ཨོཾ་ཏཱ་རེ་ཏུཏྟཱ་རེ་ཏུ་རེ་སྭཱ་ཧཱ།
Green Tārā Mantra
綠度母咒
Tārā (度母)
The Mantra 真言原文
Tibetan Script
ཨོཾ་ཏཱ་རེ་ཏུཏྟཱ་རེ་ཏུ་རེ་སྭཱ་ཧཱ།
Romanization
Om Tare Tuttare Ture Soha
Sanskrit
Oṃ Tāre Tuttāre Ture Svāhā
Chinese 漢音
嗡,達咧,圖達咧,圖咧,梭哈
Meaning 意義
Tare: liberates from suffering; Tuttare: liberates from the eight fears (fire, water, earthquake, wind, imprisonment, thieves, demons, illness); Ture: liberates from the root of suffering (ignorance); Svaha: may it be established
Ritual Use & Practice 修持法門
Swift protection and wish-fulfilment; calling upon Tara in moments of fear, illness, danger, or need. Green Tara responds instantly to sincere requests — she is the Bodhisattva of swift compassionate action. Daily practice of 21 recitations with visualisation is a standard Tibetan daily practice.
Background & Significance 背景與意義
Green Tārā (Tib: Jetsun Drolma) is the most beloved and widely propitiated female Bodhisattva in Tibetan Buddhism, regarded as the Mother of all Buddhas and the embodiment of enlightened activity. The legend holds that Tara arose from the tears of Avalokiteśvara when he wept at the immensity of suffering in the world. She vowed to always appear in a female form to work for liberation. Green Tara specifically represents swift compassionate activity — she is depicted seated on a lotus with her right foot slightly extended, ready to spring into action at the first call of a practitioner. Her mantra, Om Tare Tuttare Ture Svaha, contains three aspects: liberation from suffering (Tare), liberation from the eight outer fears (Tuttare), and liberation from the inner obscurations (Ture).
At a Glance
- Syllable Count
- 10
- Deity
- Green Tārā (Syāmatārā)
- Category
- Tārā (度母)
- School Tradition
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