Ganesha Hanging Oil Lamp Diya in Brass on MDF Wooden buy Stand, Brass Ganesh Oil Diya Lamp With Bells, Deepawali Puja Oil Lamp, Ganapati Deepak.
GANESH DIYA WITH MDF STAND
Weight: 1150 KG Approx
Measurement:
Height- 30 CM / 12 Inches.
GANESH DIYA WITH MDF STAND
Weight: 1.150 KG Approx
Measurement:
Height- 30 CM / 12 Inches Approx
Width- 16 CM / 6 Inches Approx
Depth-11 CM / 4 Inches Approx
GANESH DIYA WITHOUT MDF STAND
Weight: 625 Grams Approx
Measurement:
Height- 22.5 CM / 9 Inches Approx
Width- 10.5 CM / 4.5 Inches Approx
Depth- 9 CM / 3.5 Inches Approx
Ganesha is one of the most distinctive Hindu deities with his large elephant head and pot-bellied human body. He plays a dual role of a supreme being powerful enough to remove obstacles and ensure success or create obstructions for those whose ambition has become destructive.
Ganesha is an archetype who you might call upon when you're about to embark on a new endeavor. As the Remover of Obstacles and the god of success, Ganesha is honored throughout Indian and in Hindu cultures, at both secular and religious ceremonies. When someone launches a new business or moves into a new home, for example, the elephant-headed god is invoked to bless the venture.
Like other archetypes, Ganesha can be a source of inspiration or act as a role model as you try to achieve a goal. Archetypes are found everywhere, including in art, literature, and movies. Archetypes can be anyone who has traits you admire. In the Vedic tradition, they can play valuable roles in your relationships and spirituality as well as help shape your values and potential. Archetypes represent all of our collective soul's yearnings, imagination, and deepest desires. And these themes have existed forever.
Revered for his cleverness and wisdom, Ganesha is also known as the patron of letters and learning. Ganesha is the scribe who wrote down the legendary Indian epic the Mahabharata, dictated to him by the ancient sage Vyasa, according to some scholars of Hindu literature. It is said that Ganesha agreed to transcribe the epic only if Vyasa would recite the poem without pausing.
In many depictions of Ganesha, he is shown holding a broken tusk in his lower right hand like a pen, perhaps symbolizing the sacrifice he made in feverishly writing the Mahabharata. Another interpretation of the broken tusk is that it's a symbol of the truth that outward imperfections have nothing to do with inner perfection.
Ganesha is typically the first deity contacted buy in prayers in Hinduism. Those who seek wisdom and prosperity often call for him.
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