Clarification
of the Term “Heart Sons”
By H.H. Shamar Rimpoche
Date:
14.06.2004
Sometimes truth really is stranger than fiction.
For
reasons that I cannot fathom, recent
books on the Karmapa controversy by two
supporters
of Tai Situ Rinpoche, Lea Terhune and Mick Brown,
employ the term “Heart Sons” to describe four Karma Kagyu
lamas—Shamar Rimpoche, Situ Rinpoche, Gyaltsab Rinpoche and
Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoche.
This
is confusing to me because this term did not come down to us from
the ancient
tradition
of the Karma Kagyu; nor was it given by
the late 16 th Gyalwa Karmapa. Instead, the term “Heart Sons” was
coined in 1997 by my cousin Topga Rinpoche, the general secretary
of the late Karmapa. And what's more, Rinpoche used the term ironically,
as part of a detailed critique of the behavior of Situ and Gyaltsab
Rinpoches.
Topga Rinpoche was a gifted writer and learned scholar blessed with
a strong sense of right and wrong and a keen wit to match. In the
finest Tibetan literary tradition, Rinpoche was not afraid to target
his sharp pen and his irony at behavior that failed to meet his high
moral standards.
It
was in this spirit that Topga Rinpoche sarcastically applied the
term “heart sons” to
Situ and Gyaltsab Rinpoches. It is curious to me that Brown and
Terhune would employ a term invented
specifically to criticize their lamas. And it is confusing that these
writers do not cite the source of this term, nor explain the context
in which Topga Rinpoche first used it.
To understand why this term is so confusing to me, let me explain
how Topga Rinpoche came to use it.
An Official Lineage of Spiritual Fathers and Sons
Before
the establishment of the Dalai Lamas as the secular rulers of Tibet
, the country
was governed by a dynasty of kings sympathetic
to the Karma Kagyu order, the Tsangpa Dynasty. In the 17 th century
King Tsangpa Dhesid wanted to institutionalize the spiritual primacy
of the Karma Kagyu within the nation. Thus, he designated the ninth
Karmapa “Dharma King” of Tibet , and he also established
an official, government-sanctioned hierarchy for the highest lamas
of the Karma Kagyu.
In
language adopted from the Indian tradition of spiritual fathers
and sons started
by Marpa
and Milarepa, this hierarchy was known
as the Kagyu Gyalwa Yab Say or “Victorious Lineage of Spiritual
Fathers and Sons.” In this system, the main reincarnate lamas
were placed in an order of authority from the highest on down. The
top lamas were listed as follows:
1. Gyalwa Karmapa Black Hat
2. Gyalwa Karmapa Red Hat (Shamarpa)
3. Goshir Gyaltsab Rinpoche
4. Kenting Tai Situ Rinpoche
5. Pawo Rinpoche
6. Teho Rinpoche
This hierarchy parallels the system in the Dalai Lama's Gelugpa
order, the Jey Yab Say Sum with Tsongkhapa at the top and Khedrup
Je and Gyalstab Je below, and the Gyalwa Yab Say Nampa Nyi with the
Dalai Lama at the top and the Panchen Lama just below.
The Kagyu Gyalwa Yab Say became a kind of ruling cabinet for the
Karma Kagyu School and established a lasting order of the highest
lamas with only one exception. Informally within the Kagyu tradition,
because Gyaltsab was involved in a long-standing legal dispute with
Gyalwa Karmapa himself that distanced Gyaltsab and Karmapa, Situ
moved up to take Gyaltsab's place in the #3 position.
The ban that the Lhasa government placed on Shamarpa reincarnations
from the late eighteenth century until 1956 had no effect on the
hierarchy; the number #2 position remained officially empty. Neither
Gyalwa Karmapa nor the government of Tibet transferred Shamarpa's
rank to any other lama.
Formulated by the Tibetan government of the Tsangpa kings and then
reconfirmed by the government of the Fifth Dalai Lama, the Kagyu
Gyalwa Yab Say was adopted by the Karma Kagyu School itself and remained
in force into the twentieth century. Then, the 16 th Gyalwa Karmapa
made his own temporary ranking of Karma Kagyu lamas that paralleled
the Gyalwa Yab Say . These two rankings provided the only terms used
to describe the hierarchy of our lamas until the death of the 16th
Karmapa in 1981.
The
Brief Life of “The
Four Regents”
At
the late Karmapa's death, the Karma Kagyu School found itself in
the extraordinary
situation of running its affairs in the interregnum
between Karmapas while in exile from Tibet . Recognizing the potential
for disorder in this situation, the late Karmapa's general secretary,
Damchoe Yongdu, created a group of four “regents” consisting
of myself, Situ, Gyaltsab and Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoches. With some
reservation, I naively accepted this situation to preserve harmony
within our school. At the time I didn't realize that I myself had
no authority to change the Kagyu system. And sure enough, within
a few years it became clear that this arrangement created more problems
than it solved. In particular, the secretaries of each rinpoche's
administration began throwing their weight around based on their
lama being a “regent,” which created resentment among
the administrations of other lamas.
Therefore,
I dissolved the regent group in 1984, with the agreement of the
other
three
rinpoches. We all agreed that the term “Four
Regents” should cease to be used in any official communications
of the Karma Kagyu in general or the late Karmapa's seat at Rumtek
Mona stery in particular. Accordingly, the Rumtek office reverted
to the original terminology of the Kagyu Gyalwa Yab Say .
Topga Rinpoche's Coup de Plume
In
1992 the unfortunate conflict within our school began. The sad
history of those years
is known to us all, though we may disagree
about who was in the right. In the heat of this discord, in 1997,
Topga Rinpoche published a book criticizing the behavior of Situ
and Gyaltsab Rinpoches. Topga criticized the two rinpoches in particular
for attacking Rumtek Mona stery and forging their Karmapa prediction
letter. Written in Tibetan language and titled Tam Na Tsog Kuntok
Gi Rimo , the book detailed how the two rinpoches collaborated with
corrupt politicians “to loot the ancient relics of the Karmapas.”
Topga Rinpoche's book became famous among Himalayan scholars for
its indignant critique supported by impeccable logic, impressive
evidence and Topga Rinpoche's signature wit and sarcasm.
In
his book, Topga Rinpoche borrowed a term used by other schools
of Tibetan
Buddhism, thug
sey . Translated as “heart sons,” this
term was used historically to describe various groups of close disciples
of famous Nyingma and Drukpa Kagyu lamas, much as Christians use
the term “apostles” to refer to the closest followers
of Jesus.
Here,
Topga used the term thug sey ironically to refer to the four lamas
who were
supposed
to have had a special connection and loyalty
to the late Karmapa. Arguing that Situ and Gyaltsab Rinpoches had
used their position of trust to betray the institution of the Karmapas,
Topga gave the term Heart Sons an ironic tinge. Perhaps this would
have been like calling Judas “the good disciple.” Topga
Rinpoche certainly meant to say that Situ and Gyaltsab Rinpoches
had acted like Judases towards their guru the 16 th Gyalwa Karmapa.
Needless to say, Situ and Gyaltsab Rinpoches were not pleased by
Topga Rinpoche's book, or by its popularity among Himalayan Buddhists.
But this did not stop Situ Rinpoche from removing the term Heart
Sons from the ironic context in which Topga Rinpoche had used it
and applying it to himself and the other lamas as a kind of badge
of honor.
The Precious Gift of Our Unbroken Lineage
For
my part, I prefer the traditional terms of our lineage. I was never
comfortable
with
the term “regent” and was glad
to see it go. And I am confused that Situ Rinpoche should want to
call himself a “Heart Son,” given the origin of this
term.
In any event, I would like to request here that Situ Rinpoche not
include me in this newfangled designation.
I
am satisfied with the nomenclature of our tradition and with the
hierarchy laid
out in
the Kagyu Gyalwa Yab Say . This was good enough
for seven Karmapas and all other Kagyu lamas since the 17th century,
and it is good enough for me. Neither of the late general secretaries
of Gyalwa Karmapa, Damchoe Yongdu or Topga Rinpoche, had the authority
to change this structure. The terms “Four Regents” and “Four
Heart Sons” have no history in our lineage; they appear in
no documents generated by the administration of the late 16th Karmapa;
and I can't see that these terms add any value. Indeed, these terms
were circulated only after the death of the late Karmapa, in a time
of disorder, by people who wanted to take advantage of the temporary
lack of authority to enhance their own political positions.
For
these reasons, I would like to ask all followers of our lineage
as well as journalists
and others interested in Tibetan Buddhism
to abandon the terms “regents” and “Heart Sons.” If
writers need to refer to the work that the four rinpoches did together
during the period from 1981 to 1992 to locate the reincarnation of
the late Gyalwa Karmapa, then they may refer to us as the Karmapa
Search Committee of Four Rinpoches.
The beauty and power of Buddhism comes from its preservation of
the original teachings of Buddha Shakyamuni unchanged over eons.
Of course, the cultural forms through which the precious Dharma is
expressed can and should change to suit different times and places.
But we would be ill-served to change the heart essence of the teachings.
And for Tibetans, the way we have preserved the heart essence of
Buddhism has been through the unbroken, authentic lineage of Mahamudra.
Marpa the Translator transmitted this lineage to his student Jetsun
Milarepa who in turn transmitted it to Gampopa. Gampopa's students
then handed down the teachings through successive Karma Kagyu lineage-holders
to the present day, from teacher to student, from spiritual father
to spiritual son.
This unbroken lineage is our unique gift to the world, a world that
needs authentic spiritual wisdom today more than ever before. It
is the duty of all Karma Kagyu practitioners to preserve this precious
lineage so that future generations may enjoy the blessings of genuine,
pure Dharma.
Blessings,
Shamar Rimpoche
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