We
finally arrived in Dehra Dun after a particularly filthy series of bus
journeys. The worst was probably the
overnight leg to Chandigarh, where Samuel, Susie’s son, had his orthodontist
appointment. It’s not long and
uncomfortable journeys that especially bother me, I’ve decided. It’s the managing of heavy luggage during the
course of them.
We
caught the bus in Patlikuhl at about 22:00 and arrived in Chandigarh about an
hour and a half early, at around 7:00 the next morning. This is not the boon it sounds. Basically, it meant the driver sped along
bumpy, winding and dusty roads, jerking everyone in the government bus with
remarkable constancy so that even hardened bus-sleepers (which I am not) found
it pretty impossible to nod off. I had
been allocated the window seat, as I have a tendency to get a bit carsick on
such journeys. Unfortunately, the wedge
to open it stuck out at just the place my head fell any time I was near dozing
off, doing a splendid job of jabbing me back to alertness. I have arrived dirty
and dusty at quite a few destinations in my time, but the prize for filthiness
for both me and my luggage probably goes to this journey.
After
a hazy if pleasant morning waiting in the hospital restaurant and lounge,
Susie, Samuel and I made our way to Chandigarh’s bus station, via a detour to
buy headphones for Samuel’s return journey.
Samuel was deposited on his homeward bus while Susie and I climbed on
board one bound for Dehra Dun. We
arrived at our guesthouse near the Sakya Buddhist Centre in the early evening,
exhausted but grateful. Two thorough
scrubs in the shower (initially thwarted by a broken tap but soon remedied
by the hotel handyman) didn’t quite clean the dust and grime off me. This might have had something to do with the
state of the bathroom, which could have done with a decent scrub itself.
After
a trip to the Sakya Buddhist Centre, we were relieved to discover that the puja
didn’t begin the next morning at 5:00, as we had feared, but the positively
lie-in friendly time of 6:00.
“It’s
a very high Tantra,” Susie had said to me when trying to explain the Dorje
Purbha. That’s the Tibetan name. In Sanskrit it’s known as the Vajrakilaya.
Those are cymbals, under the cloths on the desks. |
The
purbha is a kind of dagger, metaphorical of course. I don’t remember all the details, but all
things come to a point, symbolic of the mind which is able (with enough
lifetimes of meditation) to pierce through illusion to perceive the true nature
of reality. There’s a lot of protection
ritual involved and banishment of anything that might stand in the seeker’s way
to following the path of Dharma and reaching enlightenment, or I guess in
terms of Tibetan Buddhism, Buddha-hood.
Presiding
over the whole thing is His Holiness the Sakya Trizen. I was taught all of this
during my course at Tushita (see the entry entitled Dharmic Dilettantes for more on that) in 2009 but some of the finer
details now escape me. After a bit of
instruction from Susie and some perusing of the internet, I am now once again
aware that there are four lineages of Tibetan Buddhism (the Nyingma, Kagyu,
Sakya and Gelug). The Dalai Lama is head
of the Gelug whereas the Sakya Trizen leads the Sakya (hence His Holiness). So although he is less famous than the Dalai
Lama, he’s in the same general sphere of spiritual attainment. Rather surprisingly, although all the monks
are celibate, the Sakya Trizen and a few of the senior lamas of the lineage are
householders with families, and the Sakya Trizen’s position is passed down
through the family. So through the puja,
he was flanked on his throne by his sons on theirs.
Susie counts the Sakya Trizen as one of her teachers, and various other senior lamas, also teachers of hers, were at the puja. Apparently it’s a rare occurrence for them all to gather in this way, and the atmosphere was all the more charged for it. “Such a blessing to have them all here,” Susie kept repeating.
I
guestimated about a hundred monks took part in the puja. Hardcore observers, those of us who sat cross-legged
(or in my case, mostly up on my blocks in virasana) through hours of it, not
counting the steady stream of people coming into the gompa for blessings
throughout the day, numbered perhaps ten or fifteen. Nearly all were Western, and most (yours
truly excepted) seemed to be pretty serious students of Tibetan Buddhism. “I haven’t been studying long”, said Michel,
the lawyer from Saint Tropez who now has the time and resources to follow his
guru around the world, “only ten years”.
As
we waited, the monks started to file in and take their seats in rows
perpendicular to the four thrones at the front of the gompa, backed by a wall
of gold buddhas. Soon after began a
great blowing of trumpets and conches, and trembling of drums. Those of us who
weren’t monks got to our feet and bowed towards the door with our hands pressed
together in a prayer position. In processed
His Holiness and three other lamas to prostrate themselves three times (as had
we all on entering the gompa; virtually everything I do seems to involve some
version of bowing or prostration, so that the etiquette of them all is now a
confused jumble in my mind and body) and take up the thrones at the front.
I
am always a bit uneasy in the presence of figureheads, not quite sure where to
put myself or how I view any institution.
A wave of something hit me when the Sakya Trizen came in, energetic and
strong, that I have felt occasionally in the presence of some people with a
strong spiritual practice or certain healers of various traditions. At such times, I often want to cry, feeling a
great pulling at my heart. It happens
sometimes in kirtan, and my instinctive reaction is to tamp it down. I have no desire to break down in front of a
room full of strangers (or even friends).
But it does make me think, after all these years, I must be carrying a
lot of grief around and maybe I should have a bit more therapy. Or perhaps allow myself to burst into tears
in front of rooms full of people.
Sunday’s
first hour and a half consisted entirely of horn blowing, cymbals, drums,
conches, all pretty intense pre-dawn.
Our seats (cushions) were right at the mouth of the three metre
trumpets, so soon my insides were vibrating as much as the drum skins.
This is what we sat in front of - loud! |
Then
the chanting began. Tibetan chanting has
a very different quality to the Sanskrit variety, differently beautiful. I itched for a script to follow, to know when
they were chanting in Tibetan, when in Sanskrit, if ever in Pali, to know what
they were chanting, why. But as the
books the monks were following were of the Tibetan kind, unbound, the pages
loosely wrapped in card and cloth (heaven help you if you drop one and scatter
hundreds of pages everywhere), written in Tibetan script, it wouldn’t have
helped me much even if I could get my hands on one.
Soon
after the instrumental beginning, breakfast was brought round, timed to fit an
appropriate part of the ritual, senior monks served first, then the more
junior, finally us riff-raff lay-people.
First was salty tea made with butter. I don’t know if it was the
traditional yak variety of butter or the home-grown Indian cow version, but it
was extremely rich. We were also given a
flatbread, also cooked in butter. The
taste of either is not unpleasant, but that quantity of fat is pretty hard to
swallow if you’re not used to it.
Nonetheless, my travelling policy is to eat what I’m given, providing
it’s of the vegetarian variety, so down it went.
A monk cleans up after breakfast, as the puja continues. |
A
little later came the chai, sweet in the Indian style, also made with butter
(Tibetan style).
Through
all the serving, the chanting continued, punctuated with drums and cymbals and
trumpets and conches. Hats were put on
and taken off. At times the monks got up
and moved around, at one point to go outside for a bit before filing back in,
with appropriate bows to His Holiness and the senior lamas and prostrations –
to the buddhas? To the practice? To the
Dharma? I’m never entirely sure which,
or even if it matters. I am humble, I am
humble, I am humble. As if I need
reminding of all the reasons I have cause to be.
Relaxing between 3-metre trumpet blows. |
At
noon we broke for lunch. Susie and I
joined the queue to present the Sakya Trizen with white cloths (which have a
name I can’t remember) which were then given back to us so that we could
deposit them in a pile by the hidden sand mandala after we’d passed around the
front of the gompa by the wall of gold buddhas.
We kneeled down in front of His Holiness and were bopped on the head in
blessing. Being slightly confused and
not fast enough for the monk policing the queue, I was shoved to send me on my
way. It reminded me of the policing of
the deity at the Attakal Pongala temple (it probably has a totally different
official name) in Kerala in 2010 before the festival of that name: no praying
in front of God! Move on! So I collected my red thread, duly chastened,
and wrapped it around my wrist. I’m not
likely to receive many blessed threads from a His Holiness, shoves or no
shoves, so on my wrist it will stay for a while.
the outside part |
At
two o’clock, the puja resumed and continued until six that evening. Considering how long I was sat there and how
long I’d been sat on buses previously (albeit a completely different variety of
sitting), the time passed remarkably quickly.
And
something was definitely going on in that puja.
Both Susie and I had surprise, short and unexpected menstrual
visitations that lunchtime. “It’s the
downward flowing winds,” said Susie. Of
course, we couldn’t check if this was a normal occurrence, as a roomful of
largely celibate monks wasn’t likely to know.
My shushumna nadi started vibrating with the first instruments, ida and
pingala joining the dance. I had visions
of them, a trembling caduceus through my seven principle chakras. I’m not quite sure what attending a day and a
half of that ten-day puja did to me, but it did something.
The
end of the day involved more food being handed out. “Be sure to keep some back to give the hungry
ghosts” said Susie. But the monks on duty only collected back from the other
monks, not from us riff-raff. I only
hope the monks’ offerings were enough to keep the hungry ghosts at bay. I haven’t noticed any following me, so perhaps
they were appeased.
The
next morning we were back at our seats before six.
While
the senior monks seemed to be the same (they sit in order of rank, nothing
non-hierarchical about Tibetan Buddhism), the junior ones nearer us had
changed. Presumably they’re on a rota,
perhaps yet too young to deal with ten hours of puja day in and day out. Behind the main raised cushions were some
lower ones, where sat a couple of very young monks. It’s hard to pinpoint age, as children here
tend to look younger than their equivalent in the West, but I would have given
them somewhere between seven and ten years old.
A
monk in charge of discipline (and reading occasional news bulletins at appropriate
intervals) strode up and down the aisles. At his approach, the teenage monk nearest me
who was consistently late with his drum beats (maybe he just had a poor sense
of rhythm but I suspect his head nodding forward in sleep had more to do with
it) suddenly perked up. His drum beats
still weren’t in time, and he still missed the skin half the time, but he
looked more alert.
Disciplinarian-monk
took the two young boys away with him. Maybe
it was lesson-time. Around breakfast
time, one of them returned, flatbread and butter in hand, to sit down behind
the monks nearest Susie and me. Unfortunately,
on the way there, his chunk of butter slipped off his warm bread, all over the stone floor of the gompa. Looking a little
sheepish, he salvaged what he could of the butter, took it on his bread to his
cushion and ate what was salvageable of his breakfast.
I
had visions of some elderly blessing-seeker or tea-bearing monk prat-falling on
the remains of the butter, so once I had
eaten my bread and drunk my tea, I got out the wet wipes that go everywhere
with me and mopped up the floor.
“That
was a good idea,” said Susie on my return to our cushion. “Perhaps we should give him one.” She nodded at the young monk. I hadn’t noticed, but he was in a sorry state,
half his breakfast uneaten on the side of his cushion, trying to follow the
puja with buttery hands on an increasingly buttery script.
“Psssst!”
hissed Susie, throwing a wipe his way. She
missed, but the monk in front of him caught it and passed it back to him. The young monk assiduously cleaned his fingers
and book (I wonder if those scripts are antiques), where I could see the butter
stains from my seat. He then settled
down to the real business in hand.
Note the wetwipe to the side of his book! |
He was
an extraordinarily alert young chap, asking his elders to point out where in his
book the puja had reached, carefully following the Tibetan script, lifting his
pages and chanting along enthusiastically. He had his hat ready when hat-time approached,
donning it with great pride, exactly on cue, not seeming to mind how large it sat
on his small head. His mudra-dancing was
very accurate, as far as I could tell. I
watched entranced as the monks’ hands danced through a gestural language at
various intervals in the ritual.
mudra-dancing |
I
wouldn’t be remotely surprised if the little monk turns into a great lama one
day.
But
the guru-in-the-making was still very young. An hour or so later, early risings, spilled
breakfasts and the excitement of hats and chants all got too much, and he fell
asleep.
adho mukha siddhasana |
The
boys blowing the conches were a little older than him, perhaps young teenagers.
During the standing part of Sunday’s
rituals, they lined up in front of the doors to the gompa. There was something
intensely poetic about them, bare brown feet, red velvet hats and young robed
bodies bending in clockwise circles as they sounded the great shells.
I
found it hard to tear myself away, but eventually I did, over an hour later
than I had planned. I said my goodbyes
to Susie, and as she headed back into the gompa, I returned to our room at the
guesthouse for the last time to pack and then find the bus for Rishikesh.
Through
a series of unexpected events, I ended up on the local bus (rather than
overpriced taxi) to the terminus for Rishikesh, where everyone was extremely
helpful, curious and polite, in the manner I have come to know of Indians on
buses with a lone foreigner and her overstuffed bags.
“I
belong to Rishikesh,” said the nice chap squeezed onto the back seat next to
me, after enquiring after my next destination. His English was definitely better than my
Hindi but conversation was limited. Nonetheless, I was charmed, as I often am,
by the turns of phrase of Indian English.
“I
belong to Rishikesh” said the friendly young guy at the fruit juice bar I grew
so fond of in Rishikesh.
I
wonder if I will ever belong to anywhere.
Perhaps
just the sea. Or running water.
So
on, once again, to step my feet into the fast-flowing waters of the
goddess-river Ganga, before both of us head out to sea.
From
Lucy, with love. x
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