MADAME ALEXANDRA DAVID-NEEL AND TIBETAN BUDDHISM
Alexandra David-Neel (1869-1969) was a convert to the Tibetan form
of Buddhism. She spent some thirty years
in Asia after completing studies in Sanskrit at the Sorbonne and in Belgium. As a child she was extremely precocious,
interested in oriental and occult subjects. She wanted "to go beyond the garden gate
in search of the Unknown."
One of her many trips took her from India to China across vast
mountain passes and plateaus no European had seen previously. She went to Tibet to do research in the
various forms of religion that became Lamaism. Lamaism borrowed doctrinal and ritualistic
elements from Bon, Tantrism, Shamanism, and other Altaic and northern religions
that had infiltrated Tibet over the centuries.
Madame David-Neel's visit to Tibet included trips to Lhasa and
Shigatse, normally barred to foreigners. She was permitted to interview both the Dalai
and Tashi Lamas. Her stay grew to
fourteen years, two of which were spent in a cave in the Tibetan side of the
Himalayas where she lived as a hermit.
As a professed Buddhist, she enjoyed many of the psychic
experiences, called siddhis, that she described in her writings, although she
usually spoke of them in the third-person. Madame David-Neel spoke all of the
dialects of Tibet.
Among her seventeen books, translated into many languages
including English, the three most famous are My Journey to Lhasa, Initiation
and Initiates in Tibet, and, Magic and Mystery in Tibet, also known as With
Mystics and Magicians in Tibet. The latter is probably her most famous work.
Her frequent traveling companion, a young Tibetan monk named
Yongden, she adopted as her son. Madame
David-Neel spent her last years at her own lamasery, Samten Dzong, at Digne in
France's Maritime Alps, where she died at the age of one hundred.
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