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Achi Chökyi Drolma Dharma protector of
the Drikung Kagyu tradition
- Achi Chökyi Drolma (Tib. A-chi Chos-kyi
sGrol-ma) is a female Dharma protector whose practice was introduced by
Drikung ('Bri-gung) Achi, the matriarch of the Drikung hereditary
lineage. She is white-coloured and is usually portrayed seated and
riding a snow lion, the legendary white animal of Tibet; she may also be
shown standing (see right). Unusually, for a Dharma protector,
Achi Chökyi Drolma's aspect is not wrathful, but peaceful. NEW See Achi
Chökyi Drolma - Chief Protectress of the Glorious Drigung Kagyu
for the story of her origins, an
image of the deity, and a description
of her iconography.
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Dorje Yudrönma Dharma
protector
- Dorje Yudrönma is said to be one of Tibet's
chief protectors. She holds an arrow with the five colours in her
right hand and a white silver mirror in her left. The lifestory of
the Longchen Nyingthig yogi Jigme Gyalwai Nyugu (from the
Dzogchen
Lineage of Nyoshul Khenpo) relates that an emanation of this deity
appeared and offered him food once when he was suffering hardship and
poverty. Dorje Yudrönma is associated with a divination practice
which uses a mirror. The Art of Tibet site includes a good thangka of Dorje
Yudrönma.
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Ekajati Dharma protector -
protectress of mantras
- Ekajati is a female dharma protector
especially popular in Nyingma, where she is also considered a
protectress of Dzog Chen. She is cognate to Palden
Lhamo. The Nyingma
form of Ekajati (whose name literally means 'One Plait' or 'One
Braid') has one tuft of hair, one eye, one mouth, one breast -- and
sometimes only one leg! -- to demonstrate her singleminded devotion to
Dharma. Whenever a Nyingma refuge tree or series of protectors is
portrayed, Ekajati is usualy the dark-red central figure in the bottom
row (see the thangka
of Dharma protectors of the Nyingma tradition from the Chagdud Gompa
site); however, she may be depicted as dark-blue or black, rather than
red. In the Sarma (New
Translation) schools Ekajati is regarded as the mother of Mahakala and
Mahakali (Palden Lhamo). NEW Chopa.com has a particularly
lovely thangka of
Ekajati.
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Ekajati Yidam - wrathful Black
Tara
- Ekajati is also the name of a wrathful form
of Green Tara known as Black Tara. She is depicted in
seated posture holding a curved knife and skullcup. This form is
often shown in a triumvirate with Avalokiteshvara and Green Tara.
This unidentified
thangka from Andrew Stinson's thangka website also depicts
Ekajati.
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Kakasya Yidam
- Kakasya is a guardian goddess with the face
of a crow: one of the bird-headed goddesses associated with the
mandalas of various tutelary, or personal, deities. The Asian Art Museum included a
delightful statue of Kakasya in its Mongolia
exhibit.
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Kuan Yin Bodhisattva of
compassion
This female Bodhisattva is variously known in
China as Kuan Yin (or Kwan Yin, Quan Yin, Guanyin or Koon Yum), in Japan
as Kannon or Shokanzeon Bosatsu, and in Korea as Kwanseum Bosal or Kwan
Um. She is regarded as being identical to the (male) Tibetan deity
Avalokiteshvara
(Tib. Chenrezig), but also has much in common with the female Tibetan
deity Tara.
NEW sites dedicated to Kuan Yin:
NEW articles on Kuan Yin:
NEW images of the bodhisattva:
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Kurukulla Yidam - deity of
power
- Kurukulla is an energetic dancing red figure
with one face and four arms, two of which hold a bow and arrow made of
flowers. Her practice helps generate energy and power. JBL
Statues sell a statuette of
Kurukulla, although their equation of Kurukulla with the Hindu
goddess Kali is incorrect. The FPMT centre in Boston is named
after her (Kurukulla Center for
Tibetan Buddhist Studies) and includes a nice thangka of the deity.
There are several thangkas available online:
- In Geluk tradition Kurukulla is sometimes
also referred to as Red Tara [presumably because of her
appearance]; but this name can also refer to a completely separate
yidam. In the Hevajra Tantra, Kurukulla is a semi-wrathful female power deity,
red, in essence Hevajra, and unrelated to Tara.
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Lamanteri Wrathful
yidam
- The Asian
Art Museum of San Francisco included a Mongolia online
exhibit which described a statue of Lamanteri thusly:
"Lamanteri is the Mongolian name for this wrathful form of the goddess
Tara depicted with the third eye and four pairs of
hands."
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Painting by Duccio
Ceglie (courtesy of peacenvironment.net) |
Machig Labdrön Historical figure and
yidam - the founder of Chöd
- The eleventh-century Tibetan founder of the
chöd (cutting) practice, Machig
Labdrön is usually depicted in deified form as a peaceful white
dancing figure with three eyes, playing a damaru (two-sided drum) with
her right hand and holding a bell with her left. (She is also
depicted in seated form
on Miya Shimada's Chöd
Club site.) Thangka #349 on
the Art of Tibet site depicts Machig Labdrön's life story, and thangka #223 shows
her at the centre of a Nyingma chöd lineage tree. Alex
Clarke's Chaos/Chös page includes a depiction of
Machig; and although it is iconographically incorrect (e.g. the
image's proportions are incorrect; she should be white, not pink; etc.),
I include it here because it is an intriguing example of what may become
the wave of the future: computer-generated deity images.
There is also a short article about Machig Labdrön in Polish (Maczik
Labdryn) on this Polish Buddhist
site. NEW Aro gTér includes a particularly lovely line
drawing of Machig with accompanying article.
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Other depictions of Tröma on the Web include
solitary
Tröma (Chagdud Gompa), Tröma Five
Deity (Art of Tibet), and Tröma
Nine Deity (Chagdud Gompa).
See:
- Machig Labdrön and the Foundations of
Chöd by Jérôme Edou (Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 1995)
- A Study of the Profound Path of gCod:
The Mahayana Buddhist Meditation Tradition of Tibet’s Great Woman
Saint Machig Labdrön - a Ph.D. dissertation by Carol D. Savvas
(University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1990)
- Women of Wisdom by Tsultrim Allione
(London: Arkana, 1984 / New York: Arkana, 1986) - includes the life
story of Machig Labdrön
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Mahamaya Historical
figure
- Mahamaya was the mother of
the historical Shakyamuni Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama -- this name means
'Great Illusion.' See also Mayadevi. There
is also a male anuttarayoga deity
named Mahamaya who is not to be confused with the Buddha's mother; this
practice is found in all the Sarma (New Translation) schools and was
originally made famous by Marpa; it is also found in the 'Five Deity
Tantra' practice of the Shangpa Kagyu.
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Mandarava Yidam and historical
figure - long-life deity
- An Indian-born princess who became the
spiritual consort of Padmasambhava, founder of Buddhism in Tibet (his
second consort was the Tibetan-born Yeshe Tsogyel -- see below).
She appears in deified form as a yidam of long life, wearing the
ornaments of a bodhisattva. Her right hand holds an arrow (a
symbol of Dzogchen) adorned with banners and a melong (a round
mirror, representing the clear, reflecting nature of mind).
Mandarava sits in the manner of Tara, with right foot extended, to show
her willingness to help sentient beings.
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Marici Yidam - goddess of the
sun
Marici (pron. Marichi) is a red-coloured female yidam associated with the sun
and with dawn; her name in Tibetan is Öser Chenma, i.e. [goddess of] Great
Light. Her mantra is traditionally used as protection by
travellers. Marici has an orange-coloured body (the colour of the
sun at dawn), and three faces, eight arms and two legs. Of the three
faces, the first (central) is orange and smiling, her right face is red,
and her left is the face of a white boar: each has three eyes. Her first
right hand holds a vajra at the heart in the mudra of teaching, the
second holds a vajra axe, the third holds an arrow with the tip pointing
downwards, and the fourth, in the mudra of generosity, holds a (sewing)
needle. Her first left hand, in the mudra of teaching, holds the stem of
a plant (tree?) whose crown is at the level of her left ear (next to the
boar's face). Her second left hand holds a bow, the third holds a thread
(?), and the fourth holds a noose ending in a loop and hook. Marici's
right leg is extended in the manner of Tara, while the left is tucked
in. She is dressed in the royal robes of a bodhisattva: five-pointed
crown surmounting each face, jewels, silks and so forth. Marici rides a
throne/chariot drawn along by seven white
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Mayadevi Historical figure - mother
of Sakyamuni Buddha
- Queen Mayadevi (also Maya or
Mahamaya) was the historical mother of Sakyamuni Buddha.
She died not long after his birth, but is believed to have been reborn
in one of the heavens where he later manifested and taught her the
Dharma so that she too became enlightened. She is traditionally
depicted just as she was about to (painlessly) give birth, standing and
holding the branch of a tree in her right hand.
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Nairatmya Yidam
- This dark-blue figure appears as both a
single yidam and also in union with her consort, the Highest Yoga Tantra
male yidam Hevajra.
The name means 'No-Self' in Sanskrit. This was also the name of
the wife of Marpa (whose main practice was Hevajra) -- the founder of
the Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism.
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Niguma Lineage guru and historical
figure - lineage dakini
- This woman was a formidable
mahasiddha, variously described as the sister or consort of
Naropa. She founded the practice known as The Six Yogas of Niguma
(see Glenn Mullin's text The Six Yogas of Sister Niguma, which
includes a vigorous line drawing of Niguma).
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Palden Lhamo (Sri Devi) Dharma
protector - wrathful protectress of Tibet
- Palden Lhamo (whose name
translates as "Glorious Goddess") is the only female dharma protector
common to all four schools of Tibetan Buddhism. She is very
wrathful, and rides her mule through a sea of blood, surrounded by
wisdom fire. She is dark blue and has one face with three eyes;
she wears a sun at her navel and a moon at her crown, and over her is a
peacock umbrella (a traditional symbol of protection). She is
variously depicted, but her most common forms are two-armed and
four-armed. There is also a system of divination by dice
associated with her. She is sometimes considered cognate to
Sarasvati or Tara, but is at the same time a wrathful form
of the peaceful goddess Sri Devi.
See:
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Prajnaparamita Guru and yidam
- Mother of all the Buddhas
- Prajnaparamita
embodies the bliss/emptiness that gives rise to all phenomena -- hence
her honorofic title as Mother of all the Buddhas. She usually
appears as a tranquil seated figure clothed in silks; her body is gold
in colour, and she has one face and four arms. Her first two arms
are held in meditation posture in her lap, while the other right hand
holds a nine-spoked vajra (thunderbolt sceptre symbolising
compassion/bliss) and the left, the text of the Heart
Sutra which is the essential wisdom-text on the emptiness of
phenomena. There are other forms of the deity, as at right:
her first two hands in prayer mudra at the heart, second right hand
holding a mala [rosary] and second left hand holding a
text.
Her name means 'Perfection of Wisdom'; in
Tibetan she is also known as Yum Chenmo, or 'Great Mother'. She is
closely associated with chöd practice (see Machig Labdrön).
Natalie R. Marsh offers an essay
on the iconography of Prajnaparamita (along with an accompanying
thangka image). From the Mirrors
of the Heart-Mind exhibit. |
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Samantabhadri Guru and yidam -
Primordial Mother of all the Buddhas
- Samantabhadri (Kuntuzangmo in Tibetan) is
the consort and female counterpart of Samantabhadra/Kuntuzangpo, the
primordial Buddha of the older schools of Tibetan Buddhism. They
are usually shown in sexual union (yab/yum in Tibetan), the
blue male figure and white female figure embracing each other in lotus
position. Samantabhadri is sometimes shown alone, in which case
she is seated in lotus posture with her hands in meditation posture in
her lap. Samantabhadri is always shown naked (as is her consort)
to demonstrate the unadorned nature of Absolute Truth, the emptiness of
all phenomena. She is in some senses an analogue of
Prajnaparamita. A near equivalent of the New Translation
schools is the dark-blue Vajradhatu-ishvari, shown in union with consort
Vajradhara as the yab-yum Vajradhara /
Vajradhatu-ishvari.
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Sarasvati Yidam - goddess of
learning and the arts
- As the goddess of learning and the arts,
Sarasvati (also spelled Saraswati) is in many ways a counterpart to Manjushri, the
male Bodhisattva of discriminating wisdom, and is sometimes his
consort. Sarasvati is a peaceful yidam who holds a vina (a
sitar-like lute) on her lap; she also sometimes holds a text.
There is also a Hindu deity named
Sarasvati with near-identical attributes. She is sometimes
associated with Palden Lhamo, who may be regarded as Sarasvati in
wrathful form. The most popular form of Sarasvati is
white-coloured, with one face, two eyes, and two arms; however, there
are many other forms including the white four-handed Sarasvati and the
red Vajra Sarasvati.
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Simhamukha Yidam - lion-headed
Dakini
- Simhamukha (Tib. Seng-gdong-ma or
Seng-dong-chen) is a wrathful dancing dark-blue figure similar to
Vajravarahi in appearance and ornaments, holding a curved knife
in her right hand and a skullcup in her left, except that she also has
the face of a lion -- hence her name in Tibetan and Sanskrit (meaning
"lion-face"). Her practice was founded by a woman, Jetsun[ma]
Lochen. Simhamukha's
practice is found in the Sarma (New Translation) schools is associated
with the Chakrasamvara Tantra.
Examples of her iconography on the Web are a
statue on
the Dharmaware website, and two glorious images on the Art of Tibet
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Sukkhasiddhi Guru and historical
figure - lineage Dakini
- This mahasiddha belongs to the mother
lineage of chöd. Her name means 'good or blissful siddhi'
(a Sanskrit word meaning a miraculous accomplishment, which can be
either mundane, e.g. healing, flying, etc., or supramundane, i.e. the
siddhi of full Enlightenment). She compiled her own six yogas (see
also Niguma) which she gave to Khyungpo Naljor, the founder of Shangpa
Kagyu.
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Tara, Green Yidam - beloved
Saviouress
- Also known as Drolma (Tibetan), Tara
embodies the compassionate activity of all the Buddhas (her name means
"the liberator" or "she who saves"). She is pictured with one
face, two arms and a green-coloured body. Her right hand is
outstretched in the mudra (sacred gesture) of generosity, and her
left holds the stem of a blue lotus which blossoms at her left ear.
See:
Books devoted to Tara include:
- In Praise of Tara: Songs to the
Saviouress by Martin Willson (London: Wisdom Publications, 1986)
- The Cult of Tara: Magic and Ritual in
Tibet by Stephan Beyer (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1973) -- a study of Tibetan beliefs and practices concerning Tara
- Longing for Darkness: Tara and the
Black Madonna by China Galland (New York: Viking, 1990)
- Bodhisattva of Compassion: The Mystical
Tradition of Kuan Yin by John Blofeld (Boulder: Shambhala, 1978)
-- a study of Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of Compassion, in the
female forms of Kuan Yin (Chinese) and Tara (Tibetan).
This form of Tara, Green Tara, is the most
common one; but Tara also appears in other forms, such as White
Tara, Red Tara and the Twenty-One
Taras. In the Gelukpa school there is also a Highest Yoga
Tantra form of Tara known as Cittamani Tara (as well as a Highest Yoga
Tantra form of the Twenty-One Taras practice). See the Praises and
Requests to the Twenty-One Taras on the Osel Shen Phen Ling site for
an example of a kriya-tantra sadhana (meditation text), as well as NEW the Britannica
entry on Tara for a more scholastic look at the
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Tara, Red Yidam of
bountifulness
- Red Tara is a special
practice of Tara practised in both the Nyingma and Sakya schools.
She is depicted in much the same way as Green Tara (seated with right
leg slightly extended, left hand held to the heart with an utpala flower
blooming by her left ear, and right hand making the gesture of
generosity), except that her body is ruby-red, she possesses a third
eye, and her right hand holds a long-life vase. There are lovely
thangka reproductions of this deity (both solitary
and amongst her mandala
deities) on the Chagdud Gompa site, which also offers a photo of a
Red
Tara statue with the bow-and-arrow attributes of
Kurukulla (to whom she can be related). See also
the Art of Tibet site (e.g. thangka
331). Red Tara can also
be either one of several out of the various sets of twenty-one Taras, or
in the lower tantras (Kriya or Carya).
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Tara, White Yidam - she who grants
long life and wisdom
- Also known as Drolkar (Tibetan) or Sitatara
(Sanskrit), Tara embodies the compassionate activity of all the Buddhas
(her name means "the liberator" or "one who saves"). White
Tara is especially associated with long life and wisdom. Unlike
the green form of this deity, White Tara has seven eyes -- one in each
hand and foot, and a third eye on her face -- to show that she sees and
responds to suffering throughout the universe; and she sits in full
lotus posture.
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Tseringma Dharma protector -
goddess of the mountain
- Tseringma is the foremost of the Five
Long-Life Deities -- formerly mountain-guardian spirits -- who plagued
the great Tibetan yogi Milarepa during his cave retreats. They were
converted to Buddhism and Tseringma became his consort. She is a
white figure shown riding a snow lion and carrying a long-life vase in
her hand. Thangka 433 on the
Art of Tibet website depicts Tseringma and her sisters.
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Ushnisha-sitatapatra Yidam -
goddess of the glorious white umbrella
- This white-coloured deity, a form of
Tara, is a female counterpart of the thousand-armed
form of Avalokiteshvara. She has one thousand faces, arms and
legs; each face has three eyes, and she has one eye in the palm of each
hand and the sole of each foot, showing that she watches and protects
sentient beings. Her central faces are white (as is her body); her
right faces are yellow, the faces at the rear of her body are red, and
the left faces green; there is also a "tier" of blue faces at the top of
her head. Her right hands hold wheels of the Dharma
(dharmachakra) and her left hands hold arrows; one of her other
left hands also holds aloft a white parasol which also symbolises her
protection.
There is a lovely thangka of
Ushnisha-sitatapatra (#429) on the Art of Tibet site. Robert
Chung's website also includes an illustrated sadhana
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Ushnisha-vijaya Yidam - the
long-life deity
- Ushnisha-vijaya (Tib. Namgyalma or
Namgyelma) is a peaceful white deity and an emanation of Vairochana
Buddha. She has three faces, ten eyes and eight hands. Her
right hands hold a lasso, bow, and vase with the nectar of immortality;
her fourth right hand bears an eye in the palm and is in the
mudra (posture) of generosity. Her left hands hold a
miniature Buddha image, a double (crossed) vajra, and an arrow; the
fourth left hand is held in meditation posture in her lap.
Ushnisha-vijaya is often shown in a
triumvirate with the other two principal long-life deities, red (male)
Amitayus and White Tara (see above). Robert Chung's Namgyelma
page includes a picture and her two
mantras. |
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Vajrayogini / Vajravarahi Yidam - the
queen of Dakinis
Vajrayogini (Tib. Dorje Naljorma,
Adamantine Female Practitioner) is the principal female yidam of Highest
Yoga Tantra of the New Translation schools of Tibetan Buddhism.
She is a slightly wrathful red female figure shown holding a curved
knife in her right hand, a skullcup in her left and a khatvanga
(trident or staff) in her left elbow. The Naro form of
Vajrayogini, most commonly seen in the Sakya and Geluk traditions, is
shown standing with her face turned upwards and to the left, with the
skullcup held up to her mouth and the curved knife pointing to the
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The Vajravarahi form of Vajrayogini,
generally more frequent in Kagyu, is shown in dancing pose with the
right leg bent; this form holds the curved knife up in the air and the
skullcup to her heart. Vajravarahi, whose name means Adamantine
Sow, is usually shown with a small sow's head, representing triumph over
ignorance, emerging over her right ear. In either form of this
deity she may be visualised as a solitary yidam or in union with her
consort dark-blue Heruka
Chakrasamvara, a principal mother-tantra deity of Highest Yoga
Tantra.
Good pictures on the Web include:
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Yeshe Tsogyal Yidam, guru and
historical figure - mother of Tibetan Buddhism
- This remarkable female hermit-saint, the
Tibetan consort of Padmasambhava, is sometimes shown in Nirmanakaya form
-- the 'emanation body' a Buddha takes so as to be visible to ordinary
beings -- as a woman in everyday Tibetan clothes, seated and holding
curved knife and skullcup. She is also shown in deified form as
the Queen of Great Bliss (Tib., Dechen Gyalmo) as a red standing figure
with a damaru (double-sided drum) raised in her right hand and a curved
knife held to the ground with her left.
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Yeshe Tsogyal's sacred biography may be
read in Kevin Dowman's Sky Dancer: the secret life and songs of the
Lady Yeshe Tsogyel (London: Arkana, 1989) and Tarthang Tulku's
Mother of Knowledge: The Enlightenment of Ye-shes mTsho-rgyal
(Berkeley: Dharma Publishing, 1983). The meditation practice of
Dechen Gyalmo, Queen of Great Bliss, is discussed in Anne C. Klein's
Meeting
the Great Bliss Queen: Buddhists, Feminists, and the Art of the
Self, which has a lovely cover illustration of the
deity. |