- Phowa
Phowa (Wylie:" 'pho ba"; also spelled "Powa" or "Poa" phonetically) is a
Tibet an term for aBuddhist meditation practice that may be translated as the "practice of conscious dying", "transference of consciousness at the time of death" or "mindstream transference". Thechöd subsumes within its auspices aspects of phowasadhana . The main form is one of thesix yogas of Naropa , although other transmissions also exist. Through this Phowa practice, one learns to transfer one's consciousness through the top of the head directly into a pure realm,buddha-field dimension, field,kshetra orloka , and in so doing, by-pass some of the typical experiences that are said to occur after death. [Lingtrul Rinpoche . [http://www.kathokgonpa.ca/LR%20Phowa%201998.htm Teachings on Phowa] ] Phowa is also the discipline that has developed theTulku lineages within theBonpo ,Ngagpa ,Mantrayana andVajrayana lineages.Some lineages of Phowa are also practiced which include a rite of incision, or opening of the
sahasrara (seeArtificial cranial deformation ) at the cranialzenith , to assist with transferral.Fact|date=November 2007Shugchang, "et al." (2000), in an exegesis of the
Zhitro , discuss phowa and mentiondharmakaya ,meditation andDzogchen :Phowa has many different meanings; in Tibetan it means "transferringconsciousness." The highest form is known as the phowa of the dharmakaya whichis meditation on the great perfection. When you do Dzogchen meditation, there'sno need to transfer anything, because there's nothing to transfer, no place totransfer it, nor anyone to do it. That's the highest, and greatest phowa practice. [Shugchang, Padma (editor); Sherab, Khenchen Palden & Dongyal, Khenpo Tse Wang (2000). "A Modern Commentary on Karma Lingpa's Zhi-Khro: teachings on the peaceful and wrathful deities". PadmaGochen Ling. Source: [http://www.turtlehill.org/khen/zhikhro.pdf] (accessed: December 27, 2007) ]
Professor Pema Gyalpo, a
Tibet an Buddhist scholar in Japan, says that phowa is the act of sending the spirit of a person on his deathbed to the Pure Land."One concept in Tantra Vajrayana is that referred to by Asahara as poa, in which the spirits of the dead are transferred to a higher status through secret rites based on the power of the guru. The absolutization of this power can give rise to the perverted logic that if a person of low spiritual status is murdered by one with gedatsu then the former person’s karma improves, making the murder a good deed. It would not be surprising if a notion of this type was secretly taught in Aum." —Shimazono Susumu [Shimazono Susumu, in the Wake of Aum The Formation and Transformation of a Universe of Belief, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 1995 22/3–4 (This article, a condensed version of Shimazono Susumu’s book Aum Shinrikyõ no kiseki (c. 1995), was translated from the Japanese by Robert Kisala.)]
"Poa is a Tibetan meditative technique used near death to provide good karma in the cycle of reincarnation." —Barry Cooper [Barry Cooper, University of Calgary, 'Jihadists' and the War on Terrorism]
"Poa is practiced chiefly by members of a sect of Tibetan Buddhism called Vajrayana, or “DiamondVehicle.” According to the Vajrayana tradition, poa meditation transfers consciousness fromthe mundane world of existence to a transfigured world of post-existence. This meditation is undertaken with the intention of attaining a higher state of consciousness in the next rebirth." —Barry Cooper [Barry Cooper, Fraser Institute, Calgary Policy Research Centre, UNHOLY TERROR: The Origin and Significance of Contemporary, Religion-based Terrorism]
ee also
*
Skull (symbolism)
*Astral projection Notes
References
* Nydahl, Ole. [http://www.lama-ole-nydahl.org/olesite/pages/work/meditation_page.html Phowa: "Conscious Dying"]
* [http://www.karmaguen2003.com/pages/Spain%20June%202003%20Karma%20Guen%20Lama%20Ole%201.htm Lama Ole Nydahl Teaches Phowa]
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