Amitabha Mantra | Om Ami Dewa Hrih

Amitabha (Boundless/Infinite Light) is an important figure found in the Mahayana and Vajrayana schools of Buddhism, with his function varying differently between the two.

In the Mahayana schools, especially the Pure Land school, Amitabha is venerated as a fully enlightened Buddha and his realm Sukhavati (a place ideal to practice the Dharma) is aspired after death. This isn’t a permanent heaven, but rather a flawless realm for one to continue practice and achieve enlightenment in.

In Vajrayana, Amitabha is a Dhyani (meditation/wisdom) Buddha and is the head of the Lotus (Padma) family, associated with the direction of the West, the same direction of his heavenly realm Sukhavati. He is responsible for the transformation of desire and attachment into discerning wisdom. He is also invoked in the practice of Phowa meaning “transfer of consciousness.” However, when practiced in accordance with long-life rituals, he appears as Amitayus (Buddha of Infinite Life), a sambhogakaya (enjoyment body) form of Amitabha.

Amitabha usually appears as a red Buddha in meditation posture, adorned with Dharma robes and holding a begging bowl with both hands. The meditator is to visualize oneself as a bodhisattva, white in color, with Amitabha, the Bhagavat, in front. Through his sadhana, one eventually dissolves the barrier between Amitabha and oneself, becoming the very essence of “lucidity and emptiness.”

Om Ami Dewa Hri

Front Image Link: https://www.himalayanart.org/items/24733/images/primary#-617,-1000,1381,0

Back Image Link: https://www.himalayanart.org/items/77019/images/primary#-1434,-2204,2971,0

Leave a comment