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  2. Red string (Kabbalah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_string_(Kabbalah)

    The red string itself is usually made from thin scarlet wool thread. It is worn as a bracelet or band on the wrist of the wearer. The red string was worn in many cultures and not founded solely in Jewish culture. Hinduism and Chinese culture has also worn this red string or bracelet for luck, love and to ward off evil.

  3. Kautuka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kautuka

    The thread of Mauli tied on right arm. A bundle of Mauli. A kautuka is a red-yellow coloured ritual protection thread, sometimes with knots, found on the Indian subcontinent. It is sometimes called a kalava, mauli, maui, rakshasutra, [1] pratisara (in North India), kaapu, kayiru, charandu or rakshadhara (in South India).

  4. Red string - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_string

    Red string may be: Red string (Kabbalah), a thin red string worn to ward off misfortune; Kalava, the sacred Hindu red string; Red String, a manga-style webcomic; Red thread of fate, an East Asian belief similar to the concept of a soulmate; The Red String (documentary) a documentary film about four Chinese-born girls and their adopted families

  5. Segula (Kabbalah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segula_(Kabbalah)

    Wearing a red string. Wearing a red string cut from a longer length that has been wound around Rachel's Tomb is an ancient tradition that protects the wearer from danger [15] [16] The only classic source which does mention the red thread expressly forbids its use, saying that tying a red thread on one’s fingers is an idolatrous practice (darkei emori).

  6. Kabbalah Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabbalah_Centre

    Madonna studies regularly with a personal Kabbalah Centre rabbi, no longer gives concerts on Friday night (which is the onset of Shabbat), wears the red string around her left wrist for protection and to ward off the "evil eye" (Ayin Hara), has introduced Jewish ritual objects such as tefillin ("phylacteries") into her videos and tithes ...

  7. Martenitsa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martenitsa

    Typical Martenitsa. A Martenitsa (Bulgarian: мартеница, pronounced [ˈmartɛnit͡sa]; Macedonian: мартинка, romanized: martinka; Greek: μάρτης, romanized: mártis; Romanian: mărțișor [mər.t͡siˈʃor] ⓘ; Albanian: verore; Turkish: marteniçka [marteˈnit͡ʃka]) is a small piece of adornment, made of white and red yarn and usually in the form of two dolls, a white ...

  8. Prayer beads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_beads

    A more explicit reference is that in 1125 William of Malmesbury mentioned a string of gems that Lady Godiva used to count prayers. [16] [17] The oldest prayer beads to be found in Britain were discovered by archaeologists on Lindisfarne in 2022: made of salmon vertebrae, they date from the 8th or 9th century. [18]

  9. Category:Kabbalah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Kabbalah

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