The Udamwara Lotus Flower:
Protecting the Life of Helpless Beings
Geshe Thubten Soepa |
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| Geshe
Thubten Soepa was born in Zanskar, India in 1955.
At the age of fourteen he entered the monastery of Dromo
Geshe Rinpoche in Kalimpong. At the age of 19 he was
sent to Sera Jey monastery in South India. He took his
novice vows before the Serkong Tsenshap Rinpoche and
his full vows before Kyabje Ling Dorjechang, the 97th
head of the Geluk tradition (Tib: Ganden Tri Rinpoche).
He also received many teachings and initiations from
them, as well as from Ganden Zong Rinpoche.
After three years as resident teacher at Dzongkha Chode
monastery, Lama Zopa Rinpoche of the FPMT invited Geshe
Soepa to be the resident Geshe of Aryatara
Institut in Munich, Germany, where he has taught
for nine years.
Geshe Soepa composed the first of these two texts on
animal rights, The Udamwara Lotus Flower in
1995, and the second, Compassion is the Root of
the Teachings in 2005. They were published together
in a book in 2007 by Sera Jey Monastery in India. |
Protecting the Life of Helpless Beings
Statements from Sutra Relating to Eating Meat
Section One: Udamwara:
Statements from the Sutra
Section Two: Question
and Answer
Section Three: Compassion
is the Root of the Teachings
The above booklet about eating meat was read
through, cover to cover, by His Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama,
Tenzin Gyatso. He told me: "It is well written. It would
be nice if more equally useful texts were written for people
to read". I cannot express how pleased I was at these
words. I would like to complement my composition by a few
questions and answers concerning the topic.
Question: Don't you need some meat for the sacrificial
tsog ceremony? What do you do about that?
Answer: In Dza Patrul Rimpoche's lamrim text it
says: To that end it is appropriate to use meat from an animal
that has not been slaughtered for eating. However, if you
introduce meat that does not conform to this requirement into
the mandala of offerings, all the deities and wisdom beings
will vanish, that is what Gampopa said.
In the autobiography of the siddha Kunleg you will find the
statement: "Now, when you make offerings, you should
bear in mind the following points concerning the recipient
of the offerings, the offerings themselves and your motivation:
Each of the Three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma and Sangha) is fit
as a recipient for the offering. The object to be offered
should not be associated with theft, violent appropriation
or killing and the motivation should consist in the aspiration
to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all beings. Offerings
made in a different manner with masses of meat and alcohol
are found among the earlier non-Buddhist religions, but not
among Buddhists."
The Dalai Lama's statements regarding this point have already
been presented above.
Question: What is the right approach to the so-called
meat and blood tormas in protector rituals?
Answer: That is evident from Patrul Rimpoche's lamrim
text. It describes the protest of Guru Rimpoche, Shantarakshita
and all the pundits contemporary with the Dharma King Trisong
Detsen, at the Tibetan practice of sacrificing meat and blood
according to the Bonpo custom: 'If you continue this custom
we shall go back to India', they said. They stopped partaking
of food and refused to give any more teachings.
It follows that these so-called meat and blood tormas should
not be made up of real meat and blood. If you really make
offerings of meat and blood, no deities and wisdom beings
will come. You will only attract ghosts. As they feast on
such offerings, they may become friendly and bring you short
term benefits. If you then fail to continue giving them meat
and blood, they will harm you. However, if you go on making
offerings of meat and blood, you will be reborn among such
ghosts or you will find yourself among wolves and birds of
prey. That is what Patrul Rimpoche said about this topic.
These so-called meat and blood tormas symbolize the ignorance,
harmful intent, selfishness and self interest in one's own
mind and that of others. These characteristics are meant to
be visualised as tormas and offered in this form—not
as external substances made up of real meat. The meaning of
the secret mantra is not to be taken literally. It only opens
up through an understanding of the six alternatives and four
modes of explaining vajra expressions.
Question: How about offerings of the five kinds
of meat and nectar mentioned in the texts of highest yoga
tantra?
Answer: A yogi practising highest yoga tantra needs
some kind of realisation substance for giving up dualistic
concepts of pure and impure. As Patrul Rimpoche makes clear
in his lamrim, this also requires meat from an animal that
has died a natural death and rather than having been slaughtered.
As a matter of fact this is not meant for people who carelessly
indulge their craving for meat, but exclusively for yogis
who can transform the five kinds of meat such as dog meat
and human flesh as well as the five substances like feces
and urine into nectar through the power of concentration.
It is not meant for people like you and me.
Question: Are you suggesting that
someone who has received empowerments for Highest Yoga Tantra
should not offer meat and alcohol as part of a tsog offering
practice?
Answer: Many lamas do not really care and offer
meat. However, some more considerate ones only offer meat
of animals that have died from natural causes. During a teaching
he gave in Bodhgaya, His Holiness stated that it is not nice
if thousands of monks come together for tsog practice offering
huge amounts of meat. Instead they should offer tea, water,
fruit juice, coca cola and the like. Furthermore, Lama Atisha,
during his stay in Tibet, used to offer molasses or honey
instead of meat and milk or yoghurt instead of alcohol. Apart
from that I found a quotation to the effect that Go Lotsawa
was extremely pleased that many other masters i.e. Drigung
Jigten Gonpo, Drigung Chenga Rimpoche, Taglung Tangpa, Pagmo
Tugpa, Togme Sangpo
used to substitute molasses or honey for meat and milk or
molasses for alcohol.
Question: Is it true that offering meat to a monk
results in merit being accumulated and that there is a benefit
for the dead animal?
Answer: Gelug Shamar Pandita, tutor of the 13th
Dalai Lama, said in his lamrim text: "some people of
blind faith think it is beneficial to slaughter sheep and
goats for the soup of monks or the food of gurus, however,
in fact it is a grave harmful act due to confusion and wrong
views and it is important to be clear about this." He
goes on to say in his lamrim: "To buddhas each and every
living being is as valuable as if it were their own child
and to all beings, life is the most important thing. You,
who dare inflict unbearable pain on such beings out of greed
for a mouthful of meat, you think of yourselves as followers
of the Buddha and call yourselves lamas and monks! Shame on
you! You should judge yourselves harshly."
Question: Monks and nuns have to accept meat that
benefactors give them, don't they? After all it says that
you should eat whatever you are given when going on your alms
round.
Answer: In Panchen Deleg Nyima's commentary on the
Vinaya it says: If a monk is offered meat dishes by a donor
on his alms-round, he should ask whether or not the meat has
been obtained through killing. And in the commentary on the
Vinaya called Rays of the Sun: "You have to
ask whether or not the offering has been obtained through
an action against the rules." Numerous Vinaya scriptures
point out that you should make sure the gift that is being
offered does not contradict the rules of monastic discipline.
They also mention 20 types of meat and other foods that must
not be eaten at all, even though the creature may have died
a natural death, for instance human flesh, the meat of monkeys
or that of vultures.
Therefore, if in doubt about the origin of meat, you should
definitely ask and decline anything inappropriate. Even if
the gift is appropriate, it is important to ask whether eating
or drinking it may have any drawbacks or deleterious effects
on one's health, for instance, if you are diabetic, whether
it contains any sugar etc.
Apart from that, offering food containing meat constitutes
impure giving: In the Sutra to Rishi Gyepa Buddha
Shakyamuni taught about how the 32 types of impure giving
should be abandoned and how to perform correct giving. Impure
giving is divided into four categories: impure with regard
to the motivation, the object given, the recipient of the
gift and the manner in which it is given. In this sutra, giving
meat originating from killed animals, alcohol offered to the
careless, as well as weapons, poison and the like are enumerated
as cases of impure giving with regard to the object.
Question: In Buddhism eating meat is allowed as
the Buddha himself ate meat: The cause of his death was eating
poisoned pork that an evil-doer had given him.
Answer: This story circulates, however, looking
at statements contained in the authentic scriptures it does
not seem very plausible. As far as I know there is no reliable
source for it. On the other hand indications that the Buddha
rejected meat can clearly be substantiated with the above
passages from the Lankavatara Sutra, the sutra Vinaya
Foundations of Medicine and the Angulimala Sutra.
The reason why the Buddha could not easily be harmed by poison
is that he did not manifest himself in an ordinary aspect.
He appeared in the aspect of a buddha, both in essence and
in his individual characteristics, which is why poison could
not have harmed him. In the Kangyur we find a story where
the householder Pelbe, belonging to a different religious
group, offered poisoned meat to the Buddha, thinking he was
not clairvoyant as he ate it. However, as the poison did not
have any effect on the Buddha he deeply regretted his deed
and confessed it. Afterwards he became a monk and attained
arhatship.
There are also accounts in the sutras about how Devadatta
set a wild, maddened elephant on the Buddha in order to kill
him, but did not manage to do so, about how he shot at him
with a sling-shot, but could not do him any harm. If the Buddha
had indeed been as easy to kill as a normal being, dying from
swallowing poison, I think he would have hardly been able
to manifest one of his 12 deeds, such as the taming of Mara.
Apart from that the Hinayana presentation
of the Vaibhashika abhidharma also deals with the 18 extraordinary
qualities—exclusive features of a buddha's body, speech
and mind—and the 43 additional ones shared with arhats
and pratyekabuddhas which include the 10 powers as qualities
of the mind. In this context, the term "power" implies
that whoever possesses it cannot be harmed by anything and
that, on the contrary, such a person will overcome everything.
The Buddha could not be harmed by either mental afflictions
or the four Maras and the like.
As for his ability to overcome adversity, Vasubandhu makes
clear in the seventh chapter of his Treasury of Knowledge
that the Buddha's powers over the physical realm arise from
his mental powers and correspond to them. Consequently, poison
cannot do any harm to the body of a buddha. Furthermore, in
the Mahayana texts we find presentations regarding the attainment
of the vajra body
from the eighth bodhisattva ground and descriptions of the
vajra body itself in the mantra system. The story about harm
through poison does not take all these qualities of a buddha
into account. In the Buddhist scriptures of sutra and tantra,
eating meat of animals that have been killed especially is
rejected. If you have eaten such meat, you should try to purify
the harmful effect.
Question: Is food that contains
meat suitable for offerings or not?
Answer: If it is the meat of slaughtered animals
it is not. If you offer meat that has been obtained through
killing, you will be hard put to give a reason for not calling
this a "red sacrifice".
As we learn from both sutras
and commentaries, buddhas, bodhisattvas and all those whose
nature is compassion are filled with sorrow rather than joy
at such sacrifices. Therefore, instead of reciting the offering
prayer before eating food containing slaughtered meat, it
would be better to recite the Akshobya mantra or other mantras
such as om mani padme hum and blow on the meat, as this might
bring about a little bit of benefit.
And try to find methods for redressing the harm caused by
eating meat. The best means of purifying it is to save the
life of animals. We should strive to employ any available
means to benefit beings, we should pray for that intention
and do anything else we possibly can.
Two points should be considered over and over again: 1) the
difficulty of redressing the negative action of taking the
life and meat of others and 2) the fact that this is not a
law that has been decreed by anyone, but a natural process
of cause and effect. It really is of great benefit to realise
this and reach a point where, moved by compassion, one gives
up eating meat, liberates beings and saves their lives.
May the life of His Holiness, Tenzin Gyatso, be long.
May this cause peace to spread on earth, the harmonious practice
of all religions to be strengthened, the difficulties between
Tibet and China to be resolved peacefully and the Buddhist
teachings to bring universal benefit. May love and compassion
grow. May all masters and holy beings of Hinayana, Mahayana
and Vajrayana have a long life and see the fruition of all
their endeavours. In particular, may Lama Zopa Rimpoche, spiritual
director of the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana
Tradition, live long and achieve all his goals, such as the
successful completion of the Maitreya Project. May all sentient
beings be freed from the suffering of being killed.
Continue to Next
Section
Notes
41. 'bri gung 'jig rten mgon po, 'bri gung spyan
snga rin po che, stag lung thang pa, phag mo gru pa and thogs
med bzang po.
42. The term "vajra body"
is used both in the general Mahayana and in the Vajrayana,
but with different meaning: In the Vajrayana it signifies
the inseparability of body, speech and mind, a meaning that
is not implied by the general Mahayana (sutra system).
43. Blood sacrifice which
involves the killing of animals—not accepted in Buddhism.
44. I.e. the Lankavatara
and Angulimala sutras.
45. Liberating beings is of the greatest benefit
because it results in the purification of negativities due
to eating meat and the accumulation of karma for a long life
in good health.
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