Amla Oil
According to the Padma Purana, the Amla tree is a direct manifestation of Lord Vishnu, making Amla Oil one of the most scripturally grounded offerings a devotee can place on the puja thali.
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Description
Amla oil for puja carries deep scriptural authority in Hindu worship. The Padma Purana describes the Amla tree as a form of Lord Vishnu himself, and sacred legend tells of Goddess Lakshmi choosing the Amla tree to honour both Lord Vishnu and Lord Shiva together, recognising it as a rare convergence of divine energies.
As a puja samagri item, amla oil finds its place on the puja thali alongside roli, akshat, and flowers during Vishnu and Lakshmi worship across festivals, vratas, and daily home puja rituals.
Its Ayurvedic classification as a Rasayana herb further deepens its ritual purity, making amla puja samagri an item of both scriptural authority and living household tradition across generations.
It is also symbolically associated with longevity, nourishment, and divine blessings, making its presence in rituals both meaningful and spiritually enriching. Its inclusion reflects a balance of health, spirituality, and tradition within the sacred act of worship.
Key Features
- Referenced in the Padma Purana, establishing its authority within Vishnu puja samagri
- Offered during Amla Navami, Amalaki Ekadashi and Kartik observances as per tradition
- Classified as a Rasayana, supporting its suitability for sacred use in home and temple rituals
Why Choose This Product
- Scripturally Grounded: Amla’s association with Lord Vishnu is documented in the Padma Purana, giving this oil a level of ritual legitimacy that few puja samagri items can claim.
- Distinct Ritual Identity: Unlike general-purpose oils, this is sourced and offered specifically as amla puja samagri, with a defined place in the puja sequence for specific vratas and festivals.
- Generational Tradition: Indian households have included amla as a sacred offering across centuries, not as a trend but as a living ritual practice passed down within families.
Uses / पूजा में उपयोग
- Amla Navami Puja: Offered on the auspicious Kartik Shukla Navami tithi during Amla tree worship to seek the blessings of Lord Vishnu and Goddess Lakshmi.
- Amalaki Ekadashi Offering: Included as a ritual offering during this sacred Ekadashi dedicated to Lord Vishnu for divine grace and spiritual purification.
- Abhishekam and Deity Anointing: Used to anoint sacred murtis during abhishekam, a devotional act considered highly auspicious in traditional Vishnu puja vidhi.
- Kartik Month Diya Ritual: Offered during lamp lighting and parikrama rituals throughout the sacred month of Kartik, one of the most spiritually significant months in the Hindu calendar.
- Daily Vishnu Puja: Placed on the home mandir puja thali as a sacred offering during regular Vishnu worship, fulfilling a ritual role prescribed directly in Hindu scriptures.
When Goddess Lakshmi herself chose the Amla tree to honour both Lord Vishnu and Lord Shiva together, she established a tradition that devotees carry forward to this day, and placing Amla Oil on your puja thali is your own participation in that unbroken act of reverence.
