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The Shadow of the Dalai Lama – Part I – 10.
The aggressive myth of Shambhala
© Victor & Victoria
Trimondi
10. THE AGGRESSIVE MYTH OF
SHAMBHALA
The role of the ADI BUDDHA or rather
of the Chakravartin is not just discussed in general
terms in the Kalachakra
Tantra, rather, in the “myth of Shambhala”
the Time Tantra presents concrete political objectives.
In this myth statements are made about the authority
of the world monarch, the establishment and administration
of his state, the organization of his army, and
about a strategic schedule for the conquest of
the planet. But let us first consider what exactly
the Shambhala
myth can be understood to be.
According to legend, the historical
Buddha, Shakyamuni, taught the king of Shambhala, Suchandra, the
Kalachakra Mulatantra, and
initiated him into the secret doctrine. The original
text contained 12,000 verses. It was later lost,
but an abridged version survived. If we use the
somewhat arbitrary calendar of the Time Tantra
as a basis, the encounter between Shakyamuni and
Suchandra took place in the year 878 B.C.E. The
location of the instruction was Dhanyakataka close to the
Mount Vulture Heap near Rajagriha (Rajgir) in
southern India. After Suchandra had asked him
for instruction, the Buddha himself assumed the
form of Kalachakra
and preached to him from a Lion Throne surrounded
by numerous Bodhisattvas and gods.
Suchandra reigned as the king of
Shambhala,
a legendary kingdom somewhere to the north of
India. He did not travel alone to be initiated
in Dhanyakataka, but was accompanied
by a courtly retinue of 96 generals, provincial
kings and governors. After the initiation he took
the tantra teaching back with him to his empire
(Shambhala) and made it the state religion there;
according to other reports, however, this only
happened after seven generations.
Suchandra recorded the Kalachakra Mulatantra from
memory and composed a number of comprehensive
commentaries on it. One of his successors (Manjushrikirti)
wrote an abridged edition, known as the Kalachakra
Laghutantra, a compendium of the original
sermon. This 1000-verse text has survived in toto
and still today serves as a central text. Manjushrikirti’s
successor, King Pundarika, composed a detailed
commentary upon the Laghutantra with the name
of Vimalaprabha
(‘immaculate light’). These two texts (the Kalachakra Laghutantra and
the Vimalaprapha)
were brought back to India in the tenth century
by the Maha Siddha Tilopa, and from
there reached Tibet, the “Land of Snows” a hundred
years later. But only fragments of the original
text, the Kalachakra Mulatantra, have
survived. The most significant fragment is called
Sekkodesha and has been commented
upon the Maha
Siddha Naropa.
Geography of the kingdom of
Shambhala
The kingdom of Shambhala, in which the Kalachakra teaching is practiced
as the state religion, is surrounded by great
secrecy, just as is its first ruler, Suchandra. Then he is also
regarded as an incarnation of the Bodhisattva
Vajrapani, the “Lord of Occult
Knowledge”. For centuries the Tibetan lamas have
deliberately mystified the wonderland, that is,
they have left the question of its existence or
nonexistence so open that one has to paradoxically
say that it exists and
it does not. Since it is a spiritual empire,
its borders can only be crossed by those who have
been initiated into the secret teachings of the
Kalachakra
Tantra. Invisible for ordinary mortal eyes,
for centuries the wildest speculation about the
geographic location Shambhala have circulated.
In “concrete” terms, all that is known is that
it can be found to the north of India, “beyond
the River Sitha”. But no-one has yet found the
name of this river on a map. Thus, over the course
of centuries the numerous Shambhala seekers have nominated
all the even conceivable regions, from Kashmir
to the North Pole and everywhere in between.
A mandala of Shambhala
The most widespread opinion in
the studies tends toward seeking the original
region in what is today the desert of the Tarim
Basin (Tarim Pendi). Many lamas claim
it still exists there, but is screened from curious
eyes by a magical curtain and is well guarded.
Indeed, the syncretist elements which are to be
found in the Kalachakra Tantra speak for
the view that the text is a product of the ancient
Silk Road traversed by many cultures, which leads
through the Tarim Basin. The huge chain of mountains
which surround the plateau in almost a circle
also concord with the geography of Shambhala.
Typically, the mythical map of
Shambhala, of which there are numerous reproductions,
resembles a mandala. It has the form of a wheel
with eight spokes, or rather it corresponds to
a lotus with eight petals. Each of the petals
forms an administrative region. There a governor
rules as the highest official. He is the viceroy
of not less than 120 million villages which can
be found on each “lotus petal”. Shambhala thus possesses a
total of 960 million settlements. The whole land
is surrounded by a ring of barely scaleable snowcapped
mountains.
In the center of the ring of mountains
lies the country’s capital, Kalapa by name. By
night, the city of light is lit up as bright as
day, so that the moon can no longer be seen. There
the Shambhala king lives in a
palace made from every conceivable gem and diamond.
The architecture is based upon the laws of the
heavens. There is a sun temple and a moon temple,
a replica of the zodiac and the astral orbits.
A little to the south of the palace the visitor
finds a wonderful park. In it Suchandra
ordered the temple of Kalachakra
and Vishvamata
to be built. It is made from five valuable materials:
gold, silver, turquoise, coral, and pearl. Its
ground plan corresponds to the Kalachakra sand mandala.
The kings and administration
of Shambhala
All the kings of Shambhala belong to an inherited
dynasty. Since the historical Buddha initiated
the first regent, Suchandra, into the Time Tantra
there have been two royal houses which have determined
the fate of the country. The first seven kings
called themselves Dharmaraja (kings of law).
They were originally descended from the same lineage
which produced Buddha Shakyamuni, the Shakyas.
The following 25 kings of the second dynasty are
the “Kulikas” or “Kalkis”. Each of these rulers
reigns for exactly 100 years. The future regents
are also already laid down by name. The texts
are not always unanimous about who is presently
ruling the realm. Most frequently, King Aniruddha
is named, who is said to have taken the reins
of power in 1927 and shall set them aside again
in the year 2027. A great spectacle awaits the
world when the 25th scion of the Kalki dynasty
takes office. This is Rudra Chakrin, the wrathful
wheel turner. In the year 2327 he will ascend
the throne. We shall come to deal with him in
detail.
Like the Indian Maha Siddhas, the Kalkis have
long hair which they tie up in a knot. Likewise,
they also adorn themselves with earrings and armbands.
“The Kalki has excellent ministers, generals,
and a great many queens. He has a bodyguard, elephants
and elephant trainers, horses, chariots, and palanquins.
His own wealth and the wealth of his subjects,
the power of his magic spells, the nagas, demons,
and goblins that serve him, the wealth offered
to him by the centaurs and the quality of his
food are all such that even the lord of the gods
cannot compete with him. ... The Kalki does not
have more than one or two heirs, but he has many
daughters who are given as vajra ladies during the initiations
held on the full moon of Caitra each year” (Newman,
1985, p. 57). It thus appears they serve as mudras in the Kalachakra rituals.
The ruler of Shambhala is a absolute monarch
and has at his disposal the entire worldly and
spiritual power of the country. He stands at the
apex of a “hierarchical pyramid” and the foundations
of his Buddhocracy is composed of an army of millions
of viceroys, governors, and officers who carry
out the decrees of the regent.
As spiritual ruler, he is the representative
of the ADI BUDDHA, as “worldly” potentate a Chakravartin. He is seated
upon a golden throne, supported by eight sculptured
lions. In his hands he holds a jewel which grants
him every wish and a magic mirror, in which he
can observe and control everything in his realm
and on earth. Nothing escapes his watchful eye.
He has the ability and the right to look into
the deepest recesses of the souls of his subjects,
indeed of anybody.
The roles of the sexes in the realm
of Shambhala are typical. It is exclusively men
who exercise political power in the androcentric
state. Of the women we hear only something of
their role as queen mother, the bearer of the
heir to the throne, and as “wisdom consorts”.
In the “tantric economy” of the state budget they
form a reservoir of vital resources, since they
supply the “gynergy”
which is transformed by the official sexual magic
rites into political power. Alone the sovereign
has a million (!) girls, “young as the eight-day
moon”, who are available to be his partners.
The highest elite of the country
is formed by the tantric clergy. The monks wear
white, speak Sanskrit, and are all initiated into
the mysteries of the Kalachakra Tantra. The majority
of them are considered enlightened. Then come
the warriors. The king is at the same time the
supreme commander of a disciplined and extremely
potent army with generals at its head, a powerful
officer corps and obedient “lower ranks”. The
most effective and “modern” weapons of destruction
are stored in the extensive arsenals of Shambhala.
Yet — as we shall later see — the army will only
mobilize completely in three hundred years time
(2327 C.E.).
The totalitarian power of the Shambhala
king extends over not just the inhabitants of
his country, but likewise over all the people
of our planet, “earth”. The French Kalachakra
enthusiast, Jean Rivière, describes the comprehensive
competencies of the Buddhist despots as follows:
“As master of the universe, emperor of the world,
spiritual regent over the powerful subtle energy
flows which regulate the cosmic order just as
[they do] the lives of the people, the Kulika
[king] of Shambhala directs the spiritual
development of the human masses who were born
into the heavy and blind material [universe]"
(Rivière, 1985, p. 36). [1]
The “sun chariot” of the Rishis
Although all its rulers are known
by name, the Shambhala
realm has no history in the real sense. Hence
in the many centuries of its existence hardly
anything worthy of being recorded in a chronicle
has happened. Consider in contrast the history-laden
chain of events in the life of Buddha Shakyamuni
and the numerous legends which he left behind
him! But there is an event which shows that this
country was not entirely free of historical conflict.
This concerns the protest of a group of no less
than 35 million (!) Rishis (seers) led by the
sage Suryaratha ("sun chariot”).
As the first Kulika king, Manjushrikirti,
preached the Kalachakra Tantra to his subjects,
Suryaratha distanced himself from it, and his
followers, the Rishis, joined him. They preferred
to choose banishment from Shambhala than to follow
the “diamond path” (Vajrayana). Nonetheless, after
they had set out in the direction of India and
had already crossed the border of the kingdom,
Manjushrikirti sank in to a deep meditation, stunned
the emigrants by magic and ordered demon birds
to bring them back.
This event probably concerns a
confrontation between two religious schools. The
Rishis worshipped only the sun. For this reason
they also called their guru the “sun chariot”
(suryaratha).
But the Kulika king had as Kalachakra master and cosmic
androgyne united both heavenly orbs in himself.
He was the master of sun and
moon. His demand of the Rishis that they adopt
the teachings of the Kalachakra Tantra was also
enacted on a night of the full moon. Manjushrikirti
ended his sermon with the words: “If
you wish to enter that path, stay here, but if
you do not, then leave und go elsewhere; otherwise
the doctrines of the barbarians will com to spread
even in Shambhala.” (Bernbaum, 1980, p. 234).
The Rishis decided upon the latter.
“Since we all want to remain true to the sun chariot,
we also do not wish to give up our religion and
to join another”, they rejoined (Grünwedel, 1915,
p. 77). This resulted in the exodus already outlined.
But in fetching them back Manjushrikirti had proved
his magical superiority and demonstrated that
the “path of the sun and moon” is stronger than
the “pure sun way”. The Rishis thus brought him
many gold tributes and submitted to his power
and the primacy of the Kalachakra
Tantra. In the fifteenth night of the moon
enlightenment was bestowed upon them.
Behind this unique historical Shambhala incident hides a
barely noticed power-political motif. The seers
(the Rishis) were as their name
betrays clearly Brahmans; they were members of
the elite priestly caste. In contrast, as priest-king
Manjushrikirti integrated in his office the energies
of both the priestly and the military elite. Within
himself he united worldly and spiritual power, which — as
we have already discussed above — are allotted
separately to the sun (high priest) and the moon
(warrior king) in the Indian cultural sphere.
The union of both heavenly orbs in his person
made him an absolute ruler.
Because of the Shambhala realm’s military
plans for the future, which we will describe a
little later, the king and his successors are
extremely interested in strengthening the standing
army. Then Shambhala will need an army
of millions for the battles which are in store
for it, and centuries count for nothing in this
mythic realm. It was thus in Manjushrikirti’s
interest to abolish all caste distinctions in
an overarching militarily oriented Buddhocracy.
The historical Buddha is already supposed to have
prophesied that the future Shambhala king, “.. possessing
the Vajra
family, will become Kalki by making the four castes
into an single clan, within the Vajra
family, not making them into a Brahman family”
(Newman, 1985, p. 64). The “Vajra
family” mentioned is clearly contrasted to the
priestly caste in this statement by Shakyamuni.
Within the various Buddha families as well it
represents the one who is responsible for military
matters. Even today in the West, high-ranking
Tibetan lamas boast that they will be reborn as
generals (!) in the Shambhala army, that is, that
they think to transform their spiritual office
into a military one.
The warlike intention behind this
ironing out of caste distinctions becomes more
obvious in Manjushrikirti’s justification that
the land, should it not follow Vajrayana
Buddhism, would inevitably fall into the hands
of the “barbarians”. These — as we shall later
show — were the followers of Islam, against whom
an enormous Shambhala
military was being armed.
The journey to Shambhala
The travel reports written by Shambhala seekers are mostly
kept so that we do not know whether they concern
actual experiences, dreams, imaginings, phantasmagoria
or initiatory progress. There is also no effort
to keep these distinctions clear. A Shambhala journey simply embodies
all of these together. Thus the difficult
and hazardous adventures people have undertaken
in search of the legendary country correspond
to the “various mystical practices along the way,
that lead to the realization of tantric meditation
in the kingdom itself. ... The snow mountains
surrounding Shambhala represent worldly
virtues, while the King in the center symbolizes
the pure mind at the end of the journey” (Bernbaum,
1980, p. 229).
In such interpretations, then,
the journeys take place in the spirit. Then again,
this is not the impression gained by leafing through
the Shambha la’i lam yig, the
famous travel report of the Third Panchen Lama
(1738–1780). This concerns a fantastic collection
, which is obviously convinced of the reality
of its factual material, of historical and geographic
particulars from central Asia which describe the
way to Shambhala.
The landscapes which, according
to this “classic travel guide”, a visitor must
pass through before entering the wonderland, and
the dangerous adventures which must be undergone,
make the journey to Shambhala (whether real or
imaginary) a tantric initiatory way. This becomes
particularly clear in the central confrontation
with the feminine which just like the Vajrayana controls the whole
travel route. The quite picturesque book describes
over many pages encounters with all the female
figures whom we already know from the tantric
milieu. With literary leisure the author paints
the sweetest and the most terrible scenes: pig-headed
goddesses; witches mounted upon boars; dakinis
swinging skull bowls filled with blood, entrails,
eyes and human hearts; girls as beautiful as lotus
flowers with breasts that drip nectar; harpies;
five hundred demonesses with copper-red lips;
snake goddesses who like nixes try to pull one
into the water; the one-eyed Ekajati; poison mixers; sirens;
naked virgins with golden bodies; female cannibals;
giantesses; sweet Asura
girls with horse’s heads; the demoness of doubt;
the devil of frenzy; healers who give refreshing
herbs — they all await the brave soul who sets
out to seek the wonderland.
Every encounter with these female
creatures must be mastered. For every group the
Panchen Lama has a deterrent, appeasing, or receptive
ritual ready. Some of the women must be turned
away without fail by the traveler, others should
be honored and acknowledged, with yet others he
must unite in tantric love. But woe betide him
if he should lose his emotional and seminal control
here! Then he would become the victim of all these
“beasts” regardless of whether they appear beautiful
or dreadful. Only a complete tantra expert can
pursue his way through this jungle of feminine
bodies.
Thus the spheres alternate between
the external and the internal, reality and imagination,
the world king in the hearts of individual people
and the real world ruler in the Gobi Desert, Shambhala as everyday life
and Shambhala
as a fairytale dream, and everything becomes
possible. When on his travels through Inner Asia
the Russian painter, Nicholas Roerich, showed
some nomads photographs of New York they cried
out: “This is the land of Shambhala!” (Roerich,
1988, p. 274).
The “raging wheel turner”:
The martial ideology of Shambhala
In the year 2327 (C.E.) — the prophecies
of the Kalachakra
Tantra tell us — the 25th Kalki will ascend
the throne of Shambhala. He goes by the
name of Rudra
Chakrin, the “wrathful wheel turner” or the
“Fury with the wheel”. The mission of this ruler
is to destroy the “enemies of the Buddhist teaching”
in a huge eschatological battle and to found a
golden age. This militant hope for the future
still today occupies the minds of many Tibetans
and Mongolians and is beginning to spread across
the whole world. We shall consider the fascination
which the archetype of the “Shambhala
warrior” exercises over western Buddhists
in more detail later.
Rudra Chakrin – the militant messiah of Shambhala
The Shambhala state draws a clear
and definite distinction between friend and enemy.
The original idea of Buddhist pacifism is completely
foreign to it. Hence the Rudra
Chakrin carries a martial symbolic object
as his insignia of dominion, the “wheel of iron”
(!).We may recall that in the Buddhist world view
our entire universe (Chakravala) is enclosed within
a ring of iron mountains. We have interpreted
this image as a reminder of the “doomsday iron
age” of the prophecies of antiquity.
Mounted upon his white horse, with
a spear in his hand, the Rudra Chakrin shall lead his
powerful army in the 24th century. “The Lord of
the Gods”, it is said of him in the Kalachakra
Tantra, “ joined with the twelve lords shall
go to destroy the barbarians” (Newman, 1987, p.
645). His army shall consist of “exceptionally
wild warriors” equipped with “sharp weapons”.
A hundred thousand war elephants and millions
of mountain horses, faster than the wind, shall
serve his soldiers as mounts. Indian gods will
then join the total of twelve divisions of the
“wrathful wheel turner” and support their “friend”
from Shambhala. This support for the warlike Shambhala king is probably
due to his predecessor, Manjushrikirti, who succeeded
in integrating the 120 million Hindu Rishis into
the tantric religious system (Banerjee, 1985,
p. xiii).
If, as legend has it, the author
of the Kalachakra
Tantra was the historical Buddha, Shakyamuni,
in person, then he must have forgotten his whole
vision and message of peace and had a truly great
fascination for the military hardware. Then weaponry
plays a prominent role in the Time Tantra. Here
too, by “weapon” is understood every means of
implementing the physical killing of humans. It
is also said of Buddha’s martial successor, the
coming Rudra Chakrin, that, “with
the sella
(a deadly weapon) in the hand ... he shall proclaim
the Kalachakra on earth for the
liberation of beings” (Banerjee, 1959, p. 213).
Lethal war machines
The graphic description of the
war machines to which the Kalachakra deity devotes a
number of pages already in the first chapter of
the tantra is downright impressive and astonishing
(Newman, 1987, pp. 553-570, verses 135-145; Grönbold,
1996). A total of seven exceptionally destructive
arts of weapon are introduced. All take the form
of a wheel. The text refers to them as yantras. There is a “wind
machine” which is primarily put into action against
mountain forts. They float over the enemy army
and let burning oil run out all over them. The
same happens to the houses and palaces of the
opponent. The second art of weapon is described
as a “sword in the ground machine”. This acts
as a personal protection for the “wrathful wheel
turner”. Anyone who enters his palace without
permission and steps upon the machine hidden beneath
the floor is inevitably cut to pieces. As the
third art follows the “harpoon machine”, a kind
of ancient machine gun. At the squeeze of a finger,
“many straight arrows or sharp Harpoons hat pierce
and pass through the body of an armored elephant”
(Newman, 1987, p. 506).
We are acquainted with three further
extremely effective “rotating weapons” which shear
everything away, above all the heads of the enemy
troops. One of them is compared to the wheels
of the sun chariot. This is probably a variant
of the solar discus which the Indian god Vishnu successfully put to
use against the demon hordes. Such death wheels
have played a significant role in Tibet’s magic
military history right up into this century. We
shall return to this topic at a later point. These
days, believers in the Shambhala myth see “aircraft”
or “UFOs” in them which are armed with atomic
bombs and are guided by the world king’s extraterrestrial
support troops.
In light of the numerous murderous
instruments which are listed in the Kalachakra Tantra, a moral
problem obviously arose for some “orthodox” Buddhists
which led to the wheel weapons being understood
purely symbolically. They concerned radical methods
of destroying one’s own human ego. The great scholar
and Kalachakra commentator, Khas
Grub je, expressly opposes this pious attempt.
In his opinion, the machines “are to be taken
literally” (Newman, 1987, p. 561).
The “final battle”
Let us return to the Rudra Chakrin, the tantric
apocalyptic redeemer. He appears in a period,
in which the Buddhist teaching is largely eradicated.
According to the prophecies, it is the epoch of
the “not-Dharmas”, against whom he makes a stand.
Before the final battle against the enemies of
Buddhism can take place the state of the world
has worsened dramatically. The planet is awash
with natural disasters, famine, epidemics, and
war. People become ever more materialistic and
egoistic. True piety vanishes. Morals become depraved.
Power and wealth are the sole idols. A parallel
to the Hindu doctrine of the Kali yuga is obvious here.
In these bad
times, a despotic “barbarian king” forces all
nations other than Shambhala to follow his rule,
so that at the end only two great forces remain:
firstly the depraved “king of the barbarians”
supported by the “lord of all demons “, and secondly
Rudra Chakrin,
the wrathful Buddhist messiah. At the outset,
the barbarian ruler subjugates the whole world
apart from the mythical kingdom of Shambhala.
Its existence is an incredible goad to him and
his subjects: “Their jealousy will surpass all
limits, crashing up like waves of the sea. Incensed
that there could be such a land outside their
control, they will gather an army together und
set out to conquer it.” (Bernbaum, 1980, p. 240). It then comes, says the prophecy,
to a brutal confrontation. [2]
Alongside the descriptions from
the Kalachakra
Tantra there are numerous other literary depictions
of this Buddhist apocalyptic battle to be found.
They all fail to keep secret their pleasure at
war and the triumph over the corpses of the enemy.
Here is a passage from the Russian painter and
Shambhala believer, Nicholas
Roerich, who became well known in the thirties
as the founder of a worldwide peace organization
("Banner of Peace”). “Hard
is the fate of the enemies of Shambhala. A just
wrath colors the purple blue clouds. The warriors
of the Rigden-jyepo [the Tibetan
name for the Rudra
Chakrin], in splendid armor with swords and
spears are pursuing their terrified enemies. Many
of them are already prostrated and their firearms,
big hats and all their possessions are scattered
over the battlefield. Some of them are dying,
destroyed by the just hand. Their leader is already
smitten and lies spread under the steed of the
great warrior, the blessed Rigden. Behind the Ruler,
on chariots, follow fearful cannons, which no
walls can withstand. Some of the enemy, kneeling,
beg for mercy, or attempt to escape their fate
on the backs of elephants. But the sword of justice
overtake defamers. The Dark must be annihilated.”
(Roerich, 1985, p. 232) The
“Dark”, that is those of different faiths, the
opponents of Buddhism and hence of Shambhala.
They are all cut down without mercy during the
“final battle”. In this enthused sweep of destruction
the Buddhist warriors completely forget the Bodhisattva
vow which preaches compassion with all beings.
The skirmishes of the battle of
the last days (in the year 2327) are, according
to commentaries upon the Kalachakra
Tantra, supposed to reach through Iran into
eastern Turkey (Bernbaum, 1982, p. 251). The regions
of the Kalachakra Tantra’s origin
are also often referred to as the site of the
coming eschatological battlefield (the countries
of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan and Afghanistan). This has a certain
historical justification, since the southern “Islamic”
flank of the former Soviet Union counts as one
of the most explosive crisis regions of the present
day (see in this regard the Spiegel, 20/1998, pp. 160-161).
The conquest of Kailash, the holy
mountain, is nominated as a further strategic
goal in the Shambhala battle. After the Rudra
Chakrin has “killed [his enemies] in battle
waged across the whole world, at the end of the
age the world ruler will with his own fourfold
army come into the city which was built by the
gods on the mountain of Kailash” (Banerjee, 1959,
p. 215). In general, “wherever the [Buddhist]
religion has been destroyed and the Kali age is on the rise, there
he will go” (Banerjee, 1959, p. 52). [3]
Buddha versus Allah
The armies of Rudra Chakrin will destroy
the “not-Dharma” and the doctrines of the “unreligious
barbarian hordes”. Hereby, according to the original
text of the Kalachakra Tantra, it is above
all the Koran
which is intended. Mohammed himself is referred
to by name several times in the Time Tantra, as
is his one god, Allah. We learn of the barbarians
that they are called Mleccha, which means the “inhabitants
of Mecca” (Petri, 1966, p. 107). These days Rudra Chakrin is already celebrated
as the “killer of the Mlecchas” (Banerjee, 1959,
p. 52). This fixation of the highest tantra on
Islam is only all too readily understandable,
then the followers of Mohammed had in the course
of history not just wrought terrible havoc among
the Buddhist monasteries and communities of India
— the Islamic doctrine must also have appeared
more attractive and feeling to many of the ordinary
populace than the complexities of a Buddhism represented
by an elitist community of monks. There were many
“traitors” in central Asia who gladly and readily
reached for the Koran. Such conversions among
the populace must have eaten more deeply into
the hearts of the Buddhist monks than the direct
consequences of war. Then the Kalachakra Tantra, composed
in the time where the hordes of Muslims raged
in the Punjab and along the Silk Road, is marked
by an irreconcilable hate for the “subhumans”
from Mecca.
This dualist division of the world
between Buddhism on the one side and Islam on
the other is a dogma which the Tibetan lamas seek
to transfer to the future of the whole of human
history. “According to certain conjectures”, writes
a western commentator upon the Shambhala myth, “two superpowers
will then have control over the world and take
to the field against one another. The Tibetans
foresee a Third World War here” (Henss, 1985,
p. 19).
In the historical part of our analysis
we shall come to speak of this dangerous antinomy
once more. In contrast to Mohammed, the other
“false doctrines” likewise mentioned in the first
chapter of the Kalachakra Tantra as needing
to be combated by the Shambhala king appear pale
and insignificant. It nevertheless makes sense
to introduce them, so as to demonstrate which
founders of religions the tantric blanket conception
of enemy stretched to encompass. The Kalachakra nominates Enoch,
Abraham and Moses among the Jews, then Jesus for
the Christians, and a “white clothed one”, who
is generally accepted to be Mani, the founder
the Manichaeism. It is most surprising that in
a further passage the “ false doctrines “ of these
religious founders are played down and even integrated
into the tantra’s own system. After they have
had to let a strong attack descend upon them as
“heresies” in the first chapter, in the second
they form the various facets of a crystal, and
the yogi is instructed not to disparage them (Grönbold,
1992a, p. 295).
Such inconsistencies are — as we
have already often experienced — added to tantric
philosophy by itself. The second chapter of the
Kalachakra Tantra thus does
not switch over to a western seeming demand for
freedom of religion and opinion, on the contrary
apparent tolerance and thinking in terms of “the
enemy” are both retained alongside one another
and are, depending on the situation, rolled out
to serve its own power interest. The Fourteenth
Dalai Lama is — as we shall show in detail — an
ingenious interpreter of this double play. Outwardly
he espouses religious freedom and ecumenical peace.
But in contrast, in the ritual system he concentrates
upon the aggressive Time Tantra, in which the
scenario is dominated by destructive fantasies,
dreams of omnipotence, wishes for conquest, outbreaks
of wrath, pyromaniacal obsessions, mercilessness,
hate, killing frenzies, and apocalypses. That
such despotic images also determine the “internal
affairs” of the exiled Tibetans for the Tibetan
“god-king”, is something upon which we shall report
in the second part of our study.
After winning the final battle,
the Kalachakra
Tantra prophecies, the Rudra
Chakrin founds the “golden age”. A purely
Buddhist paradise is established on earth. Joy
and wealth will abound. There is no more war.
Everybody possesses great magical powers, Science
and technology flourish. People live to be 1800
years old and have no need to fear death, since
they will be reborn into an even more beautiful
Eden. This blissful state prevails for around
20,000 years. The Kalachakra
Tantra has by then spread to every corner
of the globe and become the one “true” world religion.
(But afterwards, the old cycle with its wars of
destruction, defeats and victories begins anew.)
The non-Buddhist origins of
the Shambhala myth
Apocalyptic visions, final battles
between Good and Evil, saviors with lethal weapons
in their hands are absolutely no topic for Hinayana Buddhism. They first emerge
in the Mahayana
period (200 B.C.E.), are then incorporated by
Vajrayana (400 C.E.) and gain
their final and central form in the Kalachakra Tantra (tenth century
C.E.). Hence, as in the case of the ADI BUDDHA,
the question arises as to where the non-Buddhist
influences upon the Shambhala myth are to be sought.
Yet before we come to that, we
ought to consider the widespread Maitreya prophecy, which collides
with the Shambhala
vision and the Kalachakra
Tantra. Already in the Gandhara era (200 B.C.E.),
Maitreya is known as the future
Buddha who shall be incarnated on earth. He is
still dwelling in the so-called Tushita
heaven and awaits his mission. Images of him strike
the observer at once because unlike other depictions
of Buddha he is not resting in the lotus posture,
but rather sits in a “European” style, as if on
a chair. In his case too, the world first goes
into decline before he appears to come to the
aid of the suffering humanity. His epiphany is,
however, according to most reports much more healing
and peaceable than those of the “wrathful wheel
turner”. But there are also other more aggressive
prophecies from the seventh century where he first
comes to earth as a messiah following an apocalyptic
final battle (Sponberg, 1988, p. 31). For the
Russian painter and Shambhala seeker, Nicholas
Roerich, there is in the end no difference between
Maitreya and Rudra Chakrin any more, they
are simply two names for the same redeemer.
Without doubt the Kalachakra Tantra is primarily dominated
by conceptions which can also be found in Hinduism.
This is especially true of the yoga techniques,
but likewise applies to the cosmology and the
cyclical destruction and renewal of the universe.
In Hindu prophecies too, the god Vishnu appears as savior at
the end of the Kali
yuga, also, incidentally, upon a white horse like
the Buddhist Rudra Chakrin, in order to
exterminate the enemies of the religion. He even
bears the dynastic name of the Shambhala
kings and is known as Kalki.
Among the academic researchers
there is nonetheless the widespread opinion that
the savior motif, be it Vishnu
or Buddha Maitreya or even the
Rudra Chakrin,
is of Iranian origin. The stark distinction
between the forces of the light and the dark,
the apocalyptic scenario, the battle images, the
idea of a militant world ruler, even the mandala
model of the five meditation Buddhas were unknown
among the original Buddhist communities. Buddhism,
alone among all the salvational religions, saw
no savior behind Gautama’s experience of enlightenment.
But for Iran these motifs of salvation were (and
still are today) central.
In a convincing study, the orientalist,
Heinrich von Stietencron, has shown how — since
the first century C.E. at the latest — Iranian
sun priests infiltrated into India and merged
their concepts with the local religions, especially
Buddhism. (Stietencron, 1965. p. 170). They were
known as Maga
and Bhojaka. The Magas, from whom our word
“magician” is derived, brought with them among
other things the cult of Mithras and combined
it with elements of Hindu sun worship. Waestern
researchers presume that the name of Maitreya, the future Buddha,
derives from Mithras.
The Bhojakas, who followed centuries
later (600–700 C.E.), believed that they emanated
from the body of their sun god. They also proclaimed
themselves to be the descendants of Zarathustra.
In India they created a mixed solar religion from
the doctrines of the Avesta (the teachings of Zarathustra)
and Mahayana
Buddhism. From the Buddhists they adopted fasting
and the prohibitions on cultivating fields and
trade. In return, they influenced Buddhism primarily
with their visions of light. Their “photisms”
are said to have especially helped shape the shining
figure of the Buddha Amitabha. Since they placed
the time god, Zurvan,
at the center of their cult, it could also be
they who anticipated the essential doctrines of
the Kalachakra Tantra.
Like the Kalachakra deity we have described,
the Iranian Zurvan carries the entire
universe in his mystic body: the sun, moon, and
stars. The various divisions of time such as hours,
days, and months dwell in him as personified beings.
He is the ruler of eternal and of historical time.
White light and the colors of the rainbow burst
out of him. His worshippers pray to him as “father-mother”.
Sometimes he is portrayed as having four heads
like the Buddhist time god. He governs as the
“father of fire” or as the “victory fire”. Through
him, fire and time are equated. He is also cyclical
time, in which the world is swallowed by flames
so as to arise anew.
Manichaeism (from the third century
on) also took on numerous elements from the Zurvan religion and mixed
them with Christian/Gnostic ideas and added Buddhist
concepts. The founder of the religion, Mani, undertook
a successful missionary journey to India. Key
orientalists assume that his teachings also had
a reverse influence upon Buddhism. Among other
aspects, they mention the fivefold group of meditation
Buddhas, the dualisms of good and evil, light
and darkness, the holy man’s body as the world
in microcosm, and the concept of salvation. More
specific are the white robes which the monks in
the kingdom of Shambhala wear. White was
the cult color of the Manichaean priestly caste
and is not a normal color for clothing in Buddhism.
But the blatant eroticism which the Kalachakra
translator and researcher in Asia, Albert Grünwedel,
saw in Manichaeism was not there. In contrast;
Mani’s religion exhibits extremely “puritanical”
traits and rejects everything sexual: “The sin
of sex”, he is reported to have said, “is animal,
an imitation of the devil mating. Above all it
produces every propagation and continuation of
the original evil” (quoted by Hermanns, 1965,
p. 105).
While the famous Italian Tibetologist,
Guiseppe Tucci, believes Iranian influences can
be detected in the doctrine of ADI BUDDHA, he
sees the Lamaist-Tibetan way in total rather as
gnostic, since it attempts to overcome the dualism
of good and evil and does not peddle the out and
out moralizing of the Avesta
or the Manichaeans. This is certainly true for
the yoga way in the Kalachakra
Tantra, yet it is not so for the eschatology
of the Shambhala myth. There, the
“prince of light” (Rudra
Chakrin) and the depraved “prince of darkness”
take to the field against one another.
There was a direct Iranian influence
upon the Bon cult, the state religion which preceded
Buddhism in Tibet. Bon, often erroneously confused
with the old shamanist cultures of the highlands,
is a explicit religion of light with an organized
priesthood, a savior (Shen rab) and a realm of paradise
(Olmolungring)
which resembles the kingdom of Shambhala in an astonishing
manner.
It is a Tradition in Europe to
hypothesize ancient Egyptian influences upon the
tantric culture of Tibet. This can probably be
traced to the occult writings of the Jesuit, Athanasius
Kirchner (1602-1680), who believed he had discovered
the cradle of all advanced civilizations including
that of the Tibetans in the Land of the Nile.
The Briton, Captain S. Turner, who visited the
highlands in the year 1783, was likewise convinced
of a continuity between ancient Egypt and Tibet.
Even this century, Siegbert Hummel saw the “Land
of Snows” as almost a “reserve for Mediterranean
traditions” and likewise nominated Egypt as the
origin of the tradition of the Tibetan mysteries
(Hummel, 1954, p. 129; 1962, p. 31). But it was
especially the occultist Helena Blavatsky who
saw the origins of both cultures as flowing from
the same source. The two “supernatural secret
societies”, who whispered the ideas to her were
the “Brotherhood of Luxor” and the “Tibetan Brotherhood”.
The determining Greek influence
upon the sacred art of Buddhism (Gandhara style)
became a global event which left its traces as
far afield as Japan. Likewise, the effect of Hellenistic
ideas upon the development of Buddhist doctrines
is well vouched for. There is widespread unanimity
that without this encounter Mahayana would have never
even been possible. According to the studies of
the ethnologist Mario Bussagli, hermetic and alchemic
teachings are also supposed to have come into
contact with the world view of Buddha via Hellenistic
Baktria (modern Afghanistan) and the Kusha empire
which followed it, the rulers of which were of
Scythian origin but had adopted Greek language
and culture (Bussagli, 1985).
Evaluation of the Shambhala
myth
The ancient origins and contents
of the Shambhala
state make it, when seen from the point of
view of a western political scientist, an antidemocratic,
totalitarian, doctrinaire and patriarchal model.
It concerns a repressive ideal construction which
is to be imposed upon all of humanity in the wake
of an “ultimate war”. Here the sovereign (the
Shambhala king) and in no
sense the people decide the legal norms. He governs
as the absolute monarch of a planetary Buddhocracy.
King and state even form a mystic unity, in a
literal, not a figurative sense, then the inner
bodily energy processes of the ruler are identical
with external state happenings. The various administrative
levels of Shambhala (viceroys, governors, and
officials) are thus considered to be the extended
limbs of the sovereign.
Further to this, the Shambhala state (in contrast
to the original teachings of the Buddha) is based
upon the clear differentiation of friend and enemy.
Its political thought is profoundly dualist, up
to and including the moral sphere. Islam is regarded
as the arch-enemy of the country. In resolving
aggravated conflicts, Shambhala
society has recourse to a “high-tech” and
extremely violent military machinery and employs
the sociopolitical utopia of “paradise on earth”
as its central item of propaganda.
It follows from all these features
that the current, Fourteenth Dalai Lama’s constant
professions of faith in the fundamentals of western
democracy remain empty phrases for as long as
he continues to place the Kalachakra Tantra and the
Shambhala myth at the center
of his ritual existence. The objection commonly
produced by lamas and western Buddhists, that
Shambhala concerns a metaphysical
and not a worldly institution, does not hold water.
We know, namely, from history that both traditional
Tibetan and Mongolian society cultivated the Shambhala myth without at
any stage drawing a distinction between a worldly
and a metaphysical aspect in this matter. In both
countries, everything which the Buddhocratic head
of state decided was holy per se.
The argument that the Shambhala vision was distant
“pie in the sky” is also not convincing. The aggressive
warrior myth and the idea of a world controlling
ADI BUDDHA has influenced the history of Tibet
and Mongolia for centuries as a rigid political
program which is oriented to the decisions of
the clerical power elite. In the second part of
our study we present this program and its historical
execution to the reader. We shall return to the
topic that in the view of some lamas the Tibetan
state represents an earthly copy of the Shambhala
realm and the Dalai Lama an emanation of the
Shambhala king.
“Inner” and “outer” Shambhala
In answer to the question as to
why the “world ruler on the Lion Throne” (the
Shambhala king) does not peacefully
and positively intervene in the fate of humanity,
the French Kalachakra
believer, Jean Rivière, replied: “He does not
inspire world politics and does not intervene
directly or humanly in the conflicts of the reborn
beings. His role is spiritual, completely inner,
individual one could say” (Rivière, 1985, p. 36).
Such an “internalization” or “psychologization”
of the myth is applied by some authors to the
entire Buddhocratic realm, including the history
of Shambhala and the final battle prophesied there.
The country, with all its viceroys, ministers,
generals, officials, warriors, ladies of the court,
vajra
girls, palace grounds, administrative bodies and
dogmata, now appears as a structural model which
describes the mystic body of a yogi: “If you can use
your body properly, than the body becomes Shambhala,
the ninety-six principalities concur in all their
actions, and you conquer the kingdom itself.”
(Bernbaum, 1980, p. 155)
The arduous “journey to Shambhala”
and the “final battle” are also subjectified and
identified as, respectively, an “initiatory path”
or an “inner battle of the soul” along the way
to enlightenment. In this psycho-mystic drama,
the ruler of the last days, Rudra Chakrin, plays the “higher
self” or the “divine consciousness” of the yogi,
which declares war on the human ego in the figure
of the “barbarian king” and exterminates it. The
prophesied paradise refers to the enlightenment
of the initiand.
We have already a number of times
gone into the above all among western Buddhists
widespread habit of exclusively internalizing
or “psychologizing” tantric images and myths.
From an “occidental” way of looking at things,
an internalization implies that an external image
(a war for example) is to be understood as a symbol
for an inner psychic/spiritual process (for example,
a “psychological” war). However, according to
Eastern, magic-oriented thinking, the “identity”
of interior and exterior means something different,
namely that the inner processes in the yogi’s
mystic body correspond to external events, or
to tone this down a little , that inside and outside consist of the
same substance (of “pure spirit” for example).
The external is thus not a metaphor for the internal
as in the western symbolic conception, but rather
both, inner and exterior, correspond to one another.
Admittedly this implies that the external can
be influenced by inner manipulations, but not
that it thereby disappears. Applying this concept
to the example mentioned above results in the
following simple statement: the Shambhala war takes place
internally and
externally. Just as the mystic body (interior)
of the ADI BUDDHA is identical with the whole
cosmos (exterior), so the mystic body (interior)
of the Shambhala
king is identical to his state (exterior).
The Shambhala myth and the ideologies
derived from it stand in stark opposition to Gautama
Buddha’s original vision of peace and to the Ahimsa politics (politics
of nonviolence) of Mahatma Ghandi, to whom the
current Dalai Lama so often refers. For Westerners
sensitized by the pacifist message of Buddhism,
the “internalization” of the myth may thus offer
an way around the militant ambient of the Kalachakra Tantra. But in
Tibetan/Mongolian
history the prophecy of Shambhala has been taken literally
for centuries, and — as we still have to demonstrate
— has led to extremely aggressive political undertakings.
It carries within it — and this is something to
we shall return to discuss in detail — the seeds
of a worldwide fundamentalist ideology of war. |