Kalachakra Initiations by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
Introduction to the Kalachakra
General presentation of the Dharma
The Buddha's Dharma, can be divided to two
vehicles, the Hinayana and the Mahayana. The Hinayana itself can be
divided into the vehicle of the shravakas and the vehicle of the
pratyekabuddhas. The shravakas and pratyekabuddhas can be
differentiated according to the relative inferiority and superiority of
their faculties and the results they obtain, but the doctrinal features
of the paths they follow are basically the same. People with a
propensity to follow these two Hinayana vehicles take them up for the
sake of merely their own emancipation, because they turn their backs on
bearing the burden of the aims of others. Since the main cause of
bondage in samsara is grasping at a self, the main cause of obtaining
the freedom of liberation is the wisdom that realizes the meaning
selflessness. Thus, shravakas and pratyekabuddhas, like bodhisattvas,
realize selflessness. They meditate on is accompanied by the other
paths of moral conduct, meditative concentration and so forth, and thus
extinguish all their passions, greed, hatred, ignorance and so forth.
Even though Hinayanists do not engage in their
path intending to obtain Buddhahood, their path is in fact a means for
ultimately leading such people to the stage of buddhahood. Thus, do not
misapprehend the Hinayana paths as being solely an obstacle to
enlightenment, because the Saddharmapundarika sutra and other
texts teach that they are methods for achieving Buddhahood. The Buddha
appears in the world so that sentient beings may obtain the gnosis that
he himself obtained. Thus, the Buddha's demonstrations of the path are
strictly means to lead sentient beings to buddhahood. Even though the
Hinayana paths do not lead directly to buddhahood, it is taught that
followers of the Hinayana do in fact eventually enter the Mahayana and
obtain buddhahood.
Although followers of the Hinayana, like followers
of the Mahayana, realize that phenomena are devoid of own-being, it is
not the case that there is no difference at all between the Hinayana
and the Mahayana. The doctrines of the Mahayana do not merely
illuminate the selflessness of phenomena, they teach the bodhisattva
stages, the perfections, the prayer to achieve perfect enlightenment
for the sake of all sentient beings, great compassion, and so forth.
They also teach the dedication of merits to enlightenment, the two
accumulations of merit and gnosis, and the inconceivable reality that
is purified of all stains.
Thus, the Mahayana and Hinayana are not
distinguished due to differences in their philosophical viewpoints, but
they are differentiated according to their respective practice and
non-practice of the entire range of skillful means. This is the
assertion of Arya Nagarjuna and his disciple Aryadeva: A mother is the
common cause of all her sons, and their fathers are the causes for
distinguishing their races. Just so the mother, the perfection of
wisdom, is the common cause of the sons, all four kinds of aryas: shravaka aryas, pratyekabuddha aryas, bodhisattava aryas, and buddha aryas.
The cause for differentiating them into the particular Hinayana and
Mahayana lineages is whether or not they have the methods of generating
bodhichitta and so forth. The general Mahayana, like the Hinayana, can
be subdivided into two vehicles: the Paramitayana and the Mantrayana.
The common aim of the Mahayana is to train oneself in the six
perfections by practising them out of a desire to obtain unexcelled
enlightenment for the sake of all sentient beings. It is clear that one
proceeds in the Mantrayana by this same path, because it is taught in
the tantras. However, Mahayana practitioners who follow the
paramitayana merely take up that much of the general body of the path,
whereas followers of the Mantrayana cultivate the perfections by means
of special tantric techniques that are not taught in the paramitayana.
The terms "Cause vehicle", "Paramitayana", and so
forth are synonyms, and "Mantrayana", "Vajrayana", "Effect vehicle",
and "Method vehicle" are synonyms as well. There is a difference
between the cause vehicle and the effect vehicle: the cause vehicle is
the Mahayana vehicle in which there is no meditation on oneself having
a like aspect with any of the effects-the four complete purities-during
the period of the path of training. The Mahayana vehicle in which there
is meditation on oneself as having a like aspect with the four complete
purities during the period of the path of training is called "The
Effect vehicle" or "The Mantrayana". This is what the master Tsongkhapa
said in the Ngag Rim Chenmo: "With regard to vehicle, since it
is the vehicle of, i.e., conveys, the effect that is desired here and
the cause that desires this, it is called 'vehicle'. The effect is the
four complete purities of abode, body, property, and activities, a
buddha's palace, body, wealth, and deeds. One meditates from the
present on oneself as having a divine mansion, a divine entourage,
divine ritual implements, and the divine deeds of purifying the cosmos
and its inhabitants, just like a Buddha, Thus, it is the Effect Vehicle
because one progresses through meditating in accordance with the
vehicle of the effect."
Thus, the Mahayana as a whole is divided into the
Paramitayana and the Mantrayana because these two have substantially
different means for achieving a Buddha's Form Body that accomplishes
the aims of others. In general, the Hinayana and the Mahayana are not
distinguished according to any difference in their wisdom of emptiness,
but must be distinguished due to differences in their methods, as
mentioned above. In particular, although the Mahayana is divided into
the Paramitayana and the Mantrayana, this is not due to any difference
in their wisdom that realizes the profound emptiness; the two Mahayana
systems must be distinguished from the point of view of differences in
their methods. The main aspect of method in the Mahayana is the portion
dealing with achievement of the Form Body, and the method that achieves
the Form Body in the Mantrayana is just the deity yoga of meditating on
oneself as having an aspect similar to that of a Form Body. This method
is superior to the method employed in the Paramitayana.
With regard to the disciples of the Mantrayana,
there are four types: inferior, middling, superior, and most excellent.
The four classes of tantra were taught with these four types of
disciples in mind. Since the disciples enter the Mantrayana through the
four classes of tantra, the four classes are likened to "four doors."
Should you wonder what the four are, they are Ritual Tantra, Conduct
Tantra, Yoga Tantra, and Unexcelled Yoga Tantra. The Kalachakra, which
will be described below, belongs to the Unexcelled Yoga Tantra class.
An Account of the Kalachakra, or Wheel of Time
The entire meaning of the subject matter of the
Kalachakra tantra is included within the three Kalachakras, or Wheels
of Time: The Outer Wheel of Time, the Inner Wheel of Time, and the
Other Wheel of Time. The Outer Wheel of Time is the external world of
the environment, and it is also called "The procession of the external
solar and lunar days." The Inner Wheel of Time is the human body, that
is an inner Jambudvipa, or earth-surface. Likewise, the inner channels,
elements, and movements of the winds are set forth as the Inner Wheels
of Time. The Other Wheel of Time is the initiations and paths of Shri
Kalachakra, together with their results. It is "other" than the
preceding two Wheels of Time. The guru ripens the disciple's
psycho-physical continuum with the initiations, and the disciple
meditates on the path that consists of the generation process and the
completion process. In this way the yogi actualizes the resultthe
buddha body that is the divine image of emptiness. This is the Other
Wheel of Time.
The Buddha's teaching of the Kalachakra is described in the Paramadibuddha, the Kalachakra, Basic Tantra:
"As the teacher demonstrated the Dharma on Vulture
Heap according to the Perfection of Wisdom system, he also taught the
mantra system at Shri Dhanyakataka. What teacher taught what tantra,
when and where was he dwelling? What was the place, who was the worldly
entourage, and what was the purpose?
"He taught the unexcelled Mahayana, the system of
the Perfection of Wisdom, to the bodhisattvas on Mount Vulture Heap.
Then at the same time the Tathagata dwelt together with bodhisattvas
and others in the great stupa, in the mandala of the sphere of
phenomena. He dwelt in the house of universal vajra, in space,
immaterial and very lucid, unpartitioned and radiant. He taught the
tantra in the beautiful sphere of phenomena, for the merit and gnosis
of human beings."
The Basic Tantra also says: "Then
Vajrapani's emanation, King Suchandra from famous Shambhala,
miraculously entered into the splendid sphere of phenomena. First he
circumambulated to the right, then he worshipped the teacher's lotus
feet with flowers made of jewels. Placing his hands together, Suchandra
sat before the perfect Buddha. Suchandra requested the Buddha for the
tantra, redacted it, and taught it too."
The Kalachakra was taught by our teacher, the
Buddha Shakyamuni. He showed the way of actualizing highest perfect
enlightenment underneath the bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya in India, at early
dawn on the full moon of April/May. For one year he taught the general
Paramitayana. In particular, at Mount Vulture Heap he turned the Dharma
Wheel of the Perfection of Wisdom, the chief, ultimate Dharma Wheel of
the Paramita system of the Mahayana.
On the full moon of March/April, the twelfth month
counted from the time he obtained buddhahood, the Buddha was teaching
the Paramitayana at Mount Vulture Heap. At the same time he manifested
another form inside the great stupa of Shri Dhanyakataka, which is near
Shri Parvata in south India where he taught the Mantrayana.
The great stupa was more than six leagues from top
to bottom, and inside it the Buddha emitted two mandalas: below the
mandala of Dharmadhatu Vagishvara, above the great mandala of the
splendid asterisms. The Buddha was in the centre on the Vajra lion
throne in the great Mandala of the Sphere of Vajra, the abode of great
bliss. He was absorbed in the Kalachakra samadhi, and stood in the form
of the Lord of the mandala.
The excellent entourage within the mandala
consisted of a host of Buddhas, bodhisattvas, furies, gods, nagas, and
goddesses. Outside the mandala the requestor was the emanated body of
Vajrapani, King Suchandra of Shambhala. He had miraculously come to
Shri Dhanyakataka from Shambhala, and he requested the Kalachakra for
the entourage of listeners: the ninety-six emanated satraps of the
ninety-six great lands within Shambhala, together with a limitless host
of fortunate bodhisattvas, gods, demons, and others.
The Buddha gave the assembly the excellent
Dharma-the worldly and transcendental initiations-and prophesied that
they would obtain buddhahood, then he taught them the Paramadibuddha, the twelve thousand verse Kalachakra Basic Tantra. King Suchandra wrote it down in a volume and miraculously returned to Shambhala.
In Shambhala Suchandra composed a sixty thousand-line commentary of the Basic Tantra.
He also erected a Kalachakra mandala made of precious substances. After
he had appointed his son Sureshvara as King and teacher of the tantra,
he passed away. Many great Kings appeared in the dynasty of Shambhala:
Kalki Yashas, Kalki Pundarika, and others. They caused the profound
Dharma of the Kalachakra to shine like the sun and the moon.
The Kalachakra continued to be transmitted through
the succession of kalkis ("chieftains") of Shambhala, and eventually it
was reintroduced into India. There are two main stories of how this
came about, the story told by the Ra tradition and the story of the Dro
tradition. (The Ra tradition and the Dro tradition will be discussed
below).
According to the Ra tradition, the Kalachakra and related commentaries famed as the Bodhisattvas Corpus
appeared in India during the simultaneous reigns of three kings. Taking
Bodh Gaya as the center, the three kings were: Dehopala, the Master of
Elephants, in the East; Jauganga, the Master of Men, in the South; and
Kanauj, the Master of Horses, in the West. At that time the great
pandit Cilu, who mastered all aspects of the Buddhadharma, was born in
Orissa, one of the five countries of eastern India. Cilu studied all
the Buddhist texts at the Ratnagiri Vihara, Vikramashila, and Nalanda.
In particular, he studied at the Ratnagiri Vihara that was undamaged by
the Turks.
Cilu realized that, in general, in order to
achieve buddhahood in a single lifetime he would need the Mantrayana,
and in particular, that he would need the clarifications of these
doctrines contained in the Bodhisattva commentaries. Knowing
that these teachings were extant in Shambhala, and depending on the
instruction of his deity, he joined up with traders who sought jewels
in the ocean. Having agreed with the traders, who were setting out
across the sea, to meet up after six months, they went separate ways.
Cilu proceeded in stages and finally, upon
climbing a mountain, he met a man. The man asked him, "Where are you
going?" Cilu replied, "I am going to Shambhala in search of the Bodhisattva Corpus."
The man said, "It is extremely difficult to go there, but if you can
understand it, you could listen to it even here." Cilu realized that
the man was an emanation of Manjushri. He prostrated, offered a
mandala, and requested instruction. The man conferred all the
initiations, tantra commentaries, and oral instructions on Cilu. He
grasped Cilu, placed a flower on his head, and blessed him, saying,
"Realize the entire Bodhisattva Corpus." Thus, like water poured from one vessel into another, Cilu realized the entire Bodhisattva Corpus. He went back the way he had come and, meeting with the traders, he returned to Eastern India.
According to the Dro tradition, the Kalachakra was
reintroduced into India by the master Kalachakrapada. A couple who
practised the Yoga of Yamantaka performed the ritual for the birth of a
son as it is taught in the Yamantaka Tantra, and had a son.
When he grew up he learned that in the north the bodhisattvas
themselves taught the Dharma, so he went to listen to them. With his
psychic power the Kalki of Shambhala knew of the youth's pure
motivation and enthusiasm for the profound Dharma. He knew that if the
youth attempted to come to Shambhala it would endanger his life because
of the waterless wasteland that takes four months to cross. Thus, the
Kalki used an emanation body to meet the youth at the edge of the
desert.
The Kalki asked the youth, "Where are you going,
and why?" when the youth told him his intentions the Kalki said, "That
road is very difficult. But if you can understand these things,
couldn't you listen to them even here?" The youth realized that this
was an emanation of the Kalki and asked him for instruction. Right
there the Kalki initiated the youth, and for four months he taught him
all the highest tantras especially the three Bodhisattva Corpus
commentaries. Like a vase filled to the brim, the youth realized and
memorized all the tantras. When he returned to India he became renowned
as an emanation of Manjushri, and his name was "Kalachakrapada"
The Ra and Dro traditions say that the Kalachakra
was introduced into India by Cilu and Kalachakrapada. The Kalachakra
continued to be studied and practised in India, and it was eventually
introduced into Tibet. Again, the Ra and Dro traditions are the two
main lineages through which this occurred.
The Dro tradition started from the visit of the
Kashmiri Pandit Somanatha to Tibet. Somanatha first arrived in Tibet at
Kharag and stayed among the Ryo clan. For a fee of one hundred measures
of gold Somanatha translated half of the great Kalachakra commentary,
the Vimalaprabha, into Tibetan, but in the meantime he became
displeased and stopped his work. He took the gold and his draft
translation and went to Phan Yul drub. There Chung Wa of the Zhang clan
took Somanatha as his guru, and Shayrabdrak of the Dro clan acted as
translator. Somanatha and Shayrabdrak translated the entire
Vimalaprabha.
The Dro tradition continued on to Lama ChöKu Özer.
This lama mastered all of the teachings of the Dro clan, including the
Kalachakra. His disciple was Lama Galo, who mastered both the Dro
tradition and the Ra tradition and passed them on in a single combined
lineage.
The Ra tradition started with Chorab of the Ra
clan, the nephew of the famous translator Ra Dorjedrak who was born in
Nyen Ma Mang Yul. Ra Chorab memorized and understood all the doctrines
of the Ra clan. Then he wished to learn the Kalachakra, so he went to
the centre of Nepal where he continuously served the Pandit Samantashri
for five years, ten months, and five days. Samantashri explained all
the Kalachakra texts and gave Chorab the initiations and oral
instructions. Then Chorab invited Samantashri to Tibet where they
carefully translated the Kalachakra tantra and its commentary, together
with the auxiliary texts.
The Ra tradition continued through Ra Chorab's son
and grandson, and it eventually came to Lama Galo, as mentioned before.
Lama Galo passed on both the Dro and the Ra traditions, and his lineage
continued through such masters as Buton Rinchendrub and Tsongkhapa. The
study and practice of the Kalachakra based on the Ra and Dro traditions
exists even today.
Practice of the Kalachakra tantra, like all
Buddhist tantric systems, is based on first receiving the proper
initiations. For the initiations to be properly given and received it
is necessary that both the guru and the disciple have certain
qualifications. The qualifications of the Mantrayana guru are described
by Losang Chökyi Gyaltsen as follows: "He should have control over his
body, speech, and mind. He should be very intelligent, patient, and
undeceitful. He should know the mantras and tantras, understand
reality, and be competent in composing and explaining texts". We are
very fortunate that such gurus can be found even now.
The disciple should have experience of the three
principal aspects of the Mahayana path: renunciation of samsara,
bodhichitta, and understanding of emptiness. If the disciple has not
actually experienced these, he or she should at least have intellectual
familiarity with them and admiration for them.
The most important of the three aspects is
bodhichitta, the primary motivation for taking the initiations. Lord
Maitreya defined bodhichitta in his Abhisamayalankara:
"Bodhichitta is the desire for true, perfect enlightenment for the sake
of others". When applied to the specific circumstance of taking the
Kalachakra initiations, the disciple should generate bodhichitta in the
following manner: "For the sake of all sentient beings I must achieve
the state of Shri Kalachakra. Then I will be able to establish all
other sentient beings in the state of Shri Kalachakra as well". With
this motivation one should take initiation.
The general aim of tantric initiations is that
through the initiations the guru ripens the disciple's psycho-physical
continuum. Here "ripening" means empowering the disciple to practise
the yoga of the generation process and the completion process. In
particular, the Kalachakra initiations empower the disciple to practise
the yoga of the Kalachakra tantra, and, ultimately, to achieve the
state of Shri Kalachakra.
There are eleven Kalachakra initiations: seven
initiations of "entering like a child", three "exalted" initiations,
and one "most exalted" initiation. Disciples who are temporarily intent
on just the worldly siddhis (magical or mystical
accomplishments) are given only the seven lower initiations. Those who
are mainly interested in the transcendental siddhi of
buddhahood are given all eleven initiations. The first of the seven
initiations of entering like a child is the water initiation. This is
analagous to a mother washing her child immediately after its birth.
The second initiation is the crown initiation that is analogous. to the
binding of a child's hairlocks. The third, ribbon initiation is
analogous to piercing a child's ears and arraying it with ornaments.
The fourth initiation, the vajra and bell initiation, is analogous to a
child laughing and talking. The fifth initiation is the discipline
initiation, it is analogous to the child's enjoyment of the five
desirable sense-objects. Sixth is the name initiation, analogous to the
naming of the child. The seventh, and final, initiation of entering
like a child is the mantra authorization initiation. This initiation
empowers the disciple to eliminate obstacles and to achieve the magic
powers of pacification, gaining prosperity, subjugation, and
destruction.
The three exalted initiations are as follows: the
vase initiation is the gnosis of bliss and emptiness that arises from
the disciple touching the consort's breasts. The secret initiation is
the gnosis of bliss and emptiness that arises from the disciple
savouring the bodhichitta, the wisdom-gnosis initiation is the
experience of connate joy that arises from the disciple and consort
themselves engaging in union.
The most exalted initiation is also called "the
fourth initiation" or "the word initiation" The previous great
wisdom-gnosis initiation empowers the disciple to achieve the eleventh
bodhisattva stage. Then the guru symbolically indicates the Gnosis Body
that is the integration of supreme unchanging great bliss and emptiness
possessing the best of all aspects. Saying, "This is it", the guru
bestows the fourth initiation on the disciple. This initiation empowers
the disciple to obtain perfect buddhahood in the form of Shri
Kalachakra.
Translated from the Tibetan and edited by John
Newman Translator's note: 'or more information on the subjects touched
on in this essay the reader is advised to see: Dalai Lama, Kalachakra
Tantra Initiation Rites and Practices (London: Wisdom Publications,
1985), and Geshe Lhundup Sopa eral, The Wheel of Time: The Kalachakra
in Context (Madison. Wisconsin USA: Deer Park Books, 1985).
Kalachakra Initiations by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
No. Date Place Audience
1. May
1954 Norbulingka, Lhasa,
Tibet
100,000
2. April
1956 Norbulingka, Lhasa,
Tibet 100,000
3. March
1970
Dharamsala, Himachal Pradesh, India 30,000
4. January
1971 Bylakuppe,
Karnataka,
India
10,000
5. December
1974 Bodh Gaya, Bihar,
India
100,000
6. September
1976 Leh, Ladakh,
India
40,000
7. July
1981 Madison, Wisconsin,
USA
1,500
8. April
1983 Dirang, Arunachal Pradesh,
India 5,000
9. August
1983 Tabo
- Spiti, Himachal Pradesh,
India 10,000
10. July
1985 Rikon,
Switzerland
6,000
11. December
1985 Bodh Gaya, Bihar,
India
200,000
12. July 1988 Zanskar,
Jammu & Kashmir,
India 10,000
13. July
1989 Los
Angeles, USA 3,300
14. December
1990 Sarnath, Uttar Pradesh,
India 130,000
15. October
1991 New York,
USA
3,000
16. August 1992 Kalpa - Kinnaur, Hiamchal
Pradesh, India 20,000
17. April
1993 Gangtok,
Sikkim,
India
100,000
18. July 1994 Jispa -
Keylong, Himachal Pradesh, India 30,000
19. December
1994 Barcelona,
Spain 3,000
20. January
1995 Mundgod,
Karnataka,
India
50,000
21. August
1995 Ulan
Bator,
Mongolia
30,000
22. June
1996 Tabo - Spiti,
Hiamchal Pradesh,
India 20,000
23. September
1996 Sydney,
Australia 3,000
24. December 1996 Salugara, West Bengal,
India 200,000
25. August
1999
Bloomington, Indiana,
USA
4,000
26. August 2000 Kyi - Spiti, Himachal
Pradesh,
India 25,000
27. October
2002 Graz,
Austria
10,000
28. January
2003 Bodh Gaya, Bihar,
India
200,000
29. April
2004 Toronto,
Canada
8,000
30. January 2006 Amarvati, Andhra Pradesh,
India 100,000