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Fortune-telling roadside stone _ Is roadside fortune-telling accurate?

Why are there many artificial stone piles on the roadside of Wutai Mountain?

That's manidu. I'll give you a detailed explanation of the encyclopedia. They are all from the reference network. Take a look.

Manidui can be seen in mountains, rivers, lakes and intersections all over Tibet. It is also called "heap of gods" and "flowers" in Tibetan.

Manidui

"Help" means that stone. "Multi-gang" can be divided into "multi-gang" and "multi-gang".

On the Mani heap, there are slates or stones engraved with Mani scriptures such as the six-character mantra and the eight-character motto of Yongzhong Benjiao, as well as some arrows and horns of goats, antelopes and yaks or complete skulls with horns. In Tibetan areas, sticks and branches are inserted into square or conical Mani piles of different sizes, and they are pulled to a nearby tree or cliff with ropes. Branches and ropes are covered with colorful wind horse prayer flags, hada, colored thread, white wool and other auspicious exorcism ornaments.

On auspicious days, people simmer mulberries, add stones to the Mani pile, touch them with their foreheads, pray silently, and then throw them on the pile. Over time, a lot of Mani piles have been built, and the more they are built, the higher they are. Every stone embodies the voice of believers.

The appearance of Mani stone made these natural stones begin to be visualized. In the long historical process, a large number of Mani stone carvings have emerged in Tibet, and ordinary people can be seen everywhere. They are the pursuits, ideals, feelings and hopes of Tibetans carved on stones.

Manidui was originally called Manza, which means Datura. It is a pile of stones of different sizes full of aura, which is called "Duoben" in Tibetan. Mani is the abbreviation of the six-character Daming mantra in Buddhist scriptures and the fundamental mantra of the Lotus Department of Tibetan Buddhism. On the plateau near the sun, almost every village has Mani stone piles, which are bigger and more near the temples. Mani heap has no fixed shape, it is square or oval, and there are walls or towers. They are all positive faces, usually facing east, because facing the sun symbolizes auspiciousness. The six-character mantra on the Mani pile is depicted in six colors: the first word is white, which is the color of Buddha; The second word is blue, which is the color of King Kong holding Tathagata; The third word is yellow, which is the color of Buddha; The fourth word is green, which is an infinitely bright color; The fifth word is red, which is the color of achievement. The sixth word is black, which is the legal color of eliminating all evils in the common town of the five buddhas, to express the elimination of hatred, anger, desire, ignorance, jealousy and suffering of all sentient beings in the three realms. Manidui has a unique Tibetan cultural atmosphere, like a picture of the earth shining on the plateau. Some Mani stones will be engraved with six-character mantra, eye-catching and other auspicious patterns and languages, and the general content will be related to Tibetan Buddhism. Carving the proverbs of faith on Mani stone has formed a unique stone carving art that inherits Buddhism. Whether it's early morning or moonlit night, people who have prayers in their hearts will walk around the Mani pile, shake the Mani wheel (also called the prayer wheel) and silently recite the scriptures.