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Asian Art Museum
Course: Asian Art Museum > Unit 4
Lesson 1: The Himalayas and the Tibetan Buddhist World- Introduction to the Himalayas
- Bön, Tibet’s indigenous belief system
- Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism
- Tibetan Buddhist orders
- Sacred arts of Tibet
- Thunderbolt and bell
- Prayer wheel
- Cabinet for storing offerings
- Views of Tibet
- Tibetan thangka painting (sacred pictures)
- The Buddhist deity Mahakala as a Brahman
- The Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara
- Mandala of the Buddhist deity Chakrasamvara
- The Goddess of the White Umbrella (the Buddhist deity Ushnisha-sitatapatra)
- Buddhist text about the Bodhisattva Manjushri
- The Buddhist deity Simhavaktra Dakini
- The Buddhist protector deity Penden Lhamo
- The Great mystic Virupa
- Secrets of the stupa
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The Great mystic Virupa
Varanasi to preach, he wanted to attract people's attention, so he went on a drinking spree at a local tavern. He told the proprietor that he would pay his bill at sunset; meanwhile Virupa stopped the sun, and the heat was so unbearable that the local king paid his bills instead.
Virupa is shown as an unorthodox figure with bulging eyes, a bushy beard, a large nose, and an expressive face. He wears flowers in his hair and a meditation band around his knee to keep his limbs in place during prolonged meditation. His right hand once held a skull bowl and his left hand is pointing at the sun, giving it away as a pawn for ale. When Virupa first came to Virupa is one of the eighty-four mahasiddhas—"great adepts," or teachers, of Vajrayana Buddhism. Mostly Indians, the mahasiddhas were spiritual mavericks. They meditated in cremation grounds among charred corpses until they were beyond every fear of life and death. Their life stories are filled with tales of magic and miracles.
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- What exactly is a "meditation band"? Do meditators use this today?(1 vote)