About Kailash Dhanraksha Yantra There is a serious hunt among - TopicsExpress



          

About Kailash Dhanraksha Yantra There is a serious hunt among collectors of ancient relics and for one of the oddest, perhaps the most mysterious, and, if true, arguably one of the greatest treasures of the Orient. Bangalore in India, is suddenly abuzz with enquiries and rumours of the existence of an ancient relic, a locket talisman, shaped like a large metal plate, described as “bearing a 12-animal Chinese calendar-like symbol along the edge of its imperfect circle”. Believed to have been created in the 9th century AD in India, this relic is considered “safe”. It is believed not to possess any bad-luck or misfortune, especially, it is said, if you were to keep it in your possession strictly in a logical and easy-to- understand cycle of “12” hours, days, months or years. It was found to have helped people of all religions and beliefs, to amass great wealth and power. It is believed to have traveled around the world, changing hands at least 692 times, entering India at least 9 times in the last 200m years. It is believed to contain a trapped “tulpa” (Tibetan word for a spirit). It was photographed for the first time in India in 1960 by a Duncan Brother’s tea planter on the request of Keshav Prasad Goenka, father of Rama Prasad Goenka the media magnate. It is not known if K.P. Goenka ever possessed it, or how or where it came to be photographed. Strangely, it was Goenka’s archrival Dhirubhai Ambani of Reliance who is believed to have later acquired it. Nearly five years after the photograph was taken by KPG, an Arab contact of Dhirubhai in Aden informed him of it. After confirming its authenticity, he is said to have borrowed it for a princely sum. At least one Arab family member from Aden has confirmed to a Chinese diplomat that in 1965 Dhirubhai religiously carried the KDY around in his pocket for 36 days. The Talisman is now once again believed to be somewhere in India. Speculation is on as to whether the “tulpa” chose the recent Reliance family split to free itself, perhaps seeking a new owner! However, the lid of secrecy surrounding the relic’s possible location was blown in the second week of April 2005, when the Chinese premier Wen Jiabao visited Bangalore. It became known that he asked his staff to secretly enquire from specified private collectors, temple officials, carefully selected individuals and museum curators, of the possible location of this talisman in South India. The Chinese intelligence agencies had him believe the KDY was in existence in South India, and caused the premier to make some unofficial forays, in the hope of locating and acquiring it, if possible. His keenness in wanting to possess this ancient relic went rather overboard, as a few media persons got wind of it. On being tipped off, they tried to extract some information from the Chinese officials in private. The following week, a long forgotten, and perhaps the only known photographs of the talisman in existence, taken in the early 60s, made its appearance (along with discrete enquires) among private collectors around the country. To add to the confusion, photocopies of a “pencil-rubbing” showing the relief features of the KDY began surfacing at Bangalore, Chennai, Mumbai & Hyderabad, confirming immediately to private collectors and museums, the existence of the metal plaque, as confirmed by the Chinese intelligence agency. Now there remains no doubt of the Chinese Premier’s secret and private agenda, and of his rather desperate and blatant enquiries. At least one Bangalore based information Technology Company’s CEO is known to have received an offer, after being directly approached, promising a reward of US $ 10 million only to trace this relic. The Chinese officials when contacted deny any knowledge of this, and on being persistently queried, light- heartedly humored the media personnel. However, one member of the delegation, on condition of anonymity, agreed to divulge the details of their leader’s keen interest in acquiring the item. According to him, at least five Indian government officials, two Bollywood personalities, one Tamil movie personality, three Indian Industrialists, two Communist party leaders from Kerala and Bengal, and one official of the Salar Jung museum, Hyderabad, have offered to try and locate this relic for the Chinese Premier. The Chinese Embassy in New Delhi is however tight-lipped on this affair. It has been allegedly observed (and reported through history) that generally the relic’s arrival or presence in a country/kingdom immediately manifests in the form of an up-swing in the nations economic growth and power, and the rulers begin to receive unimaginable wealth, support and prestige from all over the world in fulfillment of the talisman’s promise of health, wealth and happiness. As is believed to have happened in the past, politicians, aspiring world leaders, election candidates etc., are once again setting aside their personal wealth to search for, and to possess the original piece at least once in their lifetime. News appears to have traveled fast. British and Russian intelligence agencies are believed to be making discrete enquiries in all the metros in India about this strange item from India’s ancient past. The Americans, whose intelligence agency, the CIA, have long known of the relic’s existence, ever since a well-known American millionaire and public figure was dispossessed of it, have been busy scouring every place in India, from people’s private homes to museums, from private collections to the flea markets of Calcutta and Mumbai, from Delhi’s Chandni-Chowk to the old city gullies of Charminar in Hyderabad in search of the Talisman. Power beyond Human Imagination: It is believed that the Kailash Dhanaraksha Tantra Talisman has never once failed to meet the wishes and ambitions of its possessors throughout its history. The owner or possessor is advised to place the talisman in an extremely pure and hygienic atmosphere. The Talisman is accompanied by a “tulpa”- a Tibetan word for a phantom / ghostly form born solely from the imagination, and yet so strongly vitalized so as to actually materialize or cause things to happen. A “tulpa” is no more than an extremely powerful thought form. A known easy method to contain and control the “tulpa” is to keep the Talisman covered, immersed under dry holy ash in a box that is shut tight and covered or wrapped in saffron cloth. It derives its super spiritual power and strength from 12 cyclical sacred mantras. Each animal symbol represents the theological expressions of the 12 mantras. Anyone touching the brass talisman with naked hands, without any intention of wearing it, is advised to wash his/her hands with turmeric water and dry the hands, both before and after handling it. Once in possession, and placed in a suitable place, the Talisman should not be moved, sold or gifted without following its logical and successive 12-mantra cycle. It is to be disposed off (sold or gifted) in days that sum-up to multiples of 12 (i.e.: 12, 24, 36, etc) since acquiring or coming in possession of it. The Talisman is believed to serve an individual only once during his or her lifetime. It meets your highest aspiration and desires. While in possession of this talisman, the owner is requires to wear it on his/her person for at least 12 hours, 12 days, 12 months, or 12 years. And during this time one should be wishing and dreaming in a meditative mood of ones highest aspirations and ambitions during this lifetime. The “tulpa” in the talisman feels the vibrations and “hears” the inner desires of the wearer, and begins the irreversible process to meet ones desires. Then on, all the forces of the universe begin to conspire to make ones dream a reality. When the period of wearing it is over, it must be replaced in the sacred-ash box. It is advised that one should consume only vegetarian food during the period that one wears the talisman on ones person. Legend: This ancient relic is believed to have been cast in brass by six Tibetan “lamas” and six Indian “rishis” through 12 years of ritual fasting, and chanting of the 144 secrets Vedic slokas, 144 sacred Buddhist Sutras and 144 Tantric Mantras, between the years 812 AD and 824 AD to invoke “Kriya Shakti”. Legend speaks of how the talisman was heated and cooled for 144 days by soaking it in a pool of 720 medicinal herbs, roots and plant-extracts painstakingly collected from various parts of the world. It was exposed to the elements including the Lunar and Solar eclipses of those 12 years, especially during the auspicious minutes of total eclipse from atop the holy mountain of Mount Kailash, as per Vedic, Buddhist and Tantric rites. Placed in the middle of a Kyilkhor or yantra (magical diagram) the relic was struck by lightning many times during the yagnas performed by the holy seers high in the mountains. Finally it was released into the world by allowing it to “gestate”, by being hung around the neck of a carefully chosen healthy and physically perfect wild tiger for another 144 days. Throughout the history of this talisman, many people, with the ability to see, have observed a blue and white aura emanating from this ancient metal plate, especially on full-moon nights. Successful people throughout the world have paid unimaginable amounts in gold and money to try and buy this talisman. And some of the lucky ones have possessed it in secrecy, successfully deriving untold and unaccountable benefits in terms of money and power, and selling it again when satiated. When the time comes for the talisman to leave its possessor, it is said there is no stoping it. A Few Historical Personalities known to have Encountered The Talisman. Marco polo, the Italian traveler is believed to have ritually worn this Talisman around his neck for 12 months in the year 1272 AD before returning it to Kubla Khan, the Emperor of China. The Mughal Emperor Humayun wore the Talisman while he was in exile and regained his kingdom from Sher Shah Suri. Two hundred years later it was traced to a wealthy merchant in a little village called Puglia in Italy around 1480, believed to have been brought there by a wealthy Romany gypsy. Later one John Dee came in possession of the Talisman at London in 1546, but he did not follow the 12-cycle ritual, and sold it to an impoverished nobleman within three months of possessing it. Though John Dee rose to become a successful scholar, negative vibrations caused by a restless “tulpa” troubled him for sometime. The Talisman surfaced again in the tiny church of Sainte Madeleine, this time in the possession of a priest, one Francois Berenger Sauniere in the winter of 1892-1893. The priest was suddenly blessed with incalculable wealth and prestige. Sauniere died in 1917, and gave the talisman to one Marie Denarnaud, who wore it on her person, as per the ritual, for a cycle of 12 months before selling it to a French diplomat. For 36 years thereafter, until her death, she remained wealthy, never wanting of anything. Alexandra David-Neel, a Frenchwoman, is believed to have taken it back to the Himalayas, the land of its origin, in 1923. This was the fifth time it entered India. She is believed to have taken a photograph of the piece, and is credited with creating at least 30 pencil “rubbing” impressions of it before handling it to the then Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama, who instantly recognized it, is believed to have said, “Let it go back to the world to complete its cycles”. Many of the pencil impressions are believed to be still in existence in China, India and Europe, without any idea to viewers today as to the real significance the impression represents. Viceroy and Lady Curzon, the sultan of Brubei, Howard Hughes and a well-known Japanese car manufacturer are among the many successful people believed to have been in possession of the Talisman for a period of at least 96 days. The positive results of possessing the Talisman showed and manifested itself often a few months after they had sold or given it away, indicating that the “Tulpa” sometimes “stayed back” for some more time with its last owner to complete its task. Dhirubai Ambani is believed to have come in possession of the Talisman in 1965 and carried it in his pocket wrapped in a saffron cloth for 36 days. This was the last time an Indian is known to have possessed the KDY. Until now, the Chinese official visit to Bangalore seems to have opened a Pandora’s box. Many explorers, collectors, curators and government agencies throughout the world have constantly been trying hard to trace the item and possess it. It has been seen, possessed changed hands, spoken of and written about for centuries in various parts of the world. Museums around the world have all, at some point in time been alerted of its existence. Some employees of the well-known auction houses of Sotheby and Christie have been instructed to keep a quiet lookout for this mysterious and somewhat curious Sino-Indian relic, though not without some skepticism. The item is obviously priceless. If the anonymous Chinese official at Bangalore is to be believed, at least four Arab millionaires or their agents have visited India in the last two years in search of the Talisman.
Posted on: Mon, 02 Sep 2013 03:38:24 +0000

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