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- Namkha abstract "Namkha (Tibetan: ནམ་མཁའ་ nam mkha' \"sky\", \"space\", \"aether\",\" heaven\"), also known as De; (Tibetan mdos (མདོས) ) is a form of yarn or thread cross composed traditionally of wool or silk and is a form of the Endless knot of the Eight Auspicious Symbols (Ashtamangala). Namkha, space, is the Tibetan name of an extremely ancient structure made of coloured threads wrapped around wooden sticks, variations of which can be found in other traditions of the populations of our planet, which from time immemorial, Tibetans have imbued with a very precise, well defined and meaningful function, as we shall see from the pure symbolic representation.Used in the ancient rituals of Bön — the pre-Buddhist religion of Tibet — in reality this object represents the fundamental components and aspects of the energy of the individual, as defined from the conception until the birth of the individual.Knowledge about the use of Namkha were almost completely lost, but in 1983 Chögyal Namkhai Norbu wrote a text entitled The Preparation of Namkha which Harmonizes the Energy of the Elements, and in the same year gave oral teachings on Namkha explaining that its function is to harmonize the elements of the individual and the various forms of energy related to them.Faithful to the meaning of space, both as origin and of indispensable support of the five material elements, Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal and Water, the Namkha as a whole represents the global space in which these interact. But whilste being founded on astrological calculations, and in fact certainly not being able to do without them, a Namkha is not at all the equivalent of a three dimensional horoscope. It is not limited to a mere representation of the elements of the individual, but possesses a function, not just cognitive but operative. It is in fact a concrete, effective and extraordinary means to harmonize the energy of the individual, both internally and in relation to the total energy of the time and the universe as a whole.In certain tantric rituals, the Namkha becomes a pure land abode of a deity while in other rites it may act as a snare for demons. Tradition holds that it was for this latter purpose that a namkha was used by Padmasambhava after his Vajrakilaya Dance during he consecration of Samye monastery during the first importation of Buddhism to Tibet. (Pearlman, 2002: p. 18). Weavings of a similar nature are called \"God's eye\" in English folk art.In the Bön and Vajrayana Buddhist traditions, a namkha is constructed as the temporary dwelling for a deity during ritual practice. The structure of the namkha is traditionally made with colored threads symbolic of the elements (blue, green, red, white, and yellow; space, air, fire, water, and earth respectively ), the sequence, and the shape of the namkha differing for each particular deity or yidam. The namkha is placed on the practitioner's altar or shrine and an image of the deity may be placed beneath. The namkha is often accompanied in rites and ritual workings with the tantric and shamanic tool, the phurba. Pearlman (2002: p. 18) states how Padmasambhava consecrated the land for the building of Samye Monastery by the enactment of the rite of the Vajrakilaya dance which employed namkha to capture malevolent spirits and thoughtforms.Ngak’chang Rinpoche comments: \"These threads symbolise the ‘thread’ that is the literal meaning of the word ‘tantra’ and describe the manner in which each point in time and space is the warp and weft of the loom of experiential / existential emptiness.\"".
- Namkha wikiPageID "8219601".
- Namkha wikiPageLength "6847".
- Namkha wikiPageOutDegree "47".
- Namkha wikiPageRevisionID "703466503".
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Aether_(classical_element).
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Altar.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Ashtamangala.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Blood_Axis.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Bon.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buddhist_ritual_implements.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buddhist_symbols.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tibetan_Buddhist_practices.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Christian_Rätsch.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Claudia_Müller-Ebeling.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Deity.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Endless_knot.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Tucci.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Gods_eye.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Heaven.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Inner_Traditions_–_Bear_&_Company.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Khorlo.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Kīla_(Buddhism).
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Mahābhūta.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Namkhai_Norbu.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Padmasambhava.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Prayer_flag.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Pure_land.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Beer.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Samye.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Shamanism.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Shambhala_Publications.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Shang_Shung_Edizioni.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Shrine.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Silk.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Sky.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Space.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Surendra_Bahadur_Shahi.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Tantra.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Tulpa.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Vajrayana.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Weaving_(mythology).
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Wool.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Yidam.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLink Śūnyatā.
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLinkText "Namkha".
- Namkha wikiPageWikiLinkText "namkha".
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Buddhism_topics.
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Original_research.
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Namkha wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Namkha subject Category:Buddhist_ritual_implements.
- Namkha subject Category:Buddhist_symbols.
- Namkha subject Category:Tibetan_Buddhist_practices.
- Namkha hypernym Form.
- Namkha type Object.
- Namkha comment "Namkha (Tibetan: ནམ་མཁའ་ nam mkha' \"sky\", \"space\", \"aether\",\" heaven\"), also known as De; (Tibetan mdos (མདོས) ) is a form of yarn or thread cross composed traditionally of wool or silk and is a form of the Endless knot of the Eight Auspicious Symbols (Ashtamangala).".
- Namkha label "Namkha".
- Namkha sameAs Q4312773.
- Namkha sameAs m.026wm9y.
- Namkha sameAs Намка.
- Namkha sameAs Q4312773.
- Namkha wasDerivedFrom Namkha?oldid=703466503.
- Namkha isPrimaryTopicOf Namkha.