Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The History of Prayer Flags
You have probably seen prayer flags hanging, but have you ever contemplated their deeper meaning?  Over the next several months, we will be exploring each of the five classical prayer flags - their colors and deeper meanings - as our monthly themes. The tradition of hanging flags began more than 2000 years ago. At that time Tibet was ruled by war lords who carried their banners into battles. The native people, however, made their own flags to honor the nature gods. They used colors of the five elements: blue for sky or space; white for air or clouds; red for fire; green for water and yellow for earth. They hung the flags over mountain passes and rivers to benefit all who would pass underneath.  Every time you look at the flags, let them remind you to continue to send out your own prayers for world peace, kindness and generosity. As you do so, you will also benefit from their blessings.
Thousands of Tibetans, including the 14th Dalai Lama, have had to flee from their country and live in exile around the world. Their Prayer Flags continue to represent the tradition of sending out prayers, but they also remind us of a nation of gentle people who have been robbed of their home. Prayer flags are still stamped with prayers and hung to let the wind carry their messages in Tibetan refugee villages. Most of the Tibetan Prayer Flags we see today are made in those communities. And so, people around the world have adopted the custom of hanging Prayer Flags to commemorate special events and to transmit their blessings.

It has been suggested by contemporary Tibetans that we create our own prayer flags by imprinting them with poems, prayers and symbols from the great faiths of the world in hopes of uniting them in a spirit of peace and harmony.
We are now selling prayer flags at Flow made by Tibetans living in Nepal.  We offer a few different types:
Blank~ to create your own
Windhorse~ representing unshakable trust in your self and life
Guru Rinpoche~ the 'second buddha', the great master Padmasambhava who brought buddhism to Tibet
Medicine Buddha~the embodiment of the medicine that ends suffering and awakens wisdom and compassion



No comments: