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“In this age made totally dark By the five great
degenerations, The sentient being constantly tossed In waves
of disease, sorrow and pain. Thus Buddha, out of great
compassion, Emanates as Bendurya, the Medicine Guru. To shine
as a sun in the skies of the world, And dry up the water
giving birth to all ills.” A Benediction to the Medicine
Budddha. By Gyalwa Kalzang Gyatso
Originally, Tibetan
medicine dates back to the pre – Buddhist era.
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During the Bon Period, various healing techniques
were devised and practiced. With the coming
of Buddhism, medical knowledge became an integral
part of religious doctrines and monastic
discipline. Buddha’s key teachings of the middle
way between worldly indulgence and self – denial
gave wandering physicians of the period a
radically different view of the world and of
humankind’s place in it; this was further fostered
by their intensely meditative discipline. Medicine
thus became a part of Buddhism – providing the
means to maintain a healthy bodily state of
equilibrium.
Some have suggested that the Buddha’s key
teaching of the Four Noble Truths was based on a medical
paradigm, whereby suffering, its cause, its suppression, and
the method for its elimination find a parallel in midicine to
disease, its cause, health and the reedy. But actually the
four fold division that occurs in Charaka Samhita is different
from the Four Noble Truths. “ The best physician, one fit to
treat a king, is he whose knowledge is four fold: (he knows)
the cause (hetu), symptom (linga), cure (prasmana), and
non-recurrence (apunarbhava) of diseases. Knowledge of medical
theory and practice among the sarmanic, Buddhists, however, is
indisputable, and the Buddhist sangha, or monastic community
where wandering intellectuals would gather and exchange
information, soon became the principal vehicle for the
preservation, advancement and transmission of medical
lore.
Some of the repository of medical lore was
codified at these Sanghas, thereby giving rise to a Buddhist
medical monastic tradition. In the early Sangha, membership
was quite unrestricted and wanderers joined and left at will.
These comings and goings increased the volume of new
information available. Debates among the temporary residents
were common and luckily included topics related to medicine.
As fixed Sangha establishments with permanent resident monks
became more common, the knowledge discussed and exchanged was
gradually accumulated, filtered and codified, eventually
becoming Buddhist doctrine. The symbiotic relationship between
Buddhism and medicine led to the teaching of medicine in the
large conglomerate monasteries or viharas.
However,
even after the establishment of settled monasteries, medicines
requisite in sickness remained among the monk’s necessities
and constituted one of his four possessions along with a robe,
a begging bowl, and a bed.
Tibetan medicine continued
to progress due to the efforts of Buddhist monks and the
emphasis laid on it by religion. In the process, it derived
influences from various external sources. In the second
century A.D., it was further influenced by arrival of two
physicians from India by the names of Bijay and Gazay. The
Brahmin physicians Bijay was given the princess Cham – sing -
yekyireoja as his bride by King Lhatho – thori – nyentsen.
Their son, named Thung – ki – thorchok, too became a famous
physician.
The development of the Tibetan system got an
impetus during the 7th and 8th centuries
when physicians from Persia, Greece, India, Nepal, China,
Sinkiang and other neighbouring states were invited to Tibet
by the Kings Sorngstsen Gampa and Trisong Detsen, to exchange
knowledge with Tibetan scholars and physicians. Many young
Tibetans were enrolled as medical students and nine among them
became learned physicians. At this period the great Tibetan
translator and scholar, Beru Tsana (Vaircana) translated
the “Ghyushi” (Four Tantras) teachings given by the Kashmiri
scholar Chandranandna (Panchen Dawa Ngoenpa), into the
Tibetan language
and presented the work to the king. Beside Beru Tsana, the
renowned Tibetan physician, Elder Yuthong Yonten Gompo (708
–833 A.D.) too received the “Ghyu – Shi” teachings from India.
It is said that the spread of “Ghyu – shi” teachings was not
ripe for revelation at that period and Guru Padmasambhavahid
the works, until Dapa Ngoenshay revealed this hidden work from
the top of the Samye Monastery in the eleventh
century. |