The Lost Tradition of
Tibetan Zen
Dan Zigmond WINTER 2015
tricycle
The
dharma arrived in Tibet as a wedding present. Legend has it that
toward the end of the 7th century, the royal families of China and
Nepal offered brides to Songsten Gampo, the first of Tibet’s mighty
kings to unify the country (and frighten its neighbors). These two
princesses each brought with them an unusual dowry: a statue of the
Buddha. Soon the great Jokhang temple in Lhasa was built to house
these precious gifts, which are still proudly displayed in the
Tibetan capital. And these two remarkable women are remembered as
the matriarchs of Tibetan Buddhism, together planting the first
seeds of Buddha’s teachings in the Land of Snows.
About a hundred years later, another king,
Trisong Detsen, decided it was time to take this new faith even
more seriously. He built Tibet’s first Buddhist monastery at the
base of one of their holiest mountains and called it Samye, the
Inconceivable.
A spirit of ecumenicalism pervaded Samye from
the start. At its center stood a four-story temple designed to
reflect the diverse architectural styles of all Tibet’s neighbors.
Smaller chapels and stupas populated the grounds around it,
creating a huge mandala within the monastery’s circular outer
walls. Together these comprised a model of the entire universe,
with every continent and ocean represented by the 108 separate
structures. Buddhists from a variety of traditions were invited to
teach there, and monks from both India and China soon took up
residence.
It didn’t last. Perhaps inevitably, conflicts
arose between the various Buddhist schools at Samye. As the noted
English Tibetologist Sam van Schaik explained in 2011 in his
masterful book Tibet: A History, the Indian tantric Buddhists
“insisted on the need to combine meditation with rational analysis
and the basic practices of ethical conduct,” while the Chinese Zen
Buddhists felt that enlightenment only required that one
“recognized the true nature of one’s own mind.”
In his newest book, Tibetan Zen: Discovering a
Lost Tradition, van Schaik now revisits this famous, formative
dispute in the history of Tibetan dharma. As he explains in his
introduction, Tibetan scriptures have long included an account of
how the Indian teachers brought “a graduated path in which tantric
and sutric teachings were carefully laid out as steps to
enlightenment,” while the Chinese masters taught “straightforward
concept-free meditation.” And then, sometime in the 790s, according
to traditional histories, doctrinal disagreements developed between
Indian and Chinese Buddhists at the Tibetan court, and the Tibetan
emperor called for the situation to be resolved in a formal debate.
When the debate resulted in a decisive win by the Indian side, the
Zen teachers were sent back to China.
This is what Tibetans call the Great Debate at
Samye, said to have been held at the temple of Jampa Ling at the
western edge of the monastery. From that point on, conventional
wisdom says, “the popularity of Zen declined in Tibet, and its
original texts were all but forgotten.” While Zen thrived in China,
Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and almost every other Mahayana country, in
Tibet it effectively disappeared, and the unique path of Tibetan
Buddhism evolved exclusively from the Indian tantric
lineages.
Yet van Schaik’s new book vividly demonstrates
that these one-sided accounts—including the earlier one in his own
book—are not the whole story. In fact, Zen likely thrived in Tibet
for several centuries, taught side by side with the tantric
approach we now think of as Tibetan Buddhism.
Van Schaik proves this by translating for the
first time several important Tibetan Zen texts found in caves
outside the Chinese city of Dunhuang. This treasure trove of
hundreds of Buddhist scriptures discovered in the early 20th
century includes Tibetan writings from both tantric and Zen
masters, alongside a seemingly haphazard collection of “notebooks,
shopping lists, writing exercises, letters, contracts, sketches,
and scurrilous off-the-shelf verses.”
In other words, the miraculous Dunhuang
collection is less a curated library than a theological snapshot, a
strange time capsule of everyday writings from the 8th to the 10th
century. The presence of Zen and tantric texts there together
proves that both had continued to be studied by Tibetans long after
the usual dating of the Samye showdown. Also discovered in those
sealed caves was an account of the Great Debate from the Chinese
perspective. According to the Zen side, the debate was carried out
by correspondence over several years, rather than in person at
Jampa Ling—and the Chinese master won.
Many of van Schaik’s new translations will
resonate with modern students of Zen. They can be simple and
precise one moment, then descend quickly into some familiar
paradoxes:
Cross your hands and feet. Straighten your back.
Don’t move your body. Don’t say anything. Turn away without
engaging the delusory six gates of the mind with their objects, and
then look at your own mind. When you do, there is no substantiality
to mind at all. So do not think of anything. Without engaging in
the various emotional states, do not conceptualize anything. Once
you have completely purified the mental sphere in this way, do not
abide anywhere. Once you have sat for a long time, the mind will
stabilize.
But in some cases the visiting Zen masters from
China seem to be searching for a common ground, attempting to
reconcile Zen’s emphasis on a single universal method and an
instantaneous awakening with the Indians’ more varied teachings. Or
at the very least, they seem eager to explain their approach
without seeming to insult their dharma brothers:
Since it is important to train in the other
stages, things like the eight meditations are not to be
accomplished all at once; they are to be entered in succession.
Purifying all the various concepts one by one is like trying to
count all the grains of sand on earth. Yet if one does not know
what the essence of the mind is like, there will be no benefit
either from negating them instantaneously with a single
antidote.
This is van Schaik’s most important contribution
to the popular understanding of the Great Debate—the recognition
that the two sides likely had more in common than we might imagine
today. Buddhist scholars have already questioned the conventional
Tibetan account for at least 50 years, noting, for example, that
several Chinese texts were ultimately incorporated into the Tibetan
Kangyur and Tengyur canons and that both gradual and sudden
approaches to awakening are found in many of the most ancient Pali
sutras. But Tibetan Zen is the first attempt to make the evidence
accessible to nonspecialists.
The tensions in Tibet between Zen and tantric
teachings echo debates as old as Buddhism itself. The question of
whether enlightenment is a sudden or gradual experience is explored
perhaps most famously within the Zen tradition, in the so-called
Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch, the only Zen text typically
given the elevated title of “sutra” despite being credited to a
master who lived a thousand years after the Buddha’s death. Copies
of this revered Buddhist manuscript were also found in the Dunhuang
caves in China, and it too describes a contest between competing
visions of practice and awakening. But in this case, the undisputed
winner is the Zen patriarch Huineng and his “sudden doctrine” of
inherent enlightenment.
Yet the central issue seems far from settled
even today. Modern Zen and Tibetan teachings appear to offer
differing approaches to the fundamental paradox of the
buddhadharma: If we are all fundamentally enlightened, why don’t we
feel enlightened? Why do we need to practice at all? And why is
practice so hard?
As van Schaik thoughtfully explains, the two
apparent alternatives of gradual and sudden enlightenment are in
many respects a false choice, or at least not a choice that any
surviving school of Buddhism has made cleanly. Zen Buddhism may
have aligned itself with the “sudden” side, yet it too has
developed a sprawling panoply of ritual, practice, and literature
over many centuries. Tibetan Buddhism may identify with the
“gradual” approach, but it too talks of moments of unexpected
realization, chik charwa in Tibetan, which the American scholar
David Seyfort Ruegg translates as the “innate spontaneity of
Awakening.” And this muddying of the waters was even more apparent
in the formative years of both traditions, from the 8th through
10th centuries, when the Dunhuang documents were written. Back
then, Zen in China was borrowing from tantric traditions at the
same time that it was helping inform such traditions in
Tibet.
About 80 miles southeast of Lhasa, along a newly
paved road that runs beside the sandy banks of the broad Yarlung
River, the ruins of Jampa Ling still stand. Nestled within the
rebuilt fortifications of Samye monastery, it seems more a
construction site than a temple today. Its red stone walls are now
caked with cinereous dust, and a makeshift wheelbarrow filled with
rocks and debris stands guard at what was once the front door.
Inside, the colorful frescoes of the present and future buddhas are
draped in bedsheets for protection, and the intricate designs
painstakingly painted on the tall wooden beams have all but faded
with age. Dozens of Tibetan monks live in the newly renovated
structures nearby, but few venture in. Pilgrims, put off by the
rubble and mess, generally keep away.
Tibetans still recount with pride the victory of
tantric Buddhism over Zen in the Great Debate at this modest spot,
and van Schaik’s meticulous scholarship is unlikely to change this.
Given the complex and uneasy relationship between Tibet and China
over the centuries, it is not hard to imagine why they would want
to emphasize their unique connection to India and proclaim the
superiority of their own branch of the dharma. Like other native
practitioners, most Tibetans are born into their faith. They don’t
arrive at the tantric way after a dispassionate evaluation of all
the Buddha’s paths. They accept it rather as their birthright, and
as self-evidently true.
Here in the West, newcomers to the dharma are
more likely to compare and contrast. Zen and Tibetan Buddhism often
seem to stand at opposite cliffs of a great chasm, their myriad
adherents staring incomprehensibly at each other like feuding
families across a tumultuous sea. On one side, the austere
simplicity of zazen, practiced in sober silence by somber monks. On
the other, the colorful cacophony of the tantric universe, awash in
a vast array of ritual and relic, overseen by a flamboyant pantheon
of gods and demons. It can feel at times that we have little common
ground beyond a few occasional Buddhist festivals—and perhaps a
near-universal love for His Holiness the Dalai Lama, our one true
pan-Buddhist celebrity.
But as van Schaik reminds us through his
fascinating and important work, these two great Mahayana traditions
were not always quite so far apart. We are more like estranged
cousins, or even long-lost siblings. We shared a monastery once at
Samye, in faraway Tibet, waking to the same brilliant dawn and
walking the same dusty paths. We drank from the same well and were
nourished by harvests of the same soil. We borrowed each other’s
scriptures and tried for a few years to bridge the gaps between our
teachings. With a little luck and understanding, we might share the
same paths again.