(Sanskrit). In Buddhist mythology, a class of evil flesh-eating demons who also cause sickness and misfortune.
| Buddhism Dictionary: rākṣasa |
(Sanskrit). In Buddhist mythology, a class of evil flesh-eating demons who also cause sickness and misfortune.
| Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia: Rakshasa |
An Indian demon. In one of the Indian folktales he appears black as soot, with hair yellow as the lightning, looking like a thunder-cloud. He made himself a wreath of entrails and wore a sacrificial cord of hair; he gnawed the flesh of a man's head and drank blood out of a skull, thus adding him to the list of the world's vampires. In other stories, these rakshasas have formidable tusks, flaming hair, and insatiable hunger. They wander about the forests catching animals and eating them.
Rakshasas feature in the Hindu religious epic of the Ramayana. When the monkey god Hanuman goes to the city of Lanka in search of Sita, he sees rakshasas of many varied kinds, some disgusting in appearance, others quite beautiful.
"Some had long arms and fearful shapes; some were fat, others very lean, some were dwarfs, others exceedingly tall. Some had only one eye and others one ear. Some had monstrous bellies, hanging breasts, projecting teeth and crooked thighs; others were exceedingly beautiful in appearance and clothed in splendor. Some had two legs, some three legs and some four legs. Some had the heads of donkeys, some the heads of horses and some the heads of elephants."
Sources:
Sutherland, Gail Hinich. The Disguises of the Demon: The Development of the Yaksa in Hinduism and Buddhism. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991.
| Wikipedia: Rakshasa |
A Rakshasa (Sanskrit: राक्षसः, rākṣasaḥ; Malay: raksasa, Bangla: rakkhosh, Japanese: 羅刹天, rasetsuten) or alternately rakshas, is a demon or unrighteous spirit in Hindu and Buddhist mythology. Rakshasas are also called man-eaters ("Nri-chakshas," "Kravyads") or cannibals. A female Rakshasa is called a Rakshasi, and a female Rakshasa in human form is a Manushya-Rakshasi.
According to the Ramayana, Rakshasas were created from Brahma's foot; other sources claim they are descended from Pulastya, or from Khasa, or from Nirriti and Nirrita. Legend has it that many Rakshasas were particularly wicked humans in previous incarnations. Rakshasas are notorious for disturbing sacrifices, desecrating graves, harassing priests, possessing human beings, and so on. Their fingernails are venomous, and they feed on human flesh and spoiled food. They are shapechangers, illusionists, and magicians.
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In the world of the Ramayana and Mahabharata, Rakshasas are a populous race of supernatural humanoids who tend toward evil. Powerful warriors, they resort to the use of magic and illusion when unsuccessful with conventional weapons. As shape-changers, they can assume various physical forms, and it is not always clear whether they have a true or natural form. As illusionists, they are capable of creating appearances which are real to those who believe in them or who fail to dispel them. Rakshasas are cannibals, and make their gleeful appearance when the slaughter on the battlefield is at its worst. Occasionally they serve as rank-and-file soldiers in the service of one or the other warlord.
Aside from its treatment of unnamed rank-and-file Rakshasas, the epic tells the stories of certain members of the race who rose to prominence, some of them as heroes, most of them as villains.
The Battle of Lanka pitted an army of Rakshasas under Ravana against an army of Vanaras or monkeys under Rama and Sugriva.
The Pandava hero Bhima was the nemesis of forest-dwelling Rakshasas who dined on human travellers and terrorized human settlements.
Rakshasa heroes fought on both sides in the Battle of Kurukshetra.
In the Maha Samaya Sutta, the defeated antagonist of the Buddha, Mara also known as "Namuci" or the "Dark One" is described as an Asura whose army consisted of "Sensual passions, Discontent,Hunger & Thirst, Craving, Sloth & Drowsiness,Terror, Uncertainty, Hypocrisy & Stubbornness, Gains, Offerings, Fame, & Status wrongly gained,and whoever would praise self & disparage others" (Sn 3.2 Padhana Sutta). The Asuras try to capture the devas and bind them.
One of Buddha's ten titles is "Sasta deva manusanam", or the teacher of gods and men.
Ravana is mentioned in the famous Buddhist sutra, "Lankavatara Sutra" as paying homage to the Buddha.
Chapter 26 of the Lotus Sutra includes a dialogue between the Buddha and a group of Rakshasa daughters, who swear to uphold and protect the Lotus Sutra. They also teach magical dharanis to protect followers who also uphold the sutra.[1] In The Lotus-Born: The Life Story of Padmasambhava, recorded by Yeshe Tsogyal, Padmasambhava receives the nickname of "Rakshasa Demon" during one of his wrathful conquests to subdue Buddhist heretics.
In Indonesian and Malaysian, "raksasa" simply means "giant," or "huge and strong," in common usage.[citation needed] Indonesian and Malaysian are very closely related languages with significant Sanskrit influence.
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