• Vajrapāṇi (Sanskrit; Pali: Vajirapāṇi, 'holder of the thunderbolt', lit. meaning, "Vajra in [his] hand") is one of the earliest-appearing bodhisattvas in Mahayana Buddhism.
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  • Vajrapani is a Bodhisattva who represents the Power of all the Buddhas. ... Vajrapani practice is excellent to burn away afflictive emotions and obscuration.
  • In the Vajrayana tradition of Buddhism, the Buddha’s companion, Vajrapani known as Guhyapati, is regarded as the Lord of Secrets.
  • Vajrapāṇi is one of the earliest Dharmapālas of Mahāyāna Buddhism and also appears as a deity in the Pāḷi Canon of the Theravāda school.
  • Vajrapāṇi (वज्रपाणि) is the name of an ancient Tibetan tantric deity.—The iconographic group of Vajrapāṇi and the eight Nāga Kings is so far scarcely studied.
  • In the tradition of Vajrayana Buddhism, Vajrapani is more typically shown in a wrathful form and known as Guhyapati - 'the Lord of Secrets.'
  • Vajrapani is a remarkable figure in Mahayana Buddhism, and this name makes people think of great power and strong determination.
  • Vajrapāṇi (from Sanskrit vajra, "thunderbolt" or "diamond" and pāṇi, lit. "in the hand") is one of the earliest bodhisattvas of Mahayana Buddhism.
  • Vajrapāṇi, in Mahāyāna Buddhist mythology, one of the celestial bodhisattvas (“Buddhas-to-be”), the manifestation of the self-born Buddha Akṣobhya.