|
Dakini: The Goddess Who Takes Form as a Woman
The
Tibetan Buddhist Dakini is a compelling icon of untamed female freedom.
Like a trickster or the Fool in a Tarot deck, the dakini releases blockages
in the energy field and melts frozen patterns, so that the door of the
mind is suddenly ajar and something new can enter. Dakinis are often connected
to the phenomena of synchronicity and inexplicable coincidences of fate.
Tsultrim Allione wrote in her book, Women of Wisdom, "The
dakini appears at crucial moments. These encounters often have a quality
of sharp, incisive challenge to the fixed conceptions of the practitioner."
(Allione, 114)
Miranda Shaws exuberant descriptions of dakinis emphasize "flights
of spiritual insight, ecstasy, and freedom from worldliness granted by
the realization of emptiness." (Shaw,
38) Shaw learned Sanskrit so that she could read texts herself,
translating dakinis as "women who revel in the freedom
of emptiness." (19) An initiated
tantric practitioner, Shaw explains: "A wild, playful, unpredictable
quality erupts when experience is released from its predetermined patterns."
(95)
Tibetan historical and tantric texts refer to
the famous "Land of the Dakinis," a matriarchal place west of
Tibet, where spiritual leaders were women.
Tibetan historical and tantric texts refer to the famous "Land of
the Dakinis," a matriarchal place west of Tibet, where spiritual
leaders were women. The place was called Odiyana or Uddiyana, which translates
as vehicle of flying. Imagine an entire country of women who
fly gifted shaman women and magical priestesses
and the powerful yogis and magicians who companion them. It is from that
legendary realm that the famous yogi, Padmasambhava, originally flew into
Tibet with a "retinue" of Dakinis (his spiritual team) to "subdue
the demons" and anchor Tantric (Vajrayana) Buddhism there for good.
There he met and collaborated with a local princess and incarnate dakini,
Yeshe Tsogyal.
Although historically dated to 8th-century Tibet, dakinis actually descend
from far more ancient female supernatural beings from the time of our
earliest human cultural origins. Tibetan scholar John Vincent Bellezza
calls our attention to certain "extinct" Tibetan sisterhoods
that provide "evidence suggesting the existence of a matriarchal
culture and the supremacy of female deities in prehistory." (Bellezza,
308)
Since earliest times, supernatural, shamanistic females in the ecstasies
of soul flight have been depicted as able to "move through space"
like birds. In
soul flight, the invisible spirit body detaches from the physical in order
to ascend to upper worlds or descend to the underworld for healing or
soul-retrieval. This flight is a well-understood feature of traditional
shamanism around the world. Women's ancient, shamanistic work to facilitate
the profound rites of birth and death quite naturally would have led to
out-of-body experiences, soul flight, and the dissolution of boundaries
between self and other that is a primary Buddhist goal.
The word dakini is Sanskrit; its inferred meaning has been
borrowed from (and equated with) the Tibetan word khandro ("sky
goer," "she who moves through space"), and the two words
are often used interchangeably. But unlike dakini, with its
derived male form ("daka"), the Tibetan word khandro
has no such twin and stands alone as a female being who moves through
emptiness or flies through space a kind of Tibetan Fairy Goddess
or, as June Campbell named her in her book by the same name, A Traveller
in Space. (Campbell) Khandro,
Campbell says, "is quite a unique word, with no male equivalent,
and would seem to have arisen not out of the Sanskrit background of Tantra
but apparently from the shamanistic roots of Tibet itself." (145)
And Miranda Shaw mentions several Indian scholars who "suggest that
Tantra itself (both Hindu and Buddhist) originated among the priestesses
and shamanesses of matrilinear tribal and rural societies." (Shaw,
6)
But unlike dakini, with its derived
male form ("daka"), the Tibetan word khandro has no such
twin and stands alone as a female being who moves through emptiness
or flies through space....
This is easy to substantiate, as winged women and "bird goddess"
figures abound in many places around the world and through eons of time,
going all the way back to the Paleolithic period (around 30,000 BCE) where
they are part of the earliest human art. And we know from linguistics
that the earliest shamans were women, described in an ancient root word
meaning "female shaman" that relates to Earth Goddess, Mother
Earth, and the two Bear constellations. All the various words for "male
shaman" came into being much later, after the tribes had migrated
from their place of origin. An early 20th-century Russian ethnographer
surveying shamanism across Siberia wrote: "The woman is by nature
a shaman" and "women receive the gift of shamanizing more often
than men." (Czaplicka, 244)
Hybrid bird-women, hugely pregnant, dance with the animals on a ceiling
in the Paleolithic cavern at Pech Merle in the south of France. From the
later Neolithic period, more than a hundred thousand female figurines
have been unearthed from Old Europe alone, a large percentage of them
depicted with wings or as pregnant birds; significantly, many are also
covered with an extinct script. (Marler,
2008) Egyptian
vulture goddesses with raised arms pre-date three thousand years of dynastic
empire in northern Africa. Intricate and colorful bird-women in flight
are finely embroidered on remarkable textiles found in Peru and Bolivia,
wrapped around mummies from extinct Andean cultures known to have practiced
shamanism. At least one such textile has been shown to be a complex solar-lunar
calendar. To me all these figures are khandro or female traveler(s)
in space.
In my 2003 book, The Double Goddess: Women Sharing Power, I documented
a long, possibly unbroken lineage of shaman priestesses that emerged in
Crete and the Mediterranean area during the late Bronze Age, but were
in fact the confluence of earlier streams from Africa, Europe and Asia.
For at least 4,000 years, the Silk Road connected East and West across
Central Asia. This exceptional channel fostered the migration of peoples
and the cross-cultural exchange of ideas, symbols, and artifacts that
ultimately must underlie any serious investigation of the dakini in Tibet,
Nepal, and India. Iron Age Burials found near the Black Sea and all the
way east to the Altai Mountains have unearthed images of high-status shaman
priestesses, sometimes covered in gold, often wearing elaborate headdresses,
with the mirrors and portable altars that defined their spiritual leadership.
Mummies from the late Bronze Age have been unearthed from oasis sites
in eastern China's Tarim Basin (once northern Tibet); they have Caucasoid
features, including blonde hair and blue eyes, perfectly preserved by
the combination of sand and salt from the desert floor.
Between 2000 and 500 BCE, at least three waves of Bronze and Iron Age
settlers migrated from beyond the Black Sea, some of them bringing the
knowledge and tools of weaving, along with a now extinct language (Tocharian)
whose closest relative is an ancient Anatolian language (Hittite), also
extinct. Buddhist texts hidden away in the Dunhuang caves a thousand years
ago were written in Tocharian. Textile expert Elizabeth Wayland Barber
presents evidence suggesting that the early migrants might have been related
to others who went west to Crete and Troy, carrying the same distinctive
weaving tools with them. (Barber)
Women (and one man) buried at Cherchen, tattooed like Greek Maenads, wore
red woolen garments like those worn by Tibetan monks and nuns today. One
set of priestesses found buried at Subeshi (6th century BCE) were wearing
tall pointy black hats; archaeologists dubbed them "the three witches."
(Mallory & Mair) Oasis towns
like Khotan, Kucha, and Dunhuang were sophisticated places where Buddhism
already flourished by the time Tibetans conquered them, assimilated their
knowledge, and absorbed their pacifism.
(Yeshe) Tsogyal unites the sacred and magical
"wild women" (Maenads) from Old Europe's Mediterranean region
with the yogini cults of India and dakinis of Tibet....
Yeshe Tsogyal was born in the northern city of Charchen (or Cherchen),
one of the oasis sites where Caucasoid burials from 1200 BCE were unearthed.
She is fondly remembered as the cofounder of Buddhism in Tibet, with her
consort Padmasambhava, and as a direct emanation of Vajrayogini. Although
they were separated by some two thousand years, I like to think that Yeshe
Tsogyal might be descended from those shaman priestesses who traveled
the Silk Road so long ago. I consider her to be the lineage holder from
the point at which East meets West, and ancient meets contemporary. Tsogyal
unites the sacred and magical "wild women" (Maenads) from Old
Europe's Mediterranean region with the yogini cults of India and dakinis
of Tibet; their folklore, images, and stories overlap in many interesting
ways, as I briefly described in The Double Goddess.
Details of Yeshe Tsogyal's supernatural birth and early childhood are
contained in her autobiography, a transmitted work discovered and revealed
as a treasure or "terma" a few hundred years ago in Tibet.
Tsogyal's primary occupation during her adult lifetime was the burying
or hiding of terma (artifacts and mind treasures) which would be
discovered in later times by designated reincarnated persons having the
task of such discoveries. A terma-finder, called "terton,"
is born to "pull out a treasure" and communicate it to a particular
constituency of people in a particular time and place.
Three English translations of the autobiography have been published in
the States over the past three decades, each containing the following
remarkable narrative, in which Tsogyal tells us that when she reached
the brink of death in her advanced meditation retreat and she called out
to "the Teacher": "Then I had a vision of a red woman,
naked, lacking even the covering of bone ornaments, who thrust her bhaga
against my mouth, and I drank deeply from the copious flow of blood. My
entire being was filled with health and well-being, I felt as strong as
a snow-lion, and I realized profound absorption to be inexpressible truth."
(Dowman, 71)
Dakinis are explicitly understood to take form
as human women, and although not all women are dakinis, any woman at any
time might be a dakini.
This is clearly a direct link to Vajrayogini, the red Queen of the Dakinis
who is frequently depicted drinking her own menstrual blood from a skullcup
held in her left hand. The essential female bodily substance, menstrual
blood, is shown here to be spiritual nourishment par excellence,
creating a striking metaphor for female-to-female direct transmission
in a lineage of wisdom, in this case from the deity, Vajrayogini, to a
dakini, Yeshe Tsogyal, in human form. Dakinis
are explicitly understood to take form as human women, and although not
all women are dakinis, any woman at any time might be a dakini. The simplest
way of understanding this is through the biological bloodline of menstruation,
a legacy bequeathed from all mothers of daughters in every culture throughout
time, all the way back to the beginnings of human evolution. Humans diverged
from the primate tree when we abandoned estrus and established our bleeding
and ovulation in synchronization with the yin-yang polarity of the Moon's
monthly cycles.
David Gordon White, an expert in Indian Tantra, tells us, "When
the template is the body of a naked maiden and the medium her sexual or
menstrual discharge, we are in the presence of the Tantra of the old Hindu
'clans' (the Kula, or Kaula) and their inner and East Asian Buddhist Tantric
homologues." (White 2000, 11)
Kaula practices (known in India as the "left hand" path) took
place in cremation grounds and involved "the communal consumption
of blood, flesh, wine, and sexual fluids." (White
1996, 137) White documents how the earlier centrality of the sexual
fluids was later "cleaned up, aestheticized, and internalized in
different ways," and transferred to the "bliss of sexual orgasm."
(White 1996, 4) In Tibetan Buddhist
tantric practice, certainly it has been interiorized into the potent visualization
techniques surrounding the tradition of Vajrayogini.
Regarding Yeshe Tsogyal's visionary experience of receiving and ingesting
Vajrayogini's blood, White grounds the story in this understandable tradition.
"The cosmic force that activates and energizes every facet of tantric
practice that originates from the womb of the Goddess and
passes through every link in the chain of transmission
is ultimately
nothing other than a stream (ogha) or flow (scrotas) of
sexual fluid." And to this day, he says, the tantrikas in Assam identify
their lineage nectar (kulamrta) with the goddess's
menstrual fluid or the commingled sexual fluids of Siva and the Goddess.
(White 1996, 138) White's descriptions
of yoginis in the early Indian tantric practices seem to resonate perfectly
with representations of dakinis in Tibetan practice. For example, he writes
that a "horde of wild goddesses
attracted by offerings of mingled
sexual fluids, would converge into the consciousness of the practitioner,
to transform him, through their limitless libido, into a god on earth."
(White 1996, 4)
Details and aspects of Vajrayogini rituals in Tibet are precisely matched
by plentiful artifacts and evidence of the Maenads in Greece, Italy, and
Turkey, which is the larger subject of my next book.
This article adapted from a longer
piece to appear in Goddesses in World Culture, edited by Patricia
Monaghan, to be published by Praeger in 2009.
Bibliography
- Allione, Tsultrim. Women of Wisdom.
Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 2000.
- Barber, Elizabeth Wayland. The Mummies
of Ürumchi. NY: W.W. Norton & Co., 1999.
- Bellezza, John Vincent. Divine Dyads:
Ancient Civilization in Tibet. Dharamsala, India: Library of Tibetan
Works & Archives, 1997.
- Campbell, June. Traveller in Space:
In Search of Female Identity in Tibetan Buddhism. NY: George Braziller,
1996.
- Czaplicka, M. A. Aboriginal Siberia:
A Study in Social Anthropology. Oxford, England: The Clarendon
Press, 1914.
- Dowman, Keith. Sky Dancer: The Secret
Life and Songs of the Lady Yeshe Tsogyel. London, England: Routledge
& Kegan Paul, 1984.
- Gundrum, Dale. "Fabric of Time" in Archaeology,
March-April 2000, pp. 46-51.
- Mallory, J.P. & Victor Mair. The Tarim
Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from
the West. London, England: Thames & Hudson, 2000.
- Marler, Joan. The Danube Script: Neo-Eneolithic
Writing in Southeastern Europe (Exhibition Catalogue). Institute
of Archaeomythology, 2008.
- Noble, Vicki. The Double Goddess: Women
Sharing Power. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 2003.
- Shaw, Miranda. Passionate Enlightenment:
Women in Tantric Buddhism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1994.
- White, David Gordon. The Alchemical
Body: Siddha Traditions in Medieval India. Chicago, IL: University
of Chicago Press, 1996.
- White, David Gordon, editor. Tantra
in Practice. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000.
Graphics Credits
- Erotic Dakini Kurukulle (Samye Monastery/Tibet),
photo © 2007 Vicki Noble. All rights reserved.
- winged female figure from the Valley
of Mexico (1200 - 900 BCE), drawing © 2003 Kimberley Eve,
from the author's 2003 book, The Double Goddess: Women Sharing
Power, Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 2003.
- head of a Europoid female mummy wearing
a tall conical black hat; unearthed at Subeshi cemetery in the Tarim
Basin (China), from around 500 BCE, drawing © 2003 Kimberley
Eve, from the author's 2003 book, The Double Goddess: Women Sharing
Power, Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 2003.
- Vajrayogini (Samye Monastery/Tibet),
photo © 2007 Vicki Noble. All rights reserved.
|