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INNER TRADITIONS
ROCHESTER,
VERMONT
MAIN 299.72 Gold, Peter Navajo & Tibetan sacred wisdom :
31143005830436 Inner Traditions International
One Park Street Rochester, Vermont 05767 Copyright All rights reserved.
No
©
1994 by Peter Gold
part of this
book may be reproduced or
utilized in
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Gold, Peter.
Navajo and Tibetan sacred wisdom: the
the spirit
circle of
/
Peter Gold.
cm.
p.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-89281-41 1-X 1.
Navajo Indians
— Religion
and mythology. I.
E99.N3G84
Buddhism
2.
— China —Tibet.
Title.
93-40305
1994
299'.72— dc20
CIP Printed and
10
bound
in
Canada
987654321
Text design and layout by Bonnie Distributed to the Publishers
book trade
in
F.
Atwater
Canada by
Group West (PGW), Toronto, Ontario
Distributed to the
book trade in the United Kingdom by Deep Books, London
Distributed to the
book trade
in Australia
Millennium Books, Newtown, N. Distributed to the
book trade
Tandem
Press,
in
New
Auckland
S.
by
W.
Zealand by
This book
is
dedicated with respect
guidance
and
love to
my teachers,
could never have been written,
it
let
without whose
alone conceived.
Thubten Jigme Norbu Tagtser Rinpoche
Who
compassionately guided this
often unwilling student into the beauty of
Tibetan philosophy and culture
W. Yazzie
Margaret Mead
Alfred
Anthropologist
Navajo Chanter
Who
Master of the path of Beauty
me
introduced
a world of anthropological to
ideas
and
and protector of The People
ideals
Henrietta Yurchenco Ethnomusicologist
My
formative mentor in
and
And
this
work
and heroines of
is
the
humanism
cultural relativity
especially dedicated to the spiritual heroes
Poba (Tibetan) and Dine (Navajo) people who,
through dedication
to living
according to spiritual principles,
have preserved the universal wisdom of the Circle of the their sisters
and
brothers worldwide.
Spirit for
Acknowledgments
ix
Message from His Holiness, Tenzin Gyatso,
xi
the Dalai
Lama
Foreword by Ethics
of Tibet
Philip Snyder, Director, Center for Religion,
and
xiii
Social Policy, Cornell University
Introduction
1
PART ONE fluinKcninG nnD Con(iEai(iG to tut
iTouE
of Tuiugf
19
1
The Tibetan Sacred World
25
2
The Navajo Sacred World
36
3
Spirit in
World
46
4
Wind
part
of
the Sacred Life,
Light of Mind
62
two
BOLflUElUG nUD UUIFOIDG 5
The Code of Unity
6
The Cosmic Mother
CflllTU lUITU
tKO
85
87 3 The Tibetan Plateau's
Fig.
106
central region
is
7
The Spiritual Hero
114
dry
8
Ultimate Union
125
(above Lhatse).
a high,
and sundrenched place of raw natural power
PART THREE
(minG 9
10
in
me
flinnDiiLn or
Sat non (ornioi
m
At THE Center OF THE Sacred World
133
Mandala Universals
145
11 Journey TO THE Primordial
Ground
160
PART four
BaominG: toaeo eiia or Inonsronmorion
181
12 Orchestrating THE Sacred Journey
183
13 The Rite OF Transformation
186
14 The Night 15 The
Way
Rite
Wheel of Time
16 The Sacred
Way
17 Beyond Time
Initiation
of Life
and Form
195
215
229
236
Appendices 1
The Wheel of Cyclic Existence
240
2
Tibetan and Navajo Models of the Sacred World
242
3
Enlightening Experiences
250
4
Harnessing Protective Powers
252
5
Two
269
6
Diviners
Rites of Exorcism
and Divination
276
Endnotes
280
Pronunciation Guide
316
Glossary
317
Bibliography
323
Illustration Credits
325
Index
327
About the Author
334
lla[IOlllLEDGI1IEIir»
Tin
undertaking of this scope and
magnitude could only have been accomplished with the guidance,
aid,
and goodwill of numerous organizations and individuals. As such,
would
thank
like to
following
list
its
many
material and psychic sponsors.
attempts to be all-inclusive.
If,
And
to
all,
I
offer
my
The
however, any individual
or organization has been inadvertently omitted,
apologies.
I
I
offer
my
sincere
heartfelt thanks.
American Alpine Club, American Philosophical
Society,
The Ann and
van Waveren Foundation, Asian Cultural Council, National En-
Erlo
dowment Ven.
for the Arts;
Amchok
Rinpoche, David Begay, Olivier Bernier, Marcia Calkowski,
Kevin Cassidy,
Jeff
Cox, Nathan Cutler, His Holiness the Dalai Lama,
Lotsawa Tenzin Dorje, Ven. Yeshe Dorje Rinpoche, Lisa Faithorn, Peter N. Fowler Esq., Tashi Gyaltsen Gangzey, Barbara Green, Jeff Greenwald,
Lory and
Dean
Dan Hawley, Djann Hoffman,
C. Jackson,
Feuille),
Virginia
Frances Howland, Edwin Irwin,
Joann Kealiinohomoku, Ven. Kunckok Lhundrub Qohn
Marc Lieberman,
Brigitte Lueck,
Regina Lynch, Rev. Mark and
MacDonald, Ed McCombs, Margaret Mead, Frank Morgan,
Leroy C. Multine, Thubten Jigme Norbu, Arlene Olson, Lobsang
T. Rikha,
Ray Rodney, Rough Rock Arizona Community Schools, Cathy Rountree, Philip Snyder, Francis Teller, Richard Weingarten, Alfred
W.
Yazzie,
Kim
Yeshi, Henrietta Yurchenco;
The
staff at
Inner Traditions International, with
Leslie Colket,
Wood.
Cannon M.
whom
Labrie, Jeanie Levitan,
Jill
I
worked
closely:
Mason, and Lee
LAMA
THE DALAI
In the present century, although
many
technological development,
we have reached an
extraordinary level of
people remain unhappy.
One
of the most
immediate causes of this has been our undue emphasis on material development alone. So engrossed have we become in its pursuit, that, almost without knowing
it,
we have neglected
most basic human needs
to foster the
kindness, cooperation, and caring. This
is
for love,
also reflected in a thoughtless attitude
toward our natural environment. Regardless of time and place,
human
beings cherish a
common
desire for
happiness and a wish to avert suffering. From the very core of our being we
yearn for contentment. In ness
is
others.
my own
limited experience, the source of
all
happi-
love and compassion, a sense of kindness and warmheartedness toward
Our world
qualities. Lately,
that, living in
is
rich in traditions possessing
methods
for
developing these
people seeking such methods have turned to communities
harmony with
nature, retain a strong
commitment
to cultivating
the inner environment.
The Tibetans and the Navajo Indians of North America Following the teachings of the Buddha,
we Tibetans have
are such people.
derived a clarity of
mind, openness of heart, and strength of character that have given us a pragmatic resourcefulness on the one hand and the ideal of enlightenment on the other. In this book, Peter
and Tibetan Buddhist
Gold describes and compares many aspects of Navajo
practice, highlighting the
which they are based. The similarity of two cultures geographically so far apart feel this
the
comparison most importantly
human
humanitarian principles on
and practices between indeed very interesting. But what I
ideas, symbols, is
reflects
is
the fundamental goodness of
heart.
o June
1,
1992
XI
1#®
:
/
•
?
•
*
fOWRD
This remarkable book coalesces the fruits of a personal odyssey that ranged back and forth between two continents over a period of many years. As an anthropologist, I am impressed by Peter Gold's sustained fieldwork among two peoples so far apart in space,
language, history. Typically most anthropologists are
more
more wedded
specialized,
to a specific people or area. But this
is
not a work of conventional social science or of comparative mythology; rather,
it
invites the reader to search
framework and enter onto
beyond
his or her cultural
a quest of "spiritual anthropology."
The Tibetans and Navajos each embody what the poet-philosopher Gary Snyder has termed "the Old Ways." Although the particular florescence of their cultural forms can be traced over the preceding
millennium, the roots of their traditions stem back into Transmitted orally over the
many
centuries
a
deep
past.
and generations, they
are
taproots linking back to the Paleolithic, that ancient and formative
"Dreamtime" of the human gatherers, alive with
race. This
was the world of the hunter-
numinous powers,
a
time
gaged directly the primal forces of earth and
when humanity
en-
sky.
So what could such traditional peoples possibly have to say to "post-
modern" humanity? The anthropologist Stanley Diamond observes in his book The Search for the Primitive that the journey of anthropology is the search of civilized (urban) man and woman for that which has been lost and which may possibly still be recovered. What was lost is "Primal Culture," a world based upon community and communion in which
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