








Sacred Buddhist Purity Deity Statue | Vajrasattva Figurine for Meditation
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Tibetan Vajrasattva Deity Statue | Buddhist Altar Decor for Meditation and Prayer
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Size: 7cm(Height) x 5.5cm(Length) x 3cm(Width)
Weight: 0.084 kg
Materials: Copper Body, Gold Plated, Machine-Made
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About Our Product
This Tibetan Vajrasattva Deity Statue represents purification, clarity, and the peaceful restoration of the mind in Vajrayana Buddhist practice. Made from a copper body with gold plating, the statue shows Vajrasattva seated gracefully on a lotus base, adorned with a crown, ornaments, and a calm meditative expression. Standing at 7 cm tall, this small sacred statue is ideal for personal altars, meditation spaces, shrine rooms, or spiritual collections dedicated to cleansing negative karma and cultivating inner peace.
Vajrasattva is revered as the Buddha of purification, helping practitioners cleanse obscurations, harmful actions, and mental confusion through sincere practice and mantra recitation. He is traditionally shown holding a vajra near his heart, symbolizing awakened method and spiritual strength, while the bell in his other hand represents wisdom and the realization of emptiness. The lotus base, graceful posture, and golden finish reflect the beauty of Tibetan Buddhist iconography and make this statue a meaningful reminder of purity, compassion, and enlightenment.
Placing this Vajrasattva statue on your altar encourages mindfulness, forgiveness, spiritual renewal, and peaceful awareness. It serves as a sacred focus for meditation, purification prayers, mantra practice, and daily devotional offerings. This statue also makes a thoughtful gift for practitioners, collectors, or anyone seeking a Buddhist symbol of healing, blessings, and purified wisdom.
Introduction Of Vajrasattva:
Vajrasatva is typically regarded as the second patriarch in the Shingon Buddhist lineage, the first being Vairocana Buddha. According to Kukai's writings in Record of the Dharma Transmission, Nagarjuna encountered Vajrasatva in an iron tower in southern India, based on Amoghavajra's testimony. As recounted in the Mahavairocana Sutra, Vajrasatva inducted Nagarjuna into the abhiseka ceremony and entrusted him with the esoteric teachings he had gained from Vairocana Buddha. Kukai doesn't go into detail on Vajrasatva or his beginnings.
























































































































































































































































































