24921ECPhurba

Buddhist Hayagriva Phurba | Ritual Dagger for Spiritual Protection


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$651.00
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Size: 26cm x 6.5cm
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Traditional Hayagriva Phurba | Buddhist Altar Tool

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Size: 26cm(Height) x 7.5cm(Length) x 6.5cm(Width)
Weight: 0.56 kg
Materials: Oxidized Copper Body 
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About Our Product

This Traditional Hayagriva Phurba is a sacred Tibetan Buddhist ritual dagger made with an oxidized copper body for meditation, altar display, and spiritual protection. Its design features a wrathful Hayagriva head, a horse headed crown, red ritual accents, blue painted details, a carved ceremonial handle, and a three sided blade rising from a decorated base. Created as a powerful spiritual object, it symbolizes the cutting away of fear, confusion, and negative energy on the path toward enlightenment and inner peace.

The fierce deity motifs reflect Hayagriva’s protective wisdom and compassionate strength, guiding practitioners through transformation, awareness, and sacred discipline. Each carved section adds ceremonial meaning, from the expressive guardian face to the ritual blade form associated with focus, purification, and obstacle removal. The oxidized copper finish gives the phurba an aged devotional presence, making it a meaningful meditation tool for mantra practice, energy work, and Buddhist altar rituals.

Designed for collectors, healers, spiritual practitioners, and lovers of Tibetan decor, this Hayagriva ritual dagger brings depth and intention to any sacred space. Whether displayed on a home altar, used as a visual focus during meditation, or offered as a thoughtful spiritual gift, it encourages protection, clarity, courage, enlightenment, and a peaceful connection to inner wisdom.

Introduction To The Phurba :

The ceremonial dagger (Sanskrit: Kila; Tibetan: phurba) is essential for expelling evil and is considered particularly effective in neutralizing the forces obstructing Tantric Buddhist practice. It has ancient origins, first appearing in the Indian Rig Veda as the core blade of the vajra used by Indra to destroy the primordial cosmic snake Vritra. Kila, derived from Sanskrit, was most likely associated with Vedic sacrifices. Meditation on the Vajrakila Tantra, an early Indian scripture first promoted in Tibet in the eighth century by Padmasambhava, one of the founding teachers of Tibetan Buddhism, is used to invoke the three-headed Vajrakila Buddha.

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