Tantra

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Tantra (Sanskrit: "weave"), tantric yoga or tantrism is any of several esoteric traditions rooted in the religions of India. It exists in Hindu, Bönpo, Buddhist, and Jain forms. Tantra in its various forms has existed in India, China, Japan, Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Korea, Cambodia, Burma, Indonesia and Mongolia.[1] David Gordon White, while cautioning us about attempting a rigorous definition of what is a protean and highly variable practise, offers the following working definition:

"Tantra is that Asian body of beliefs and practices which, working from the principle that the universe we experience is nothing other than the concrete manifestation of the divine energy of the godhead that creates and maintains that universe, seeks to ritually appropriate and channel that energy, within the human microcosm, in creative and emancipatory ways."[2]

In the west, early European Orientalists originally reviled Tantra as a subversive, antisocial, licentious and immoral force that had corrupted classical Hinduism. On the other hand many today see it as a celebration of social equity, sexuality, feminism and the body.[3]

Contents

[edit] Overview

Rather than a coherent system, Tantra is an accumulation of practises and ideas, which has among its characteristics the use of ritual, the manipulation of energy, transgressional acts, the use of the mundane to access the supramundane and the identification of the microcosm with the macrocosm.[4] The Tantric practioner seeks to utilise the divine power that flows through the universe (including his own body), in order to attain his goals. These goals may be spiritual, material or both.[5]

Practicioners of tantra consider the guidance of a Guru to be imperative.[6] In the process of manipulating energy the Tantric has various tools at his disposal. These include yoga - bodily control to actuate processes that will connect him with the divine. Also important are the use of visualisation of the deity and verbalisation through mantras - which can be construed as seeing and speaking the power into being; identification and internalisation of the divine is performed - commonly through a total identification with a deity, such that the aspirant 'becomes' the deity.[7]

[edit] Hindu tantra

The philosophy of Tantra is based on any collection of the 92 shrutis, the Tantras. Tantra exists in Vaisnava, Shaiva, and Shakta forms, among others.

The Tantric tradition, or Tantrika Parampara, can be considered as either parallel to or intertwined with the Vedic tradition (Vaidika Parampara). Swami Nikhilananda wrote not only of the close affinity with the Vedas, but also that the development of Tantric thought shows the influence of the Upanishads, the Puranas, and Yoga.[8] Tantra itself speaks of its origins. For example, the Tripura Rahasya, one of the central texts of Shakta Tantra, says "This text has been created by summarising the teachings of the Vedas, Puranas and other scriptures."

[edit] Reality as Shiva-Shakti

According to Tantra, Reality is pure consciousness (chit), which is considered to be identical with both being (sat) and bliss (ananda). In Tantra, this being-consciousness-bliss or Satchidananda is called Shiva-Shakti, a hyphenated word conveying the inseparable nature of Shiva, the Absolute, and Shakti, the power of creation. In Tantra, any conception of the Divine which does not include Shakti, or the power to become, is considered to be incomplete.[8]

[edit] Evolution and involution

According to Tantra, being-consciousness-bliss or Satchidananda has the power of both self-evolution and self-involution. Reality evolves into a multiplicity of creatures and things, yet at the same time always remains pure consciousness, being, and bliss. In this process of evolution, Maya (illusion) conceals Reality and separates it into opposites, such as conscious and unconscious, pleasant and unpleasant, and so forth. These determining conditions limit or restrict the individual (jiva), acting as fetters (pasa) by which it is bound and made to act like an animal (pasu).[8]

In this relative world, Shiva and Shakti are perceived as separate. However in Tantra, even in the state of evolution, Reality remains pure consciousness, being, and bliss, though Tantra does not deny either the act or fact of this evolution. In fact, Tantra affirms that both the world process itself and the individual jiva are themselves Real. In this, Tantra distinguishes itself from pure dualism as well as from the qualified non-dualism of Vedanta.[8]

Hoewever, evolution or the "outgoing current" is only one half of the functioning of Maya. Involution, or the "return current," takes the jiva back towards the source or root of Reality, revealing the infinite. Tantra is said to teach the method of changing the outgoing current into the return current, transforming the fetters created by Maya into that which 'releases' or 'liberates'. This idea is behind two of the sayings of Tantra: "One must rise by that by which one falls" and "the very poison that kills becomes the elixir of life when used by the wise."[8]

[edit] The Tantric method

The Tantric method is to sublimate rather than negate relative reality. This method of sublimation consists of three phases: purification, elevation, and "reaffirmation of identity on the plane of pure consciousness."[8]

[edit] Tantric practices

Because of the wide range of groups covered by the term tantra, it is hard to describe tantric practices definitively. The basic practice, the Hindu worship known as puja may include any of the elements below.

[edit] Mantra and yantra

As in other Hindu and Buddhist yoga traditions, mantra plays an important part in Tantra for focusing the mind. The mantras used often invoke specific Hindu gods such as Shiva and Kali Ma. Similarly, puja often involves concentrating on a yantra or mandala associated with a deity as well.[citation needed]

[edit] Identification with deities

Tantra, being a development of early Hindu-Vedic thought, embraced the Hindu gods and goddesses, especially Shiva and Shakti, along with the Advaita philosophy that each represents an aspect of the ultimate Para Shiva, or Brahman. These deities may be worshipped externally with flowers, incense, and other offerings; but, more importantly, are used as objects of meditation, the practitioners either visualizing themselves as the deity or experiencing the darshan (vision) of the deity visualized as appearing in front of the practitioner. In Buddhist tantra, this process is known as deity yoga.[9]

[edit] Concentration on the body

Tantrikas generally see the body as a microcosm; thus in the Kaulajnana-nirnaya, for example, the practitioner meditates on the head as the moon, the heart as the sun and the genitals as fire. As in the yoga tradition, a series of energy centres (chakras - "wheels") may be used as concentration points, and may be associated with elements, planets or occult powers (siddhi).[citation needed]

[edit] Sexual rites

Sexual rites may have emerged from early Hindu Tantra as a practical means of generating transformative bodily fluids.[10] These constituted a vital offering to Tantric deities. Sexual rites may also have evolved from clan intitiation ceremonies involving the transaction of sexual fluids. Here the male inititate was inseminated or insanguinated with the sexual emissions of the female consort, sometimes admixed with the semen of the guru. He was thus transformed into a son of the clan (kulaputra) through the grace of his consort. The clan fluid (kuladravya) or clan nectar (kulamrita) was conceived as flowing naturally from her womb. Later developments in the rite emphasised the primacy of bliss and divine union, which replaced the more bodily connotations of earlier forms. Although popularly equated with Tantra in its entirety in the west, a minority of sects practised sexual rites. Most underwent a process of transformation into psychological symbolism with time.[11]

In Tantra one can go beyond the sexual plane of existence only by its complete acceptance; utilising it and spiritualising ones innate sexual tendencies towards greater awareness. The tantras recognize several approaches as methods for conditioning aspirants prior to sexual meditation. The guru takes into account individual proclivities and spiritual achievement. The guru usually considers the path appropriate only for certain individuals whose temperament and self control will enable them to forego sexual indulgence — a necessity, if the act is to serve as a tool to transcend identification with the mortal body. As with other tantric practices the presence of a guru is a paramount and essential condition.[6]

When performed as enjoined by the tantras the ritual culminates in a sublime experience of infinite awareness, by both participants. The Tantric texts specify that sex has three distinct and separate purposes — procreation, pleasure and liberation. Those seeking liberation eschew frictional orgasm for a higher form of ecstasy, as the couple participating in the ritual, lock in a static embrace. Several sexual rituals are recommended and practised. These involve elaborate and meticulous preparatory and purificatory rites. The act results in a balance of energies coursing within the pranic ida and pingala channels in the subtle bodies of both participants. The sushumna nadi is awakened and kundalini rises upwards within it. This eventually culminates in samadhi wherein the respective individualities of each of the participants are completely dissolved in cosmic consciousness. Tantrics understand the act on multiple levels. The male and female participants are joined physically and represent Shiva and Shakti, the male and female principles. Beyond the physical, a subtle fusion of Shiva and Shakti energies takes place resulting in an undivided energy field. On an individual level each participant experiences a fusion of their own Shiva and Shakti energies.[6][12]

[edit] Western views of Tantra

[edit] Sir John Woodroffe

The first Western scholar to take the study of Tantra seriously was Sir John Woodroffe (1865–1936), who wrote about Tantra under the pen name Arthur Avalon. He is commonly regarded as the "founding father of Tantric studies."[13] Unlike previous Western scholars, Woodroffe was an apologist for Tantra, defending Tantra against its many critics and presenting Tantra as an ethical philosophical system greatly in accord with the Vedas and Vedanta.[14]

[edit] Further development

Following Sir John Woodroffe, a number of scholars began to actively investigate the Tantric teachings. These included a number of scholars of comparative religion and Indology, such as: Agehananda Bharati, Mircea Eliade, Julius Evola, Carl Jung, Giuseppe Tucci, and Heinrich Zimmer.[15]

According to Hugh Urban, Zimmer, Evola, and Eliade viewed Tantra as "the culmination of all Indian thought: the most radical form of spirituality and the archaic heart of aboriginal India", and regarded it as the ideal religion of the modern era. All three saw Tantra as "the most transgressive and violent path to the sacred."[16] Zimmer praised Tantra as having a world-affirmative attitude:

In the Tantra, the manner of approach is not that of Nay but of Yea ... the world attitude is affirmative ... Man must approach through and by means of nature, not by rejection on nature."[17]

[edit] Tantra in the modern world

Following these first positive presentations of Tantra, other more popular authors such as Joseph Campbell helped to bring Tantra into the popular imagination in the West. Tantra comes to be viewed as a "cult of ecstasy", combining sexuality and spirituality in such a way as to act as a corrective force to Western repressive attitudes about sex.[18]

As Tantra has become more popular in the West it has undergone a major transformation which has made Western New Age appropriations of Tantra, more properly called Neotantra, very different from the original Tantric traditions of India. For most modern readers, "Tantra" has basically become a synonym for "spiritual sex" or "sacred sexuality", a belief that sex in itself ought to be recognized as a sacred act which is capable of elevating its participants to a higher spiritual plane.[18] Though Neotantra may adopt many of the terms and concepts of Indian Tantra, the traditional reliance on guruparampara and rules of ritual conduct have been discarded.

According to Hugh Urban, most Western scholars criticize Neotantra:

Since at least the time of Agehananda Bharati, most Western scholars have been severely critical of these new forms of pop Tantra or neo-Tantra. This "California Tantra" as Georg Feuerstein calls it, is "based on a profound misunderstanding of the Tantric path. Their main error is to confuse Tantric bliss ... with ordinary orgasmic pleasure."[18]

Urban goes on to say that he himself does not consider neo-Tantra "wrong" or "false" but rather "simply a different interpretation for a specific historical situation."[18]

Shambhavi Saraswati gives a description of the difference between real Tantra and Neotantra:

"Neo-Tantra ritualizes sex. Authentic Tantra sexualizes ritual."[19]

For three Tantric practitioners (two well-known and one lesser-known), see the Dalai Lama (Buddhist), Shri Ramakrishna (Hindu) and Shri Gurudev Mahendranath (Hindu).

[edit] See also

[edit] Hindu tantra

[edit] Buddhist tantra

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ White (2000), p. 7
  2. ^ White (2000), p. 9
  3. ^ Urban (2002), Vol.6, No.1
  4. ^ Harper (2002), p. 2
  5. ^ Harper (2002), p. 3
  6. ^ a b c Satyananda (2000)
  7. ^ Harper (2002), p. 3-5
  8. ^ a b c d e f Nikhilananda (1982), pp. 145-149
  9. ^ Dalai Lama (1987). Deity Yoga. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 0-937938-50-5
  10. ^ White (2000)
  11. ^ White (2000)
  12. ^ Woodroffe (1959)
  13. ^ Urban (2003), p. 22
  14. ^ Urban (2003), p. 135
  15. ^ Urban (2003), pp. 165-166
  16. ^ Urban (2003), pp. 166-167
  17. ^ quoted in Urban (2003), p. 168
  18. ^ a b c d Urban (2003), pp. 204-205
  19. ^ Saraswati, Shambhavi (2005). What is Tantra? Part I

[edit] References

  • Avalon, Arthur. The Serpent PowerGanesh and Co., ISBN 81-85988-05-6.
  • Arthur Avalon: Tantra of the great liberation - Mahanirvana Tantra, Dover publications, New York 1972, ISBN 0-486-20150-3
  • Bagchi, P.C. (ed.), Magee, Michael (trans.) (1986). Kaulajnana-nirnaya of the School of Matsyendranath. Varanasi: Prachya Prakashan.
  • Davidson, Ronald M. (2003). Indian Esoteric Buddhism: A Social History of the Tantric Movement. Columbia University Press. ISBN 81-208-1991-8
  • Davidson, Ronald M. (2005). Tibetan Renaissance : Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-13471-1
  • Feuerstein, Georg (1998). Tantra: The Path of Ecstasy. Boston: Shambhala. ISBN 1-57062-304-X
  • Guenon, Rene (1966). "Studies in Hinduism" (Études sur l'Hindouisme).
  • Gyatso, Geshe Kelsang (2003). Tantric Grounds and Paths. Glen Spey: Tharpa Publications.
  • Harper, Katherine Anne (ed.), Robert L. Brown (ed.) (2002). The Roots of Tantra. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-5306-5
  • Kane, Pandurang Vaman (1930–1962) History of Dharmashastra (Ancient and Mediaeval Religious and Civil Law). 5 Vols. Poona:Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute.
  • Magee, Michael, tr. (1984). Yoni Tantra.
  • Mahendranath, Shri Gurudev (1990). The Scrolls of Mahendranath. Seattle: International Nath Order.
  • Mookerji, Ajit (1997). The Tantric Way: art, science, ritual. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Nikhilananda, Swami (1982). Hinduism: Its meaning for the Liberation of the Spirit (2nd edition). Sri Ramakrishna Math.
  • Rao, T. A. Gopinatha (1981). Elements in Hindu Iconography. Vol 1. Madras:Law Printing House, 1914. Reprint, New York:Garland Publishing.
  • Saraswati, Swami Satyananda (2000). Sure Ways to Self Realization. Yoga Publications Trust.
  • Sivananda, Swami. Kundalini Yoga.
  • Urban, Hugh (2002). "The Conservative Character of Tantra: Secrecy, Sacrifice and This-Worldly Power in Bengali Śākta Tantra", International Journal of Tantric Studies, Vol 6, No. 1.
  • Urban, Hugh B. (2003). Tantra: Sex, Secrecy, Politics, and Power in the Study of Religions. University of California Press.
  • Walker, Benjamin (1983) Tantrism: It's Secret Principles and Practices, Acquarian Press, London, 1982; Borgo Press, 1983, ISBN 0-85030-272-2.
  • White, David Gordon (2003). Kiss of the Yogini : "Tantric Sex" in its South Asian Contexts. University Of Chicago Press.
  • White, David Gordon (1998). The Alchemical Body : Siddha Traditions in Medieval India. University Of Chicago Press.
  • White, David Gordon (ed.) (2000). Tantra in Practice. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-05779-6
  • Woodroffe, John. Mahanirvana Tantra (Tantra of the Great Liberation).
  • Woodroffe, John (1959). Sakti and Sakta. Ganesh and Co.

[edit] External links

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