Kruba Noi ~ Water Wealth Buddha Upaku (13 x 29cm)
[Efficacy of Sacred Objects]
✅Attracts wealth from all directions, with a focus on enhancing financial fortune💰
✅Avoid risks and protect your home's safety and health
✅Purify the magnetic field and protect your home.
✅Enhance your interpersonal relationships and increase your personal charm💕
✅May your business prosper
✅A successful career will pave a bright future for you.
✅ Wealth, good fortune, and the help of benefactors 👑
[Introduction to the Sacred Relic]
Upaku, also known as the "Water Wealth Buddha," was born about two hundred years after the death of Shakyamuni Buddha into a wealthy merchant family in the village of Madura, India. From a young age, he helped his father take care of the family business, and his innate good fortune always made his business prosper.
Later, Upakku decided to become a monk, and he was one of the most important Buddhist monks during the reign of King Ashoka of India. Upakku never stopped practicing, and legend has it that he could even teleport and move freely, and everyone believed that he possessed supernatural powers.
The key legend is that he built a crystal temple at the bottom of an ocean whirlpool, and he only accepts alms and offerings from believers on Wednesday nights when the moon is full. When disaster strikes, people call upon him to help with rescue efforts. Therefore, people consider him a wealth-bringing Buddha. It is believed that wearing Upaku amulets protects against malicious people, and that those who frequently worship and make offerings to Upaku will receive his blessings, peace, good fortune, prosperous business, and abundant wealth. It is said that business people who worship Upaku every morning will achieve commercial success and acquire boundless wealth.
[Maintenance Method]
Placement: The Water Wealth Buddha should be placed in a clean place.
If you wish to place it in a shop: Please place the Water Wealth Buddha facing the entrance, near the cashier, service counter, or other suitable locations.
If you wish to place it at home: you can put it in your workplace or in the wealth corner of your home.
🪷Offerings🪷
The main offering is clean water daily, accompanied by chanting and prayers for the Water Wealth Buddha to help the business prosper that day. When making a wish or fulfilling a vow, fresh flowers and fruits are offered. Offerings on Buddhist holy days are especially believed to be efficacious.
The "Water Wealth Buddha" among Buddhist sacred objects, known as "Ubaku" in Thai, is widely worshipped by believers. Statues of Ubaku are commonly found in Myanmar, Cambodia, Lanna, and northern Thailand.
The Legend of Upaku. According to legend, Upaku was born more than two hundred years after the Nirvana of Shakyamuni Buddha. After becoming a monk, Upaku secluded himself in the sea to practice asceticism and possessed a crystal throne.
King Ashoka built 84,000 stupas to house the Buddha's relics and convened the Third Buddhist Council. The construction of numerous stupas took a very long time, and the demon Mara, the demon of the sixth heaven of desire, caused disturbances, so many high-ranking monks and deities dared not protect the construction of the stupas.
The monastic community sent two monks of high moral character to the sea to invite Venerable Upaku to be born and assist King Ashoka in building the stupa. Venerable Upaku gladly agreed and subdued the demon, bringing him into the Buddhist order.
Kruba Noi, Wat SriDonMoon. Kruba Noi is a highly renowned master in the Thai amulet world; almost every group visiting Chiang Mai province in northern Thailand makes a special trip to pay homage to him.
Kruba Noi is skilled in protective magic. His personally crafted amulets are renowned for their effectiveness in warding off danger, protecting lives, and providing invulnerability. He is also well-known for his amulets made of water-based wealth symbols. In Chiang Mai, northern Thailand, Kruba Noi is a prominent figure. Many tour groups visiting Chiang Mai make a point of visiting his temple, and he receives numerous visitors daily. Kruba Noi also assists monks at other temples in creating amulets and provides them with special sacred materials for their amulet making.
Although Kruba Noi was old, he was extremely diligent. Every day, he would start at 3:30 a.m., leading his disciples and novices in meditation and chanting. Afterward, they would go to the neighborhood to beg for alms. He would receive visitors and devotees from about 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In the evening, he would spend all his time chanting, meditating, and teaching the young monks. He would not go to sleep until 1 a.m.