Handcrafted Phurba Ritual Dagger | Sacred Tantric Tool for Meditation & Worship
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Handcrafted Phurba Ritual Dagger | Unique Ritual Dagger with Deity and Skull Motifs
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Size: 28cm (Height) x 13.5cm (Width)
Weight: 0.28kg
Materials: Wooden Base, Buffalo Bone, Acrylic Color
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About The Ritual Item :
Harness ancient spiritual power with this Handcrafted Phurba Ritual Dagger, a revered Vajrayana instrument made from a wooden base, buffalo bone, and acrylic paint. This phurba, measuring 28cm in height and 13.5cm in breadth and weighing a balanced 0.28kg, is both lightweight and powerful—ideal for ritual and sacred exhibition. The hand-carved buffalo bone represents impermanence and the cycle of death and rebirth, while the wood base gives anchoring energy. A detailed acrylic painting complements the work with symbolic hues and ancient iconography, such as the three-sided blade representing the eradication of the three poisons: ignorance, attachment, and repulsion.
The Phurba, also known as a ritual dagger or Kila, is a highly effective implement in Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana meditation. Tantric practitioners, shamans, and high lamas have traditionally utilized it to pin down and suppress bad spirits, sever spiritual barriers, and purify the environment during great rites. The blade's triple edges represent the ability to cut through delusion at all levels—mental, emotional, and spiritual—while the handle frequently depicts wrathful deities or Vajra symbols that call divine strength. The lightweight yet detailed design of this phurba makes it easy to hold and utilize for energetic work, exorcism rituals, and protective blessings.
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.
How to Set Up Your Buddhist Shrine?
Find a clean, quiet, and uncluttered spot.
Please set up an altar table and cover it with an altar cloth that calls to you.
Place your sacred item (statue, thangka, or a picture of Buddha) at the center.
