PADMASAMBHAVA AND THE FELICITY SCARF
Tibet
Used with the permission of Shambhala Publications, Inc.
From TIBETAN FOLK TALES by Frederick and Audrey Hyde-Chambers, ©1981. Reprinted by arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc., Boston, www.shambhala.com
There is a story told of Padmasambhava, the famous Indian teacher, who more than any other was responsible for bringing Buddhism to Tibet over twelve hundred years ago.
It is said that the Tibetan king, who was not a Buddhist, deeply resented the reverence and honor the people of Tibet were showing to the great Indian teacher Padmasambhava. Indeed, it seemed to him that the people revered Padmasambhava more than they did their own king! So the king decided to make sure that when the great teacher visited him, all the country's leaders would see this man, whom they honored so much, pay homage to their king.
On the day of Padmasambhava's visit all the courtiers were
assembled to watch him pay his respects to their king,
who
waited to acknowledge the great teacher. The haughty king
could hardly conceal his delight when Padmasambhava raised
his arms as if to prostrate himself before the royal throne,
but flames darted from Padmasambhava's hands and ignited
the king's clothes, which were ablaze in seconds. As courtiers
beat out the flames, the king, stifled by the smoke rising
through the folds of his ceremonial scarf, tore it from
his shoulders. Realizing the great teacher's power, he threw
himself at Padmasambhava's feet in submission and offered
the scarf to him as a token of humility. Padmasam-bhava
accepted the scarf, then returned it to the king, draping
it around his neck as a blessing and signifying the victory
of spiritual over temporal power.
And so it is said in Tibet, a land of few flowers, that
Padma-sambhava established the giving of katas, or felicity
scarves, as a gesture of respect.
