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Brass Ghungaru Glass
₹510.00
Description
- Glass made in high quality finish in shining brass. Used for storing water or milk used in prayer ceremony.
- It can also be used to collect divinely charged water leftover from ritual bathing (Abhishek).
- Made of thick brass with long lasting finish.
Specifications
- Material: Brass
- Pack of – 1
- Size – (W x H): 6 x 6.2 cm
- Weight – 90 gram
Categories: Metal, Parampara Products, Pooja Ingrediants, Pooja Vessels
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Chandan Powder
₹150.00
Description
- Chandan or sandal is well known for its aroma and cooling effect on human body.
- Sandal powder is an important pooja item.
- Sandal paste is used in worshiping deities especially for applying tilak on the forehead of sacred idols.
- After offering to deities, devotees can apply it between the eyebrows or on the forehead to cool the nervous system and to stimulate spiritual energy.
- The paste can help heal skin diseases such as infectious sores, ulcers, acne and rashes.
- Sandalwood powder helps smooth and cool the skin, and can be made into a paste, lotion or soap for cleansing, calming and hydrating sensitive or aging skin.
- Sandalwood balances the circulatory, digestive, respiratory and nervous systems.
Quantity
- 20 gms
Jau (Barley) grains
₹25.00
Ghee
₹320.00
Description
- Ghee holds its position of purity in nearly all the Hindu pooja rituals.
- In Hindu mythology, Prajapati/Brahma, created Ghee by rubbing or "churning" his hands together and then poured it into fire to engender his progeny.
- So, whenever the rituals are performed, the pouring of Ghee into fire symbolises a re - enactment of creation.
Quantity
- 200 gms
Copper Panchapatra
₹210.00
Description
- copper panchpatra is an integral part of poojas where in the holy charan amrit is placed before the pooja and then distributed upon the Pooja's completion.
- The Charanamrit literally means Amrit (Holy Nectar) from the Charan (Feet of the Lord) of the worshipped deity and is partaken as a sacred offering or a holy gift after the completion of the pooja.
- In many Hindu homes the cooked food is first offered to the Lord each day and is then consumed by everyone else.
- The offered food is mixed with the rest of the food and then served as prasad.
Specifications
- Material - Copper
- Pack of - 1
- Size - (W x H) 7 x 6 cm
- Weight - 33 g
- Capacity - 100 ml
Supari / Betelnut
₹105.00
Description
- The betel nut/Supari is an integral part of the daily or ritualistic Pooja.
- It is also popularly used in the age old-custom of Indian eating.
- The supari is symbolic of the nut of the ego that must be offered on the altar of God.
- It represents the hard, coarse qualities that must be surrendered to God, leaving only the soft, pure qualities.
- Mostly symbolic, the Supari is many a times traditionally represented as the Nine planets (in the Navgrah Pooja) and takes the form of Deities like Brahma, Surya and others during different Pooja.
Quantity
- 11 pieces
Dry Coconut
₹130.00
Description
- We never offer the coconut as it is.
- We remove the fibre that covers it and offer the fruit that is free from all the external fibre.
- Only then is it possible to break the coconut.
- By breaking the coconut, the water in it flows out.
- The heart is the coconut and it is covered by the fibre of desire.
- The water that flows out is the 'Samskara' or purification. The fibres on the surface are the desires.
- We must strip the heart of all desires and offer the core without the fibre. It then becomes an offering to God.
- If we plant a coconut as it is, in course of time and by watering it, another plant will grow out of it.
Used
- Dry coconuts are used as an offering to deities and especially during the final oblation (purna-ahuti) of any homa/yagna.
- It is filled with sugar and ghee and is then closed with a sacred thread, before offering to the homa fire.
Quantity
- 360 gm - Broken pieces of 2 coconuts
Darbha Grass
₹215.00
Description
- Darbha Grass or Kusha Grass is scientifically known as Desmostachya bipinnata, commonly known in English by the names Halfa grass, Big Cordgrss, and Salt read-geass, is an Old World Perennial Grass. Kusha grass is a special type of grass which is used in Hindu rituals Pooja and Worship.
Uses
- While chanting hymns, hold a bunch of Darbha grass, dipping the tip into a pot full of water. The positive vibrations of the mantras recited are believed to be absorbed by water in the pot through the grass. Then the recharged water is sprinkled around to purify the surroundings.
- Also, while performing fire ritual, Darbha grass is placed on the four sides of the agni kund or sacred fireplace, While chanting and reciting verses from the Vedas, one has to wear a ring made of Darbha grass on one’s right hand ring finger as a protective shield from negative vibrations.
- The number of Darbha leaves used depends on the ceremony that is being performed. For ceremonies related to death, only one Darbha leaf is used. For auspicious and daily rituals, a ring made of two leaves is used for inauspicious but not death related functions — Amavasya Tharpanam, Pithra Pooja — a three - leaf Darbha ring is used. For temple prayers and pooja, a four-leaf Darbha ring is used.
Quantity
- Set of 5
Panchmeva
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