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  2. Prayer rope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_rope

    Historically, the prayer rope would typically have 100 knots, although prayer ropes with 150, 60, 50, 33, 64 or 41 knots can also be found in use today. There are even small 10-knot prayer ropes intended to be worn on the finger. Hermits in their cells may have prayer ropes with as many as 300 or 500 knots in them. [citation needed]

  3. Japamala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japamala

    Jōdo-shū is somewhat unusual because of the use of a double-ringed prayer beads, called nikka juzu (日課数珠), which are used for counting nenbutsu recitations (i.e. recitation of the name of Amitabha Buddha): one ring contains single beads used to count a single recitation while the other ring is used to count full revolutions of the ...

  4. Prayer beads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_beads

    Islamic prayer beads, called Misbaha or Tasbih, usually have 100 beads (99 +1 = 100 beads in total or 33 beads read thrice and +1). Buddhists and Hindus use the Japa Mala, which usually has 108 beads, or 27 which are counted four times. Baháʼí prayer beads consist of either 95 beads or 19 beads, which are strung with the addition of five ...

  5. Misbaha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misbaha

    Black Misbaha . A Misbaha (Arabic: مِسْبَحَة, romanized: misbaḥa), subḥa (Arabic: سُبْحَة) (Arabic and Urdu), tusbaḥ (), tasbīḥ (Arabic: تَسْبِيح) (Iran, India, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia), or tespih (Turkish, Bosnian and Albanian) is prayer beads often used by Muslims for the tasbih, the recitation of prayers, the ...

  6. Zuni fetishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuni_fetishes

    According to Rodee and Ostler, Zuni fetishes with a heartline (sometimes called a breath line) were rarely found on older fetishes and became more popular in the 20th century. [15] Traditionally, they are given "ceremonial feedings" by sprinkling a bit of ground blue corn meal and pulverized turquoise. The time of day the fetish is fed, as well ...

  7. Insufflation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insufflation

    The breath of the saints was credited with healing, as well as exorcistic, powers from an early period. Gregory of Nyssa says of Gregory Thaumaturgus ('Gregory the magician') that he needed to resort to "no finicking and laborious" magic, but "there sufficed, for both the casting out of demons and the healing of bodily ailments, the breath of ...

  8. Kara (Sikhism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kara_(Sikhism)

    A kara, or kada (Punjabi: ਕੜਾ (), کڑا कड़ा ()), is a steel or cast iron bangle worn by Sikhs and sometimes Indian people of other religions. [1] [2] Sikhism preaches the importance of equality and having reverence for God at all times, which is represented through the five Ks—ceremonial items worn or used by Sikhs who have been initiated into the Khalsa, of which kara is one.

  9. Om - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Om

    Ṛc (ऋच्) is speech, states the text, and sāman (सामन्) is breath; they are pairs, and because they have love for each other, speech and breath find themselves together and mate to produce a song. [57] [58] The highest song is Om, asserts section 1.1 of Chandogya Upanishad.

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