Tara and the Female in Buddhism
The female in Buddhism, despite its Master's reluctance to admit
women folk into the order, was its psychological need and
comprised its spiritual structure. Compassion - the softest
aspect of being, man or divine, which was the core of Buddhism,
best revealed itself in a female frame. Hence, in the course of
time, feminineness dominated the Buddhist ambience so much so
that even the images of the male gods like Avalokiteshvara were
conceived with a feminine touch in their appearance and as an
essential aspect of personality.
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The feminine tenderness and grace with which subsequent Buddhist
images were conceived define the epitome of Buddhist iconographic
perception and art. After benevolence and protectiveness, other
virtues which a female best represented, were added to the
cardinal of compassion this feminine aspect was more thrusting
and diversified with the result that during Mahayana phase, more
so in Tibetan Buddhism, the number of female deities reached in
thousands.
Such psychodynamics apart, factors outside Buddhism, especially
plurality cult of Brahmanism and preponderance of feminine
elements, played a vital role in determining the male-female
ratio and their relative significance in Buddhism too. By sixth
century or so mutuality of Brahmanical male and female 'devatas -
gods, was completely revolutionized, the female gaining supremacy
and priority over the male, even the great Trinity - Brahma,
Vishnu and Shiva. Texts like Devi-Mahatmya in the Markandeya
Purana and Devi-Bhagavata among others installed Devi not only as
possessing attributes and cumulative energies of all male gods
but also as preceding them, even creation. Invoking a different
form or aspect in each of the 'dhyanas' - meditative visions,
these texts perceived Devi - Divine Female, as one and also as
many, the former defining unity, and latter, diversity. To this
plurality were added her 'shaktis' - subordinate powers.
Aboriginals as well as Vedic Aryans had some early female deities
but while those in the former tradition were just regional
inoperative boon-bestowing icons, most of the latter represented
aniconic elements or aspects of nature - usually terror
inflicting, they appeased by laudation and 'havya' - offerings.
The more accomplished post-Devi-Mahatmya form of Devi was,
however, completely different from them both.
Early Female Deities in Buddhism
The Buddhism, too, had some early female deities, mostly
inherited from erstwhile cults, as the Earth goddess and some
yakshanis, Hariti in particular, from aboriginal tribes, and
Lakshmi and Saraswati, from the Vedic. Interestingly, the Earth
goddess who had iconic presence in pre-Buddhist cults was in
Buddhism a symbolic presence, while Lakshmi and Saraswati, the
aniconic Vedic deities, had in Buddhism well-defined iconographic
forms. When the Buddha invoked the mother earth to be the witness
to his act of conquering Mara and its hosts, he perceived her as
all-seeing formless one competent to certify genuineness of his
act.
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Except the Lalitavistara that talks of her as appearing in
person, or the Nidanakatha and Mahavastu that talk of her quaking
and dispelling Mara and its hosts, in the entire Buddhist
literature the mother earth remains a non-operative aniconic
spiritual presence. The earth goddess is alluded to in texts time
and again sometimes as Sthavara - Steadfast, having ten lac
forms, and at other times as Aparajita - Undefeatable, in
Buddhist narratives she does not appear again. In the Mahayana
narratives she appears before the pilgrim Suthana but only to
proclaim that she has been the witness of the 'spiritual
transformations of all Buddhas when they were to almost attain
enlightenment', a role identical to her earlier one.
Later, after Buddha's mother Mayadevi was deified around Lumbini,
where the Buddha was born, the role of mother-goddess shifted to her.
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This human-born mother of their Master was more intimate a mother
and inspired greater reverence than did the symbolic earth
goddess. As the tradition has it, Mayadevi gave up her mortal
frame soon after the Buddha was born, only to seek greater
freedom to roam and re-visit her son as and when wished.
Consequently, each time a Bodhisattva was born Mayadevi
re-created herself to be his mother. She was thus the mother of
all Bodhisattvas and all Buddhas. She was present on all eventful
occasions in Buddha's life, as at river Niranjana where he
emaciated due to fasting. Her eyes melted into tears the moment
she saw him. Buddha visited her in Tushit or Trayastrinsha Heaven
and delivered sermon.
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She is said to descend from Heaven on the Buddha's
Mahaparinirvana and weep over his robe.
The other woman who rose to divine heights and attained
Buddhahood was Mahaprajapati Gautami, Buddha's maternal aunt, who
brought him up after his mother Mayadevi died. However, Gautami
appears in Buddhist narratives only after Sakyamuni attains
Buddhahood and accepting his path she embarks on her quest for
liberation, as a regular monk. She was the first woman to seek
monastic life on par with men and establish the order of female
monks. She was the founder of nuns' order and was the ever first
preceptor of its first batch. She had thus an outstanding role in
the growth of institutional life in Buddhism. The Buddhist
tradition venerates Gautami as the female Buddha, who destroyed
all her imperfections, acquired great powers, knew others'
thought, heard divine chorus, and was beyond the cycle of birth
and death. No shrines are dedicated to Gautami but her legends
figure in Buddhist sectarian art and faithful heads have always
bowed in reverence over them.
Hariti and Yakshani Cult
Yakshas-yakshanis, often interchanged with 'devatas', were an
integral part of pre-Buddhist cosmology and their worship a major
cultic activity of Indian populace. Buddhism neither questioned
or prohibited nor ignored yaksha-worship. Rather,
yakshas-yakshanis were a recurring theme in early Buddhist art.
Buddha even advised people to honor, worship and make offerings
to yakshas as it brought prosperity. He even ordained that
Hariti, the yakshani, would have a shrine at every monastery and
also daily offering. Since then Hariti shrine became a
monastery's essential feature, and Hariti, its protecting deity.
The benevolent matron surrounded by children, Hariti represented
female procreativity, abundance and fertility.
Hariti, meaning thief, was initially a devourer of infants.
Buddha transformed her into a protector of children and
benefactor of humans. As the Mulasarvastivada Vinaya has it,
Hariti was the daughter of Sata, patron yaksha of Rajagraha. Her
name was Abhirati. After Sata died, his duties towards Rajagraha
devolved on Abhirati and her brother Satagiri. Abhirati had,
however, a different mind. Instead of serving as protector she
had a vow to prey on children of Rajagraha and the same she
revealed to her brother. When nothing could dissuade her,
Satagiri married her to Panchaka, the son of the patron Yaksha of
Gandhara. She had by him five hundred children. Before long,
impelled to act by her baneful pledge she along with her
offspring came back to Rajagraha and began abducting and
devouring infants and children. Reports reached the king, and on
his counselor's advice offerings were made to the unknown yaksha
but all without result. Meanwhile, a yaksha disclosed all that
Abhirati was doing. The term Abhirati meant a 'joyful girl',
something not co-relating with her act. People hence changed her
name to Hariti, the thief. Finally, townsfolk approached
Sakyamuni who moved by their grief decided to deal with Abhirati
in her own coins. He concealed Abhirati's youngest son Priyankara
under his alms bowl. Not finding him anywhere, Abhirati broke
into tears blinding her almost. Eventually, advised by a senior
yaksha she also went to Sakyamuni and pledged that she would end
her life that very day if her son was not restored. It afforded
to Buddha the opportunity to make Abhirati realize the grief of
parents who lost their only son when the loss of just one out of
five hundred crazed her.
Realizing her ills Hariti empathized with parents whose children
she had stolen and promised not only to desist but also protect
and nourish them since onwards. She turned to Buddha as her
spiritual guide and to his path. Buddha restored her child. He
ordained that she would have a part of offerings, and with it she
would nourish her offspring. He also revealed to her what turned
her into a devourer of infants and children. In one of her
previous birth she was a herdswoman in Rajagraha. one day when in
market to sell her buttermilk, a huge crowd of people celebrating
some festival invited her to dance. Accepting the invitation she
participated and danced and aborted in exhaustion. Despite all
that, she sold her buttermilk for five hundred mangos and
staggered homewards. on her way she met a Pratyeka (solitary)
Buddha. Impressed by him she offered him all her five hundred
mangos. In her moments of deep reverence she pledged to avenge
people of Rajagraha for her miscarriage by devouring their
children.
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Lakshmi and Saraswati
Lakshmi and Saraswati are two Rig-Vedic deities in the Buddhist
line. Their absorption into the Buddhist stream was perhaps
necessitated by what they represented - Lakshmi, abundance,
prosperity, fertility, happiness, beauty, luster, sovereignty
among others, and Saraswati, art, culture, learning and all
fruits of intellect. With followers from ranks and upper strata
Buddhism could hardly ignore Lakshmi. And, an order as was
Buddhism, esteeming wisdom, reasoning, oratorical skill . as the
best of man, might not reject Saraswati who besides harnessing
them had a lot in common with Prajnaparmita, the most venerated
Buddhist divinity.
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The early Buddhist texts are, however, evasively silent about
them both. Lakshmi has significant presence in early Buddhist art
at Bharhut, Sanchi . but Saraswati is completely missing. By
around the 3rd century C.E., even Lakshmi disappears. Except a
couple of them, Lakshmi images are not seen even in Gandhara
sculptures. From around the sixth-seventh centuries Lakshmi
images begin appearing on a larger scale but they are on
Brahmanical lines, not Buddhist. Lakshmi's presence in early art
but absence in texts, and in art, her icons decorating
subordinate spaces, not forming part of the proper Buddhist
theme, are enigmatic. Maybe, while rich donors commissioning
construction of a stupa, or a part, at Bharhut, Sanchi or
anywhere, insisted inclusion of Lakshmi icons for her favor, the
order of the monks that determined the line of a text, or the
body of the theme to be carved at a sacred site, was reluctant to
admit her into the pantheon, at least as regular deity. The
conflict was perhaps resolved by including Lakshmi icons as
subordinate motifs, not as official deity, or part of a regular
Buddhist theme. Saraswati was the patron of intellectuals -
poets, dramatists. Like rich donors these intellectuals weren't
instrumental in constructing a shrine, and, hence, Saraswati
images weren't patronized. Apart, Buddhism had Saraswati's
substitutes in Tara and Prajnaparmita, the deities with wider
range of attributes and personality aspects. It was in late
Tibetan Buddhism that the order of Lamas laid fresh impetus on
Saraswati worship and consecrated her in Buddhist pantheon.
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Tara
'Whose smile made the sun to shine and frown made darkness to
envelope the terrestrial sphere' is how the 778 AD Nagari
inscription of Kalasan Chandi sanctuary at Java pays homage to
Tara. This apart, Prince Shailendra, the founder of sanctuary,
lauds the goddess as the savior of men and the most noble and
venerable one. The temple she then enshrined was just one but by
around 12th century Java hardly had a household shrine which was
without an image of Tara.
Tara, the principal Buddhist goddess conceived with a wide range
of attributes and personality aspects, has in Buddhism the same
status as Devi or Durga in the Brahmanical. As various
Brahmanical goddesses look like different forms of Devi, most
Buddhist deities look like Tara's 'bhedas' - manifestations. As
Devi preceded all gods, Tara as Prajnaparmita - Perfection of
Wisdom and highest metaphysical principle, is claimed to have
priority even over Buddha. Like Devi who revealed to Vishnu who
he was and what for he was there, in Buddhism, Tara was the light
and the prime source of Buddhahood and thus of all Buddhas. Like
Devi, who is Shiva's consort, Tara has been conceived as the
consort of Avalokiteshvara. Like Devi who is the mother of the
gods of the highest order, Tara, at least in Mahayana Buddhism,
is the mother of all Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. Tara had an early
presence in the Buddhist pantheon; however it was largely after
the emergence of the Devi cult around the sixth-seventh centuries
that Tara rose to a status on par with any other Buddhist god and
was sometimes venerated like the great Master himself. Tibetan
Buddhism has thousands of deities with local identities; Tara is
the deity known to all, and her mantra - hymn, to every lip. In
Tibet she is almost its national deity.
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Tara in Brahmanism
Scholars have discovered in early texts like the Mahabharata a
term 'tarini' meaning one that carried one's votaries across
waters of tribulation and linked it with Tara suggesting her
early origin and Brahmanical connection. The argument is little
convincing. Tara's form, as emerged later in the Tantra, or as
one of the Mahavidyas, was not known to the writers of the
Mahabharata or of the main eighteen Puranas. Not so early, she
undoubtedly preceded Mahavidyas, as when with one Mahavidya, not
ten, the Mahavidya-cult was just evolving, Tara had her fully
evolved form. Her transformation as one of the Mahavidyas
occurred long after.
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In her early form Tara was seen as commanding shaktis - powers
that controlled rush of waters, protected navigators and guided
boats.
Before her emergence as second Mahavidya Tara's concept continued
to change. In Agni Purana, she is a Yogini, not devata.
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In Mayadipaka, she has one form while as Mahavidya, another.
Shaivite tradition considers her as the transform of Mahamaya,
the great illusion. Shiva's epithet after he consumed arson
during ocean-churning was Akshobhya - unperturbed, and Tara was
his consort. Tara's prime presence is, however, in Tantra.
Brahmanical Tantra-books do not go back beyond 6th century.
Obviously, the Brahmanical Tara must have emerged only
afterwards. The Java inscription, dated 778, and Chalukyan dated
circa 1095-96, comprise her earliest known epigraphic records.
Not as popular in South as in North, Tara is the principal deity
of all significant Tantras. In Brahmanical texts too,
Chinachara-krama - worship-mode as prevailed in China, was the
accepted mode of her worship. Apart, the legend that sage
Vashishtha went to Mahachina to learn the mode of worshipping
Tara from Buddha, as the same was not known to anybody else, as
also her form different from all other Brahmanical divinities,
suggest that the Buddhist Tara was her prototype.
However, the two concepts of the goddess are widely different.
Despite that in Buddhism Tara has many manifestations, she is
almost always benevolent, compassionate, gentle, playful, young,
lustrous, and protective. The Brahmanical Tara, especially as the
Mahavidya, is almost always fierce, often horrible to behold, and
potentially dangerous, the same as Kali.
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She is usually conceived as riding a corpse in the cremation
ground, or as standing in the attitude of an archer - pratyalidha
posture. Not that Tara does not have a fierce form in Buddhism,
or a benign one in Brahmanism, in general, in the former context
she manifests gentle aspects, while in the latter, fierce ones.
Brahmanical texts allude to her several forms, however, among
them three - Ekajata, Nilasaraswati and Ugra are more
significant. Tararahasya, Taratantra, Tantrasara and
Mantramahodadhi are the principal Brahmanical texts on Tara's
Tantrika-cult.
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Origin of Tara
Ambiguity prevails in regard to both, place and period of the
origin of Tara. Buddha was reluctant to admit womenfolk into the
Sangh. Hence, an early worship-cult of female principle might be
a remote possibility. Western scholars, misled by her 7th-8th
century representations in stone, fix her origin around then and
somewhere in Himalayan region, more likely Tibet, or around. No
doubt, Tara's early pictorial representations, in caves at
Nishik, Ellora, Kanheri etc., are datable to 6th-7th centuries,
but a concept or a metaphysical principle would emerge so
extensively and with such pre-eminence in art in simultaneity to
its origin is something difficult to concede. The journey of a
religious concept from the mind it was born in to the mind that
believed it, and further, to formal visualization into stone or
any other medium, which represented it, might have taken pretty
long time, a few centuries or so. More reasonably, Tara had her
origin during early centuries of the Common Era, perhaps as a
cult already prevalent amongst aboriginals or others, which the
liberal Buddhism readily adopted. Being mightier and more popular
the Tara-cult absorbed other concurrent similar cults and emerged
as the mightiest. Tara's visual transforms emerged late, not
before 4th century at least. Early Avalokiteshvara images are
without Tara, which suggests that her form as his consort was a
later development, perhaps in pursuance to Ardhanarishvara model
of Shiva and Shakti.
Such academic allusions that the worship of Tara was revived in
Tibet by Nagarjuna, the founder of Madhyamika school, apart, the
origin of Tara abounds in several interesting myths. It is said
that all creatures of the world began lamenting when
Avalokiteshvara was about to attain nirvana - final liberation.
Avalokiteshvara heard them. His heart melted in compassion for
their suffering and a tear rolled from his eyes which turned into
Tara. The so-born Tara was the essence of the essence of
compassion. The Swatantra-tantra relates her origin in a Cholana
lake, which lay on the western slope of the mount Meru, the
Indo-Tibetan borderland which had around it several lakes and
many monasteries. People living there looked for a deity to help
cross these lakes. Ultimately, their desire had divine sanction.
On Cholana's right bank close to village Tar was a mountain.
People one day saw on it twenty-one figures of the goddess Tara
which have come into existence of their own.
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Since then the great goddess was always there to help cross the
lakes. This form of Tara is essentially her original form. Root
'tri' from which the term Tara developed itself means to 'swim
across'. All her names popular in Tibet, China, Korea and Japan
give this meaning. In islands like Java she was especially
popular, perhaps for helping people against tempestuous seas. In
Buddhism this aspect was not so significant but as 'Tarini' she
enabled her votaries to wade across 'bhavasagara' - ocean of
life.
Tara's Bhedas or Forms of Tara
Otherwise innumerable, Tara's main forms are five : Sita or White Tara,
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Shyama or Green Tara,
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Bhrakuti or Yellow Tara,
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Ekajata or Blue Tara,
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and Kurukulla or Red Tara.
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White Tara manifests in seven forms, Green Tara in ten, Yellow
Tara in five, Blue Tara in two, and Red Tara just in one. These
five forms relate to five sacred colors associated with five
Dhyani-Buddhas whose Shaktis these forms are. They also represent
five cosmic elements. Her two other forms : Rajeshvari-Tara,
equated with Gauri or Vishvamata, and the blue lotus-carrying
Pitha-Tara also occur in the Sadhanamala. Apart, the sacred
Tara-mantra commemorates her in eleven forms. In yet another
classification her forms are twenty-one.
The Vajrasana White Tara, her foremost form, represents
Prajnaparmita. She is usually two-armed, right held in varada,
and left in vitarka-mudra - teaching posture, besides it carries
the stem of a full blown lotus. She generally has a third eye,
symbolic of knowledge, but sometimes as many as seven, grafted on
soles and hands. As the Shakti of Amoghasiddha, she carries stems
of lotuses in both hands. Lotus supports a Vishvavajra - double
thunderbolt. Texts perceive her as the timeless youth of sixteen,
lustrous as moon, and adorned in white and with brilliant jewels.
In Tantra, she manifests as white complexioned Janguli, with two
or four arms, wearing white garment, white jewels and carrying
white serpents. With original two hands she plays on vina, of the
other, right is held in abhaya and left holds a white serpent.
Rays of moon form her garland.
Green Tara carries a fully or partially closed blue lotus. With
right leg pendent reaching a foot-rest made of a smaller lotus
she sits on a lotus-throne. Sometimes her seat is supported on
two roaring lions. She carries the image of Amoghasiddha in her
head-dress. When with Avalokiteshvara, she is usually on his
right. A urna mark defines her forehead. She is sometimes
accompanied by her own eight forms, and at other times, by
Ekajata and Marichi, or Janguli and Mahamayuri, her
manifestations. When with Janguli and Mahamayuri, she becomes
Dhanada, giver of wealth. As Dhanada she has four arms, upper
ones in usual postures, lower ones carrying a goad and a lasso.
Some texts perceive her as two-armed, one carrying a lotus and
other held in varada, and as three-eyed. Surrounded by Shaktis
having various colors she is conceived with a smiling face, as
adorned with bright pearls and wearing shoes set with jewels.
Yellow Tara or Bhrikuti, the goddess that frowns, is Tara's angry
form. She carries Amoghasiddha in diadem, holds her right hand in
varada and carries in the left a blue lotus. She is flanked by
Marichi on her right and by Ekajata on left. She is conceived as
a celestial maiden with timeless youth and adorned with jewels.
Khadiravarni Tara and Vajra Tara are her forms. Adorned with all
sorts of ornaments, she is represented as seated in the midst of
Matrikas, divine mothers, having eight arms, right ones carrying
vajra, arrow, conch, varada, and the left, lotus-bow,
diamond-goad, noose and the forefinger of the fourth raised
towards sky, four faces, yellow, black, white and red from left
to right, and three eyes in each face. She sits on the moon
placed on a lotus representing universe. In another innovation,
she sits on a diamond-throne, has red body color and four Buddhas
on her crown.
Blue Tara or Ekajata, one with single chignon, manifests Tara's
ferocious - ugra aspect and is hence known as Ugra Tara. As
represented in texts, she stands in archer's posture, has short
stature, one face; three eyes and protuberant abdomen, is fierce
and terrible-looking, wears necklace of human heads, and is
adorned with a blue lotus. She rides a corpse, is adorned with
eight snakes and five mudras - attitudes, has red and round eyes
and protruding tongue, and is in the prime of youth. Always very
happy she is resplendent because of her wild laughter and
dreadful with her protruding jaws. She wears tiger-skin around
her waist. In her two right hands she carries sword and scissors,
in the left, blue lotus and skull. Her chignon is brown, and head
adorned by Akshobhya.
The four-armed Red Tara or Kurukulla is red-complexioned, sits on
red lotus and wears red garment. one of her right hands is held
in abhaya, while in other is carried an arrow, in one of the left
is held a quiver of jewels, and in other, an arrow made of
red-lotus-buds set on a bow of flowers drawn up to ears.
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Many of Tara's forms are merely her attributes. Over-emphasis
make them look like her bhedas - forms. She is one throughout.
Her attributes are two-fold, pacific and angry, or five-fold
according to five sacred colors, pacific being white or green,
and angry red, yellow or blue. Pacific forms have smiling
expression, long and wavy hair and ornaments that befitted a
Bodhisattva, and angry, fierce and awe-striking. Many of Tara's
forms - Janguli, Prajnaparmita, Marichi, Bhrakuti. have emerged
in the tradition as independent goddesses and have shrines
dedicated to them.
This article by Prof. P. C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet
Bibliography
1.. Miranda Shaw : Buddhist Goddesses of India
2.. Mallar Ghosh : Development of Buddhist Iconography in
Eastern India : A Study of Tara, Prajnas of Five Tathagatas and Bhrikuti
3.. Hitendra Shashtri : ASI Memoirs No. 20 : The Origin and Cult of Tara
4.. Tom Lowenstein : The Vision of the Buddha
5.. David Kinsley : Tantrik Visions of the Divine Feminine
6.. Vessantara : Female Deities in Buddhism
7.. Chhaya Haesner : India : Land of the Buddha
8.. Prithvi Kumar Agrawal : Goddesses in Ancient India
9.. Vasudeva S. Agrawal : Ancient Indian Folk Cults
10.. Eva Allinger : The Green Tara as Saviouress from Eight Dangers in the Sumtsek at Alchi
11.. Shashi Bhushan, Dasgupta : An Introduction to Tantric Buddhism
12.. M. K. Dhavalikar : The Origin of Tara
13.. Edward Conze : Buddhism, its essence and development
14.. Pratapditya Pal : Two Metal Images of Mahashri Tara, in Proceedings of Indian History Congress
15.. Gill Farrer-Halls : The Feminine Face of Buddhism
16.. Sadhanamala, ed. Benoytosh Bhattacharya
17.. Buddhist Women Across Cultures : ed. Karma Lekshe Tsomo
18.. Buddhism, Sexuality, and Gender : ed. Jose Ignacio Cabezon
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