Mongolia mummy find highlights Buddhist ‘living gods’ tradition

Published February 21, 2015
BUDDHIST monk G. Purevbat, founder of the Aglag Meditation Temple, walks in front of a stone carving of the white old man at the Ulzi Badruulagch Monastery, some 60 kilometres west of Ulan Bator.—AFP
BUDDHIST monk G. Purevbat, founder of the Aglag Meditation Temple, walks in front of a stone carving of the white old man at the Ulzi Badruulagch Monastery, some 60 kilometres west of Ulan Bator.—AFP

ULAN BATOR: For more than a century he sat in a meditative pose in remote western Mongolia before being thrust into the spotlight by an unscrupulous thief.

The discovery of the nearly perfectly preserved mummy of a Buddhist monk born almost 200 years ago may have baffled many but it is also shining a light on how the religion venerates relics of holy figures.

The corpse, still sitting in the lotus position, was recovered in the Central Asian country’s capital of Ulan Bator after being stolen from its provincial resting place by a man who aimed to sell it, Mongolian media reported last month.

The remains are believed to those of a monk named Sanjjab who lived from 1822 to 1905, according to G. Purevbat, a noted Mongolian Buddhist artist and lama — spiritual teacher — involved in the investigation into the identity of the recovered mummy, as well as its long-term preservation.

Purevbat said that the deceased monk had been a disciple of the Geser Lama, a revered figure in Mongolian Buddhism who lived from 1811-1894.

“He is preserved so well, so beautifully,” Purevbat told AFP in an int­erview at the Ulzii Badruulagch Monastery, located in snowy mountains in Tov province about a 90-minute drive from Ulan Bator. Purevbat is the head of the monastery.

“Once they finish the cleaning it will look like [the] real features,” he said, adding that dust and earth had accumulated on the mummy’s body and that it was now being carefully prepared for re-interment.

‘They are alive’

Mummified holy figures are a vital spiritual force for Mongolian Buddhists, with some believers maintaining that senior lamas whose bodies have been preserved are not really dead.

“We believe they are alive, therefore we believe they are living gods,” Purevbat said.

Photos published shortly after the body’s discovery show a bony, dusty-looking figure sitting with legs crossed, one palm slightly upturned with its head and upper body bent forward.

Requests by AFP to see the mummy, now in the hands of forensics officials in Ulan Bator, were rebuffed. Pure­v­bat cited the need to conclude the investigation and pro­perly clean the mummy before showing it to the public.

Jonathan Mair, an authority on Buddhism at the University of Manchester in Britain, said that the preservation of bodily relics in the faith goes all the way back to the Buddha himself.

“In Tibetan Buddhism [as practised in Mongolia] intentional preservation of bodies of important religious teachers is commonplace,” he told AFP in an e-mail.

“The body is placed in the lotus position, as in this case, before being packed in salt or other preservatives for a period of years” and eventually being exhumed and put in a stupa, or shrine, he said.

The exact circumstances of Sanjjab’s mummification were not immediately clear and may come to light after the ongoing investigation is complete. Mair, however, cited the country’s weather conditions as a possible factor.

“Mongolia’s is a very dry climate and it is possible that this contributed to the preservation of the body in this case,” he said.

“There have also been cases of attempted — and sometimes successful — self-mummification, in which the body is prepared through an arduous process involving starvation and culminating in a meditation- unto-death,” Mair added. “This is well documented in Chinese, and especially in Japanese Buddhism, and it has been suggested that it has also been practised by Tibetan Buddhists.”

Buddhists in Mongolia were subject to intense persecution during much of the 20th century when the country was a communist satellite of the Soviet Union.

The oppression involved the destruction of numerous stupas, temples and monasteries and the killing of some 24,000 lamas in the 1930s, according to Purevbat.

Mongolia in 1990 threw off Soviet control in the aftermath of the collapse of communism in Eastern Eur­ope and swiftly transformed itself into a vibrant democracy.—AFP

Published in Dawn, February 21st, 2015

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