Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Swan (Hamsa) in Hindu Thought!

I came across an interesting image of Hamsa or swan connected to Gandhara art.



A Hamsa sacred goosereliquary, stupa 32 of the Gangu group, Babar Khana, Taxila, Gandhara, 1st century CE. This Hamsa was found inside a granite bowl, with an inscribed gold sheet stating "Shira deposited the relics of her departed parents in the Hamsa". It has a cavity in the middle for the insertion of the relics. British Museum.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamsa_bird



The Hamsa bowl with the relics sounds a Buddhist connection.
But in Vedic way of life, storing relics was not in practice. What was in practice was to store the burnt remains of the deceased in a burial pot.


(also found in Sembiam kadaiyur burial pots
http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/04/from-adicchanallur-to-sembiyankandiyur.html

http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/05/sangam-texts-sanskrit-texts-and-burial.html)


We come across a description of such storage, in the immortalized verses of Thevaram by sage Thirugyana sambhandar. He brought life to a dead girl called ‘Poompavai’ from the burnt remains that were stored in a pot. The songs that brought life to the girl were in praise of Sri Virupaksheeswarar in Mylapore.


Hamsa, seems to go with transcendence.
It is also about gaining supreme Knowledge or Buddhi.

Brahma traveled in Hamsa vahana.

Brahmi has Hamsa as her Vahana.

Brahma took up the form of hamsa when he searched along with Vishnu, the upper and lower extremes of lord Shiva.

It is even said that Shiva once traveled on hamsa (found near His abode in Manasarover) to Madhya dveepa. Here the hamsa-allegory is to speed and quick transition from one plane to another. The details of this can be read in the stories of ISKCON.


Such transition happens with dhyana and gyana,

Since Brahma stands for gyana, acquisition of knowledge and Vedas, the swan became his carrier.


The Hamsa vahana in temple processions is symbolic of Brahma or Vedas carrying the Lord.


In astrology too, hamsa is used in the meaning of knowledge, that too, vedic knowledge. There is an important yoga called “Hamsa yoga” which is one among the 5 pancha maha purusha yogas. This yoga is caused by Jupiter, the signifactor for Teacher, when it is in exaltation or own house in Kendra from lagna or moon. The one born with this yoga will be an adept in Vedic wisdom and knowledge of the Supreme. A person born in this yoga is said to have venerated his teacher in his previous birth, according to the text “Brahma rishi vaakhyam”.


There is a reference to Hamsa in Kalidasa’s Raghu vamasa, as a poetical image of the flight of spiritual swans to the lake (Manasarover) in the Himalayas.


Like this, from different perspectives we can connect hamsa to knowledge and transcendence only.

The vedic hamsa must have entered into Buddhist thought as Buddha was known for attainment of Supreme knowledge. (Due to this reason it is possible to come across images of not only Buddha but other saints / sages / persons in meditative mode, in connection with Hamsa.)

It is an interesting coincidence that Hamsa upanishad was first preached to a sage named “Gautama’.


Keeping relics is a holy custom of Buddhists.

The image of Hamsa, standing for transcendence was perhaps considered as an appropriate form to store the relics of the departed ones. The belief could have been that the departed ones had transcended or attained Nirvana.


Sage- composer, Sri Sadashiva Brahmendrar is said to be a practitioner of Hamsa yoga.
His song, “Sarvam Brahma mayam” concludes like this:-

“Sarvathra sadha Hamsa dhyaanam,
Karthavyambo mukthi nidhaanam”



******************


About Hamsopanishad:-

Hamsopanishad (Hamsa Upanishad) describes the Hamsa Vidya.
The word is aham + saa = hamsaa
It means knowing - ‘I am that/he’.


The one who practices Hamsavidya will know that one is the manifestation of the Supreme.
Hamsa also means swan. Like a swan that knows to separate water and milk from a mixture, the practitioner of Hamsa vidya knows to separate and take only good from the world where bad and good are present. The one who knows this vidya is known as Hamsa Rishi.


The Upanishad says that when the Hamsa rishi moves to higher level, he becomes Paramahamsa. This Upanishad is the discussion between Sanat kumar and Gouthama. This Upanishad is the basis for Hamsa mantra, Naada Brahma upasana, the upasana of the sound from all the musical instruments.


Verse 8 of this Upanishad talks about the 8 faced (directions) Buddhi.
The 8 directions have the same universal relevance in Vaastu mandala too. That will be separately discussed in a future post.



*********************************


Hamsa Upanishad
Translated by K. Narayanasvami Aiyar

http://www.celextel.org/108upanishads/hamsa.html


Om ! That (Brahman) is infinite, and this (universe) is infinite.
The infinite proceeds from the infinite.
(Then) taking the infinitude of the infinite (universe),
It remains as the infinite (Brahman) alone.
Om ! Let there be Peace in me !
Let there be Peace in my environment !
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me !


1. Gautama addressed Sanatkumara thus: “O Lord, thou art the knower of all Dharmas and art well versed in all Shastras, pray tell me the means by which I may obtain a knowledge of Brahma-Vidya.

2.
Sanatkumara replied thus: “Hear, O Gautama, that Tattva as expounded by Parvati after inquiring into all Dharmas and ascertaining Shiva’s opinion.

3.
This treatise on the nature of Hamsa which gives the fruit of bliss and salvation and which is like a treasure to the Yogin, is (a) very mystic (science) and should not be revealed (to the public).

4.
Now we shall explain the true nature of Hamsa and Paramahamsa for the benefit of a Brahmacharin (a seeker after Brahman or celibate), who has his desires under control, is devoted to his guru and always contemplates (as) Hamsa and realise thus:


5. It (Hamsa) is permeating all bodies like fire (or heat) in all kinds of wood or oil in all kinds of gingelly seeds. Having known (It) thus, one does not meet with death.


6.
Having contracted the anus (with the heels pressed against it),
having raised the Vayu (breath) from (Mula) Adhara (Chakra),
having made circuit thrice round Svadhisthana,
having gone to Manipuraka,
having crossed Anahata,
having controlled Prana in Visuddhi and then
having reached Ajna,
one contemplates in Brahmarandhra (in the head)
and having meditated there always ‘I am of three Matras’,
cognises (his Self) and becomes formless.
The Sisna (penis) has two sides (left and right from head to foot).


7.
This is that Paramahamsa (Supreme Hamsa or Higher Self)
having the resplendence of Crores of suns
and by whom all this world is pervaded.


8.
If (this Hamsa which has Buddhi as vehicle) has eight-fold Vritti.
(When it is) in the eastern petal,
there is the inclination (in a person) to virtuous actions;
in the south-eastern petal, there arise sleep, laziness, etc.,
in the southern, there is the inclination to cruelty;
in the south-western, there is the inclination to sins;
in the western, there is the inclination to sensual sport;
in the north-western, there arise the desire of walking and others;
in the northern, there arises the desire of lust;
in the north-eastern, there arises the desire of amassing money;
in the middle (or the inter-spaces between the petals),
there is the indifference to material pleasures.
In the filament (of the lotus), there arises the waking state;
in the pericarp there arises the Svapna (dreaming state);
in the Bija (seed of pericarp), there arises the Sushupti (dreamless sleeping state); when leaving the lotus, there is the Turya (fourth state).


9.
When Hamsa is absorbed in Nada (spiritual sound),
the state beyond the fourth is reached. Nada
(which is at the end of sound and beyond speech and mind)
is like a pure crystal extending from (Mula) Adhara to Brahmarandhra.
It is that which is spoken of as Brahma and Paramatman.


10.
(Here is the performance of Ajapa Gayatri is given):
Now Hamsa is the Rishi;
the metre is Avyakta Gayatri;
Paramahamsa is the Devata (or presiding deity)
‘Ham’ is the Bija;
‘Sa’ is the Sakti;
So’ham is the Kilaka (wedge).


11. 12.
Thus there are six.
There are 21,600 Hamsas (or breaths) in a day and night.
(Salutation to) Surya, Soma, Niranjana (the stainless)
and Nirabhasa (the universeless).


Ajapa mantra. (May) the bodiless and subtle one guide
(or illuminate my understanding).
Vaushat to Agni-Soma.
Then Anganyasas and Karanyasas occur
(or should be performed after the Mantras as they are performed
before the Mantras) in the heart and other (seats).


13.
Having done so, one should contemplate upon Hamsa
as the Atman in his heart.

(the Hamsa japa is
“Hamsa jape viniyOga://
hamsaam
sooryaathmane ankushtaabhyaam namah:/
hamseem sOmaathmane tarjaneebhyaam namah:/ )


14.
Agni and Soma are its wings (right and left sides);
Omkara is its head;
Ukara and Bindu are the three eyes and face respectively;
Rudra and Rudrani (or Rudra’s wife) are the feet Kanthata


15.
(or the realisation of the oneness of Jivatma or Hamsa,
the lower self with Paramatman or Paramahamsa, the Higher Self)
is done in two ways (Samprajnata and Asamprajnata).
After that, Unmani is the end of the Ajapa (Mantra).



16.

Having thus reflected upon Manas by means of This (Hamsa),
one hears Nada after the uttering of this Japa (Mantra) a crore of times.
It (Nada) is (begun to be heard as) of ten kinds.
The first is Chini (like the sound of that word);
the second is Chini-Chini;
the third is the sound of bell;
the fourth is that of conch;
the fifth is that of Tantiri (lute);
the sixth is that sound of Tala (cymbals);
the seventh is that of flute;
the eighth is that of Bheri (drum);
the ninth is that of Mridanga (double drum);
and the tenth is that of clouds (viz., thunder).


17.
He may experience the tenth without the first nine sounds
(through the initiation of a Guru).


18.
In the first stage, his body becomes Chini-Chini;
in the second, there is the (Bhanjana) breaking (or affecting) in the body;
in the third, there is the (Bhedana) piercing;
in the fourth, the head shakes;


19.
in the fifth, the palate produces saliva;
in the sixth, nectar is attained;
in the seventh, the knowledge of the hidden (things in the world) arises; in the eighth, Para-Vak is heard;


20.
in the ninth, the body becomes invisible and the pure divine eye is developed;
in the tenth, he attains Para-Brahman in the presence of (or with) Atman
which is Brahman.


21.
After that, when Manas destroyed,
when it which is the source of Sankalpa and Vikalpa disappears,
owing to the destruction of these two,
and when virtues and sins are burnt away,
then he shines as Sadashiva of the nature of Sakti pervading everywhere,
being effulgence in its very essence, the immaculate,
the eternal, the stainless and the most quiescent Om.
Thus is the teaching of the Vedas; and thus is the Upanishad.”



Om ! That (Brahman) is infinite, and this (universe) is infinite.
The infinite proceeds from the infinite.
(Then) taking the infinitude of the infinite (universe),
It remains as the infinite (Brahman) alone.
Om ! Let there be Peace in me !
Let there be Peace in my environment !
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me !


Here ends the Hamsa Upanishad belonging to the Sukla-Yajur-Veda.



*******************


Related article on Hamsopanishad :-


http://www.scribd.com/doc/9509290/Hamsa-Yoga-The-Elixir-of-Self-RealizationSoham-Sadhana


On Hamsa:-

Hamsa and Hamsadhwani.


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Monday, March 16, 2009

Greatness of Charity in Kali yuga



Yuga dharma varies from yuga to yuga.
"Meditation is the special dharma in the Krita yuga.
Spiritual wisdom in Treta yuga,
Yagna [rituals] in the Dvapara yuga and
Charity in the Kali yuga are the special dharmas for these ages.
Though all the dharmas are to be observed in all ages,
each has a special value in each yuga", says sage Parashara.


People can overcome adverse effects of prarabhda karma in Kali yuga by means of 'daana' or charity.
Charity must be given whole-heartedly.
Charity must be given to a deserving one and the one who is need of it.
It is of 3 types, superior (utthama),
medium (madhyama)
and inferior (athama).


If one goes to the place of a deserving one and gives him what he needs, such charity is superior.
If one gives to the one who is nearby, (like friends and relatives) or to those who are easier to reach because they happen to live nearby, such charity is medium.
If one gives to those who comes to their doorstep asking for help, such charity is inferior.


But any act of charity gives good returns to the giver in Kali yuga.
It not only adds to the punya-account of the giver, but also cancels the dues
that one owes to others due to past bad karma.
Such cancellation of old dues that are carried from previous births can be identified astrologically.
The astrological factors give indications about what exactly to give in charity so that the past dues can be canceled.


To know what to give in charity, one must look at the 9th house in the natal chart.
The sub-lord of the lord of the 9th house indicates the kind of charity in this regard.


If the sub-lord is Jupiter, gift of cows and gift of cloths will help in the cancellation of prarabhda dues.
If the sub-lord is Mercury, gift of books must be done.
If the sub-lord is Venus, gift of money (rupees / gold / silver) and / or gift of food must be done.
If the sub-lord is Mars, gift of blood and / or gift of land will help.
If the sub-lord if sun or moon, gift of eyes will help.
If the sub-lord is moon, gift of food will help.
If the sub-lord is Saturn, physical labour must be given - say by doing some cleaning work in places wherever needed.


While doing these, one must not think that he is doing beacuse his prarabhda dues will be cancelled.
I have only indicated that it is better to know what gifts must be given by a person so that he can write off the dues.
While giving, one must not make calculations. One must put all his mind in the act of giving and wishing to see that it reaches the deserving ones.
One can do all kinds of charity in addition to those given astrologically as above.


Tips from sages :-

Yagnavalkya says :-

Everyday a person should give a gift to a deserving
person. He should give gifts on special occasions as well as when
somebody makes a request. He should do it with devotion and according
to his ability.

Manu
says :-

The good effects of giving gifts is as follows:-

one who gives water gets satisfaction, one who gives food gets great happiness,

one who gives sesame seeds gets good progeny,

one who gives lamp gets good eyesight,

one who gives land gets land,

one who gives gold gets long life,

one who gives house gets high class houses,

one who gives silver gets best silver,

one who gives dhoti goes to the moon,

one who gives a bull gets abundant wealth,

one who gives a cow goes to the sun,

one who gives a cart and a bed gets a beautiful wife,

one who gives refuge gets wealth,
one who gives grains gets permanent good life,

and the man who imparts education [who teaches Veda] goes to Brahmaloka.



Shandilya says :-

All gifts should be given to the man who does not make a
request. But the gift of education, food and a daughter in marriage
should be given only to persons who make requests and who deserve.
Two kinds of men shine over the heaven-

One who gives food at the time of famine and

one who gives away gold and clothes at the time of prosperity.


Devala says :-

It does not matter whether the gift is small or big in value.

It depends on the love and devotion of the man
who gives and it's value is known from the results.

Religious merit is destroyed if a person brags about the yagnas performed by him for
himself or for others and about his reciting the Vedas.

If we praise our own good deeds and regret giving gifts in charity, our
brightness will be diminished.

Therefore do not talk about your good deeds.



Sunday, March 15, 2009

கருணாநிதி அண்ணாச்சி, பகுத்தறிவு என்னாச்சு?











தேர்தல்
வந்தால், தெய்வத்தையும் கண்டு கொள்ளலாம் -
இது 'பகுத்தறிவுப்' பரிணாமம்!


தொகுதி 'விசிட்' போல, இப்பொழுது
'புட்டபர்த்தி' விசிட்!
விரட்டியது கூவம் நாற்றம் என்று சொன்னாலும்,
வந்தது என்னவோ தேர்தல் ஜுரம்.


ஜுரத்துக்கு மருந்து கொடுத்தார் மகான்.
தங்கச் சங்கிலி தந்தார் 'தங்கத் தளபதிக்கு'!

இலவசம் கொடுப்பவர்களுக்கே, 'பாபா'விடமிருந்து இலவசம்!!


முன்பு கொடுத்தார் மோதிரம் இரண்டு!
பெற்றுக் கொண்ட துரை முருகன், 'தூர" முருகன் ஆனார்!

ஆட்டிக் காட்டிய தயாநிதியோ,
தாத்தாவின் தயவையே இழந்தார்!


இந்த முறை தந்தார் தங்கச் சங்கிலி -
நம் சிங்கத் தளபதி,
"சொங்கித்' தளபதி
ஆவதற்கோ ?!!


என்ன வேடிக்கை காட்டப் போகிறாயோ,
இறைவா நீ?


- ஜெ. சா.


********************************



DMK strongman M. K. Stalin on Saturday flew to Puttaparthi near Bengaluru along with his wife to seek the blessings of Satya Sai Baba for success to his party front in the coming Lok Sabha elections, sources said.

Mr Stalin, who is the party treasurer and also the state local administration minister, also discussed the Cooum reclamation project, for which Sai Baba had pledged financial assistance, the sources said.

State PWD minister Durai Murugan accompanied Mr Stalin on his ‘pilgrimage’, which had the approval of his atheist father M. Karunanidhi, the chief minister.

http://www.dc-epaper.com/DC/DCC/2009/03/15/ArticleHtmls/15_03_2009_005_006.shtml?Mode=0#



Related post:-


http://idlyvadai.blogspot.com/2009/03/blog-post_260.html





Friday, March 13, 2009

Are eclipses to be dreaded?





Mr Cho gave some information on eclipses in yesterday's episode in the mega serial "Enge Brahmanan?'



I don't agree with him fully on what he said on 'peedai' as caused by eclipses.




Astrology is the best source to know the importance attached to eclipses.

There is no taboo attached to eclipses and Varahamihira and Bhaskara were vocal about it.

There is no 'peedai' in the meaning of 'torment' connected with eclipses.

Peedai is derived from 'peeditthal'.

This is the Tamil equivalent for 'grahanam' which means 'binding' or 'catching'.

There is no torment caused by this 'peedai' in effect.

This peedai is a description of the eclipse.

But gradually it came to be identified with a non-existent torment as being caused by the eclipse.




One common practice at the time of eclipse is bathing (sarvanga snanam - head to toe bath) and washing the house after the eclipse is over.

Bathing oneself and washing the house are done not to remove this 'peedai'.

They are done because of the belief that pithrus or departed ancestors visit our plane of existence or the houses where pithru tarpan is done at the time of eclipse.



Another practice is to stop eating any food minimum four hours before the eclipse begins. (In olden days this was stretched to more than eight hours)

Food takes four hours to move out of the stomach. This restriction shows that there must not be any food in the stomach at the time of eclipse.

This restriction on food could be because there is likely to be some disturbance to the digestive juices of the stomach caused by the combined attraction of the sun and the moon.


Another reason could be that one must fast at the time of coming of the pithrus during eclipse, as it is done at the time of pithru tarpan or yearly shraddha when the pithrus come to the earthly plane.



Yet another practice in food matters is that of keeping a piece of darbha grass on edible items just before an eclipse. These pieces of darbha grass must be removed after the eclipse. There is a proven property of darbha grass in inhibiting x-rays. (can be read in this link)

http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/02/importance-of-darbha-grass-in-tarpanam.html

We don’t know what kind of radiation is let out during an eclipse. But the practice to keep the darbha on food items does indicate that some sort of radiation reaches the earth and enters the food items. Darbha gives protection from such radiations. That there is some radiation let off during an eclipse can also ascertained from a custom of not using the cooked food prepared before the eclipse. That is, one must not consume the food prepared prior to the eclipse. Food is freshly made after the eclipse for consumption.



Perhaps this radiation is called as ‘peedai’. This is removed by water wash. Bathing after an eclipse and washing the house after an eclipse may be due to this.



The only serious problem with eclipse is in the case of pregnant women.

Throughout the period of pregnancy, the fetus is in some stage of development.

It is vulnerable to outside influences. Such vulnerability is exploited by Vedic society only once, during the 3rd month of the first pregnancy to change the sex of the fetus.

The 'pum' ceremony is found effective in influencing the status of the fetus. This goes to show that any outside force can tamper with the fetus. In this sense, eclipse is viewed as a potential agent to disturb the fetus – at any stage of its development and therefore the pregnant woman is made to hide herself from the direct rays of the sun or moon at the time of eclipse.




This seclusion does not happen in other societies prompting one to question whether they had any problems in their kids after they were born. My answer is that we can not say that their kids did not have any problem attributed to exposure to eclipse. There is another possibility that not all fetuses can be influenced. Seclusion is done only as a precaution to avert any damage to that faculty or part of the body that is developing in the fetus at that moment of eclipse. Nothing stops one from experimenting or analyzing this supposed influence of the eclipse. Since we have seen Sanatanic wisdom as highly scientific in so many other issues, we depend on it in this issue too and continue to recommend seclusion for pregnant women at the time of eclipse.




Apart from this, no seclusion is done for others. Mr Cho seemed to suggest that some diseases could take root due to the exposure to eclipse. Nowhere such a predicament is suggested in texts or in practice.


Eclipses are the time when people used to go to the banks of river or the sea shore to do pithru karma. People should not see the sun directly – obviously to avoid damage to their eyes. That does not mean one should not go out during eclipse.


There are many inscriptions found in South India on what people in those days did on eclipse days. The following link provides the information.


http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1997BASI...25..601S/0000601.000.html


From these it is known that solar eclipses were the time when people were ready sacrifice their lives. Yes, pyre would be lit and the one intending to go to Surya mandala after death, would enter the pyre at the time of Solar eclipse.

Such sacrifices were not done on Lunar eclipses.

They were the time to do charity.

Both the eclipses were special occasions for doing pithru tarpaN and charity.




Astrology recommends some propitiation for those born in those stars influenced by an eclipse. It is because any celestial body in close proximity with sun loses its power in astrological terms. In reality we do find problems in mental faculties (such as thoughts, temper etc) of those born in eclipses or on new moon days. This gives rise to the concept of needing to do some propitiation for those born in stars afflicted by eclipse.



Related posts can be read here:-


http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/08/fear-not-eclipse-blame-astrologers-not.html


http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/08/astrology-behind-eclipses.html






Any sin in killing mosquitoes?


 

We happen to kill many insects like mosquitoes and cockroaches in everyday life.  We also kill many micro organisms unknowingly. Does this kind of killing cause a karma for us? How does sanatana dharma view intentional and unintentional killings in daily life?  This post deals with this issue.


Ahimsa or non-violence is the Supreme dharma according to Sanatana dharma.

However, we are driven to commit some killings unknowingly and inevitably in daily life. Dharma sastras do take cognizance of this factor and has recommended propitiation for such killings.


According to dharma sastras, a family man or gruhastha who plays a pivotal role in running the societal affairs do commit 5 types of sins everyday.

These are committed in his house.

The grushatha becomes responsible for 5 types of killings in
his house when he
(1) burns the firewood for cooking,
(2) grinds flour in the grinding stone,
(3) sweeps the floor,
(4) breaks the grains and
(5) boils water.

(this is to be replaced with all those activities about cooking and food in today's life style)


In all these acts which are regularly done,
many micro organisms and
living things such as insects are killed.
His house becomes a ground for 'Soona' (killing) or a 'slaughter house'.

But in these instances, the killing is inevitable and not deliberately done.

So these can be redressed.

In order to seek redress from these 5 types of unintentional killings,
the gruhastha has been ordained to conduct
the 5 great sacrifices, the "pancha maha yajnas", namely,

Brahma yagyam (upasana on Brahman),
Pitru yagyam (remembering the departed ancestors),
deva yagyam (worshipping devas),
bhootha yagyam (feeding plants and animals) and
manushya yagyam (athithi bhojanam ).


In today's condition athithi bhojanam can be in the form of offer of food to someone who can not afford food.

All these 5 yajnas or acts must be done everyday before one takes his meals.

 

This propitiation is meant only for unintentional killings in the course of cooking or making food. This does not cover the intentional killings such as killing mosquitoes.

In this sense, killing mosquitoes do invite a sin.
The remedy lies in prevention rather than in killing them after they are allowed to attack us.

 

Any killing – for the sake of eating or self gratification attracts a karmic result.

Sanatana dharma does not approve of killing life for food.

Killing is allowed only in extreme condition of deprivation when a person needs to kill something to eat so that his own life will be saved. In this case too, he has to do some propitiation once he comes out of that situation.

 

 

In all other instances of killing, a karmic burden is added.

In the case of non-vegetarians, the karmic burden is shared among three people - the one who kills the animal, the one who sells and the one who eats. Of them, the one who eats the animal gets most part of the karmic burden, for, it was for his sake the animal was killed. If all the three acts are done by the same person, he gets the full effect of this karma.

 

 

To get out of this burden, one must first give up non vegetarian food completely.

Pious acts and taking part in animal care / life-care activities will help in reducing the accumulated karmic burden.

 

 

There is an opinion that doing Sandhyavandhana will absolve one of all sins from such acts. The sandhyavandhana prayaschittham covers all sins and but that does not mean one can go on destroying life (of insects in this context) and seek prayaschittham in sandhya mantras.


The sandhya mantras are meant for long life - or the maximum guaranteed 100 / 120 years.
Long life is gained through freedom from diseases.
The asuras destroyed  by the sandhya- arkhyam are the disease- causing organisms that attack our bodies all the time and
also the sins (paapam) that cause diseases.


What is done in sandhya prayaschittham is protection to one's body and actions.
But the kind of common-place killing of micro life in daily life requires a different prayaschittham.
That is told in panch maha yajnas.

 

 

 

Astrological pointers for travel.



The chapter on Travel in the astrological book, Kalaprakaashika is given in the link below.
The chapter starts on page 139.

http://books.google.co.in/books?id=e_8MaBfTncgC&pg=PP7&lpg=PP7&dq=kalaprakasika+translation&source=web&ots=7096Yp5mnG&sig=_pN0EIEn38u-y2pjz277r4gtheM&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result#PPA148,M1

Interested ones can read this chapter and follow the basics.


I must also say that it is not necessary to follow all the astrological factors for travel in today's life style of frequent business travels.


However I do advice to follow the basics with reference to day's star, thithi and yogini if one is going on an important mission on business or any other auspicious venture.

Same holds good for going on sea voyage or going abroad or going on a pilgrimage.

Here are some basics that must be followed.



The basics include seeing one's tara balam and Chandra balam on the day of beginning the travel.



(1) Tara balam must be there. One must strictly avoid the 1st, 3rd, 5th and 7th star in the 3 rounds of 9 stars starting from one’s birth star.


(2) One must also avoid the 12 stars that are inconducive for travel (arudra, 3 pum stars, barani, krittika, vishaka, kettai, magam, chitthrai, ayilyam and swathi) on the day of starting the journey. But they can be there in further course of the travel. The reason for avoidance is that these stars indicate one-way route. They dont allow return route. This works in giving money (lending), falling sick and going to para-sthaanam. This means money lent on these stars will not be returned. The one falling terribly sick (holds good for those with terminal illnesses) may not recover soon. The one going for a stay in para-sthanam (in those days to in-laws house) will have to stay there and not return as per plan. Today staying in parasthanam is unthinkable. The only probable interpretation is not being able return as per original plan. Like this we have to interpret.


(3)
There must be Chandra balam on the day of starting the journey. From one’s moon sign, the day's moon must be in 1,3,6,7,10 or 11 signs.
Moon should not be afflicted.



(4) The lagna at the time of starting from home must be good with ashtama suddhi. There should be no affliction to this lagna or the 8th from Mars and Rahu. If lagna is afflicted by Mars, there will be troubles on the way. If by Rahu, disappointment in the mission. So one must stick to a blemish-free lagna for starting from the house.


(5) Among months, most astrological texts insist that one must not start a journey in the month of Panguni. Panguni or the solar month of Pisces did not find favour with astrologers of olden times.

Starting the travel in Pisces lagna is also not advised. It was because Pisces is the universal moksha sthaan (leading to other worldly plane), besides being a dual rasi with watery property (conducive for travel) In those days travel was through jungles and inhospitable terrains beset with threats and fears of sorts. There was the problem of getting food on the way in those days. So the probability of overcoming those threats and other problems was uppermost in the minds of the astrologers in those days making them look meticulously into every conceivable threat to life. But today these fears and problems are not there. Movement from one place to another has become a very easy and comfortable one too. So no need to adhere to the maasa (month) restriction.



(6) Most people fear Chandrashtama. But avoidance of Chandrashtama is not generally recommended by texts for starting a travel. However Chandrashtama must be avoided only in Krishna paksha.


(7) In Kalaprakashika, chandra kandakam is mentioned. Starting a travel at a lagna where moon is positioned causes chandra kandakam. It must be avoided.



(8)
Greater emphasis is laid on Navama-thrayam or Thrividha navami - the 3 nines, namely avoiding a journey on the 9th day after the return from a previous travel, avoiding the return from a travel on its ninth day and avoiding starting a travel on a navami thithi.

(9) Vaara shoolai and Yogini must be avoided while starting a journey.

These two are given in Panchanga for all days


Vaara shoolai is connected to the day of the week.
Yogini is connected to thithi..

Yogini is the name of the servant of KaaLi who lords over the directions. Based on the combination of thithi and day, yogini is known.


In panchanga, yogini is given as the name of some direction, bhoomi and akasha.
One must avoid the direction opposite to yogini and also avoid the direction on the right side the yogini.
That is, if yogini is given as east, the opposite direction is west. (The directions are facing each other.) The right side of east is North. So, one must avoid west and north if the yogini is in east.



Finally, if one's dasa-bhukthi is supportive of the mission for which the travel is undertaken, not much ado needs to be made about all these.




Monday, March 9, 2009

Origin of the word “Thoppukkaranam”.



The term ‘ThoppukkaraNam’ (தோப்புக்கரணம்) seems odd with a mix of Tamil and Sanskrit.

Karanam is a Sanskrit term for ear.

Then what is “thOppu” (தோப்பு) ?

It is not a Sanskrit word, nor a Tamil word bearing some connection to ear or the act of Thoppukkaranam.

This made me to look into the probable ways in which this term could have come into usage.



The word ‘thOppu’ looks irrelevant here. It has no connection to ear or hearing or the act of thoppukkaranam.

We can also think of Thoppu, thoppi etc, but they can not be interpreted with the above meanings as there is no authentication from Tamil texts or Tamil lexicon.



When I was searching through the dictionaries and Nigandu, I came across a term ‘thodu’ (தொடு) meaning ‘thOdu’ (தோடு) – the ear stud!

‘Thodu’ is an ornament worn in the ears and sounds similar to ‘தொடி’ (bangle) worn in the hands.



Thodu means ‘thuLaitthal’ (துளைத்தல்). (piercing)

The ear stud is known as ‘thOdu’ because it is worn by making a thuLai (துளை) in the ear.

துளைக்கப்பட்டு அணிவதால் , அது தோடு .



The exact place where the piercing is made is the bottom of the ear lobe that we hold for doing thoppukkaranam.

ThOdu is considered to an auspicious ornament worn in the ear.


Lord Shiva is ‘thOdudaiya seviyan’ (தோடுடைய செவியன்)..



Speaking on what constitutes auspiciousness, Pramacharyal of Kanchi once quoted this expression that even Shiva was seen all the time with the thOdu.

Therefore thOdu should not be removed at any time.

The only time womenfolk remove it is when they take oil bath. But soon after oil bath, they have to wear it.

It is important like the kumkum and mangal sutra that can not be removed.

So said ParamacharyaL.



The Choodamani nigandu meaning of ThOdu is ‘தடாங்கம் ’.

This term is derived from ‘thadaavuthal’ (தடாவுதல்).

Thadaavuthal means curved.

This ornament is a curved one clinging to the ear.




The part of the ear where it is worn is a ‘தொகுதி ’ or a place having some group of internal energy flows (nadi).

I say this because thOdu also means thoguthi (தொகுதி ).

In chapter 6-158 of Silappadhikaram, it is mentioned “தோடு கொள் மருங்கு

Here the thOdu is interpreted as “thoguthi” or group.



The thOdu was worn by all men and women in those days.

The ear piercing was one of the samskaaras done to both boys and girls soon after birth.

The thodu that is worn must be something that gently pulls the ear..



Almost all paintings and statues showing men and women in those days

show elongated ear lobes – made so by wearing ear ornaments.



The ear lobe is pulled by the ornaments.

This is similar to the pulling done manually in ThOppukkaranam.



From all this it is possible to assume that people could have actually meant

‘Thottu’ karanam (தோட்டுக்கரணம் ) – meaning

the part of the ear where the thOdu is worn or

the part of the ear which is pierced (துளைத்தல் )



தோட்டுக்கரணம் could mean holding that part of the ear where the ear ornament or thOdu is worn.

This could have become

தோப்புக்கரணம் in due course.




Related post:-


http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2009/03/thoppukkaranam-scientific-effect-on.html





“Saraswads” – the people of Saraswathi civilization?

 

Yet another article is posted below on the Reality about River Saraswathi that it did exist and the that current excavations at Harappa, Lotha etc were all about the civilization that flourished on its banks.


What interested me most in this article was the information about a community called "Saraswats", who originally inhabited the banks of Saraswathi and later spread to other parts of India. Their descendants are still living today and are known as "Saraswathi Brahmins"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rajapur_Saraswat_Brahmins

 

The existence of a community tracing their origins to Saraswathi civilization is difficult to accept for some people outside India, who can not accept a civilized antiquity to India. They consider that archeology is the one and only source to authenticate the past. One such response refusing to accept the prevalence of "Saraswad" community is given underneath this article.

 

For us in India, the current archeological revelations are a mere addition to what we already know of the Indian past from other sources.

One such source is the vast literature we have on many issues. Of relevance here is Brihad Samhita by Varahamihira who has written on a sage called "Saraswad". This sage was the son of rishi Dadheechi born to the river Saraswathi. Details of the story can be read here.http://www.geocities.com/bhagvatjee/rishi/biographies-A-M/dadheechi.htm

 

As the child was born of Saraswathi, the sage named him "Sarawad". One may dismiss the story of Saraswad as yet another fiction from puranas. But Saraswad is not a fictional character. Varahamihira recalls his contribution to – guess what?  It is about the exploration of underground water! The sage Sarasawad, true to his name, had  possessed the knowledge of water ways, their sources and methods to identify underwater sources. Even the term Saras in Saraswad means pond or lake or any water body. The lotus is known as Sarasija in Sanskrit because it is found in saras.

 

In chapter 54 in Brihad samhita, Varahamihira has detailed about the contributions of two prominent personalities connected with water sources. One is Saraswad and another is Manu.

 

Manu is earlier to Saraswad and had mastered the art of identifying underground water flows. It is to be remembered here that Manu was said to have survived a flood. He relocated to another area after confirming the water availability there. Both Saraswad and Manu have had good knowledge of water sources owing to their connection to water bodies and life around them. Varahamihira says that sage Saraswad had written about the science of exploration of water springs. He also says that Saraswad had learnt it from Manu. The wisdom of Saraswad is well documented by Varahamihira in Brihad samhita.

 

By the time of Varahamihira (he was considered as one of the Navaratnas in the court of King Vikramadhitya – this tell about his antiquity), the science of water sources had become scarcely known. He renewed it in his Samhita by recording the wisdom of Saraswad and Manu. After Varahamihira, this science was completely forgotten.

 

However the very information about Saraswad and his works as quoted by Varahamihira adds legitimacy to the existence of a community whose antecedents can be traced to Saraswathi civilization.

 

Sage Saraswad's link to Manu is a proof of Saraswathi civilization's connectivity to Vedic society that was rooted there since the end of Ice age. Manu's lineage is listed in Valmiki Ramayana and also in the copper plates unearthed in Thiruvalankaadu tracing the origins of Cholas to one Choal varman who came in the lineage of Sibi, whose ancestors diverged after Mandhatha. Sibi belonged to the lineage of the second son after Mandhatha whereas Rama came in the lineage of the eldest son.

http://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/04/tretha-yuga-in-cholan-inscriptions.html

 

Thus goes the antiquity of Indian past in which Saraswathi civilization formed a part in continuity of the pre-existing civilization rooted in Vedic culture.

 

-jayasree

 

*******

 

From

 

http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Mar82009/finearts20090307122633.asp

 

Tale of a mystic river

By

Vimla Patil

 

With the Global Heritage Fund planning to set up the Indus-Saraswati Heritage Centre in association with the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, the mystic River Saraswati has once again become the focus for passionate archeologists and researchers.



"The Indus-Saraswati Civiliation in Mohen-jo-daro, Harappa and Lothal was the earliest urban society with a bustling economy that worked on the principles of democracy and prosperity. It had several flourishing industries and there is little or no evidence of continuous warfare or conquests with other contemporary civilizations in Egypt or Mesopotamia which were built around conquest and wars. It is thus not only the oldest known pre-historic culture of the world, but also attracts international researchers because of its theme of peace and progress," says Kalpana Desai, India director of the Global Heritage Fund based in the US.



The Indus-Saraswati culture was extraordinarily innovative and rich in entrepreneurship and promoted technological excellence in various products — especially jewellery. The processes of cutting precious stones and making intricate jewellery are comparable to modern designs! It traded extensively with faraway lands from its wonderfully built huge ports. Sixty to eighty thousand people with various skills lived in every city which was well designed and had good water supply and drainage systems.

 

But around 4000 years ago, it is believed that this civilization died out without any proof of war or devastation. Researchers' conjecture is that a huge earthquake or tectonic movement of the layers of the earth took place around that time and the River Saraswati changed its course towards the east leaving the rest of its waters to pool into lakes in Gujarat or vanished into the Rann of Kutch and the deserts of Rajasthan. Thus the glorious civilization, with its dependence on water for trade and livelihood, shifted possibly to the fertile plains of the Ganga and Yamuna and became an agricultural rather than industrial community. "The new initiative will form a collection of the coins, the artifacts and the archeological remnants of this cultural miracle will be housed in a world class centre with a museum and a research laboratory in Baroda within the next few years,"  adds Kalpana.


This is not the only initiative by archeologists and researchers to track the ancient basin and intermittent streams and pools of the River Saraswati, which once flowed from the Himalayas to the Gulf of Cambay. The Indian government has set up a huge initiative to track the flow of the river and establish the truth about this magical nerve centre of India's original civilization, a river that has been described as the Goddess of wisdom and learning. Much work has been done with excavations and re-digging extinct water canals as well as satellite tracking of its underground waters and pictures of its remaining streams and pools.



Dr Jagdish Gandhi, a researcher with an unparalleled passion for the Saraswati, has walked through the extinct basin and the streams of the lost river and brought fascinating new facts and nuggets of knowledge into limelight. He says that many highly-cultured communities called Saraswats lived on the banks of the Saraswati and that over the millenniums after it vanished, they scattered all over India — and lived in Bengal, Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Goa.



Even today, they continue to follow their ancient culture and still venerate the lost river as their cultural mother and the Goddess of knowledge, learning and wisdom. Dr Gandhi has travelled to every mountain and valley where remnants of the Saraswati can be seen and has built a huge body of pictures, videos and documents about the river. "Every Indian knows that the River Saraswati is gupt (invisible) — but definitely present in the waters of the Yamuna and joins the Ganga to make the holy Triveni Sangam in Prayag. My research — as that of other scholars — shows that the Saraswati rose in the Yamdhar glacier in the Himalayas, barely five kilometers from the sources of the Yamuna and Ganga."


Saraswati flowed as a beautiful stream in the Doon Valley and then gushed through Uttaranchal, touching Yamunanagar in Himachal Pradesh, Sirsa, Hanumangarh, Suratgarh and Anupgarh in Rajasthan. Passing through the tri-junction of west Rajasthan, Kutch and the eastern border of Pakistan, she entered Gujarat, where she emptied into the Gulf of Cambay at the Kuwarbet Island.


The Indus and the Saraswati served as the major trade routes for the pre-historic cities of Mohen-jo-Daro and Lothal. As is well known, the huge tectonic upheaval which happened around 4000 years ago changed the course of many rivers in India. The earthquake-like calamity started in Kutch and spread through the desert of Rajasthan to Uttar Pradesh and finally to the foothills of the Himalayas. Thus, the Saraswati and the Yamuna changed their courses, with one stream of the Saraswati confluencing with the Yamuna in Dak Patthar in Himachal Pradesh.


"This sangam can be seen even today. I also believe that from the description of the Saraswati in the Rig Veda, the present day Tons could well be the remnant of the river," adds the professor. The scriptures say that Saraswati burst through the mountain boulders with an unimaginable force and cascaded down the slopes. The Tons matches this description accurately.



"I also believe that many present day canals in the heart of India, built for the purpose of irrigation in the river systems, have followed the basin of the dried up Saraswati. Satellite pictures show small streams in this basin and these could be the remaining waters of the lost river. There is reason to believe that the Nal Sarovar, today a popular tourist attraction for its magnificent bird life and pools set in the midst of a variety of rushes and water plants, is formed by the last still waters of the Saraswati."



The Nal Sarovar spreads over an area of 123 sq km. The surrounding swamps and forests attract birds of all species. "More recently, when a devastating earthquake hit Kutch in January 2001, I went to the area and was surprised to find sweet water gushing out of the land in the Rann which is full of salt and sea water. This water was sent for analysis to a government laboratory and found to be more than 5000 years old! Though no conclusion can be drawn, it is proved that Kutch is an earthquake prone area and that there could be sweet water streams from lost rivers or reservoirs lying underground in this otherwise barren area."


Dr Gandhi has studied Indian rivers in great detail and presented reports to the Indian government and the concerned authorities to be alert about the steady decline of India's main rivers like Ganga, Yamuna, Narmada, Godavari, Krishna and Kaveri and to consider planning a network of canals that would utilize the huge quantity of rain water that is presently wasted when it flows into the sea.



"I believe that the Saraswati, though lost today, is the key to the golden age of India's culture. She is the thread which holds together all the beads of our culture and civilization. She offers us a continuous document of our ancient civilization. We should know everything about the Indus-Saraswati civilisation which surpassed all other contemporary ones in the world so many millenniums ago.


"We should be proud of our heritage and help in the re-discovery of a river that must be called the 'Mother of Indian Culture'. No wonder, she is also called the River Dharini, the mother of prosperity!"

 

 

 

*****

 

A post commenting on the above article:-

 

 

From

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Indo-Eurasian_research/message/12225

 

 

 

Those "Democratic" Harappans: A Weekend Post

 

 

 

The occupants of the "Indus-Saraswati Civilization" were the first
democrats, of course. And masters of industry and lovers of "peace
and progress" as well. Oh yes, and the "oldest known prehistoric
culture of the world" as well.

Read all about it in the Sunday Deccan Herald, from Bangalore, hot
off the press.

Indian newspapers are masters of "keep 'em stupid" methods, but
this piece goes beyond the usual:

http://tinyurl.com/b2o86f

Snippet:

> The Indus-Saraswati Civiliation in Mohen-jo-daro, Harappa and
> Lothal was the earliest urban society with a bustling economy that
> worked on the principles of democracy and prosperity. It had
> several flourishing industries and there is little or no evidence
> of continuous warfare or conquests with other contemporary
> civilizations in Egypt or Mesopotamia which were built around
> conquest and wars. It is thus not only the oldest known pre-
> historic culture of the world, but also attracts international
> researchers because of its theme of peace and progress, says
> Kalpana Desai, India director of the Global Heritage Fund based in
> the US.

It gets better (worse) -- read about the "Saraswats":

> Dr Jagdish Gandhi, a researcher with an unparalleled passion for
> the Saraswati, has walked through the extinct basin and the streams
> of the lost river and brought fascinating new facts and nuggets of
> knowledge into limelight. He says that many highly-cultured
> communities called Saraswats lived on the banks of the Saraswati
> and that over the millenniums after it vanished, they scattered all
> over India and lived in Bengal, Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh,
> Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Goa.
>
> Even today, they continue to follow their ancient culture and still
> venerate the lost river as their cultural mother and the Goddess of
> knowledge, learning and wisdom....