"Ganachakra (en s\u00E1nscrito, \u0917\u0923\u091A\u0915\u094D\u0930, \"c\u00EDrculo de reuni\u00F3n\") o tsog (lo mismo en tibetano) es una ceremonia t\u00E1ntrica o esot\u00E9rica, de tintes orgi\u00E1sticos, originada en el hinduismo y el budismo vajrayana. Sus participantes se re\u00FAnen para cantar mantras, realizar mudras, hacer ofrendas votivas y compartir pr\u00E1cticas com\u00FAnmente prohibidas o desaconsejadas: comer carne, consumir alcohol, cohabitar con personas de castas diferentes y tener sexo t\u00E1ntrico, todo ello enmarcado dentro de una espiritualidad antinomiana particular. Tambi\u00E9n recibe los nombres de ganapuja, cakrapuja or ganacakrapuja, y a\u00FAn se realiza en ciertas ramas vajrayana, hind\u00FAes y del b\u00F6n tibetano."@es . . . . "13658"^^ . . . "Ganachakra (en s\u00E1nscrito, \u0917\u0923\u091A\u0915\u094D\u0930, \"c\u00EDrculo de reuni\u00F3n\") o tsog (lo mismo en tibetano) es una ceremonia t\u00E1ntrica o esot\u00E9rica, de tintes orgi\u00E1sticos, originada en el hinduismo y el budismo vajrayana. Sus participantes se re\u00FAnen para cantar mantras, realizar mudras, hacer ofrendas votivas y compartir pr\u00E1cticas com\u00FAnmente prohibidas o desaconsejadas: comer carne, consumir alcohol, cohabitar con personas de castas diferentes y tener sexo t\u00E1ntrico, todo ello enmarcado dentro de una espiritualidad antinomiana particular. Tambi\u00E9n recibe los nombres de ganapuja, cakrapuja or ganacakrapuja, y a\u00FAn se realiza en ciertas ramas vajrayana, hind\u00FAes y del b\u00F6n tibetano."@es . "Ganachakra"@es . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "A ganacakra (Sanskrit: \u0917\u0923\u091A\u0915\u094D\u0930 ga\u1E47acakra \"gathering circle\"; Tibetan: \u0F5A\u0F7C\u0F42\u0F66\u0F0B\u0F40\u0FB1\u0F72\u0F0B\u0F60\u0F41\u0F7C\u0F62\u0F0B\u0F63\u0F7C\u0F0D, Wylie: tshogs kyi 'khor lo) is also known as tsok, ganapuja, cakrapuja or ganacakrapuja. It is a generic term for various tantric assemblies or feasts, in which practitioners meet to chant mantra, enact mudra, make votive offerings and practice various tantric rituals as part of a s\u0101dhan\u0101, or spiritual practice. The ganachakra often comprises a sacramental meal and festivities such as dancing, spirit possession, and trance; the feast generally consisting of materials that were considered forbidden or taboo in medieval India like meat, fish, and wine. As a tantric practice, forms of ga\u1E47acakra are practiced today in Hinduism, B\u00F6n and Vajray\u0101na Buddhism."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "tshogs kyi 'khor lo"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Ganachakra"@en . . . "1105555412"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "\u0F5A\u0F7C\u0F42\u0F66\u0F0B\u0F40\u0FB1\u0F72\u0F0B\u0F60\u0F41\u0F7C\u0F62\u0F0B\u0F63\u0F7C\u0F0D"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "2835485"^^ . "A ganacakra (Sanskrit: \u0917\u0923\u091A\u0915\u094D\u0930 ga\u1E47acakra \"gathering circle\"; Tibetan: \u0F5A\u0F7C\u0F42\u0F66\u0F0B\u0F40\u0FB1\u0F72\u0F0B\u0F60\u0F41\u0F7C\u0F62\u0F0B\u0F63\u0F7C\u0F0D, Wylie: tshogs kyi 'khor lo) is also known as tsok, ganapuja, cakrapuja or ganacakrapuja. It is a generic term for various tantric assemblies or feasts, in which practitioners meet to chant mantra, enact mudra, make votive offerings and practice various tantric rituals as part of a s\u0101dhan\u0101, or spiritual practice. The ganachakra often comprises a sacramental meal and festivities such as dancing, spirit possession, and trance; the feast generally consisting of materials that were considered forbidden or taboo in medieval India like meat, fish, and wine. As a tantric practice, forms of ga\u1E47acakra are practiced today in Hinduism, B\u00F6n and Vajray\u0101na Buddhism. Professor Miranda Shaw summarises the experience of a ga\u1E47acakra: The feast is an esoteric ritual that unfolds in many stages. The sacred space for the ceremony is demarcated by geometric designs drawn on the ground with powdered pigments, and an elaborate array of offerings and foods are laid out. The participants don special insignia like bone ornaments and crowns and use musical instruments of archaic design... for inducing heightened awareness. Practitioners sit in a circle and partake of sacramental (dry) meat and wine (often liquor) served in skull-cups. The feasts also provide an occasion for the exchange of ritual lore, the ritual worship of women (sripuja), and the performance of sexual yogas. The feast culminates in the performance of tantric dances and music that must never be disclosed to outsiders. The revelers may also improvise \"songs of realization\" (caryagiti) to express their heightened clarity and blissful raptures in spontaneous verse. Samuel holds that: [S]erious Tantric practice is generally seen as appropriate for a small minority only. The ancient Indian ga\u1E47acakra, the circle ritual...discussed earlier, is far in the past. In Tibetan practice it has long been replaced by the ga\u1E47apuja (Tibetan: tshogs), a considerably tamer affair, still involving a sacramental meal but normally performed indoors and without possession or dancing."@en . . . . . . . . . . . .