Vajra-Chopper (Kartri)

$60
$80
(25% off)
Item Code: ZX71
Specifications:
Brass Statue
Height: 6 inch
Width: 6 inch
Weight: 650 gm
Handmade
Handmade
Free delivery
Free delivery
Fully insured
Fully insured
Shipped to 153 countries
Shipped to 153 countries
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More than 1M+ customers worldwide
This object depicts an exquisitely made chopper, surmounted by a nine-pronged half-vajra. A knife with a bent tip is known as a chopper and when it is surmounted by a vaja, is known as Vajra Chopper (Kartri). The upper portion of both sides of the chopper depicts beautiful designs and at the center there is a Kirtimukha (face of glory). The middle portion of the handle of the chopper attempts to replicate a nectar vase.

The vajra-chopper is an attribute of several Vajrayana deities. It also acts as a tantric ritual material and is used to conquer evil spirits and to destroy obstacles. Sometimes it is also utilized in magic rituals by high-level practitioners.

The vajra-chopper is generally held in the right hand of many of the wrathful Buddhist deities, especially the female ones, symbolizing critical, analytic and disective wisdom which cuts through and chops up all delusive appearances of intrinsic substantiality reducing all things to voidness.

This description by Dr. Shailendra Kumar Verma, Ph.D. His doctorate thesis being on the "Emergence and Evolution of the Buddha Image (from its inception to 8th century A.D)."

Ref.

Alice Getty, The Gods of Northern Buddhism, Tokyo, Japan, 1962.

P. Pal, Art of the Himalayas: Treasures from Nepal and Tibet, New York, 1991.

S. K. Saraswati, Tantrayana Art: An Album, Calcutta, 1977.

Of Related Interest :

Chopper with Vajra Hilt

Chopper Earrings

Hayagriva Phurpa cum Chopper

Ritual Implements in Tibetan Buddhism: A Symbolic Appraisal


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