Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra
Toh 563
Degé Kangyur, vol. 90 (rgyud ’bum, pha), folios 150.b–156.a
- Śīlendrabodhi
- Jñānasiddhi
- Śākyaprabha
- Bandé Yeshé Dé
Imprint
Translated by the Dharmachakra Translation Committee
under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
First published 2016
Current version v 1.4.19 (2024)
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Table of Contents
Summary
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra is one of five texts that together constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection, popular for centuries as an important facet of Mahāyāna-Vajrayāna Buddhism’s traditional approach to personal and communal misfortunes of all kinds. It addresses a range of human ailments, as well as misfortunes such as robbery, natural disaster, and criminal punishment, thought to be brought on especially through the animosity of non-human spirit entities. The sūtra stipulates the invocation of these spirit entities, which it separates into hierarchically ordered groups and thus renders subordinate to the command of the Buddha and members of his saṅgha. The Buddha stipulates that just “upholding” or intoning their names and the mantra formula for each will quell the violent interventions of non-human entities and even hasten them to provide for the pragmatic needs of the saṅgha and its surrounding communities.
Acknowledgments
Translated by the Dharmachakra Translation Committee under the guidance of Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche. The translation was produced by James Gentry, who also wrote the introduction. Andreas Doctor compared the translation with the original Tibetan and edited the text. Wiesiek Mical contributed to the analysis of the title in its text-historical context.
This translation has been completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
Introduction
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra (Mahāmantrānudhāriṇī,1 Toh 563) is the fifth scripture in a series of five; the other four texts are Destroyer of the Great Trichiliocosm (Mahāsāhasrapramardanī, Toh 558), The Great Peahen, Queen of Incantations (Mahāmāyūrīvidyārājñī, Toh 559), The Noble Great Amulet, Queen of Incantations (Mahāpratisarāvidyārājñī, Toh 561), and The Sūtra of Great Cool Grove, (Mahāśītavana, Toh 562).2 Together these five texts have been apotheosized in the Mahāyāna tradition as five goddesses known collectively as the Pañcarakṣā, or the “Five Protectresses.” In the Tibetan tradition this collection is known by the moniker gzungs chen grwa lnga, the “Fivefold Great Dhāraṇī.” In the Degé Kangyur collection these texts constitute 60, 49, 43, 25, and 12 folios, respectively, making a total of 189 folios.
Tibetan redactors of Kangyur collections have catalogued this set of five texts together within the final Action (kriyā) tantras section of the “tantra collection” (rgyud ’bum) division. Indeed, these scriptures do contain elements—powerful incantations, an emphasis on external ritual hygiene and other material details such as auspicious dates, and so forth—that resonate with standard Kriyāyoga practice as understood in Tibet. Yet missing from nearly all these texts is any extensive mention of the contemplative visualization exercises, specialized ritual gestures (mudrā), elaborate maṇḍala diagrams, and initiation ceremonies so typical of full-blown Buddhist tantra. A close perusal of these five texts might then lead the reader to construe them as standard Mahāyāna texts with a preponderance of elements—magical mantra formulas, ritual prescriptions, pragmatic aims, and so forth—that only later coalesced and developed into a typically tantric practice tradition with its own unique set of view, meditation, and conduct. To complicate things further, the core of the Mahāmāyūrī, for one, is rooted in Indian Buddhist traditions that predate even the rise of Mahāyāna.3 The Mahāmāyūrī also appears as a remedy for snakebites in the earlier Mūlasarvāstivāda-vinayavastu.4 This accords with Gregory Schopen’s general observation, based on inscriptional evidence, that “dhāraṇī texts were publically known much earlier and more widely than texts we think of as ‘classically’ Mahāyāna”.5
Regardless of their bibliographical position in the Tibetan canon, the Five Protectresses have been among the most popular texts used for pragmatic purposes throughout the Mahāyāna-Vajrayāna Buddhist world. While it seems certain that these texts each developed independently and were only later combined into a five-text corpus, their popularity is attested by their eventual spread to Nepal, Tibet, Central Asia, China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan, and Indonesia (Hidas 2007: 189). In East Asia, the textual tradition associated with the Mahāmāyūrī in particular was instrumental in integrating Buddhist and indigenous notions of divine kingship.6 Moreover, the tradition of all five goddesses and their texts still occupies a place of central importance today in the Vajrayāna Buddhism practiced by the Newar population of the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal. Newar Buddhist communities of Kathmandu have even translated the texts of the Five Protectresses into the modern vernacular, based on which they continue to stage a number of annual rites for a broad range of pragmatic purposes.7 Newars often propitiate the Five Protectresses together by means of a five-section maṇḍala and other tantric elements that do not necessarily feature in the scriptures themselves. This tradition reflects a specifically tantric ritual treatment of the texts, which, judging by the presence of tantric sādhana practices associated with these five texts in the Tibetan Tengyur collections, had already developed by the time the Tibetan translations were executed. This helps account for why Tibetan redactors construed these five texts as belonging to the category of Kriyātantra, and not to the Dhāraṇī or Sūtra sections. Indeed, the Tibetan translation of the Mahāpratisarā reflects a recension of the Sanskrit text, which, Gergely Hidas suggests, “most likely served the better integration of this text into the Vajrayāna, changing the historical locus of the nidāna to a mythical Vajrayānic setting.”8
The designation Five Protectresses denotes the set of five texts, the incantations presented therein, and the goddesses presiding over each. It is believed that all these texts, particularly their incantations, provide special protection against a wide range of illnesses and misfortunes for those who memorize, recollect, read, copy, teach, wear, or otherwise come into contact with them. Each text promises protection against specific misfortunes, with considerable overlap witnessed between the texts. Despite the pragmatic thrust of these scriptures, each text also contains numerous allusions to doctrinal notions. The range of effects described therein sometimes, though rarely, extends beyond the pragmatic sphere to include the purification of negative karma, deliverance from the lower realms, and even the attainment of buddhahood.
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra was translated into Tibetan under Tibetan imperial patronage sometime during the early ninth century by a translation team that included the translator-editor Bandé Yeshé Dé (ca. late eighth to early ninth century) and the Indian scholars Śīlendrabodhi, Jñānasiddhi, and Śākyaprabha. The sūtra promises protection against a range of threats, from illnesses, natural disasters, and dangers while traveling, to warfare, corporal punishment, and theft. This text frames all of these perils as originating from the animosity and ill will of human beings and spirits. The principal focus is threats posed by the capricious spirit world of “non-humans” (mi ma yin), who feed off the life force, vitality, flesh, and blood of humans. The negative impact of these non-humans extends beyond the individual to include homes, villages, towns, cities, regions, and entire countries. The text claims to be efficacious by means of “drawing” or demarcating a “boundary” around those in need of protection, sealing them off from the source of harm and thereby restoring health and internal cohesion. It is through “receiving, holding, reciting, preaching, and mastering” this scripture that such a protective boundary is formed.
The narrative of the sūtra begins with an interchange between the Buddha and the god Brahmā. Brahmā, along with his divine retinue, visits the Blessed One at the Jetavana hermitage and requests that he “guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being” to the entire trichiliocosm of a thousand million worlds, just as the god himself does for the chiliocosm of a thousand worlds under his care. The Buddha acquiesces to his request by remaining silent. He subsequently proceeds to teach the scripture’s dhāraṇī formulas and to extol its many benefits. Much as in the Mahāmāyūrīvidyārājñī, but with less elaboration, the Buddha prescribes the invocation by name of the spirits responsible for personal and communal misfortunes. These litanies, which the Buddha separates into groups based on the locations and activities of these beings, hierarchically arrange the spirits so that they are all subordinate to the Buddha’s command and to the command of his saṅgha. The Buddha states that just “upholding” or intoning these names along with the mantra formula that accompanies each group will urge them to obey members of the saṅgha so that they desist from causing harm and instead serve the pragmatic needs of the saṅgha and surrounding lay communities.
Owing to the absence of a reliable Sanskrit edition that reflects the Tibetan translations, this English translation is based on the Tibetan Degé edition, in consultation with the Pedurma (dpe bsdur ma) comparative edition. Thus, rather than adjudicate on the many variant readings of the dhāraṇī formulas found in the different Tibetan versions of this text, we have chosen to defer this issue for now and record only the Degé version until a Sanskrit edition is produced that might shed further light on the matter.
The Tibetan text translated here is different from the Sanskrit text dedicated to the corresponding rakṣā goddess found in the extant Sanskrit sources (Skilling 1994); even the goddess’s name is not the same—in the Sanskrit text (nowadays accepted as ‘standard’ for this rakṣā) this name is given as Mahāmantrānusāriṇī/-aṇī, whereas the name inferred from the array of (possibly back-translated) Sanskrit titles found in the different editions of the Tibetan canon might have been Mahāmantrānudhāriṇī/-aṇī.
In the mini-pantheon of the Pañcarakṣā, the two goddesses perhaps ought to be conflated, but preferably without obliterating the Mahāmantrānudhāriṇī/-aṇī variant altogether, as this form could have been the original one historically, or it would have been excogitated independently from the form Mahāmantrānusāriṇī/-aṇī.
To represent the name’s etymology (traced to anu + √dhṛ) reflected in the Tibetan text, and basing the name’s grammar on the Sanskrit text (the adjectival feminine ending -iṇī/-aṇī), the title reconstructed for this translation is Mahāmantrānudhāriṇī-sūtra. Such a ‘midway’ reconstruction might be justified by the impossibility of reliably reconstructing the original Sanskrit title from the ‘Sanskrit’ versions found in the different editions of the Tibetan text, and by the wide divergence of the possible interpretations thereof. Committing to just one interpretation would be tantamount to redacting the text.
The Sanskrit title given in the main editions of the Tibetan canon comes, basically, in two variants, the masculine/neuter Mahāmantrānudhāri-sūtra, and the (gender open to interpretation) Mahāmantrānudhāraṇi-sūtra, the latter coming close to our reconstructed title.
The meaning of Mahāmantrānusāriṇī/-aṇī, “Great Follower of the Mantra,” is open to interpretation, but suggests a goddess attuned to the mantra path (mantranaya), or perhaps one that is responsive to her own mantra employed in a rite and compliant with the requests made.
The meaning of Mahāmantrānudhāriṇī, “Great Upholder of the Mantra,” could overlap with the above if -anusāriṇī were interpreted as causative (“one who causes [the others] to follow, or to live in accordance with, the mantra path”). The prefix anu could imply either that her ‘upholding/preserving’ accords (anu) with the mantra path, or that she is favorably (anu) disposed toward this path.
Another variant, Mahāmantrānudhāraṇī (short a in the suffix), would allow for an additional interpretation of its being a dhāraṇī (rather than a goddess per se), i.e. a formulaic ‘container’ or ‘retainer,’ where the ‘containing’ occurs in agreement with (anu), or is triggered by, the mantra.
The name of the rakṣā goddess that appears in the Tibetan translation of the Mahāsāhasrapramardanī is gsang sngags rjes su brang ba chen mo, which would most likely render Mahāmantrānusārinī, and suggest an English translation of “Great Upholder/Follower of the Secret Mantra.” This Tibetan translation was edited in the fifteenth century by Gö Lotsawa Zhonnu Pal (’gos lotsAwa gzhon nu dpal) based on a Sanskrit manuscript in the possession of Chak Lotsawa Chöjé Pal (chag lotsAwa chos rje dpal), who was active in the thirteenth century. Thus, this title may very well represent a later stage or different recension of the Sanskrit text and might not provide additional clues into the source text used by the Tibetan imperial period translation team.
Text Body
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra
The Translation
Following this homage:
Thus did I hear at one time. The Blessed One was dwelling in Śrāvastī, in the Jetavana, Anāthapiṇḍada’s Park. At that time, Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, with the gods of the Brahmā realm; Śakra, lord of the gods, with the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three; the four great kings, with the gods of their realm; the twenty-eight great yakṣa generals; and Hārītī with her children and retinue of servants went before the Blessed One, bowed their heads at his feet, and stood to one side.
Standing there, Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, bowed toward the Blessed One with palms joined, and said, “Venerable Blessed One, I rule as lord over the realms of the chiliocosm. [F.151.a] Venerable Blessed One, when needed I guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms in the chiliocosm. Venerable Bliss-Gone Dharma Sovereign, Blessed One, you rule as lord over the realms of the great trichiliocosm. Blessed One, when you see fit you, too, guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms of the great trichiliocosm. So, Venerable Blessed One, I request you to guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms of the trichiliocosm!”
The Blessed One acquiesced by remaining silent. Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, understood that the Buddha had acquiesced by his silence, and at that moment he vanished.
Subsequently, the Blessed One said to the monks, “Monks, last night I was approached by Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, along with the gods of the Brahmā realm; Śakra, lord of the gods, with the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three; the four great kings, with the gods of the realm of the four great kings; and the twenty-eight great yakṣa generals; and Hārītī with her children and retinue of servants also came.
“Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, said to me, ‘Venerable Blessed One, I rule as lord over the realms of the chiliocosm. Venerable Blessed One, when needed, I guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms in the chiliocosm. [F.151.b] Venerable Bliss-Gone Dharma Sovereign, Blessed One, you rule as lord over the realms of the great trichiliocosm. Blessed One, when you see fit, you also guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms of the great trichiliocosm. So, Venerable Blessed One, I request you to guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the realms of the trichiliocosm!’
“Monks, I acquiesced by not responding to Brahmā, master of the Sahā world. Then Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, knowing that I had acquiesced by remaining silent, disappeared at that moment.
“Monks, this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, was taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats of the past. It will be taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats in the future. And likewise, right now in the present, I will also teach it as an aid for the awakening of buddhahood.”
Then the Blessed One said to venerable Ānanda, “Ānanda, you are to receive, hold, recite, preach, and master this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra! Ānanda, this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, will bring welfare, benefit, happiness, and comfort to the four assemblies.
tadyathā ubuddhe nibuddhe vibuddhe saṃbuddhe viśvaṣṭabuddhe īhabuddhe tattrabuddhe niyaṃgame chavila apula tapula [F.152.a] tāle māle maṅgagamaṅga manana imam vidyā hudume huhume pūrvaprahare |
“Ānanda, this strong and powerful secret mantra, which has been practiced for a long time, was taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats of the past. It will be taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats in the future. And such is also the case at present, as I now teach it to aid in the awakening of buddhahood. With this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, I will protect and form a boundary around the person named such-and-such. I will form a boundary one league to the east. I will form a boundary one league in all the cardinal and intermediate directions.
tadyathā samuca vimuca palamuca jagadhara madasṭhala nalakamaga samuḥśvavāti vimukti yoga hinasagama aradamula vihaṃgami idiciri vitalākhayo makhayo lagabhidharaṇi pratiprāyogi aḥcakrapati samasraḥvati ilāya milāya bahusaddhya anatama arthavati garavati tikhinitive akanati sakanati samidima vasuvaṭe aṭe aṭe taṭṭa kharusmin kharusmin lahataṃ lahutaṃ sambhara sambhara vatiranataṃ nirutaṃ ila taila saraphala bahuphala satamata daṃṣṭrimata |
“Ānanda, this strong and powerful secret mantra, which has been practiced for a long time, was taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats of the past. It will be taught by the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats in the future. And such is also the case at present, for I too teach it. Brahmā, lord of the Sahā world, teaches it. Śakra, lord of the gods, also teaches it. The four great kings also teach it. The twenty-eight great yakṣa generals also teach it. [F.152.b] And Hārītī, with her children and retinue of servants, also teaches it.
“Ānanda, any monk, nun, layman, or laywoman who receives this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, and understands, sees, or performs it, precisely as it has been taught and mastered, will be guarded, protected, looked after, and brought peace and well-being for as long as he or she shall live.
“Ānanda, by the command of the perfectly and completely awakened thus-gone arhats of the past, future, and present, this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, shall guard, protect, look after, and bring peace and well-being to the person named such-and-such. It will form a boundary. It will form a boundary one league to the east. Likewise, it will form a boundary one league to the west. It will form a boundary one league to the south. It will form a boundary one league to the north. It will form a boundary one league in all the cardinal and intermediate directions.
“Ānanda, there are four who dwell on and off the path of the four great kings.9 Who are they? They are Auspicious, Friend to All, Complete, and Glory of Joy. Whoever knows their names and families will not be in danger of the great kings, nor will he be in danger of robbers, fire, water, humans, or non-humans.
“Ānanda, Vajrapāṇi’s older brother called Swift Hand resides in the city known as Cakravālapur. Whoever knows his name and family will be guarded, protected, looked after, pardoned, [F.153.a] and brought peace and well-being by him. On behalf of the person named such-and-such, I beseech and supplicate Vajrapāṇi’s older brother Swift Hand! By the command of the blessed buddhas of the past, future, and present, all yakṣas, rākṣasas, pretas, piśācas, kumbhāṇḍas, pūtanas, and kaṭapūtanas who seek an occasion and look for an opportunity to harm the person named such-and-such will not find any such opportunity, nor will they be able to quarrel with him!
“Ānanda, there are fourteen great rākṣasīs. They protected the Bodhisattva while he was in his mother’s womb. They also protected him during his birth, as a newborn, and while he was being reared. Who are they? They are Powerful, Stainless, Tumult, Supple, Terrifying Lady, Voice of Jambū, Supreme Seizer, Master, Renowned Female, Amazing Renown, Conflict Lover, Playful Lady, Earth Supporter, and Conflict Engager. Whoever knows their names and families will be guarded, protected, looked after, and brought peace and well-being by them!
“Ānanda, there are eight rākṣasīs who steal the vitality of men or women regardless of whether they are asleep or not. Who are they? They are Horn, Unassailable, Instigator of Evil, Slanderous, Red Female Servant, Greatest, Excellent Eyes, and Terrifying. Whoever knows their names and families will be guarded, protected, looked after, and brought peace and well-being by them!
“Ānanda, there are seven rākṣasīs who travel as far as one hundred miles when they smell the scent of blood. Who are they? They are Excellent Splendor, Layered Joy, Giver of Various Things, [F.153.b] Excellent White Female Servant, Desiring Engagement, Surrounding City, and Mountain Protector. Whoever knows their names and families will be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon!
“Ānanda, there is a rākṣasī called Mahākālī with one thousand sons who lives at the seashore and travels 80,000 miles in a single night. Whoever knows her name and family will be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon by her!
“Ānanda, there are five rākṣasīs who, along with 7,700,000 yakṣas, guard and protect the humans in the Jambu continent. Who are they? They are Always Insane, Further Insane, Bloated with Power, Bamboo Stick, and Wealthy. Whoever knows their names and families will be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon by them!
“Therefore, on behalf of the person named such-and-such, I beseech and supplicate those five rākṣasīs, along with the 7,700,000 yakṣas! By the command of the blessed buddhas of the past, future, and present, may the person named such-and-such be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon!
tadyathā vīmude vītide picarite pigarite karaṭi karavīra swāri madhuraghoṣe śatahanita bhaṣitaghe akke nakke vika ḍitā vikuṭite viraje vighaṣṭavāte |
“Ānanda, nowhere in the worlds of gods, demons, Brahmā, mendicants, priests, humans, kinnaras, and mahoragas have I seen anyone—whether human, non-human, yakṣa, rākṣasa, asura, gandharva, nāga, garuḍa, guhyaka, preta, piśāca, vetāla, kākhorda, kṛtya, pūtana, kaṭapūtana, unmāda, or apasmāra—[F.154.a] who, seeking an opportunity to hurt and looking for conflict, was ever able to harm a person guarded, shielded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon by this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra—unless, that is, the ripening of their karma precludes it.
“Therefore, by the command of the blessed buddhas of the past, future, and present, I will use this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, to guard the person named such-and-such from humans, non-humans, yakṣas, rākṣasas, piśācas, asuras, gandharvas, nāgas, garuḍas, guhyakas, pretas, vetālas, kākhordas, kṛtyas, pūtanas, kaṭapūtanas, unmadas, and apasmāras. He will be protected, shielded, brought peace and well-being, granted pardon, and purged of poison.
“This queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, will intoxicate all those with hostile intentions, ill will, animosity, and rage, as well as all demons, [F.154.b] trail guards, fort guards, and customs guards. It will intoxicate them, cause paralysis and stupefaction, and seize their hands, feet, minds, and tongues. Through this queen of incantations, Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra, the person will escape on each and every occasion.
“By such truth and true words, as follows: [F.155.a] one who is unforgettable to beings appearing in the world is a ‘thus-gone one;’ that he speaks by speaking truly means he speaks by speaking truly at the appropriate time. Furthermore, Ānanda, those verses were spoken by the Thus-Gone One to assist in the observation of pure conduct. And what is more, Ānanda, the following words will secure the purpose, as well as further assist and ease, whatever function those verses are set to perform:
syād athedana svasti mati vilumati praharati kaśumadchi nanda mati vihagrahe vidumati edakṛta ārtha sudṛśabuddhi bodhimati suhudume alakhūme alamite higaraśara āśuha pragaśini |
“Ānanda, the ten roots of seeds and the ten root words of seeds have been spoken by the Thus-Gone One. Ānanda, these words will be spoken by Thus-Gone Ones, and will be taught by them; so if people who dwell in their teaching utter them, yakṣas and rākṣasas will perform activities for them like slaves.
“By such truth and true words, as follows: true words at the irreversible level are called the ‘words that are supreme in the world.’ Those who, of all renunciants, are ‘the most joyful renunciants,’ the perfectly and completely awakened, thus-gone arhats, who have neither fear nor terror, who, neither cowering nor fleeing, lack fear, and who, having abandoned fear and its impetus, are called ‘free of anything that causes one to cry out in hair-raising panic’—these are what is meant by ‘those who speak by speaking truly, those who speak by speaking truly at the appropriate time.’ By their truth and those true words, may the person named such-and-such have well-being!
“By such truth and true words, as follows: of all those who observe ethical discipline, controlled conduct, austerities, or pure conduct, those who are known as ‘supreme in the discipline that pleases the noble ones’—by their truth and their true words, may the person named such-and-such have well-being!
“Of the elders, Ājñātakauṇḍinya, like the eldest of a king’s sons, foremost among those practicing pure conduct, [F.155.b] for a long time has passed since his ordination; Mahākāśyapa, supreme among those with few desires who adhere to the qualities from training and have contentment; Śāradvatīputra, supreme among those with great wisdom and eloquence; Mahāmaudgalyāyana, supreme among those with great miraculous powers and great magical abilities; Aniruddha, supreme among those with the divine eye; Ānanda, supreme among the learned; Upālī, supreme among holders of discipline; Pūrṇamaitrāyaṇīputra, supreme among Dharma preachers; Rāhula, supreme among those with respect for the trainings; Vasumallaputra, supreme among those who distribute bedding and cushions; Piṇḍola Bhāradvāja, supreme among those who proclaim the lion’s roar; Kālodāyin, supreme among those who inspire householders; and Sudarśana, supreme among those who are venerated by gods and men—by the truth and true words of these elders, may the person named such-and-such be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon. He shall be protected from kings, ministers, robbers, fire, water, enemies, and adversaries, and when traveling, lost, asleep, drunk, or careless!
“By such truth and true words, as follows: among all possible beings—those without feet, with two feet, with four feet, or with many feet; those with form or without form; those with perception, without perception, or neither with nor without perception—the Thus-Gone One is called ‘supreme.’ By his truth and his true words, may the person named such-and-such be guarded, protected, looked after, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon!
“By such truth and true words, as follows: in the entire range of conditioned and unconditioned phenomena, freedom from attachment is called ‘supreme.’ By that truth and those true words, [F.156.a] may the person named such-and-such be guarded, protected, embraced, brought peace and well-being, and granted pardon.
“By such truth and true words, as follows: of all kinds of assemblies, gatherings, multitudes, and retinues, the saṅgha of the Thus-Gone One’s śrāvakas is called ‘supreme.’ By their truth and their true words, may countries, regions, cities, towns, villages, houses, abodes, fields, and this sick patient be guarded, protected, looked after, and brought peace and well-being. Boundaries will be formed around them. All bhūtas will be turned back. Those who steal vitality will be turned back.
“By such truth and true words, as follows: in order that I—a blessed, perfectly and completely awakened, thus-gone arhat—may end this person’s desire, anger, and ignorance, by the truth and true words of the teaching, explanation, and enunciation of the 84,000 sections of teachings, may the 404 sicknesses of the person named such-and-such come to an end! May they be eliminated! May they cease! May they cease completely!”
When the Blessed One had spoken, the world, including venerable Ānanda, Brahmā, master of the Sahā world, and all gods, humans, asuras, and gandharvas rejoiced and praised what the Blessed One had said.
This completes “The Sūtra Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra.”
Colophon
This was translated and edited by the Indian scholars Śīlendrabodhi, Jñānasiddhi, and Śākyaprabha, along with the translator-editor Bandé Yeshé Dé, who then revised it according to the new lexicon and finalized it.
Notes
Bibliography
Tibetan and Sanskrit Texts
gsang sngags chen po rjes su ’dzin pa’i mdo (Mahāmantrānudhāriṇīsūtra). Toh 563, Degé Kangyur vol. 90 (rgyud ’bum, pha), folios 150b–156a.
gsang sngags chen po rjes su ’dzin pa’i mdo (Mahāmantrānudhāriṇīsūtra). bka’ ’gyur (dpe bsdur ma) [Comparative Edition of the Kangyur], krung go’i bod rig pa zhib ’jug ste gnas kyi bka’ bstan dpe sdur khang (The Tibetan Tripitaka Collation Bureau of the China Tibetology Research Center). 108 volumes. Beijing: krung go’i bod rig pa dpe skrun khang (China Tibetology Publishing House), 2006–2009, vol. 90, pp. 457–476.
gsang sngags chen mo rjes su ’dzin ma’i mdo’i ’bum ’grel (Mahāmantrānudhāraṇīsūtraśatasahasraṭīkā). Toh 2692, Degé Tengyur vol. 72 (rgyud, du), folios 241b–282b.
“Mahāmantrānusāriṇīsūtra.” In Skilling, Peter (ed.). The Mahāsūtras: Great Discourses of the Buddha Vol. I: Texts. Bristol: Pali Text Society, 1994 (repr. 2010), pp. 608–622.
Secondary Sources
Dharmachakra Translation Committee, trans. (2007). “Remarks on the Use of the Dhāraṇīs and Mantras of the Mahāpratisarā-Mahāvidyārājñī.” In Indian Languages and Texts Through the Ages: Essays of Hungarian Indologists in Honour of Prof. Csaba Töttössy. Edited by Csaba Dezsö, pp. 185–208. New Delhi: Manohar Publishers and Distributors, 2007.
———(2016), trans. Destroyer of the Great Trichiliocosm (Mahāsāhasrapramardanī, Toh 558). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2016.
———(2023a), trans. The Great Peahen, Queen of Incantations (Mahāmāyūrīvidyārājñī, Toh 559). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2023.
———(2023b), trans. The Noble Great Amulet, Queen of Incantations (Mahāpratisarāvidyārājñī, Toh 561). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2023.
———(2023c), trans. The Sūtra of Great Cool Grove, (Mahāśītavanīsūtra, Toh 562). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2023.
Hidas, Gergely (2010). “Mahāpratisarāvidyāvidhi: The Spell-Manual of the Great Amulet.” Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hung, vol. 63(4) (2010): 473–484.
———(2012). Mahāpratisarā-Mahāvidyārājñī, The Great Amulet, Great Queen of Spells: Introduction, Critical Editions and Annotated Translation. Sata-pitaka Series: Indo-Asian Literatures Vol. 636. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture and Aditya Prakashan, 2012.
Lewis, Todd. Popular Buddhist Texts from Nepal: Narratives and Rituals of Newar Buddhism. Albany: SUNY Press, 2000.
Orzech, Charles D. “Metaphor, Translation, and the Construction of Kingship in the Scripture for Humane Kings and the Mahāmāyūrī Vidyārājñī Sūtra.” Cahiers d’Extreme-Asie, vol. 13 (2002): 55–83.
Pathak, Suniti K. “A Dharani-mantra in the Vinaya-vastu.” Bulletin of Tibetology, vol. 25, no. 2 (1989).
Schopen, Gregory. “A Verse from the Bhadracaripranidhana in a 10th Century Inscription found at Nalanda.” Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, 12(1) (1989): 149–57.
Sørensen, Henrik H. “The Spell of the Great, Golden Peacock Queen: The Origin, Practices, and Lore of an Early Esoteric Buddhist Tradition in China.” Pacific World Journal, Fall (8) (2006): 89–123.
Yao, Fumi, trans. The Chapter on Medicines (Bhaiṣajyavastu, Toh 1, ch. 6). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2021.
Glossary
Types of attestation for names and terms of the corresponding source language
Attested in source text
This term is attested in a manuscript used as a source for this translation.
Attested in other text
This term is attested in other manuscripts with a parallel or similar context.
Attested in dictionary
This term is attested in dictionaries matching Tibetan to the corresponding language.
Approximate attestation
The attestation of this name is approximate. It is based on other names where the relationship between the Tibetan and source language is attested in dictionaries or other manuscripts.
Reconstruction from Tibetan phonetic rendering
This term is a reconstruction based on the Tibetan phonetic rendering of the term.
Reconstruction from Tibetan semantic rendering
This term is a reconstruction based on the semantics of the Tibetan translation.
Source unspecified
This term has been supplied from an unspecified source, which most often is a widely trusted dictionary.
Ājñātakauṇḍinya
- kun shes kauN+Din+ya
- ཀུན་ཤེས་ཀཽཎྜིནྱ།
- ājñātakauṇḍinya
Always Insane
- rtag tu myos
- རྟག་ཏུ་མྱོས།
- —
Amazing Renown
- rmad grags
- རྨད་གྲགས།
- —
Ānanda
- kun dga’ bo
- ཀུན་དགའ་བོ།
- ānanda
Aniruddha
- ma ’gags pa
- མ་འགགས་པ།
- aniruddha
apasmāra
- brjed byed
- བརྗེད་བྱེད།
- apasmāra
asura
- lha ma yin
- ལྷ་མ་ཡིན།
- asura
Auspicious
- bkra shis ldan
- བཀྲ་ཤིས་ལྡན།
- svastika
Bamboo Stick
- ’od ma’i sbubs
- འོད་མའི་སྦུབས།
- —
bhūta
- ’byung po
- འབྱུང་པོ།
- bhūta
Bloated with Power
- stobs kyis rgyags
- སྟོབས་ཀྱིས་རྒྱགས།
- —
Brahmā
- tshangs pa
- ཚངས་པ།
- brahmā
Cakravālapur
- grong khyer khor yug
- གྲོང་ཁྱེར་ཁོར་ཡུག
- cakravālapur
chiliocosm
- stong gi ’jig rten gyi khams
- སྟོང་གི་འཇིག་རྟེན་གྱི་ཁམས།
- sāhasralokadhātu
Complete
- gang po
- གང་པོ།
- pūrṇa
Conflict Engager
- ’thab ’jug
- འཐབ་འཇུག
- —
Conflict Lover
- ’thab dga’
- འཐབ་དགའ།
- kalahapriya?
Desiring Engagement
- ’jug ’dod
- འཇུག་འདོད།
- —
Earth Supporter
- sa ’dzin
- ས་འཛིན།
- bhūmidhāra
Excellent Eyes
- mig bzang
- མིག་བཟང་།
- —
Excellent Splendor
- gzi brjid mchog
- གཟི་བརྗིད་མཆོག
- —
Excellent White Female Servant
- bran mo dkar mo bzang
- བྲན་མོ་དཀར་མོ་བཟང་།
- —
Friend to All
- kun bshes
- ཀུན་བཤེས།
- viśvāmitra
Further Insane
- rjes su myos
- རྗེས་སུ་མྱོས།
- —
gandharva
- dri za
- དྲི་ཟ།
- gandharva
garuḍa
- nam mkha’ lding
- ནམ་མཁའ་ལྡིང་།
- garuḍa
Giver of Various Things
- sna tshog sbyin sbong
- སྣ་ཚོག་སྦྱིན་སྦོང་།
- citra?
Glory of Joy
- dga’ ba’i dpal
- དགའ་བའི་དཔལ།
- śrīharṣa
great trichiliocosm
- stong gsum gyi stong chen po
- སྟོང་གསུམ་གྱི་སྟོང་ཆེན་པོ།
- trisāhasramahāsāhasralokadhātu
Greatest
- rab chen
- རབ་ཆེན།
- —
guhyaka
- gsang ba pa
- གསང་བ་པ།
- guhyaka
Hārītī
- ’phrog ma
- འཕྲོག་མ།
- hārītī
Horn
- rwa
- རྭ།
- —
Instigator of Evil
- ngan slob
- ངན་སློབ།
- —
Jetavana
- rgyal bu rgyal byed kyi tshal
- རྒྱལ་བུ་རྒྱལ་བྱེད་ཀྱི་ཚལ།
- jetavana
Jetavana, Anāthapiṇḍada’s Park
- rgyal bu rgyal byed kyi tshal mgon med zas sbyin gyi kun dga’ ra ba
- རྒྱལ་བུ་རྒྱལ་བྱེད་ཀྱི་ཚལ་མགོན་མེད་ཟས་སྦྱིན་གྱི་ཀུན་དགའ་ར་བ།
- jetavanam anāthapiṇḍadasyārāmaḥ AO
Jñānasiddhi
- dz+nyA na sid+dhi
- ཛྙཱ་ན་སིདྡྷི།
- jñānasiddhi
kākhorda
- byad stems
- བྱད་སྟེམས།
- kākhorda
Kālodāyin
- nag po ’char ka
- ནག་པོ་འཆར་ཀ
- kālodāyin
kaṭapūtana
- lus srul po
- ལུས་སྲུལ་པོ།
- kaṭapūtana
kinnara
- mi’am ci
- མིའམ་ཅི།
- kinnara
kṛtya
- gshed byed
- གཤེད་བྱེད།
- kṛtya
kumbhāṇḍa
- grul bum
- གྲུལ་བུམ།
- kumbhāṇḍa
Layered Joy
- dga’ brtsegs
- དགའ་བརྩེགས།
- —
league
- rgyang grags
- རྒྱང་གྲགས།
- krośa
Mahākālī
- nag mo chen mo
- ནག་མོ་ཆེན་མོ།
- mahākālī
Mahākāśyapa
- ’od srung chen po
- འོད་སྲུང་ཆེན་པོ།
- mahākāśyapa
Mahāmaudgalyāyana
- maud gal gyi bu chen po
- མཽད་གལ་གྱི་བུ་ཆེན་པོ།
- mahāmaudgalyāyana
mahoraga
- lto ’phye chen po
- ལྟོ་འཕྱེ་ཆེན་པོ།
- mahoraga
Master
- bla ma
- བླ་མ།
- prabhu
- guru
Mountain Protector
- ri srung
- རི་སྲུང་།
- —
nāga
- klu
- ཀླུ།
- nāga
Piṇḍola Bhāradvāja
- bha ra dwa dza bsod snyoms len
- བྷ་ར་དྭ་ཛ་བསོད་སྙོམས་ལེན།
- piṇḍola bhāradvāja
piśāca
- sha za
- ཤ་ཟ།
- piśāca
Playful Lady
- rtsed mo
- རྩེད་མོ།
- —
Powerful
- stobs ldan
- སྟོབས་ལྡན།
- balī
preta
- yi dags
- ཡི་དགས།
- preta
Pūrṇamaitrāyaṇīputra
- byams ma’i bu gang po
- བྱམས་མའི་བུ་གང་པོ།
- pūrṇamaitrāyaṇīputra
pūtana
- srul po
- སྲུལ་པོ།
- pūtana
Rāhu
- sgra gcan
- སྒྲ་གཅན།
- rāhu
Rāhula
- sgra gcan zin
- སྒྲ་གཅན་ཟིན།
- rāhula
rākṣasa
- srin po
- སྲིན་པོ།
- rākṣasa
rākṣasī
- srin mo
- སྲིན་མོ།
- rākṣasī
Red Female Servant
- bran mo dmar mo
- བྲན་མོ་དམར་མོ།
- —
Renowned Female
- grags ma
- གྲགས་མ།
- kīrtī
Sahā world
- mi mjed
- མི་མཇེད།
- sahā
Śakra
- brgya byin
- བརྒྱ་བྱིན།
- śakra
Śākyaprabha
- shAkya pra bha ba
- ཤཱཀྱ་པྲ་བྷ་བ།
- śākyaprabha
Śāradvatīputra
- sha ra dwa t’i bu
- ཤ་ར་དྭ་ཏའི་བུ།
- śāradvatīputra
Śīlendrabodhi
- shrI len+dra bo dhi
- ཤྲཱི་ལེནྡྲ་བོ་དྷི།
- śīlendrabodhi
Slanderous
- phra ma can
- ཕྲ་མ་ཅན།
- —
Śrāvastī
- mnyan yod
- མཉན་ཡོད།
- śrāvastī
Stainless
- dri med
- དྲི་མེད།
- vimalā
Sudarśana
- legs mthong
- ལེགས་མཐོང་།
- sudarśana
Supple
- rab mnyen
- རབ་མཉེན།
- pramṛdū
Supreme Seizer
- mchog len
- མཆོག་ལེན།
- paramalabhā
Surrounding City
- grong khyer ’khor yug
- གྲོང་ཁྱེར་འཁོར་ཡུག
- cakravālapur
Swift Hand
- lag myur
- ལག་མྱུར།
- laghupāṇi
Terrifying
- ’jigs byed
- འཇིགས་བྱེད།
- —
Terrifying Lady
- ’jigs byed ma
- འཇིགས་བྱེད་མ།
- bhairavā
Tumult
- sgra chen
- སྒྲ་ཆེན།
- ghoṣā
Unassailable
- thub med
- ཐུབ་མེད།
- —
unmāda
- smyo byed
- སྨྱོ་བྱེད།
- unmāda
Upālī
- nye bar ’khor
- ཉེ་བར་འཁོར།
- upālī
Vasumallaputra
- gyad bu nor
- གྱད་བུ་ནོར།
- vasumallaputra
vetāla
- ro langs
- རོ་ལངས།
- vetāla
Voice of Jambū
- ’dzam bu’i mgrin
- འཛམ་བུའི་མགྲིན།
- —
Wealthy
- ’byor ldan
- འབྱོར་ལྡན།
- —
yakṣa
- gnod sbyin
- གནོད་སྦྱིན།
- yakṣa