Author Topic: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka  (Read 12630 times)

Big Uncle

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Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« on: September 17, 2010, 04:58:23 PM »
Another Emanation of Manjushri/Dorje Shugden is Vajrabhairava / Yamantaka         

In Vajrayana Buddhism, Vajrabhairava, also known as Yamantaka, is a wrathful, buffalo-headed meditational deity (Tib: yi-dam) of the Highest Yoga Tantra class and/or a dharma protector. Vajrabhairava is one of the principal three meditational deities of the Gelug school (Tib: gsang bde 'jigs gsum; the others are Chakrasamvara and Guhyasamaja). He is also one of the main yidams in the Sakya school where he comes in a variety of appearances (with different mandalas). In both schools Vajrabhairava is seen as the wrathful manifestation of Manjushri, the buddha of wisdom. In the other schools of Tibetan Buddhism Yamantaka seems to be mostly revered as a protector. The (mostly secret and arcane) practices there involve different activities for various purposes. There are also some Yamantaka terma revelations in the Nyingma and Kagyu schools. From amongst the many lineages of practice to enter Tibet the main transmissions of Vajrabhairava were those of the two translators Ra Lotsawa and Mal Lotsawa. Although practiced early on in Tibet by the Sakya and Kagyu Traditions, it was Tsongkapa, founder of the Gelug Tradition, who instituted Vajrabhairava as the principal Gelugpa meditation practice.

Terminology

In Sanskrit "Vajrabhairava" stands for 'Adamantine Terrifier'. Regardless which manifestation of Vajrabhairava you are looking at it he is always depicted as fear-inducing, scary, and intimidating. Not only is he terrifying to look at but - according to the Vajrabhairava Tantra - he also has conquered all evil spirits, including the Lord of Death, Yama. That's why he is also called "Yamantaka", the Slayer of Death. Depending on which manifestation of Yamantaka the Tibetans call him either gSin-rje-gsed or in the buffalo-faced aspect of Vajrabhairava rdo-rje 'jigs-byed. It seems that the term "Yamantaka" (and "Yamari") is used in a more general way than "Vajrabhairava" which is restricted to the buffalo-headed yidam of the Gelug and Sakya schools. Sometimes the protector Kalarupa is called "Yamaraja" and comes as Outer, Inner, and Secret Yama- or Dharmaraja. In the Gelug school Yama- or Dharmaraja is part of the Vajrabhairava practice.

Multiple Forms of Vajrabhairava / Yamantaka

The Ngor Mandala collection of the Sakya tradition alone lists eight different forms/lineages of the blue/black buffalo-faced Vajrabhairava (which include the two Gelug ones) and four of red Rakta- or blue Krishna-Yamari (all without the buffalo head). All the former are yidams (=meditational deities) whereas Yamaraja (sometimes also called Dharamaraja) is a Dharma protector. Inner and Outer Yamaraja are blue/black, the Secret Yamaraja is red in color; Outer and Secret have buffalo heads, the Secret Yamaraja does not. There is also an emanation of Yamantaka (called Yamantaka orYamantakrt) in the Ten Wrathful Ones / Uncommon Protection Wheel in the Vajrabhairava and Guhyasamaja practices. Other emanations of Yamantaka appear as residents in the various mandalas (13-, 17-, 21-, and 49-Deity). They all embody the wrathful aspect of peaceful Manjushri; Yamnataka's consort, Vajravetali the wrathful nature of Saraswati.

Taken from www.yamantaka.org


« Last Edit: September 18, 2010, 04:25:15 AM by Big Uncle »

beggar

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #1 on: September 17, 2010, 05:17:46 PM »
Another interesting thing to note, that Yamantaka manifests as both Yidam and Dharma Protector, so he can be propitiated /invoked upon as either, depending on the presentation of the path that we follow.

This is definitely possible, as Yamantaka - just like Dorje Shugden - is an emanation of Manjushri, a fully enlightened Buddha, who of course can help us at any level, whether it is as the highest level of a Yidam or as our guardian and protector.

Big Uncle

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #2 on: September 19, 2010, 02:58:42 AM »
Origins of Vajrabhairava/Yamantaka Tantras
taken from www.yamantaka.org

All Buddhist textual sources refer to Lalitavajra as the revealer of the Vajrabhairava and Yamari tantras to an originally Indian tantric audience. Lalitavajra, a 10th-century scholar from the Nalanda monstary in Bihar whose main yidam was Manjushri, one day had a vision of the deity telling him to go to the land of Oddiyana and retrieve the tantras of Yamantaka. He went there and encountered the Wisdom-dakini (in the form of Vajra-vetali) and other dakinis who eventually revealed the various Yamantaka tantras to him. They refuse to let him take the texts with him; he was only allowed to memorize as much as he could in a short time and then write it down upon his return.

DharmaDefender

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #3 on: September 20, 2010, 08:04:08 AM »
Big Uncle, thank you for posting that. As much as it wasn't a very nice incident in history, I like to recall the story of the Mindroling Lamas trying to destroy Dorje Shugden in a fire, and him turning into Yamantaka and hopping off the ladle, probably with a nice "see ya later". In my head, the episode has been turned into an animation (not unlike the illustrated cartoon on this site) but it helps me to understand how frustrating must it have been for them.

Beggar - if Yamantaka is Manjushri and can be taken as a yidam and protective deity, it follows that the same can be done for Dorje Shugden who is also Manjushri.

Big Uncle

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #4 on: September 20, 2010, 05:55:10 PM »
The Lotsawa that brought the Yamantaka Tantras to Tibet.

Ra Lotsawa Dorje Drak (rwa lo tsA ba rdo rje grags) was born in 1016, in Nyenam, in a place called Nangyul (snye nam / gnya' nang snang yul), on one of the most important Nepali-Tibetan trade routes. His father was Raton Konchok Dorje (rwa ston dkon mchog rdo rje) and his mother was Dorje Peldzom (rdo rje dpal 'dzom). His father was a lineage holder of the Nyingma tradition Yangdak Heruka and Vajrakila, and he passed these on to his son. According to tradition, soon after birth the goddess Remati took him into her robe and traveled across Tibet for two months.

At the age of fourteen Ralo made his first trip to Kathmandu, arriving in Patan during a period of some political social instability, but great cultural fluorescence. Despite the considerable details of his sojourn there given in the (probably) thirteenth-century hagiography, recent scholarship has shown that little of the information given can be trusted, from the name of the monastery in which he resided to the circumstances of his ordination, where he was given the name Dorje Drak.

Ralo is said to have trained under a master named Bharo, a title given to newly influential members of the merchant class. The Blue Annals gives the teachers name as Bharo Chakdum (bha ro phyag rdum). Bharo was a specialist in the Vajravarahi and Vajrabhairava ritual systems, the transmission of which Ralo received during this first visit. According to the hagiography, during this first trip he already displayed his penchant for magical combat, engaging with a Shaivite teacher whose doctrine he insulted, driving the Shaivite to suicide. In addition he trained with a Mahakaruna, a master in Naropa's lineage of disciples. From him he received a number of tantric initiations, including the Chakrasamvara and the Namasamgiti.

Returning to Tibet, Ralo quickly became enmeshed in clan feuds over property and marriage arrangements, and he used his new magical abilities to do battle with his enemies. Many of his enemies were translators and lamas propagating in competing tantric systems, and Ralo infamously engaged them in combat. Khon Skyakya Lodro ('khon shakya blo gros), a member of the Khon family that would later initiate the Sakya tradition and a holder of the same Yangdak Heruka and Vajrakila lineages, saw in Ralo a serious rival to his influence and survival as a sought-after teacher. He accused Ralo of propagating a non-Buddhist teaching, one that would lead all Tibetans to Hell. According to the hagiography Ralo slew Shakya Lodro with the killing rite of Vajrabhairava, and witnesses saw Vajrabharava in the sky carrying the 58-deity mandala of Yandak Heruka as a sign of the Vajrabhairava's superiority. Shakya Lodro's disciples and feudal subjects then became disciples of Ralo.

Later a similar contest arose between him and Langlap Jangchub Dorje (lang lab byang chub rdo rje), another important Vajrakila master. Ralo had gone to pay his respects to the venerable teacher, but Langlap, like Shakya Lodro, dismissed Ralo as a purveyor of non-Buddhist magic. In the ensuing contest, however, Ralo was defeated, his disciples slain by Langlap's superior magic. According to the hagiography Ralo then experienced a vision of Tara, who sent him to Nepal for further instructions from Bharo and other Nepali masters. Upon his return to Tibet he once again engaged Langlap, this time emerging victorious and slaying the Nyingma lama.

It was during the second trip south than Ralo is said to have gone to India and ordained at Nalanda.

Ralo claimed to have murdered thirteen lamas. Among them were translator Gyu Monlam Drakpa (rgyus smon lam grags pa), the translator of the Chakrasamvara Samvarodaya Tantra, which he had studied in India with Pandita Shenpen (paN Di ta gzhan phan), Go Lotsawa Kukpa Letse ('gos lo tsA ba khug pa lhas brtses), the translator of the Guhyasamaja, and Marpa's son Dharma Dode (dar ma mdo sde).

In addition to challenging rivals to competing tantric systems, Ralo spent his wealth renovating temples in southern Tsang and Lhato, including Samye, Tibet's first monastery, which had been damaged by fire in 986. He also sponsored translations, the copying and recitations of scripture, and the installation of statues.

Ralo is known to have attended the famous religious council of 1076, convened by the Purang King Tside (rtse lde), for translators working on new texts and new versions of scripture from India. There Ralo met Nyen Lotsawa Darma Drag (gnyan lo tsA ba dar ma grags), who accompanied Ralo to India. The two later fell out, and slayed each other in magical combat.


Sources
Davidson, Ronald. 2005. Tibetan Renaissance. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 129-141.
Dudjom Rinpoche. 2002. The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism. Gyurme Dorje and Matthew Kapstein, trans. Boston: Wisdom, pp. 713-714.
Grags pa 'byung gnas. 1992. Gangs can mkhas grub rim byon ming mdzod. Lanzhou: Kan su'u mi rigs dpe skrun khang, p. 1645-1647.
Roerich, George, trans. 1996. The Blue Annals. 2nd ed. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidas, pp. 374-380.
Ye shes seng ge. 1974. Rwa lo dang thar pa'i rgyal mtshan gyi rnam thar. New Delhi: N. G. Demo.

Alexander Gardner
December 2009

lightning

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #5 on: October 15, 2010, 04:50:55 AM »
Another interesting thing to note, that Yamantaka manifests as both Yidam and Dharma Protector, so he can be propitiated /invoked upon as either, depending on the presentation of the path that we follow.

This is definitely possible, as Yamantaka - just like Dorje Shugden - is an emanation of Manjushri, a fully enlightened Buddha, who of course can help us at any level, whether it is as the highest level of a Yidam or as our guardian and protector.
For your information, under Gelug tradition and LalitaVajra tradition, Yamantaka is not a protector as under Yamantaka Sadhana, it does have washing feet offering in the 8 offerings (water to mouth, washing feet water, perfume, flower, incense, lamp, perfume ,food offering and music), whereas protectors do not have washing feet offering as they do not need to rest and have duty or samaya to protect Dharma, Thus all protectors have only 7 offerings (water to mouth, flower, incense, lamp, perfume, food offering and music). Those Yamantaka practitioners are able to detect the "password" that I am saying. 

Similarly, Vajrayogini is a Yidam and She is not a protector, as there is washing feet offering too. If anyone claim that Yamantaka or Vajrayogini is a protector, I guess that they are not familiar with the generation stage of the Highest Yoga Tantra Yidam.
« Last Edit: October 15, 2010, 06:28:11 AM by lightning »

triesa

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #6 on: October 15, 2010, 04:26:12 PM »

For your information, under Gelug tradition and LalitaVajra tradition, Yamantaka is not a protector as under Yamantaka Sadhana, it does have washing feet offering in the 8 offerings (water to mouth, washing feet water, perfume, flower, incense, lamp, perfume ,food offering and music), whereas protectors do not have washing feet offering as they do not need to rest and have duty or samaya to protect Dharma, Thus all protectors have only 7 offerings (water to mouth, flower, incense, lamp, perfume, food offering and music). Those Yamantaka practitioners are able to detect the "password" that I am saying. 

Similarly, Vajrayogini is a Yidam and She is not a protector, as there is washing feet offering too. If anyone claim that Yamantaka or Vajrayogini is a protector, I guess that they are not familiar with the generation stage of the Highest Yoga Tantra Yidam.

[/quote]

This is interesting to know. Thanks Lightning for explaining.

lightning

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #7 on: October 16, 2010, 01:29:57 AM »
Sorry the correct 8 offerings for Yamantaka is as per following:
water to mouth, washing feet water, perfume, flower, incense, lamp, food offering and music.

psylotripitaka

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #8 on: October 19, 2015, 01:50:36 AM »
Another interesting thing to note, that Yamantaka manifests as both Yidam and Dharma Protector, so he can be propitiated /invoked upon as either, depending on the presentation of the path that we follow.

This is definitely possible, as Yamantaka - just like Dorje Shugden - is an emanation of Manjushri, a fully enlightened Buddha, who of course can help us at any level, whether it is as the highest level of a Yidam or as our guardian and protector.
For your information, under Gelug tradition and LalitaVajra tradition, Yamantaka is not a protector as under Yamantaka Sadhana, it does have washing feet offering in the 8 offerings (water to mouth, washing feet water, perfume, flower, incense, lamp, perfume ,food offering and music), whereas protectors do not have washing feet offering as they do not need to rest and have duty or samaya to protect Dharma, Thus all protectors have only 7 offerings (water to mouth, flower, incense, lamp, perfume, food offering and music). Those Yamantaka practitioners are able to detect the "password" that I am saying. 

Similarly, Vajrayogini is a Yidam and She is not a protector, as there is washing feet offering too. If anyone claim that Yamantaka or Vajrayogini is a protector, I guess that they are not familiar with the generation stage of the Highest Yoga Tantra Yidam.


Dear Lightning,

Just to clarify, your comment about Yamantaka is incorrect. Within the extensive Vajrabhairava sadhana of the Gelugpa lineage coming from Lalitavajta and Ra Lotsawa, there are actually 2 Yamantakas: one is the Principal Yidam of the Mandala, and the other is as a Protector who is one of the 10 wrathful deities of the Uncommon Command Wheel. This is confirmed by the sadhana and many extensive commentaries available to us.


psylotripitaka

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #9 on: October 19, 2015, 02:09:25 AM »
Dear Beggar and Dharmadefender,

Though your logic may seem sound regarding reliance on Dorje Shugden as a Yidam, I have yet to read or even hear of any generation or completion stage of Dorje Shugden as a personal Yidam. Though we refer to this Dharmapala as the "embodiment" of our Guru, Yidam, and Protector, the meaning is not that we rely upon him via self-generation as a Yidam, but that he is the same nature of our Yidam. Similarly, our Guru is the source and embodiment of our Yidam, but we do not self-generate ourself in the aspect of our Guru. There are only a couple exceptions to this: generating as Buddha Shakyamuni during refuge practice, as Lama Tsongkhapa during King of the Dharma sadhana, or as Lama Losang Tubwang Dorjechang during the initial refuge practice beginning Lama Chopa. Yet even in those practices, we are not generating in the aspect of our human Guru.

If you have ever heard of or read a qualified comment or commentary on a generation stage of Dorje Shugden as a Yidam, I'm sure many people here would be intrigued to read these. Otherwise, it's probably better not to make such conclusive remarks that might mislead people to imagining themselves to be Dorje Shugden.

psylotripitaka

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #10 on: October 19, 2015, 02:12:43 AM »
Here is a new extensive biography of Ra Lotsawa. A very inspiring and instructional read!

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0142422614/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1445220623&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=ra+lotsawa

christine V

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #11 on: October 19, 2015, 04:35:59 PM »
Thanks for sharing this article on Yamantaka. Indeed Yamantaka is a very powerful practice. If i not mistaken, the practice can even "repair" on people karma whom have involve in five heinous crime.

Manjushri have many emanation to suit the generation. Yamantaka in earlier stage was known to be protector and then Yidam.
Dorje Shugden is the emanation of Manjushri, thus, for Dorje Shugden to be propitiate as Yidam, I think is it possible.

Do refer more on Yidam and protector nature which state on the link of the article below: http://www.dorjeshugden.com/all-articles/features/dharma-demystified-dorje-shugden-as-a-yidam/
Dharma Demystified: Dorje Shugden As A Yidam


psylotripitaka

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #12 on: October 19, 2015, 05:39:46 PM »
Christine V

Please see my response here:

http://www.dorjeshugden.com/forum/index.php?topic=5520.0

psylotripitaka

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Re: Vajrabhairava/ Yamantaka
« Reply #13 on: December 06, 2015, 05:20:26 AM »
...he who is by nature inseparable from Manjushri and Yamantaka, in the aspect of the Protector of the doctrine of Je Tsongkhapa, the great king Dorje Shugden