Principles of Buddhist Tantrism

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PRINCIPLES OF BUDDHIST TANTRISM

-LAMA ANAGARIKA GOVINDA


The word tantra is related to the concept of weaving and
its derivatives (thread, web, fabric, etc.), hinting at the interwovenness
of things and actions, the interdependence of all that exists, the conti-
nuity in the interaction of cause and effect. as well as in spiritual and
traditional development like a thread weaves its way through the
fabric of history and of individual lives. The term tantra (Tib. ,there-
fore can also stand for tradition. spiritual continuity or succession. The
scriptures, however. which in Buddhism go by the title of Tantra, are
invariably of a mystic nature and try to establish the inner relation-
ships of things: the parallelism of microcosm and macrocosm. mind
and universe, ritual and reality, the world of matter and the world
of the spirit. This is achieved through exercises in which yantra (i4o::;rJ,
mantra (qo::;r).andmudra the parallelism of the visible, the audible,
and the touchable, unite the powers of mind (f'CI'ff). speech and
body (q:;lll'). in order to realize the frnal state of completeness and
enlightenment.
Thus in applying the words of Guru Gampopa, it may be said
that the Buddhist Tantras represent "a philosophy comprehensive enough
to embrace the whole of knowledge, a system of meditation which wilf
produce the power of concentrating the mind upon anything whatsoever,
and an art of living which will enable one to utilize each activity (of
body, speech, and mind) as an aid on the Path of Liberation"
Among all the aspects of Buddhism, its Tantric teachings have
until now been the most, neglected and misunderstood. The reason for
this was the fact that these scriptures cannot be understood merely
philologrically, but only from the point of view of yogic experience,
which cannot be learned from books, Moreover, those books, from
which information was sought, were written in a peculiar idiom, a lan-
guage of symbols and secret conventions which in Sanskiit was called
literally "twilight language", because of the double
meaning which underlay its words).
This symbolic language was not only a protection against intellectual
curiosity and misuse of yogic practices by the ignorant or the uninitiated.
but, had its origin mainly in the fact that the ordinary language is not
able to express the highest experiences of the mind. The indescribable,
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which is experienced by fll!:li:P (Sadhaka, the true devotee) can only be
hinted at by symbols, similes and paradoxes.
The influence of Tantric Buddhism upon Hinduism was so
found, that up to the present day the majority of Western scholars
labour under the impression that Tantrism is a Hinduistic creation which
was taken over later by more or less decadent Buddhist schools.
Against this view speaks the great antiquity and consistent develop-
ment of Tantric tendencies in Buddhism. Already the early Mahasanghikas
had a special collection of mantric formulas in their Dharani-pitaka
and the Manjusri-mulakalpa which according
to some authorities goes back to the first century A. D., contains not
only mantras and dharanis (an:;;fl) but numerous mandalas t and
mudras (IJA
T
) as well. Even if the dating of the Manjusri-mulakalpa is
somewhat uncertain, it seems probable that the Buddhist Tantric system
had crystallized into definite form by the end of the third century A. D.,
as we see from the well-known Guhya samaja lib
Tantra.
To declare Buddhist Tantrism as an off-shoot of Saivaism is only
possible for those who have no first-hand knowledge of Tantric literature.
A comparison of the Hindu Tantras with those of Buddhism (which are
mostly preserved in Tibetan and which therefore for long remained
unnoticed by Indologists) not only shows an astonishing divergence of
methods and aims, in spite of external similarities, but proves the spiritual
and historical priority and originality of the Buddhist Tantras.
Sankara{'arya. the great Hindu philosopher of the 9th century AD.
whose works form the foundation of all Saivaite philosophy, made use
. of the ideas of Nagarjuna and his followers to such an extent that
orthodox Hindus suspected him of being a secret devotee of Buddhism.
In a similar way the Hindu Tantras, too. took over the methods and
principles of Buddhist Tantrism and adapted them fO their o\l\ln purposes
(much as the Buddhists had adapted the age-old principles and tech-
niques of yoga to their own systems of meditation). This view is not
only held by Tibetan tradition but confirmed by Indian scholars after a
critical investigation of the earliest Sanskrit texts of Tantric Buddhism
and their historical and ideological relationship with the Hindu Tantras.
Thus Benoytosh Bhattacharya in his Introduction to Buddhist
Esoterism. has come to the conclusion, "it is possible to declare. without
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fear of contradiction, that the Buddhists were the first to introduce the
Tantras into their religion, and that the Hindus borrowed them from the
Buddhists in later times, and that it is idle to say that later Buddhism
was an outcome of Saivaism", (p.147)
To judge Buddhist Tantric teachings and symbols from the stand.
point of Hindu fantras. and specially from the principles of Saktism is not
only inadequate but thoroughly misleading, bacuase both systems start from
entirely different premises. Although both make use of the methods of
yoga and of similar technical philosophical terms, there is little
justification for declaring Buddhism to be identical with Brahmanism and
therefore in interpreting the Buddhist Tantras in the light of the Hindu
Tantras. or vica versa,
The main difference is that Buddhist Tantrism is not Saktism. The
concept of Sakei. l!'8Rf;, divine power} of the creative female aspect of the
Highest God (Siva, f!'8(l') , or his emanations does not play any role in
Buddhism: in fact. the term Sakti never occurs in Buddhist Tantrss in
this connection, while in the Hindu Tantras, the concept of power (!'8fw)
forms the focus of interest. The central idea of Tantric Buddhism. how-
ever, is SIGn (prajml=knowledge, wisdom).
To the Buddhist. Sakri (!'8fw) is maya the very power that
creates illusion, from which only prajna can liberate us, It is, therefore
not 1he aim of the Buddhist to acquire power. or to join himself to the
powers of the universe, either to become their instrument Or to become
their master. but on the contrary. he tries to free himself from those powers,
which for aeons kept him a prisoner of samsara He strives to
perceive those powers, which have kept him going in the rounds of life
and death, in order to liberate himself from their dominion. However, he
does not try to negate them or to destroy them. but to transform them
in the fire of knowledge, so that they may become forces of enlighten-
ment which, instead of creating further differentiation. flow in the opposite
direction: towards union, towards wholeness, towards completeness,
The attitude of the Hindu Tantras is quite different, if not contrary.
"United with the Sakti. be full of power" says (KuJa-cudamani
Tantra), ' From the union of Siva and Sakti (!'8fw) the world is crea-
ted", The Buddhist, on the other hand, does not want the creation and un-
foldment of the world but the realization of the uncreated. unformed" state
of sunyata from which all creation proceeds, or which is prior to and
beyond all cr13ation (if one may put the inexpressible into human language).
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The becoming conscious of this sunyata Tib. is
(!,;fiJI) Tib. " or highest knowledge. The realization of this
highest knowledge in life is enlightenment (i:iI1fa ). i.e. if prajna
or sunyats the passive, all embracing female principle, from
which everything proceeds and into which everylhing recedes. is united
with the dynamic male principle of active universal love and compassion,
which represents the means (i3qnl Tib. ) for the realization of prajna
and sunyata, then perfect Buddahood is attained. Intellect without fee-
ling, knowledge without love, and reason without compassion lead to
pure negation. to rigidity, spiritual death, to mere vacuity, while feeling
wilhout reason. love without knowledge (blind love), compassion without
understanding. lead to confusion and dissolution; but where both are
united. where the great synthesis of heart and h9ad, feeling and intellect
highest love and deepest knowledge has taken place, completeness is
re-established. perfect enlightenment is attained.
The process of enlightenment is therefore represented by the most
obvious, the most human and at the same time the most universal
symbol imaginable: the union of male and female in the ecstasy of
love, in which the active element (upaya) is represented as a male.
the passive (prajna) by a female figure. in contrast to the Hindu Tantras,
in which the female aspect is represented as Sakri. i. eO, the active
principle, and the male aspect as Siva. the pure state of divine con-
sciousness or 'being', i.e .. the passive principle, or the 'resting in its
own nature'.
In Buddhist symbolism. the Knewer (Buddha) becomes one with
his knowledge (prajna). just as man and wife become one in
the embrace of 10 lie. and this becoming one is the highest
indescribable happiness, m'lhasukha Tib. ) The
Ohyani- Buddhhas i. e., the ideal Buddhas visualized in
meditation) and the Ohyani- Bodhisattvas as embodiments
of the active urge of enlightenment which finds its expression in upaya.
the all-embracing love and compassion. are therefore represented in the
embrace of their prajna, symbolized by a female deity, the embodiment
of highest knowledge.
This is not the arbitrary reversal of Hindu symbology, but the con-
sequent application of a principle which is of fundamental importance
for the entire Buddhist Tantric system.
By confusing Buddhist Tantrism with the Saktism of the Hindu
Tantras, a basic misconception had been created, which up to the present
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day has prevented a clear understanding of the Vajrayana and its symbolism,
in iconography as well as in literature. especially that of the Siddhas.
The latter used a particular form of symbology, in which very often
the highest was clothed in the form of the lowest, the most sacred in
the form of the most profane. the transcendent In the form of the most
earthly. and deepest knowledge in the form of the most grotesque
paradoxes. It was not only a language for initiates, but a kind of shock
thelapy, which had become necessary on account of the over-intellec-
tualization of the religious and philosophical life of those times.
Though the polarity of male and female principles is recognized
in the Tantras of the Vajrayana and is an important feature of its sym-
bolism, it is raised upon a plane VIIhich is as far away from the sphere
of mere sexuality as the mathematical juxtaposition of positive and negative
signs. which is as valid in the realm of irrational values as in that of
rational or concrete conce pts.
In Tibet the male and female DhyaniBuddhas and Boddhlsattvas
are regarded as little as "sexual beings" as in certain schools of Japan;
and to the Tibetan even their aspect of union Tib. )
is indissolubly associated with the highest spiritual reality in the process
of enlightenment. so that associations with Ihe realm of physical sexuality
are completely ignored,
We must not forget that the figural representation of these symbols
are not looked upon as portraying human beings, but as embodying
the experiences and visions of meditation. In such a state, however,
there is nothing more that could be called 'sexual', there is only the
super-individual polarity of all life, which rules aI/ mental and physical
activities, and which is transcended only in the ultimate state of integra-
tion, in the realization of snnyata. This is the state which is called
mahamudfo Tib. ), the "Great Attitude" or "the Great
Symbol", which has given its name to one of the most important
systems of meditation in Tibet.
In the earlier forms of Indian Buddhist Tantrism, Mahamudra was
represented as the 'eternal female' principle, as may be seen from Advara-
vajra's definition: "The words 'great' and 'mudra' form together the term
'mahamudra', She is not something she is free from the veils
which cover the cognizable object and so on; she shines forth like
the serene sky at noon during autumn; she is tre support of all success;
she is the identity samsara and nirvana; her body is compassion
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which is not restricted to a single object; she is the uniqueness of Great
Bliss
If in one of the most controversial passages of Anangavajra s
it is said that all women should be enjoyed by the
sadhaka in order to experience the mahamudra; it is clear that this can
not be understood in the physical sense, but that it cCln only be applied
to that highest form of love which is not restricted 10 a Single object
and which is able to see all 'female' qualities, whether in ourselves or
in others, as those of the Divine Mother Tib.
Another passage, which by its very grotesqueness proves that it
is meant to be a paradox and is not to be taken literally states that
"the sadhaka who has sexu al intercourse with his mother, his sister,
his daughter, and his sister's daughter, will easily succf.led in his striving
for the ultimate goal
To take expressions like 'mother' 'sister', 'daughter' or 'sister's
daughter' literally in this connection is as senseless as taking literally
the well-known Dhammapada verse (No. 294). which says that, after
having killed father and mother and two Ksattriya kings, and destroyed
a Kingdom with all its inhabitants, the Brahmana remains free from sin.4
Here 'father and m:>ther' stands for 'egoism and craving' (Pali : orffl1J:1rf
and the two kings' for the erroneous views of annihilation or eternal
existence (\3;;ae en \lIHltf the kingdom and its inhabitants' for 'the
twelve spheres of consciousness' and the Bruhmana for the
liberated monk (fl1l11).
1. ore:lItt'jI: quoted in Yuganaddha by H. V. Guenther
(Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series, Banaras. 1952).
2. in Two Vajrayana Works. Gaikwad Oriental
Series, No. XLIV, p. 22.
3. V, 25. quoted in Yuganaddha, p. , 06. A similar
statement is found in tne Guhyasam.ya Tantfa.
4. illtft fqtft r1Gilrj) if :q f<l'RTtt I
i;?"('cu. 3l;;lcft IQrOl) II
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To maintain that Tantric Buddhists actually encouraged incest and
licentiousness is as ridiculous as accusing the Thtral'odins of condoning
matricide and patricide and similar heinous eriff.es. If we only take the
trouble to investigate the living tradition of the Tantras in their genuine.
unadulterated forms, as they existed still in out days in thousands of
monasteries and hermitages of Tibet. where the ideals of sense control
and renunciation were held in the highest esteem. then only can we
realize how ill-founded and worthless are the current theories which try
to drag the Tantras into the realm of sensuality.
From the point of view of tkle Tibetan Tantric tradition, the above
mentioned passages can only be meaningful in the context of yoga
terminology.
'All women in the world' signifies all the elements which make
up the female principles of our psycho-physical personality which, as the
Buddna says, represents what is called 'the world'. To these principles
correspond, on the opposite side, an equal number of male principles.
Four of the female principles form a special group. representing the
vital forces (SI'lfJ)') of the Great Elements (i1i:!l116), Earth, Water. Fire, Air
and their corresponding psychic centres or plans of consciousness
within the human body. In each of them the union of male and female
principles must take place. before the fifth and highest stage is reached.
If the expressions 'mother', 'sister', 'daughter', etc, are aj;)plied to the
forces of these fundamental qualities of the mohabhutas, the meaning
of the symbolism becomes clear.
In other words, instead of seeking union with a woman outside
ourselves. we have to seek it within ourselves ("in our own family")
by the union of our male and female qualities in the process of medita-
tion. This is clearly stated in Naropa's famous "Six Doctrines" (
) upon which the most important yoga method of the Kargyupa
) school is based, a method which was practised by Milarepa.
the most saintly and Bustere of all the great masters of meditation
(whom certainly nobody could accuse of 'sexual practices'), Though
we cannot here go into the details of this yoga, a short quotation may
suffice to prove our point. "The vital force of the Five Aggregates
(Tib. SkI. fq;::a) in its real nature, pertaineth to the masculine
aspect of the Buddha-principle manifesting through the left psychic nerve
(Tib. Skt tiS1 ;;l(iS). The vital force of the Five Elements (Tlb.
Ski, in its real nature, pertaineth to the feminine aspect
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of the Buddha principle manifesting through the right psychic nerve (Tib.
Skt. fcrW&f ;:nf;e). As the vital force with these two aspects of
it in union, descendeth into the median nerve (rib. Skt. ~ ~ I J l ' , )
gradually there cometh the realization ......... " and one attains the trans
cendental boon of the Great Symbol (mahamudra),5 the union of the
male and female principles (as upaya and prajna ) iA the highest state
of Buddhahood.
Thus, only if we are able to see the relationship of body and
mind, of physical and spiritual interaction in a universal perspective, and
if in this way we overcome the "1" and "mine" and the whole structure
of egocentric feelings. opinions. and prejudices which produce the iIIus'on
of our separate individuality. then only can we rise into the sphere of
Buddhahood.
5. W. Y. Evans-Wentz and Dewa Samdup: Tibetan Yoga and
Secret Doctrines. p. 220ff.
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