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Shrouded in
mystery, revealed in wonder, the Great Goddess has been adored for
millennia. Sculptural evidence discovered in prehistoric caves of
30,000 years ago finds Her worship to be more ancient than humankind
has memory.
Legends and myths of
every culture praise She Who Brings Forth Life, She Who Is The
Embodiment Of Wisdom, The Great Compassionate Mother, The Star Of
Heaven. She has been called by many names, she has been revealed in
many forms. Her worship continues to this day in ancient cultures of
Asia, and in the 20th century search for the lost feminine.
To the Tibetans,
She is their Mother, closer than their heartbeat. She is known as
Tara, a Sanskrit word meaning Star. We hear the echoes of Her name
in the Latin Terra, Mother Earth.
The Druids called their Mother
Goddess Tara. An ancient saga of Finland said to be 5 million years
old speaks of Tar, the woman of wisdom. An ancient tribe of
indigenous peoples in the South American jungles, the Tarahumara,
worship the Goddess. The Cheyenne people tell of Star Woman who fell
from the heavens to the earth, and that out of Her body all
essential food grew. She sent Her people to mate with the more
primitive inhabitants of earth, thereby giving them the capacity for
wisdom. This legend is echoed in the more modern research of Z.
Sitchin who tells of IshTar who came to earth from another planetary
system and instructed her people to intermarry with earthlings,
making them capable of many things.
To the Tibetans,
even higher than a god or goddess is a
Buddha, a being who has gone beyond the rounds of birth and
death. Such an enlightened one has attained the highest wisdom,
compassion and capability.
Tara
is so highly thought of that she is said to be the Mother of all the
Buddhas. Buddhas integrate all aspects and possibilities. They are one with all
that exists. They can manifest bodies of light and radiance and they
can emanate bodies of form into the world in order to bring benefit
to this world of challenges and confusion. Tara is known to the
Tibetans as The Faithful One, The Fierce Protectoress, and to this
day there are stories carried out of Tibet by refugees, fleeing from
the horrors of Chinese occupation, that tell of Her intervention and
assistance in their lives. In the system of mind-training practices
offered by the great masters of Tibetan wisdom, Tara is an archetype
of our own inner wisdom. They speak of a transformation of
consciousness, a journey to freedom. They teach many simple and
direct means for each person to discover within themselves the
wisdom, compassion and glory that is Tara.
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