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Glossary›Avalokiteshvara

Glossary

Avalokiteshvara

Avalokiteshvara is the bodhisattva of compassion in Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism, revered across Asia as the embodiment of the compassionate activity of all buddhas.

What is Avalokiteshvara?

Avalokiteshvara (Sanskrit: अवलोकितेश्वर; Tibetan: Chenrezig; Chinese: Guanyin; Japanese: Kannon) is the bodhisattva who embodies the compassion (karuna) of all buddhas. In Mahayana Buddhism, Avalokiteshvara represents the ideal of the bodhisattva—a being who postpones final enlightenment to relieve the suffering of all sentient beings. Avalokiteshvara is depicted in numerous forms, from two-armed to thousand-armed iconography, and is venerated across East Asia, Tibet, and Southeast Asia as the divine listener who hears the cries of the world.

The name Avalokiteshvara translates approximately as “the Lord who looks down [with compassion],” though scholarly interpretations vary. This bodhisattva is central to the practice of compassion meditation (karuna meditation) and is the focus of the six-syllable mantra Om Mani Padme Hum, one of Buddhism’s most widely recited prayers.

Origins & Lineage

Avalokiteshvara first appears in early Mahayana sutras dating to approximately the 1st–2nd centuries CE. The Lotus Sutra (Saddharmapundarika Sutra), composed around the 1st century CE, contains the “Universal Gateway of Avalokiteshvara” chapter (Chapter 25), which describes the bodhisattva’s ability to manifest in thirty-three different forms to rescue beings from danger. The Heart Sutra (Prajnaparamita Hridaya Sutra) opens with Avalokiteshvara teaching the nature of emptiness (sunyata) to Shariputra.

In Tibetan Buddhism, Avalokiteshvara holds special significance. According to tradition, the Tibetan people are under the bodhisattva’s protection, and the Dalai Lama is considered a successive emanation (tulku) of Avalokiteshvara. The 7th-century Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo is also regarded as an incarnation of Chenrezig. The Mani Kambum, a treasure text (terma) attributed to the 12th-century terton Nyang Ral Nyima Özer, expands the mythos and practices associated with Avalokiteshvara in Tibet.

In East Asia, Avalokiteshvara evolved into the primarily feminine form Guanyin (Kuan Yin) in China, Kannon in Japan, and Quan Âm in Vietnam, blending with indigenous goddess traditions and Taoist elements by the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE).

How It’s Practiced

Practice centered on Avalokiteshvara takes multiple forms across Buddhist lineages. The most widespread practice is recitation of the mantra Om Mani Padme Hum, believed to invoke the bodhisattva’s compassionate presence and purify the six realms of samsara. Practitioners often use a mala (prayer beads) while chanting this mantra during japa meditation.

In Vajrayana Buddhism, Avalokiteshvara sadhana (formal deity practice) includes visualization, mantra recitation, and empowerment (wang) from a qualified lama. The Nyung Ne fasting retreat, widespread in Tibetan communities, is a two-and-a-half-day intensive practice of Chenrezig involving prostrations, silence, and abstention from food and water on the second day.

The thousand-armed, thousand-eyed form of Avalokiteshvara appears in esoteric practices, particularly in Chinese and Japanese Buddhism, symbolizing the bodhisattva’s omnipresent ability to perceive and respond to suffering. Practitioners may visualize this form while cultivating metta (loving-kindness) and karuna (compassion) in formal meditation sessions.

Devotional practices include making offerings before statues or thangka paintings of Avalokiteshvara, reciting liturgies such as the Karandavyuha Sutra, and pilgrimage to sites associated with the bodhisattva, including Mount Putuo in China and Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet.

Avalokiteshvara Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter Avalokiteshvara primarily through meditation centers offering Tibetan Buddhist teachings, Zen temples, and Pure Land Buddhist communities. Kirtan groups occasionally incorporate Om Mani Padme Hum into sacred chant sessions, bridging Buddhist and bhakti traditions. The mantra appears frequently in sound healing and mantra meditation recordings available through platforms like Insight Timer and Sounds True.

Many Western teachers trained in Tibetan Buddhism—including those in the Kagyu, Gelug, Nyingma, and Sakya lineages—offer Avalokiteshvara empowerments and teach the associated sadhanas at retreats worldwide. The Dalai Lama regularly confers the Avalokiteshvara initiation during public teachings. Teachers such as Pema Chödrön emphasize Avalokiteshvara practice as a foundational training in compassion for students navigating contemporary life.

Guanyin temples throughout Asia and diaspora communities serve as active pilgrimage sites where practitioners pray for protection, healing, and fertility. In Vietnam, Quan Âm devotion remains central to popular Buddhist practice, blending Mahayana liturgy with local customs.

Common Misconceptions

Avalokiteshvara is sometimes mistakenly understood as a deity to be worshipped in a theistic sense, rather than as a symbolic embodiment of enlightened compassion and a focus for cultivating one’s own bodhicitta (awakened heart-mind). While devotional language is common, Mahayana philosophy emphasizes that the bodhisattva’s qualities are not separate from the practitioner’s own buddha-nature.

The gendered transformation of Avalokiteshvara into the feminine Guanyin confuses some Western students. Bodhisattvas in Mahayana teaching transcend gender, manifesting in whatever form benefits beings. The East Asian feminine iconography reflects cultural contexts and the integration of goddess worship, not a theological contradiction.

Avalokiteshvara practice is not a quick-fix compassion technique. Traditional sadhana requires refuge vows, preliminary practices (ngondro in Tibetan traditions), and ongoing guidance from a qualified teacher within an authentic lineage. Mantra recitation alone, while beneficial, represents only one aspect of a comprehensive path.

How to Begin

For those new to Avalokiteshvara practice, begin with the mantra Om Mani Padme Hum. Find a recording by a traditional chant master or teacher to learn proper pronunciation. Sit comfortably, bring attention to the heart center (anahata chakra), and recite the mantra aloud or silently for 10–20 minutes, allowing it to cultivate a sense of warmth and compassion.

Read the “Universal Gateway of Avalokiteshvara” chapter in the Lotus Sutra (available in Burton Watson’s translation) to understand the scriptural foundation. For Tibetan approaches, Thubten Chodron’s How to Free Your Mind: Tara the Liberator offers accessible instruction on related deity practices. The Dalai Lama’s commentary The Compassionate Life provides context for Avalokiteshvara as the model for bodhisattva activity.

Seek an introduction to practice at a local Tibetan Buddhist center or Zen temple. Many centers offer public sessions featuring Avalokiteshvara chanting or metta meditation that incorporate the bodhisattva’s symbolism. For formal training, receiving empowerment from a qualified lama in the Kagyu, Gelug, Nyingma, or Sakya lineages establishes the traditional foundation for daily sadhana practice.

Related terms

bodhisattvakarunaom mani padme hummahayanatibetan buddhismmetta meditation
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