The Yungdrung

Discussion of the fifth religious tradition of Tibet.
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kalden yungdrung
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The Yungdrung

Post by kalden yungdrung »

Tashi delek,

The Yungdrung is a very famous cult object in several cultures, especially in eternal Bön.
It has no owner but only users.
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And the cultures worldwide, use this symbol all different.
Some say it can represent the 4 seasons in conjunction with the pole star and the big dipper.....

- The question raises, who did use it first ?


Mutsug Marro
KY
The best meditation is no meditation
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kalden yungdrung
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Re: The Yungdrung

Post by kalden yungdrung »

Tashi delek ,

Below an explanation about the Yungdrung, by Dmitry Ermakov.

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Swastika Symbology in Bө Murgel and Bön
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Swastika controversy
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The swastika has been used as a symbol of good luck, happiness and truth by very diverse cultures in many locations all over the globe since prehistory. Today it can still be seen throughout Asia as a symbol of general good luck. In Nepal, for instance, it features not only on religious monuments but also on wrought iron gates, above doorways, embroidered on clothes, bags and belts, as a logo for food manufacturers, and even as a sign on drainage man holes! However, this ancient symbol has been much maligned. In the 20th century, the right-turning swastika - or more correctly, the Hakenkreuz (hook-cross) - was adopted by the German Nazis as their emblem.

In fact, the Nazis simply hijacked the symbol of the clockwise swastika, fabricating their own interpretation (unrelated to the original one) in order to fit it within their doctrine of Aryan supremacy and anti-Semitism. This is how Adolf Hitler explained the symbology behind the Nazi flag in his Mein Kampf:

'As National Socialists, we see our program in our flag. In red, we see the social idea of the movement;
in white, the nationalistic idea; in the swastika, the mission of the struggle for the victory of the Aryan man, and, by the same token, the victory of the idea of creative work, which as such always has been and always will be anti-Semitic.'

This led to this ancient symbol being stigmatized in the Western World as a symbol of evil, and indeed, this misinterpretation is still strongly held by many people in the West today. However, Hitler's interpretation of the swastika is just what it is - invented and untrue.

Firstly, his interpretation of the swastika as the symbol of the Aryan race is false: the symbol of the swastika is not explicitly connected with the ancient Aryan tribes or Vedic religion as such, and since prehistory it has been used by many cultures of Eurasia, America and Africa, so it was common among nations which are not even Indo-European, let alone Aryan.

Secondly, it was never connected with anti-Semitism anywhere in the world until in the 19th century when Émile-Louis Burnouf (1821-1907), a French orientalist and racialist who completely misinterpreted the teachings of Vedas and Buddhist doctrines, came up with this erroneous connection.

This misinterpretation was picked up by the German nationalists, and then by the Nazis. Because German Nazis caused so much suffering and destruction in Europe during the Second World War, it is understandable that many people have strong negative feelings towards their emblem the Hakenkreuz.

Nevertheless, it is important to distinguish between the Hakenkreuz in particular and the Swastika in general.

In some countries, such as Germany for example, it is forbidden to display any swastika symbol in public and Germany recently went further, suggesting the symbol should be banned in all the countries of the EU.

Fortunately, this has been prevented. To ban the swastika just because of the German Nazis misinterpretation and misuse of it would be similar to banning the cross just because it is also a symbol used by the Ku Klux Klan and was used by the Spanish Inquisition, or banning all five-pointed stars just because this symbol was used by Totalitarian Communist regimes. This is, obviously, not a solution.



Swastika as a solar symbol
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Many scholars believe that the swastika was originally a solar symbol, associated with the harmony of the natural order of universe, life, good luck, prosperity, truth and virtue. Since prehistory there have been two types of swastika: clockwise and anti clockwise. How could they both be associated with the sun? This contradiction is resolved in Bө and Bön by examining the Arctic Home Theory of the 19th century Indian Brahmin scholar Bal Gangadhar Tilak, the cosmology of Bhagavata Purana, and the cosmology of Yungdrung Bön.



Swastika in the Prehistoric Bön of Eurasia and Bө Murgel
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The swastika is a very important symbol in the Prehistoric Bön of Eurasia, and in Mongol-Buryat Bө Murgel in particular. In Bө Murgel the swastika is called has tamga - 'jade stamp'. This name, no doubt, arose at the time when precious jade was exported from Siberia to China along the Jade Route, a trade route connecting the Glazkovskaya culture of South Siberia (which included Lake Baikal) and the Shan-Yin Empire in China in the 2nd millennium BC. Many images of has tamga are found all over the Great Steppe, in particular in Mongolia, Inner Mongolia and Amdo, on so-called Deer Stones, large standing stones dated at roughly the same period as the Jade Route. The has tamga of Modern Bө Murgel turns to the left whereas the prevailing ritual movement of Modern Bө Murgel is to the right. This contradiction is also addressed and resolved in Bө and Bön.



Swastika in Yungdrung Bön
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The swastika is an extremely important symbol in Yungdrung Bön, all the more so because the Tibetan name for swastika - yungdrung - forms part of its name. Thus Yungdrung Bön could be translated as the Religion of the Swastika.

In Yungdrung Bön, the swastika is rich in symbolism.

Primarily, it represents the unchangeable, indestructible state, Buddha-nature, the Nature of Mind, the fundamental ground of existence, light.

The 4 arms and the centre of the yungdrung also represent the 4 directions and the centre, as well as the 5 purified elements which appear as the dimensions of the 5 Buddha-clans of 5 colours.

These are further symbolised by the 5 seed-syllables (in this case in the language of Zhang Zhung) marking each of the 5 sections within the yungdrung.
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kalden yungdrung
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Re: The Yungdrung

Post by kalden yungdrung »

IN ADDITION:


Some examples of some Swastikas

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