Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch
Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch
Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch
Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch

Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch

SKU: 81005699

Ucheyma (Headless Vajrayogini) Brass Statue with Gold Leaf, 17 inch

SKU: 81005699
  • Designed by Kechara
  • Traditional Buddhist iconography
  • Customised art services available
Regular price RM3,348.00
/
  • In stock
  • Backordered, shipping soon
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A brass statue of Tantric Buddha Ucheyma (also known as Headless Vajrayogini) with full iconographic detail according to traditional scriptural sources completed with hand-painted gold face. Symbolising the clean and complete removal of the ego, her practice purifies the three delusions of ignorance, hatred and desire, and leads us swiftly to the attainment of Buddhahood. It is an excellent focal point and meditation aid for your daily practice.

  • Crafted from brass.
  • Deity iconography according to Buddhist scriptural sources.
  • Natural polished finish.
  • Hand-painted 24k gold face.
  • Filled with traditional mantra rolls, holy pills, protector rice and a small piece of H.E. Tsem Rinpoche's holy robes.
  • Additional statue enhancement services available for greater blessings and merits.

ENHANCED BLESSINGS (while stocks last)
This item has been consecrated in a Soongdrup & Rabney ritual conducted by very senior members of the monastic community at Kechara Forest Retreat.

WITH COMPLIMENTS (while stocks last)
Get a complimentary set of 7 herbal rilbus for every statue you invite.

* As each item is handfinished, minor variations in shape, colour and finishing may occur from piece to piece. These do not impact its spiritual function and benefits.

About Ucheyma

Also known as Chinnamasta in Sanskrit, Ucheyma literally means “she whose head is severed.” Her iconography symbolises the clean and complete removal of the ego – the grasping at a separate self or individual identity. In general, our feelings of attachment or aversion arise because we have an ego to please, gratify and protect. However, in reality, this self or ‘I’ is illusory and does not really exist. Therefore, Ucheyma reveals this truth with the dramatic decapitation of her head. Her practice purifies the three delusions of ignorance, hatred and desire, and leads us swiftly to the attainment of Buddhahood.

Ucheyma’s right hand, extended downwards, holds a curved ritual chopper and her left hand holds aloft a blood-filled skullcup. Her head is severed and sits in the skullcup. The three severed blood vessels at the trunk of Ucheyma’s neck spurt three jets of blood that flow into the mouth of her own decapitated head and the mouths of her two attendants (not depicted). Standing amidst blazing wisdom fire, she is adorned with a crown of five dry skulls and wears a garland of fifty fresh heads around her neck. She holds a khatvanga (tantric ritual staff) on her left shoulder.

Her left leg is bent, stepping on the head and heart of the worldly deity Bhairava, representing the elimination of hatred and ignorance, while her right leg is straight, stepping on the breasts of Kalarati, representing the destruction of desire and its associated negative karmas.

  • Material: Brass
  • Height: 450 mm (17.7-in)
  • Width: 290 mm (11.4-in)
  • Depth: 110 mm (4.3-in)
  • Weight: 4.4 kg (9.7 lb)

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