| The art of the sand mandala | |
| Training the nuns in
    Buddhist philosophy and debate is not the only innovation at KGN. The nuns are now
    receiving education in the full range of ritual arts, including music, sacred dance, and
    sand mandala painting. All of these ritual arts are integral parts of the meditative
    practices that Tibetans have been performing since the beginning of Tibetan monasticism in
    the ninth century. Only now, through the innovation of KGN, the nuns have a far more profound understanding of the symbolic meaning of their rituals, and they have taken control of their own ritual life. They are no longer dependent on others to perform the aspects of Buddhist rituals that were once out of bound to women. Among the Tibetan arts, the one that has astonished and moved North American audiences wherever it has been performed and displayed is the art of sand mandala painting. |  | 
| Medicine Buddha sand mandala | A sand mandala is a
    two-dimensional geometric design, drawn in coloured sand, that represents the celestial
    palace of a particular emanation of the Buddha. In their ritual function mandalas are most
    commonly created in connection with a tantric "initiation," in which a
    practitioner receives the empowerment or permission to enter into the practice of a
    particular Buddha; this is carried out by the initiate symbolically gaining entrance into
    the mandala.  From that point on the initiate becomes a devotee or practitioner of
    the path of that Buddha, and throughout their lives they will reproduce the mandala within
    the visualized sphere of their own imagination.  The mandala now comes to represent
    the psycho-cosmic universe in which the Buddha carries out his or her spontaneous activity
    of leading all beings to happiness and peace through the emanation of unlimited love and
    compassion, and the pointing out of transcendent discriminating wisdom. The most requested sand mandalas have been those of the Compassion Buddha, Thousand-Armed Chenrezig, and of Medicine Buddha. | 
| Links on sand mandalas 
 | 
Sacred
performance | Ritual music | Sand
mandalas | The nuns of KGN | Image
gallery 
CD recording | European tour itinerary
(in German) | Info for organizers | Support the nuns! | Related links
© Khachoe Ghakyil 1999-2000
Web custodian Julia Milton
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