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Description of Sitatapatra
Sitatapatra, also known as “the indestructible goddess with the white parasol,” is a complex Vajrayana goddess who represents the power of active compassion. She possesses a thousand eyes that watch over living beings, as well as a thousand arms that protect and help them. Her parasol represents her capacity to defend sentient people against natural disasters and illnesses. She is also seen as a wrathful side of the bodhisattva of compassion, Avalokiteshvara. Despite her wrathful protecting abilities, she is represented in a tranquil form with elements of exquisite femininity.
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Buddhist Gods main description
Buddhist Gods
The Buddhist pantheon comprises hundreds of Gods and Goddesses. They are intended to illustrate the multiple aspects of enlightenment, including its wrathful and furious sides, as well as its peaceful and beneficial aspects. In Mahayana Buddhism, gods, goddesses, and other spiritual beings play a much bigger role than in Theravada Buddhism. They symbolize the energies, forces, and entities that surround and fill human life. They also mirror the human spirit's deeper depths, reflecting attributes that can be awakened through spiritual practice. Voluptuous tree spirits, maternal nurturers, elevated knowledge figures, benevolent healers, potent protectors, cosmic mothers of liberation, and dancing female Buddhas are all part of the pantheon. Childbirth, agriculture, fortune, longevity, art, music, knowledge, love, magic, and occult rituals are all overseen by gods, goddesses, and other spiritual beings. Some of them protect against diseases, snakebites, demons, curses, untimely death, and all other fatal dangers. There are also gods, goddesses, and other spiritual beings that aid practitioners in their quest for knowledge, mental cleansing, higher rebirth, and complete spiritual enlightenment.