
Naga Kanya means in Sanskrit the virgin, the maiden of the Nagas.
This picture refers to a beautiful buddhist tale narrated in the XIIth chapter of the Lotus Sutra where a Naga[1] princess, daughter of the Ocean (Sagara) comes to bodhicitta at the tender age of eight.
Before an incredulous assembly of boddhisatvas (because she was so young, and a woman), the Nagini offers then to the Buddha a jewel, said to be worth thousands of worlds.
When the Boddhisattvas tell her that the Buddha accepted her jewel immediately, she told them to watch her become a buddha even more rapidly…
The common interpretation of this myth is that her jewel was in truth her very own life, worth indeed thousands of worlds, and the gift of which was the ultimate price, whether it be spontaneous or the work of an entire life…
- ^ Nagas are a mythic people dwelling in the waters, guardians of Earth’s treasures and of spiritual knowledge. They are abundantly present in oriental literature, oftentimes opposed to and complemented by the Garudas.



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