Ritual daggers have long been vital accoutrements in the exercise of magic and sorcery. As a means of subduing demonic forces, their power of transfixion has long been a feature in rites of great ritual power. In India and Tibet, they are the center of a vast and ancient spiritual lineage of devotees, who use the dagger or phurba as a means of both exorcism and enlightenment. Sharp Practice is an exposition upon 'Dagger as Deity' within Bön and Vajrayana Buddhism, and delineates the evolution of the Phurba as a ritual weapon. Examining its deific essence, as well as its iconography, the book concludes with a rite dedicated to the Three Jewels, inspired by each tradition. -- Publisher
This small, but very informative book is an introduction to the mysticism of the phurba in both Vajrayana Buddhism and Bön. I found admirable the huge and intricate symbols in the ritual knives themselves. What I also found fascinating is the evolution of the ritual knife itself from its shamanistic roots in the practice of Bön Po to the more religious and sophisticated use of it in Tibetan Buddhism and Hinduism.