Monday, February 27, 2017

Guru Rinpoche Kutsab

Guru Rinpoche Kutsab
This detail of the Kutsab or representative of Guru Rinpoche enschrined in a reliquary container is kept by Khangsar Zhabdrung Rinpoche in Bhutan.
Kutsab (sku tshab), or ‘representative’ — a statue made in the likeliness of a buddha, yidam or great master. These images are used as objects of inspiration and a source of blessing for Vajrayana practitioners.
Many kutsabs of Guru Rinpoche were made during his stay in Tibet, concealed as earth termas, and later discovered by tertöns. These particularly sacred images were made by Guru Rinpoche and his twenty-five disciples out of sacred substances and relics, and blessed by Guru Rinpoche himself to be his representatives in the future.
Tulku Thondup writes:
Kutsabs are the most important and rare terma images of Guru Padmasambhava, blessed as his own representatives by the Guru himself. Generally, there are hundreds of terma images of him, but according to many Nyingma scriptures there are only twenty-five kutsab images.
The materials used to make kutsabs include:
materials gathered by dakinis from celestial realms and sacred places,
jewels from the gods and nagas,
gold from the Jambu river and sands of Lake Manasarovar,
soil from the eight great charnel grounds and twenty-four great sacred places,
fragrances from a tree of paradise,
medicinal essences,
various elixirs and extracts,
relics from Dzogchen masters (Garab Dorje, Manjushrimitra, Shri Singha, Vimalamitra among others) such as locks of their hair, clothing fragments, bone relics, practice substances,
Guru Rinpoche's own blood, hair and semen.

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