The Tantra on the Origin of All Rites of Tārā, Mother of All the Tathāgatas
The Mother of All the Tathāgatas
Toh 726
Degé Kangyur, vol. 94 (rgyud ’bum, tsha), folios 202.a–217.a
- Chökyi Sangpo
- Dharmaśrīmitra
Imprint
Translated by Samye Translations
under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
First published 2022
Current version v 1.0.13 (2024)
Generated by 84000 Reading Room v2.26.1
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Table of Contents
Summary
In this scripture of the Action Tantra genre, the Buddha gives instructions to the bodhisattva Mañjuśrī on the rituals and mantras associated with the goddess Tārā. The tantra includes a description of Tārā, a nine-deity maṇḍala and related initiations, and a litany of ritual practices associated with the four activities.
Acknowledgements
Translated by Samye Translations under the guidance of Phakchok Rinpoche. The translation was produced by Laura Dainty with the assistance of Khenpo Tsöndrü Sangpo. Oriane Lavolé checked the translation against the Tibetan and edited it. Paul Thomas checked all the mantras and their variants. Stefan Mang and Oriane Lavolé wrote the introduction.
The translation was completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
Text Body
The Mother of All the Tathāgatas
“Mañjuśrī, the mother of the tathāgata family has four faces and eight hands. Her body is yellow like molten gold and in the prime of youth. Her main face is yellow, her right face is white, her left face is red, and her rear face is black. Each is marked on its crown with the four families and has three eyes. In her right hands she holds a wheel, an arrow, and a spear, while the lowermost hand is in the boon-granting gesture. In her left hands she holds an utpala flower, a bow, and a vajra hook, and she wields a lasso while making the threatening gesture. She sits in the vajra posture and is of dharmakāya nature.
“namo ratna-trayāya | namo ārya-jñāna-sāgarāya vairocana-vyūha-rājāya | tathāgatāya | arhate samyak-sambuddhāya | tadyathā | oṁ tāre tuttāre ture svāhā.70
“With that, the entire tathāgata family makes offerings of flowers, lamps, incense, fragrances, and so on.
“Mañjuśrī, her rite is as follows. Make an effigy from corpse ash and the saturated earth beneath it, and into its heart insert the name ending with the two sets of syllables. Then recite this mantra:
“oṁ māraya māraya | kāraya kāraya | stambhaya stambhaya | jambhaya jambhaya. | hūṁ hūṁ hūṁ | laṁ laṁ laṁ laṁ laṁ.71
“Say that and then bury the effigy at a crossroads.”
This was the fourteenth chapter, “The Mother of All Tathāgatas.”
Colophon
Translated by the Indian preceptor Dharmaśrīmitra and the Tibetan translator and monk Chökyi Sangpo.
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