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[[Image:Yumka.jpg|frame|]]'''Dakini''' (Skt. ''ḍākinī''; Tib. [[མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་]], ''khandroma'', [[Wyl.]] ''mkha' 'gro ma'') — a female embodiment of enlightened energy. Female [[lama]]s and the spiritual wives of male lamas often have the epithet 'khandro'.
[[Image:Yumka.jpg|frame|]]'''Dakini''' (Skt. ''ḍākinī''; Tib. [[མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་]], ''khandroma'', [[Wyl.]] ''mkha' 'gro ma'') — a female embodiment of enlightened energy. Female [[lama]]s and the spiritual wives of male lamas often have the epithet 'khandro'.
[[Dodrupchen Jikme Tenpe Nyima]] explains:
:In the Nyingma tradition they commonly talk about the karmic, wisdom, and worldly dakinis, and in the Sarma tradition about pureland, mantra, and innate dakinis, but this is merely a difference in terminology. 


==Etymology==
==Etymology==

Revision as of 15:27, 16 February 2021

Dakini (Skt. ḍākinī; Tib. མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, khandroma, Wyl. mkha' 'gro ma) — a female embodiment of enlightened energy. Female lamas and the spiritual wives of male lamas often have the epithet 'khandro'.

Dodrupchen Jikme Tenpe Nyima explains:

In the Nyingma tradition they commonly talk about the karmic, wisdom, and worldly dakinis, and in the Sarma tradition about pureland, mantra, and innate dakinis, but this is merely a difference in terminology.

Etymology

The Sarvabuddhasamayoga Tantra is one of the earliest sources to provide the etymology 'sky-goer' for the word ḍākinī: "Here the root is understood to be ḍai, which expresses going in the sky; a 'ḍākinī' is known as the power (siddhi) of moving everywhere through space."[1]

References

  1. Sarvabuddhasamāyogatantra, i.9. See also Ratnakāraśānti, Guṇavatī, NGMCP C 25-7, 1v.7; Sampuṭatantra, I.iii.9cd-10ab. There are many variant readings of this verse; the above is based on the following text: ḍai vihāyagamane dhātur atra vikalpitaḥ | sarvākāśacarā siddhir ḍākinīti prasidhyati |

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