|
By Lea Terhune in New Delhi Far Eastern Economic Review
24 March 1994
Early one morning in April 1992, a new BMW car raced along an open
stretch of road outside the West Bengal town of Siliguri, the
railhead where tea from the Darjeeling hills is sent to Calcutta
auction houses. The car veered off the road and crashed into a
tree, killing its driver and two passengers, a Tibetan high lama
called Jamgon Kongtrul and another monk.
The accident, never fully investigated by police, remains a
mystery. Although the car had been serviced the night before, some
accounts said the engine was found far from the wreckage, as
though its an chorage bolts had broken off.
The timing of the accident was also intriguing. For 11 years
following the death in 1981 of its last leader, the 16th Gyalwa
Karmapa, the important Rumtek monastery in India's Sikkim state
had been with out a spiritual head. During that time and on the
day of the crash, Kongtrul was one of four "regents" charged with
running the monastery. When a hidden letter from the late Karmapa
giving clues to the where abouts of his reincarnation was
announced in 1992, it was Kongtrul who was tasked to follow the
directions set forth. He was preparing for that undertaking when
he was killed.
Popular and respected, Kongtrul was the ideal choice to lead the
search party. He lived at Rumtek and had been close to the
Karmapa. His death, however, prefaced a controversy that continues
to this day.
The Karmapa, Rumtek's chief lama, is the head of the Karma Kagyu
lineage of Tibetan Buddhism. Known as the "Black Hat Lama" because
of the antique ceremonial crown he wears, the Karmapa is one of
Tibet's most formidable lamas. His line of incarnations predates
that of both the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama.
When China invaded Tibet in 1959, the 16th Karmapa escaped to
Bhutan, eventually settling in Sikkim, where he built a new
monastery to accommodate refugee monks from Tibet. Although he had
ar rived from Tibet with only a few belongings, by the time he
died in 1981, the 16th Karmapa was able to provide for a monastery
of more than 100 monks.
Before his death, the 16th Karmapa hid a letter with one of his
close disciples, Tai Situpa, describing the place of his rebirth.
But Tai Situpa did not discover the note until 1990, during which
time the four la mas responsible for finding the new Karmapa
concealed their lack of instruction.
When the letter was eventually found tucked in an amulet given to
Tai Situpa, the clues it gave came as a puzzle in verse: In the
east of the land of snow Is a country where divine thunder
spontaneously blazes. In a beautiful nomad's place with the sign
of a cow, The method is Dondrup and the wisdom is Lolaga. Born in
the year of the one used for the earth.
Tai Situpa did not show the letter to the other three regents
until March 1992. All the high lamas had busy travel schedules,
and one of them, Shamarpa, was unwilling to comply with Tai
Situpa's urgent request for a meeting in Rumtek.
Shamarpa's cousin, Topga Yugyal, then general secretary of Rumtek
monastery, also helped to slow things. Both Shamarpa and Topga are
nephews of the late 16th Karmapa, and management of Rumtek's
temporal affairs rested primarily with them. When the lamas
finally met on March 19, 1992, the letter was read and decoded. It
was determined that the reincarnation would be discovered in
eastern Tibet. The "sign of the cow" referred to the name of the
place; "Method"Qa male rebus in Tibetan Buddhist symbolism Q
indicated the father's name was Dondrup; and "Wis dom"Q similarly
a female rebusQmeant the mother's name would be Lolaga. Finally,
"the one used for the earth" was an ox.
Jamgon Kongtrul was appointed to lead the search party, but on
April 26 he died in the car crash. A few days later, Shamarpa, who
would have been expected to participate in the 49-day funeral
rites for Kongtrul, left India for the United States, where,
according to several sources in the Buddhist community, he tried
to persuade Kongtrul's donors to sign their charitable trusts over
to him.
Back at Rumtek, the other two regents, Tai Situpa and Gyaltsap,
authorised a new Karmapa search party. Soon, a group of monks
were dispatched from Tsurphu monastery in central Tibet where
the first Karmapa had established a centre 800 years ago to
eastern Tibet, where they found a seven-year-old nomad boy. Beyond
having been born in 1985, the Year of the Ox, other signs
indicated the child, now officially called Ugyen Thinlay, was the
Karmapa's reincarnation.
Tai Situpa and Gyaltsap made a quick trip to New Delhi and
Dharamsala to show the 16th Karmapa's prediction letter to the
Dalai Lama. On June 7, the boy was confirmed as the 17th Karmapa.
The discovery of the new Karmapa was significant enough to bring
the Chinese into accord with the Dalai Lama. On June 27, the
Chinese Government news agency Xinhua announced that the boy was
"the first reincarnated Living Buddha approved by the Chinese
Government since Tibetan democratic reform in 1959." The occasion
should have been a moment of great celebration at Rumtek, only it
wasn't.
While Tai Situpa and Gyaltsap were in New Delhi, Shamarpa had
returned to Sikkim, where Kongtrul's funeral rites were still in
progress. Shamarpa called public meetings during which he
questioned the authenticity of the Karmapa's letter and further
disparaged the two other regents. Despite a videotape shot before
Kongtrul's death showing him voicing approval of the letter,
Shamarpa claimed Kongtrul had also doubted the letter, and he
called for its examination by experts.
Given the intricate mechanisms of the recognition and the silence
the regents had observed, Shamarpa's accusations gained
credibility with some monks and lay people, particularly when
reports surfaced that the new Karmapa may have been found earlier
than stated.
On June 12, Tai Situpa and Gyaltsap announced the recognition of
the 17th Karmapa at Rumtek. As Tai Situpa finished speaking, a
dozen Indian soldiers carrying guns arrived with Shamarpa. When
they attempted to enter the monastery, scuffles broke out. The
meeting ended with the two lamas retreating into the monastery,
and Shamarpa to his house.
The Indian army denied knowledge of the action, claiming it had
not given any orders. Similarly, the Bhutan Government denied
that a member of its royal family had made phone call to a junior
military officer.
Enthroned at Tibet's Tsurphu monastery on September 27, the
Karmapa today studies, performs rituals, blesses devotee and
grants audiences to tourists. Efforts t bring him to Sikkim for a
second, symbolic enthronement in India have not been successful,
in part because the Chinese Q perhaps reluctant to send him abroad
when he would undoubtedly meet the Dalai Lama Q have been slow to
issue travel documents. They may also be concerned for his welfare
given an alleged hit list that calls for his supporters to "be
destroyed. A series of alleged fabrications planted in the Indian
press have also aggravated the sensitive political situation
between China and India over Sikkim, where the border is still
disputed.
To be sure, the reasons behind Shamarpa's resistance are varied.
The death of the previous Karmapa, in November 1982 had been
followed in December 1982 by the sudden death of the Rumtek
administrator. Topga, Shamarpa's cousin, took his place. Together
with Shamarpa, already once the four regents, the two had
considerable control of the monastery's assets. The would find
their authority lessened were new Karmapa from a different family
or sphere of influence to appear.
Moreover, some of the late Karmapa's supporters had questioned
Shamarpa's handling of the Karmapa's estate. In an unprecedented
action, three of the Karmapa' Bhutan monasteries were sold off,
reportedly for extraordinarily low prices, and an old Mercedes, a
gift to the previous Karmapa from a disciple, was taken by Topga to
Bhutan for "repairs," but never returned. Disagreements among the
four regents over the action of Shamarpa and Topga began as early
as 1988. Shamarpa denies he has taken any decisions on the
monastery's assets independent of the board of trustees, which
includes the other regents an senior Sikkim officials.
Although Shamarpa signed a letter acknowledging the 17th Karmapa,
he subsequently recanted it, and instead launched campaign to
denigrate the lamas responsible for the recognition, including the
Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama's office responded with public
statements and leased newspaper advertisements in India
reconfirming the recognition. Privately, the Dalai Lama tried to
settle the matter by calling for meeting of the three lamas, which
Shamarpa refused to attend.
For his part, Shamarpa recently announced that he had discovered
his own "authentic" Karmapa. In theory, there could be more than
one "emanation" of a high lama existing at one time, but the Dalai
Lama has made it clear that Ugyen Thinlay is the one who will
carry the title and privileges.
Following that lead, most Tibetans appear to accept the enthroned
17th Karmapa. While they are not happy about the controversy, it
does not surprise them. Indeed, a prophecy made by a Karmapa 500
years ago warned not only of the domination of Tibet by powerful
neighbours, but of a problem regarding the succession of Karmapas
stemming from an insider who will wreak havoc "by the power of his
twisted aspirations."
Preventing the new Karmapa access to his hereditary
treasures sealed up for nearly two years in Rumtek monastery under
24-hour police guard is inauspicious at best. Without access to
the "Black Crown"from which the "Black Hat Lama's" name is
derived there are likely to be people who question the 17th
Karmapa's legitimacy.
There has also been speculation about why, after 40 years of
recognising incarnations beyond Chinese control, the Dalai Lama
acknowledged a Karmapa who was born and remains in Tibet. Was it a
test case to see how Beijing would respond to the opportunity to
approve a genuine in carnation? There has been speculation that
Beijing approved the Tibetan-born 17th Karmapa in hopes of
eventually playing him against the Dalai Lama.
As for relations between India and China, they remain unsettled
over the issue of Sikkim, and, by extension, the 17th Karmapa.
Whether the Chinese will let the new leader of the Kagyu Buddhists
out, or whether India, whose officials may support
Shamarpa, will let him in is anyone's guess even the young
Karmapa's.
 |
May the supreme jewel bodhicitta
that has not arisen, arise and grow.
And may that which has arisen not diminish,
but increase more and more.
|
|