These unique prayer flags
feature a woodblock print of Milarepa, who
is among the most important figures in the
Tibetan Buddhist tradition and certainly one
of the most inspirational for those aspiring
toward enlightenment. Milarepa (1040 - 1123)
was born and raised in Tibet. As tradition
has it, Mila's immediate family was cheated
out of an estate that was rightfully theirs
by his callous and deceptive uncle and aunt.
With his family reduced to poverty and
humiliation, Mila became overwhelmed by
indignation and set on revenge, he began to
study black magic. He was a good student and
soon he had acquired the skills necessary to
exact his revenge. During a gathering at the
aunt and uncles house, Mila summoned
destructive forces that resulted in the
collapse of the uncle's home and the deaths
of a number of people.
However, as is often the
case, the satisfaction taken in this act of
revenge was short lived and soon he was
overcome with remorse. Milarepa knew well
that the negative karma generated by his
actions would certainly doom him to endure a
great deal of future suffering. With the
aspiration to forever release himself from
the bondage of cyclic existence and
suffering, he set out to find a lama who
could help him offset the impending results
of his actions and lead him on the path to
enlightenment.
The great lama, Marpa,
became Milarepa's teacher. Marpa knew from
the beginning that Milarepa was a special
person who had the fortitude and inherent
qualities that would take him to the
pinnacle of realization - complete and
perfect enlightenment. Still, before
Milarepa could receive the teachings, Marpa
subjected him to intense hardships, the aim
of which was to purify him of his karmic
defilements. One of the grueling tasks Marpa
set before Mila was to build large stone
towers by hand. Each time Milarepa completed
the tower however, Marpa would compel him to
tear it down and begin again. The final
tower still stands today in southern Tibet,
and is needles to say, an important
pilgrimage destination.
Milarepa spent most of
his life is solitary meditative retreat in
remote mountain caves. He exhibited an
intense and unwavering, single pointed
devotion to his goal of enlightenment. He
wore only a simple cotton garment, known in
Tibetan as "re", hence the name Mila + Repa,
"cotton clad Mila". He was so unconcerned
with mundane matters that he ate very little
and then usually only wild nettles gathered
near his mountain retreat. When questioned
about wearing warmer clothes or eating
better, he would reply that the time of
death was uncertain and since he may die
that very night it would be better to spend
his time meditating rather than sewing or
cooking. He was completely uncompromising in
terms of not allowing anything to get in the
way of his practice.
As easy as it is for most
of us to put off our practice and wallow in
spiritual apathy, wouldn't it be nice to
have even a fraction of Milarepa's
unyielding perseverance? That is the object
of these prayer flags with the Milarepa
image and invocation -- to release Mila's
blessing into the world for the benefit of
all sentient beings.