The ghau is a kind of portable altar in which the image of the possessor's chosen deity is kept, wrapped in silken garments. The vast majority of Tibetans use ghau at home and carry it on their travels. They keep it on a real altar at home. When traveling, it is attached to the back belt. It serves as a protective symbol during travels and also allows its owner to prove his devotion to his deity.

925 silver hallmarked according to international standards

24K gold plate

Turquoise from Arizona and nan hong (southern red) agate from Yunnan, Baoshan site. This exceptional agate owes its red color to the presence of cinnabar.

As a gemologist graduated from the National Institute of Gemmology in Paris, all our stones are appraised and certified.

Mantra of compassion rotating on the back thanks to a precision rotating ball system developed in Germany, 

 

The protective windows are made of leuco sapphire like high-end watches.

 

Dimensions of the pendant: 53mm in diameter Weight of 72 grams Delivered with a mala composed of 108 coconut beads, silver rock crystal and copper

Pendant and mixed mala, Man and woman, children from 10 years old. Gold, silver, copper blue, red black and transparent color

BODHISATTVA GUAN YIN / CHENREZI

Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Hindi अवलोकितेश्वर Avalokiteśvara “lord who watches from above”, Chinese 觀世音 Guānshìyīn or 觀音 Guānyīn, Shanghainese Kueu(sy)'in, Korean Gwanseeum 관세음, Japanese 観音 Kan'non, Tibetan Chenrezig, Vietnamese Quan Thế m, Indonesian Kwan Im, Khmer លោកេស្វរ Lokesvara), is arguably the most revered and popular great bodhisattva among Great Vehicle Buddhists. He is also used as a yidam (tutelary deity) in tantric meditations. Protean and syncretic bodhisattva (he can represent all other bodhisattvas), embodying ultimate compassion, he can be feminine in China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam, in the form of Quan Yin. He is considered the protector of Tibet where King Songtsen Gampo and later the Dalai Lamas are seen as his emanations. This is also the case with other tulku such as the karmapa.

Also called Padmapāṇi or Maṇipadmā, he is invoked by the famous mantra Om̐ Maṇipadme hūm (ॐ मणिपद्मेहूम्). Chenrezi is the bodhisattva of love and compassion.

Chenrezi Puja aims to develop loving friendship and compassion for all living beings without distinction. Chenrezi manifests in different forms: the Chenrezi with 10 heads and 1000 arms of compassion is the best known: he promised his spiritual father, Amitabha Buddha, to spend all his energy to liberate all living beings and not to rest until all living beings are delivered from

their suffering. Should he ever doubt his mission, 'may my head then fragment into ten and my body into 1000'. When, after deep meditation and continuous reciting of the Mani Mantra, he saw that the ocean of suffering was still not emptied, then he fell into deep despair and broke his head in 10 and his body in 1000. The six-syllable mantra OM MANI PEME HOENG is the best-known mantra of Tibetan Buddhism.