Bon and Tibetan Buddhism
Bon and Tibetan Buddhism
Bon and Tibetan Buddhism
Home > Historical, Cultural, and Comparative Studies > Comparison of Buddhist Traditions > Bon and
Tibetan Buddhism
Preliminaries
Let us quiet down by focusing on the breath. If our minds are very distracted we can count the breath – out,
in, one; out, in, two – up to eleven a few times. If our minds are relatively quiet there is no need to count.
We can just focus on the sensation of the breath coming in and out of the nose.
Then we reaffirm our motivation. In the West, "motivation" seems to imply the psychological or emotional
reasons for doing something. That is not the meaning of the Tibetan word'dun-pa. It is rather the aim, it is
what we want to accomplish. Our goal or aim in coming here and listening to this talk is to get a clearer
picture of Bon and its relationship with Buddhism. We are doing this so that we can follow whatever path
we are on, whether Bon or Buddhist, with more clarity and without sectarian views. This is so that we can
put our full attention onto the spiritual path to reach enlightenment for the benefit of everyone. We reaffirm
this aim.
Then we make the conscious decision to listen with concentration. Just as we make such a decision before
meditating, it is also important before a class, before work, or before doing anything. We decide that if our
attention wanders, we will bring it back and if we become sleepy we will try to wake ourselves up, so that we
can take full advantage of being here. We make that conscious decision.
Introduction
This evening I have been asked to speak about the Bon tradition and its relation to Buddhism. When His
Holiness the Dalai Lama speaks of the Tibetan traditions, he often refers to the five traditions of Tibet: the
Nyingma, Kagyu, Sakya, Gelug and Bon. From His Holiness' point of view, Bon has an equal place with the
four Tibetan Buddhist lineages. His Holiness is very broadminded. Not everybody has agreed with such a
stance. There have been and still are a lot of very strange ideas about Bon amongst Buddhist teachers. From
the Western psychological point of view, when people are trying very hard to emphasize positive things in
their personalities before they have really resolved things on a deep level, then the shadow side gets
projected onto an enemy. "We are the good guys on a proper pure path and they are the devil."
Unfortunately, the Bonpos have been the traditional objects of this projection in Tibetan history. We will
look at the historical reasons for this. It definitely needs to be understood within the context of Tibetan
political history.
It is just a fact that Bon has received a lot of negative publicity and a bad image within Tibet itself.
Westerners are often attracted to controversy, as if something that receives a bad image is more interesting.
The other traditions are boring and straight. An equally strange idea is that Bon is more exotic than Tibetan
Buddhism. Some Westerners look at it as a place where they can find magic, Lobsang Rampa type of stuff
like drilling a hole in people's foreheads to open their third eyes. Neither view is accurate. We need to try to
get a more balanced perspective and look at Bon with respect, as His Holiness does. It is important to
understand Tibetan history to see how a negative view of Bon has developed and to see how its approach to
spiritual development relates to Tibetan Buddhism.
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Khotan
Khotan is to the north of Western Tibet. As you know, Tibet is a very high plateau with a lot of mountains.
As we go further north to the end of that plateau, there is another mountain range, and then it goes all the
way down to below sea level to a desert in east Turkistan, which is now called the Xinjiang province of
China. Khotan was at the foot of those mountains as we enter the desert. It was an Iranian cultural area;
people came from Iran. It was a tremendous center of Buddhism and of trade. It made a significant cultural
impact on Tibet, although the Tibetans downplay this and say everything came from either India or China.
Even the Tibetan writing system came from the Khotanese alphabet. The Tibetan Emperor Songtsen-gampo
sent a minister to Khotan to get a writing system for the Tibetan language. The trade road to Khotan went
through Kashmir, and as it happened, the great teacher from Khotan that they were hoping to meet happened
to be there. So, they got the writing system from him in Kashmir, and the story became that they got a
writing system from Kashmir. If we analyze the writing system, we can see that it actually comes from
Khotan. Of course, the Khotanese system originally came from India. The point is that there was a lot of
cultural contact with Khotan.
We can see that the Bon presentation is very plausible. It certainly could be that it came from Khotan. From
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this point of view, we could say that Buddhism came to Tibet from two directions: from Khotan or the
Iranian cultures into Western Tibet and then later from India. In the former case, it could have come in the
form of early Bon. It is quite possible that Buddhism, and in particular dzogchen, came from both sides and
that each side borrowed from the other. That is probably closer to the truth.
There was the famous debate between Indian and Chinese Buddhism at Samyay, then a religious council
was set up and, in 779, Buddhism was declared to be the state religion of Tibet. There were undoubtedly a
lot of political considerations involved. Shortly afterwards, in 784 there was a persecution of the Bon faction.
This is where all the bad blood begins. It is important to analyze this. What was actually going on?
Within the imperial court were a pro-China faction, a pro-India faction and an ultra-conservative
xenophobic native faction. Emperor Tri Songdetsen's father had married a Chinese queen who had a lot of
influence and consequently the father had been pro-Chinese in many policies. The conservative faction had
assassinated the father. I think this is one of the reasons for the Chinese losing the debate. There was no way
that they could win a debate anyway. The Chinese had no tradition of debating and they were matched
against the best debater in India. They did not have a common language, so what language did they debate
in? It was all being translated. Obviously, it was a political move to get rid of the Chinese faction. Because
of the Chinese, the Emperor's father had been killed. Now, in addition, the king wanted to get rid of the anti-
foreign faction as well. The Indian faction was the least threat to the political power of the Emperor. So, the
conservative political faction was sent into exile. Those were the Bonpos.
What is confusing is when people say that the Bonpos were doing burial rituals in the court. Those were
not the Bonpos who were sent into exile. The Bonpos who were exiled were these conservative ministers and
political figures who were kicked out. Interestingly, burial rituals and sacrifice rituals continued in the court
even after their exile. To commemorate a treaty with China signed in 821, a pillar was erected that described
the ceremonies. They sacrificed animals. Although they no longer had imperial burials, there was still some
influence there. I think it is quite important to realize that the bad blood between the Buddhists and the
Bonpos was actually a political thing; it was not really about religion or rituals.
The conservative faction was sent to two areas. One is Yunnan, in the area of present day southwestern
China, north of Burma, and the other was Gilgit in northwest Pakistan, very close to where Guru Rinpoche
came from. We can infer that the Bonpos might have gotten some teachings on dzogchen from that area,
where Guru Rinpoche received them as well, and that the Bonpos could have brought them back to Tibet
later, independently of Guru Rinpoche. There are many possible explanations for Bon's having a tradition of
dzogchen separate from the Buddhist tradition that came from Guru Rinpoche. It is not just a matter of
someone says so and therefore it is true. One has to look at the history.
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them. They were mostly non-dzogchen material, covering what we would call teachings in common with
Tibetan Buddhism. It was only after this that Nyingmas start to discover texts in Samyay and in other
monasteries. A number of masters found both Bon and Nyingma texts, and often in the same place. The
Nyingma texts were mostly about dzogchen. We are on a more solid historical ground when we consider the
new phase of Bon, the old phase being before the exile and burial of texts.
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into various knots. The mo indicates if harmful spirits are causing the sickness and if so, which rituals to
perform to propitiate them. Secondly, one consults astrology to determine the most effective time for
performing the rituals. Astrology is done in terms of the Chinese elements – earth, water, fire, metal and
wood. Then thirdly, the rituals are done to clear away external harmful influences. Afterwards, fourthly, one
takes medicine.
The theory behind rituals is slightly different in Buddhism and Bon. From a Buddhist point of view, we
work with karma and look at the external situation as being basically a reflection of karma. A ritual or puja
helps to activate positive karmic potentials. Bon places an equal emphasis on harmonizing the external forces
and then the internal karmic situation.
In both cases, these pujas for healing use tormas, which are toned down remnants of the ancient sacrifice
rituals. The tormas, made from barley flour, molded into the form of little animals, and used as scapegoats
undoubtedly comes from Bon. They are given to the harmful spirits: "Take this and leave the sick person
alone."
The whole issue of sacrifice is very interesting. The Bonpos say, "We didn't do that, that was an earlier
tradition in Tibet." The Buddhists say, "It was the Bonpos, we didn't do that." Obviously, everyone wants to
deny having made sacrifices and undoubtedly there were sacrifices. Milarepa mentions that they were going
on his time. Even as recently as in 1974 when His Holiness the Dalai Lama gave the Kalachakra
empowerment in Bodhgaya for the first time, he spoke very strongly to people coming from the border
regions of Tibet about stopping animal sacrifice practices. This is something that has been around for a long
time.
Pictures of various deities are used in Bonpo bardo rituals and in many Buddhist bardo rituals as well. This
goes back to the Iranian/Bonpo burial rituals where things were put into the tomb with the dead person.
Another thing borrowed from Bon into Tibetan Buddhism is the "space harmony web," a spider web-like
configuration of multicolored strings representing the five elements. It comes from the idea of having to
harmonize the external elements before one can work on the internal elements or karma. A web is designed
according to divination and so on and is hung outside. Sometimes they are called spirit catchers, but that is
not quite what they are. They are meant to harmonize the elements and tell the spirits to leave us alone. It is
very Tibetan.
The concept of life spirit (bla), which is in Bon and Buddhism, comes from the Central Asian Turkic idea
of qut, the spirit of a mountain. Whoever ruled the area around a certain sacred mountain was the Khan, the
ruler of the Turks and later of the Mongols. The king was the person who embodied this qut or life spirit. He
had charisma and could rule.
Someone's life spirit can be stolen by harmful spirits. All the Tibetan Buddhist traditions have pujas to
hook back a life spirit that has been stolen by harmful spirits. They involve a ransom: here is a torma, give
me back my life spirit. How do you know that your life spirit has been stolen? From a Western point of
view, we might call it a nervous breakdown or shell shock, where someone cannot cope with life. Someone
whose life spirit has been stolen is unable to organize his or her life. This life spirit rules our life like the
Khan rules the country. The Tibetan word for life spirit, "la," is used in the word lama. A lama is somebody
who really has a life spirit. La is also used in some contexts to translate white bodhichitta, so it is a very
strong material force or essence within the body.
Then there is the prosperity spirit. If it is strong, everything will go well and we will be prosperous. The
Tibetan word is "yang" (g.yang). "Yang" is also the Chinese word for sheep. At Losar, the Tibetan new year,
one eats a sheep's head and moulds a sheep's head out of tsampa, toasted barley grain. This represents the
prosperity spirit. It clearly comes in from old Bon rituals.
The idea of prayer flags also comes from Bon. They are in the colors of the five elements and are hung to
harmonize the external elements so that things will be in balance and we can do internal work. Many prayer
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flags have the image of the wind horse (lungta, rlung-rta), which is associated with the horse of fortune.
China was the first country to develop a postal system, in which the postmen rode horses. There were certain
places where they would stop and change horses. Those postal stage horses were the wind horses. The
Chinese words are the same. The idea is that good fortune will come on a horse like the postman bringing
goods, letters, money, etc. It is very Tibetan/Chinese.
Certain aspects of Bon healing came into Buddhism such as sprinkling consecrated water with a feather. In
all Buddhist initiation rituals, there is a peacock feather in a vase. The burning of leaves and branches from
the juniper tree, called sang in Tibetan, is done on the tops of mountains to greet someone who is coming.
They do it along the side of the road when His Holiness comes back into Dharamsala. It is associated with
making offerings to local spirits.
The emphasis on oracles in Tibetan Buddhism is often confused with shamanism, but oracles and shamans
are quite different. An oracle is a spirit who speaks through a medium. It is channeling. Shamans, found in
Siberia, Turkey, Africa, etc., are people who enter a trance in which they go to different realms and speak to
various spirits, usually the spirits of ancestors. The spirits give them answers to various questions. When the
shamans come out of trance, they deliver the message from the ancestors. In contrast, a medium usually has
no memory whatsoever of what the oracle said through him or her. Oracles became associated with
protectors. The Nechung oracle is also the protector called Nechung. A trace of shamanism, however, is
reflected in a division of things as being on, above and below the earth, which is prevalent in Bon material
and then came into Buddhism.
Buddha taught a tremendous amount on many topics. Wherever Buddhism went in Asia, people
emphasized elements that resonated with their culture. There is mention of pure lands in Indian Buddhism
but it was not emphasized. The Chinese, who had the Daoist (Taoist) idea of going to the Western land of
the immortals, put tremendous emphasis on the pure lands and expanded it tremendously. Thus, we get pure
land Buddhism. It is one of the most significant Chinese Buddhist schools. Likewise, within Indian
Buddhism, we do find discussion of protectors, of various spirits, offering pujas and so on, but the Tibetans
expanded these elements tremendously because it was in their culture.
Conclusion
I think it is very important to have a great deal of respect for the Bon tradition. There are many things that
can be identified as Bon or as Tibetan culture which are not completely in common with Tibetan Buddhism.
There are various elements in the Buddhist teachings found in Bon as well. The debate about who copied
what from whom is pointless. Buddhism and Bon had contact with each other and there is no reason why
they would not have influenced each other.
It is important to understand that making the Bonpos into the bad guys is, on the one hand, political – a
leftover from their being super-conservative in the eighth century. On the other hand, it is psychological –
people who emphasize their positive sides will tend to project their negative sides onto somebody. This
phenomenon is found particularly in fundamentalist Buddhist traditions with super guru devotion and a big
emphasis on a protector. The protector becomes the important thing. The texts say terrible things about
anyone who is against the Dharma or against the said tradition. Smash our enemies, trample them, tear their
eyes out, etc. I think it is much more appropriate to follow the example of His Holiness in thinking of there
being five Tibetan traditions, each of which teaches completely valid paths to enlightenment. They share
many things in common and they talk about reaching the same goal, enlightenment.
Within what they share in common, there are certain things that can be identified as Tibetan culture and
others which are more Buddhist. It is up to us to decide what we want to follow. If we want to accept certain
things from Tibetan culture, fine, why not. However, it is not necessary. If we can distinguish Tibetan
elements from essential Buddhism, then at least we can be clear about what we are following. We cannot be
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purist in Buddhism. Even Indian Buddhism was in keeping with Indian society. We cannot divorce
Buddhism from the society in which it was taught, but we can be clear about what is cultural and what is
about the four noble truths, the path to enlightenment, bodhichitta and so on.
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that group, like making the Muslims into the devil. Certainly, open knowledge about Bon is more recent. His
Holiness the Dalai Lama has been very instrumental in that, but he is not the only one. During the time of
the Fifth Dalai Lama, the Mongols put an end to a 150-year civil war and made the Fifth Dalai Lama the
political head of Tibet. There were many reasons for that.
The Fourth Dalai Lama was a Mongol. The First Panchen Lama was the tutor of the Fourth and Fifth Dalai
Lamas and the one who chose the Fifth Dalai Lama. It is quite reasonable that the Mongols would support
the reincarnation of their Mongol Fourth Dalai Lama. The Fifth Dalai Lama’s policy was reconciliation
among all the different factions within Tibet to end this horrible period of civil war. He not only brought all
the traditions together and arranged places for them in the Monlam festival, but he had the various Nyingma
monasteries from the two main Nyingma lineages do rituals for the success of the Tibetan government. He
had the Bon monasteries also do rituals for the success of the Government. The present Dalai Lama himself
says that he tries to continue the policies of the Great Fifth. Now, because of the refugee situation, all of the
traditions are thrown equally into the public eye. We now have information about all of them.
Question: A Westerner wrote a thesis on Bon in 1927.
Alex: Yes. The Bon monasteries were there. Snellgrove was looking at it in the fifties and sixties.
Question: Are there dzogchen elements in Iranian culture?
Alex: I don’t think so. Even the Bon creation myths are quite different from the Zoroastrian creation myths
of ancient Iran. What I was saying was that Buddhism was present in Iranian cultural areas quite early. If we
define a Buddhist teaching as one that will bring one to enlightenment, with all of the qualities of an
enlightened being, then that teaching is Buddhist whether we call it Buddhist or not. Bon did not necessarily
come from an Iranian culture area, although the area to the west of Tibet was an Iranian cultural area, and
the Bonpos say their tradition came from there. It is likely that through the contact Western Tibet had with
Khotan, which is well documented, there was also cultural contact between Western Tibet and Iranian
cultural areas. It is at least possible.
Question: Isn’t it established that Bon is older than Buddhism?
Answer: How do we know that it is older? Are we going to accept that Shenrab Miwo lived thirty thousand
years ago in the Stone or Bronze Age? How important is that? The way I understand it is that Bon
influenced Buddhism in Tibet: they influenced the way that Tibetan Buddhists present Buddhism. That is
clear. That I would not argue with. But I don’t know how we could possibly ever know objectively who
came first.
Question: The practice of dzogchen is older than Buddhism, is it not?
Alex: Here as well, I don’t see how anyone could possibly know. It depends on how we define dzogchen. If
we define it as a teaching to bring us to enlightenment, did it come before Shakyamuni? The Buddhists
themselves would say there were Buddhas before Shakyamuni who taught methods for achieving
enlightenment. If one called Shenrab Miwo an earlier Buddha, fine. Why not? What difference does it
make? Are you asking about dzogchen as a fully developed system to bring enlightenment or about certain
methods that are used in dzogchen, which come from earlier practices? Dzogchen is certainly not in
Zoroastrianism. Zoroaster only lived about fifty years before Buddha, not thirty thousand years before. There
is no documented religion going back that far. Another point is that if a tradition is labeled as the bad guys,
they will surely compensate for the bad publicity by claiming to be older. Is that to be taken literally? I
would not take it literally. If someone wants to take it literally, fine.
Question: Is there any historical evidence of dzogchen in ancient Bon?
Alex: As far as I know, and I may be mistaken, there is nothing written that has been preserved. The only
historical evidence is archeology and the only archeological evidence is from the royal tombs. It is clear that
the Bonpos had rituals, but there certainly is not any evidence that they were doing dzogchen meditation.
There is a lineage of the belief that they were because, “ My teacher said so.” “How does your teacher
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Dedication
Let us end here with a dedication. Dedication is very important. When we do something positive, like
gaining clarity about Buddhism and Bon, it builds up a certain positive force. If we don’t dedicate it, that
positive force acts as a cause for improving samsara. We don’t just want to contribute to having more
intellectual knowledge so that we can get a good job at a university and teach a course and make money. We
dedicate it as a cause for achieving enlightenment. With more clarity about the path and with freedom from
sectarian views, we can put all our energies into reaching enlightenment to be able to benefit everyone. If we
dedicate the positive force as a cause for enlightenment, it will act as a cause for enlightenment. This is why
the motivation is important at the beginning: it sets the tone.
May whatever we have learned go deeper and deeper and act as a cause for truly being able to follow a
Buddhist or Bon path to its end, with clarity and without sectarian views, so that we can be of best help to
everyone.
Thank you.
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