• མི་མཇེད་ཀྱི་འཇིག་རྟེན་གྱི་ཁམས།
  • མི་མཇེད་ཀྱི་འཇིག་རྟེན།
  • མི་མཇེད་པ།
  • མི་མཇེད་འཇིག་རྟེན།
  • མི་མཇེད།
  • འཇིག་རྟེན་གྱི་ཁམས་མི་མཇེད།
  • mi mjed
  • mi mjed kyi ’jig rten
  • ’jig rten gyi khams mi mjed
  • mi mjed kyi ’jig rten gyi khams
  • mi mjed ’jig rten
  • mi mjed pa
  • sahā
  • sahā­loka­dhatu
  • sahālokadhātu
  • sahāloka
  • saha
  • sahaloka
  • Note: this data is still being sorted
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Publications: 76

The name for our world system, the universe of a thousand million worlds, or trichiliocosm, in which the four-continent world is located. Each trichiliocosm is ruled by a god Brahmā; thus, in this context, he bears the title of Sahāṃpati, Lord of Sahā. The world system of Sahā, or Sahālokadhātu, is also described as the buddhafield of the Buddha Śākyamuni where he teaches the Dharma to beings.

The name Sahā possibly derives from the Sanskrit √sah, “to bear, endure, or withstand.” It is often interpreted as alluding to the inhabitants of this world being able to endure the suffering they encounter. The Tibetan translation, mi mjed, follows along the same lines. It literally means “not painful,” in the sense that beings here are able to bear the suffering they experience.