Dhāraṇī

"Dharani" redirects here. For the Indian film director, see Dharani (director). For the film, see Dharani (film). For the Southeast Asian Buddhist goddess, see Phra Mae Thorani.
Chinese use of the Siddhaṃ script for a Sanskrit dhāraṇī. Later Tang, 927 CE

A dhāraṇī is a Sanskrit term for a type of ritual speech similar to a mantra.

Etymology and purpose

The word dhāraṇī derives from a Sanskrit root √dhṛ meaning "to hold or maintain".[1]

Ryuichi Abe and Jan Nattier suggest that a dhāraṇī is generally understood as a mnemonic which encapsulates the meaning of a section or chapter of a sutra.[2] Dhāraṇīs are also considered to protect the one who chants them from malign influences and calamities.

Dhāraṇīs and mantras

Kūkai

The Japanese Buddhist monk Kūkai drew a distinction between dhāraṇī and mantra and used it as the basis of his theory of language. Kūkai claims that mantra is restricted to esoteric Buddhist practice whereas dhāraṇī is found in both esoteric and exoteric ritual.

Kūkai classified mantras as a special class of dhāraṇīs and argued that every syllable of a dhāraṇī was a manifestation of the true nature of reality – in Buddhist terms, that all sound is a manifestation of śūnyatā or emptiness of self-nature. Thus, rather than being devoid of meaning, Kūkai suggests that dhāraṇīs are in fact saturated with meaning – every syllable is symbolic on multiple levels.

Scholarship

According to Red Pine, mantra and dharani were originally interchangeable, but at some point dhāraṇī came to be used for meaningful, intelligible phrases, and mantra for syllabic formulae which are not meant to be understood.[3] Jan Nattier writes that, whereas mantra has ancient Hindu usage back to the Vedas, dhāraṇī does not predate Buddhism.[4]

See also

References

  1. Braarvig, Jens (1985), p.19
  2. Nattier 1992, pg. 158
  3. Pine 2004, pg. 146
  4. Nattier 1992, pg. 202

Sources

Further reading

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