Tantric Roots of Hatha Yoga, Interview With Christopher Wallis
Tantric Roots of Hatha Yoga, Interview With Christopher Wallis
Tantric Roots of Hatha Yoga, Interview With Christopher Wallis
Hatha yoga
Tantric roots of hatha yoga. Interview with Hareesh (Christopher
Wallis)
Christopher D. Wallis was introduced to Indian spirituality at the age of
six and initiated into the practice of meditation and yoga at sixteen.
While traveling around the world in his early twenties, he felt an inner
inspiration to study, teach, and practice Indian spirituality as the focus of
his life. A highly decorated scholar with a Masters of Philosophy in
Classical Indian Religions from the University of Oxford, he is currently a
Ph.D. candidate in Sanskrit at the University of California, Berkeley. He
has received traditional yogic education at ashrams in India, Thailand,
and New York. Hareesh teaches internationally on meditation, yoga
philosophy, Sanskrit, and chanting, and he also offers spiritual coaching.
He is the founder of the The Mattamayura Institute for Studies in the
Tantrik Arts and Sciences: mattamayura.org
Ilya Zhuravlev
Interview with Hareesh (Christopher Wallis)
in Oakland, California
Ilya: Could you tell me briefly about your new book “Tantra
Illuminated: The Philosophy, History, and Practice of a Timeless
Tradition”?
Hareesh: So, the book has an Introduction, which explains what is
"tantra." This is a very difficult question to answer, so introduction
addresses different ways of answering it. Then Part 1 of the book, which
is 1/3 of the total book, covers the philosophy of non-dual Śaiva tantra -
the vision of reality according to non-dual saiva tantra, explained in
detail. Then 1/3 of the book is history, talking about the main two
streams of tantra - right and left, non-dual (vāmāchāra) - dual
(dakshināchāra) etc. The right-hand stream is in agreement with Veda
and orthodox brahminical conduct, left-hand is not. Many of their
differences are described there, in fact there is a diagram in my book,
illustrating these differences between right and left tantra. It shows that
they are not just two streams but there are a number of separate groups.
On the left there is a greater emphasis on non-dualism, worship of the
feminine, inclusion of women, transgression of social norms, mortuary
symbolism (cremation grounds etc.) and charismatic gurus, meaning
that they can initiate with just a look or thought (initiation). On the right
there is an absence of all these. It should not be understood as two
streams being so cut and dried, but rather should be viewed as a
spectrum, because there are fewer of these things in some groups, with
the Krama having all these taken to the extreme, Krama being the most
extreme group of the left-hand groups. The Śaiva Siddhānta, on the
other hand, is in total agreement with the Veda, they will do nothing to
offend traditional Brāhmins.
Hareesh: Yes, that’s right. So, when I say that they are in
agreement with the Veda, I just mean that the Siddhānta followers will
not offend the traditional Brāhmins and they will follow the practice that
is non-offensive to Vaidikas (Vedic scholars). But their practice is also
coming from the Āgamas and includes yoga, a detailed yoga, none of
which is present in the Vedas. So, going back to the book contents --
Part 2 is a history section, 1/3 of the book. A lot is here on the Krama
lineage, because it is not that well known and is very important, much
more important than previously suspected. And then Part 3, the final 1/3
of the book, covers the theory of practice: what is Shaktipāta, Dīkshā,
the role of the guru, theory of ritual, structure of Tantrik ritual etc. And
then the Conclusion is on how do we practice tantra in the modern world
and more to the point, what are the problems involved in doing so.
Ilya: But in the modern western world it`s not that easy to find a
person who can give a initiation, it`s much easier to go to the library and
even to study Sanskrit in order to read scriptures.
Hareesh: That`s true, but that will not work. In fact, I will argue that
you can`t get anything out of the book or scripture if you haven`t already
had some meeting with the teacher. For example, in my case I met a
powerful teacher when I was young and I received an initiation.
Ilya: At this point, could you tell us a little more about your
background, perhaps starting from you childhood?
Ilya: Really? I think that may be he wasn`t the only one but merely
the most famous in the West.
Hareesh: es, but you see, the thing is Shaivism is gone in Kashmir
now. I`ve been there and the last families, who knew something about
this tradition have moved to Dehli. So, the tradition is gone in Kashmir
but only recently during the last 10-20 years. Still, it continues in other
ways: those who studied with Lakshman Joo closely, like John Hughes,
Bettina Baumer, and Alexis Sanderson, and also masters like Swami
Satyānanda in Bihar and others in Tamil Nādu, who continued other
lineages of the tradition. Kashmir was not the only place that non-dual
Tantra flourished, it just had the most famous lineages. So the end of
"Kashmir Shaivism" is not the end of non-dual Tantra.
Ilya: Do you think the end of Shaivism in Kashmir was due to the Civil
War?
Hareesh: Well, Muslims have been pressing on them [the
Kashmiri Brahmins] for 700 years now, so the number of Kashmiri
Shaiva Brahmins has been declining slowly since 1300. So, there is a
historical process that has been going on for 700 years and just now it
comes to an end in the last 20 years. So, first of all I would like to say
that we should stop using the term Kashmir Shaivism, this Shaivism in
not the product of Kashmir it was a pan-Indian tradition. More than India,
it is also found in Nepāl, Indonesia, Bali, Cambodia and other kingdoms.
Kashmir Shaivism only means the writings of the great Kashmir masters
of this tradition, but Trika itself was also practiced even in Tamil Nādu
and in Mahārāshtra, so it`s not just Kashmiri. But as far as we know
Swami Lakshman Joo was the last guru of the Trika. He didn`t give the
abhisheka, he didn’t create a successor, but he did initiated Mark
Dyczkowski, Bettina Baumer, Rameshvar Jha and others. Many people
received powerful initiation from him that continued his work, even
though there is no successor. Meanwhile Shaivism also survives in other
forms- it survives in some version of Śrīvidyā in the far South and so on.
I think that if people start to understand that there is no separate religion
of Shaktism - yes there are some forms of Kālā worship in Bengal that
are exclusively Shakta, but the thing is that if you want to separate
Shaiva and Shakta, then Abhinavagupta himself is more Shakta than
Shaiva, he only uses the name Shiva when he is speaking to the
uninitiated people. To his desiples he is a goddess worshipper, he
worships Parā Devi, Parā Vāk [the Supreme Goddess, the Supreme
Word] and in his secret inner practice he was a worshipper of Kālī. So,
the point is that in his actual practice and worship Abhinavagupta
worshipped only the goddess. So, it`s a completely incorrect myth to call
him just a Shaiva or to say that Kashmir is Shaiva and Tamil Nadu is
Shakta, because the tradition is a Shakta-Shaiva tradition and always
was. It was always part of the same thing.
Ilya: What are the earliest scriptures that describe the system of
subtle anatomy - system of chakras, nādīs, which was adopted and
described in such writing like Hatha Yoga Pradīpikā and some Yoga
Upanishads - Yoga Kundalinī Upanishad, Amrita Nadu Upanishad etc?
For example the system of chakras – the most known text is 19-th
century translation of Shat-Chakra Nirupana by Arthur Avalon.
Hareesh: Yes, but in ancient times they were not different, they
were just synonyms. So, this subtle body physiology was developed
completely within Tantra. Of course we have a couple of fleeting
references from other earlier sources, like in Yoga Sūtras we have an
idea of nādī, chakra and we have a kurma-nadi, which must mean the
central channel, but Patanjali makes no explanations of this and just
refers to them in passing: one possible chakra, one possible nadi; a few
references in early Upanishads, but just tiny ones. May be there is an
oral tradition, we don`t know for sure, but what we do know is that the
complete systematic descriptions of the energy body comes only in
Tantra. So, we find it in a number of early sources, Abhinavagupta also
gives a system of 5 chakras.
Hareesh: Well said. I would say this is the number one problem in
practice of yoga in the West, that people think that the purpose of yoga
is to feel good. All the original authorities agree that the purpose of yoga
is to transform yourself into somebody who can see things as they really
are, see yourself as who you really are, see reality as what it really is.
You discover that at the core you are divine, you are a manifestation of
God. But in order to find that core you also have to see all the places in
yourself where you are lying to yourself, inauthentic. Of course, that is
painful, transformation is challenging and painful. These people
practicing yoga to feel good and have fun - that is fine unless they think
it will bring them to final liberation and full awakening. Then they are
deluded. But if their goal is to have fun then there is no problem. So, this
is the tantric attitude - not to put down or condemn anyone`s practice,
instead it just tries to show when the practice is not aligned with the
desired fruit. Any good teacher would ask you what you want and help
you choose a practice that will lead to that. Because there is not sort of
Christian way to think that everyone should want highest liberation,
many people don`t want that because they don`t want to give up their
comfort, their comfortable idea of themselves. In some other life they will
realize that nothing but the final liberation will be ultimately good for me,
and they will go for it. And if they are not ready for it, then the tantric
guru says fine, let them have some enjoyments with some pain and
suffering, as long as you know what you are choosing. Obviously, one
that choses final liberation choses uncomfortable transformation to reach
Ānanda. Whereas a person doesn`t want to choose that, prefers less
challenge and also ultimately less happiness.
Ilya: My next question is about the Yoga Sutras and Tantric Yoga.
It`s a very interesting question, because Yoga Sutras is the most well-
known scripture in the West and most of the people, including modern
Indian teachers use this scripture as the main philosophical text of yoga
tradition, even teachers of Hatha Yoga, which is not described in Sutras.
I`ve read that these are two completely different systems - like yoga of
Rishis and Munis is close to the Vedic tradition and tantric yoga, which is
different. I have doubts about this. There is an opinion that Sutras is a
dualistic text - about division of Prakriti from Purusha and Tantric texts
are about union. Do you think these are completely different traditions or
merely two points of view on one subject?
Ilya: But could it be the case that Patanjali didn`t even mean to
establish a separate school but merely wrote a book on the subject?
Hareesh: Well, it`s hard to say now, records are too early, but
what we do have is a list of 6 shad-darshanas, including Sānkhya and
Yoga.
Ilya: But this shad-darshana list was created by Max Muller, some
other darshana could also be found.
Ilya: That`s interesting that among the Indian yoga teachers, who
spread Hatha Yoga in the West no one belonged to Nath Sampradaya.
Krishnamacharya was from Shri Vaishnava Sampradaya, Sivananda
and Satyananda belonged to Sarasvati order (Advaita Vedanta) etc. A
few years ago I was searching around India but Natha yogis don`t seem
to practice Hatha Yoga anymore.
Hareesh: No, they don`t and this is very important that you know
this, because in fact the Nāths have not been practicing Hatha Yoga for
400 years. Do you know James Mallinson? He is a very important
scholar of Hatha Yoga, because he not only reads Sanskrit very well, but
he has lived with yogis, sadhus and naga babas in India for many years,
so he sees the current reality and he also reads the ancient texts. He
shows that for some reason Nāths have stopped practicing real yoga
and they are called Jogis, which is just the caste name, they don`t
practice yoga. Who preserved the yoga practices? Some yoga practices
were preserved by Dasnami Sannyasis, some by Śrī Vaishnavas and
especially by the Ramanandi. That is where we look for the preservation
of these practices. When the Dasnami orders became more and more
dominant and powerful, if you want to be a full time practitioner you
become a sarasvati or a giri or whatever. The thing is that those
Dasnamis are renunciates, so this obscures the fact that the original
tantric tradition was not practiced be renunciates, but mostly by
householders. And it would still be practiced by householders except the
economic reality who is going to support that. Before there was a lot of
support for that but in the past several hundred years you had to
become a renunciate, because then you can get some support, whether
from begging your food or from organisations from Sarasvati orders or
other orders.
Ilya: Going back to our previous talk about chakra systems and
nadis. In the Tibetan Tantra channel system the main three nadis are not
crossing each other but parallel, whereas in Indian systems we can find
pictures showing crossed channels, which are quite late dating back to
18th-19th century. What do you think about this? Do you think that
perhaps Tibetan preserved more early and correct system?
Ilya: I studied a little bit of Tibetan practices and always nadis were
visualised as straight lines - pingala was of red color, ida - moonlight and
sushumna nadi was blue like a flame of a burning gas.
Hareesh: And that is the same in Shaiva thought, probably they
got this tradition from Shaivas. Abhinavagupta describes this in detail.
The inhale comes in through ida nadi and that is the "lunar inhale." The
exhale is the solar, so central channel can be blue fire or it can also be
orange fire, because the idea is that red and white merge and that
makes orange. So, when Sun and Moon merge it becomes Fire. We see
this in a technique where you visualize the crescent moon above your
head, you inhale down and the moon grows as it comes down and
become a full moon in the heart and then it sets and you visualize the
sun rising in the heart, like the morning sun rising, exhale the sun up,
release it, again visualize the moon, bring it down etc. So, the internal
kumbhaka (full moon setting and sun rising and you are supposed to
fuse those two energies in kumbhaka) and fire surges up the central
channel. This is all in Abhinavagupta.
Ilya: And why do you think Buddhism is more popular in the West?
I read an article by David Frawley in which he says that many western
yoga teachers prefer meditation techniques according to the Buddhist
teachings rather than tradition Indian ones. What is your opinion on this?
Ilya: Going back to the question about the future of Indian tradition.
We have already discussed that in modern India it is oversimplified, but
here in the West there is the danger that it will be oversimplified for the
commercial purposes. What is your opinion on that?