BUDDHISM IN TIBET
Buddhism was late in coming to Tibet. Long after the countries to the
south and east had yielded to Buddhist missionaries, Tibet remained unaffected. At last about 630 A.D., a
Tibetan prince, Srong Tsan Gam Po, sent emissaries to northern India for the
purpose, in part, of securing the introduction of Buddhism into his realm. Likely his two wives, princesses
from China and Nepal had acquainted him with their own religion, Buddhism, and
expressed their desire to practice it in Tibet.
Yet Srong's introduction of Buddhism into Tibet was
not successful. The native demonolatry was too strong and besides, the
Tibetans found it hard to understand. It would take another century
before the true founder of Buddhism in Tibet came up from Bengal. He was
Padma-Sambhava, a vigorous teacher of a corrupt version of Buddhism from 8th
century northern India. This Buddhism, with it Tantric infusion of sex
symbolism, took root, ironically, and ultimately, after various vicissitudes
and "reforms," became the religion of Tibet.
The clergy of Tibet have had an interesting history.
Early on they acquired the name of "lamas," a term of respect
meaning "one who is superior." For a thousand years they lived
in thick-walled monasteries. These were originally of the unmilitary
Indian model, but finally developed into fortresses of a distinctly Tibetan
style. They had massive walls rising
firmly from the foundation rocks to overhanging roofs far above. The climate, with its extreme cold and its
long winters, made necessary the building of walled structures with plenty of
room in them for winter stores.
At first the life that went on there was more that of
princely magicians than of monks. The Tantric Buddhism that was practiced
encouraged the lamas to take spouses. Celibacy, at least among the higher
clergy, became a rarity. The monasteries therefore often had hereditary
heads, the abbots passing their offices on to their sons.
In the second half of the 14th century, the conditions
were created for the final "reform" of Lamaism by the great Tibetan
monk Tsong-kha-pa. He organized the so-called Yellow Church, whose
executive head is the Dalai Lama. Its monks are popularly known as Yellow
Hats, as their hats and girdles are yellow, evidence of Tsong's attempt to
purify Lamaism and take it back in theory and practice toward early Buddhism.
The monasteries that resisted reform continued the use of red and
constitute the "Red" sects.
Tsong's reform was in part an imposition of a stricter
monastic discipline. There was to be less alcohol and more praying.
But what counted most and had the greatest future consequences was the
reintroduction of celibacy. The practice of celibacy had the obvious and
immediate effect of ending hereditary rule in the Yellow Hat monasteries; the
abbots had no sons. But another result ultimately followed, about a
century later, which gave the Yellow Church its world-famous theory of the
reincarnation of the head lamas, hence their successors.
Born 6 July 1935, Lhamo Dondrub is the 14th Dalai
Lama. He was the fifth of seven children in a farming family in the
village of Taktser. His first language was, in his own words, "a
broken Xining language which was a dialect of the Chinese language," for his
family did not speak the regional Amdo dialect. At the age of two he was
proclaimed the tulku or rebirth of the 13th Dalai Lama.
In 1950 the army of the People's Republic of China
invaded the region. One month later, on 17 November 1950, Lhamo Dondrub was
formally enthroned as Dalai Lama. By age
fifteen he had become the region's most important spiritual leader and
political ruler.
In 1951 the Chinese military pressured the Dalai Lama
to ratify a seventeen-point agreement which permitted the People's Republic of
China to take control of Tibet. Soon after a failed uprising in 1959, the effective collapse of the
Tibetan resistance movement, the Dalai Lama and his monks fled through the mountains
to India. In Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh, India, he established a
government-in-exile. The most influential member of the Gelugpa or Yellow
Hat sect, he had considerable influence over the other sects of Tibetan
Buddhism.
Today, Tibetan Buddhism is adhered to widely in the
Tibetan Plateau, Nepal, Bhutan, Mongolia, Kalmykia, the northwest shore of the
Caspian Sea, Siberia, central Russia, Buryatia and Chita Oblast, and the
Russian Far East. The Indian regions of Sikkim and Ladakh, both formerly
independent kingdoms, are also home to significant Tibetan Buddhist
populations. In the wake of the Tibetan
diaspora, Tibetan Buddhism has gained adherents in the West and throughout the
world. Celebrity practitioners include Brandon Boyd, Richard Gere, Adam
Yauch, Jet Li, Sharon Stone, Allen Ginsberg, and Philip Glass.
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