Luminous Mind: The Way of the Buddha
By Kalu and Dalai Lama
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About this ebook
As the Dalai Lama notes in his foreword, Luminous Mind covers "the full range of Buddhist practice from the basic analysis of the nature of the mind up to its ultimate refinement in the teachings of Mahamudra." This anthology of Kalu Rinpoche's writings and oral teachings resonates with his wisdom and compassion.
Comparing Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche with Milarepa, the greatest mediation master Tibet has ever known, His Holiness the Dalai Lama extols the author of Luminous Mind as a "beacon of inspiration" for spiritual practitioners of all traditions. Noting that "there have been few like him before or since," His Holiness urges us to delve into this remarkable anthology of the late Kalu Rinpoche's essential instructions so that we may encounter "the full range of Buddhist practice from the basic analysis of the nature of the mind up to its ultimate refinement in the teachings of Mahamudra." Drawn from both his lucid writings and his eloquent oral presentations, this unprecedented book lays bare the full grandeur of Kalu Rinpoche's legacy. At the same time, the gentle words and playful stories of this master of meditation are filled with a depth of clarity and warmth that could only arise from a profound realization of both wisdom and compassion.
Kalu
Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche (1904-89) was widely acclaimed as one of the greatest living examplars of the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of meditative contemplation. A leader of the Shangpa Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism, Kalu Rinpoche traveled extensively throughout Tibet, Bhutan, India, and the West, instructing countless disciples in the esoteric traditions of Dzogchen and Mahamudra.
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Luminous Mind - Kalu
Luminous Mind
WISDOM PUBLICATIONS
199 Elm Street
Somerville, Massachusetts 02144
Original French version:
La Voie du Boudhha: selon la tradition tibétaine
© Éditions du Seuil 1993
© Wisdom Publications 1997
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photography, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system or technologies now known or later developed, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Karma-ran-byun-khyab-phrin-las, Khenpo Kalu.
[Voie du Bouddha. French]
Luminous mind : the way of the Buddha / Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche ; compiled by Denis Tondrup ; translated from the French by Maria Montenegro ; foreword by His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-86171-118-1 (alk. paper)
1. Spiritual life–Buddhism.2. Buddhism–China–Tibet–Doctrines.
I. Tondrup, Denis II. Title.
294.3’4–dc20
ISBN 0-86171-118-1
11 10 09 08 07
9 8 7 6 5
Cover Art: Eleven-Faced, Thousand-Armed Avalokiteshvara; 15th c.; Western Tibet;
gouache on cotton; Robert Hatfield Ellsworth Private Collection.
Cover Photo: Courtesy of John Bigelow Taylor
All photographs of Kalu Rinpoche courtesy of Sanje Elliott
Designed by: L·S·JAWLiť
Wisdom Publications’ books are printed on acid-free paper and meet the guidelines
for the permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for
Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Printed in the United States of America
This book was produced with environmental mindfulness. We have elected to print this title on 50% PCW recycled paper. As a result, we have saved the following resources: 23 trees, 16 million BTUs of energy, 2.060 lbs. of greenhouse gases, 8,549 gallons of water, and 1,098 lbs. of solid waste. For more information, please visit our web site, www.wisdompubs.org.
Contents
Foreword by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
Biographical Note
The Quick Ripening of the Desired Fruit
Preface
Editor’s Note
Acknowledgments
GENERAL INTRODUCTION:
THE UNITY OF THE DIFFERENT TRADITIONS
1 The Spirit of All Traditions
Understanding Our Actual Nature
2 The Basic Unity of All Traditions
Realization of Mind as the Origin of All Traditions
The Complementarity of Different Traditions
3 Buddhadharma
The Inner Science
The Transmission of Speech and Mind
PART ONE: MIND AND ITS TRANSFORMATIONS
Calling the Lama from Afar
SECTION ONE:
MIND, REALITY, AND ILLUSION
1 What Is Mind?
The Fundamental Paradox
In Search of Mind
2 One Mind, Two States
Enlightenment and Illusion
3 The Nature of Mind
Openness
Clarity
Sensitivity
A Brief Meditation
4 Mind’s Veils
The Veil of Ignorance
The Veil of the Basic Propensity
The Veil of the Passions
The Veil of Karma
Dharma: A Practice of Unveiling
5 The Game of Illusion
Karma
Samsara
Karma and Freedom
6 The Six Realms
The Hell Realm
The Hungry Ghost Realm
The Animal Realm
The Human Realm
The Jealous God Realm
The Divine Realm
7 Two Truths
The Two Truths
Karma, Interdependence, and Emptiness
SECTION TWO:
THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF MIND: LIVES, DEATHS, REBIRTHS
1 Mind after Death
One Life or Many Lives?
Death and the Continuity of Mind
2 Birth and Death: Continuity of Illusion
Who Dies? Who Is Born?
The Five Aggregates of Individuality
3 From Life to Life: Transitions and the Bardo
Bardo
The Four Great Bardos
4 The Bardo of the Moment of Death
Outer Dissolution
Inner Dissolution
5 The Bardo of Emptiness
Lights and Deities
6 The Bardo of Becoming
The Body and the Mental World
The Moment of Rebirth
7 The Bardo of Birth to Death
Gestation
During Life
8 The Eight Consciousnesses and the Five Principal Elements
Alteration of the Elements in the Mind and Bardos
9 The Twelve Links of Dependent Origination
10 Practices at the Moment of Death
Liberating Practices in the Different Bardos
Wishes to Be Reborn in a Pure Land
11 Human Life and Its Problems
The Three Kinds of Suffering
The Main Kinds of Human Suffering
12 Human Life: Using It Well
13 On the Urgency of Practice
PART TWO: THE PATH OF LIBERATION
Beseeching the Lama to Shower Blessings
SECTION ONE:
A GENERAL OVERVIEW: THE DIFFERENT APPROACHES OF DHARMA
1 The Three Turnings of the Teaching
The Turnings and the Yānas
The Characteristics of Each Vehicle
2 The Three Vehicles: Complementarity and Unity
Three Methods
Complementarity and Progression
SECTION TWO:
THE HĪNAYĀNA: PATH OF DISCIPLINE
1 The Path of Discipline
The Discipline of Vows and Meditation
2 Refuge and the Three Jewels
Faith
Buddha
Dharma
Sangha
Taking Refuge
3 Karma and Outer Discipline
Negative Karma of Body, Speech, and Mind
Positive Karma of Body, Speech, and Mind
4 The Components and Results of Actions
Qualitative and Quantitative Differences
The Components and Results
5 The Karma of Meditation
SECTION THREE:
THE MAHĀYĀNA: PATH OF OPENING AND COMPASSION
Introduction: From Hīnayāna to Mahāyāna
1 Bodhicitta and the Bodhisattva Vow
The Different Aspects of Bodhicitta
The Bodhisattva Vow
2 Compassion
Three Levels of Compassion
Tonglen
Universal Love
The Eight Aspirations of a Great Being
3 Emptiness, Heart of Compassion
From Compassion to Emptiness
Emptiness: Twofold Selflessness
From Emptiness to Compassion
4 The Two Accumulations
The Accumulation of Merit
The Accumulation of Wisdom
5 The Six Perfections
Generosity
Discipline
Patience
Effort
Meditation
Transcendent Wisdom
6 Śamatha-Vipaśyanā
Meditation
Analytical and Contemplative Meditation
Śamatha, Vipaśyanā, and Mahāmudrā
The Practice of Śamatha
Insight Practice
The Path of Śamatha
The Practice of Vipaśyanā
7 The Stages of Realization
The Five Paths
8 Enlightenment and the Three Bodies of the Buddha
The Buddhas’ Enlightenment
The Qualities of a Buddha’s Body, Speech, and Mind
The Three Bodies of the Buddha
SECTION FOUR:
THE VAJRAYĀNA: PATH OF TRANSMUTATION
1 The Path of Transmutation
Uniqueness of Vajrayāna
The Secret Teaching
2 The Guide and Spiritual Direction
The Lama: Spiritual Father-Mother
Levels of Relationship with the Guide
3 Transmission and Blessing
Continuity of the Lineage
The Role of the Root Lama
4 The Three Roots
Lama
Yidam
Dharmapāla
Outer, Inner, and Absolute Refuges
5 Progression in Vajrayāna
Slow Path, Instant Path
Stages of Progress
6 The Common Preliminary Practices
The Precious Human Rebirth
Impermanence and Death
Faults of Samsara
Karmic Causality
7 The Ngöndro
Refuge and Prostrations
Vajrasattva Purification
Offering the Maṇḍala
Guru Yoga
8 Deity Yoga
Relative Deity, Ultimate Deity
The Two Stages of Deity Yoga
9 The Subsequent Practices
The Five Golden Teachings
The Tree of the Five Golden Teachings
SECTION FIVE:
MAHĀMUDRĀ AND DZOGCHEN: THE IMMEDIATE PATH
1 Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen
Mahāmudrā
Path of Mahāmudrā
2 Transmission and Qualification
The Golden Nugget
Three Kinds of Receptivity
3 Ngotro: Introducing Mind
To See Mind
A Personal Relationship
4 The Practice of Mahāmudrā
Preliminaries before a Session
The Mind of Immediacy
The Three Key Points
Mind’s Three Bodies
Integration and Transmutation of Thoughts and Emotions
5 Experience and Realization
Recognizing, Cultivating, Stabilizing
The Four Yogas
Conclusion
SECTION SIX:
DHARMA PRACTICE TODAY
1 Living Dharma in Daily Life
Right Motivation
Detachment
The Six Perfections in Daily Life
A Day of Practice
2 The Study and Practice of Dharma
How to Listen to Dharma
Practice in Daily Life
In a Dharma Center
On Retreat
The Three-Year Retreat
Tibetan Language Study
Monastic Discipline
Beyond Attachment
Patriarchs of the Lineage: Different Styles of Practice
EPILOGUE: THE GREAT SHIP OF LIBERATION
Notes
List of Stories and Anecdotes
List of Illustrations
Glossary of Terms
Glossary of Proper Names
Index
Foreword
by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
Thinking of the forefathers of the Kagyu tradition, we remember Marpa Lotsawa for the hardships he underwent in obtaining Buddhist teachings from India and his scholarship in translating them into Tibetan. We remember Gampopa for consolidating the tradition and launching the monastic order. But the great yogi Milarepa is renowned and admired above all for his sincere dedication to spiritual practice and his saintly way of life. He remains a vital example to us all, yet there have been few like him before or since.
In our own time, Kalu Rinpoche had a similar simplicity in his determination to practice. Distinguished for the dozen years of his youth spent in meditative retreat, he devoted the rest of his life to guiding others and preserving the variety of Buddhist traditions. Following the tragedy which befell Tibet in the 1950s and the flight of many Tibetans to exile in India and elsewhere, he was a beacon of inspiration, not only for the Kagyu order, but for all traditions of Tibetan Buddhism then struggling to preserve their spiritual heritage.
In his later years, energy undiminished, he also accepted a number of requests to travel abroad and teach in Western countries. Consequently, he attracted many disciples and established Dharma centers—especially retreat centers where he supervised a number of three-year retreats.
This book, Luminous Mind, contains an anthology of instructions that Kalu Rinpoche gave from his own experience, covering the full range of Buddhist practice from the basic analysis of the nature of the mind up to its ultimate refinement in the teachings of Mahāmudrā. As the Buddhist saying goes, Rely less on the person than on what he teaches.
This book is an apt memorial to Kalu Rinpoche, who now is no longer among us. If readers follow the additional dictum, Rely less on the words of the teaching than on the meaning they express,
and actually put them into effect, his great-hearted purpose will have been fulfilled.
Biographical Note
Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche (1904–1989) was born in Kham province in eastern Tibet. His birth was accompanied by extraordinary signs which revealed a predisposition to become an exceptional being. As a child, he displayed an unusually altruistic and intellectual nature.
His father, an accomplished yogi and well-known doctor, was a direct disciple of the three great master initiators¹ of the nonsectarian movement—Rime in Tibetan—a spiritual current that flourished in nineteenth-century Tibet. Rime advocated the transcendence of intellectual discussion by returning to the source of all teachings through inner experience cultivated in meditative practice. Among these three great sages, Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Thaye (1813–1899) was unquestionably the principal architect of the vast spiritual revival that the Rime movement inspired throughout the entire Tibetan tradition. Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche was eventually recognized as one of his main spiritual emanations, or tulkus, and became one of Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Thaye’s main spiritual heirs. This is what Kalu Rinpoche’s life—his ecumenical and universal approach—came to fully exemplify.
At thirteen years of age, Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche was ordained a monk at Pelpung monastery, one of eastern Tibet’s main Kagyu monasteries, seat of the Taï Situpa. At a very tender age he pursued his studies and earned the title of Doctor of Traditional Sciences.²
At sixteen, he undertook a three-year lama retreat and received from Lama Norbu Töndrup—a perfectly realized being who became Kalu Rinpoche’s main spiritual master, or root lama—the different transmissions of the old and new schools, particularly the Five Golden Teachings of the Shangpa lineage, of which he became the principal holder. After this retreat, while beginning to use his talents in the service of his fellow Tibetans, he continued to study and practice at the feet of many realized lamas of the different Tibetan lineages and traditions.
At twenty-five, he chose to devote himself completely to practice and became a wandering yogi, practicing in Himalayan retreats as a solitary hermit for twelve years.
Later, when he was thirty-seven years of age, the fame of his realization brought him the name Meditation Master of Three-Year Retreats,
or drubpön in Tibetan, of Pelpung monastery. He exerted himself in this capacity for many years, during which he gathered a large number of disciples.
At age forty, Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche made various trips and pilgrimages to central Tibet, which provided the opportunity to transmit the Five Golden Teachings to many well-known lamas of central Tibet, as well as to revive the teachings and monasteries of the Jonang and Shangpa traditions in other areas. Later on, he pursued these activities in Kham in eastern Tibet.
In 1955, when he was fifty-one, political problems due to the Chinese invasion of Kham forced him to return to central Tibet, and in 1957 he left for Bhutan, invited to serve as abbot of a large monastery and chaplain for the royal family.
In 1966, Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche settled at Sonada, India, where he founded the monastery and retreat centers that became his principal residence and the seat of the Shangpa-Kagyu tradition. It was at this time, about 1968, that the first Westerners—his future disciples—encountered him.
As patriarch of the Shangpa tradition, he became one of the most revered spiritual masters in all Tibetan traditions; he was particularly acclaimed for his realization and for his teaching of the spiritual yogas and ultimate practices of mahāmudrā and dzogchen. In his later years, he was invited by His Holiness the Karmapa, head of the Kagyu lineage, to teach the tulku princes, the holders of his lineage. Prompted by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, he likewise taught a number of geshes of his monastic and tantric colleges.
At the encouragement of the Karmapa and the Dalai Lama, he left for the West. In 1971, he accepted an invitation from Western disciples and made his first trip to Europe and North America. In response to the great interest with which his teachings were met, he founded the first Dharma center in Canada and formed a meditation group in Paris.
At the time of his second trip in 1974, the same interest prompted the creation of numerous Dharma centers in Europe and America, responsibility for which he entrusted to his first group of lama-disciples.
During a third tour in 1976–1977, he founded the West’s first three-year retreat center in France. At the same time, he brought fifteen lamas to teach in the different centers he had founded.
While on tour in 1980 and 1982–1983, and in the years that followed, Kalu Rinpoche founded other Dharma and retreat centers in southeast Asia and other countries. His activity had become worldwide.
Between 1971 and 1989, he made a total of about ten long trips, many of which were world tours; he founded a hundred or so Dharma centers and some twenty three-year retreat centers, which he entrusted to the care of more than thirty lama-disciples who had themselves completed a three-year retreat.
Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche’s kindness and simplicity, along with the depth of his teachings and his capacity to lead disciples toward realization, touched innumerable beings all over the world. He was a perfect master, holder of the ultimate realization within pure monastic discipline, altruist and tantrika, and tireless teacher of Dharma in general and of the Karma-Kagyu and Shangpa lineages in particular. His radiant blessing and widespread activities brought about the deep and broad expansion of Buddhism to the Western world.
On May 10, 1989, Kalu Rinpoche seated himself in the meditation posture. Though his breathing stopped and he was considered physically dead, he remained in samādhi for three days, his mind dissolving into the absolute clear light, the ultimate liberation. Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche left behind an immense spiritual heritage carried on by his principal disciples today.
Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche’s reincarnation was recognized by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Taï Situpa in a young boy born on September 17, 1990.
The Quick Ripening of the Desired Fruit
A prayer composed by His Holiness the Dalai Lama
for the swift return of Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche.
All-powerful Vajradhara, Tilopa, Nāropa,
And Marpa, who was actually Hevajra,
You, the four great pillars and all the others,
Glorious masters of the lineages of practice,
Bear witness to my longing.
You, who from the bhūmi of awakened activity (karma)
Have spontaneously accomplished (rangjung) in this world
The profound deeds of a buddha (trinley),
Propagated for beings of all levels (kunkhyab),
Lord of all those who have good fortune (sangpo),
To you I direct my prayer:
You, Lord, who for ages have perfected bodhicitta,
Please return once again to be the Dharma guide,
Leading beings and giving them
The sap of your profound secret instructions
According to their infinite aspirations and capacities.
You, who could everywhere establish the victory banner of the practice of the teachings’ ultimate meaning
And who have attained the mind of the great ancestors of the tradition of practice;
You, holder of the Shangpa tradition and in particular the lineage of the Seven Jewels;
You, the glory of the qualities of the teaching,
Please return without delay.
By the inconceivable power of the truth of those who give refuge;
Lamas, deities, and Dharma protectors;
By the power of the truth of suchness and dependent arising,
As well as by the strength of our devotion and aspiration,
May this wish quickly bear fruit!
The glory of the teaching and of beings, the holder of the Shangpa-Kagyu tradition, Kalu Rinpoche Karma Rangjung Trinley Kunkhyab Sangpo, being gone for a short period to the realm of peace, his nephew, the excellent Gyaltsen, with an offering of white silk, has expressed to me the need to compose a prayer for the prompt return to the world of his supreme emanation.
In response to his request, Śākyamuni’s monk, Tenzin Gyatso (His Holiness the Dalai Lama), with aspiration and fervor, has composed this prayer for the sake of virtue, the second of August 1989, or, according to the Tibetan calendar, the first day of the sixth month of the earth-snake year.
Preface
Several years ago, I proposed to Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche the idea of gathering into one anthology the many documents I had accumulated since becoming his disciple. He gave this project his complete approval and blessing, and work on it began, but the sheer volume of the many other activities he entrusted to me in the Dharma delayed its accomplishment for a long time.
Today, I am happy to see the completion of about ten years of compilation and to be able to offer the completed book, Luminous Mind: The Way of the Buddha. Although Rinpoche is no longer among us in body, I hope this book will at least help to expand his spiritual presence. It contains teachings I heard directly from his lips over the years. Having translated and meditated on them and put them into practice under his guidance, I have found the development of this book to be an intense experience that revived the memory of his words and kindness.
With the responsibility of transmitting these teachings, I tried to translate them as faithfully as possible, in the hopes that they would be clearly understood and might convey the inspiration they first awakened.
May this work, which is dedicated to Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche with devotion and gratitude, illuminate the nature of mind and the lives of innumerable beings.
Lama Denis Töndrup
Institut Karma-Ling
Editor’s Note
In spite of the growing interest in Buddhism in the West, relatively few of Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche’s teachings have been published to date. Moreover, Dharma students have long wished for an integrated work that contains the essentials.
Rather than create a simple compilation of teachings given in certain specific circumstances, our objective was to produce a work that would serve two purposes simultaneously: a general introduction to Dharma which would be accessible to a wide, nonspecialized audience, and an instructional manual that would serve as the basis for study and reference for Dharma students in general and for students of Kalu Rinpoche in particular.
We proceeded, using a very important collection of archived teachings, compiled over some twenty years, between 1968 and 1989, and derived from various sources: miscellaneous personal notes taken down for the most part at Sonada, Rinpoche’s monastery in India, prior to 1974; a book written by Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche entitled Fundamentals of Spiritual Practice; and transcriptions of public teachings given in the West.
The process of selecting and creating a detailed inventory of these documents yielded a plan corresponding to one that Rinpoche himself used in his public teachings: first, a statement on the nature of mind and its transformations, followed by a glimpse into the various aspects of the path to enlightenment. These outlines became the two parts of this book. Under these headings, we selected the essential themes that form the different chapters.
The disparity of the sources—oral and written, public teachings and private conversations, guided meditations, anecdotes, stories, and so forth—posed problems which added to the inherent difficulties of oral translation from the Tibetan. We tried to maintain a sense of coherence as well as to standardize the translation of Dharma terminology.
In the second part of the book, there are various traditional stories chosen from those Rinpoche frequently told; these are sprinkled throughout the text and illustrate the dynamic aspect of the oral teachings. Some of them may be a bit disconcerting, but as Rinpoche explained at the end of one such story, the inconceivable is real, just as it is true that the inconceivable nature of phenomena escapes our understanding!
The inscriptions at the beginning of the chapters are citations from the living tradition Rinpoche often referred to, and some of the illustrations were inspired by his own original drawings. Since several chapters complement one another, we have inserted cross-references. We have also added a detailed table of contents, a thematic index, and two glossaries (terms and proper names). To find information on a given subject, the reader can first consult the table of contents, which presents a list of the main subjects, and then follow up with cross-references provided in the endnotes, which refer to other chapters on the same topic. To research particular terms or subjects that do not appear in the table of contents, the reader can refer to the index (page 299). The pages listed in bold in these entries refer to the main passage where a definition or general explanation of the concept may be found. The glossary of terms lists only English-Tibetan-Sanskrit equivalents, since the reader can use the index to locate a term’s definition in the text. The main proper names are indexed and explained in the glossary of proper names (page 285); they also appear in the index. Terms that appear only in the prayers and chants are not included in the index.
In addition to commonly used Sanskrit or Tibetan terms, we have kept some technical terms in their original language. This prevents the creation of strange neologisms, the use of descriptive paraphrasing, or the use of common words as technical terms, which often encourages hasty assimilations of ideas that are mistakenly interpreted. This solution has the advantage of enriching the English terminology while encouraging the discovery and correct understanding of new concepts. Except in special cases, we have preferred the use of the Sanskrit over Tibetan; this has the advantage of being more legible in transliteration as well as understood outside the circle of Tibetologists. The Sanskrit is spelled according to the way it is transliterated, with diacritical marks, and for the sake of pronunciation Tibetan words are given in English phonetic transliteration. We have chosen these options because they seemed to reconcile precision with readability.
Acknowledgments
We would like to extend our gratitude first and foremost, of course, to Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche, whose wisdom and compassion are the source of these teachings and of this work, and also to His Holiness the Dalai Lama, who has honored it with a foreword.
Lama Denis Töndrup inspired and directed each stage of this anthology’s preparation. He is one of Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche’s senior Western students and was his personal translator. We owe him a great deal of thanks for translations and source materials.
Many others, over the years, have participated in the development of this collective effort. We will cite here those who contributed to the preliminary sources by their translations and notes: Sylvie Carteron, Dominique Gallot, A. Sonam Lhakyi, L. Chokyi, and A. Zangmo. Rose-Marie Mengual in particular, along with Daniel Gerrer, and Marc and Monique Frion participated in the first edition of Fundamentals of Spiritual Practice. François Chenique, A. Dechen, N. Drolma, Marcelle Eysseric-Vacher, Jean Lessieux, N. Mingyour, Jean-Pierre Schnetzler, L. Sonam, and others already mentioned above reread the manuscript at different stages and made suggestions.
We would also like to acknowledge all those who painstakingly transcribed the recordings, among them Dominique Bouchez Mongardé, whose writing often appears in the early manuscripts, as well as Christine Drai and Madeleine Santi, who had the weighty responsibility of the archives at Institut Karma-Ling and who made various typewritten manuscripts with N. Chophel and Catherine Ratinier.
Illustrations, derived from traditional original works, were prepared by Cecile Boullet, N. Tenma, N. Phuntsok, and J. M. Soule; J. C. de Verneuil also contributed.
The book owes a tremendous gratitude to Maliana Perrey-Perrier for preparing a list of its sources and to Elisabeth Dayot and Christine Brunet for putting together the first part. The second part of the book was completed by Françoise Bonardel, who also made a vital contribution in the revision of the entire manuscript, offering numerous suggestions that greatly added to the quality of the finished product.
Finally, it is thanks to Claire Sicard’s patience that a great many corrections were made and the definitive version produced, complete with glossaries and index.
His Holiness’s foreword was arranged through the help of Alain Blisson, and the final version was attentively reread by Michel Drai, Georgette Rudigoz, and Anne and Michel Berry.
We would like to thank them all, as well as all those who, from near and far, anonymously made generous contributions to the realization of the original French edition, not to mention the Institut Karma-Ling and all its responsible benefactors, without whose support the original book could not have been completed.
We have decided that proceeds from this book will be given as an offering to Kyabje Kalu Rinpoche’s monastery in Sonada, India. As to the spiritual benefits of our modest contributions, we would like to dedicate them to the welfare of all sentient beings.
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
The Unity of the Different Traditions
1
The Spirit of All Traditions
Every major religion of the world—
Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, Jainism,
Judaism, Sikhism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism—
has similar ideals of love, the same goal of benefiting humanity
through spiritual practice, and the same effect
of making their followers into better human beings.
—His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Ocean of Wisdom
Westerners have achieved an astonishingly high level of technological sophistication. Mass-produced machines allow us to travel through the air at great speed, explore the depths of the ocean, and witness instantly whatever is happening in any corner of the world and even beyond our own planet.
Yet our own mind, which is so close to us, remains impenetrable: we do not understand what our own mind really is. This is a paradox because, even though we have extremely refined telescopes to see light-years away and microscopes powerful enough to distinguish the atomic details of matter, the mind, which is the most basic and intimate aspect of our being, remains the most unrecognized, mysterious, and unknown.
Scientific developments and control over our material conditions have brought us a relatively high level of comfort and physical well-being. This is certainly wonderful, but even so, progress in science and technology does not prevent the mind from remaining in ignorance about itself and therefore conditioned and afflicted by suffering, frustration, and anguish. To alleviate these problems, it is crucial to discover and understand the actual nature of our own mind.
UNDERSTANDING OUR ACTUAL NATURE
The main point here is to understand our real nature, or what we actually are. Many of you know many things; you are educated. Try to use your capacities to study the mind.
You mustn’t think this kind of investigation applies only to a small elite. Each of us has a mind whose nature is the same as everyone else’s. We are all alike; we all have the feeling of existing with an ego which is subjected to all kinds of hardships and suffering, anxieties and fears. All of this results from ignorance about our basic nature. If we can reach the understanding of what we actually are, there is no better remedy for eliminating all suffering. This is the heart of all spiritual practices.
All spiritual traditions, whether Christian, Hindu, Judaic, Islamic, or Buddhist, teach that the understanding of what we are at the deepest level is the main point. This understanding of the nature of mind sheds light from within and illuminates the teachings of all traditions. In every tradition, whoever gains firsthand, experiential understanding of mind and retains that kind of awareness is led to a worldview that would not have been possible prior to this direct experience. Knowledge of the nature of mind is the key that yields an understanding of all teachings; it sheds light on what we are, the nature of all our experiences, and reveals the deepest form of love and compassion.
The actual realization of the nature of mind opens onto a complete understanding of Dharma and all the traditions. To have a good theoretical knowledge of Dharma or any other spiritual tradition and to effectively realize the ultimate nature of mind, however, are profoundly different. Even a realized being who is not involved in a particular spiritual tradition would have, while living in the ordinary world, an extremely beneficial influence.
I would like to emphasize that this is true regardless of the spiritual tradition. Every tradition is illuminated by this awareness. But it is especially the case in the Buddha’s teachings, in which this knowledge constitutes the heart and goal of all his instruction.
2
The Basic Unity of All Traditions
All spiritual traditions, whether Buddhist
or non-Buddhist, differ in their forms in order
to adapt