[
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enlarge it. | Click on the text for the chart of elements ] [ The Kalachakra Initiation Explained ] The multicoloured Kalachakra Mandala, made entirely from coloured sand, was painstakingly created over three weeks by monks from the Namgyal Monastery in Dharamsala, India. In a lesson about the impermanence of life, the completed mandala was destroyed and the sands were used as an offering for world peace. 'Kalachakra' means 'Wheel of Time' and is the name of one of the Buddhist deities which represent particular aspects of the Enlightened Mind. It forms a part of a system of teachings and practice conferred by the Buddha to his disciples. Traditionally this Kalachakra Initiation has been a closely guarded secret and the viewing of the mandala forms the culmination of a twelve day initiation ritual for the Buddhist practitioners. However, the Dalai Lama, recognizing the many misconceptions surrounding Tibetan Buddhist practice, began presentations of the Kalachakra Sand Mandala to the general public as a cultural offering. Practitioners
use the Mandala to visualize in meditation the steps along the Path
to Enlightenment. In the Kalachakra Mandala, 722 deities, or manifestations
of the supreme deity Kalachakra, are portrayed within a circle of
some 2 metres in diameter in the form of miniature human, animal and
flora forms, abstract pictographs and Sanskrit syllables. The sand
is made from white stones ground and mixed with opaque water colors.
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