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	Balaha (बलह)  
			Sanskrit-Khmer. Name of a talking, flying 
			white 
			
			horse, that 
			rescues those who repent from their sins, as well as merchants from 
			perils at sea.   According to one legend, it  
			
			helped rescue the chief merchant 
			Samhala and five hundred merchants, whom were held captive by a 
			group of 
			
			      
			      Rakshasa. 
			The horse is 
			considered to be 
			the king of horses and is 
			described as the embodiment of one of the 
			
			
			former 
			
		      incarnations 
			of the
			 
			
		Buddha 
			himself, as well as  
			an emanation of the
			
		      
		      
		      bodhisatva
			
		      
			Avalokitesvara. 
			It bears a 
			
			chintamani, 
			i.e. a wishing gem 
			or 
			wish-fulfilling jewel, on its back, akin to the 
			Wind Horse Lung Ta found on 
			Buddhist prayer flags 
			in 
			Tibet and Nepal 
			(fig.). 
			In 
			
                
              Khmer
			mythology, the 
			story of the horse Balaha was immortalized in a stone sculpture 
			found at Neak Pean in 
			
		      Cambodia 
			and which dates back to the 
			12th century AD, in the middle of the 
			
		      
			Angkorian Period, 
			and of which today a copy stands at the entrance of the 
			International Airport in Siem Reap (map). Also referred to as Balahaka and 
			Valaha, and reminiscent of 
			
			Kanthaka, 
			
			
			      
			      i.e. Prince 
			
			      Siddhartha's
			
			snow-white horse, on 
			which he leaves his father's palace during the 
			
			
			
			Great Departure, 
			flying through the sky with 
			his servant 
			Chandaka
			hanging on its 
			tail (fig.). 
			See also 
			
			Mah Pihk.
			
			
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