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Tibetan Lamaism Buddhism? (2) Is Tibetan Lamaism Buddhism? (1) - A Culture of Black Magic 20 April 2008 This is the translation of the excerpt of a reaserch paper by 耶律大石. The full text in Chinese can be found on www.realsidelama.cn. Tibetan voodoo believes each life has its source called La. La doesn’t have to be located within the body, but could be situated almost anywhere, on a hill, in a lake or within a beast. One person may have more than one La; moreover, a family, a tribe or a nation also has its collective La. If you want to destroy your opponents, according to Tibetan Lamaism, the easiest way to achieve this is to find out through divination where this person's La locates and then destroy it.
The 5th Dalai Lama is known to be completely obsessed with Black Magic, and exploited some allegedly extremely powerful voodoos to eliminate his political rivals. One of such super measures to kill people in a large scale and efficiently is Eight Teeth Wheel, which is said can slay hundreds of thousands of people in the blink of an eye.[1] Another powerful killing machine handed down by the 5th Dailai is so-called “Devil’s Grinding Mill” made of two round stones, and it is believed that 14th Dalai Lama once used this “Mill” in his bitter struggle against his enemies. He drew the La of the enemy troops into mustard seeds. When he learned by reading the omens that he had successfully done so, he placed the seeds in the Devil’s Mill and ordered lamas to grind them into powder. Allegedly the force of destruction was so potent that the lamas who grinded the mill all died soon after the ritual. The mill is still kept in a Yellow Hat Lamaist Monastery KardoGompa outside Lhasa. It is said that the 5th Dalai Lama held voodoo rituals for the purpose of killing periodically and on every special occasions, and he was convinced that his triumphant over his political rivals had to be attributed mainly to, not the force of the Mongols, but the power of his voodoo. According to Kagyupa document, the lama in question once released five vicious demons from hell to seduce Mongols into a Tibetan trap to meet their doomed fate. [2] The 14th Dalai has acknowledged that he draws inspiration mainly from 5th Dalai, so how good is this current lama at using the black magic? This is a closely guarded secret in the Tibetan government-in-exile, but still there are traces all over that could help us to gain some insight into his murky world. In Dalai’s autobiography there is a reference on how his black magic caused the death of China’s late leader Chairman Mao Zedong. The Dalai Lama gave a detailed description of a three-day voodoo ritual taken place with Kalachakra Tantra - a time machine in Lamaism. Following the instructions by the 5th Dalai, prior to the ritual, the 14th Dalai held a weeks-long prayer session in solitary. On September 8, 1976, a process to manipulate the "time" began. When the ritual entered the second day, September 9, Mao died. The Dalai described how in the morning of the third day, he found the heavan was in tears, then in the afternoon, he witnessed a most beautiful rainbow in the sky that he said he ever seen in his life. [3] Whether it is a true story or a fiction, in the circle of the Tibetan Lamaimm followers, the caused of the Mao’s death is commonly credited to Dalai’s black magic. And not just Mao, even the death of another Chinese supreme leader Deng Xiaoping is attributed to the power of voodoo, this time it was executed by Dalai’s brother Gyalo Thondup. Deng died on February 12, 1997, juest days before his death he met with the master of the black magic, thus a link between the meeting and the death are established according to Lamaist traditions. [4] (to be continued) [1] Secret visions of the
fifth Dalai Lama. The gold manuscript in the fournier
collection, London 1988. By Samtsen Gyaltsen Karmay Pre: The
Hypocrisy of Anti-China Demonstrations
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