Hayagriva Buddha’s Sanskrit Mantra: Pacifies Strife, Disease and Negativities—chanted 108 times

Many Buddhist teachers have requested students recite Hayagriva’s supreme mantra in troubled times. In The Sutra of Forming Hayagriva it is called “the King of All Protections“ and it is written: “Whoever, including even the insects, has heard the name and mantra of Hayagriva only one time will never again fall into the lower paths.“ Chant along with us now, Hayagriva’s swift and powerful mantra 108 times with beautiful visualization images in this Buddha Weekly special presentation. CONTENTS 00:00 Introduction 02:27 Mantra chanting begins in Sanskrit 108 times with meditation images! MUSIC RELEASE: Releasing soon on your favorite music streaming platform and Youtube Music in our release BUDDHA WEEKLY MANTRA COLLECTION 2. #BuddhaWeeklyMantras #MantraCollection2 In the Manifestation of the Superb Victorious Wrathful Great Horse Tantra, the benefits of reciting Hayagriva’s supreme mantra, is described as: “Those who merely recite the mantra frequently will be free from afflictions. Hayagriva is the king of all protections.“Many great teachers continue to request their students accumulate Hayagriva Heruka’s mantra — known to be particularly efficacious in these troubled times, famous for both healing of serious diseases, averting strife and war and other disasters and negativities. (See his origin story for the reasons why, in the linked video.) Teachers advise that regarding sharing and reciting Hayagriva’s mantras it is fine, as long as you don’t do self-generation without the empowerment. — in other words, visualize Hayagriva in front of you, not with yourself as the deity. (NOTE: This is a rare chanting of the mantra in the original Sanskrit language. Many people also practice the Tibetan version (see both below) — although this video is the most sacred and ancient Sanskrit mantra. Bring the benefits of Hayagriva’s supreme mantra into your life. Chant along now, 108 times with beautiful visualized images of the great wrathful lord of learn more about Hayagriva Buddha, visit the video linked in the top right of this video, or here— — for an exciting documentary covering Hayagriva, his practice, appearance, benefits, origin story and what the teachers have to say about his important practice. Hayagriva’s practice, although a Highest Yoga Tantra practice — that strictly requires empowerment to self-generate — is openly practiced by many devotees of the Padma family (front-visualized if you don’t have empowerment): compassionate people who care about the suffering of the world. It is also considered the “practice for modern” times — since Hayagriva’s mandala exists tangibly in our world. The mantra as chanted: OM HRIH PADMAN TATRO VAJRA KRODHA HAYAGRIVA HULU HULU HUM PHAT. In Tibetan, this is typically pronounced (not in this video): OM HRIH PEMA THAN DRIH BENZA TROHDHA HAYA GRI WA HOOLOO HOOLOO HUNG PHET! According to commentary by Lama Jigme: “ ‘Om‘ is the Vajra Peak Tantra; it is most supreme, it is filled with wealth, treasure, auspiciousness, and prosperity. It is endowed with the aspect of fortune, promise, success, and it is the essence of holding a precious gem. ‘Hrih‘ is Hayagriva’s own seed syllable put at the beginning of the mantra for invocation. Wisdom is also the syllable of ‘Hrih‘, which is the heart of Buddhahood. ‘PADMAN TATRO‘ is the “eliminating lotus”. ‘VAJRA KRODHA‘ is the wrathful Vajra. ‘HULU HULU‘ means strive, strive! ‘HUM‘ is the great bliss from the nature of the five wisdoms, in which the vowel U is demonstrated by the completeness of those five wisdoms. ‘Phet‘ (Pey) means to cut down or to break.“ EXTENSIVE FEATURE (Written with videos and many images) on Hayagriva Buddha on Buddha Weekly: #SpreadTheDharma #BuddhaWeekly #Buddhism COMMENTS and COMMUNITY: Please be respectful in your comments, guided by kindness and Bodhichitta. We do appreciate corrections, however, we will not approve comments with corrections that are unsupported. If you wish to state “this is not correct“ (bearing in mind it may be correct in one tradition and not in another) then it is important to INCLUDE CITIATIONS, if you are claiming authoritative answers. Thank you.
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