Avalokitesvara

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[Sanskrit, “the lord who sees” or “the lord who hears the sounds of the world” or “the lord who is seen”] Known in China as the feminine being Kuan Yin or Kuan Shih Yin and in Japan as Kannon, Kwannon, or Kwanzeon. In Mahayana Buddhism, Avalokitesvara is the bodhisattva of infinite compassion and mercy; a bodhisattva is literally a “being of wisdom” who is destined to become a Buddha but has foregone the bliss of nirvana with a vow to save every being on earth. Avalokitesvara is a divine emanation of the Dhyani Buddha Amitabha, who embodies the quality of compassion in its highest sense.

Avalokitesvara (India, c. 9th century)

As one of the most popular and beloved Buddhist figures, Avalokitesvara’s attributes and miracles are recounted in many scriptures (sutras). His assistance is invoked often, especially for protection from natural disasters and calamities, to resolve personal and family problems, and to bestow children. The Surangama Sutra records that Avalokitesvara has the power to appear in thirty-two different bodily forms, according to the different types of beings he is trying to save, and that he has the power to bestow fourteen kinds of fearlessness. Devotees invoke Avalokitesvara’s power and merciful intercession through the mantra OM MANI PADME HUM (“Hail to the jewel in the lotus!”).

The worship of Avalokitesvara can be traced back to the second century in China and was well established in Tibet by the seventh century. Tibetan Buddhists believe that Avalokitesvara is incarnated in each Dalai Lama (the spiritual and temporal ruler of Tibet; the fourteenth Dalai Lama was forced to flee the country following the 1959 Tibetan uprising against the Chinese).

Avalokitesvara is often portrayed with a thousand arms and varying numbers of eyes, heads and hands, sometimes with an eye in the palm of each hand. In this form he is looking in all directions, sensing the afflictions of mankind and striving to alleviate them. His female consort is the White Tara, who is said to have been born of a tear shed by him in compassion for the distress of sentient beings. In his 1987 New Year’s Eve address, Gautama Buddha said, “It is an hour that you may also reach out through the Presence of Avalokitesvara to save that which can be saved.”

Sources

Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 31, no. 4.