Manjushri Institute
.
Religious and educational foundation established at Conishead Priory in Britain in 1976 by students of the
Geluk
Tibetan Buddhist tradition.
Mañju
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(Jap., Monju, Tib., ’Jam.pa’i.d-byangs). A great
bodhisattva
of the
Mah
y
na
tradition of Buddhism closely associated with learning, knowledge, and transcendental wisdom (
prajñ
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). Mañju
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r
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is prominent in Buddhist
Tantra
and is frequently invoked in ritual and depicted in mystic diagrams and
ma
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00026.jpg)
alas
. In iconography he is portrayed with the sword of wisdom in his right hand and a book to his left-hand side. In Tibet, great teachers are often regarded as incarnations of Mañju
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00004.jpg)
r
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, e.g.
Tsong
Khapa. He also appears in angry form, and as a
yidam
of that sort, is especially important in
Gelugpa
.
Mañju
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00004.jpg)
r
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00013.jpg)
's name means Gentle Holy One, yet he has a terrifyingly wrathful form as the bull-headed Yam
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ntaka (Slayer of Death), who as Vajrabhairava has been chief protector of the
Geluk
since his
s
dhana
(ritual practice) was institutionalized by Tsong Khapa. Vajrabhairava—the most common form of Yam
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00006.jpg)