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Thread Cross

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
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Namkha.jpeg



Thread Cross Constructions (Tibetan: nam mkha'. English: sky)

Common to the Himalayas and all ethnographic Tibetan regions are colourful thread-cross constructions called 'namka', similar in appearance to dream catchers and spirit catchers of North American aboriginal peoples of the plains and south-west regions.

The early biographies of Tonpa Shenrab tell of how when traveling in Tibet to retrieve stolen horses from the area of Kongpo he taught the construction of thread-cross, namka, as a way of making offerings to the deities and gods.

Some Tibetans speculate that this was done in substitution for animal sacrifice practiced in Tibet at the time.


Early interpretations of the meaning of the namka describe them as abstract symbolic offerings of the soul or life-force of a person.


The namka are made from thin pieces of wood as a frame wrapped with variously colored threads into geometric patterns, circular, square and triangular.

In some rituals entire models of the universe are fashioned along with a giant horned eagle also made of thread and placed at the top.

All elaborate Bon rituals require the thread-cross namka as part of the assembled offerings.

Small namka constructions wrapped in cloth, only a few inches square, and containing sacred verses are worn on the body as a protective talisman.

The creation of namka and its ritual use has been adopted into all traditions of Tibetan Buddhism to a greater or lesser extant depending on the tradition. http://www.britannica.com/topic/thread-cross





Thread cross, object usually made of two sticks bound together in the shape of a cross, with colored threads wound around their ends to resemble a cobweb, used in Tibetan rituals to entrap evil spirits.

Similar thread crosses have been encountered in areas bordering Tibet and in South Africa, Peru, Australia, and Sweden.

In Tibet the thread crosses vary from simple diamond-shaped structures to complex wheel- or box-shaped combinations of structures up to 11 feet (3 meters) high and may be decorated with wool, feathers, and bits of paper according to the purpose and the deity for which they are intended.

They are most probably pre-Buddhist in origin but are used by Buddhist priests, also, as a protective device or as a net to catch and destroy unspecified evil spirits.

The crosses used in purification ceremonies during the New Year celebrations or for persons suffering from illness or misfortune are broken up and burned.

Source

http://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=1348