Having Once Died And Returned To Life: Tibetan Biographies Of The Journey Beyond Death, Page 2
Yoingza Chökyiâs Return from Death
Tibetan: ÎDas log gling bzaâ chos skyid
kyi rnam thar
In Two Visionary Accounts of
Returns from Death.
Delhi: Tibetan Bonpo Monastic
Center, Dolanji, H.P., 1974. I-Tib 1305;
74-901396.
This sixteenth century tale of Lingza
Chökyi's death experience is more
representative of the majority of de-lok
biographies. Feeling great stress and
frustration over having been forced to
neglect her religious aspirations and
instead lead an ordinary woman's life as
a wife and mother, Lingza Chökyi grows
sick with fever. After being ill
incurably for several weeks she has a
claustophobic vision of being shoved
underground and into a great ocean where
she is tossed about wildly. She then
experiences the heat of a scorching
fire, hears loud roaring sounds, and
sees various demons who laugh at and
taunt her. Upon remembering the sobering
instructions of her lama that all these
visions, lights, and sounds are nothing
more than projections of her own mind,
Lingza Chökyiis hallucinations disappear
and she returns to what seems to be her
old room. However, when she looks over
at her bed she sees to her dismay the
putrid corpse of a large pig dressed in
her clothes. She then notices that her
husband and children and all of her
friends are gathered around this
horrible dead creature, wailing and
crying. Each tear shed by a member of
her family sends down a painful hail of
pus and blood upon Lingza's head, and
when the tears stop flowing, so does the
bloody storm. After a while, her family
and friends sit down to eat and, growing
hungry, Lingza asks them for food and
water, but they do not respond. Instead,
her relatives place a bowl of food at
the bedside next to the dead pig.
Angered, Lingza Chökyi steps out of the
room and hears a voice resembling that
of her late father calling out, "Chökyi,
come here! Follow me, I want to show you
something." She leaves and, like Lama
Jampa above, is led through the many
levels of the bardo realm only to be
later confronted by the Lord of Death,
who narrates a long litany of her sins
and virtues and then sends her back to
preach the benefits of living a dutiful
religious life.
The Story of Karma Wangzinâs
Return from Death
Tibetan: ÎDas log karma dbang
Îdzin gyi rnam thar
Author: Khrag Îthun rdo rje
Delhi, 1973. I-Tib-1141; 73-905481.
This mid-eighteenth century biography of
Karma Wangzin is perhaps the most
renowned and popular of the older
Tibetan de-lok stories. Like Lingza
Chökyi, Karma Wangzin was an
intelligent, compassionate, and pious
woman who wanted nothing more than to
follow a devoted and virtuous Buddhist
path. Her parents, on the other hand,
had a different vision of the life they
wanted their daughter to lead. An
arrangement was set up with the governor
of a neighboring district and Karma
Wangzin was sent as his bride. One day
in her room, the text relates, she has a
vision of Padmasambhava, the eighth
century yogin who had helped to
establish Buddhism in Tibet. Reaching
out to show her a skull-cup filled with
nectar, Padmasambhava tells Karma
Wangzin that this precious liquid will
cure leprosy and bring joy to many
suffering beings. A year later, she is
stricken with a terrible disease and
begins to have sensations usually
associated with dying, such as the loss
of feeling in her body, the inability to
perceive external forms or hear sounds.
As she regretfully recalls all the sins
in her life, visions of the next life
begin to appear and she is met by a
woman dressed in white, who says "Get
up! Do not suffer." The woman takes
Karma Wangzin by the shoulder and pulls
her along a path where she meets a late
uncle who tells her to renounce all
feelings of anger and jealousy. Longing
for her family and friends, she calls
out to them, but receives no reply.
Instead, all that appears around her are
unfamiliar faces contorted with fear,
writhing in panic. Frantically she asks
the woman in white, "Where are we? How
can I get home?" The woman replies that
they are in the bardo, in the City of
the Dead, and that the visions appearing
around her arise as frightful enemies
only because of Karma Wangzin's
ignorance and agitated emotional state.
At that point, Karma Wangzin is lead
through the City of the Dead where she
witnesses many people being rewarded for
their past virtues and punished for
their sins. She meets some of them,
listens to their solemn stories, and
promises to take messages back to their
families. Later, she meets the Lord of
Death, who reviews all of her past
rebirths and decides that she has
accumulated enough merit to be granted
temporary reprieve from the tortures of
hell. Karma Wangzin returns to teach and
to remind all whom she encounters that
Buddhist doctrine is more than just
philosophical mumbo jumbo and that
devotion to religious practice is the
only guarantee of a joyful destiny in
the next life.
The Story of Latri Gyalwaâs
Bardo Experience
Tibetan: dBra sprang lho gling
smar khams gling gi bla mchod khri chen
rgyal ba g.yung drung bstan Îdzin gyi
Îkhrul snang bar doâi rnam thar
Author: bLa khri rgyal ba g.yung
drung (1814-1871) Ochghat, Distt.
Solan, H.P., Tashi Dorji, 1985.
I-Tib-2668; 85-902640.
This Bon-po account of the de-lok
journey through the bardo, which follows
closely many of the events related in
our previous biographies, relates the
story of Latri Gyalwa who, after losing
the battle with a sudden and incurable
illness, crosses the threshold of death
and for several days moves freely
through various otherworldy realms,
often accompanied by a radiant female
being. Frequently, Latri Gyalwa
encounters marvelous people on his
journey who recite verses from religious
scriptures, such as those included in
the Liberation upon Hearing. The message
is always clear: respect one's teachers,
practice their religious instruction,
and avoid harming others. Uza Rinchen
Drönselâs Visionary Account of Hell
Tibetan: dBu za rin chen sgron
gsal gyis shi log dge sdig gsal byed
Îphrul gyi me long
Compiler: sLob dpon bstan Îdzin
rnam dag (b.1926)
In Three Bonpo Visionary Accounts of
Hell. Delhi: Tibetan Bonpo Monastic
Center, New Thobgyal, H.P., 1973.
I-Tib-1034; 73-903236.
The Tale of Lhamo Lhamjungâs,
Experiences in Hell
Tibetan: ÎDas log lha mo lham
gcung gi rnam thar dmyal ba Îgrim paâi
lo rgyus
Author: Lha mo bu khrid
Darjeeling: Lama Dawa and Chopal
Lama, 1984. I-Tib-2494.
After a period of wandering in the
bardo, the de-lok is usually led
directly into the court of Dharmaraja,
the Lord of Death. In the accounts here
of Uza Rinchen Drönsel's and Lhama
Lhamjung's meeting with this ominous
magistrate, the experience is not unlike
standing before an authoritative and
all-knowing judge of a corrupt
administrative bureaucracy. In the court
of Dharmaraja, the de-lok witnesses a
series of judgement trials in which the
unjust pay dearly for their crimes and
the just are not always set free. From
here, the de-lok is taken to hell and
back and then placed before the Judge.
The two personal advocates (a white
divine spirit and a black demon spirit)
that are said to be born together with
each individual--the "guardian angels,"
so to speak--join the de-lok to present
their case. The Lord of Death listens
attentively to their tale and orders a
check of their statements in the "mirror
of karma," in which is vividly reflected
the de-lok's every virtuous and sinful
act. When all is said and done,
Dharmaraja pronounces judgement and
exhorts the defendants to mend their
ways. Curiously, in the case of Uza
Rinchen and Lhama Lhamjung, the Lord of
Death discovers that a simple
bookkeeping error has been made
concerning their proper identities and
admits that they have more time left in
this life after all. Upon their return,
both men commit themselves to a life of
religious service for the welfare of all
suffering beings.
A Message from the Lord of
Death
Tibetan: gShin rje chos kyi rgyal
poâi gsung phrin
In Two Obscure Texts of the
Avalokitesvara Cult from Spiti. New
Delhi, O rgyan rdo rje, 1975.
I-Tib-1447; 75-904456.In this biography
of the de-lok Longwa Adrung, recorded in
1533, the trial in the court of
Dharmaraja ends with the Lord of Death
presenting a lengthy injunction to moral
conduct. In his message, Dharmaraja
addresses the famous lamas of Tibet,
meditation masters, Tantric yogins,
religious scholars, nuns, government
officials, laypeople, and beggars.
Living beings, he warns, should work
hard not to be led astray from the
religious path due to laziness, hatred,
or desire. They should not lust after
the counterfeit joys of samsara or place
lasting value on a world that is forever
changing. Circumstances change, emotions
change, and living beings trapped in the
ceaseless cycle of birth and death
continue to be swept along by the chaos
of every moment. Practice diligently and
resolve to generate compassionate
concern for all suffering beings. The
Lord of Death concludes his message with
a prophecy concerning the fate of Longwa
Adrung, who then suddenly finds himself
in his body once more. In the usual
case, a lama is asked to authenticate
the de-lok's story in order to insure
that a demon has not possessed the
corpse and caused it to rise (ro-lang).
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