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Crystal Ritual Phurba | Crystal Altar Tool for Protection Practice
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Size: 72.5cm(Height) x 18cm(Length) x 13.5cm(Width)
Weight: 2.36 kg
Materials: Copper Filigree, Crystal, Gold Plated, Natural Stone
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About Our Product
This Crystal Ritual Phurba represents protection, purification, obstacle removal, and the sacred power of Vajrayana Buddhist practice. Made with copper filigree, crystal, gold plating, and natural stone accents, this ritual phurba measures 72.5 cm in height, 18 cm in length, and 13.5 cm in width, with a weight of 2.36 kg. Its tall ceremonial form is suitable for Buddhist altars, shrine rooms, meditation spaces, ritual displays, and spiritual collections inspired by Tibetan Buddhist tradition.
The design features a crystal blade, detailed copper filigree work, gold plated ornamentation, natural stone inlay, and layered wrathful deity motifs along the upper body. In Tibetan Buddhist practice, the phurba, also known as a ritual dagger or vajra dagger, is not used as an ordinary blade but as a sacred symbolic tool. It represents the power to cut through ignorance, negative energy, fear, and inner obstacles, while helping the practitioner remain grounded in clarity and spiritual discipline.
Placing this crystal phurba on an altar supports protection practice, mantra recitation, meditation, purification rituals, and offerings connected with Vajrayana tradition. It also serves as a meaningful sacred display piece for practitioners, collectors, and anyone seeking a powerful Buddhist symbol of enlightened strength, transformation, peace, and spiritual protection.
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.

























































































































































































































































































