Jump to navigation

  •  
  •  
  •  

  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos

Search form

Animation Design Communication Design Design Fundamentals Interaction Design Product Design Tools for Design Open Design
Home / Gallery / Mani Stones

.

top unblocked 76 games free access unblocked games 76 now latest unblocked online games kays games unblocked access retro bowl unlimited play play retro bowl without block cool math brain games free school-friendly unblocked games yohoho io game online lesson guru hack and help play baseball bros unblocked classroom 6x games to play 76
Design Gallery

Mani Stones

Practicing peace
by
Ruchi Shah
IDC, IIT Bombay
  • Printer-friendly version
  • An 'Om Mani Padme Hum' chant painted on a stone near the highway to Hanle, Changthang.

  • Auspicious chants can be seen frequently painted on stones and mountains.

  • These highway milestones with chants and messages become a visual marker for regular travellers.

  • This monk has a handmade contraption the stone in position while he begins carving it.

  • The mantra has to be plotted out with a pencil on the stone, before the carving begins.

  • Each stone may take many hours and days to complete.

  • Monks do it as a 'japa' or a form of meditation.

  • A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

  • A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

  • These stones are chiseled out by hand in order to get focus, peace of mind and good karma.

  • The Mani stones are usually placed with a darchor (vertical prayer flag) in the courtyard of a house.

  • This mani stone is placed in the courtyard of the Stok Palace.

An 'Om Mani Padme Hum' chant painted on a stone near the highway to Hanle, Changthang.

Auspicious chants can be seen frequently painted on stones and mountains.

These highway milestones with chants and messages become a visual marker for regular travellers.

This monk has a handmade contraption the stone in position while he begins carving it.

The mantra has to be plotted out with a pencil on the stone, before the carving begins.

Each stone may take many hours and days to complete.

Monks do it as a 'japa' or a form of meditation.

A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

These stones are chiseled out by hand in order to get focus, peace of mind and good karma.

The Mani stones are usually placed with a darchor (vertical prayer flag) in the courtyard of a house.

This mani stone is placed in the courtyard of the Stok Palace.

Buddhism has influenced the life and thinking of the people in Ladakh owing to its widespread presence in this region. The locals come across as irrepressibly happy, with a strong sense of self and remain connected to their land having developed a close bond with their natural surroundings. Within Ladakh it is a common practice to create mounds of carved Mani stones inside monastery areas, roadsides, or decorated with goat or yak horns at the entrances of homes. The universal mantra of the Avalokitesvara Buddha ‘Om Mani Pad Me Hum’ is etched into these smooth stones with hammers and chisels. Monks carve them occasionally as a form of 'Sadhana' or meditation; local villagers make them in their spare time in winters. It could be a form of punishment, an inner calling or a method of contemplation. Every stone that is made is added to the mound making it bigger with time. The locals and lama’s make these works to express their faith within Buddha.

For more details: http://dsource.in/resource/practicing-peace
 

An 'Om Mani Padme Hum' chant painted on a stone near the highway to Hanle, Changthang.

Auspicious chants can be seen frequently painted on stones and mountains.

These highway milestones with chants and messages become a visual marker for regular travellers.

This monk has a handmade contraption the stone in position while he begins carving it.

The mantra has to be plotted out with a pencil on the stone, before the carving begins.

Each stone may take many hours and days to complete.

Monks do it as a 'japa' or a form of meditation.

A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

A flattish oval shaped stone is usually preferred for the mantra to be carved upon.

These stones are chiseled out by hand in order to get focus, peace of mind and good karma.

The Mani stones are usually placed with a darchor (vertical prayer flag) in the courtyard of a house.

This mani stone is placed in the courtyard of the Stok Palace.


Creating Digital-learning Environment for Design



  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos
  • Animation Design
  • Communication Design
  • Design Fundamentals
  • Interaction Design
  • Product Design
  • Tools for Design
  • Open Design
  • Contribute to our Dsource
  • About
  • People
  • Events
  • Job@D'source
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Download App
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Indian Language
English Bangali Gujarati Hindi
Kannada Malayalam Marathi Punjabi
Sindhi Tamil Telugu Urdu