Bioethical Threads in the Reflection of Tibetan Refugees in India
Abstract
:namo bhagavate bhaiṣajyaguru vaiḍūryaprabharājāyatathāgatāya arahate samyaksambuddhāya tadyathā:oṃ bhaiṣajye mahābhaiṣajya-samudgate svāhā.BhaiṣajyaguruMantra
1. Introduction
2. The Idiosyncrasies of Tibetan Medicine and the Seedbed for Bioethics
“(1) The State shall endeavour to promote adequate health and medical services and to provide that such services would be available free to those sections of the population which are unable to pay for them.(2) The State shall endeavor to provide necessary facilities and institutions for the care of the aged and the infirm.”(Constitution of Tibet; Bod kyi rtsa khrims)
“(1) The Tibetan Administration shall endeavor to promote adequate health, medical and sanitation services, and provide free medical treatment for the needy. It shall conduct special medical care programs for immunization and chronic illnesses and educate people on environmental issues.(2) In particular, it shall endeavor to promote the Tibetan pharmacy and the practice of ancient astro-medical sciences, and conduct comparative research in the field of Tibetan and modern astro-medical sciences.(3) The manufacture and prescription of Tibetan pharmaceutical medicines shall be authorized, regulated and standardized in accordance with the law.”(Charter of the Tibetans In-Exile; Btsan byol bod mi’i bca’ khrims)
“bcom ldan ‘das de bzhin gshegs pa dgra bcom ba yang dag par rodzogs pa’i sangs rgyas sman gyi bla vai du rya ‘ong kyi rgyal po la phyag ‘tshal lo.”“I prostrate before the blessed Buddha, the Conqueror who achieved full Awakening, Buddha, the teacher of healers, Bhaiṣajyaguru, the King of Aquamarine Light.”(Glong gzhi: 1)
“de’i tshe de’i dus na ston pa bcom ldan ‘das ‘tsho mdzad sman gyi bal vai du rya ‘od kyi rgyal po des nad bzhi brgya rtsha bzhi zhi bar byed pa’i sman gyi rgyal po zhes bya ba’i ting te ‘dzin la snyoms par zhugs so.”“At that moment of that time the Buddha, the Master, the Victorious Conqueror, the Supreme Healer, the King of Aquamarine Light entered into a meditative concentration called ‘the King of Medicine’, in order to alleviate four hundred and four disorders.”(Glong glong: 1)
“’di skad bdag gis bshad pa’i dus gcig na. drang srong gi gnas sman gyi grong kher lta na sdug ces bya ba rin po che san lang las grub pa’i gzhal yas khang yod de. khang pa de’i rgyan ni sman gyi nor bu rin po che rnam pa san tshogs pas brgyan pa ste.”“Thus have I heard, at one time in the abode of the sages, the City of Medicine called Tanaduk, where there is an inconceivable palace made of five different precious substances and is decorated with various types of precious medicinal jewels.”(Glong gzhi: 2)
“rgyu ni blo ldan bsam pa dkar ba dang. dan tshig ldan zhing rnam pa bzo ba dang. bya ba la brtson mi chos mkhas dang drug”“The six qualities of an eminent physician are being intelligent, being compassionate, being committed, having dexterity, being diligent and understanding the dharma.”(Sman pa)
“dis tshig nad gso lus la phan phyir sman. nang steng dpyad dpa’ ‘gro la pha ltar skyob. rgyal po rnams kyis rje ru ‘khur bar byed.”“The word physician [sman pa] means the one who cures illness and helps the well-being of the body. He is a hero who heal disease. That one who is like a compassionate father and protector. That one who the king highly appreciates.”(Sman pa: 5)
3. The Ban on Abortion and the Status of Human Fetus in Tibetan Medicine
“dang po pha ma’i khu khrag skyon med pa. rnam shes las dang nyon mongs kyis bskul nas. ‘byung lang dzogs pa mngal du chags pa’i rgyu. dper na gtsubs shing dag las me ‘byung mtshungs.”“The causes of conception are the union of non-defective semen [khu] and [menstrual—M. L.] blood [khrag] of parents [pha ma’i], and the consciousness of the being, imprint of past karma [les] with kleshas [nyon mongs] and the assemblage of the five elements. It resembles the fire produced by the friction of two sticks.”(Chags tshol: 1)
“les ma ‘dzom na rnam shes mi ‘jug set.”“If karma [les] does not arise, consciousness [rnam shes] will not enter the mother [ma].”(Chags tshol: 2)
“mngal kha bye nas zhag ni bcu gnyis bar. dang bo’i zhag gsum bcu gcig bu mi len. gcig gsum lang bdun dgu la bur ‘gyur te. gnyis dang bzhi drug brgyad pa bu mor ‘gyur. nyi ma nub pas pad ma’i kha zum bzhin. bcu gnyis ‘das nas khu ba mngal mi sdod.khu ba mang ba bu ru skye ‘kyur gyi. zal mtshan mang ba bu mor skye bar ‘kyur. ca mnyam ma ning bye las mthse mar skye. skye gnas mi mthun pa dang gjugs mi sdug. ‘di dig gnod pa’i dri mas skye bar ‘khyur.”“The entrance to the uterus is open for twelve days. In the first three days and after the eleventh conception does not occur. If conception occurred on the first, third, fifth, seventh or ninth day, then there will be a boy; if in the second, fourth, sixth or eighth, then a girl. Similar to how the lotus closes at sunset, after twelve days sperm does not penetrate there.If there is more sperm, a boy will be born, if there is menstrual blood, a girl, if equally will be a hermaphrodite [mtshan mang ba], and if the seed splits twins [mthse ma] will be born. The birth of a non-human being or an unattractive child is due to negative influences.”(Chags tshol: 4)
“On the astrologically auspicious day when the Victory star and the moon are aligned, he explains, a blacksmith should create the form of a male child out of three, five or seven types of metal. The form should be heated in a coal fire until it glows red, and then soaked in the milk of an animal who has given birth to male offspring, measuring an amount of milk that corresponds to however many types of metal were used. Two handfuls of cooled milk should be given to the woman. Alternatively, he continues, to achieve the same effect a medicinal concoction, a mixture of Seaberry, grape and molasses, could be administered to the pregnant woman. Finally, if these procedures are ineffective or impractical, the woman could try wearing an amulet.”
4. The Termination of Life from the Tibetan Medical and Religious Perspective
“lus kyi ‘jig ltas rnam pa bzhi yin ti. ring dang nye ba ma nges pa’o.”“There are four types of signs of destruction [‘jig]: distant, near, indefinite and definite.”(‘jig ltas: 1)
“While in the process of dying, what is important is that we should not be given by medications that distort our clear-mindedness. The person involved in her spiritual practice should not be administered stupefying medications because the consciousness should be as lucid as possible. An injection causing a ‘peaceful death’ might deprive one’s mind of the possibility of manifesting itself in positive ways such as, for example, the contemplation of flimsiness, the inducement of faith, the experience of sympathy or the meditation over selflessness. However, if a non-stupefying painkiller were to be invented, its influence might be even favorable because one’s mind could then normally function, while remaining free of distortions caused by pain.”
“Recognizing the voidness of thine own intellect to the Buddhahood, and looking upon it as being thine own consciousness, is to keep thyself in the (state of the) divine mind of the Buddha.”
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In this text, I will use the Wylie transliteration for Tibetan scripts and pinyin for Chinese words. |
2 | For same reasons, when I used the word ‘Tibetans’, what will be thereby be meant by default are the refugees living in India unless indicated otherwise. |
3 | On the history of the formation of this thread in the draft of the Constitution of Tibet, see: Hofer (2018, pp. 59–60) and Van Vleet ([2010] 2011, p. 355) |
4 | A similar meaning to the abovementioned draft of the Tibet Constitution regarding health care is contained in Art. 47 of the Constitution of India (cf. Constitution of India). |
5 | In the forthcoming part of the text, I deliberately skip the references made by Tibetans to Indian, Chinese, Greek, and Persian medicine, as these references are beyond the scope of the present essay. |
6 | The contemporary research confirms that this text is not a translation of the Sanskrit tantra Amṛṭahṛdayāṣṭaṅgaguhyopadeśatantra (The Essence of Nectar: The Manual of the Secret Teachings of the Eight Limbs) since it is indigenously Tibetan (Fenner 1996, p. 459; Sułek 2004, p. 101). However, the opinions about the existence of the Sanskrit text are to be found currently in the subject matter literature, e.g., Ilza Veith in the book Medizin in Tibet (Veith 1962, p. 7). |
7 | These are, respectively: Root Tantra (Rtsa rgyud), Explanatory Tantra (Bshad rgyud), Instructional Tantra (Man ngag gi rgyud), and Subsequent Tantra (Phyi ma’i rgyud) (cf. Rgyd bzhi). |
8 | According to Janet Gyatso, this phrase was later added to the text (Gyatso 2015, pp. 1148–49). |
9 | Tibetan medicine knowledge also consists of threads transferred from Persia, China, and India, including Ayurveda (cf. Renchung 1973, pp. 14–15; Gyatso 2015, p. 2). |
10 | Both centers are located in Dharamshala in India. |
11 | The above-quoted fragments should be supplemented with information from the previous chapter, Ngan g.yo skyon brtag (Mistake and problems with analyzing), about when the patient refuses to ‘cooperate’ with the physician (cf. Ngan g.yo skyon brtag: 2). It may suggest a change from a vertical to a horizontal relationship between the patient and the physician. However, this is only a ‘technical’ remark for the physican: what to do when the patient refuses to provide information about his illness. Moreover, the physician remains the one who knows better, and the patient himself, as the text suggests, behaves inappropriately. The approach to the relationship between the physican and the patient corresponds to the paternalism characteristic of medical ethics (cf. Gillon 1986, p. 67), but not for bioethics. The paternalistic approach is presented by famous Buddhist scholar Patrul Rinpoche in his book, Words of My Perfect Teacher, who compares a teacher to a skillful doctor who can help achieve the proper state of health or spiritual life (cf. Patrul 1998, pp. 16, 18). |
12 | It should be added that the content of Sman pa contains important remarks on medical ethics. It is worth mentioning, for example, the description of the features that should characterize a good and a bad physican (cf. Sman pa). It is also worth bearing in mind that there is a concept ‘medical ethics’ (sman pa’i kun spyod) in the Tibetan language that corresponds to Chinese yīdé (Ài and Lǐ 2011, p. 680). |
13 | In Western bioethics, there also appears the recognition of the patient as an ill person (Szewczyk 2009, p. 420). |
14 | This corresponds to the Chinese phrase yī huàn guānxì (Ài and Lǐ 2011, p. 680). |
15 | I mean the conversations I had with people in the Tibetan centers in Dharamshala and who were receiving Tibetan medical care and Tibetan medicine. |
16 | In the debates conducted mainly by western Buddhists or the researchers of Tibetan medicine, there appears some hints pertinent to other issues related to birth control. What is thereby meant is in vitro insemination and the ban on using contraceptives. |
17 | English edition: David Scott (Ngawang Jampa Thaye), A Circle of Protection for the Unborn (Scott 1985). |
18 | Incidentally, it should be noted that Tibetans living in TAR are subject to birth control with the so-called “one-child policy” (yī hái zhèngcè), and are thus compelled to have a forced abortion and/or sterilization (cf. Birth Control Policies In Tibet ). |
19 | As one of the reasons for the change, Geoff Childs points to the increasing percentage of children who live away from their parents and only visit during school holidays (Childs 2008, p. 139). |
20 | An example of such discrepancies is the appearance among Tibetans—in spite of being at variance with the canonical literature—of a view justifying abortion by the fact that it is less blameworthy to kill a smaller entity than a bigger one. In other words, it is one thing to abort fetus and it is another to kill and independently existing person (cf. Keown 2001, pp. 97–98). |
21 | The Buddhist construal is not marked with the connection between sex and procreation (with the connection being present in, say, Christianity), which thus allows for the occurrence of sexual intercourses not leading to the formation of a baby. |
22 | An intermediate state is bar do, which corresponds with antarābhava in Sanskrit. |
23 | Such a statement is also not included in the Russian translation of Rgyud bzhi done by Dandar B. Dashtsev (cf. Nikolayev 1988, p. 40). |
24 | Rlung literally means ‘wind’ (in Sanskrit vāyu) and as well as ‘breath’ (in Sanskrit prāṇa) and indicates the relationship between traditional Tibetan medicine and Ayurveda. The complexity of the concept ‘rlung’ was described by Tawni Tidwell (2019, p. 150) and Anastasia Holečko (2015). |
25 | The Dalai Lama’s remark poses problems not only for the bioethical justification of the possibility of abortion but also for the future Tibetan law, which will require consistency. Namely, from his words, it is not clear whether abortion will be prohibited in Tibetan law or not. First, it can be assumed that it will be legal but inconsistent with the Buddhist doctrine. Such a case is probable and is not against the law. This means that abortion may be legal, but for religious reasons, Buddhists will not use it. Secondly, it can be banned, e.g., because it is inconsistent with Buddhist doctrine, but what then with the changes taking place in the refugee community in India, who may take a positive view of abortion, and with the exceptional cases mentioned by the Dalai Lama? Finally, third, abortion may be legal in special cases. Then, there is no explanation as to what exceptions are mentioned and who will decide on its admissibility, e.g., a court or a phisician. |
26 | It should be admitted that the text of Rgyud bzhi contains quite accurate descriptions of the development of the fetus and sex. This means what elements influence female, male, or hermaphroditic sex (cf. Chags tshol). However, what is important from a bioethical point of view is that they lack content that would justify deliberate sex formation in the fetus. |
27 | It is worth adding that the Buddhist approach rejects the definition of death as “death brain” (cf. Keown 2019, p. 173). In the Tibetan tradition, there is a different understanding of the process of dying from the Western one. According to John Power, in tantric physiology, the sign of actual death is not the cessation of inhalation or circulation of blood, but the appearance of the mind of clear light, which lasts three days (Powers 2007, p. 341). |
28 | In the literature on the subject, this process is divided into several stages that the dying person must go through (cf. Prude 2019, pp. 128–29). Of course, it is a natural death, not a sudden one, because in such cases, these processes do not occur (Polnop 2017, p. 228; cf. Renchung 1973, p. 48). |
29 | What is of interest is that he only indirectly refers to the cases of suicide committed by Tibetans by way of a protest against the oppressive policy pursued by the People’s Republic of China against the former (Dalai 2001, p. 15). However, whereas towards the end of the 20th century, the problem under scrutiny was barely noticed, by 2020, self-immolation was committed by more than a few hundred people (cf. Carrico 2015; Central Tibetan Administration; Flynn 2018). |
30 | Let me add that even if there appear some hints related to physical pain, they are occasional and this thread is not developed any further (cf. Dalai 1997, p. 155). |
31 | Śīla in Sanskrit, which belongs to one of the parts of ‘Noble Eightfold Path’ and is associated with: right speech, right action, and right livelihood (Gethin 1998, p. 81). |
32 | The Dalai Lama draws attention to the dilemmas. |
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Lisiecki, M. Bioethical Threads in the Reflection of Tibetan Refugees in India. Religions 2021, 12, 436. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060436
Lisiecki M. Bioethical Threads in the Reflection of Tibetan Refugees in India. Religions. 2021; 12(6):436. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060436
Chicago/Turabian StyleLisiecki, Marcin. 2021. "Bioethical Threads in the Reflection of Tibetan Refugees in India" Religions 12, no. 6: 436. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060436