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Buddhist protection amulet pendant Buddha Akashagarbha mala of prayer and meditation 108 beads, 925 silver 18K gold Bail Garuda

Buddhist protection amulet pendant Buddha Akashagarbha mala of prayer and meditation 108 beads, 925 silver 18K gold Bail Garuda

Regular price €431,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €431,00 EUR
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Guru Rinpoche Buddhist protection amulet pendant (description below)
below)

925 silver 24K gold plated

Dimension of the pendant 66/ 39/ 11mm Weight of the pendant alone: ​​67 grams

Bail representing the mythical bird of Buddhism Garuda Agate called "nan
hong" (southern red) set in its eyes 925 silver head and copper beak.

Garuda, fabulous bird-man of Hindu and then Buddhist mythology, son
of Kashyapa and Vinatâ and brother of Aruna, the charioteer of the god Surya.
It is the vahana, or mount, of the god Vishnu. He is also considered the king
birds. In Tibet, Khyung (ཁྱུང) is the Tibetan name for the Garuda. Coming from
India, it was assimilated to the khading of the Bön religion, the eagle with golden horns. THE
black garuda is a deity of the nyingmapa school of tibetan buddhism that
held to suppress the ailments caused by the naga and spirits of the
earth. It is featured on the Lungta. He is represented in the iconography of
Shambhala by Chogyam Trungpa for whom it is associated with speed and
significant power. Like the phoenix, he rises from the ashes of destruction,
it is indestructible.

On the back is designed a rotating Buddhist wheel of life thanks to a bearing
German high precision ballpoint.

In terms of symbols, the Buddha, seated under the bodhi tree, saw two
things. First, he saw a Ferris wheel. This wheel embraces the whole of
conditioned existence, it is of the same extent as the cosmos, it contains
all living beings. It spins non-stop: it spins day and night,
it turns life after life, it turns era after era. We can't see when
she started spinning, and we can't yet see when she
will stop spinning: only a Buddha sees that.

Turquoise and nan hong agate set.

The protective windows are made of leuco sapphire like high-end watches.
range.

As a gemologist graduated from the National Institute of Gemmology in Paris,
all our materials are appraised and certified.

prayer and meditation mala 108 beads of coconut beads 925 silver and copper

AKASHAGARBHA

Akashagarbha is the protector of people born under the sign of the Ox and the Tiger.

He is one of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas of Vajrayana. and one of thirteen
Buddhas of the Japanese Shingon tantric school. His name is formed from ākāśa, "
unlimited space”, and from garbha, “matrix”. invoked to develop the
wisdom. His cult has been maintained mainly in Japan.

Ākāśagarbha represents the essence of ether and belongs on the mandalas to the
ratna (jewel) family. According to the Akashagarbha Sutra, it is prayed towards the east
while waiting for the dawn (aruņa) which is its manifestation. It is also said that the moon,
the sun and the stars are its manifestations.

Given that part of his name may have the meaning of "sky", some
proposed to see a celestial or stellar deity at the origin of the
bodhisattva. This bodhisattva is associated with a memory enhancement ritual
described in the Bodhisattva Ākāśagarbha Sutra which was introduced in Japan
during the Nara period (645-794). Even today, many people
recite his mantra in the hope of revitalizing a failing memory.

On the island of Honshu, children used to pay homage to Kokuzo
on their thirteenth birthday to seek the improvement of their abilities
intellectual. Ākāśagarbha is also prayed for manual skill; he
is considered the patron saint of craftsmen.

Apart from its utilitarian aspects, Kokûzô's mantra also has an effect
witty. It is recited to develop wisdom. Kukai, founder of
Shingon Buddhism, made several times his particular asceticism, "Goumanji"
100 day ritual of repeating the mantra a million times in
isolation.

At the end of the 10th, it is said that the star of dawn, symbolized by the
bodhisattva, descended to merge with him, bringing him enlightenment. Last
on the list of Thirteen Buddhas of the True Word stream, Ākāśagarbha also closes the
cycle of funeral rituals by presiding over the last commemorative ceremony 32
years after death. Ākāśagarbha also has some importance in the
Nichiren Buddhism.

The Seicho-ji (Kiyosumi-dera), temple where the founder of the current studied, was
built around a statue of this bodhisattva. According to the Gosho, a collection of his
writings, Nichiren saw one day Kokuzo appear in front of him then change into a
old monk who gave him a pearl of wisdom.

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