-40%

sale!! WRATHFUL MAHAKALA DHARMA PROTECTOR TIBETAN BUDDHIST PENDANT NECKLACE

$ 0.52

Availability: 84 in stock
  • Made from: Tibetan Silver
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Size: 1.25 inch top to bottom
  • Religion: Tibetan Buddhism
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Nepal
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Condition: New
  • Role as a deity: Protects the Dharma and Dharma practitioners
  • Theme: Mahakala, wrathful Dharma protector
  • Image: Fierce & scary!!
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Modified Item: No
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Gender/style: Unisex
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Cord: simple black cord

    Description

    CLOSEOUT SALE!!
    TIBETAN SILVER UNISEX WRATHFUL SCARY MAHAKALA DHARMA PROTECTOR TIBETAN BUDDHIST PENDANT NECKLACE
    light weight "Tibetan Silver" pendant portrays the wonderful and wrathful dharma protector, Mahakala
    Mahakala measures 1.25 inches from the bottom to the top of his attached hanging ring.  I have provided a quarter for scale in the picture below.  He is just under an inch at his widest point
    pendant is unisex in style and comes strung on a simple black cord
    Mahakala's Sanskrit meaning comes from its roots of "Maha", or "great", and "kala", meaning "black"\
    Mahakala, a wrathful deity, is considered to be the fierce and powerful emanation of Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion
    Mahakala is correctly displayed with his crown of five skulls, which represent the transmutation of the five kleshas (negative afflictions) into the five wisdoms, or five wisdom Buddhas
    If you would like additional information about him, please see below
    ***
    Buy With Confidence:
    We are practicing Buddhists
    We respect the importance of these religious materials
    We use the same products that we sell
    USA-based
    —————————————-
    ***
    "This tutelary deity is one of the Dharmapalas in Vajrayana Buddhism who defend the Dharma from corruption and degeneration and from forces hostile to it; to keep the site of the ritual free from impure thoughts and actions; to guide and protect the individual practitioner from all kinds of deception and delusion; bestow the power to overcome life struggles; and to eliminate one’s obstacles and impediment that hinder
    s"
    H
    e glares with round eyes and a gaping mouth with huge, fang-like teeth.  If we had a
    larger pendant or statue
    , we would be able to see that his hair flames up like fire!!  In some depictions, he is standing on corpse
    .
    Mahākāla is often black in color. Just as all colors are absorbed and dissolved into black, all names and forms are said to melt into those of Mahakala, symbolizing his all-embracing, comprehensive nature. Black can also represent the total absence of color, and again in this case it signifies the nature of Mahakala as ultimate or
    absolute reality
    . This principle is known in Sanskrit as "
    nirguna
    ", beyond all quality and form, and it is typified by both interpretations.
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