Wednesday, 18 February 2015

The Bhutanese Cham: The Dance Goes On

Directly behind Tergar Monastery, where HH Karmapa resides in Bodhgaya, is Druk Ngawang Thubten Chokling, the monastery of the spiritual king or Shabdrung of Bhutan. Yangsi Shabdrung is eleven years old but he is still unable to travel freely outside the country. His parents, however, have travelled here with their second child, a boy of five.

A monastery without a rinpoche lacks magnetizing power and thus the place looks forlorn. But for three days of the year, during the annual Guru Rinpoche festival, it comes alive with the sound of traffic on the dusty pot-holed road that leads through a poor Indian village to the main gate. 

The Bhutanese arrive in traditional dress, crammed into cars, motor rickshaws and the new environmentally-friendly electric trolleys. The prayer flags fly, and the golden canopy comes out, transforming the temple entrance into a VIP seating area. To the right is a throne that awaits the arrival of the 17th Karmapa, who has been a regular guest here since he started the Monlam.
The Bhutanese cham is significantly different from the Tibetan, originating as it did with the visions of Jampal Dorje, the son of the founder of Bhutan, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal, in the 17th century. The dancers have more flexibility, their movements are lithe and somehow contemporary, even feminine in style.

Devotees line both sides of the long playing field leading to the monastery holding white offering scarves: Bhutanese, Europeans and a significant number of Malaysians and Taiwanese. A procession greets the Karmapa's black car at exactly 10 o'clock.  Masked dancers sway, while jesters cavort, and monks in dark orange robes blow horns and gyalins. It just happens that the first glimmer of sun melts the fog at precisely the same time as the Karmapa enters the temple. Once inside there are three enormous statues: the Buddha, Guru Rinpoche and the first Shabdrung of Bhutan. He lights a butter lamp, chants a Mahakala prayer and blesses a new mask of Yamantaka before he takes his customary seat on the throne outside. The Khenpo, Tshokey Dorje sits beneath him talking to His Holiness almost continuously. As they talk, three clowns make floppy prostrations to the Karmapa, in jest. Another poses for a photo with him. The idea is to distract the crowd while the dancers prepare.

It is the second day of the dance called Dungam, the dance of the wrathful deities of Lama Gongdu, a treasure cycle discovered by terton Sangye Lingpa (1314-1396).  Four dancers appear in the form of deer wearing stag masks with antlers to subdue all the evil spirits who try to destroy the dharma.  The next dance is performed by the charnal ground protectors called durda wearing skull masks.  They catch the spirits of the dharma obstructors and put them into a black triangular spirit catcher. In the final act they will take out their phurbas to liberate the spirits from evil karma.  In between there is a shift to a dakini dance, in which the movements of the dancers are flexible like swans, flowing from one graceful step to the next. It is in an elegant, well-rehearsed, confident performance.

On the balcony of the monastery, where another scene is being enacted, the Khenpo brings out a tray with some objects on it, among them a phurba used to destroy obstacles. The Karmapa blesses it. Soon afterwards at mid-day, the Karmapa stands up to depart while his devotees flock in singular pursuit. The Guru Rinpoche dancers barely miss a beat.


Sonam Dorje, the head monk confides: ''We rejoice that His Holiness comes here every year to bless our Tsechu. His time is very precious, yet he sacrifices it and sits here for two hours. We would like to thank His Holiness for guiding and taking care of us. No Rinpoche other than His Holiness Karmapa comes here to visit us.'' 

Naomi Levine: Author of The Miraculous 16th Karmapa - Incredible Encounters with the Black Crown Buddha.






Photos copyright of Kagyu Monlam. 



Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Bliss, Clarity and Emptiness – Kumbhaka Weekend

My only experience so far of Yantra Yoga has been a 2 day beginner’s course and since doing that weekend I have done very little practice. I am relatively new to Dzogchen and a lot of the practices are things that I am learning for the first time, so integrating what I am learning to daily life has posed challenges. I have to admit I went into the Kumbhaka weekend held last month in London with having done no practice, and very little knowledge/understanding of what it is and what it would involve - I didn’t leave the weekend the way I started it. I think it was Leo who said something along the lines of ‘this is like studying quantum physics without having studied physics 101’, and it definitely felt like I was learning very advanced practices.

The weekend was taught by John Renshaw at The Tara Yoga Centre near Old Street, 30 dzogchen community practitioners crammed into a very strange yoga space to learn Kumbhaka. John went through stages of explaining breathing, anatomy, chakras and lot of other things to get us ready for the actual practice. The first day was broken up with John talking, showing us slides and getting us to practice the elements that would come together for the main Kumbhaka. I will put my hands up, a lot of it went over my head but I don’t learn through intellectual understanding and I trusted that all that was being imparted would come together. It definitely did the next day, after a brief overview of what we covered yesterday the rest of the second day was dedicated to sessions of practice and discussion around our experiences and opportunities for clarifications.


I left Sunday evening having had an experience of bliss, clarity and emptiness. I slept Sunday night like a baby. The weekend was brilliant as a crash course in Kumbhaka; I have the foundations for personal practice and know my limitations and what I need to develop in order for me to be able to do kumbhaka more effectively. I went in with little or no expectations but left with a solid foundation for practice.

Wadud