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{{Tibetan Buddhism}}
{{for|the color and iron–cyanide complex|Prussian blue}}
{{MahayanaBuddhism}}
{{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians -->
'''Tibetan Buddhism'''<ref>An alternative term, "lamaism", apparently derives from Chinese ''lama jiao'' and was used to distinguish Tibetan Buddhism from Han [[Chinese Buddhism]], ''fo jiao''. The term was taken up by western scholars including [[Hegel]], as early as 1822 ({{cite book |last=Lopez |first=Donald S. Jr. |authorlink=Donald S. Lopez, Jr. |title=Prisoners of Shangri-La: Tibetan Buddhism and the West |year=1999 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago |isbn=0226493113 |pages=6, 19f }}). Insofar as it implies a discontinuity between Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, the term has been discredited (Conze, 1993).</ref> is the body of [[Buddhist]] religious doctrine and institutions characteristic of [[Tibet]] and certain regions of the [[Himalayas]], including northern [[Nepal]], [[Bhutan]], and [[India]] (particularly in [[Arunachal Pradesh]], [[Ladakh]], [[Dharamsala]], [[Lahaul]] and [[Spiti]] in [[Himachal Pradesh]], and [[Sikkim]]). It is the [[state religion]] of [[Buddhism in Bhutan|Bhutan]].<ref>The 2007 U.S. State Department report on religious freedom in Bhutan notes that "Mahayana Buddhism is the state religion..." and that the Bhutanese government supports both the Kagyu and Nyingma sects. [http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2007/90227.htm State.gov]</ref> It is also practiced in [[Mongolia]] and parts of [[Russia]] ([[Kalmykia]], [[Republic of Buryatia|Buryatia]], and [[Tuva]]) and [[Northeast China]]. Texts recognized as scripture and commentary are contained in the [[Tibetan Buddhist canon]], such that [[Classical Tibetan|Tibetan]] is a [[sacred language|spiritual language]] of these areas.
| name = Prussian Blue
| image = Prussian Blue.jpg
| caption = Lynx and Lamb Gaede at the age of eleven.
| image_size = <!-- Only for images narrower than 220 pixels -->
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1992|6|30|mf=yes}}
| background = group_or_band
| alias =
| origin = [[Bakersfield, California]]
| genre = [[White nationalist]] [[Pop music|pop]]
| years_active = 2003–2009?
| label = [[Resistance Records|Resistance]]
| associated_acts =
| website = ''none''
| current_members = Lynx Gaede <br /> Lamb Gaede
| past_members =
}}


A [[Tibetan diaspora]] has spread Tibetan Buddhism to many [[Western world|Western countries]], where the tradition has gained popularity.<ref>[http://religions.pewforum.org/reports Statistics on Religion in America Report] -- The 2007 Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life Survey estimates that although Tibetan Buddhism adherents are less than 0.3 percent of the population, Buddhism has had a 0.5 net increase in reported adherents.</ref> Among its prominent exponents is the [[14th Dalai Lama]] of Tibet. The number of its adherents is estimated to be between ten and twenty million.<ref>Adherents.com estimates twenty million for [http://www.adherents.com/adh_branches.html#Buddhism ''Lamaism (Vajrayana/Tibetan/Tantric).'']</ref>
'''Prussian Blue''' was a [[White nationalism|white nationalist]] [[pop music|pop]] pre-teen duo formed in early 2003 by the mother of '''Lynx Vaughan Gaede'''<ref>[http://www.nndb.com/people/053/000113711/ Lynx at NNDB.com]</ref> and '''Lamb Lennon Gaede''',<ref>[http://www.nndb.com/people/052/000113710/ Lamb at NNDB.com]</ref> [[fraternal twin]] girls born on June 30, 1992, in [[Bakersfield, California]].<ref name="ABCnews">{{cite news | url=http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/Story?id=1231684&page=1 | title=Young Singers Spread Racist Hate | date=October 20, 2005 | publisher=ABC News | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5u0A26xl7 | archivedate=05-11-2010}}</ref> The twins referred to the [[Holocaust]] as a myth<ref name="viceland"/> and their group was described as [[racist]] and [[white supremacist]] in nature.<ref name="Primetime"/><ref name="Telegraph"/> In the years since they actively toured the twins have renounced their previous politics.<ref name="TheDaily">{{cite web|last=Gell|first=Aaron|title=Change of heart: Former Nazi teeny boppers are singing a new tune|url=http://www.thedaily.com/page/2011/07/17/071711-news-nazi-twins-1-6/|publisher=The Daily|accessdate=7/17/11}}</ref>

==Buddhahood==
[[Image:IMG 0361 Kathmandu Bodnath.jpg|thumb|left|[[Bodhnath]] [[Stupa|Stūpa]], [[Kathmandu]], [[Nepal]]. A stūpa symbolizes the mind of a Buddha.]]
Tibetan Buddhism comprises the teachings of the three [[Yana (Buddhism)|vehicles]] of [[Buddhism]]: the [[Hinayana|Foundational Vehicle]], [[Mahayana|Mahāyāna]], and [[Vajrayana|Vajrayāna]]. The Mahāyāna goal of spiritual development is to achieve the enlightenment of [[Buddhahood]] in order to most efficiently help all other sentient beings attain this state.<ref>Cf. Dhargyey (1978), 111; [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 533f; Tsong-kha-pa II: 48-9</ref> The motivation in it is the [[bodhicitta]] mind of enlightenment — an altruistic intention to become enlightened for the sake of all sentient beings.<ref>Thurman, Robert (1997). ''Essential Tibetan Buddhism''. Castle Books: 291</ref> [[Bodhisattva#Mahayana_Buddhism|Bodhisattvas]] are revered beings who have conceived the [[Bodhisattva vows|will and vow]] to dedicate their lives with [[bodhicitta]] for the sake of all beings. Tibetan Buddhism teaches methods for achieving Buddhahood more quickly by including the Vajrayāna path in Mahāyāna.<ref>Thurman, Robert (1997): 2-3</ref>

Buddhahood is defined as a state free of the obstructions to liberation as well as those to omniscience.<ref>Cf. Dhargyey (1978), 64f; Dhargyey (1982), 257f, etc; [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 364f; Tsong-kha-pa II: 183f. The former are the afflictions, negative states of mind, and the three poisons – desire, anger, and ignorance. The latter are subtle imprints, traces or "stains" of delusion that involves the imagination of inherent existence.</ref> When, in Buddhahood, one is freed from all mental obscurations,<ref>[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 152f</ref> one is said to attain a state of continuous bliss mixed with a simultaneous cognition of emptiness,<ref>[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 243, 258</ref> the true nature of reality.<ref name="Hopkins 1996">Hopkins (1996)</ref> In this state, all limitations on one's ability to help other living beings are removed.<ref>Dhargyey (1978), 61f; Dhargyey (1982), 242-266; [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 365</ref>

It is said that there are countless beings who have attained Buddhahood.<ref>[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 252f</ref> Buddhas spontaneously, naturally and continuously perform activities to benefit all sentient beings.<ref>[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 367</ref> However it is believed that sentient beings' [[karma]]s limit the ability of the Buddhas to help them. Thus, although Buddhas possess no limitation from their side on their ability to help others, sentient beings continue to experience suffering as a result of the limitations of their own former negative actions.<ref>Dhargyey (1978), 74; Dhargyey (1982), 3, 303f; [[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 13f, 280f; [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/comparison_buddhist_traditions/theravada_hinayana_mahayana/intro_comparison_hinayana_mahayana.html: Berzin, Alexander (2002). ''Introductory Comparison of Hinayana and Mahayana'']</ref>

==General methods of practice==
[[Image:Konchog-wangdu.jpeg|upright|thumb|left|Buddhist monk Geshe Konchog Wangdu reads [[Mahayana sutra]]s from an old woodblock copy of the Tibetan Kanjur.]]

===Transmission and realization===
There is a long history of oral transmission of teachings in Tibetan Buddhism. Oral transmissions by lineage holders traditionally can take place in small groups or mass gatherings of listeners and may last for seconds (in the case of a mantra, for example) or months (as in the case of a section of the [[Tibetan Buddhist canon|canon]]). A transmission can even occur without actually hearing, as in Asaṅga's visions of Maitreya.

An emphasis on oral transmission as more important than the printed word derives from the earliest period of Indian Buddhism, when it allowed teachings to be kept from those who should not hear them.<ref>Conze (1993): 26</ref> Hearing a teaching (transmission) readies the hearer for realization based on it. The person from whom one hears the teaching should have heard it as one link in a succession of listeners going back to the original speaker: the Buddha in the case of a sutra or the author in the case of a book. Then the hearing constitutes an authentic lineage of transmission. Authenticity of the oral lineage is a prerequisite for realization, hence the importance of [[Lineage (Buddhism)|lineages]].

===Analytic meditation and fixation meditation===
Spontaneous realization on the basis of transmission is possible but rare. Normally an intermediate step is needed in the form of analytic meditation, i.e., thinking about what one has heard. As part of this process, entertaining doubts and engaging in internal debate over them is encouraged in some traditions.<ref>Cf.[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 66, 212f</ref>

Analytic meditation is just one of two general methods of meditation. When it achieves the quality of realization, one is encouraged to switch to "focused" or "fixation" meditation. In this the mind is stabilized on that realization for periods long enough to gradually habituate it to it.

A person's capacity for analytic meditation can be trained with logic. The capacity for successful focused meditation can be trained through [[calm abiding]]. A meditation routine may involve alternating sessions of analytic meditation to achieve deeper levels of realization, and focused meditation to consolidate them.<ref name="Hopkins 1996"/> The deepest level of realization is Buddhahood itself.

===Devotion to a Guru===
As in other Buddhist traditions, an attitude of reverence for the teacher, or guru, is also highly prized.<ref>''Lama'' is the literal Tibetan translation of the Sanskrit ''guru''. For a traditional perspective on devotion to the guru, see Tsong-ka-pa I, 77-87. For a current perspective on the guru-disciple relationship in Tibetan Buddhism, see [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/e-books/published_books/spiritual_teacher/spiritual_teacher_preface.html Berzin, Alexander. ''Relating to a Spiritual Teacher: Building a Healthy Relationship'']</ref> At the beginning of a public teaching, a lama will do prostrations to the throne on which he will teach due to its symbolism, or to an image of the Buddha behind that throne, then students will do prostrations to the lama after he is seated. Merit accrues when one's interactions with the teacher are imbued with such reverence in the form of guru devotion, a code of practices governing them that derives from Indian sources.<ref>notably, ''Gurupancasika'', Tib.: ''Lama Ngachupa'', Wylie: ''bla-ma lnga-bcu-pa'', “Fifty Verses of Guru-Devotion” by [[Aśvaghoṣa]]</ref> By such things as avoiding disturbance to the peace of mind of one's teacher, and wholeheartedly following his prescriptions, much merit accrues and this can significantly help improve one's practice.

There is a general sense in which any Tibetan Buddhist teacher is called a lama. A student may have taken teachings from many authorities and revere them all as lamas in this general sense. However, he will typically have one held in special esteem as his own root guru and is encouraged to view the other teachers who are less dear to him, however more exalted their status, as embodied in and subsumed by the root guru.<ref>Indian tradition (Cf. ''Saddharmapundarika Sutra'' II, 124) encourages the student to view the guru as representative of the Buddha himself.</ref> Often the teacher the student sees as root guru is simply the one who first introduced him to Buddhism, but a student may also change his personal view of which particular teacher is his root guru any number of times.

====Skepticism====
Skepticism is an important aspect of Tibetan Buddhism, an attitude of critical skepticism is encouraged to promote abilities in analytic meditation. In favour of skepticism towards Buddhist doctrines in general, Tibetans are fond of quoting sutra to the effect that one should test the Buddha's words as one would the quality of gold.<ref>"Do not accept my Dharma merely out of respect for me, but analyze and check it the way a goldsmith analyzes gold, by rubbing, cutting and melting it." (''Ghanavyuhasutra''; ''sTug-po bkod-pa'i mdo''); A Sutra [on Pure Realms] Spread Out in a Dense Array, as quoted in translation in [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/e-books/published_books/spiritual_teacher/pt3/spiritual_teacher_13.html The Berzin Archives.] On the same need for skepticism in the [[satipatthana|satipatthāna]] tradition of Theravada Buddhism, cf. Nyanaponika Thera (1965), 83. Further on skepticism in Buddhism generally, see the article, [[Buddhist philosophy]].</ref>

The opposing principles of skepticism and guru devotion are reconciled with the Tibetan injunction to scrutinise a prospective guru thoroughly before finally adopting him as such without reservation. A Buddhist may study with a lama for decades before finally accepting him as his own guru.

===Preliminary practices and approach to Vajrayāna===
[[Image:Vajrasattva Tibet.jpg|thumb|upright|left|The Vajrayāna deity, [[Vajrasattva]]]]

[[Vajrayana|Vajrayāna]] is said to be the fastest method for attaining Buddhahood but for unqualified practitioners it can be dangerous. To engage in it one must receive an appropriate initiation (also known as an "empowerment") from a lama who is fully qualified to give it. From the time one has resolved to accept such an initiation, the utmost sustained effort in guru devotion is essential.

The aim of [[ngöndro|preliminary practices]] (''ngöndro'') is to start the student on the correct path for such higher teachings.<ref>Kalu Rinpoche (1986), ''The Gem Ornament of Manifold Instructions''. Snow Lion, p. 21.</ref> Just as Sutrayāna preceded Vajrayāna historically in India, so sutra practices constitute those that are preliminary to tantric ones. Preliminary practices include all ''Sutrayāna'' activities that yield merit like hearing teachings, prostrations, offerings, prayers and acts of kindness and compassion, but chief among the preliminary practices are realizations through meditation on the three principle stages of the path: renunciation, the altruistic [[bodhicitta]] wish to attain enlightenment and the wisdom realizing emptiness. For a person without the basis of these three in particular to practice Vajrayāna can be like a small child trying to ride an unbroken horse.<ref>[[Pabongka Rinpoche]], 649</ref>

While the practices of Vajrayāna are not known in Sutrayāna, all Sutrayāna practices are common to Vajrayāna. Without training in the preliminary practices, the ubiquity of allusions to them in Vajrayāna is meaningless and even successful Vajrayāna initiation becomes impossible.

The merit acquired in the preliminary practices facilitates progress in Vajrayāna. While many Buddhists may spend a lifetime exclusively on sutra practices, however, an amalgam of the two to some degree is common. For example, in order to train in [[calm abiding]], one might use a tantric visualisation as the meditation object.
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===Esotericism===
[[Image:Sand mandala. Drongste Gompa 1993.JPG|thumb|right|A [[sand mandala]]]]
In Vajrayāna particularly, Tibetan Buddhists subscribe to a voluntary code of self-censorship, whereby the uninitiated do not seek and are not provided with information about it. This self-censorship may be applied more or less strictly depending on circumstances such as the material involved. A depiction of a [[Mandalas|mandala]] may be less public than that of a deity. That of a higher tantric deity may be less public than that of a lower. The degree to which information on Vajrayāna is now public in western languages is controversial among Tibetan Buddhists.

Buddhism has always had a taste for [[esotericism]] since its earliest period in India.<ref>Cf. Conze (1993), 26 and 52f.</ref> Tibetans today maintain greater or lesser degrees of confidentiality also with information on the ''[[vinaya]]'' and [[Śūnyatā|emptiness]] specifically. In Buddhist teachings generally, too, there is caution about revealing information to people who may be unready for it. Esoteric values in Buddhism have made it at odds with the values of Christian missionary activity, for example in contemporary Mongolia.
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==Native Tibetan developments==
Some commentators have emphasised Tibetan innovations such as the system of [[tulku|incarnate lamas]],<ref>Tib.: ''tulku, Wylie: ''sprul-ku''</ref> but such genuine innovations have been few.<ref>Conze (1993). Moreover, that even this is a distinctly Tibetan development is disputable. Two centuries before Buddhism was introduced to Tibet, in the fifth century CE, the ''Abhidharma'' teacher [[Buddhaghosa|Buddhaghoṣa]] was declared by Sri Lankan elders to be a reincarnation of the bodhisattva Maitreya. [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/comparison_buddhist_traditions/theravada_hinayana_mahayana/intro_comparison_hinayana_mahayana.html: Berzin, Alexander (2002). ''Introductory Comparison of Hinayana and Mahayana'']</ref> True to its roots in the ''Pāla'' system of North India, however, Tibetan Buddhism carried on a tradition of eclectic accumulation and systematisation of diverse Buddhist elements, and pursued their synthesis. Prominent among these achievements are the [[lamrim|Stages of the Path]] and [[lojong|motivational training]].

==Study of tenet systems==
[[Image:Young monks of Drepung.jpg|right|thumb|Monks debating in [[Drepung]] Monastery]]
Tibetan Buddhists practice one or more understandings of the true nature of reality, the [[shunyata|emptiness of inherent existence]] of all things. Emptiness is propounded according to four classical Indian schools of philosophical tenets.

Two belong to the older path of the [[Hinayana|Foundation Vehicle]]:
* [[Vaibhashika|Vaibhaṣika]] (Tib. ''bye-brag smra-ba'')
* [[Sautrantika|Sautrāntika]] (Tib. ''mdo-sde-pa'')
The primary source for the former is the [[Abhidharmakosha|Abhidharma-kośa]] by [[Vasubandhu]] and its commentaries. The Abhidharmakośa is also an important source for the Sautrāntikas. [[Dignaga|Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakirti|Dharmakīrti]] are the most prominent exponents.

The other two are [[Mahayana]] (Skt. ''Greater Vehicle'') (Tib. ''theg-chen''):
* [[Yogacara|Yogācāra]], also called [[Cittamatra|Cittamātra]] (Tib. ''sems-tsam-pa''), ''Mind-Only''
* [[Madhyamaka]] (Tib. ''dbu-ma-pa'')
Yogacārins base their views on texts from [[Maitreya]], [[Asanga|Asaṅga]] and [[Vasubandhu]], Madhyamakas on [[Nagarjuna|Nāgārjuna]] and [[Aryadeva|Āryadeva]]. There is a further classification of Madhyamaka into [[Svatantrika|Svatantrika-Madhyamaka]] and [[Prasangika|Prasaṅgika-Madhyamaka]]. The former stems from [[Bhavaviveka]], [[Śāntarakṣita]] and [[Kamalaśīla]], and the latter from [[Buddhapālita]] and [[Candrakīrti]].

The tenet system is used in the monasteries and colleges to teach Buddhist philosophy in a systematic and progressive fashion, each philosophical view being more subtle than its predecessor. Therefore the four schools can be seen as a gradual path from a rather easy-to-grasp, "realistic" philosophical point of view, to more and more complex and subtle views on the ultimate nature of reality, that is on emptiness and [[dependent arising]], culminating in the philosophy of the Mādhyamikas, which is widely believed to present the most sophisticated point of view.<ref>Sopa & Hopkins (1977), 67-69; Hopkins (1996). Non-Tibetan scholars have suggested that historically, Madhyamaka predates Cittamātra, however. Cf. Conze (1993).</ref>


==History==
==History==
===Early history===
The band was named after the color [[Prussian blue (color)|Prussian blue]]. In an interview with ''[[Vice Magazine]]'', the twins stated, "Part of our heritage is Prussian German. Also our eyes are blue, and Prussian Blue is just a really pretty color." They also remarked, "There is also the discussion of the lack of 'Prussian Blue' coloring ([[Zyklon B]] residue) in the so-called gas chambers in the concentration camps. We think it might make people question some of the inaccuracies of the 'Holocaust' myth."<ref name="viceland">[http://www.viceland.com/issues/v11n10/htdocs/hello.php Viceland - HELLO, WHITE PEOPLE! - Prussian Blue Look to the Future<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This is a reference to the claims<ref>[http://petitlien.com/6d The Non-Existent “Auschwitz Gas Chambers” of Deborah Lipstadt, Part I]</ref><ref>[http://petitlien.com/6e Germar Rudolf: The Rudolf Report]</ref><ref>[http://www.holocaust-history.org/auschwitz/chemistry The Chemistry of Auschwitz]</ref> made by many [[Holocaust denial|Holocaust deniers]] that the Holocaust either could not have happened as historians and observers have asserted or that the number of victims could have been far lower.
According to a Tibetan legendary tradition, the text of ''[[Kāraṇḍavyūhasūtra]]'' arrived in a casket from the sky unto the roof of the palace of the 28th king of Tibet, Lha [[Thothori Nyantsen]] who died in 650 A.D., in southern Tibet.<ref>Studholme, Alexander: ''The Origins of Om Manipadme Hum'', Albany, NY 2002, pp. 13-14.</ref>


While there is a level of doubt about the level of interest in Buddhism of king [[Songtsän Gampo]] (who died in 650) it is known that he married a Chinese [[Tang Dynasty]] Buddhist princess, [[Princess Wencheng|Wencheng]], who came to Tibet with a statue of Shakyamuni Buddha. It is however clear from Tibetan sources that some of his successors became ardent Buddhists. The records show that [[Chinese Buddhism|Chinese Buddhists]] were actively involved in missionary activity in Tibet, they did not have the same level of imperial support as Indian Buddhists, with tantric lineages from Bihar and Bengal.<ref name="Powers39">Powers 2004, pp. 38-39</ref>
Lynx and Lamb Gaede first performed together by singing at a [[white nationalist]] festival called "Eurofest" in 2001.<ref>[http://www.prussianbluestore.com/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=6 Prussian Blue - Content<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> They began learning how to play instruments in 2002 (Lamb plays the guitar and Lynx plays the violin). In the same year they appeared on a [[VH1]] special called ''Inside Hate Rock''. In 2003, they were featured in a [[Louis Theroux]] [[BBC]] documentary, entitled ''[[Louis and the Nazis]]'', on [[racism]] and [[white supremacy]] in the [[United States]]. Lamb, Lynx, and their mother, April Gaede, also appeared in the low-budget 2003 horror film ''[[Dark Walker]]''.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0373782/fullcredits http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0373782/fullcredits] ''IMDb.com''</ref>


According to a Tibetan legendary tradition, Songtsän Gampo also married a Nepalese Buddhist princess, [[Bhrikuti]]. By the second half of the 8th century he was already regarded as an embodiment of the bodhisattva [[Avalokiteśvara]].<ref>Macdonald, Alexander: ''Religion in Tibet at the time of Srong-btsan sgam-po: myth as history'', in: ''The History of Tibet'', ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 354-363 (for the queens see p. 355); Dargyay, Eva: ''Srong-btsan sgam-po of Tibet: Bodhisattva and king'', in: ''The History of Tibet'', ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 364-378 (for the queens see p. 373).</ref>
The twins recorded and released a debut CD at the end of 2004 called ''[[Fragment of the Future]]'' ([[Resistance Records]]) which had both an [[acoustic instrument|acoustic]] [[folk-rock]] and a [[bubblegum pop]] sound. A year later, they recorded their second album, ''[[The Path We Chose]]'', which has a more traditional rock sound including both [[Steel-string guitar|acoustic]] and [[electric guitar]]. Most of the songs on the second album lack the racial and [[nationalism|white supremacist]] overtones of ''Fragment of the Future'' and are about more mainstream subject matter, like boys, crushes, and dating. On October 20, 2005, Prussian Blue was featured in a critical segment on [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]'s ''[[Primetime (TV series)|Primetime]]''.<ref name="Primetime">[http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=1231684&page=1 Young Singers Spread Racist Hate], abcnews.go.com, Oct. 20, 2005</ref> A DVD, ''Blonde Hair Blue Eyes'', featuring three music videos and some live performances, was released in 2005. The pair toured the United States in 2005. On August 22, 2006, they were again featured in a critical segment on [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]'s ''[[Primetime]]''.


The successors of Songtsän Gampo were less enthusiastic about the propagation of Buddhism but in the 8th century, King [[Trisong Detsen]] (755-797) established it as the official religion of the state.<ref>Beckwith, C.I.: ''The revolt of 755 in Tibet'', in: ''The History of Tibet'', ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 273-285 (discusses the political background and the motives of the ruler).</ref> He invited Indian Buddhist scholars to his court. In his age the famous tantric mystic [[Padmasambhava|Padmasambhāva]] arrived in Tibet according to the Tibetan tradition. In addition to writing a number of important scriptures, some of which he hid for future ''[[terton]]s'' to find, Padmasambhāva, along with Śāntarakṣita, established the [[Nyingma]] school.
The twins moved with their mother and stepfather, Mark Harrington, and younger half-sister, Dresden, from [[Bakersfield, California]], to [[Kalispell, Montana]], in 2006; in their mother's words, Bakersfield was "not white enough." Some of their new neighbors did not welcome them; many city residents passed out flyers warning of the family's views, and signs proclaiming "No Hate Here" appeared on some windows around the town. Some of the people who passed out flyers received threatening letters from members of out-of-state [[white supremacist]] organizations.<ref name=abcnews>{{cite web | url=http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=2449483&page=1 | title=Town Tells White Separatist Singers 'No Hate Here'' | publisher=ABCnews.com | author=Bill Redeker | date=2006-09-15 | accessdate=2007-11-12}}</ref> The Montana Human Rights Network planned a rally in Kalispell to protest the family's racist views.<ref name=abcnews/><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.kxly.com/index.php?story_id=6348&view=text | title=Montana dealing with new influx of white supremacists | author=Karina Shagren | publisher=KXLY4 | date=2006-11-17 | accessdate=2007-11-12}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref>


The outlines of the history of Buddhism in Tibet from this time are well-known.<ref>Conze, 1993. For more detail, see [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/history_buddhism/buddhism_tibet/details_tibetan_history/history_early_period_buddhism_tibet/Part_2.html: Berzin, Alexander (1996). ''The History of the Early Period of Buddhism and Bon in Tibet'']</ref> At this early time also, from the south came the influence of scholars under the [[Pala Empire|Pāla dynasty]] in the Indian state of Magadha. They had achieved a blend of [[Mahayana|Mahāyāna]] and [[Vajrayana|Vajrayāna]] that has come to characterize all forms of Tibetan Buddhism. Their teaching in sutra centered on the ''[[Abhisamayalankara|Abhisamayālankāra]]'', a 4th century [[Yogacara|Yogācārin]] text, but prominent among them were the [[Madhyamaka|Mādhyamika]] scholars [[Śāntarakṣita]] and [[Kamalaśīla]].
The twins toured Europe in the summer of 2007, performing at events for white nationalist organizations. They also appeared as guests on ''[[The Political Cesspool]]''. As of early 2009, the band's website and [[MySpace]] page are no longer operational.


A third influence was that of the [[Sarvastivada|Sarvāstivādins]] from Kashmir in the south west<ref>Conze, 1993, 106</ref> and [[Khotan]] in the north west.<ref>[http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/history_buddhism/general_histories/introduction_history_5_traditions_buddhism_bon.html: Berzin, Alexander (2000). ''Introductory History of the Five Tibetan Traditions of Buddhism and Bon'']; [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/history_buddhism/general_histories/spread_buddhism_asia.html: Berzin, Alexander (1996). ''The Spread of Buddhism in Asia'']</ref> Although they did not succeed in maintaining a presence in Tibet, their texts found their way into the [[Tibetan Buddhist canon]], providing the Tibetans with almost all of their primary sources about the [[Hinayana|Foundation Vehicle]]. A subsect of this school, [[Mulasarvastivada|Mūlasarvāstivāda]] was the source of the Tibetan [[vinaya]].<ref>Berzin, Alexander, as above</ref>
==Ideology==
The group had strong ties to the [[National Vanguard (American organization)|National Vanguard]] organization, a "white nationalist" group formed by disaffected former members of the hate group [[National Alliance (United States)|National Alliance]]. Their ideology has been described as [[racist]] and [[white supremacist]] by many organizations.<ref name="Primetime"/><ref name="Telegraph">{{cite news
|first = Catherine
|last = Elsworth
|url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/1501463/Twin-pop-stars-with-angelic-looks-are-new-face-of-racism.html
|title = Twin pop stars with angelic looks are new face of racism
|work = [[The Daily Telegraph]]
|date = 2005-10-25
|accessdate = 2009-03-27
}}</ref><ref>[http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=30523 Yale Daily News - The bittersweet melody of racist tunes<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' reports that, on stage, the twins execute [[Nazi salute]]s.<ref name="Telegraph"/>


===The Chinese princess Jincheng (Kon-co) and the Khotanese monks===
According to [[ABC News]], the girls were [[homeschooling|homeschooled]] by their mother, April Gaede, an activist and writer for the white nationalist organization National Vanguard.<ref name="Primetime"/> The twins' maternal grandfather, who lives in [[Squaw Valley, Fresno County, California]], wears a Nazi [[swastika]] belt buckle; he also features the [[Nazi symbolism|swastika]] on his truck and has registered it as a [[Livestock branding|cattle brand]].<ref name="Primetime"/> During their ABC interview, the twins said they believe [[Adolf Hitler]] was a great man with good ideas, and they described the [[The Holocaust|Holocaust]] as being exaggerated. They have also been criticized for stipulating that goods they donated to [[Hurricane Katrina]] victims should go only to white people: "After a day of trying, the supplies ended up with few takers, dumped at a local shop that sells [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] memorabilia."<ref name="ABCnews"/><ref name="Telegraph"/>
The Chinese princess Jincheng Gongzhu (?-739), Zongli, the "real daughter" of the king of Yong, and an adoptive daughter of [[Emperor Zhongzong of Tang]] (r. 705-710),<ref>Lee, Don Y. ''The History of Early Relations between China and Tibet: From Chiu t'ang-shu, a documentary survey'', p. 29. (1981). Eastern Press, Bloomington, Indiana. ISBN 0-939758-00-8.</ref> was sent to Tibet in 710 where, according to most sources, she married Mes-ag-tshoms, who would have been only six or seven years old at the time.<ref>Wangdu and Diemberger (2000), pp. 33-34 and n. 56.</ref> She was known in Tibet as Gyim shang Ong co, or, simply, Kim-sheng or Kong-co, and was a devout Buddhist.


Five Buddhist temples were built at: 'Ching bu nam ra, Kwa chu in Brag dmar, 'Gran bzang, 'Khar brag and sMas gong.<ref>Wangdu and Diemberger (2000), pp. 33-35 and n. 56.</ref>
A 2011 profile in ''[[The Daily (News Corporation)|The Daily]]'' describes the twins' rejection of some of their previous politics:


Buddhist monks from [[Khotan]] (Li), fleeing the persecutions of an anti-Buddhist king, were given refuge by Kim-sheng about 737. The story of these Khotanese monks is recorded the ''Li yul lung-btsan-pa'' or 'Prophecy of the Li Country', a Buddhist history of Khotan which has been preserved as part of the Tibetan [[Tanjur]].
<blockquote>"I’m not a white nationalist anymore," Lamb told The Daily in an exclusive interview, the twins’ first in five years. "My sister and I are pretty liberal now." ... "I’m glad we were in the band," Lynx said, "but I think we should have been pushed toward something a little more mainstream and easier for us to handle than being front-men for a belief system that we didn’t even completely understand at that time. We were little kids."</blockquote><ref name="TheDaily"/>


Kim-sheng died during an outbreak of [[smallpox]] sometime between 739 and 741. The rise of anti-Buddhist factions in Tibet following the death of the Chinese princess began to blame the epidemic on the support of Buddhism by the king and queen.<ref>''Ancient Tibet'', p. 253.</ref> This forced the monks to flee once again; first to [[Gandhara]], and then to [[Kosambi]] in central India where the monks, apparently ended up quarrelling and slaughtering each other.<ref>Hill (1988), pp. 179-180.</ref>
==Lyrics and influences==
About half of the songs on Prussian Blue's first album are covers of other songs put out by other "white pride" bands with one (Lamb Near the Lane) co-written by [[David Lane (white nationalist)|David Lane]] and a few of the others by [[Ian Stuart Donaldson]] and Ken McLellan. One of their famous covers, "Victory Day" was a cover from the racialist band, RAHOWA. Two of Prussian Blue's songs on their first album are dedicated to famous German [[National Socialists|Nazi]] and [[white nationalist]] activists, including [[Rudolf Hess]] and [[Robert Jay Mathews]]. One of those songs, dedicated to [[Ian Stuart Donaldson]], [[Robert Jay Matthews]], [[Rudolf Hess]] and [[William L. Pierce]] which was written by Lamb, is "Sacrifice".<ref name=Primetime/>


A fourth influence from China in the east came in the form of [[Chan Buddhism]].
Another song, "Gone With the Breeze," is dedicated to Robert Mathews. The cover songs on their album invoke ideas like [[Valhalla]] and [[Vinland]], taken from [[Vikings|Norse]] [[Norse mythology|mythology]] and [[Norse sagas|sagas]]. Several songs, including "Victory Day," refer to a holy war waged under [[Creativity (religion)]].


[[Image:Guru Rinpoche - Padmasambhava statue.jpg|upright|thumb|left|[[Padmasambhava|Padmasambhāva]], founder of the [[Nyingmapa]], the earliest school of Tibetan Buddhism. Note the wide-open eyes, characteristic of a particular method of meditation.<ref>Wallace, 1999: 183</ref>]]
The lyrics to their song "The Stranger" are taken from a [[Rudyard Kipling]] poem of the same name.


===Transmission of Chan to the Nyingmapa===
Prussian Blue also released a cover of a song called "Ocean of Warriors" in [[mp3]] format, dedicated to white participants in the [[2005 Cronulla riots|2005 Sydney, Australia race rioting]].<ref>[http://prussianbluefan.blogspot.com/2005_12_01_prussianbluefan_archive.html http://prussianbluefan.blogspot.com/2005_12_01_prussianbluefan_archive.html] ''Prussianblue.fan.blogspot.com''</ref>
According to A. W. Barber of the University of Calgary,<ref>[http://www.ucalgary.ca/rels/barber A.W. Barber]</ref> [[Zen|Chan]] Buddhism was introduced to the [[Nyingmapa]] in three principal streams: the teachings of Korean Master Kim, [[Kim Ho-shang]], (Chin ho shang) 金和尚 transmitted by ''Sang Shi''<ref>''Sang Shi'' later became an abbot of [[Samye]] Monastery.</ref> in [[circa|ca.]] 750 AD; the lineage of Master [[Wu Chu]] (無住禪師) of the Pao T'ang School was transmitted within Tibet by Ye-shes Wangpo; and the teaching from [[Mo Ho Yen]], 和尚摩訶衍 (Tibetan: ''Hwa shang Mahayana'') that were a synthesis of the Northern School of Chan and the Pao T'ang School.<ref>{{cite journal| last=Barber | first=A. W. | year=1990 | title= The Unifying of Rdzogs Pa Chen Po and Ch'an | journal=Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal | volume= 3, 04.1990 | pages=301–317. | url= http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-BJ001/barber.htm | accessdate= April 23, 2011}}</ref>


Tibetan king ''[[Trisong Detsen|Khri srong lde btsan]]'' (742–797) invited the Ch’an master Mo-ho-yen (whose name consists of the same Chinese characters used to transliterate “[[Mahayana]]”) to transmit the Dharma at Samye Monastery. Mo-ho-yen had been disseminating Dharma in the Tun-huang locale, but, according to Tibetan sources, lost an important philosophical debate on the nature of emptiness with the Indian master Kamalaśīla, and the king declared Kamalaśīla's philosophy should form the basis for Tibetan Buddhism.<ref>Yamaguchi, Zuihō (undated). ''The Core Elements of Indian Buddhism Introduced into Tibet: A Contrast with Japanese Buddhism.'' Source: [http://thezensite.com/ZenEssays/Miscellaneous/Indian_buddhism.pdf Thezensite.com] (accessed: October 20, 2007)</ref> However, a Chinese source says their side won, and some scholars conclude that the entire episode is fictitious.<ref>Macmillan ''Encyclopedia of Buddhism'' (Volume One), page 70</ref> Pioneering Buddhologist [[Giuseppe Tucci]] speculated that Hwashang's ideas were preserved by the Nyingmapas in the form of [[dzogchen]] teachings.<ref>Masao Ichishima, "Sources of Tibetan Buddhist Meditation." Buddhist-Christian Studies, Vol. 2, (1982), pp. 121-122, published by University of Hawai'i Press.</ref> John Myrdhin Reynolds holds a very different point of view stating "Except for a brief flirtation with Ch'an in the early days of Buddhism in Tibet in the eighth century, the Tibetans exhibited almost no interest at all in Chinese Buddhism, except for translating a few Sutras from Chinese for which they did not possess Indian originals." <ref>Reynolds, John. [http://vajranatha.com/teaching/DzogchenChinese.htm Vajranatha.com], (accessed: November 18, 2010)</ref>
In 2006, a compilation album was released through the extreme right-wing [[National Democratic Party of Germany]] (NPD) titled ''For The Fatherland''.<ref>[http://www.20min.ch/news/kreuz_und_quer/story/12368879 http://www.20min.ch/news/kreuz_und_quer/story/12368879] From the free daily newspaper ''20 Minuten'': ''Nazi-Twins-Album: NPD vertreibt «For the Fatherland»'' = ''Nazi-Twins-Album: NPD distributes «For the Fatherland»''</ref>


Whichever may be the case, Tibetan Buddhists today trace their spiritual roots from Indian masters such as [[Padmasambhava|Padmasambhāva]], [[Atisha|Atiśa]], [[Tilopa]], [[Naropa]] and their later Tibetan students.
==References in the media==
{{clear}}
Prussian Blue was parodied in [[Ryan J. Davis]] and Joe Drymala's musical, ''[[Ryan_J._Davis#White_Noise:_A_Cautionary_Musical|White Noise]]''.<ref>[http://www.playbill.com/news/article/102133.html White Noise On Playbill.com]</ref> The show received mixed reviews despite being featured on ''[[Good Morning America]]''<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFF7hVlqUeA White Noise On Good Morning America(Video)]</ref> and ''[[ABC Primetime Live]]''.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daHKMld1_Ic White Noise On ABC Primetime Live (Video)]</ref> The show has been optioned for a major [[New York]] run.<ref>[http://www.broadwayworld.com/viewcolumn.cfm?colid=12560 White Noise Ends Run Sept. 30; Off-Broadway Transfer? (BroadwayWorld.com)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


===Later history===
Prussian Blue has appeared in two [[Great Britain|British]] television documentaries. The first, 2003's ''[[Louis and the Nazis]]'' by documentary maker [[Louis Theroux]], was an account of white nationalists, including Prussian Blue.<ref>{{cite news|title= Those ugly Americans |work= [[New Zealand Listener]]| date=|url= http://www.listener.co.nz/issue/3386/tvradio/3708/those_ugly_americans.html|accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title= Reich and wrong|work= Guardian|date=|url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/dec/22/broadcasting.tvandradio|accessdate=2010-10-10}}</ref> The second, ''[[Nazi Pop Twins]]'', by James Quinn, was first aired in 2007. This documentary stressed the tension that existed between the twins and their mother, April. In this documentary, Lynx and Lamb disavowed their mother's race-related views and said that they want to perform music that was not focused on race. Lynx told Quinn that they wore the infamous t-shirts bearing a smiley face that resembled [[Adolf Hitler]] because she believed they "were a joke" and said that "being proud of being white" did not mean she was a [[racism|racist]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.archive.org/details/MichielSmit.comPrussionBlueMichielSmit.com | title=Nazi Pop Twins | date=July 2007 | publisher=IMG Media | accessdate=2009-06-08}}</ref> Louis Theroux later revisited the twins and their mother to collect material for his book ''Call of the Weird''.
[[Image:Atisha.gif|right|thumb|Atiśa]]
From the outset Buddhism was opposed by the native shamanistic [[Bön]] religion, which had the support of the aristocracy, but with royal patronage it thrived to a peak under King Rälpachän (817-836). Terminology in translation was standardised around 825, enabling a translation methodology that was highly literal. Despite a reversal in Buddhist influence which began under King Langdarma (836-842), the following centuries saw a colossal effort in collecting available Indian sources, many of which are now extant only in Tibetan translation.


Tibetan Buddhism exerted a strong influence from the 11th century AD among the peoples of [[Inner Asia]], especially the Mongols. It was adopted as an official state religion by the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan dynasty]] and the [[Manchu people|Manchu]] [[Qing dynasty]] that ruled [[China]]. Coinciding with the early discoveries of "[[Terma (religion)|hidden treasures]]" (''terma''),<ref>[http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/audio/historical_cultural_comparative_stu/comparison_buddhist_traditions/tibetan_traditions/four_traditions_tibetan_buddhism_pe/transcript_1.html: Berzin, Alexander. ''The Four Traditions of Tibetan Buddhism: Personal Experience, History, and Comparisons'']</ref> the 11th century saw a revival of Buddhist influence originating in the far east and far west of Tibet.<ref>Conze, 1993, 104ff</ref> In the west, [[Rinchen Zangpo]] (958-1055) was active as a translator and founded temples and monasteries. Prominent scholars and teachers were again invited from India. In 1042 [[Atisha|Atiśa]] arrived in Tibet at the invitation of a west Tibetan king. This renowned exponent of the Pāla form of Buddhism from the Indian university of [[Vikramasila|Vikramaśīla]] later moved to central Tibet. There his chief disciple, Dromtonpa founded the [[Kadampa]] school of Tibetan Buddhism, under whose influence the [[Sarma|New Translation]] schools of today evolved.
The twins were parodied in a ''[[Boston Legal]]'' episode entitled "The Nutcrackers," in which [[Alan Shore]] successfully defended a family from losing custody of their two daughters, a pair of white supremacist singers.<ref>http://www.tv.com/boston-legal/the-nutcrackers/episode/926122/summary.html</ref>


==Schools==
The girls were also featured in a 2006 issue of [[Bernard Goldberg]]'s book ''[[100 People Who Are Screwing Up America]]''.
[[Image:Sakya Pandita.jpg|180px|thumb|right|[[Sakya Pandita]]]]
[[Image:Kalou Rimpoche & Lama Denys.jpg|180px|thumb|right|[[Kalu Rinpoche]] (right) and Lama Denys at [[Karma Ling Institute]] in Savoy]]
Tibetan Buddhism has four main traditions:


* '''[[Nyingma|Nyingma(pa)]]''',<ref>The Tibetan adjectival suffix ''-pa'' is translatable as "-ist" in English.</ref> “the Ancient Ones”. This is the oldest, the original order founded by [[Padmasambhava|Padmasambhāva]] and [[Śāntarakṣita]].<ref name="berzinarchives.com">Berzin. Alexander (2000). ''Introductory History of the Five Tibetan Traditions of Buddhism and Bon'': [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/study/history_buddhism/general_histories/introduction_history_5_traditions_buddhism_bon.html Berzinarchives.com]</ref> Whereas other schools categorize their teachings into the three [[Yana (Buddhism)|vehicles]]: [[Hinayana|The Foundation Vehicle]], [[Mahayana|Mahāyāna]] and [[Vajrayana|Vajrayāna]], the Nyingma tradition classifies its into nine vehicles, among the highest of which is that known as ''Atiyoga'' or [[Dzogchen]] (“Great Perfection”).<ref>[http://www.kagyuoffice.org/buddhism.nyingma.html Kagyuoffice.org] See section: ''The Nine Yana Journey''</ref> [[Terma (Buddhism)|Hidden treasures]] (''terma'') are of particular significance to this tradition.
The two were noted in [[Jackie Mason]] and [[Raoul Felder]]'s book ''Schmucks!''.


* '''[[Kagyu|Kagyu(pa)]]''', “Lineage of the (Buddha's) Word”. This is an oral tradition which is very much concerned with the experiential dimension of meditation. Its most famous exponent was Milarepa, an 11th century mystic. It contains one major and one minor subsect. The first, the Dagpo Kagyu, encompasses those Kagyu schools that trace back to the Indian master [[Naropa]] via [[Marpa]], [[Milarepa]] and [[Gampopa]]<ref name="berzinarchives.com"/> and consists of four major sub-sects: the [[Karma Kagyu]], headed by a [[Karmapa]], the Tsalpa Kagyu, the Barom Kagyu, and Pagtru Kagyu. There are a further eight minor sub-sects, all of which trace their root to Pagtru Kagyu and the most notable of which are the [[Drigung Kagyu|Drikung Kagyu]] and the [[Drukpa Kagyu]]. The once-obscure [[Shangpa Kagyu]], which was famously represented by the 20th century teacher [[Kalu Rinpoche]], traces its history back to the Indian master [[Naropa]] via Niguma, Sukhasiddhi and Kyungpo Neljor.<ref name="berzinarchives.com"/>
==Discography==
===Albums===
*''[[Fragment of the Future]]'' (2004)
*''[[The Path We Chose]]'' (2005)
*''[[For the Fatherland]]'' (compilation, 2006)


* '''[[Sakya|Sakya(pa)]]''', “Grey Earth”. This school very much represents the scholarly tradition. Headed by the [[Sakya Trizin]], this tradition was founded by Khon Konchog Gyalpo, a disciple of the great translator [[Drogmi Lotsawa Shākya Yeshe|Drokmi Lotsawa]] and traces its lineage to the Indian master [[Virupa]].<ref name="berzinarchives.com"/> A renowned exponent, [[Sakya Pandita]] 1182–1251CE was the great grandson of Khon Konchog Gyalpo.
===Singles===

*"Your Daddy"
* '''[[Gelug|Gelug(pa)]]''', “Way of Virtue”. Originally a reformist movement, this tradition is particularly known for its emphasis on logic and debate. Its spiritual head is the [[Ganden Tripa]] and its temporal one the [[Dalai Lama]]. The Dalai Lama is regarded as the embodiment of the Bodhisattva of Compassion.<ref>Sanskrit: [[Avalokitesvara|Avalokiteśvara]], Tibetan: [[Chenrezig]].</ref> Successive Dalai Lamas ruled [[Tibet]] from the mid-17th to mid-20th centuries. The order was founded in the 14th to 15th century by [[Je Tsongkhapa]], renowned for both his scholasticism and his virtue.
*"Keepers of the Light" (Battlecry featuring Prussian Blue)

*"Stand Up"
These major schools are sometimes said to constitute the [[Nyingma|”Old Translation”]] and [[Sarma (Tibetan Buddhism)|”New Translation”]] traditions, the latter following from the historical ''[[Kadampa]]'' lineage of translations and tantric lineages. {{anchor|Red and Yellow Hats}}Another common differentiation is into "[[Red Hat sect|Red Hat]]" and "[[Yellow Hat sect|Yellow Hat]]" schools. The correspondences are as follows:
*"I Will Bleed for You"

{| class="wikitable" width="750"
!align="center" width="100"|'''Nyingma'''
!align="center" width="120"|'''Kagyu'''
!align="center" width="150" |'''Sakya'''
!align="center" width="160" |'''Gelug'''
|-
|align="center" bgcolor=#CCBBCC |Old Translation
|align="center" bgcolor=#CCFFCC |New Translation
|align="center" bgcolor=#CCFFCC |New Translation
|align="center" bgcolor=#CCFFCC |New Translation
|-
|align="center" bgcolor=#FFB6B6 |Red Hat
|align="center" bgcolor=#FFB6B6 |Black Hat
|align="center" bgcolor=#FFB6B6 |Red Hat
|align="center" bgcolor=#E6E6AA |Yellow Hat
|-
|}

The pre-Buddhist religion of [[Bön]] has also been recognized by [[Tenzin Gyatso]], the fourteenth [[Dalai Lama]], as the fifth principal spiritual school of Tibet.<ref>"In 1978 the Dalai Lama acknowledged the Bon religion as a school with its own practices after visiting the newly built Bon monastery in Dolanji." Tapriza Projects Switzerland [http://www.tapriza.org/e/kultur/s_reli_02.htm]</ref>

Besides these major schools, there is a minor one, the [[Jonang]]. The Jonangpa were suppressed by the rival Gelugpa in the 17th century and were once thought extinct, but are now known to survive in [[Eastern Tibet]].

There is also an [[ecumenical]] movement known as [[Rime movement|Rimé]].<ref>Wylie: ''ris-med''</ref>

==Monasticism==
{{See also|List of Tibetan monasteries}}
{{Ref improve section|date=July 2008}}
[[Image:Lamayurugate.jpg|thumb|upright|right|[[Lamayuru]] monastery.]]
Although there were many [[householder (Buddhism)|householder]]-[[yogis]] in Tibet, monasticism was the foundation of Buddhism in Tibet. There were over 6,000 monasteries in Tibet, however nearly all of these were ransacked and destroyed by [[Red Guards (China)|Red Guards]] during the [[Cultural Revolution]].<ref>{{cite web| url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7307495.stm | title=Tibetan monks: A controlled life | publisher= [[BBC News]] | date=March 20, 2008}}</ref> Most of the major monasteries have been at least partially re-established while, many other ones remain in ruins.

In [[Mongolia]] during the 1920s, approximately one third of the male population were monks, though many lived outside monasteries. By the beginning of the 20th century about 750 monasteries were functioning in Mongolia.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.orientmag.com/8-30.htm | title=Mongolia: The Bhudda and the Khan | publisher= Orient Magazine}}</ref> These monasteries were largely dismantled during Communist rule, but many have been reestablished during the Buddhist revival in Mongolia{{Citation needed|date=February 2010}} which followed the fall of Communism.

Monasteries generally adhere to one particular school. Some of the major centers in each tradition are as follows:

===Nyingma===
The [[Nyingma]] lineage is said to have "six mother monasteries," although the composition of the six has changed over time:
*[[Dorje Drak]]
*[[Dzogchen Monastery]]
*[[Katok Monastery]]
*[[Mindrolling Monastery]]
*[[Palyul]]
*[[Shechen Monastery]]
Also of note is
*[[Samye]] — the first monastery in Tibet, established by [[Padmasambhava|Padmasambhāva]] and [[Śāntarakṣita]]

===Kagyu===
[[Image:Lamas Rumtek.jpg|thumb|right|Tibetan [[Buddhist monk]]s at [[Rumtek Monastery]] in [[Sikkim]]]]
Many [[Kagyu]] monasteries are in Kham, eastern Tibet. Tsurphu, one of the most important, is in central Tibet, as is Ralung and Drikung.
*[[Palpung Monastery]] — the seat of the [[Tai Situpa]] and [[Jamgon Kongtrul]]
*[[Ralung Monastery]] -- the seat of the [[Gyalwang Drukpa]]
*[[Surmang Monastery]] — the seat of the [[Trungpa tülkus]]
*[[Tsurphu Monastery]] — the seat of H.H. the [[Gyalwa Karmapa]]

===Sakya===
*[[Sakya Monastery]] — the seat of H.H. the [[Sakya Trizin]]

===Gelug===
The three most important centers of the [[Gelugpa]] lineage which are also called 'great three' Gelukpa university monasteries of Tibet, are [[Ganden]], [[Sera]] and [[Drepung]] Monasteries, near Lhasa:
*[[Ganden Monastery]] — the seat of the [[Ganden Tripa]]
*[[Drepung Monastery]] — the home monastery of the [[Dalai Lama]]
*[[Sera Monastery]]

Three other monasteries have particularly important regional influence:
*[[Mahayana Monastery]] — the seat of the H.H Kadhampa Dharmaraja (The 25th Atisha Jiangqiu Tilei), Nepal
*[[Tashilhunpo Monastery]] in [[Shigatse]] — founded by the first [[Dalai Lama]], this monastery is now the seat of the [[Panchen Lama]]
*[[Labrang Monastery]] in eastern [[Amdo]]
*[[Kumbum Jampaling]] in central [[Amdo]]

Great spiritual and historical importance is also placed on:
*The [[Jokhang Temple]] in [[Lhasa]] — said to have been built by King [[Songtsen Gampo]] in 647 AD, a major pilgrimage site

[[Image:BuddhaUlaanbaatar.jpg|thumb|right|The statue of Buddha in [[Ulaanbaatar]], [[Mongolia]]]]

==Tibetan Buddhism in the contemporary world==
Today, Tibetan Buddhism is adhered to widely in the [[Tibetan Plateau]], [[Nepal]], [[Bhutan]], [[Mongolia]], [[Kalmykia]] (on the north-west shore of the Caspian), [[Siberia]] and [[Russian Far East]] ([[Tuva]] and [[Republic of Buryatia|Buryatia]]). The [[India]]n 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]], [[Philip Glass]], [[Mike Barson]] and [[Steven Seagal]] (who has been proclaimed the reincarnation of the [[tulku]] [[Chungdrag Dorje]]).<ref>[http://sangyetashiling.dk/kt/seagal.htm: Statement by H.H. Penor Rinpoche Regarding the Recognition of Steven Seagal as a Reincarnation of the Treasure Revealer Chungdrag Dorje of Palyul Monastery]</ref>

In his classic work ''Buddhism in China'' (Princeton University Press, 1965), Kenneth Chen proposed the idea that Buddhism adapts itself to its host culture. Adaptations of Buddhism to contemporary Western culture include [[Tricycle: The Buddhist Review|''Tricycle'' magazine]], the modern notion of a [[dharma center]], and [[Celtic Buddhism]].

== Glossary of terms used ==
{| class="wikitable" width="750"
!align="center" width="120"|'''English'''
!align="center" width="120"|'''spoken Tibetan'''
!align="center" width="120"|'''Wylie Tibetan'''
!align="center" width="120"|'''Sanskrit''' transliteration'''
|-
|align="center" |affliction
|align="center" |nyönmong
|align="center" |nyon-mongs
|align="center" |kleśa
|-
|align="center" |analytic meditation
|align="center" |jegom
|align="center" |dpyad-sgom
|align="center" |yauktika dhyāna
|-
|align="center" |calm abiding
|align="center" |shiné
|align="center" |zhi-gnas
|align="center" |śamatha
|-
|align="center" |devotion to the guru
|align="center" |lama-la tenpa
|align="center" |bla-ma-la bsten-pa
|align="center" |guruparyupāsati
|-
|align="center" |fixation meditation
|align="center" |joggom
|align="center" |'jog-sgom
|align="center" |nibandhita dhyāna
|-
|align="center" |foundational vehicle
|align="center" |t’ek män
|align="center" |theg sman
|align="center" |hīnayāna
|-
|align="center" |incarnate lama
|align="center" |tülku
|align="center" |sprul-sku
|align="center" |nirmānakāya
|-
|align="center" |inherent existence
|align="center" |rangzhingi drubpa
|align="center" |rang-bzhin-gyi grub-pa
|align="center" |svabhāvasiddha
|-
|align="center" |mind of enlightenment
|align="center" |changchub sem
|align="center" |byang-chhub sems
|align="center" |bodhicitta
|-
|align="center" |motivational training
|align="center" |lojong
|align="center" |blo-sbyong
|align="center" |autsukya dhyāna
|-
|align="center" |omniscience
|align="center" |t’amcé k’yempa
|align="center" |thams-cad mkhyen-pa
|align="center" |sarvajña
|-
|align="center" |preliminary practices
|align="center" |ngöndo
|align="center" |sngon-'gro
|align="center" |prārambhika kriyāni
|-
|align="center" |root guru
|align="center" |zawé lama
|align="center" |rtsa-ba'i bla-ma
|align="center" |mūlaguru
|-
|align="center" |stages of the path
|align="center" |lamrim
|align="center" |lam-rim
|align="center" |pātheya
|-
|align="center" |transmission and realisation
|align="center" |lungtok
|align="center" |lung-rtogs
|align="center" |āgamādhigama
|-
|}


==See also==
==See also==
[[File:White-A-2Anime150.png|thumb|Tibetan letter "A", the symbol of [[rainbow body]]]]
*[[Rock Against Communism]]

*[[Buddhism]]
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*[[Derge Parkhang]]
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*[[Shambhala Buddhism]]
*[[Tibetan art]]
*[[:Category:Tibetan Buddhist teachers|Tibetan Buddhist teachers]]
*[[Traditional Tibetan medicine]]


==References==
== Notes ==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}


==External links==
== References ==
{{refbegin}}
{{wikiquote|Prussian Blue}}
* ''Ancient Tibet: Research Materials from The Yeshe De Project''. Dharma Publishing, Berkeley, California. ISBN 0-89800-146-3.
*[http://web.archive.org/web/*/prussianblue.net Prussian Blue Official Website (defunct)] from [[Archive.org]]
* Coleman, Graham, ed. (1993). ''A Handbook of Tibetan Culture''. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.. ISBN 1-57062-002-4.
**[http://prussianbluefan.blogspot.com/ Prussian Blue Blog]
* {{cite book |last= Conze |first= Edward |authorlink= Edward Conze |coauthors= |editor= |others= |title= A Short History of Buddhism |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition=2nd |series= |volume= |date= |year=1993 |month= |publisher= Oneworld |location= |language= |isbn=1851680667 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
*[{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p753311|pure_url=yes}} Prussian Blue] at [[Allmusic]]
* {{cite book |last= Dhargyey |first= Geshe Ngawang|coauthors= ed. Alexander Berzin, based on oral trans. by Sharpa Tulku |editor= |others= |title= Tibetan Tradition of Mental Development |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition=|series= |volume= |date= |year=3rd edn, 1978 |month= |publisher= Library of Tibetan Works and Archives |location= Dharmsala |language= |isbn= |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }} [A pithy lam-rim by a geshe appointed in 1973 by His Holiness the Dalai Lama as head of the translation team at the Tibetan Library.]
* {{cite book |last= Dhargyey |first= Geshe Ngawang |coauthors= ed. Alexander Berzin, based on oral trans. by Sharpa Tulku |editor= |others= |title= An Anthology of Well-Spoken Advice on the Graded Paths of the Mind, Vol. I |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1982 |month= |publisher= Library of Tibetan Works and Archives |location= Dharmsala |language= |isbn= 8186470298 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }} [The first part of a more extensive lam-rim by a geshe appointed in 1973 by His Holiness the Dalai Lama as head of the translation team at the Tibetan Library. The language of this publication is very different from that of the 1978 work by the same lama due to widespread changes in choice of English terminology by the translators.]
* Hill, John E. "Notes on the Dating of Khotanese History." ''Indo-Iranian Journal'', Vol. 13, No. 3 July 1988. To purchase this article see: [http://www.springerlink.com/content/gg8740360243350j/]. An updated version of this article is available for free download (with registration) at: [http://independent.academia.edu/JHill/Papers/439945/Notes_on_the_Dating_of_Khotanese_History]
* {{cite book |last= Hopkins |first= Jeffrey |authorlink= Jeffrey Hopkins |coauthors= |editor= |others= |title= Meditation on Emptiness |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1996 |month= |publisher= Wisdom |location=Boston |language= |isbn= 0861711106 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }} [Definitive treatment of emptiness according to the Prasaṅgika-Madhyamaka school.]
* {{cite book |last= Lati Rinpoche |first= |authorlink= Lati Rinpoche |coauthors= trans. & ed.: Elizabeth Napper |editor= |others= |title= Mind in Tibetan Buddhism: Oral Commentary on Ge-shay Jam-bel-sam-pel’s "Presentation of Awareness and Knowledge Composite of All the Important Points Opener of the Eye of New Intelligence |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1980 |month= |publisher= Snow Lion |location= Valois, NY |language= |isbn= 0937938025 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
*[[Mullin, Glenn H.]] (1998). ''Living in the Face of Death: The Tibetan Tradition''. 2008 reprint: Snow Lion Publications, Ithica, New York. ISBN 978-1-55939-310-2.
* {{cite book |last= Nyanaponika Thera |first= |authorlink= Nyanaponika Thera |coauthors= |editor= |others= |title= The Heart of Buddhist Meditation |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1965 |month= |publisher= Weiser |location= Boston |language= |isbn= 0877280738 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
* {{cite book |last=Pabongka Rinpoche |first= |authorlink= Pabongka Rinpoche |coauthors= Ed. Trijang Rinpoche, transl. Michael Richards |editor= |others= |title= Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand, A Concise Discourse on the Path to Enlightenment |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition=|series= |volume= |date= |year= 3rd edn. 2006 |month= |publisher= Wisdom |location=Somerville, MA |language= |isbn= 0861715004 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }} [This famous lam-rim text was written from notes on an extended discourse by the Gelugpa geshe, Pabongka Rinpoche in 1921 and translated through extensive consultation with Achok Rinpoche (Library of Tibetan Works and Archives).]
*Powers, John. ''History as Propaganda: Tibetan Exiles versus the People's Republic of China'' (2004) Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517426-7
* {{cite book |last= Ringu Tulku |first= |coauthors= |editor= |others= |title= The Ri-Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year= |month= |publisher= Shambhala |location= |language= |isbn=1-59030-286-9 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
* Smith, E. Gene (2001). ''Among Tibetan Texts: History and Literature of the Himalayan Plateau''. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-179-3
* {{cite book |last= Sopa |first= Geshe Lhundup |coauthors= Jeffrey Hopkins |editor= |others= |title= Practice and Theory of Tibetan Buddhism |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1977 |month= |publisher= B.I. Publications |location= New Delhi |language= |isbn= 0091256216 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }} [Part Two of this book, ‘’Theory: Systems of Tenets’’ is an annotated translation of ‘’Precious Garland of Tenets (Grub-mtha’ rin-chhen phreng-ba)’’ by Kön-chok-jik-may-wang-po (1728-1791).]
* ''The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment''
** {{cite book |last= Tsong-kha-pa |first= |authorlink= Je Tsongkhapa |coauthors= the Lamrim Chenmo Translation Committee; Joshua Cutler, ed. in chief; Guy Newland, ed. |editor= |others= |title= The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume I|origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=2000|month= |publisher= Snow Lion |location= Canada |language= |isbn= 1559391529 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
** {{cite book |last= Tsong-kha-pa |first= |authorlink= Je Tsongkhapa |coauthors= the Lamrim Chenmo Translation Committee; Joshua Cutler, ed. in chief; Guy Newland, ed. |editor= |others= |title= The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume II |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=2002|month= |publisher= Snow Lion |location= Canada |language= |isbn= 1559391685 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
** {{cite book |last= Tsong-kha-pa |first= |authorlink= Je Tsongkhapa |coauthors= the Lamrim Chenmo Translation Committee; Joshua Cutler, ed. in chief; Guy Newland, ed. |editor= |others= |title= The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume III |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=2004 |month= |publisher= Snow Lion |location= Canada |language= |isbn= 1559391669 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
* Wallace, B. Alan (1999), "The Buddhist Tradition of Samatha: Methods for Refining and Examining Consciousness", ''Journal of Consciousness Studies'' '''6''' (2-3): 175-187 .
{{refend}}


== Further reading ==
===Articles===
;Introductory books
* [http://www.thedaily.com/page/2011/07/17/071711-news-nazi-twins-1-6/ "Change of heart: Former Nazi teeny boppers are singing a new tune"]
* Wallace, B. Alan (October 25, 1993). ''Tibetan Buddhism From the Ground Up: A Practical Approach for Modern Life''. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-075-4, ISBN 978-0-86171-075-1
*''[http://www.archive.org/details/MichielSmit.comPrussionBlueMichielSmit.com Nazi Pop Twins]'' at [[Ourmedia]] (Documentary on Prussian Blue. In streaming [[Macromedia Flash|Flash]] format.)
* Yeshe, Lama Thubten (2001). "The Essence of Tibetan Buddhism". Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. ISBN 1-891868-08-X
*[http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=539 Southern Poverty Law Center on Prussian Blue]
;Other books
*[http://www.adl.org/main_Extremism/prussian_blue.htm Anti-Defamation League article]
* Coleman, Graham, ed. (1993). ''A Handbook of Tibetan Culture''. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.. ISBN 1-57062-002-4.
*[http://www.tinymixtapes.com/Hitler-II-He-s-Back-And-He-s-Blue Tiny Mix Tapes parody article]
* {{cite book |last= Lati Rinpoche |first= |authorlink= Lati Rinpoche |coauthors= trans. & ed.: Elizabeth Napper |editor= |others= |title= Mind in Tibetan Buddhism: Oral Commentary on Ge-shay Jam-bel-sam-pel’s "Presentation of Awareness and Knowledge Composite of All the Important Points Opener of the Eye of New Intelligence |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year=1980 |month= |publisher= Snow Lion |location= Valois, NY |language= |isbn= 0937938025 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
*[http://journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/pressethic/node/594 NYU Journalism report on Teen People's decision not to feature Prussian Blue]
* {{cite book |last= Ringu Tulku |first= |authorlink= Ringu Tulku |coauthors= |editor= |others= |title= The Ri-Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet |origdate= |origyear= |origmonth= |url= |format= |accessdate= |edition= |series= |volume= |date= |year= |month= |publisher= Shambhala |location= |language= |isbn=1-59030-286-9 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= |quote= }}
*[http://abcnews.go.com/Primetime/story?id=1231684&page=1 ABC News article]
* Smith, E. Gene (2001). ''Among Tibetan Texts: History and Literature of the Himalayan Plateau''. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-179-3
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20060428100430/http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/368373p-313337c.html New York Daily News article]

*[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/10/25/wnazi25.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/10/25/ixportal.html Daily Telegraph article]
==External links==
*[http://men.style.com/gq/features/landing?id=content_4207 Interview with GQ Magazine]
{{commons category|Tibetan Buddhism}}
*[http://solidprinciples.com/news/Prussian.mp3 MP3 of a call to Inga Barks Show on KERN Newstalk 1410(Bakersfield) from Lamb Gaede]
* {{DMOZ|/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Buddhism/Lineages/Tibetan}}
*[http://www.viceland.com/issues/v11n10/htdocs/hello.php Interview with Vice Magazine on viceland.com]
* [http://www.lamrim.com/ LamRim.com] &mdash; Tibetan Buddhist Internet Radio
*[http://educationwonk.blogspot.com/2006/08/lamb-and-lynx-gaede-children-of-hate.html Lamb And Lynx Gaede: The Children Of Hate]
* [http://thdl.org/ The Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library]
* [http://www.tbrc.org/ The Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center]
* [http://www.bibliographietibet.org/ the Tibetan bibliography database]
* [http://www.siddharthasintent.org/Pubs/West.htm Tibetan Buddhism in the West by Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche]
* [http://www.songtsen.org Songtsen &mdash; The rescue and preservation of Tibet's cultural and spiritual traditions]
* [http://www.buddhist-tourism.com/countries/tibet/monasteries/ Famous Monasteries of Tibet]
* [http://www.nyingmatrust.org/DharmaPerspectives/buddhismSchools.html Tibetan Buddhism: History and the Four Traditions]
* [http://www.berzinarchives.com The extensive archives of teachings from Alexander Berzin]
* [http://lotsawahouse.org/translations.html Lotsawa House | Tibetan Buddhist Texts | Translations]
* [http://www.dharmadata.org/ Tibetan Rimé Text Library] &mdash; Buddhist Text Library of all traditions
* [http://www.dharmawheel.net/ Tibetan Buddhism Forums]
* [http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2010/09/17/129930953/monks A Day In The Life Of A Tibetan Monk] - article and slideshow by ''[[National Geographic]]''
* [http://home.valornet.com/overbeck/tibet.html Tibetan Buddhist Practice eCalendar]


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Revision as of 15:01, 24 September 2011

Tibetan Buddhism[1] is the body of Buddhist religious doctrine and institutions characteristic of Tibet and certain regions of the Himalayas, including northern Nepal, Bhutan, and India (particularly in Arunachal Pradesh, Ladakh, Dharamsala, Lahaul and Spiti in Himachal Pradesh, and Sikkim). It is the state religion of Bhutan.[2] It is also practiced in Mongolia and parts of Russia (Kalmykia, Buryatia, and Tuva) and Northeast China. Texts recognized as scripture and commentary are contained in the Tibetan Buddhist canon, such that Tibetan is a spiritual language of these areas.

A Tibetan diaspora has spread Tibetan Buddhism to many Western countries, where the tradition has gained popularity.[3] Among its prominent exponents is the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet. The number of its adherents is estimated to be between ten and twenty million.[4]

Buddhahood

Bodhnath Stūpa, Kathmandu, Nepal. A stūpa symbolizes the mind of a Buddha.

Tibetan Buddhism comprises the teachings of the three vehicles of Buddhism: the Foundational Vehicle, Mahāyāna, and Vajrayāna. The Mahāyāna goal of spiritual development is to achieve the enlightenment of Buddhahood in order to most efficiently help all other sentient beings attain this state.[5] The motivation in it is the bodhicitta mind of enlightenment — an altruistic intention to become enlightened for the sake of all sentient beings.[6] Bodhisattvas are revered beings who have conceived the will and vow to dedicate their lives with bodhicitta for the sake of all beings. Tibetan Buddhism teaches methods for achieving Buddhahood more quickly by including the Vajrayāna path in Mahāyāna.[7]

Buddhahood is defined as a state free of the obstructions to liberation as well as those to omniscience.[8] When, in Buddhahood, one is freed from all mental obscurations,[9] one is said to attain a state of continuous bliss mixed with a simultaneous cognition of emptiness,[10] the true nature of reality.[11] In this state, all limitations on one's ability to help other living beings are removed.[12]

It is said that there are countless beings who have attained Buddhahood.[13] Buddhas spontaneously, naturally and continuously perform activities to benefit all sentient beings.[14] However it is believed that sentient beings' karmas limit the ability of the Buddhas to help them. Thus, although Buddhas possess no limitation from their side on their ability to help others, sentient beings continue to experience suffering as a result of the limitations of their own former negative actions.[15]

General methods of practice

Buddhist monk Geshe Konchog Wangdu reads Mahayana sutras from an old woodblock copy of the Tibetan Kanjur.

Transmission and realization

There is a long history of oral transmission of teachings in Tibetan Buddhism. Oral transmissions by lineage holders traditionally can take place in small groups or mass gatherings of listeners and may last for seconds (in the case of a mantra, for example) or months (as in the case of a section of the canon). A transmission can even occur without actually hearing, as in Asaṅga's visions of Maitreya.

An emphasis on oral transmission as more important than the printed word derives from the earliest period of Indian Buddhism, when it allowed teachings to be kept from those who should not hear them.[16] Hearing a teaching (transmission) readies the hearer for realization based on it. The person from whom one hears the teaching should have heard it as one link in a succession of listeners going back to the original speaker: the Buddha in the case of a sutra or the author in the case of a book. Then the hearing constitutes an authentic lineage of transmission. Authenticity of the oral lineage is a prerequisite for realization, hence the importance of lineages.

Analytic meditation and fixation meditation

Spontaneous realization on the basis of transmission is possible but rare. Normally an intermediate step is needed in the form of analytic meditation, i.e., thinking about what one has heard. As part of this process, entertaining doubts and engaging in internal debate over them is encouraged in some traditions.[17]

Analytic meditation is just one of two general methods of meditation. When it achieves the quality of realization, one is encouraged to switch to "focused" or "fixation" meditation. In this the mind is stabilized on that realization for periods long enough to gradually habituate it to it.

A person's capacity for analytic meditation can be trained with logic. The capacity for successful focused meditation can be trained through calm abiding. A meditation routine may involve alternating sessions of analytic meditation to achieve deeper levels of realization, and focused meditation to consolidate them.[11] The deepest level of realization is Buddhahood itself.

Devotion to a Guru

As in other Buddhist traditions, an attitude of reverence for the teacher, or guru, is also highly prized.[18] At the beginning of a public teaching, a lama will do prostrations to the throne on which he will teach due to its symbolism, or to an image of the Buddha behind that throne, then students will do prostrations to the lama after he is seated. Merit accrues when one's interactions with the teacher are imbued with such reverence in the form of guru devotion, a code of practices governing them that derives from Indian sources.[19] By such things as avoiding disturbance to the peace of mind of one's teacher, and wholeheartedly following his prescriptions, much merit accrues and this can significantly help improve one's practice.

There is a general sense in which any Tibetan Buddhist teacher is called a lama. A student may have taken teachings from many authorities and revere them all as lamas in this general sense. However, he will typically have one held in special esteem as his own root guru and is encouraged to view the other teachers who are less dear to him, however more exalted their status, as embodied in and subsumed by the root guru.[20] Often the teacher the student sees as root guru is simply the one who first introduced him to Buddhism, but a student may also change his personal view of which particular teacher is his root guru any number of times.

Skepticism

Skepticism is an important aspect of Tibetan Buddhism, an attitude of critical skepticism is encouraged to promote abilities in analytic meditation. In favour of skepticism towards Buddhist doctrines in general, Tibetans are fond of quoting sutra to the effect that one should test the Buddha's words as one would the quality of gold.[21]

The opposing principles of skepticism and guru devotion are reconciled with the Tibetan injunction to scrutinise a prospective guru thoroughly before finally adopting him as such without reservation. A Buddhist may study with a lama for decades before finally accepting him as his own guru.

Preliminary practices and approach to Vajrayāna

The Vajrayāna deity, Vajrasattva

Vajrayāna is said to be the fastest method for attaining Buddhahood but for unqualified practitioners it can be dangerous. To engage in it one must receive an appropriate initiation (also known as an "empowerment") from a lama who is fully qualified to give it. From the time one has resolved to accept such an initiation, the utmost sustained effort in guru devotion is essential.

The aim of preliminary practices (ngöndro) is to start the student on the correct path for such higher teachings.[22] Just as Sutrayāna preceded Vajrayāna historically in India, so sutra practices constitute those that are preliminary to tantric ones. Preliminary practices include all Sutrayāna activities that yield merit like hearing teachings, prostrations, offerings, prayers and acts of kindness and compassion, but chief among the preliminary practices are realizations through meditation on the three principle stages of the path: renunciation, the altruistic bodhicitta wish to attain enlightenment and the wisdom realizing emptiness. For a person without the basis of these three in particular to practice Vajrayāna can be like a small child trying to ride an unbroken horse.[23]

While the practices of Vajrayāna are not known in Sutrayāna, all Sutrayāna practices are common to Vajrayāna. Without training in the preliminary practices, the ubiquity of allusions to them in Vajrayāna is meaningless and even successful Vajrayāna initiation becomes impossible.

The merit acquired in the preliminary practices facilitates progress in Vajrayāna. While many Buddhists may spend a lifetime exclusively on sutra practices, however, an amalgam of the two to some degree is common. For example, in order to train in calm abiding, one might use a tantric visualisation as the meditation object.

Esotericism

A sand mandala

In Vajrayāna particularly, Tibetan Buddhists subscribe to a voluntary code of self-censorship, whereby the uninitiated do not seek and are not provided with information about it. This self-censorship may be applied more or less strictly depending on circumstances such as the material involved. A depiction of a mandala may be less public than that of a deity. That of a higher tantric deity may be less public than that of a lower. The degree to which information on Vajrayāna is now public in western languages is controversial among Tibetan Buddhists.

Buddhism has always had a taste for esotericism since its earliest period in India.[24] Tibetans today maintain greater or lesser degrees of confidentiality also with information on the vinaya and emptiness specifically. In Buddhist teachings generally, too, there is caution about revealing information to people who may be unready for it. Esoteric values in Buddhism have made it at odds with the values of Christian missionary activity, for example in contemporary Mongolia.

Native Tibetan developments

Some commentators have emphasised Tibetan innovations such as the system of incarnate lamas,[25] but such genuine innovations have been few.[26] True to its roots in the Pāla system of North India, however, Tibetan Buddhism carried on a tradition of eclectic accumulation and systematisation of diverse Buddhist elements, and pursued their synthesis. Prominent among these achievements are the Stages of the Path and motivational training.

Study of tenet systems

Monks debating in Drepung Monastery

Tibetan Buddhists practice one or more understandings of the true nature of reality, the emptiness of inherent existence of all things. Emptiness is propounded according to four classical Indian schools of philosophical tenets.

Two belong to the older path of the Foundation Vehicle:

The primary source for the former is the Abhidharma-kośa by Vasubandhu and its commentaries. The Abhidharmakośa is also an important source for the Sautrāntikas. Dignāga and Dharmakīrti are the most prominent exponents.

The other two are Mahayana (Skt. Greater Vehicle) (Tib. theg-chen):

Yogacārins base their views on texts from Maitreya, Asaṅga and Vasubandhu, Madhyamakas on Nāgārjuna and Āryadeva. There is a further classification of Madhyamaka into Svatantrika-Madhyamaka and Prasaṅgika-Madhyamaka. The former stems from Bhavaviveka, Śāntarakṣita and Kamalaśīla, and the latter from Buddhapālita and Candrakīrti.

The tenet system is used in the monasteries and colleges to teach Buddhist philosophy in a systematic and progressive fashion, each philosophical view being more subtle than its predecessor. Therefore the four schools can be seen as a gradual path from a rather easy-to-grasp, "realistic" philosophical point of view, to more and more complex and subtle views on the ultimate nature of reality, that is on emptiness and dependent arising, culminating in the philosophy of the Mādhyamikas, which is widely believed to present the most sophisticated point of view.[27]

History

Early history

According to a Tibetan legendary tradition, the text of Kāraṇḍavyūhasūtra arrived in a casket from the sky unto the roof of the palace of the 28th king of Tibet, Lha Thothori Nyantsen who died in 650 A.D., in southern Tibet.[28]

While there is a level of doubt about the level of interest in Buddhism of king Songtsän Gampo (who died in 650) it is known that he married a Chinese Tang Dynasty Buddhist princess, Wencheng, who came to Tibet with a statue of Shakyamuni Buddha. It is however clear from Tibetan sources that some of his successors became ardent Buddhists. The records show that Chinese Buddhists were actively involved in missionary activity in Tibet, they did not have the same level of imperial support as Indian Buddhists, with tantric lineages from Bihar and Bengal.[29]

According to a Tibetan legendary tradition, Songtsän Gampo also married a Nepalese Buddhist princess, Bhrikuti. By the second half of the 8th century he was already regarded as an embodiment of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara.[30]

The successors of Songtsän Gampo were less enthusiastic about the propagation of Buddhism but in the 8th century, King Trisong Detsen (755-797) established it as the official religion of the state.[31] He invited Indian Buddhist scholars to his court. In his age the famous tantric mystic Padmasambhāva arrived in Tibet according to the Tibetan tradition. In addition to writing a number of important scriptures, some of which he hid for future tertons to find, Padmasambhāva, along with Śāntarakṣita, established the Nyingma school.

The outlines of the history of Buddhism in Tibet from this time are well-known.[32] At this early time also, from the south came the influence of scholars under the Pāla dynasty in the Indian state of Magadha. They had achieved a blend of Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna that has come to characterize all forms of Tibetan Buddhism. Their teaching in sutra centered on the Abhisamayālankāra, a 4th century Yogācārin text, but prominent among them were the Mādhyamika scholars Śāntarakṣita and Kamalaśīla.

A third influence was that of the Sarvāstivādins from Kashmir in the south west[33] and Khotan in the north west.[34] Although they did not succeed in maintaining a presence in Tibet, their texts found their way into the Tibetan Buddhist canon, providing the Tibetans with almost all of their primary sources about the Foundation Vehicle. A subsect of this school, Mūlasarvāstivāda was the source of the Tibetan vinaya.[35]

The Chinese princess Jincheng (Kon-co) and the Khotanese monks

The Chinese princess Jincheng Gongzhu (?-739), Zongli, the "real daughter" of the king of Yong, and an adoptive daughter of Emperor Zhongzong of Tang (r. 705-710),[36] was sent to Tibet in 710 where, according to most sources, she married Mes-ag-tshoms, who would have been only six or seven years old at the time.[37] She was known in Tibet as Gyim shang Ong co, or, simply, Kim-sheng or Kong-co, and was a devout Buddhist.

Five Buddhist temples were built at: 'Ching bu nam ra, Kwa chu in Brag dmar, 'Gran bzang, 'Khar brag and sMas gong.[38]

Buddhist monks from Khotan (Li), fleeing the persecutions of an anti-Buddhist king, were given refuge by Kim-sheng about 737. The story of these Khotanese monks is recorded the Li yul lung-btsan-pa or 'Prophecy of the Li Country', a Buddhist history of Khotan which has been preserved as part of the Tibetan Tanjur.

Kim-sheng died during an outbreak of smallpox sometime between 739 and 741. The rise of anti-Buddhist factions in Tibet following the death of the Chinese princess began to blame the epidemic on the support of Buddhism by the king and queen.[39] This forced the monks to flee once again; first to Gandhara, and then to Kosambi in central India where the monks, apparently ended up quarrelling and slaughtering each other.[40]

A fourth influence from China in the east came in the form of Chan Buddhism.

Padmasambhāva, founder of the Nyingmapa, the earliest school of Tibetan Buddhism. Note the wide-open eyes, characteristic of a particular method of meditation.[41]

Transmission of Chan to the Nyingmapa

According to A. W. Barber of the University of Calgary,[42] Chan Buddhism was introduced to the Nyingmapa in three principal streams: the teachings of Korean Master Kim, Kim Ho-shang, (Chin ho shang) 金和尚 transmitted by Sang Shi[43] in ca. 750 AD; the lineage of Master Wu Chu (無住禪師) of the Pao T'ang School was transmitted within Tibet by Ye-shes Wangpo; and the teaching from Mo Ho Yen, 和尚摩訶衍 (Tibetan: Hwa shang Mahayana) that were a synthesis of the Northern School of Chan and the Pao T'ang School.[44]

Tibetan king Khri srong lde btsan (742–797) invited the Ch’an master Mo-ho-yen (whose name consists of the same Chinese characters used to transliterate “Mahayana”) to transmit the Dharma at Samye Monastery. Mo-ho-yen had been disseminating Dharma in the Tun-huang locale, but, according to Tibetan sources, lost an important philosophical debate on the nature of emptiness with the Indian master Kamalaśīla, and the king declared Kamalaśīla's philosophy should form the basis for Tibetan Buddhism.[45] However, a Chinese source says their side won, and some scholars conclude that the entire episode is fictitious.[46] Pioneering Buddhologist Giuseppe Tucci speculated that Hwashang's ideas were preserved by the Nyingmapas in the form of dzogchen teachings.[47] John Myrdhin Reynolds holds a very different point of view stating "Except for a brief flirtation with Ch'an in the early days of Buddhism in Tibet in the eighth century, the Tibetans exhibited almost no interest at all in Chinese Buddhism, except for translating a few Sutras from Chinese for which they did not possess Indian originals." [48]

Whichever may be the case, Tibetan Buddhists today trace their spiritual roots from Indian masters such as Padmasambhāva, Atiśa, Tilopa, Naropa and their later Tibetan students.

Later history

Atiśa

From the outset Buddhism was opposed by the native shamanistic Bön religion, which had the support of the aristocracy, but with royal patronage it thrived to a peak under King Rälpachän (817-836). Terminology in translation was standardised around 825, enabling a translation methodology that was highly literal. Despite a reversal in Buddhist influence which began under King Langdarma (836-842), the following centuries saw a colossal effort in collecting available Indian sources, many of which are now extant only in Tibetan translation.

Tibetan Buddhism exerted a strong influence from the 11th century AD among the peoples of Inner Asia, especially the Mongols. It was adopted as an official state religion by the Mongol Yuan dynasty and the Manchu Qing dynasty that ruled China. Coinciding with the early discoveries of "hidden treasures" (terma),[49] the 11th century saw a revival of Buddhist influence originating in the far east and far west of Tibet.[50] In the west, Rinchen Zangpo (958-1055) was active as a translator and founded temples and monasteries. Prominent scholars and teachers were again invited from India. In 1042 Atiśa arrived in Tibet at the invitation of a west Tibetan king. This renowned exponent of the Pāla form of Buddhism from the Indian university of Vikramaśīla later moved to central Tibet. There his chief disciple, Dromtonpa founded the Kadampa school of Tibetan Buddhism, under whose influence the New Translation schools of today evolved.

Schools

Sakya Pandita
Kalu Rinpoche (right) and Lama Denys at Karma Ling Institute in Savoy

Tibetan Buddhism has four main traditions:

  • Kagyu(pa), “Lineage of the (Buddha's) Word”. This is an oral tradition which is very much concerned with the experiential dimension of meditation. Its most famous exponent was Milarepa, an 11th century mystic. It contains one major and one minor subsect. The first, the Dagpo Kagyu, encompasses those Kagyu schools that trace back to the Indian master Naropa via Marpa, Milarepa and Gampopa[52] and consists of four major sub-sects: the Karma Kagyu, headed by a Karmapa, the Tsalpa Kagyu, the Barom Kagyu, and Pagtru Kagyu. There are a further eight minor sub-sects, all of which trace their root to Pagtru Kagyu and the most notable of which are the Drikung Kagyu and the Drukpa Kagyu. The once-obscure Shangpa Kagyu, which was famously represented by the 20th century teacher Kalu Rinpoche, traces its history back to the Indian master Naropa via Niguma, Sukhasiddhi and Kyungpo Neljor.[52]
  • Sakya(pa), “Grey Earth”. This school very much represents the scholarly tradition. Headed by the Sakya Trizin, this tradition was founded by Khon Konchog Gyalpo, a disciple of the great translator Drokmi Lotsawa and traces its lineage to the Indian master Virupa.[52] A renowned exponent, Sakya Pandita 1182–1251CE was the great grandson of Khon Konchog Gyalpo.
  • Gelug(pa), “Way of Virtue”. Originally a reformist movement, this tradition is particularly known for its emphasis on logic and debate. Its spiritual head is the Ganden Tripa and its temporal one the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama is regarded as the embodiment of the Bodhisattva of Compassion.[54] Successive Dalai Lamas ruled Tibet from the mid-17th to mid-20th centuries. The order was founded in the 14th to 15th century by Je Tsongkhapa, renowned for both his scholasticism and his virtue.

These major schools are sometimes said to constitute the ”Old Translation” and ”New Translation” traditions, the latter following from the historical Kadampa lineage of translations and tantric lineages. Another common differentiation is into "Red Hat" and "Yellow Hat" schools. The correspondences are as follows:

Nyingma Kagyu Sakya Gelug
Old Translation New Translation New Translation New Translation
Red Hat Black Hat Red Hat Yellow Hat

The pre-Buddhist religion of Bön has also been recognized by Tenzin Gyatso, the fourteenth Dalai Lama, as the fifth principal spiritual school of Tibet.[55]

Besides these major schools, there is a minor one, the Jonang. The Jonangpa were suppressed by the rival Gelugpa in the 17th century and were once thought extinct, but are now known to survive in Eastern Tibet.

There is also an ecumenical movement known as Rimé.[56]

Monasticism

Lamayuru monastery.

Although there were many householder-yogis in Tibet, monasticism was the foundation of Buddhism in Tibet. There were over 6,000 monasteries in Tibet, however nearly all of these were ransacked and destroyed by Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution.[57] Most of the major monasteries have been at least partially re-established while, many other ones remain in ruins.

In Mongolia during the 1920s, approximately one third of the male population were monks, though many lived outside monasteries. By the beginning of the 20th century about 750 monasteries were functioning in Mongolia.[58] These monasteries were largely dismantled during Communist rule, but many have been reestablished during the Buddhist revival in Mongolia[citation needed] which followed the fall of Communism.

Monasteries generally adhere to one particular school. Some of the major centers in each tradition are as follows:

Nyingma

The Nyingma lineage is said to have "six mother monasteries," although the composition of the six has changed over time:

Also of note is

Kagyu

Tibetan Buddhist monks at Rumtek Monastery in Sikkim

Many Kagyu monasteries are in Kham, eastern Tibet. Tsurphu, one of the most important, is in central Tibet, as is Ralung and Drikung.

Sakya

Gelug

The three most important centers of the Gelugpa lineage which are also called 'great three' Gelukpa university monasteries of Tibet, are Ganden, Sera and Drepung Monasteries, near Lhasa:

Three other monasteries have particularly important regional influence:

Great spiritual and historical importance is also placed on:

The statue of Buddha in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

Tibetan Buddhism in the contemporary world

Today, Tibetan Buddhism is adhered to widely in the Tibetan Plateau, Nepal, Bhutan, Mongolia, Kalmykia (on the north-west shore of the Caspian), Siberia and Russian Far East (Tuva and Buryatia). 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, Philip Glass, Mike Barson and Steven Seagal (who has been proclaimed the reincarnation of the tulku Chungdrag Dorje).[59]

In his classic work Buddhism in China (Princeton University Press, 1965), Kenneth Chen proposed the idea that Buddhism adapts itself to its host culture. Adaptations of Buddhism to contemporary Western culture include Tricycle magazine, the modern notion of a dharma center, and Celtic Buddhism.

Glossary of terms used

English spoken Tibetan Wylie Tibetan Sanskrit transliteration
affliction nyönmong nyon-mongs kleśa
analytic meditation jegom dpyad-sgom yauktika dhyāna
calm abiding shiné zhi-gnas śamatha
devotion to the guru lama-la tenpa bla-ma-la bsten-pa guruparyupāsati
fixation meditation joggom 'jog-sgom nibandhita dhyāna
foundational vehicle t’ek män theg sman hīnayāna
incarnate lama tülku sprul-sku nirmānakāya
inherent existence rangzhingi drubpa rang-bzhin-gyi grub-pa svabhāvasiddha
mind of enlightenment changchub sem byang-chhub sems bodhicitta
motivational training lojong blo-sbyong autsukya dhyāna
omniscience t’amcé k’yempa thams-cad mkhyen-pa sarvajña
preliminary practices ngöndo sngon-'gro prārambhika kriyāni
root guru zawé lama rtsa-ba'i bla-ma mūlaguru
stages of the path lamrim lam-rim pātheya
transmission and realisation lungtok lung-rtogs āgamādhigama

See also

Tibetan letter "A", the symbol of rainbow body

Notes

  1. ^ An alternative term, "lamaism", apparently derives from Chinese lama jiao and was used to distinguish Tibetan Buddhism from Han Chinese Buddhism, fo jiao. The term was taken up by western scholars including Hegel, as early as 1822 (Lopez, Donald S. Jr. (1999). Prisoners of Shangri-La: Tibetan Buddhism and the West. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 6, 19f. ISBN 0226493113.). Insofar as it implies a discontinuity between Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, the term has been discredited (Conze, 1993).
  2. ^ The 2007 U.S. State Department report on religious freedom in Bhutan notes that "Mahayana Buddhism is the state religion..." and that the Bhutanese government supports both the Kagyu and Nyingma sects. State.gov
  3. ^ Statistics on Religion in America Report -- The 2007 Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life Survey estimates that although Tibetan Buddhism adherents are less than 0.3 percent of the population, Buddhism has had a 0.5 net increase in reported adherents.
  4. ^ Adherents.com estimates twenty million for Lamaism (Vajrayana/Tibetan/Tantric).
  5. ^ Cf. Dhargyey (1978), 111; Pabongka Rinpoche, 533f; Tsong-kha-pa II: 48-9
  6. ^ Thurman, Robert (1997). Essential Tibetan Buddhism. Castle Books: 291
  7. ^ Thurman, Robert (1997): 2-3
  8. ^ Cf. Dhargyey (1978), 64f; Dhargyey (1982), 257f, etc; Pabongka Rinpoche, 364f; Tsong-kha-pa II: 183f. The former are the afflictions, negative states of mind, and the three poisons – desire, anger, and ignorance. The latter are subtle imprints, traces or "stains" of delusion that involves the imagination of inherent existence.
  9. ^ Pabongka Rinpoche, 152f
  10. ^ Pabongka Rinpoche, 243, 258
  11. ^ a b Hopkins (1996)
  12. ^ Dhargyey (1978), 61f; Dhargyey (1982), 242-266; Pabongka Rinpoche, 365
  13. ^ Pabongka Rinpoche, 252f
  14. ^ Pabongka Rinpoche, 367
  15. ^ Dhargyey (1978), 74; Dhargyey (1982), 3, 303f; Pabongka Rinpoche, 13f, 280f; Berzin, Alexander (2002). Introductory Comparison of Hinayana and Mahayana
  16. ^ Conze (1993): 26
  17. ^ Cf.Pabongka Rinpoche, 66, 212f
  18. ^ Lama is the literal Tibetan translation of the Sanskrit guru. For a traditional perspective on devotion to the guru, see Tsong-ka-pa I, 77-87. For a current perspective on the guru-disciple relationship in Tibetan Buddhism, see Berzin, Alexander. Relating to a Spiritual Teacher: Building a Healthy Relationship
  19. ^ notably, Gurupancasika, Tib.: Lama Ngachupa, Wylie: bla-ma lnga-bcu-pa, “Fifty Verses of Guru-Devotion” by Aśvaghoṣa
  20. ^ Indian tradition (Cf. Saddharmapundarika Sutra II, 124) encourages the student to view the guru as representative of the Buddha himself.
  21. ^ "Do not accept my Dharma merely out of respect for me, but analyze and check it the way a goldsmith analyzes gold, by rubbing, cutting and melting it." (Ghanavyuhasutra; sTug-po bkod-pa'i mdo); A Sutra [on Pure Realms] Spread Out in a Dense Array, as quoted in translation in The Berzin Archives. On the same need for skepticism in the satipatthāna tradition of Theravada Buddhism, cf. Nyanaponika Thera (1965), 83. Further on skepticism in Buddhism generally, see the article, Buddhist philosophy.
  22. ^ Kalu Rinpoche (1986), The Gem Ornament of Manifold Instructions. Snow Lion, p. 21.
  23. ^ Pabongka Rinpoche, 649
  24. ^ Cf. Conze (1993), 26 and 52f.
  25. ^ Tib.: tulku, Wylie: sprul-ku
  26. ^ Conze (1993). Moreover, that even this is a distinctly Tibetan development is disputable. Two centuries before Buddhism was introduced to Tibet, in the fifth century CE, the Abhidharma teacher Buddhaghoṣa was declared by Sri Lankan elders to be a reincarnation of the bodhisattva Maitreya. Berzin, Alexander (2002). Introductory Comparison of Hinayana and Mahayana
  27. ^ Sopa & Hopkins (1977), 67-69; Hopkins (1996). Non-Tibetan scholars have suggested that historically, Madhyamaka predates Cittamātra, however. Cf. Conze (1993).
  28. ^ Studholme, Alexander: The Origins of Om Manipadme Hum, Albany, NY 2002, pp. 13-14.
  29. ^ Powers 2004, pp. 38-39
  30. ^ Macdonald, Alexander: Religion in Tibet at the time of Srong-btsan sgam-po: myth as history, in: The History of Tibet, ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 354-363 (for the queens see p. 355); Dargyay, Eva: Srong-btsan sgam-po of Tibet: Bodhisattva and king, in: The History of Tibet, ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 364-378 (for the queens see p. 373).
  31. ^ Beckwith, C.I.: The revolt of 755 in Tibet, in: The History of Tibet, ed. Alex McKay, Vol. 1, London 2003, p. 273-285 (discusses the political background and the motives of the ruler).
  32. ^ Conze, 1993. For more detail, see Berzin, Alexander (1996). The History of the Early Period of Buddhism and Bon in Tibet
  33. ^ Conze, 1993, 106
  34. ^ Berzin, Alexander (2000). Introductory History of the Five Tibetan Traditions of Buddhism and Bon; Berzin, Alexander (1996). The Spread of Buddhism in Asia
  35. ^ Berzin, Alexander, as above
  36. ^ Lee, Don Y. The History of Early Relations between China and Tibet: From Chiu t'ang-shu, a documentary survey, p. 29. (1981). Eastern Press, Bloomington, Indiana. ISBN 0-939758-00-8.
  37. ^ Wangdu and Diemberger (2000), pp. 33-34 and n. 56.
  38. ^ Wangdu and Diemberger (2000), pp. 33-35 and n. 56.
  39. ^ Ancient Tibet, p. 253.
  40. ^ Hill (1988), pp. 179-180.
  41. ^ Wallace, 1999: 183
  42. ^ A.W. Barber
  43. ^ Sang Shi later became an abbot of Samye Monastery.
  44. ^ Barber, A. W. (1990). "The Unifying of Rdzogs Pa Chen Po and Ch'an". Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal. 3, 04.1990: 301–317. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
  45. ^ Yamaguchi, Zuihō (undated). The Core Elements of Indian Buddhism Introduced into Tibet: A Contrast with Japanese Buddhism. Source: Thezensite.com (accessed: October 20, 2007)
  46. ^ Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism (Volume One), page 70
  47. ^ Masao Ichishima, "Sources of Tibetan Buddhist Meditation." Buddhist-Christian Studies, Vol. 2, (1982), pp. 121-122, published by University of Hawai'i Press.
  48. ^ Reynolds, John. Vajranatha.com, (accessed: November 18, 2010)
  49. ^ Berzin, Alexander. The Four Traditions of Tibetan Buddhism: Personal Experience, History, and Comparisons
  50. ^ Conze, 1993, 104ff
  51. ^ The Tibetan adjectival suffix -pa is translatable as "-ist" in English.
  52. ^ a b c d Berzin. Alexander (2000). Introductory History of the Five Tibetan Traditions of Buddhism and Bon: Berzinarchives.com
  53. ^ Kagyuoffice.org See section: The Nine Yana Journey
  54. ^ Sanskrit: Avalokiteśvara, Tibetan: Chenrezig.
  55. ^ "In 1978 the Dalai Lama acknowledged the Bon religion as a school with its own practices after visiting the newly built Bon monastery in Dolanji." Tapriza Projects Switzerland [1]
  56. ^ Wylie: ris-med
  57. ^ "Tibetan monks: A controlled life". BBC News. March 20, 2008.
  58. ^ "Mongolia: The Bhudda and the Khan". Orient Magazine.
  59. ^ Statement by H.H. Penor Rinpoche Regarding the Recognition of Steven Seagal as a Reincarnation of the Treasure Revealer Chungdrag Dorje of Palyul Monastery

References

  • Ancient Tibet: Research Materials from The Yeshe De Project. Dharma Publishing, Berkeley, California. ISBN 0-89800-146-3.
  • Coleman, Graham, ed. (1993). A Handbook of Tibetan Culture. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.. ISBN 1-57062-002-4.
  • Conze, Edward (1993). A Short History of Buddhism (2nd ed.). Oneworld. ISBN 1851680667. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |coauthors= (help)
  • Dhargyey, Geshe Ngawang (3rd edn, 1978). Tibetan Tradition of Mental Development. Dharmsala: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |month= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) [A pithy lam-rim by a geshe appointed in 1973 by His Holiness the Dalai Lama as head of the translation team at the Tibetan Library.]
  • Dhargyey, Geshe Ngawang (1982). An Anthology of Well-Spoken Advice on the Graded Paths of the Mind, Vol. I. Dharmsala: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. ISBN 8186470298. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |month= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) [The first part of a more extensive lam-rim by a geshe appointed in 1973 by His Holiness the Dalai Lama as head of the translation team at the Tibetan Library. The language of this publication is very different from that of the 1978 work by the same lama due to widespread changes in choice of English terminology by the translators.]
  • Hill, John E. "Notes on the Dating of Khotanese History." Indo-Iranian Journal, Vol. 13, No. 3 July 1988. To purchase this article see: [2]. An updated version of this article is available for free download (with registration) at: [3]
  • Hopkins, Jeffrey (1996). Meditation on Emptiness. Boston: Wisdom. ISBN 0861711106. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |coauthors= (help) [Definitive treatment of emptiness according to the Prasaṅgika-Madhyamaka school.]
  • Lati Rinpoche (1980). Mind in Tibetan Buddhism: Oral Commentary on Ge-shay Jam-bel-sam-pel’s "Presentation of Awareness and Knowledge Composite of All the Important Points Opener of the Eye of New Intelligence. Valois, NY: Snow Lion. ISBN 0937938025. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Mullin, Glenn H. (1998). Living in the Face of Death: The Tibetan Tradition. 2008 reprint: Snow Lion Publications, Ithica, New York. ISBN 978-1-55939-310-2.
  • Nyanaponika Thera (1965). The Heart of Buddhist Meditation. Boston: Weiser. ISBN 0877280738. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |coauthors= (help)
  • Pabongka Rinpoche (3rd edn. 2006). Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand, A Concise Discourse on the Path to Enlightenment. Somerville, MA: Wisdom. ISBN 0861715004. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) [This famous lam-rim text was written from notes on an extended discourse by the Gelugpa geshe, Pabongka Rinpoche in 1921 and translated through extensive consultation with Achok Rinpoche (Library of Tibetan Works and Archives).]
  • Powers, John. History as Propaganda: Tibetan Exiles versus the People's Republic of China (2004) Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517426-7
  • Ringu Tulku. The Ri-Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet. Shambhala. ISBN 1-59030-286-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, |month=, and |coauthors= (help)
  • Smith, E. Gene (2001). Among Tibetan Texts: History and Literature of the Himalayan Plateau. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-179-3
  • Sopa, Geshe Lhundup (1977). Practice and Theory of Tibetan Buddhism. New Delhi: B.I. Publications. ISBN 0091256216. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |month= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) [Part Two of this book, ‘’Theory: Systems of Tenets’’ is an annotated translation of ‘’Precious Garland of Tenets (Grub-mtha’ rin-chhen phreng-ba)’’ by Kön-chok-jik-may-wang-po (1728-1791).]
  • The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment
    • Tsong-kha-pa (2000). The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume I. Canada: Snow Lion. ISBN 1559391529. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
    • Tsong-kha-pa (2002). The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume II. Canada: Snow Lion. ISBN 1559391685. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
    • Tsong-kha-pa (2004). The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, Volume III. Canada: Snow Lion. ISBN 1559391669. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Wallace, B. Alan (1999), "The Buddhist Tradition of Samatha: Methods for Refining and Examining Consciousness", Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (2-3): 175-187 .

Further reading

Introductory books
  • Wallace, B. Alan (October 25, 1993). Tibetan Buddhism From the Ground Up: A Practical Approach for Modern Life. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-075-4, ISBN 978-0-86171-075-1
  • Yeshe, Lama Thubten (2001). "The Essence of Tibetan Buddhism". Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. ISBN 1-891868-08-X
Other books
  • Coleman, Graham, ed. (1993). A Handbook of Tibetan Culture. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.. ISBN 1-57062-002-4.
  • Lati Rinpoche (1980). Mind in Tibetan Buddhism: Oral Commentary on Ge-shay Jam-bel-sam-pel’s "Presentation of Awareness and Knowledge Composite of All the Important Points Opener of the Eye of New Intelligence. Valois, NY: Snow Lion. ISBN 0937938025. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, and |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Ringu Tulku. The Ri-Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet. Shambhala. ISBN 1-59030-286-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |origmonth=, |month=, |chapterurl=, |origdate=, and |coauthors= (help)
  • Smith, E. Gene (2001). Among Tibetan Texts: History and Literature of the Himalayan Plateau. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-179-3