-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.iht.com/articles/72411.html

Copyright © 2002 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com

Buddhist miracle in Siberia

Steven Lee Myers The New York Times


Wednesday, October 2, 2002


Lama's body is intact, 75 years after his death

IVOLGINSK, Russia A miracle has occurred here in Siberia. Or it may be a hoax. Others
believe science can explain it. It is a question, it seems, of faith.

The story begins in 1927, when a spiritual leader of Russia's Buddhists gathered his
students and announced his plans to die. The leader, Dashi-Dorzho Itigilov, the 12th 
Pandito
Hambo Lama, then 75 and retired, instructed those gathered around him to "visit and 
look
at my body" in 30 years.

He crossed his legs into the lotus position, began to meditate and, chanting a prayer 
for the
dead, died.

The years that followed were difficult for all faiths in Russia, including the 
Buddhists here in
Buryatia, an impoverished Siberian region on the Mongolian border. The Soviet Union,
under Stalin, repressed most manifestations of religion, executing hundreds of lamas 
and
destroying 46 Buddhist temples and monasteries.

After World War II, Stalin relented somewhat and allowed the Buddhists to rebuild their
monastery outside Ivolginsk, along a low, desolate valley 35 kilometers (20 miles) from
Buryatia's capital, Ulan-Ude. But religious practice remained tightly restricted.

When the 30 years had passed - it might have been 28; the details are murky - 
Itigilov's
followers did what he had asked, exhuming his remains from a cemetery in Khukhe-
Zurkhen.

What they found, as the story goes, was Itigilov's body, still in the lotus position, 
still
perfectly intact, having defied nature's imperative to decay.

Stalin was dead, but Soviet power remained absolute, and so the Buddhists reburied 
Itigilov
- and the secret - in an unmarked grave, packing his wooden coffin with salt. (That 
may be
important, or not.)

"Nobody could talk about it then," said the current Pandito Hambo Lama, the 25th, Damba
Ayusheyev. "To bring him back to the temple - it was forbidden, impossible. So he was 
put
back."

Unlike supreme Tibetan lamas, who are considered reincarnations of previous lamas and
are enthroned for life, Pandito Hambo Lamas are elected by other lamas, serve 
relatively
short terms and are free to step down.

The story might have ended with the reburial had not a young lama, Bimba Dorzhiyev,
turned his curiosity for history into a quest to resolve the mystery of Itigilov. He 
found an
88-year-old believer, Amgalan Dabayev, whose father-in-law had been there when the
coffin had been opened and who himself had seen Itigilov. Dabayev led him to the grave.

On Sept. 11, 75 years after Itigilov's death, the body was once again lifted from the 
earth.
This time there was a record of the event: a dozen witnesses, including two forensic
experts and a photographer. The lamas who opened the coffin wore surgical masks, but
they need not have. Itigilov's body remained preserved.

The current Hambo Lama ordered the body brought to Ivolginsk, where it was greeted with
fanfare, ringing bells and lulling chants. He ordered the body placed on the second 
floor of
one of the monastery's four temples, where it remains today, secreted behind heavy
curtains and locked doors.

The monastery's 150 students keep a vigil on the first floor, praying around the clock,
though only the lamas may see the body. "To me it is the greatest miracle in life," 
said
Ayusheyev, the spiritual leader since 1995. "It turns out there are things on which 
time has
no power."

The 12th Hambo Lama was born in 1852 in czarist Russia and orphaned early, according to
the Buddhists' history. At 16 he studied to become a lama and served in several
monasteries in Buryatia. In 1911 he was nominated along with nine other candidates to
become the Hambo Lama and he was ultimately appointed by the czar's governor in 
Irkutsk.

During his time as Hambo Lama, Itigilov is said to have strengthened the faith, 
especially
among the Buryats, a nomadic people of Mongol descent who have lived in the region for
more than 30 centuries. He published religious tracts and teachings and united many of 
the
religion's factions.

Most of Russia's Buddhists - estimated today at 1 million - adhere to the "yellow hat" 
sect
that is predominant in Tibet. The Dalai Lama is their highest spiritual leader.

In the years since the Soviet collapse, Buryatia has remained a republic of the Russian
Federation. Across Russia the Buddhists have begun to thrive again, rebuilding lost 
temples,
opening schools and attracting new followers, even among ethnic Russians.

In Moscow, Vladislav Kozeltsev, an expert at the Center for Biomedical Technologies, 
the
institute that keeps the body of Lenin - who died in 1924 - in state on Red Square, 
said the
salt in the coffin might have slowed the decay but could not alone explain the 
preservation
of the lama's body. Other factors may include the soil and the condition of the coffin.

More likely, Kozeltsev said, Itigilov suffered from a defect in the gene that hastens 
the
decomposition of the body's cellular structure after death.

He added, "You cannot rule out some secret process of embalming."

Ayusheyev says the body was preserved because Itigilov achieved a heightened state of
existence through meditation known as shunyata, or emptiness.

He acknowledged that there would be skepticism. When greeted with it, he relented on 
his
own order and led a visitor into the temple to the darkened chamber where Itigilov 
sits atop
a simple table, surrounded by candles and metal bowls holding oils.

The lamas have dressed his body in a golden robe, with a blue sash laid across his 
lap. His
eyes are closed, his features blurred, though the shape of his face and his nose 
certainly
resemble the 1913 photograph. His hands remain flexible, his nails perfectly trimmed. 
His
skin is leathery but soft. His head is still covered in short-trimmed hair.

"Many people don't see what's obvious," Ayusheyev said. "Many people won't understand
even if they see him."

 Copyright © 2002 The International Herald Tribune

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