It is said that at the end of his fifty years stay in Tibet Padmasambhava disappeared miraculously, and entered the body of a Yaksha king, Me-wal, where he has reigned supreme over all the Yakshas up to the present day, and in perpetual youth is preaching the doctrine of Lamaism in a paradise which rivals that of Amitabha's western heaven of Sukhavati.
Padmasambhava was deified and is still worshipped by the Northern Buddhists of Tibet. He has eight forms; among them one is named Guru Drakpo. It is a fierce manifestation of Guru Rinpoche. In this form Nyingmapa specially worship him. It is said that Padmasambhava took this form as a propagator of religion in the six worlds with the roaring lion's voice. Here , a pot-bellied Drakpo is standing in pratyalidha on two corpses on a lotus throne. He holds a vajra in his right hand, while his left makes a threatening gesture. The complexion of his body is deep blue. His brown hair is upswept and wears a crown of skulls with jewels and half vajra, earrings, armlets, bracelets, and anklets; bracelets and anklets of snakes; scarf and elephant skins; garland of freshly severed human heads, tiger-skin dhoti and a waist-band. Moreover, he wears finely painted white bone ornaments. The fiery halo is well painted. In the top center a Nyingma lama is seated. On the top right a beautiful cave has been depicted from which a lama is coming out. Below this, a siddha is seated on a cushion in a field and before him perhaps a blue complexioned yogini is approaching Guru Drakpo. The scene of charnel ground is also shown in this region. There is a serene blue lake in the foreground, over which a yogi is flying whose right hand is in teaching gesture. A siddha is seated in lower right corner on a cushion and holding a vajra in the right hand. His left hand is in tarjani-mudra. There are three figures of baby Buddha before him in the clouds.
References:
A.Getty, The Gods Of Northern Buddhism, Tokyo, 1962
L.A. Waddell, Buddhism & Lamaism of Tibet, New Delhi, 1979 (reprint)
M.M. Rhie & R.A.F. Thurman, World of Transformation: Tibetan Art of Wisdom and Compassion, New York, 1999
This description by Dr. Shailendra Kumar Verma, Ph.D. His doctorate thesis being on the "Emergence and Evolution of the Buddha Image (From its inception to 8th century A.D)."
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