Goddess Kwan/Gwan/Quan Yin - Goddess of Mercy & Compassion

Ads
Kwan Yin's topics are kids, kindness, magic, fertility and health. Kwan Yin is the most beloved of all Eastern Goddess characters, providing openly Her unending sympathy, fertility, health and magic insight to all who ask. It is Her sacred responsibility to ease suffering and promote enlightenment among people. In Eastern mythology, a rainbow bore Kwan Yin to heaven in human form. Her name means 'regarder of sounds', meaning She hears the cries and prayers of the planet. There's so many people searching on the google, looking for this Goddess.

Goddess Kwan Yin

If you would like to have children or wish to invoke Kwan Yin's blessing and protection on the young ones in your life, you can follow Eastern custom and leave an offering for Kwan Yin of sweet cakes, lotus incense, fresh fruit or blossoms. If you can not locate lotus incense, search for lotus-shaped soaps at novelty or import stores. For literal or figurative fertility, try making this Kwan Yin talisman: During a waxing-to-full moon, then take a pinch of black tea along with a pinch of rice and put them in a yellow cloth, saying:

‘As a little tea makes a full cup
so may my life be full
As the rice expands in warm water
so may my heart expand with love and warmth
The fertility of Kwan Yin, wrapped neatly within.’

Tie this up and keep it in a spot that corresponds to the type of fertility you want (such as the bedroom for physical fertility).”
(Patricia Telesco, “365 Goddess: a daily guide to the magic and inspiration of the goddess”.)

Gwan Yin Goddess

“The Goddess Kwan Yin is known as the Goddess of Mercy and Her specialization is empathy, and Goddess Gwan Yin, Also Goddess Quan Yin for She knew all about distress. In Her very first life in India She was born as a man named Avalokitesvara, who sought to help poor lost souls be reborn to a better life in their journey to enlightenment. However he was overrun and anguished when more lost souls kept coming from what seemed an infinite cycle. In his despair he shattered into a million bits. From his remains they formed him as a girl, a Goddess -- more appropriate for attracting compassion and mercy to the planet, they believed.

They gave Her a thousand arms and eyes in the palms of each of Her hands so that She'd always observe the people's distress and be in a position to reach out to encircle them. They then shipped Her back to ground to do Her work. So successful was She at reassuring the public, that word of Her began to disperse to other lands and other religions. 'We need Her here,' the people cried.

And so She went, reincarnating Herself wherever She was needed. Known by many names and stories in many places, She was revered as a Buddhist deity and then a Taoist one.”

In Chinese tradition, Kwan Yin ('She Who Hears the Prayers of the World') was initially the mother Goddess of China, who proved so popular She had been adopted into the Buddhist pantheon as a bodhisattva (much like the Goddess Bride was made a saint). A bodhisattva is someone that has attained enlightenment but chooses to forgo Nirvana and remain in the world to help others attain enlightenment.”

Goddess Quan Yin

Before She turned into a bodhisattva, Kwan Yin was a princess named Miao Shan. "At the time of Miao shan's conception the queen, Pao-ying, dreamed that she swallowed the moon. When the time came for your child to be born, the entire earth quaked, and terrific odor and heavenly flowers were spread near and far. The people of the nation were astounded. At birth She was fresh and clean without being washed. Her holy marks were tight and majestic, Her figure has been coated with many-colored clouds. The people said that these were signs of this incarnation of a sacred person.

Even though the parents believed that phenomenal, their hearts were corrupt, and thus they detested Her. As Miao Shan, She had been rejected at dawn and mistreated by a father who had wanted a son. He sought to wed Her off, but She refused, just wanting to be a nun. She endured many trials, but finally Her father relented and She had been allowed to pursue her dream of spiritual life and dedicated Her life into Buddhism. But Her suffering did not end there. Her vengeful dad even hired a man to kill Her, but She forgave him. Ultimately, Her amazing love and mercy saved his life and reconciled Her parent's to Her divinity.

“Since the still-popular mother Goddess of China, Kwan Yin is called a fantastic healer that can cure all ills. She is also a Goddess of fertility, and is often shown carrying a kid. Within this aspect She is called Sung-tzu niang-niang, "The Lady Who Brings Children". She is shown holding a crystal vase, pouring out the waters of creation. Simply calling Her name in time of crisis is believed to give deliverance..”

Kuan Yin

Guanyin can be admired by Chinese Taoists (occasionally called Daoists) as an Immortal. However, in Taoist mythology, Guanyin has other origination stories that are not directly related to Avalokiteśvara. She's known as the Goddess Tara in the Himalayas and Mazu in Her incarnation as the Goddess of the Southern Seas, but She is best known by Her Chinese name, Kwan Yin (also spelled Kuan Yin), the Goddess of Compassion.

Depicted in statues and paintings, the Goddess Kwan Yin often appears as a calm, gentle woman of middle-age who radiates serenity. She is sometimes referred to as an Asian madonna.” 

“Some syncretic Buddhist and Christian observers have Remarked on the similarity between Guanyin and Mary of Christianity, the mother of Jesus Christ. This is sometimes credited to the representation of Guanyin holding a young child in Chinese art and sculpture; it is thought that Guanyin is your patron saint of mothers and grants parents filial children. When the Tzu-Chi Foundation, a Taiwanese Buddhist company, observed that the similarity between this Kind of Guanyin and the Virgin Mary, the organization commissioned a portrait of Guanyin and a baby which looks like the Standard Roman Catholic Madonna and Child painting. 

Some Chinese of This overwhelmingly Roman Catholic Philippines, in an act of syncretism, have identified Guanyin with the Virgin Mary. Throughout the Edo Period in Japan, when Christianity was prohibited and punishable by death, some underground Christian groups venerated the Virgin Mary disguised as a part of Kannon; these statues are known as Maria Kannon. Many needed a cross hidden in an inconspicuous location.”

Goddess Kwan Yin Symbols :

  • the color white
  • white flowing robes
  • white lotus blossom
  • avase of dew/nectar
  • fish (carp) & oysters
  • rice-cakes
  • oranges
  • garlic
  • six arms or a thousand
  • eight heads, one sitting atop the next
  • eyes on the palms of the hands
  • peacocks
  • vase of dew
  • willow branches
  • jade and pearls
  • the number 33
  • a boat made of bark
  • blossoming flowers
  • the Hou (a mythological creature resembling the Buddhist lion)
  • a rosary in one hand or a book

Names of the Goddess :
  • Kuan Yin (Kwan Yin. Guan Yin, Guan Shih Yin, Quan Yin, Guanyin, Kuanin)
  • Avalokitesvara
  • Mazu, A-ma, Matsu
  • Goddess of the Southern Sea
  • Kwannon (Japan)
  • the Asian Santa Maria
  • One Who Hears the Cries of the World
  • Sung-Tzu-Niang-Niang
  • (Lady Who Brings Children)
  • The Maternal Goddess
  • The Observer of All Sounds
  • Bodhisattava of Compassion
  • The Thousand-hand Kuanyin

Artikel Terkait