Sunday, March 8, 2009

Milarepa Day, or "Why people would read 292 pages out loud in one day"

On Saturday, we had a Milarepa Day celebration at the DC Shambhala Center. A group of us gathered from 8:30 AM until a little after 7 PM to read through 292 pages of Kagyü 'vajra songs' in "the Rain of Wisdom".  
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Now, you are likely wondering (since you are reading this) "What is Milarepa Day?" This is an annual commemoration of the life and enlightenment of Milarepa, who is considered one of the greatest examples of a dharma practitioner in all of Himalayan Buddhism.  What is most significant about him is the fact that he got enlightened in one lifetime with many years left to teach, even after amassing the immense negative karma of killing several people in his village (including his relatives) at the request of his mother.  Basically, if HE could get enlightened, ANYONE can if they practice it diligently enough.  

Milarepa is also known for his spontaneous teaching songs, or 'dohas'.  In the Kagyü lineage of buddhism, there is a long history of using songs to convey meditation instructions. The late, great eccentric translator Dr. Robin Kornman called us "the Southern Baptists of Buddhism" for this reliance on songs.  Since many members of this tradition were illiterate (since that was unfortunately common in olde Tibet), these songs were often the -only- way to teach yogis and yoginis what they should practice and what they should abandon.

These songs and stories of realization are very famous in Tibetan literature.  Also, for a songwriter (which I am), I've found it's very good to tap into this tradition. Most of what was read on Milarepa Day in DC were songs from lamas of the Karma Kagyu tradition, which is what Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, the founder of what became the Shambhala centers, was trained in.  (In the Kagyu lineage (aka "the practice lineage"), there used to be "four great and eight lesser lineages". )

Here's some photos of us reading through all this. Different people came and went during the course of the day. There were a few stalwarts who stayed the whole time (myself included).



Also, my job's contract ended two weeks ago, so I am back in the 'employment bardo'.  It sucks, but, well, this- IS- samsara which, to a certain extent, is supposed to suck. :)  TBC...

2 comments:

Cherie Scott said...

Thank you for your posting about Milarepa Day and the reading of "The Wisdom of The Rain." How I found it was because a dear friend and colleague who was an internationally certified trainer in Nonviolent Communication was given Milarepa as her name at birth. Known as Milli, she was killed in a road accident in May 2009 and I have been exploring Milarepa in an effort to understand more about her life and death. I believe it is no coincidence that her birth name was Milarepa and I'm longing for some more understanding of the meaning and purpose behind the giving of this name to her.

I enjoyed reading your blog posting and looking at the photographs. I guess its about connecting and understanding. Until today i didn't know there was a "Milarepa Day." By the way - have you seen the movie "Milarepa"? If so - did you enjoy it?

Kind regards,
Cherie.

JT Randrol said...

Cherie-
Yes, Milarepa Day has been a tradition in the Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism for centuries. Milarepa is the greatest example of how one can go from as negative as one can get (a mass-murderer!) to being enlightened in one lifetime.

And yes, I saw the movie. I loved it - until i realized it was about to end and he hadn't even met his main teacher Marpa yet. :)

So, I hope causes and conditions allow me to see part 2 of Milarepa in the not-too-distant future.

-NJTR