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Avalokeshwor

$452.05 Previous Next

Name Avalokeshwor
Weight 1586 gram
Size 20 cm
Price $452.05

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Avalokeshwor

Name Avalokeshwor Weight 1586 gram Size 20 cm Price $452.05

Avalokeshwor

$452.05

Name Avalokeshwor Weight 1586 gram Size 20 cm Price $452.05

Statue of Avalokeshwor made of copper with gold plated on it.
Kharachheri / Avalokiteshwara / chenrezig is also a form of bodhisatwa Avalokiteswara. he is also known as six syllabled lokeswara. The six syllables are “OM MANI PADME HUM” which is considered so efficacious that is has been carved on rock faces constantley canted by devotees. He is always decked with all sorts or ornaments. he is white in color four armed carrying rosary in the right hand and fuyll blown louts in left. the other two princeiples hands are raised to the Chest iwth palms enjoined in the namsakar mudra with a round object known as JEWEL which is regarded as a symbol of knowledge. In the Tibetan Buddhist pantheon of enlightened beings, Chenrezig is renowned as the embodiment of the compassion of all the Buddhas, the Bodhisattva of Compassion. Avalokiteswara is the earthly manifestation of the self born, eternal Buddha, Amitabha. He guards this world in the interval between the historical Shakyamuni Buddha, and the next Buddha of the Future Maitreya. According to legend, Chenrezig made a a vow that he would not rest until he had liberated all the beings in all the realms of suffering. After working diligently at this task for a very long time, he looked out and realized the immense number of miserable beings yet to be saved. Seeing this, he became despondent and his head split into thousands of pieces. Amitabha Buddha put the pieces back together as a body with very many arms and many heads, so that Chenrezig could work with myriad beings all at the same time. Sometimes Chenrezig is visualized with eleven heads, and a thousand arms fanned out around him. Chenrezig may be the most popular of all Buddhist deities, except for Buddha himself — he is beloved throughout the Buddhist world. He is known by different names in different lands: as Avalokiteswara in the ancient Sanskrit language of India, as Kuan-yin in China, as Kannon in Japan. As Chenrezig, he is considered the patron Bodhisattva of Tibet, and his meditation is practiced in all the great lineages of Tibetan Buddhism. The beloved king Songtsen Gampo was believed to be an emanation of Chenrezig, and some of the most respected meditation masters (lamas), like the Dalai Lamas and Karmapas, who are considered living Buddhas, are also believed to be emanations of Chenrezig. Whenever we are compassionate, or feel love for anyone, or for an animal or some part of the natural world, we experience a taste of our own natural connection with Chenrezig. Although we may not be as consistently compassionate as some of the great meditation masters, Tibetan Buddhists believe that we all share, in our basic nature, unconditional compassion and wisdom that is no different from what we see in Chenrezig and in these lamas. We might have trouble believing that we are no different than Chenrezig — but learning about the nature of compassion, and learning about Chenrezig, repeating his mantra Om Mani Padme Hum and imagining that we would like to be like Chenrezig, pretending that we really are just like Chenrezig, we actually can become aware of increasing compassion in our lives, and ultimately, the lamas tell us, awaken as completely wise and compassionate Buddhas.

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