Dakini
A ḍākinī is a type of goddess in Hinduism and Buddhism.
The concept of the ḍākinī somewhat differs depending on the context and the tradition. For example, in earlier Hindu texts and East Asian esoteric Buddhism, the term denotes a race of demonesses who ate the flesh and/or vital essence of humans. In Hindu Tantric literature, Ḍākinī is the name of a goddess often associated with one of the six chakras or the seven fundamental elements of the human body. In Nepalese and Tibetan Buddhism, meanwhile, 'ḍākinī' can refer to both what can be best described as fierce-looking female embodiments of enlightened energy, and to human women with a certain amount of spiritual development, both of whom can help Tantric initiates in attaining enlightenment.
In Japan, the ḍākinīs – held in the East Asian Buddhist tradition to have been subjugated and converted to Buddhism by the buddha Vairocana under the guise of the god Mahākāla – were eventually coalesced into a single deity called Dakiniten, who, after becoming syncretized with the native agricultural deity Inari, became linked to the fox iconography associated with the latter.
Etymology
The Sanskrit term ' is related to ', "to fly", as in '. The Tibetan khandroma, meaning "sky-goer", may have originated from the Sanskrit ', a term from the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra. The masculine form of the word is ', which is usually translated into Tibetan as pawo, "hero".In Chinese, ' is transcribed mainly as 荼枳尼, 荼吉尼, or 吒枳尼 ; other less common alternative transcriptions include 陀祇尼, 吒祇尼, 吒幾爾, and 拏吉尼. It is also translated as 空行母, a calque of the Tibetan term. In Japanese, these transcriptions are all read as dakini.
In Hinduism
As demonesses
In certain passages in Hindu Purāṇic literature, ḍākinīs are depicted as flesh-eating demonesses in the train of the goddess Kālī. For instance, in the Shiva Purāṇa, Vīrabhadra and Mahākāḷī at Shiva's command march against Prajapati Daksha accompanied by the Nine Durgas and their fearsome attendants, namely "Ḍākinī, Śākinī, Bhūtas, Pramathas, Guhyakas, Kūṣmāṇḍas, Parpaṭas, Caṭakas, Brahmarakshasa, Bhairavas and Kṣetrapālas." In the Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa, Paraśurāma sees ḍākinīs among Shiva's retinue in Mount Kailash.In the Bhāgavata Purāṇa, after the young Krishna had killed the demoness Pūtanā, the cowherd women of Vrindavan carry out protective rites to keep him safe from future harm. At the end of the ritual, they declare:
As a goddess
Other texts meanwhile apparently use 'Ḍākinī' as the name of a goddess. In the Lalitopākhyāna section of the Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa, Ḍākinī is one of the deities who guards the chariot of the boar-faced goddess Daṇḍanāthā, one of Lalitā's generals.File:Dakini.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|The goddess Kālī flanked by Ḍākinī and Yoginī
A chapter detailing the mode of worship of the goddess Kubjikā contained in the Agni Purāṇa instructs that the goddesses "Ḍākinī, Rākinī, Kākinī, Śākinī, and Yakṣiṇī should be worshipped in the six directions from the north-west."
In Tantric literature, Ḍākinī the goddess is usually associated with the saptadhātus or the six chakras. The Kubjikāmata Tantra for instance enumerates seven yoginī goddesses to whom the ritual practitioner symbolically offers his semen, bones, marrow, fat, flesh, blood and skin, respectively. A nearly identical listing of goddesses can be found in a later text belonging to the same tradition, the Śrīmatottara Tantra: here, the names listed are Dākinī, Rākinī, Lākinī, Kākinī, Śākinī, Hākinī, Yākinī and Kusumā. Another chapter in the Kubjikāmata Tantra lists two sequences of six goddesses, assigned to each of the six chakras: the first denotes the creative "northern course" of the six chakras, from the ājñā down to the ādhāra, while the latter – comprising Ḍākinī, Rākinī, Lākinī, Kākinī, Śākinī and Hākinī – denotes the destructive "southern course", in reverse order.
Later Tantric texts such as the Rudrayāmala Tantra identify Ḍākinī, Rākinī, Lākinī, Kākinī, Śākinī and Hākinī with the six chakras, the dhātus and the five elements plus the mind. This work associates Ḍākinī with the mūlādhāra chakra, Rākinī with svādhiṣṭhāna, Lākinī with maṇipūra, Kākinī with anāhata, Śākinī with viśuddhi, and Hākinī with ājñā. The Śrīmatottara Tantra places Kusumamāla at the feet, while other texts place a figure named Yākinī at the level of the sahasrāra.
In Buddhism
As flesh-eaters
In a chapter criticizing meat-eating in the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra, Gautama Buddha refers to dākas and ḍākinīs – described as "terrible eaters of human flesh" – as the offspring of the carnivorous King Kalmaśapada, who was born after a human king had mated with a lioness.In East Asian Buddhism, the ḍākinīs are mainly known via the story of their subjugation by the wrathful deity Mahākāla found in a commentary on the Mahāvairocana Tantra by the Tang dynasty monk Yi Xing. According to the story, the buddha Vairocana, wishing to stop the ḍākinīs from preying on humans, took the form of Mahākāla, summoned the ḍākinīs before him, and then swallowed them all, declaring that he would release them on the condition that they cease devouring human flesh. When the ḍākinīs complained that this would lead them to starvation, Mahākāla as a concession allowed them to consume the vital essence of deceased humans known as 'human yellow' – an elusive substance believed to be found either inside a person's liver, heart or at the top of the head – instead, teaching them a mantra enabling them to know of a person's impending death six months in advance so that they could obtain it before other demons, who also coveted the substance as it conferred various magical powers to the consumer.
Other texts meanwhile assign the taming of the ḍākinīs to other figures such as Vajrapāṇi or the Wisdom King Acala. Indeed, in Japanese esoteric Buddhism Acala is believed to have the power to extend the lifespan of his devotees and was thus invoked in certain life-prolonging rituals against soul-stealing demons such as ḍākinīs. Like Mahākāla, Acala is interpreted in the Japanese tradition as a wrathful avatar of Vairocana, with some texts even identifying Mahākāla as Acala's "trace" or manifestation.
A dictionary compiled by the Tang dynasty monk Huilin titled The Sound and Meaning of All Sūtras defines ḍākinīs as demonesses who bewitch people and have sexual relationships with them.
In Japanese Buddhism
Emergence and development of cult
The ḍākinī imagery arrived in Japan via Kūkai's introduction of Tangmi to the country in the beginning of the 9th century in the form of the Shingon school. The Womb Realm Mandala, one of the two main mandalas of Shingon Buddhism, depicts three ḍākinīs in the southern part of the mandala's Outer Vajra section in the court of Yama, next to the Saptamātṛkās and other similar deities. The figures are half-naked and seated on circular mats next to a human corpse. One of the ḍākinīs is shown devouring a human arm and a leg; the other two hold skulls in their right hands, and one holds a chopper in her left hand. All in all, the ḍākinīs represented in this mandala are more akin to the demonesses of Hindu and early Buddhist texts and iconography than the female personifications of enlightenment found in Tibetan Buddhism.File:Enmaten Mandala.png|thumb|Mandala of Enmaten, from the Besson Zakki, a late Heian-early Kamakura period Japanese compendium of Buddhist iconography. A half-naked ḍākinī figure holding a sack or bag is depicted to the right of Enmaten and his two consorts.
The ḍākinīs were, as per their placement in the Womb Realm Mandala, originally revered as part of Yama's retinue, mainly figuring in rituals centered around the deity. A ḍākinī, depicted as a long-haired woman holding a bag, also appears in the Enmaten mandalas of the late Heian period as one of the god's attendants. It was after the Insei period of the late 11th to mid-12th century, during which Japan was effectively under the rule of retired emperors, that a cult centered around the deified ḍākinī as a single goddess named 'Dakiniten' emerged independent of the Enmaten ritual. As the cult of Dakiniten flourished, its rite became famous for being particularly effective for obtaining worldly benefits and was thus especially attractive to the politically ambitious; at the same time, however, the ritual was viewed with suspicion within some circles as a dangerous, "heterodox" practice due to its supposed subversive, black magical aspects.
It is difficult to trace the exact origins of the Japanese Dakiniten cult. While a number of medieval texts claim the ritual's lineage started with eminent esoteric masters such as Amoghavajra or Vajrabodhi, the lineage may more plausibly be traced back to 10th century Shingon monks such as the Jingo-ji priest Kengyō or the Tō-ji abbot Kanshuku. Although one legend claims that Saichō, the founder of the Tendai school, brought with him Dakiniten ritual texts from China which he then buried at Mount Hiei, there is actually no historical proof that he or any of the other monks who went to China to study esoteric Buddhism – Kūkai, Jōgyō, Engyō, Ennin, Eun, Enchin and Shuei – brought home any such texts with them, suggesting that the Dakiniten rite developed in Japan well after their time.
File:A man confronted with an apparition of the Fox goddess.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|left|Taira no Kiyomori encounters the fox goddess Kiko Tennō, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi
The rapid rise of certain notable figures to prominence, as well as their decline, have been popularly attributed to Dakiniten. A certain anecdote regarding the military leader Taira no Kiyomori found in the Genpei Jōsuiki claims that Kiyomori once shot an arrow at a fox during a hunt. The fox then transformed into a woman who promised to grant Kiyomori whatever he wanted in exchange for her life. Kiyomori, realizing this woman is none other than the goddess Kiko Tennō, spared her life. He subsequently became a devotee of the goddess, despite his awareness that the benefits obtained through the Dakiniten rite would not be passed on to his progeny. The story thus attributes both Kiyomori's rise in power and the subsequent fall of his clan to his performance of the Dakiniten ritual.
File:MET DT215133.jpg|thumb|Nanboku-chō period painting of Dakiniten riding a white fox, carrying a sword and a wish-granting jewel
According to the Kamakura period work Kokon Chomonjū, the late Heian period nobleman Fujiwara no Tadazane commissioned the performance of the Dakiniten rite for seven days as he was about to be sent into exile. At the end of that period, a fox came to eat his offering, a rice cake. He then later had a dream in which he was visited by a beautiful young woman. When she was getting ready to leave, he grasped her hair to hold her back, at which he woke up finding himself holding a fox's tail in his hands. The next day, instead of being exiled, he was promoted to a high rank. Attributing this turn of events to Dakiniten, Tadazane in thanksgiving worshiped the fox tail as a symbol of the deity.
Other people claimed to have attained positions of authority due to their devotion to Dakiniten include the monk Ningai, the founder of the Ono branch of Shingon, and the Shingon Risshū monk Monkan, a close aide of Emperor Go-Daigo whose name became linked to the infamous Tachikawa branch. Monkan's enemies in particular painted him in a negative light by emphasizing the dubious nature of the rites he performed; one notable rival, Yūkai, accused him of "making offerings to the ḍākinīs and conjuring dragons while he is reporting to the throne." The Tendai monk Kōshū, in his work Keiran Shūyōshū, wavers in his judgment of the Dakiniten rite: on the one hand, he comments that "he who worships animals is worthy of being a master. He who worships a fox is worthy of becoming a king." On the other hand, he warns his readers about the dangers of the Dakiniten cult.