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THE MELODIOUS TAMBURA OF JOY
GUIDE TO THE
SUPREME HOLY PLACE OF
IMMORTAL LIFE
THE ROCKY CAVE OF MARATIKA
By His Holiness Kyabje
Chadral Sangye Dorje Rinpoche

Homage to the guru, yidam and
dakinis.
To the essence of all
appearances, Pema Amitayus.
To the embodiment of emptiness,
the great mother, clothed in
white,
To the three root long life
deities, the mudra of non-duality,
I bow down with devotion and
beseech you to bestow the
empowerment of immortal life.
North of Bodhgaya, the center
of the universe, within a rocky
mountain covered with trees and
bushes, is the widely renowned
wondrous holy place called Haleshi,
about which I will explain, so
listen for a moment with joy.
Outwardly, it is the blissful
play of Shiva and Umadevi.
Inwardly, it is the palace of
Chakrasamvara. Secretly, it is the
celestial mansion of the deities
of immortal life and most secretly
it is the pure land of great
bliss, the absolute Akanishta
realm.
In the past, when the
Vidhyadhara Pema Thodrengtsal with
his ravishingly beautiful consort
Mandarava practiced the swift path
of the secret activities at this
place, the empowerment of immortal
life was bestowed on them by
Amitayus, Buddha of Boundless
life. Attaining the body which is
without birth or death,
decrepitude and disintegration,
Guru Rinpoche even now dwells in
the southwest, subduing the
rakshas, continuously sending
forth emanation upon emanation in
whatever way necessary to benefit
beings in cyclic existence.
Later, Bhikshu Akarma emanated
from the point between the
eyebrows of Songtsen Gampo, (who
was Avatokiteshvara). When Bhikshu
Akarma was erecting a statue of
the eleven-headed Avalokiteshvara
in the Jokhang, he went in search
of special substances to make it
and inner relics. He miraculously
arrived at Maratika and at that
time beheld the faces of many
deities. He called it the Practice
Cave Mandala of Glorious Qualities
and uttered many other praises and
stories providing a reliable
source and proof.
When the Tirthika
Shankaracharya caused much harm to
the Buddhist doctrine in India and
Nepal, many old sacred places and
holy objects were destroyed,
scattered and lost. After that,
all his followers took them over
as places of Shiva.

At the present time, people
make special offerings of bells,
cymbals, tridents, butter lamps
with a hundred or a thousand wicks
and incense, flowers, milk and the
three white offerings, but not one
person offers live sacrifice or
red offerings. Their pujas,
performed with the playing, both
slow and fast, of drums, cymbals,
white conches and various kinds of
instruments of the blowing and
twirling classes, causing the
sounds of "ur- ur! chem chem!"
and so forth to resound in the
cave.
They continuously make offering
and praise to Brahma, Vishnu,
Shiva (Mahadeva), and other
worldly deities. Adhering to
superior and inferior castes from
brahmin to butcher there are those
who are allowed and those who are
not allowed to enter the cave.
Some of the inferior castes may
only sit at the entrance as even
now they adhere to their ancient
traditions.
Especially during the tenth of
the waxing and waning days of the
month and other excellent days, I
have seen the brahmin pujaris
inside the cave with mandalas of
colored sand making huge fire
ceremonies.
As all individuals have their
own perception it is not right to
harbor wrong views and speak
maligning words. One should
maintain pure vision, rejoice, and
give praise, thus making a good
connection. To slander other
people or the deities is the basis
for misfortune.
To arouse interest I began with
an explanation of the history, to
develop faith in outsiders,
Buddhists and ordinary people, and
incidentally to dispel arguments
about the holy place.
EMA! Having mentioned some of
the qualities of this holy place
which are clearly evident even to
ordinary people, there can hardly
be room for disagreement. As well,
it is said in the commentaries,
with good reason, that even the
words of a child if authentic and
well-spoken should be used.
On seeing this place,
uncontrollable wonder arises.
Through merely hearing the name,
the seed of liberation is planted.
By recalling it, accidental death
is prevented. Through making
prostrations, circumnabulation and
offerings, great accumulation of
merit is accomplished.
The sky around forms a vast
eight-spoked wheel. The ground is
shaped like an eight-petalled
lotus with the middle swelling up
like the pistil of a flower. The
landscape being wide and open, the
sun remains long and the weather
is temperate. In the front a
stream gushes forth. The center of
the holy place is a huge self -
existing assembly hall, high and
spacious with room for one
thousand people. There is the
single bindu skylight shaped like
a round wheel.
Outside, out of the craggy
rocks grow various shrubs and
trees. Inside the cave abounds
with innumerable images of
statues, seed-syllables and hand
implements of the peaceful and
wrathful deities. The special
characteristic or mark of this
holy place are the many stone
linga (stalagmites) ranging in
size from six feet down to six
inches in height. Naturally
formed, they are white, smooth,
shiny and resplendent.
During auspicious times, nectar
collects like moist dew and drips
down. There are many crevice-like
holes through which one can test
one's positive or negative karma,
birth in the lower realms or
entrance to the higher realms and
path of liberation.

Below the holy place is a cave
whose entrance faces to the
southwest. The mouth is not so big
but once inside it opens up and is
very wide and spacious, with
enough room to fit a hundred
people. There are many images of
body, speech and mind, hand and
foot imprints, a white conch and
many other amazing self-arisen
things. When those of fortunate
karma arrive there, dew-like
nectar seeps out. Straight above,
unobstructed, is a high vaulted
skylight, making it renowned as a
training place for the
transference practice of Khachod.
In the spacious sphere of the
main cave are hosts of bats whose
forms are imperceptible but they
ceaselessly sound the mantra of
long life (one hears the sounds of
Tsey and bhrum).
It is a very special place for
helping all tantric practitioners
on the path with their
visualization of the wheel of
luminosity of the deities and
mantras.
This
text, which mentions
only a drop from the ocean of good
qualities of this holy place, was
composed with the thought of
benefiting others. Like a
wish-fulfilling gem or an
excellent vase may it bring
unfailingly all our wishes to
fruition.
By coming to this sacred place,
may the obscurations of all the
followers of Guru Padmasambhava,
Dharma brothers and sisters, be
purified and may they accumulate
merit.
One should endeavor in the
recitation of mantras, in the
offering of tormas and in
performing fire ceremonies, and
especially in longevity practice.
By the merit of my composing
this, may all beings under the sky
be saved from untimely death and
present obstacles, and,
ultimately, having attained the
level of the protector Amitayus,
lead all beings to that state.
By the blessing and the power
of the truth of the wondrous
compassion of all Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas, all unwanted trouble
and misery without exception
having been completely subjugated,
may there be continuous glory and
may auspiciousness prevail day and
night.
My daughter Saraswasti Devi
with offerings of a stainless
scarf and writing paper requested
me to write a praise of this holy
place. Therefore, I, the old
vagabond father Sangye Dorje,
wrote this in the Fire Tiger Year
on an excellent day of the tenth
month, between sessions, at the
supreme holy place of Maratika
which puts an end to death.
SHUBHAM.
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