Snowlion
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The Snowlion (also Snow Lion. Tibetan: གངས་སེན་གེ་ Wylie: Gangs Senge) is a celestial animal of Tibet. It symbolizes fearlessness, unconditional cheerfulness, east and the earth element. It is one of the Four Dignities. It ranges over the mountains, and is commonly pictured as being white with a turquoise mane. In Mainland China, the Snow Lion is called a Fu Dog.
The Snow Lion resides in the East and represents unconditional cheerfulness, a mind free of doubt, clear and precise. It has a beauty and dignity resulting from a body and mind that are synchronized. The Snow Lion has a youthful, vibrant energy of goodness and a natural sense of delight. Sometimes the throne of a Buddha is depicted with eight Snowlions on it, in this case, they represent the 8 main Bodhisattva-disciples of Buddha Shakyamuni, the historical Buddha. Associations: main quality is fearlessness, dominance over mountains, and the earth element.
– The Four Dignities, Rudy Harderwijk [1]
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[edit] Roar
The roar of the Snow Lion embodies the sound of emptiness, courage and truth, and because of this is often a synonym for the Buddhadharma, the Buddha’s teachings, as it implies freedom from karma and the challenging call to awakening. It was considered to be so powerful that just a single roar could cause seven dragons to fall from the sky.
[edit] Flag of Tibet
Two snow lions appear on the Flag of Tibet. They represent here the country's victorious accomplishment of a unified spiritual and secular life. This is a reference to the Dalai Lama being the head of the Tibetan government as well as the supreme head of Tibetan Buddhism.
[edit] Snow Lioness Milk
In Tibetan folklore the milk of the Snow Lioness (Tibetan: Gangs Sengemo) contains special nutrients to heal the body and restore it to harmony. Some holy medicinal remedies are believed to contain the essence of Snow Lioness milk. Her milk is also used to symbolise the Dharma and it's purity, as Milarepa replies to a man seeking to buy the Dharma from him with expensive gifts:
"I, the snow lioness who stays in snowy solitudes, Have milk which is like the essential nectar. In the absence of golden cups, I would not pour it in an ordinary vessel."
[edit] Tibetan Lion Dog
The Shih Tzu is called the Tibetan Lion Dog after it’s resemblance to the Snow Lion, however it is unknown whether the dog was bred to resemble the Snow Lion or if the artistic design was influenced by the features of the dog.
[edit] Attributes
The snowlion is an archetypal thoughtform confluence or personification of the primordial playfullness of joy and bliss, somewhat energetically comparable to the western unicorn, though without a horn. Though paradoxical, the snowlion does not fly but their feet never touch the ground; their existence is a playful continuum of leaping from mountain peak to mountain peak. The energetic potency (wisdom or shakti) of the snowlion is expressed in the attribute of the gankyil/gakyil ('bliss+whirling' or 'wheel of joy') that the snowlion keep in eternal play. The gankyil is a vriddhi derivation of the dragon's fiery 'pearl of great price'.[2] The gakyil is the principal polyvalent symbol and teaching tool of all the doctrinal trinities of Dzogchen, and is the energetic signature of the trikaya. The gankyil is the inner wheel of the Dharmacakra of the Vajrayana Ashtamangala path of Buddhism.
[edit] Notes
1 Source: http://buddhism.kalachakranet.org/symbols_tibet_buddhism.htm#4; accessed: Friday January 19,2007
2 Ingersoll, Ernst (1928). 'Chapter Ten: The Dragon's Precious Pearl' in Dragons and Dragon Lore. Source: http://www.sacred-texts.com/etc/ddl/ddl12.htm (accessed: Friday January 19, 2007)
[edit] References
- Ingersoll, Ernst (1928). Dragons and Dragon Lore. Source: http://www.sacred-texts.com/etc/ddl/ddl12.htm (accessed: Friday January 19, 2007)