This thangka depicts the life of the Sakyamuni Buddha, for example, the central section on the right shows Gautama, the Buddha, after his six years of ascetic practices; his body is very weak and he washes the grime from his body in the Nairanjana river and takes gruel and milk offerred to him by a herdswoman; his body is restored and he achieves enlightenment under the pippala tree. Beneath the main figure are his ten leading disciples. The Buddha sits cross-legged on a Dharma throne with the six votive objects, the seat of the highest Buddha. The six emblems are: in the centre the Kapindula (Kapinjila) bird (garuda); below (on both the left and right) a dragon with a human upper torso and the lower torso of a snake; an enormous turtle in the sea; the handsome youth Adonis, a unicorn; and an elephant. The six emblems represent the six paramitas (Tibetan: phar phyin, virtues or perfections of the Bodhisattva's path), which are, charity (Sanskrit: dana), morality (sila), patience (kshanti), industry ( virya), meditation (dhyana) and wisdom (prajna).
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