Tara
The Saving Word
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Tara is not only an important Hindu
Goddess, she is also the most important of the Buddhist Goddesses.
The Bodhisattva Tara is the consort of the great Buddha Avalokiteshvara,
the Lord who looks down with compassion on all living beings.
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The term Tara means the deliverer or
savior, from the Sanskrit root tri, meaning “to take across,” as to take
across a river, the ocean, a mountain, or any difficult situation.
The Goddess Tara is called upon in emergencies or at crossroads where we
require guidance as to which way to turn. Tara is the saving knowledge.
She is the Saviouress. The idea of the Goddess as saving wisdom is
as old as the Vedas, and is a common idea in many spiritual traditions.
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Tara is the feminine form of Om or Om
personified as a Goddess. Tara is the unmanifest sound that exists
in the ether of consciousness, through which we can go beyond the entire
manifestation. Tara is Om that has the appearance of the ether and
which pervades the ether as its underlying vibratory support,
but also transcends it. Om is the unmanifest field behind creation,
which is the destroyer as well as the creator of the universe.
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Tara is the purifying force of the vital
breaths. Sound that manifests in the ether is the same
as the Prana (life-force) that manifests in the ether. Breath is
the primal sound of life, and the sound of the breath is the original,
spontaneous and unuttered mantra (So’ ham). Both mind and Prana,
as word and vibration, have their root in sound. Hence the
use of sound or mantra both purifies and energizes the mind.
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Tara is the radiance of knowledge that
arises from the differentiation of meanings through sound. Different
sounds serve as vehicles whereby different ideas or meanings flash forth.
Om is the underlying light that illumines these different sounds
and allows meaning to flow through them. All meanings exist to reintegrate
us into the ocean of meaning that is pure consciousness itself.
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Tara, like Kali, is deep blue in color.
She has matted hair, wears a garland of human heads, and has eight
serpents for her ornaments. She is dancing on a corpse, has four
arms and carries in her four hands a sword or head chopper, a scissors,
a severed head and a lotus.