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The Shadow of the Dalai Lama – Part
II – 11. The Shambhala Myth and the west
© Victor & Victoria
Trimondi
11. THE SHAMBHALA MYTH AND
THE WEST
The spread of the Shambhala myth and the Kalachakra Tantra in the West
has a history of its own. It does definitely not
first begin with the expulsion of the lamas from
Tibet (in 1959) and their diaspora across the
whole world, but rather commences at the beginning
of the twentieth century in Russia with the religious
political activity of an ethnic Buriat by the
name of Agvan Dorjiev.
The Shambhala missionary Agvan
Dorjiev
Even in his youth, Agvan Dorjiev
(1854–1938), who trained as a monk in Tibet, was
already a very promising individual. For this
reason he was as a young man entrusted with caring
for the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. The duties of the
Buriat included among other things the ritual
cleansing of the body and bedroom of the god-king,
which implies quite an intimate degree of contact.
Later he was to be at times the closest political
adviser of His Holiness.
Dorjiev was convinced that the
union of Tibet with Russia would provide the Highlands
with an extremely favorable future, and was likewise
able to convince the hierarch upon the Lion Throne
of the merits of his political vision for a number
of years. He thus advanced to the post of Tibetan
envoy in St. Petersburg and at the Russian court.
His work in the capital was extremely active and
varied. In 1898 he had his first audience with
Tsar Nicholas II, which was supposed to be followed
by others. The Russian government was opening
up with greater tolerance towards the Asian minorities
among whom the Buriats were also to be counted,
and was attempting to integrate them more into
the Empire whilst still respecting their religious
and cultural autonomy, instead of missionizing
them as they had still done at the outset of the
19th century.
Even as a boy, Nicholas II had
been fascinated by Tibet and the “yellow pontiff”
from Lhasa. The famous explorer,
Nikolai Przhevalsky, introduced the 13-year-old
Tsarevitch to the history and geopolitics of Central
Asia. Przhevalsky described the Dalai Lama as
a „powerful Oriental pope with dominion over some
250 million Asiatic souls” and believed that a
Russian influence in Tibet would lead to control
of the entire continent and that this must be
the first goal of Tsarist foreign policy (Schimmelpennink,
1994, p. 16). Prince Esper Esperovich Ukhtomsky, influential
at court and deeply impressed by the Buddhist
teachings, also dreamed of a greater Asian Empire
under the leadership of the “White Tsars”.
Since the end of the 19th century
Buddhism had become a real fashion among the Russian
high society, comparable only to what is currently
happening in Hollywood, where more and more stars
profess to the doctrine of the Dalai Lama. It
was considered stylish to appeal to Russia’s Asiatic
inheritance and to invoke the Mongolian blood
which flowed in the veins of every Russian with
emotional phrases. The poet, Vladimir Solovjov
declaimed, “Pan-Mongolism — this word: barbaric,
yes! Yet a sweet sound” (Block, n.d., p. 247).
Agvan Dorjiev
The mysto-political influences
upon the court of the Tsar of the naïve demonic
village magician, Rasputin, are common knowledge.
Yet the power-political intrigues of an intelligent
Asian doctor by the name of Peter Badmajev ought
to have been of far greater consequence. Like
Dorjiev, whom he knew well, he was a Buriat and
originally a Buddhist, but he had then converted
to Russian Orthodox. His change of faith was never
really bought by those around him, who frequented
him above all as a mighty shaman that was “supposed
to be initiated into all the secrets of Asia”
(Golowin, 1977, p. 219).
Badmajev was head of the most famous
private hospital in St. Petersburg. There the
cabinet lists for the respective members of government
were put together under his direction. R. Fülöp-Miller
has vividly described the doctor’s power-political
activities: “In the course of time medicine and
politics, ministerial appointments and 'lotus
essences' became more and more mingled, and a
fantastic political magic character arose, which
emanated from Badmajev’s sanatorium and determined
the fate of all Russia. The miracle-working doctor
owed this influence especially to his successful
medical-political treatment of the Tsar. ... Badmajev’s
mixtures, potions, and powders brewed from mysterious
herbs from the steppes served not just to remedy
patient’s metabolic disturbances; anyone who took
these medicaments ensured himself an important
office in the state at the same time” (Fülöp-Miller,
1927, pp. 112, 148). For this “wise and crafty
Asian” too, the guiding idea was the establishment
of an Asian empire with the “White Tsar” at its
helm.
In this overheated pro-Asian climate,
Dorjiev believed, probably somewhat rashly, that
the Tsar had a genuine personal interest in being
initiated into the secrets of Buddhism. The Buriat’s
goal was to establish a mchod-yon relationship between
Nicholas II and the god-king from Lhasa, that
is, Russian state patronage of Lamaism. Hence
a trip to Russia by the Dalai Lama was prepared
which, however, never eventuated.
Bolshevik Buddhism
One would think that Dorjiev had
a compassionate heart for the tragic fate of the
Tsarist family. At least, Nicholas II had supported
him and the Thirteenth Dalai Lama had even declared
the Russian heir to the throne to be a Bodhisattva
because a number of attempts to give him a Christian
baptism mysteriously failed. At Dorjiev’s behest,
pictures of the Romanovs adorned the Buddhist
temple in St. Petersburg.
Hence, it is extremely surprising
that the Buriat greeted the Russian October Revolution
and the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks with
great emotion. What stood behind this about-face,
a change of attitude or understandable opportunism?
More likely the former, then at the outset of
the twenties Dorjiev, along with many famous Russian
orientalists, was convinced that Communism and
Buddhism were compatible. He publicly proclaimed
that the teaching of Shakyamuni was an “atheistic
religion” and that it would be wrong to describe
it as “unscientific”. Men in his immediate neighborhood
even went so far as to celebrate the historical
Buddha as the original founder of Communism and
to glorify Lenin as an incarnation of the Enlightened
One. There are reliable rumors that Dorjiev and
Lenin had met.
Initially the Bolsheviks appreciated
such currying of favor and made use of it to win
Buddhist Russians over to their ideas. Already
in 1919, the second year of the Revolution, an
exhibition of Buddhist art was permitted and encouraged
amidst extreme social turmoil. The teachings of
Shakyamuni lived through a golden era, lectures
about the Sutras were held, numerous Buddhist
books were published, contacts were established
with Mongolian and Tibetan scholars. Even the
ideas of pan-Mongolism were reawakened and people
began to dream of blood-filled scenes. In the
same year, in his famous poem of hate Die Skythen [The Scythians],
Alexander Block prophesied the fall of Europe
through the combined assault of the Russians and
the Mongolians. In it we can read that
We shall see through the slits
of our eyes
How the Huns fight over your
flesh,
How your cities collapse
And your horses graze between
the ruins.
(Block, n.d., p. 249)
Even the Soviet Union’s highest-ranking
cultural official of the time, Anatoli Vassilievich
Lunacharski, praised Asia as a pure source of
inexhaustible reserves of strength: “We need the
Revolution to toss aside the power of the bourgeoisie
and the power of rationality at the same time
so as to regain the great power of elementary
life, so as to dissolve the world in the real
music of intense being. We respect and honor Asia
as an area which until now draws its life energy
from exactly these right sources and which is
not poisoned by European reason” (Trotzkij, 1968,
p. 55).
Yet the Buddhist, pan-Asian El
Dorado of Leningrad transformed itself in 1929
into a hell, as the Stalinist secret service began
with a campaign to eradicate all religious currents.
Some years later Dorjiev was arrested as a counterrevolutionary
and then put on trial for treason and terrorism.
On January 29, 1938 the “friend of the Dalai Lama”
died in a prison hospital.
The Kalachakra temple in St.
Petersburg
There is a simple reason for Dorjiev’s
enthusiasm for Russia. He was convinced that the
Kalachakra system and the
Shambhala myth had their origins
in the Empire of the Tsar and would return via
it. In 1901 the Buriat had received initiations
into the Time Tantra from the Ninth Panchen Lama
which were supposed to have been of central significance
for his future vision. Ekai Kawaguchi, a Buddhist
monk from Japan who visited Tibet at the turn
of the last century, claims to have heard of a
pamphlet in which Dorjiev wrote “Shambhala was Russia. The
Emperor, moreover, was an incarnation of Tsongkhapa,
and would sooner or later subdue the whole world
and found a gigantic Buddhist empire” (Snelling,
1993, p. 79). Although it is not certain whether
the lama really did write this document, it fits
in with his religious-political ideas. Additionally,
the historians are agreed: “In my opinion,” W.A.
Unkrig writes, “the religiously-based purpose
of Agvan Dorjiev was the foundation of a Lamaist-oriented
kingdom of the Tibetans and Mongols as a theocracy
under the Dalai Lama ... [and] under the protection
of Tsarist Russia ... In addition, among the Lamaists
there existed the religiously grounded hope for
help from a ‘Messianic Kingdom’ in the North ...
called 'Northern Shambhala’” (quoted by Snelling,
1993, p. 79).
At the center of Dorjiev’s activities
in Russia stood the construction of a three-dimensional
mandala — the Buddhist temple in St. Petersburg.
The shrine was dedicated to the Kalachakra deity. The Dalai
Lama’s envoy succeeded in bringing together a
respectable number of prominent Russians who approved
of and supported the project. The architects came
from the West. A painter by the name of Nicholas
Roerich, who later became a fanatic propagandist
for Kalachakra doctrine, produced
the designs for the stained-glass windows. Work
commenced in 1909. In the central hall various
main gods from the Tibetan pantheon were represented
with statues and pictures, including among others
Dorjiev’s wrathful initiation deity, Vajrabhairava. Regarding the
décor, it is perhaps also of interest that there
was a swastika motif which the Bolsheviks knocked
out during the Second World War. There was sufficient
room for several lamas, who looked after the ritual
life, to live on the grounds. Dorjiev had originally
intended to triple the staffing and to construct
not just a temple but also a whole monastery.
This was prevented, however, by the intervention
of the Russian Orthodox Church.
The inauguration took place in
1915, an important social event with numerous
figures from public life and the official representatives
of various Asian countries. The Dalai Lama sent
a powerful delegation, “to represent the Buddhist
Papacy and assist the Tibetan Envoy Dorjiev” (Snelling,
1993, p. 159). Nicholas II had already viewed
the Kalachakra temple privately
together with members of his family several days
before the official occasion.
Officially, the shrine was declared
to be a place for the needs of the Buriat and
Kalmyk minorities in the capital. With regard
to its occult functions it was undoubtedly a tantric
mandala with which the Kalachakra system was to be
transplanted into the West. Then, as we have already
explained, from the lamas’ traditional point of
view founding a temple is seen as an act of spiritual
occupation of a territory. The legends about the
construction of first Buddhist monastery (Samye)
on Tibetan soil show that it is a matter of a
symbolic deed with which the victory of Buddhism
over the native gods (or demons) is celebrated.
Such sacred buildings as the Kalachakra temple in St. Petersburg
are cosmograms which are — in their own way of
seeing things — employed by the lamas as magic
seals in order to spiritually subjugate countries
and peoples. It is in this sense that the Italian,
Fosco Maraini, has also described the monasteries
in his poetic travelogue about Tibet as “factories
of a holy technology or laboratories of spiritual
science” (Maraini, 1952, p. 172). In our opinion
this approximates very closely the Lamaist self-concept.
Perhaps it is also the reason why the Bolsheviks
later housed an evolutionary technology laboratory
in the confiscated Kalachakra shrine of St. Petersburg
and performed genetic experiments before the eyes
of the tantric terror gods.
The temple was first returned to
the Buddhists in June 1991. In the same year,
a few days before his own death, the English expert
on Buddhism, John Snelling, completed his biography
of the god-king’s Buriat envoy. In it he poses
the following possibility: “Who knows then but
what I call Dorjiev's Shambhala Project for a great
Buddhist confederation stretching from Tibet to
Siberia, but now with connections across to Western
Europe and even internationally, may well become
a very real possibility” (Snelling, 1993, xii).
Here, Snelling can only mean the explosive spread
of Tantric Buddhism across the whole world.
If we take account of the changes
that time brings with it, then today the Kalachakra temple in Petersburg
would be comparable with the Tibet House in New York. Both
institutions function(ed) as semi-occult centers
outwardly disguised as cultural institutions.
In both instances the spread of the Kalachakra
idea is/was central as well. But there is also
a much closer connection: Robert Alexander Farrar
Thurman, the founder and current leader of the
Tibet House,
went to Dharamsala at the beginning of the sixties.
There he was ordained by the Dalai Lama in person.
Subsequently, the Kalmyk, Geshe Wangyal (1901-1983),
was appointed to teach the American, who today
proclaims that he shall experience the Buddhization
of the USA in this lifetime. Thurman thus received
his tantric initiations from Wangyal.
This guru lineage establishes a
direct connection to Agvan Dorjiev. Namely, that
as a 19-year-old novice Lama Wangyal accompanied
the Buriat to St. Petersburg and was initiated
by him. Thus, Robert Thurman’s “line guru” is,
via Wangyal, the old master Dorjiev. Dorjiev —
Wangyal — Thurman form a chain of initiations.
From a tantric viewpoint the spirit of the master
live on in the figure of the pupil. It can thus
be assumed that as Dorjiev’s “successor” Thurman
represents an emanation of the extremely aggressive
protective deity, Vajrabhairava, who had incarnated
himself in the Buriat. At any rate, Thurman has
to be associated with Dorjiev’s global Shambhala utopia. His close
interconnection with the Kalachakra Tantra is additionally
a result of his spending several months in Dharamsala
under the supervision of Namgyal monks, who are
specialized in the time doctrine.
Madame Blavatsky and the Shambhala
myth
Yet, as the real pioneering deed
in the spread of the Shambhala myth in the West
we have to present the life and work of a woman.
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891), the influential
founder of Theosophy, possibly contributed more
to the globalization of a warlike Buddhism than
she was aware of. The noble-born Russian is supposed
to have already been a gifted medium as a child.
After an adventurous life (among other things
she worked as a rider in a circus) her spiritual
career as such began in the 1870s in the USA.
At first she tried her hand at all kinds of spiritualist
séances. Then she wrote her first occult book,
later world famous, Isis Unveiled (first published
in 1875). As the title reveals, at this stage
she oriented herself to secret Egyptian teachings.
There is almost no trace of Buddhist thought to
be found in this work. In 1879 together with her
most loyal follower, Colonel Henry Steele Olcott,
Blavatsky made a journey to Bombay and to the
teachings of Buddha Gautama. There too, the doctrine
of the “great White Brotherhood of Tibet” and
the mysterious spiritual masters who determine
the fate of humanity was invented, or rather,
in Blavatsky’s terms, “received” from the higher
realms.
Tibet, which, her own claims to
the contrary, she had probably never visited,
was a grand obsession for the occultist. She liked
to describe her own facial characteristics as
“Kalmyk-Buddhist-Tatar”. Even though her esoteric
system is syncretized out of all religions, since
her work on the Secret Doctrine Tibetan/Tantric
Buddhism takes pride of place among them.
A detailed comparison of the later
work of the Theosophist with the Shambhala myth and the Kalachakra Tantra would reveal
astounding similarities. Admittedly she only knew
the Time Tantra from the brief comments of the
first western Tibetologist, the Hungarian, Csoma
de Körös, but her writings are permeated by the
same spirit which also animates the “Highest Tantra
of all”. The mystic Secret
Book of Dzyan, which the Russian claimed to
have “received” from a Tibetan master and which
she wrote her Secret Doctrine as a commentary
upon, is central to her doctrine. It is supposed
to be the first volume of the 21 Books of Kiu te, in which
all the esoteric doctrines of our universe are
encoded according to Blavatsky. What are we dealing
with here? The historian David Reigle suspects
that by the mysterious Books of Kiu te she means
the tantra section of the Tibetan Tanjur and Kanjur, the officially codified
Tibetan collections of Buddhist doctrinal writings,
about which only little was known at the time.
But this is not certain. There is also supposed
to be a Tibetan tradition which claims that the
Books of
Kiu te were all to be found in the kingdom
of Shambhala (Reigle, 1983, p.
3). Following such opinions Madame Blavatsky’s
secret directions would have been drawn directly
from the kingdom.
In her philosophy the ADI BUDDHA
system is of central importance, and likewise
the fivefold group of the Dhyani (or meditation)
Buddhas and the glorification of Amitabha as the supreme god
of light, whom she compares with the “Ancient of Days” of the Jewish
Cabala. Astutely, she recognizes the Chinese goddess
Guanyin as the “genius of
water” (Spierenburg, 1991, p. 13). But as “mother,
wife, and daughter” she is subordinate to the
“First Word”, the Tibetan fire god Avalokiteshvara.
The result is — as in the Kalachakra Tantra — an obsessive
solar and fire cult. Her fire worship exhibits
an original development in the principal deity
of our age, Fohat by name. Among other
things he is said to emanate in all forms of electricity.
Madame Blavatsky was not informed
about the sexual magic practices in the tantras.
She herself supported sexual abstinence as “occult
hygiene of mind and body” (Meade, 1987, p. 398).
She claimed to be a virgin all her life, but a
report from her doctors reveals this was not the
truth. “To Hades with the sex love!”, she cursed,
“It is a beastly appetite that should be starved
into submission” (Symonds, 1959, p. 64). When
the sexes first appeared — we learn from the Secret Book of Dzyan — they
brought disaster to the world. The decline into
the material began with a sexual indiscretion
of the gods: “They took wives fair to look upon.
Wives from the mindless, the narrow-headed. …
Then the third eye acted no longer” (Blavatsky,
1888, vol. 2, p. 13).
Blavatsky was probably convinced
that her female body was being borrowed by a male
Tibetan yogi. At any rate her closest co-worker,
Henry Steele Olcott, who so admired her works
that he could not believe they could be the work
of a woman, suspected this. Hence,
thinking of Madame, he asked an Indian guru, “But
can the atman [higher self] of a yogi
be transferred into the body of a woman?”. The
Indian replied, “He can clothe his soul in her
physical form with as much ease as he can put
on a woman's dress. In every physical aspect and
relation he would then be like a woman; internally
he would remain himself” (Symonds, 1959, p. 142).
As in the Kalachakra Tantra, androgyny
is also considered the supreme goal along the
path to enlightenment in Theosophy. The gods are
simultaneously “male-female”. Their bisexuality
is concentrated in the figure of Avalokiteshvara, the cosmic
Adam.
Through her equation of the ADI
BUDDHA with the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara Madame Blavatsky
clears the way for a cosmologization of the latter’s
earthly embodiment, the Dalai Lama. For her, the
Bodhisattva is “the powerful and all-seeing”,
the “savior of humanity” and we learn that as
“the most perfect Buddha” he will incarnate in
the Dalai Lama or the Panchen Lama in order to
redeem the whole world (Blavatsky, 1888, vol.
2, p. 178).
As in the Shambhala myth, the Russian
presumes that a secret world government exists,
whose members, the Mahatmas,
were brought together in an esoteric society in
the 14th century by the founder of
the Gelugpa order, Tsongkhapa. The “White Brotherhood”,
as this secret federation is known, still exists
in Tibet, even if hidden from view, and influences
the fate of humanity. It consists of superhumans
who watch over the evolution of the citizens of
the earth.
Likewise, the catastrophic destruction
of the old eon and the creation of a new paradisiacal
realm are part of the Theosophical world view.
Here, Blavatsky quotes the same Indian source
from which the Kalachakra Tantra is also
nourished, the Vishnu
Purana. There it says of the doomsday ruler
that, “He ... shall descend on Earth as an outstanding
Brahman from Shambhala ... endowed with
the eight superhuman faculties. Through his irresistible
power he will ... destroy all whose hearts have
been relinquished to evil. He will re-establish
righteousness on earth” (Blavatsky, 1888, vol.
1, p. 378).
Of course, the Russian was able
to read much into the Tibetan Buddhist doctrine,
since in her time only a few of the original texts
had been translated into a western language. But
it is definitely wrong to dismiss her numerous
theses as pure fantasy, as her speculative world
brings her closer to the imagination and occult
ambience of Lamaism than some philologically accurate
translations of Sanskrit writings. With an unerring
instinct and a visionary mastery she discovered
many of the ideas and forces which are at work
in the tantric teachings. In that she attained
these insights more through intuition and mediumism
than through scientific research, she can be regarded
as the semi-aware instrument of a Buddhist-Tibetan
world conquest. At any rate, of all the western
“believers in Tibet” she contributed the most
to the spread of the idea of the Land of Snows
as a unfathomable mystery. Without the occult
veil which Madame Blavatsky cast over Tibet and
its clergy, Tantric Buddhism would only be half
as attractive in the West. The Fourteenth Dalai
Lama is also aware of the great importance of
such female allies and has hence frequently praised
Blavatsky’s pioneering work.
Nicholas Roerich and the Kalachakra
Tantra
A further two individuals who won
the most respect for the Shambhala myth in the West
before the flight of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama,
were also Russians, Nicholas Roerich (1874–1947)
and his wife Helena Ivanovna (1879–1955). Roerich
was a lifelong painter, influenced by the late
art nouveau movement. He believed himself to be
a reincarnation of Leonardo da Vinci. Via his
paintings, of which the majority featured Asian
subjects, especially the mountainous landscapes
of the Himalayas, he attempted to spread his religious
message. He became interested in the ideas of
Theosophy very early on; his wife translated Madame
Blavatsky’s Secret Doctrine into Russian.
The occultist led him to Buddhism, which was as
we have said en
vogue in the society of St. Petersburg at
the time. We have already briefly encountered
him as a designer of Agvan Dorjiev’s Kalachakra temple. He was
a close friend of the Buriat. In contrast, he
hated Albert Grünwedel and regarded his work with
deep mistrust. Between the years
of 1924 and 1928 he wandered throughout Central
Asia in search of the kingdom of
Shambhala and subsequently
published a travel diary.
In 1929 he began a very successful
international action, the Roerich Banner of Peace and
the Peace
Pact, in which warring nations were supposed
to commit themselves to protecting each other’s
cultural assets from destruction. In the White
House in 1935 the Roerich Pact was signed by 21
nations in the presence of President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt. The migrant Russian succeeded
in gaining constant access to circles of government,
especially since the American agricultural minister,
Henry Wallace, had adopted him as his guru. In
1947 the painter died in the Himalayan foothills of northern
India.
With great zeal his wife continued
her husband’s religious work up until the nineteen-fifties.
Helena Ivanovna had from the outset actively participated
in the formation of her husband’s ideas. Above
all it is to her that we owe the numerous writings
about Agni Yoga, the core of their
mutual teachings. Roerich saw her as something
like his shakti, and openly admitted to her contribution
to the development of his vision. He said in one
statement that in his understanding of the world
“the duty of the woman [is] to lead her male partner
to the highest and most beautiful, and then to
inspire him to open himself up to the higher world
of the spirit and to import both valuable and
beautiful aspects and ethical and social ones
into life” (Augustat, 1993, p. 50). In his otherwise
Indian Buddhist doctrinal system there was a revering
of the “mother the world” that probably came from
the Russian Orthodox Church.
Roerich first learned about the
Kalachakra
Tantra from Agvan Dorjiev during his work
on the temple in St. Petersburg. Later, in Darjeeling,
he had contact to the lama Ngawang Kalzang, who
was also the teacher of the German, Lama Govinda,
and was well versed in the time teachings. It
is, however, most unlikely that Roerich received
specific initiations from him or others, as his
statements about the Kalachakra Tantra do not display
a great deal of expertise. Perhaps it was precisely
because of this that he saw in it the “happy news
“ of the new eon to come. He thus took up exactly
the opposite position to his contemporary and
acquaintance, Albert Grünwedel, who fanatically
denounced the supreme Buddhist doctrinal system
as a work of the devil. “Kalachakra”, Roerich wrote,
“is the doctrine which is attributed to the numerous
rulers of Shambhala. ... But in reality
this doctrine is the great revelation brought
to humankind ... by the lords of fire, the sons
of reason who are and were the lords of Shambhala”
(Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, pp. 79, 81).
According to Roerich, the “fiery
doctrine was covered in dust “ up until the twentieth
century. (Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 122). But now the time had come in which
it would spread all over the world. As far as
their essential core was concerned, all other
religions were supposed to be included in the
Time Tantra already: “There are now so many teachers
— so different and so hostile to one another;
and nonetheless so many speak of the One, and
the Kalachakra
expresses this One”, the Russian has a Tibetan
lama say. “One of your priests once asked me:
Are the Cabala and Shambhala not parts of the
one teaching? He asked: Is the great Moses not
a initiate of the same doctrine and a servant
of its laws?” (Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 78).
Agni yoga
For Roerich
and his wife the Time Tantra contains a sparkling
fire philosophy: „This Teaching of Kalachakra, this utilization
of the primary energy, has been called the Teaching
of Fire. The Hindu peoples know the great Agni — ancient teaching though
it be, it shall be the new teaching for the New
Era. We must think of the future; and in the teaching
of Kalachakra we know there lies all the material
which may be applied for greatest use.
[…] Kalachakra is the Teaching ascribed to the
various Lords of Shambhala […] But in reality
this Teaching is the Great Revelation brought
to humanity at the dawn of its conscious evolution
in the third race of the fourth cycle of Earth
by the Lords of Fire, the Sons of reason who were
an are the Lords of Shambhala” (Reigle, 1986,
p. 38). The interpretation which the Russian
couple give to the Kalachakra Tantra in their
numerous publications may be described without
any exaggeration as a “pyromaniac obsession”.
For them, fire becomes an autocratic primary substance
that dissolves all in its flames. It functions
as the sole creative universal principle. All
the other elements, out of the various admixtures
of which the variety of life arises, disappear in
the flaming process of creation: “Do not seek
the creative fire in the inertia of earth, in
the seething waves of water, in the storms of
the air (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol. I, p. 5). Keep
away from the other “elements” as “they do not
love fire” (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol. I, p. 7).
Only the “fiery world” brings blessing. Everyone
carries the “sparks of the fiery world in their
hearts” (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol. II, p. 8).
This announces itself through “fiery signs”. “Rainbow
flames” confirm the endeavors of the spirit. But
only after a “baptism of fire” do all the righteous
proceed with “flaming hearts” to the “empire of
the fiery world” in which there are no shadows.
They are welcomed by “fire angels”. “The luminosity
of every part of the fiery world generates an
everlasting radiance” (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol.
II, p. 8). The “song of fire sounds like the music
of the spheres” (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol. II,
p. 8). At the center of this world lies the “supreme
fire”. Since the small and the large cosmos are
one, the “fiery chakras” of the individual humans
correspond to “the fiery structures of space”
(H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol. I, p. 240).
This fire cult is supposed to be
ancient and in the dim and distant past its shrines
already stood in the Himalayas: „Beyond the Kanchenjunga
are old menhirs of the great sun cult. Beyond
the Kanchenjunga is the birthplace of the sacred
Swastika, sign of fire. Now in the day of Agni
Yoga, the element of fire is again entering
the spirit.” (N.
Roerich, 1985, p. 36, 37). Madame Blavatsky’s
above-mentioned god of electricity, Fohat,
is also highly honored by the Roerichs.
The Roerichs’ fiery philosophy
is put into practice through a particular sacred
system which is called Agni
Yoga. We were unable to determine the degree
to which it follows the traditions of the already
described Sadanga
Yoga, practiced in the Kalachakra Tantra. Agni Yoga gives the impression
that is conducted more ethically and with feelings
than technically and with method. Admittedly the
Roerich texts also talk of an unchaining of the
kundalini (fire serpent),
but nowhere is there discussion of sexual practices.
In contrast -the philosophy of the two Russians
requires strict abstinence and is antagonistic
to everything erotic.
In 1920
the first Agni
Yoga group was founded by the married couple.
The teachings, we learn, come from the East ,
indeed direct from the mythical kingdom: „And
Asia when she speaks the Blessed Shambhala, about Agni Yoga, about the Teaching
of Flame, knows that the holy spirit of flame
can unite the human hearts in a resplendent evolution”
(N. Roerich, 1985, p. 294). Agni Yoga is supposed to join the great world religions
together and serve as a common basis for them.
With great regret the Roerichs
discover that the people do not listen to the
“fiery tongues” that speak to them and want to
initiate them into the secrets of the flames.
They appropriated only the external appearances
of the force of fire, like electricity, and otherwise
feared the element. Yet the “space fire demands
revelation” and whoever closes out its voice will
perish in the flames (H. I. Roerich, 1980, p.
30).
Even if it is predicted in the
cosmic plan, the destruction of all dark and ignorant
powers does not happen by itself. It needs to
be accelerated by the forces of good. It is a
matter of victory and defeat, of heroic courage
and sacrificial death. Here is the moment in which
the figure of the Shambhala warriors steps into
the plan and battles with the inexorably advancing
Evil which wants to extinguish Holy Flame: “They
shall come — the extinguishers; they shall come
— the destroyers; they shall come — the powers
of darkness. Corrosion that has already begun
cannot be checked” (H. I. Roerich, 1980, vol.
I, p. 124).
Shambhala
We hear from Helena Ivanova Roerich
that “the term Shambhala truly is inseparably
linked to fiery apparitions” (H. I. Roerich, 1980,
vol. I, p. 26). “Fire signs introduce the epoch
of Shambhala”, writes her spouse
(Schule
der Lebensweisheit, 1990, p. 29). It is not
surprising that the Russian visionaries imagined
the temple of Shambhala as an “alchemic
laboratory”, then a fire oven, the athanor, also stood at the
heart of the hermetic art, as western alchemy
was known.
The couple consider Shambhala, the “city of happiness”,
to be the “geographic residence or workplace of
the brotherhood and seat of the interplanetary
government in the trans-Himalaya” (Augustat, 1993,
p. 153). In an official fundamental declaration
of the two it says: “The brotherhood is the spiritual
union of highly developed entities from other
planets or hierarchs, which as a cosmic institution
is responsible to a higher institution for the
entire evolution of the planet Earth. The interplanetary
government consists of cosmic offices, which are
occupied by the hierarch depending on the task
and the age” (Augustat, 1993, p. 149). The Mahatmas,
as these hierarchs are called in reference to
Madame Blavatsky, have practical political power
interests and are in direct contact with certain
heads of state of our world, even if the ordinary
mortals have no inkling of this.
Then it is impossible for normal
humans to discover the main lodge of the secret
society: “How can one find the way to our laboratories?
Without being called no-one will get to us”, Roerich
proclaims (Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 9). From there the Mahatmas coordinate an army
of in part paid agents, who operate here on Earth
in the name of the hidden kingdom. In the meantime
the whole planet is covered by a net of members,
assistants, contacts, and spies of the “international
government” who are only waiting for the sign
from their command center in Shambhala
in order to step into the light and reveal themselves
to humanity.
Likewise, the activities and resolutions
of the “invisible international government” are
all but impenetrable for an outsider. There is
a law which states that each earthly nation will
only be visited and “warned” by an envoy from
Shambhala once in a century.
An exception was probably made during the French
Revolution, then “hierarchs” like the Comte de
Saint Germain for example were extremely active
at this troubled time. Sadly he died in the year
1784 “as a result of the undisciplined thinking
of one of his assistants”. (Schule
der Lebensweisheit, 1990, p. 117). The dissolute
life of his sadhaka (pupil), Cagliostro, was probably
to blame for his not being able to participate
in the great events of 1789 (the storming of the
Bastille).
According to Roerich the members
of the government of Shambhala have the ability
to telepathically penetrate into the consciousness
of the citizens of Earth without them realizing
where particular ideas come from: “Like arrows
the transmissions of the community bore into the
brains of humanity” (Schule
der Lebensweisheit, 1990, p. 10). Sometimes
this takes place using apparatuses especially
constructed for this purpose. But they are not
permitted to openly reveal their amazing magical
abilities: “Who can exist without food? Who can
get by without sleep? Who is immune to heat and
cold? Who can heal wounds? Truly only one who
has studied Kalachakra”
(Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 77).
Tableau of N. Roerich: “The command of Rigden-jyepo”
For the Russian couple all the
interventions of the governing yogi caste have
just one goal, to prepare for the coming of the
future Buddha Maitreya Morya or Rigden-jyepo, who shall then
make all important decisions. According to the
Roerichs both names are synonyms for the Rudra
Chakrin, the “wrathful wheel turner” and doomsday
ruler of the Kalachakra
Tantra. We thus await a fairytale oriental
despot who cares about his subjects: “Just like
a diamond the light shines from the tower of Shambhala. He is there — Rigden-jyepo, untiring, ever
watchful for the sake of humanity. His eyes never
close. In his magic mirror he sees everything
which happens on Earth. And the power of his thoughts
penetrates through to the distant countries. ...
His immeasurable riches lay waiting to help all
the needy who offer to serve the cause of uprightness”
(Augustat, 1993, p. 11).
In passing, this doomsday emperor
from Shambhala
also reveals himself to be the western king of
the Holy Grail, who holds the Holy Stone in his
hands and who emigrated to Tibet under cover centuries
ago. He is returning now, messengers announce
him. True Knights of the Holy Grail are already
incarnated on Earth, unrecognized . The followers
of the Roerichs even believe that their master
himself protected the grail for a time and then
returned it to Shambhala
on his trip to Asia (Augustat, 1993, p. 114).
Apocalypse now
"Why do clouds gather when the
Stone [the Grail] becomes dull? If the Stone becomes
heavy, blood shall be spilled”, we learn mysteriously
(Schule der Lebensweisheit,
1990, p. 88). Behind this secret of the grail
lies the apodictic statement known from almost
all religions that total war, indeed the destruction
of the world, is necessary in order to attain
paradise. It is essential because in a good dualist
cliché the “brotherhood of Good” is always counterposed
by the “brotherhood of Evil”. The “sons of darkness”
have succeeded in severing humanity’s connection
to the “higher world”, the “bright hierarchy”.
The forces of the depths lurk everywhere. Extreme
caution is required since an ordinary mortal can
barely distinguish the Evil from the Good, and
further, “the brotherhood of Evil attempts to
imitate the Good’s method of action” (Schule
der Lebensweisheit, 1990, p. 126).
The final battle between Light
and Darkness is — the Roerichs say- presaged in
the prophecies of the ancestors and the writings
of the wise and must therefore take place. When
natural disasters and crimes begin to pile up
on Earth, the warriors from Shambhala will appear. At
the head of their army stands the Buddha Maitreya Morya, who “ [combats]
the prince of darkness himself. This struggle
primarily takes place in the subtle spheres, whereas
here [on earth] the ruler of Shambhala
operates through his earthly warriors. He himself
can only be seen under the most exceptional circumstances
and would never appear in a crowd or among the
curious. His appearance in fiery form would be
disastrous for everybody and everything since
his aura is loaded with energies of immense strength”
(Schule
der Lebensweisheit, 1990, p. 152). It could
be thought that this concerned an atomic bomb.
At any rate the battle will be conducted with
a fire and explosive power which allows of comparison
only to the atomic detonations in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki:
Fiery the battle
with blazing torches,
Blood red the arrows
against the shining shield
(Schule der Lebensweisheit, 1990,
p. 110)
Thus
the armies of Shambhala
storm forth. „Space is filled with fire. The lightning
of the Kalki avatar [Rudra Chakrin] — the preordained
Maitreya
— flashes upon the” (N. Roerich, 1985, p. 76). Even if Kalki also goes by the epithet
of “Lord of Compassion”, with his enemies he knows
no mercy. Accompanied by Gesar,
the mythic war hero of the Tibetans, he will storm
forward mounted on a “white horse” and with a
“comet-like, fiery sword” in his hand. Iron snakes
will consume outer space with fire and frenzy
(N. Roerich, 1988 p. 12). “The Lord”, we read,
“ strikes the people with fire. The same fiery
element presides over the Day of Judgment. The
purification of evil is performed by fire. Misfortunes
are accompanied by fires” (H. I. Roerich, 1980,
vol. I, 46).
Those who fight for Shambhala are the precursors
of a new race who take control of the universe
after Armageddon, after the “wheat has been separated
from the chaff” (Augustat,1993, p. 98). That is,
to put it plainly, after all the inferior races
have been eradicated in a holocaust.
Distribution in the west
As far as the fate of Tibet is
concerned, the prophecies that Roerich made at
the end of the twenties have in fact been fulfilled:
„We must accept
it simply, as it is: the fact that the true teaching
shall leave Tibet”, he has a lama announce, „and
shall again appear in the South. In all countries,
the covenants of Buddha shall be manifested. Really,
great things are coming.” (N. Roerich, 1985, p. 3) In 1959
the Fourteenth Dalai Lama fled to India in the
south and from this point in time onwards Tibetan
Buddhism began to be spread all around the world.
Roerich and his wife saw themselves
as agents of Shambhala who were supposed
to make contact with those governing our world
in order to warn them. They could at any rate
appeal to a meeting with Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Their followers, however, believe that they were
higher up in the hierarchy and that they were
incarnated Mahatmas from the kingdom.
In the meantime the Roerich cult
is most popular in Eastern Europe, where even
before the fall of Communism it had penetrated
the highest circles of government. The former
Bulgarian Minister for Culture, Ludmilla Shiffkova,
daughter of the Communist head of state Todor
Shiffkov, was almost fanatically obsessed with
the Agni master’s philosophy,
so that she planned to introduce his teachings
as part of the official school curriculum. For
a whole year, cultural policy was conducted under
the motto “N. K. Roerich — A cultural world citizen”,
and she also organized several overseas exhibitions
including works by her spiritual model as well.
Mikhail Gorbachev and his wife
also supported numerous Roerich initiatives. In
Russia, the renaissance of the visionary painter
was heralded for years in advance in elaborate
symposia and exhibitions, in order to then fully
blossom in the post-Communist era. In Alma Ata
in October 1992, a major ecumenical event was
organized by the international Roerich groups
under the patronage of the president of Kazakhstan,
at the geographical gateway, so to speak, behind
which the land of Shambhala
is widely believed to have once lain. The Fourteenth
Dalai Lama hesitated as to whether he ought to
visit the Congress before deciding for scheduling
reasons to send a telegram of greeting and a high-ranking
representative.
The “Shambhala warrior” Chögyam
Trungpa
In 1975 the Tibetan, Chögyam Trungpa
(1940–1987), gathered several of his western pupils
around himself and began to initiate them into
a special spiritual discipline which he referred
to as “Shambhala Training”. As a
thirteen-month-old infant the Rinpoche from the
Tibetan province of Kham was recognized as the
tenth reincarnation of the Trungpa and accepted
into the Kagyupa order. In 1959 he had to flee
from the Chinese. In 1963 he traveled to England
and studied western philosophy and comparative
religion at Oxford. Like no other Tibetan lama
of his time, he understood how to make his own
contribution to western civilization and culture.
As a brilliant rhetorician, poet, and exotic free
spirit he soon found numerous enthusiastic listeners
and followers. In 1967 he founded the first European
tantric monastery in Scotland. He gave it the
name and the ground-plan of Samye Ling — in remembrance
of the inaugural Tibetan shrine of the same name
that Padmasambhava erected at the end of the 8th
century despite resistance from countless demons.
In the opinion of Trungpa’s followers
the demonic resistance was enormous in Scotland
too: In 1969 the young lama was the victim of
a serious car accident which left him with a permanent
limp. There is an ambiguous anecdote about this
unfortunate event. Trungpa had reached a fork
in the road in his car — to the right the road
led in the direction of his monastery, the road
to the left to the house in which his future wife
lived. But he continued to drive straight ahead,
plowing right into a shop selling magic and joke
articles. Nevertheless, his meteoric rise had
begun. In 1970 he went to the United States.
Trungpa’s charming and initially
anarchic manner, his humor and loyalty, his lack
of respect and his laugh magnetically attracted
many young people from the sixties generation.
They believed that here the sweet but dangerous
mixture of the exotic, social critique, free love,
mind-expanding drugs, spirituality, political
activism and self-discovery, which they had tasted
in the revolutionary years of their youth, could
be rediscovered. Trungpa’s friendship with the
radical beatnik poet Allan Ginsberg and other
well-known American poets further enhanced his
image as a “wild boy” from the roof of world.
Even the first monastery he founded, Samye
Ling, was renowned for the permissive “spiritual”
parties which were held there and for the liberal
sex and drug consumption.
But such excesses are only one
side of things. Via the tantric law of inversion
Trungpa intended to ultimately transform all this
abandon (his own and that of his pupils) into
discipline, goodness, and enlightened consciousness.
The success of the guru was boundless. Many thousands
cam to him as pilgrims. All over America and Europe
spiritual centers (dharmadhatus) were created.
The Naropa
Institute (near Denver, Colorado) was established
as a private university, where alongside various
Buddhist disciplines fine arts could also be studied.
The Shambhala warrior
Trungpa had told one of his pupils
that during deep meditation he was able to espy
Shambhala. He also said he
had obtained the teachings for the “Shambhala training” directly from the
kingdom. The program consists of five levels:
1. The art of being human; 2. Birth of the warrior;
3. Warrior in the world; 4. Awakened heart; 5.
Open sky: The big bang. Anyone who had completed
all the stages was considered a perfect “Shambhala warrior”. As a spiritual
hero he is freed from the repulsiveness which
the military trade otherwise implies. His characteristics
are kindness, an open heart, dignity, elegance,
precision, modesty, attentiveness, fearlessness,
equanimity, concentration, and confidence of victory.
To
be a warrior, one of Trungpa’s pupils writes,
irrespective of whether as a man or a woman, means
to live honestly, also in regard to fear, doubt,
depression, and aggression which comes from outside.
To be a warrior does not mean to conduct wars.
Rather, to be a warrior means to have the courage
to completely fathom oneself (Hayward, 1997, p.
11). This subjectification of the warrior ethos
brings with it that the weapons employed first
of all represent purely psycho-physical states:
controlled breathing, the strict stance, walking
upright, clear sight.
The first
basic demand of the training is, as in every tantric
practice, a state of „egolessness”. This is of
great importance in the Shambhala teachings, writes
Trungpa. It is impossible to be a warrior |