Handcrafted Quartz Phurba with Vajra, Wrathful Deity & Three-Sided Blade
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Size: 8cm(Height) x 24cm(Width)
Weight: 0.356kg
Material: Crystal Quartz
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About The Ritual Item :
This Ritual Crystal Dagger Phurba, precisely carved from crystal quartz, is 24cm wide and 8cm tall, with a balanced weight of 0.356kg. Quartz is valued for its strong vibrational characteristics, which make this Tibetan ritual dagger an effective tool for energy purification, meditation, and Tantric Buddhist rituals. This Buddhist Phurba, with its intricate craftsmanship and sacred symbolic features, is suitable for altar displays, ritual use, or as a spiritual item for protection and transformation.
A half Vajra on top of the Phurba represents unwavering wisdom and the power of enlightenment, reinforcing its role as a spiritual tool against ignorance and negative energies. The three-sided Buddhist wrathful deity beneath the half Vajra emanates great compassion, serving as a guardian who removes illusions and impediments on the path to enlightenment. This wrathful shape symbolizes the elimination of negative karma, assisting practitioners in channeling their inner strength and change. The three-sided blade at the bottom represents the severing of attachment, aversion, and ignorance—the three poisons that impede spiritual growth. It has a wooden stand that is used for holding phurba on a flat surface area which symbolizes protection and stability. This crystal Phurba dagger, used in Tibetan Vajrayana ceremonies, is more than an artifact; it is a sacred tool for empowerment, protection, and spiritual mastery.
Introduction To The Phurba :
The ceremonial dagger (Sanskrit: Kila; Tibetan: phurba) is important for the expelling of evil and is thought to be especially effective in neutralizing the forces that obstruct Tantric Buddhist practice. It has ancient origins, first appearing in the Indian Rg Veda as the core blade of the vajra used by Indra to destroy the primordial cosmic snake Vritra. Kila, which means peg or stake in 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 own Buddhist Shrine?
Find a clean, quiet, and uncluttered spot
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