The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History, 2 vols.

reviewed by Davidson, Ronald M.

Parabola

Vol.18 No.1

P.p.102-104

Spring 1993

COPYRIGHT Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition 1993


            Widely regarded as the supreme teacher of the Nyingma tradition in 
            the very difficult period following the Chinese occupation of Tibet, 
            Dudjom Rinpoche was uniquely qualified to formulate the identity of 
            his school of Buddhism in diaspora. The result of his efforts at 
            codifying that identity are set forth in two works translated into 
            English by the collaborative effort of two of his students who knew 
            him well. These two works, Fundamentals of the Nyingma School and 
            History of the Nyingma School, are to be found in Volume One. They 
            present in a grand schematism the doctrine and history of the 
            Nyingma in a manner reflective of traditional values and 
            scholarship. 
            Of the four living traditions of Tibetan Buddhism, the Nyingma is 
            one of the least understood. Far better identified is the Geluk-pa, 
            one of the reformed schools of Tibet. The Gelukpa is headed by the 
            Dalai Lama and has been the dominant religious tradition since the 
            Fifth Dalai Lama took power in Tibet in 1642. In distinction, the 
            Nyingma represents the oldest Buddhist system, tracing its origin 
            back to the Royal Dynastic Period (617-845 A.D.). It did not 
            cultivate the development of enormous monastic enclaves, the largest 
            of Nyingma monasteries having perhaps a thousand religious, as 
            opposed to the ten thousand found in the largest Geluk-pa convents. 
            Instead, the Nyingma considered itself closer to the traditions of 
            Tibetan village life and attempted to develop its scholarly 
            traditions in an environment which fostered contemplative life as 
            well as learning. 
            Preeminent in the wealth of Nyingma lore is the position played by 
            Padmasambhava, the legendary Indian master who visited Tibet at the 
            end of the eighth century, and from whom issued two streams of 
            religiosity. The first, "Distant Lineage of the Transmitted 
            Precepts," represents the doctrines, rituals, and meditative 
            practices continually transmitted from master to disciple since the 
            eighth century; and the second, the "Close Lineage of the 
            Treasures," represents revealed materials buried by Padmasambhava, 
            either physically in the Tibetan earth or physically in the 
            mentalities of his reincarnating disciples. Dudjom Rinpoche, in 
            grand Nyingma tradition, is considered the reincarnation of one of 
            Padmasambhava's twenty-five disciples, and so was identified as one 
            of the great culture bearers of the Nyingma. 
            These works are not for the faint of heart. Excellent antidotes to 
            the popular perception of Tibet or Buddhism, Dudjom Rinpoche's texts 
            put forth the ideals of traditional scholarship. As such, they are 
            twentieth-century versions of medieval formulae. The Fundamentals, 
            for example, is cast in a mold which was initially a response to 
            fourteenth-century attacks on the Nyingma by those of the reform 
            systems. The least empowered of the traditions, the Nyingma was 
            frequently the brunt of assaults, either physical -- as in 1717 A.D. 
            when two of its greatest monasteries were destroyed by Dzungar 
            Mongols -- or polemical, as in the Geluk-pa castigations of the 
            Nyingma system of religiosity. The History is not critical history 
            in the manner of the post-Enlightenment West. Rather it is a 
            traditional defense of the Nyingma, recording legends and 
            hagiographic materials into an authoritative statement about the 
            lineal development of the current system. 
            In both of these works, Dudjom Rinpoche's method has been 
            straight-forward and unabashedly conservative. He has maintained 
            traditional categories and relied on prior doctrinal compendia for 
            his vocabulary and formulations. In his Fundamentals, for example, 
            he has adopted theoretical categories largely codified in the 
            fourteenth century by Longchen-pa, the greatest Nyingma thinker. 
            Likewise, for the History, his method has been to use the standard 
            hagiographical sources for the figures in whom he is interested. 
            The traditional nature of the texts has been extended to their 
            dedicatory and graphic treatments as well, in the vivid red of the 
            binding and the gold ink on the cover. The translators have clearly 
            attempted to cater to a wider audience by their employment of 
            phonetic spelling in Volume One, as opposed to standard scholarly 
            orthography. 
            Volume Two, however, is qualitatively different, with its repository 
            of learned notes, extensive bibliography, and very valuable maps. In 
            this regard, Gyurme Dorje's training at the University of London and 
            Professor Kapstein's excellence in scholarship in his position at 
            Columbia University have served the reader well. Those familiar with 
            Tibetan traditional learning will appreciate to what lengths the 
            translators went in order to identify the enumerations mentioned in 
            the text, often an extraordinarily difficult task, given Dudjom 
            Rinpoche's deep scholarship. Equally valuable are the excellent 
            notes to the translations, which discuss some of the more difficult 
            aspects of Tibetan understanding. Modern researches are noted and 
            differences between traditional and modern scholarship are 
            addressed. The excellence of the bibliography can be fully 
            appreciated only by specialists -- it is a resource which will 
            reward those taking time to pursue avenues indicated by the 
            translators. 
            The juxtaposition of traditional idioms of effusive honorifics, 
            brilliant graphics, difficult structure, and excellent scholarly 
            apparatus begs the question: for whom was this translated? 
            Tibetologists, like myself, may be initially dissuaded from a close 
            examination of the work because of the dharma center aesthetics and 
            phonetic transliteration. A wider readership will, on the contrary, 
            have great difficulty with the content -- it is neither easy reading 
            nor intuitively accessible. Both, however, will greatly profit from 
            a close perusal of the work, the first complete translation of the 
            modern self-assessment of any of the four Tibetan traditions. 
            Ronald M. Davidson, Ph.d., Assistant Professor of Religious Studies 
            and Director of the Program of Asian Studies at Fairfield 
            University, is the co-editor of Tibetan Buddhism: Reason and 
            Revelation (SUNY Press, 1992).