years later.
Four years later, in the
year of the Wood Sheep, Lozang Drakpa founded his own monastery
on Nomad Mountain. He called it Ganden, the Tibetan name for
Tushita, the heaven where Maitreya prepares to descend to Earth.
This is the fourth and last of his great deeds.
In the tenth month of
the following year, that of the Earth Pig, he complained of pain in his
feet. Before dawn on the morning of the twenty-fifth, he entered
meditation on emptiness and died as the sun rose. His body
assumed the lustre of the youthful Manjushri. He was sixty-two
years old.
Earlier the same year a
fleet returned to the Central Empire from an expedition to the East
Coast of Africa, bringing with it a cargo of tributes, including animals
never before seen in China. It is recorded that Emperor Yung-lo
greatly enjoyed the sight of his first giraffe.
This brief biography of the Buddhist monk Lozang Drakpa, known as
"Tsongkhapa," (1357-1419) is set against an account of the first three emperors of the Chinese
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). The opening paragraph is based on the oral testimony of Tibetan
refugees in India. The Tibetan dating follows the Bod rgya tshig mdzod chen mo: smad cha.
All other material is constructed and translated from the following sources:
Kenneth Chan. Buddhism in China: A Historical Survey. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1964.
L.P. Lhalungpa (ed.) dBuma rigs tshogs drug: The Six Yukt Shastra of Madhyamika written by
Acharya Nagajun. Delhi: 1970.
Robert A. F. Thurman (ed.) Life and Teachings of Tsong Khapa. Dharamsala: LTWA,
1982.
------. Tsong Khapa's speech of Gold in the Essence of True Eloquence: Reason and
Enlightenment in the Central Philosophy of Tibet. Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1984.
Tsepon W.D. Shakabpa. Tibet: A Political History. New York: Potala, 1984.
David Snellgrove & Hugh Richardson. A Cultural History of Tibet. Boulder: Prajna,
1980.
Tsongkhapa. rTsa she tik chen rigs pa’i rgya mtsho. Sarnath: 1973.
D. Twitchett and F.W. Mote (eds.). The Cambridge History of China. Volume 7: The Ming
Dynasty 1368-1644. Part 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. |