Friday, July 2, 2021

Lalitaditya Muktapida

 An excellent conqueror, an adept warrior and a gift to Kashmiri civilization. This is the history of Lalitaditya Muktapida.

A good amount of what we know about Lalitaditya comes from the Rajatarangini (‘River of Kings’) composed by Kalhana, a renowned 12th century historian from Kashmir. We know that he ascended the throne of Kashmir (which, in the early 8th century, was being ruled by the Karkota dynasty) as the youngest son of his predecessor, King Durlabhaka. At that time, the relatively small Karkota Empire had sway over what is now Jammu and Kashmir along with parts of modern-day Punjab and Haryana. Lalitaditya’s ascension paved the way for a soon-to-come golden age in Kashmir. A peak of expansion and the birth of a new power on the subcontinent.

During most of his rule, Lalitaditya was known to have embarked on numerous aggressive campaigns. In fact, most of his rule centered around military conquest. Various Chinese, Turkish and Tibetan sources describe him as a very skilled warrior, adept at the art of warfare (however, some Chinese sources also mention that Kashmir was a vassal of the Tang Empire).

Lalitaditya began his conquests by defeating local kings of the subcontinent. He first took King Yashovarman of Kannauj down, allowing him to march further east and south. After subjugating several other kings in the north and east, Lalitaditya returned to Kashmir. According to German historian Hermann Goetz, Lalitaditya may have had sway over major parts of Central Asia and present-day Afghanistan during his rule. This vast landmass Kashmir once called its own only goes to show how great of a conqueror Lalitaditya was.

However, Lalitaditya’s various conquests are not what makes him worthy of a place in India’s heart.

Many people like to think that India was historically a weak nation; a nation that couldn’t stand up for itself under the threat of invasion. I have always believed that when united on a single front, Bharat was impenetrable. And I had reason to believe so.

Lalitaditya is believed to have allied with the then-subjugated King Yashovarman of Kannauj in defending his territory against both the Umayyad/Turkish invaders and the Tibetans at the same time. He fended off all the invasions and ended up employing Turkish mercenaries in his army. What a way to hand it to the invaders, huh?

Under Lalitaditya’s rule, many great architectural masterpieces were also commissioned. According to Kalhana, Lalitaditya built several great cities like Parihasapura (compared to Indra’s own abode in Kalhana’s words), Sunishchita-pura (believed to have been built prior to Lalitaditya’s first conquests) and Parnotsa. According to Kalhana, Lalitaditya also had a shrine built in every town, village, river, sea and island. He would even have images of the deity attendants fill the halls of the shrines, decked out in gold and silver. Many Buddhist shrines were also commissioned during Lalitaditya’s rule (e.g. multiple viharas/stupas in what is now Ushkur, J&K).

But the greatest of all his architectural achievements was none other than the Martand Sun Temple.

The Martand Sun Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to Surya (the chief solar deity in Hinduism). Unfortunately, the temple was once destroyed by Sultan Sikandar Butshikan as a part of his vigorous efforts to convert Kashmiris to Islam. It is upsetting to know that we will never see this temple in all its original glory. One can only imagine what a beautiful temple this must have been in its heyday.


Thursday, June 24, 2021

THE ANCIENT KINGDOM OF KING YAYATI


Yayati was a powerful king who ruled seven islands of the world, whose father was King Nahusa from the Aila dynasty. Yati was the eldest son of Nahusa who became sage and he was succeeded by Nahusa’s second son Yayati. Nahusa reigned Pratishthan/Pratishthanpura, a place near #Prayagraj and married #Ashokasundari (daughter of Shiv-parvati). Pratishthanpura is currently known as Jhunsi (not Jhansi) and was the central capital. The empire was spread till Saraswati River in the west where generations of Purus later settled. Yayati had two queens; Devayani and Sharmistha.  #Devayani gave birth to Yadu and Turvasu, and #Sharmistha gave birth to Druhyu (now known as Druids), Anu and Puru. 

Puru: The central kingdom of Prathisthanpura was given to his youngest son “Puru” as he was the most righteous king. The #southeast kingdom was given to #Druhyu, #south kingdom to his son #Yadu, the #west to his son #Turvasu and #north to his son #Anu. Yayati enthroned his youngest son, Puru, as the emperor of the entire world and the proprietor of all its riches, and he placed all the other sons, who were older than Puru, under Puru's control. [1]  Son of Puru was Janamejaya; his son was Prachinvat; his son was Pravira; his son was Manasyu; his son was Bhayada; his son was Sudyumna; his son was Bahugava; his son was Samyati; his son was Ahamyati; his son was Raudraswa, who had ten sons, Riteyu, Kaksheyu, Sthandileyu, Ghriteyu, Jaleyu, Sthaleyu, Santateyu, Dhaneyu, Vaneyu, and Vrateyu. The son of Riteyu was Rantinara. whose sons were Tansu, Apratiratha, and Dhruva. The son of the second of these was Kanwa, and his son was Medhatithi, from whom the Kanwayana Brahmanas descended. Anila was the son of Tansu, and he had four sons, of whom Dushyanta was the elder. The son of Dushyanta was the emperor #Bharata. In the same lineage was son of Suhotra, whose son was Hastin, who founded the city of #Hastinapura. Further in same lineage was the great king #Prithu, son of king Para. Prithu compels Earth to acknowledge his authority: he levels it: introduces cultivation: erects cities. Earth named after him Prithivi: typified as a cow. In the same lineage after many generation was King #Kuru who gave his name to #Kurukshetra. [7]

#Yadu gave rise to Yadu vansha, and one of his descandents was Lord Krishna. Yadu had four sons, #Sahasrajit, #Kroshti, Nala, and Raghu. SAHASRAJIT was the son of the elder of these, and he had three sons, Haihaya, Venu, and Haya. The son of Haihaya was Dharmanetra; his son was Kunti; his son was Sahanji; his son was Mahishmat; his son was Bhadrasena; his son was Durdama; his son was Dhanaka, who had four sons, Kritaviryya, Kritagni, Kritavarman, and Kritaujas. Kritaviryya's son was Arjuna (not Mahabharat Period). At the expiration of his long reign Krittavirya was killed by Lord Parasurama. [8] Of the sons of this king, the five principal were Sura, Surasena, Vrishana, Madhu, and Jayadhwaja. In the same lineage was Vrisha whose son was Madhu; he had a hundred sons, the chief of whom was Vrishni, and from him the family obtained the name of Vrishni (Krishna was born in Vrishni). From the name of their father, Madhu, they were also called #Madhavas; whilst from the denomination of their common ancestor Yadu, the whole were termed Yadavas.[8] Similarly the lineage of Krosthi, Nala and Raghu goes is defined in Vishnu Puran.

Turvasu: The son of Turvasu was Vahni; his son was Gobanu; his son was Traisamba; his son was Karandhama; his son was Marutta. Marutta had no children, and he therefore adopted Dushyanta, of the family of Puru; by which the line of Turvasu merged into that of Puru. [2]

Druhyu (The #Druids): Druhyus and his descendant are believed to have formed the Twipra Kingdom[3] and Mandhata Kingdom also called Shivapuri or Onkareshwar, is an island in the Narmada river in Khandwa district in Madhya Pradesh [4] The Puranas says from Narmada they moved north-west, and then settled in Gandhara. (VP IV.17) The Druhyus were driven out of the land of the seven rivers by Mandhatr and their next king Ghandara settled in a north-western region which became known as Ghandara. The Pracetas [the sons of Praceta] occupied the northern side of India (Afghanisthan to Kashmir), which was devoid of Vedic civilization, and became kings there. (Bhagavata 9.23.15-16; Visnu 4.17.5; Vayu 99.11-12; Brahmanda 3.74.11-12 and Marsya 48.9., [5]. More recently, some scholars have theorised that the Druhyu could be ancestors of Zoroastrian, Iranian, Greek or European peoples, or more likely, the Celtic Druid class. Particularly, as the Rg Veda describes this proto-Indo European tribe as migrating North. [6]

Anu: The names of Anu(s) and Druhyus are often taken together due to #Anu_Druhyu_Migration [10]. Anu, the fourth son of Yayati, had three sons, Sabhanara, Chakshusha, and Paramekshu. The son of the first was Kalanara; his son was Srinjaya; his son was Puranjaya; his son was Janamejaya; his son was Mahamani; his son was Mahamanas, who had two sons, Usinara and Titikshu. Usinara had five sons, Sivi, Trina, Gara, Krimi, Darvan. Sivi had four sons, Vrishadarbha, Suvira, Kaikeya, and Madra. Titikshu had one son, Ushadratha; his son was Hema; his son was Sutapas; his son was Bali, on whose wife five sons were begotten by Dirghatamas, or #Anga, Banga, Kalinga, Suhma, and Pundra; and their descendants, and the five countries they inhabited, were known by the same names. The son of Anga was Para; whose genealogy continued to Mahabharat period where Satyakarma was Dhritavrata, Satyakarma’s son was Adhiratha, who found #Karna of Mahabharat in a basket. The son of Karna was Vrishasena. These were the Anga kings.

Pratishthana of Jhunsi was the most important locality of Prayagraj, the city of Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati river and it was founded by King Aila and was the capital of Pururavas and other kings of Lunar Dynasty. The place gave the start to the current world’s population of Yadus, Tarvasus-Purus, Druhyus and Anu(s) which migrated all around the world. Once belonging to the rulers of Maurya, Shunga, Kushana and Gupta period, the ancient Pratisthana has lost its identity to the modernity of Jhunsi. Kalidasa too mentions about Pratishthana in his Sanskrit drama Vikramōrvaśīyam. He has given an imaginary account of this palace of Pururavas which was magnificent. Various myths are also associated with this site. An inscription of Trilochanapala, the Pratihara king, was discovered from the site in 1830. There are various legends associated with this place. 



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References & Readings:

[1] http://www.prabhupada.de/Books/SB/09/19.html

[2] http://ancientvoice.wikidot.com/vp:turvasu

[3] A sper Rajmala, the ancient royal chronicle of the Kings of Tripura

[4] http://www.jatland.com/home/Mandhata

[5] http://vedabase.net/sb/9/23/en1

[6] http://www.indiadivine.org/.../1111841-sanskrit-in-english/

[7] http://ancientvoice.wikidot.com/src-vp:vp4-19

[8] Vishnu Puran, Book 4, Chapter 11. [http://ancientvoice.wikidot.com/src-vp:vp4-11]

[9] A History of Travancore by P. Shungoonny Menon. https://archive.org/details/ahistorytravanc00menogoog

[10] https://vamadevananda.wordpress.com/tag/druhyus/


Saturday, October 12, 2019

Why Varna is Not Caste

The Four Varna system of ancient India was originally based upon the idea of an organic social order that remains relevant even today. What is called caste today should not be confused with it.

The Vedas arose approximately about five thousand years ago, when human society was rooted in nature. ( now we can debate about dates of Vedas, but as per Precession and stars position its about 5000 or so yrs, its up to you what you want to follow - thessis of some historian or scientific method).The Vedic Rishis ,or scientists as i like to think, deeply contemplated the processes of nature and the universal consciousness behind it. Out of this basis, they devised Yoga, Vedanta, Ayurveda and the foundations of Indian or Bharatiya civilization.

This Vedic view of life required developing a model of society in harmony with nature, in which humanity’s cultural and spiritual potentials could both unfold. Like other Vedic disciplines, the Vedic approach to the social order was many-sided and multi leveled, yet rooted in an underlying unity. It did not propose one artificial rule or formula for everyone, but aimed to reflect the intricacy, harmony and abundance of all life. It did not seek to impose social unity from above via authority, dogma or institution, but sought to develop it in an organic manner, according to our natural cooperative ventures with one another.

Basis of the Four Varnas


Out of this Vedic contemplation of nature, the Vedic idea of a social order arose as the Four Varna system. The term Varna refers to qualities and inclinations called gunas in later thought. The Four Varna system is first clearly explained in the famous Purusha Sukta of the Rigveda, perhaps humanity’s oldest book. The hymn describes the entire universe in the form of a human being, a Cosmic Person called the “Purusha”. The human social order is based upon it:

1. Brahman or intellectual/spiritual class – deriving from the head of the Cosmic Purusha
2. Rajanya (instead of Kshatriya) or warrior/princely class – from his arms
3. Vaishya or merchant class – from his thighs
4. Shudras or service class – from his feet

These four Varnas represent the qualities of energy that all people naturally possess. They are not separate or conflicting occupations, but part of the same unitary social fabric.

There is in this original Vedic model no outcaste, Dalit or untouchable. Each Varna constitutes a necessary part of the whole and all are mutually interdependent. Each is a manifestation of the same Divine consciousness working in humanity.

In the Vedic view, human society should follow the same organic order as the human body, which mirrors the greater organic order of the universe. Like the human body, human society should be one in nature, but diversified in function. Just as the human body is one organism with different limbs and organs with specialized activities necessary for the health and survival of the whole; so too, human society should have a similar differentiation, with various professions working together for the good of all.

This original Vedic concept of “Varna Dharma” reflects an ecological model of society that is universal. Those who look at Varna in terms of caste oppression have not examined its origins, but only look at later distortions, in which the true Vedic spirit was compromised.

The Vedic social order was meant to instill an intrinsic feeling of unity in each individual with the greater society, and human society with the greater universe. The Varna system was based upon a transcendent ideal of human unity in the Divine, not an effort to give power and domination to one section of society.

Varna as our Human Capacity


This Vedic model tells us that each human being has the capacities of all four Varnas or human types; just as we all share the same type of human body and its different limbs. Each person is potentially a Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudra. We all perform these four roles to some degree. Each person functions as a guide to some people, a protector of others, a provider for others, and does service for yet others. But some degree of specialization also occurs, with individuals often assuming a preponderance of one of these roles for most of their adult lives.

This organic concept of the social order is not one of superiority, much less domination, but reflects a deep appreciation of the interdependence and mutual interaction out of which life operates.

It is not possible to have a society in which each individual can perform all necessary social roles, any more than it is possible to have a body in which each limb can perform all bodily functions. Evolution in society depends upon the differentiation of roles and professions that arise out of the four basic Varnas. Stability in society depends upon recognizing a common human potential behind all social roles and interactions.

To some extent, all human societies reflect this fourfold order. Every society has its head in the form of intellectual and religious leaders. It has its arms or police and military classes. It has its legs or merchant class. It has its feet or those in service occupations. Older societies worldwide, including Europe up through the nineteenth century, had similar social orders of priests, aristocracy, merchants and common people, remnants of which can be found in many countries today.

The Hindu Varna System’s Unique Spiritual and Yogic Orientation


Yet the Vedic view looks beyond all outer social concerns in its examination of human life. The Purusha Sukta begins and ends with a lauding of the Cosmic Person, with the human social order as a secondary topic. It states: “The Purusha is the entire universe, what has been and what will be.” (Purusha evedam sarvam yad bhutam yaccha bhavyam, Rigveda). All beings constitute only one-quarter of the Purusha, with three-quarters remaining immortal in the realm of light beyond (Rigveda). All human beings are manifestations of the same Cosmic Being, which is present in every person, regardless of status of birth. This is the Upanishadic recognition of the Universal Self, Atman or Purusha – the Pure Consciousness that both pervades the entire universe and dwells in the hearts of every creature.

The Hindu Varna system has a unique yogic orientation beyond outward class divisions. The Vedic goal of life is the realization of Cosmic Consciousness within the individual, for which the practice of Yoga and meditation is prescribed – which includes detachment from the outer goals of life. Varna is meant to aid in the individual process of Self-realization and not become an end-in-itself. To reach that Universal Self one must give up identification with any social group.

The goal of a Vedic life, achieved through the practice of Yoga and meditation, requires going beyond worldly desires to a state of inner freedom (Moksha) and union with the Cosmic Person or Purusha. This Hindu social goal of Moksha is very different from western social orders that exist for the fulfillment of worldly desires, emphasizing social, political and material gains. It is also different from the ordinary religious goal of going to heaven, which is based upon a continuity of the ego and human identity, not a realization of the Universal Self within us.

The capitalist model that dominates the world today is such a desire-based materialistic social order that is ignorant of our deeper consciousness. While capitalism provides outer freedom, it follows an external view of reality that blinds us to our inner nature, and gets us caught in the pursuit of enjoyment that inevitably ends in sorrow and death.

Determining Varna


The biggest problem for all social orders is determining the place and aptitude of each individual within it. For the Vedic Varna system, there is the additional complication of determining the spiritual or yogic aptitude, not just outer skills.

The bane of the social order all over the world is that social status has been usually determined by birth to the neglect of all other factors. This has resulted in oppression of individuals and groups simply because of their family of birth, regardless of their actual capacities or merits. This status by birth gained prominence in India long ago, distorting the original Varna system, and causing people to forget its organic and spiritual basis. Our birth family indicates the important karmic foundation of our lives, but it is a place that we start from, not necessarily where we should end up.

One’s family of birth can be an important factor for determining the profession a person naturally belongs to. Obviously, it is more likely that a good musician will arise from a family of musicians, where he can be trained from early childhood, rather than from a non-musical family. Yet many exceptions to this rule exist and birth is often misleading, and by itself not sufficient to determine individual capacity. The child of a great musician may not be good at music at all.

How then do we recognize an individual’s true place in the social order? This requires a proper policy of education and testing, and providing the necessary learning space for each individual to flower, with a degree of healthy competition. Creating a society that honors the aptitude of each individual, but also follows a higher rule of Dharma and the development of consciousness above material impulses, entails a great deal of effort, attention and dedication. It necessitates recognizing great gurus and yogic teachings that can guide our lives beyond mere social, economic and political concerns.

Limitations of Caste in India Today and the Way Forward


Those who belong to the four Varnas in India today may not practice their traditional Varna Dharma. Like everywhere in the world, the business class predominates and social status is largely based upon wealth.

We should not look at India’s current caste makeup as representing the original four Varna system, or its current caste problems as caused by the ancient Varna order. The problems of India’s caste system are the same as those of social inequality everywhere in the world, rooted in ego, money and power, not in the yogic values and dharmic practices.

India’s caste system today consists of various clans and extended families (Jatis), whose members may follow diverse occupations. There are untouchables and outcastes, who still suffer a great deal of oppressive caste discrimination. Caste conflicts today are not limited between Brahmins and lower castes, but occur among many different classes and clans vying for prominence. While the social support that extended family groups provide can be helpful, it becomes harmful, when it stereotypes individuals by family affiliations and creates rigid clan or regional identities that undermine national unity.

To go forward as a country, India should respect the ecological and yogic core of the Varna system, but reject its later distortions, including caste by birth, with human unity and Divine unity, not mere family status and distinction, acting as the foundation of the social order.

We must remember that our consciousness is the same Self or Atman in all. It is only our outer functions and activities that vary. We must learn to honor that Self in all the Varnas. Otherwise, we remain trapped in ego-consciousness and do not understand the deeper teachings.

An enlightened reformulation of the Varna system will produce a new social order different from both what we see in India and from the current western social model. The basis of this new dharmic society must be Karma Yoga – action based upon selfless service and a sense of the unity of all humanity and the entire cosmos. It must allow the individual to flower in his or her true capacity and encourage entrepreneurship at all levels, but with a sense of responsibility for the whole of life. Developing such a new dharmic social order requires deep exploration, profound research, new thinking and innovative insight.

Friday, October 11, 2019

In Brief : Nagas & Akhada System of Hinduism


Akhadas 

Akhada’ is a distorted form of the word ‘akhand’, which means complete. The first akhada was formed by Adi Shankaracharya in the eighth century with the aim of safeguarding the Hindu religion's interests.The Ascetics of all sects, from North Bharat to Godavari River are classified into 13 Sanghas. The 13 Sanghas means 13 Akhadas, the 14 one is the newest one of Transgender Sadhus, but yet to find the name.

Akhadas Can be divided in 3 Major Types -

1.) Shaiv
2.)Vaishnav
3.)Udaseen

The Shaiva (Dashanami) Akhadas -

There are seven such Akhadas.

1. Maha-nirvani
2. Atal
3. Niranjani
4. Anand
5. Juna (Bhairav)
6. Avahan
7. Agni

Adi Shankaracharya classified the united renunciants in the Shaiva sect into 10 groups as below

1. Giri
2. Puri
3. Bharati
4. Tirtha
5. Ban
6. Aranya
7. Parvat
8. Ashram
9. Sagar 
10. Saraswati

These united groups are called ‘Dashanami Akhadas’. These Akhadas are of seven types(as mentioned above). The chief Deity and flag of each Akhada is different. Religious education and training in arms is given in the renunciant Akhadas of the Shaiva sect. Hence, they emit Kshatratej (Radiance of a warrior).

The Shaivite Akharas are led by the intensely religious and scholarly Mahanirvani Akhara and the enormously well-funded Niranjani Akhara (which, in fact, have the first and second places in the bathing schedules that are drawn up at the Kumbh), but the real stars are the sadhus of the Juna (also known as Bhairav) Akhara. The Naga sadhus of the Juna Akhara are famed for their naked state, ash being the only covering they permit themselves.

Vaishnav Akhadas 

There are 3 prominent Akhadas.

1. Digambar 2. Nirmohi 3. Nirvani

(There are 18 sub-Akhadas and khalsas.)

Some disciples of Jagad-guru Shri Ramanandacharya and the disciple of Shri Bhavanandacharya, Shri Balanandaji considered Prabhu Shriramchandra as their Deity of worship. They united all the four Vaishnav religious orders and established three Bairagi (Vaishnav) Akhadas. The Vaishnav Akhadas also practice weapons and study Holy scriptures vigorously. 

Other Vaishnav Akhadas are  –

1. Niralambi 2. Santoshi 3. Mahanirvani 4. Khaki

        The Ascetics of these Akhadas call themselves ‘Bairagi’ or ‘Alakha’. The main duty of these Akhadas is to protect Hindus and their temples from the foreign aggressors.

The Vaishnav (Bairagi) Akharas are led by the Nirmohi Akhara, the Nirvani Akharav and the Digamber Akhara. All three have in course of time fragmented further, with the Nirmohi now boasting nine branches, the Nirvani (not to be confused with the Shaivite Mahanirvani Akhara) being further split into seven sub-branches and the Digamber being split into two.

Udasin Akhadas

There are two such Akhadas.

1. Udasin Panchayati Bada Akhada  2. Udasin Panchayati Naya Akhada

Besides these, Nirmal Akhada of Sikhs is also Udasin Akhada.

The Udasin Akhara, comprising of Sikhs who have converted to Hinduism, yet still venerate the Guru Granth Sahib as their chief religious text. Also forming part of the honour roll of the leading Akharas is the Nirmal — more accurately the Nirmal Panchayati Akhara — who comprise of Sikhs who have not converted to Hinduism,who follow Guru Nanak and was established through the inspiration of their Dharmaguru Guru Gobind Singh,

The Akharas are headed by Acharya Mahamandaleshwars, followed by the Mahamandaleshwars, the Acharyas and the Mahants, with the lay sadhus making up the following. The structure is simple — depending on the overall strength of the Akhara, a certain number of sadhus fall under a Mahant, with a group of Mahants coming under each Mahamandaleshwar and the latter, in turn, reporting to the Acharya Mahamandaleshwar who, as far as that particular Akhara is concerned, is the supreme authority.”

why the Akhadas of all Ascetics are only from North Bharat ?

All the Akhadas coming to the Kumbh Melas are from North Bharat. There is not a single Akhada from South Bharat. The utmost danger of attacks on Hindu Dharma was in North Bharat. Comparatively, South Bharat was calm. As a result, scholars following the Path of Knowledge are found in the South, whereas worshippers following the Path of Devotion are found in North Bharat.

As the Hindu political powers became weak, the Ascetics and renunciants came forward to protect Dharma, so as to repulse the Islamic aggressors who heaped untold miseries on the Hindus. The Naga sect and Dashanami renunciants came together and held spears as a weapon which symbolised strength. They began to give training in gymnastics and using of various weapons such as swords, along with lessons on religious scriptures. Two parts – ‘The weapon-wielding renunciants who preserve the ancient spiritual traditions’ and ‘The weapon-wielding renunciants who fight for the protection of  Dharma’  were  created  among  the  Naga-Dashanami  renunciants. They performed the historic mission of protecting Dharma as given ahead.

A. In the year 1666, Aurangzeb attacked Ascetics and devotees in the Kumbh Mela at Haridwar. The Ascetics gave a fitting reply to the attack. When Maratha soldiers in the Mughal army noticed saffron flags of the Ascetics, they too fought against the Mughals. As a result, the Mughal army was defeated.

B. Innumerable Ascetics laid down their lives and repulsed the attack of Ahmadshah Abdali in 1748 and on Mathura in 1757.

C. The Mughal rule was eliminated from 32 villages in Jhansi under the leadership of Naga Ascetic Rajendragiri in from 1751 to 1753, and he hoisted the flag of Independence in these areas. In the Year 1751, Bangash Afghan chieftain Ahmed Khan of Farrukhabad resorted to violence and loot at Prayag, and abducted four thousand high-caste women. At that time, six thousand Naga Ascetics who had gathered at Triveni Sangam for the Kumbha Parva united and attacked the army of Bangash Afgan chieftain. The Ascetics freed the abducted women and wounded many Afghan soldiers.

D. In the Year 1855, during the Kumbh Mela at Haridwar, Oumanandji (Guru of Swami Dayanand  Saraswati, Founder of Arya Samaj) and His Guru Purnanandji prepared a blue print for the First War of Independence against the British rulers in the Year 1857 and spread the blue print all over Bharat through the medium of Ascetics who had gathered from the entire country. During the Kumbh Mela at Prayag in the year 1858, Nanasaheb Dhundhu-pant, Balasaheb Peshwa, Tatya  Tope, Ajmulla Khan and King Kunvarsingh of Jagadishpur took an oath in the camp of Dashanami Ascetics in the presence of ‘Dast’ Baba to drive the British out of Bharat. Hundreds of Ascetics and Saints were present for the oath-taking ceremony.

        Not only renunciants, but Bairagis too fought with arms many times against aggressors of other religions, and thus performed a major duty in the protection of Dharma. Despite being scholars, the armed Ascetics of Shaiva and Vaishnav Akhadas gave great relief to the unarmed and peace-loving Hindu community. It is a historic fact that the aggression of Islam could be stopped on the border of Sindh due to these Akhadas.

Naga Sadhus are a particular group of Shaivite saints who reside in the Himalayan Caves and come to visit the civilization only during the Kumbh Mela. This is the only event when these ascetic saints can be seen amongst the general Indian population.

Nagas ....

The Naga Sadhus have unique characteristic features drawing inspiration from the God Shiva. They hold tridents crowned with human skulls. Their bodies are smeared in thick ash and they wear heavy coils of matted hair on the head. These saints remain completely naked even during biting cold. They smoke Marijuana through a pipe called a Chillum or Shiv Muli. They use it as a tool to avoid the worldly distraction yet have self-control even in the intoxicated state. But as they advance in spiritual life they renounce intoxication too. The Naga Sadhus renounce the materialistic world and practice celibacy to escape from the cycle of birth and death and to attend salvation. As they belong to the Shaivite sect, they have matted locks of hair and their bodies are covered in ash like God Shiva.

The Naga Sadhus were founded by Dattatreya during ancient times such that the date of the foundation is lost. The ancient period was perhaps an age when humans never stressed the importance of time. Shankaracharya was the first one to organize the Nagas to protect sanatan dharma (Hinduism).

The Naga Sadhus live is called ‘Akharas.’ The member of an ‘Akhara’ should always be ready for an intellectual fight and even for wrestling.

The Naga Sadhus – part of a mysterious and secret society – are worshippers of Lord Shiva. Nag means ‘naked’ and hence they are known as Nag Babas or Warrior-Ascetics. The rarely appear in public and the Kumbh Mela is one of those rare public events.

The Naga Babas are a warrior class and are divided like a regiment in an army. They have no fear of death and enraging them is a sure shot call for trouble. Their attributes are the trident, sword, stick, conch shells, other weapons and musical instruments which reflect their warrior status.

Naga Sadhus – often misunderstood by the western media as part of Indian religious gimmicks – are the epitome of renunciation. They hardly care whether they are misunderstood or called the naked holy men of India or ash-smeared and naked Hindu saints and walk unshaken on the path they have sworn for life.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Basics about Yoga & Tantra


What is Yoga ? Yoga is the manipulation of the body in the service of meditation. Well now the question is Why do these things ....well for "liberation", but are we ready or looking for right kind of Liberation is another question and an altogether different topic ( and a complex one, to say). Here i just wanted to jot down the few basics what i gathered so far about yoga and tantra as a path of liberation. well many can say we don't do it for liberation & Knowledge, but to just get in good shape. I will agree to most of you but you must know the span and possibilities it provides us.
 Our textbooks list six traditionally recognized Hindu philosophical schools, six approaches to the path of knowledge that claim the Vedas as their basis. The dividing lines between the six systems are
1) the texts that they deemed central to the quest for knowledge;
2) their emphasis on the spectrum from the individual’s practice of yoga to the priestly rituals; and
3) their assumption about the relationship between the material world and the immaterial “self”.
 Of the six, three are essentially footnotes to Hinduism’s history.
Another focuses exclusively on yoga, and will be considered later in that context.

    The fifth is the oldest of the six schools, known as Samkhya. It offers a philosophy of dualism; that is, it assumes that one’s liberation comes through the proper distinction between the two eternal orders: physical and spiritual. Neither is the product of a Creator, and indeed, the spiritual Self cannot influence nor is it influenced by the material world. As the material world changes and evolves, the Self can simply watch silently. Samkhya continues to influence Hindus in large measure because Pajantali absorbed its ideas into the Yoga Sutra, the basis of much of the Yoga school already mentioned.

Vedanta, the sixth philosophical school, is the most influential in modern Hinduism. Its central position is “non-duality,” the idea that there cannot be two realities, physical and spiritual. Sankara, the primary voice of Vedanta tradition, developed his thought based heavily on the principal Upanishads, although he also sought to incorporate the Bhagavad-gita. Sankara insisted that Brahman alone was ultimately real, and the fleeting, ever-changing nature of the universe was evidence that it could not be real. The other great Vedanta thinker, Ramanuja agreed that there could not be two realities, but was not willing to deny the physical universe its reality. He taught instead that the universe was the emanation of Brahman.

Now we discuss the meditation. In the path of meditation, one turns inward to realize the Oneness and as i said earlier  that Yoga is the manipulation of our body in the service of meditation or for meditation. It takes many forms, with names like Ashtanga, Hatha, Kriya and Kundalini.
              Ashtanga (a word that means “eight-limbed”) is often referred to as “Raja Yoga,” that is, “the Royal Path.” Its eight limbs include morality, ethics, posture, control of breath, control of the senses, concentration, meditation and absorption (the ultimate goal).
                                           Hatha yoga moves beyond simple sitting with a series of exercises whose purpose is to enable the body to approach the other aspects of Ashtanga with fewer limitations.
                                           Over time, the yogi (as practitioners are known) will come to master his or her body in ways that otherwise might seem impossible. They can come to control heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing – even to the point of seeming cessation of breathing altogether. In time, the unconscious use of energy for maintaining body activity is minimized completely, and the yogi is said to enter psychic realms that may include awareness of others and events far away (the way one twin might sense the need of the other in another city), levitation and the manipulation of physical objects using only the mind.

A lot of us are confused with Yoga & Tantra. What is Tantra? well if we put it in simple words - Yoga in Action is Tantra. The word tantra is derived from two words, tattva and mantra. Tattva means the science of cosmic principles, while mantra refers to the science of mystic sound and vibrations. Tantra, therefore, is the application of cosmic sciences with a view of attaining spiritual ascendancy. To be fair, discussing Tantra under Yoga is something of a bait and switch.
Tantra is an Agama branch of School(Agamas are those which are revelations, while Nigama are the traditions), and hence it is called "srutishakhavisesah," which means it is a branch of the Vedas. The Atharva Veda is considered to be one of the prime tantric scriptures.
                               The two are distinctive paths, but they have interacted deeply throughout the centuries. Meditation techniques from Tantra are now fully incorporated into schools of yoga associated with Raja Yoga. Still, Tantra pushes back against the Vedas and while it now appeals to a significant population in India, it stakes out an approach to which many Hindus object.

Kundalini is an outgrowth of Tantra, The name “Tantra” dates to the 500s C.E., but the practices may predate that by as much as 2000 years. At the heart of Tantra is an emphasis on the feminine, especially as the goddess Devi. As India’s history unfolded under the authority of the Brahmins, the goddess was (they thought) reduced in power, relegated to the status of wife to the gods Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva.

By the time Shankara and Ramanuja offered their own definitions of the relationship between the purely spiritual and unchanging Brahman and the very physical and ever-changing universe, Tantra had already resolved the question in another direction. The writer of the text known as the Visvasara Tantra asserts, "What is here is elsewhere. What is not here is nowhere." In other words, the physical universe is itself the very Brahman that Vedanta thinkers were seeking. The physical is the spiritual, and any attempt to separate the two would simply result in nothing. Pulling all the layers off the onion in order to find an essential onion at its center is absurd. Tantric tradition is the experience of divine bliss through the very tangible experience of the world. There is, however, more than one way to do this.

The practice of Kundalini seeks the unification of feminine and masculine powers within one’s own body. The focus is on the coiled serpent that runs from the base of the spine to the crown of the head. Rather than attempting, as in Raja Yoga, to still all physical activity so as to set the spirit free, Kundalini intentionally seeks to stimulate the sexual energy that resides within us. This is much more complicated than many assume. For most, sexual energy is the driver; for the Kundalini yogi, that energy must be absolutely mastered. Even more challenging is the effort to realize that energy on every level of our selves, becoming conscious on even the cellular level.

For many (probably most) Tantra practitioners, there is no need to go looking for that energy. In other words, sexual energy is explored within the context of individual exercises and meditation. This is usually referred to as “Right-handed Tantra.” “Left-handed Tantra” is, however, the headline grabber in the West. No one is certain just how widespread this practice is, because social context usually requires that it be kept very quiet. But we do know that this too is a centuries-old practice.
                                                 
Left-handed Tantra goes beyond visualization to actual participation in socially-forbidden behaviors. There are five “sacraments” of this tradition: wine, meat, fish, bread, and sex (all start with “M” in Sanskrit). Under the guidance of a guru (no one can pursue this path solo), an initiate prepares for as long as several years to be able to be the master of his or her own mind when the time comes to participate in the sacraments. To partake is to be intensely aware of each of one’s own senses and to focus them to the deeper essence of reality. Food is not simply food, sex is not simply sex.

Tantra says: Existence is an orgasm, an eternal orgasm going on and on and on. It is forever and forever an orgasm, an ecstasy. antra is not about being flamboyantly sexual, or tantalizing a lover to the point of exhaustion. Elements of sexuality do emerge through the tantric experience, but it shouldn’t be the focus. In essence, tantra is a practice for transcending the root, material experience towards an existential state of bliss and harmony. It can be argued that tantra has been referenced since pre-vedic times, and then mentioned for the first time in the Rigveda. Actual practices and formulations of what make up tantra didn’t form until sometime between 600 and 800 AD. Even so, today, it is still rather vague. This vagueness, however, is not in terms of defining tantra, but in the details of what make up tantra. The practice of tantra can comprise of various different methods for which to cultivate this root energy and allow it to filter into other parts of your life. When you think about it in terms of your energy body, or your chakras, your root or base energy is the seat of your fundamental needs. Physically, it’s located in your seat. The next chakra up is your sacral chakra, or the seat of your creation. Sexual energy that stems from these two energy regions, being your basic needs and your creation, can easily be expelled and released from the body through ejaculation. Tantric philosophy claims that this root-base creative energy can be powerfully transformative if you hold it in and allow it to travel up through your other chakras. Mapping it out, this energy can travel through to your solar plexus (the seat of self-knowledge, confidence, and “I Can”), then to your heart (the seat of compassion, understanding, and love), then to your throat (the seat of communication, listening, and expressing creativity), then to your third eye (the seat of your intuition and regulation of your cycles), then finally to the crown of your head (the energy region that allows you to experience oneness and connection with everything).

As you can imagine, the best way for this root and creative energy to be evoked is through sex, hence the strong correlation between tantra and love making. But that’s just where it begins. As this energy is held in the body and not released immediately through ejaculation, it can travel up through the energy body and influence other aspects of your life. Don’t worry though, running away from the finish line is not a requirement of effective tantra work. The experience of cultivating and moving this energy can include a proper finish after some time spent with the practice. An example can be of two lovers engaging in tantric love-making and cultivating this root energy through the technique of tantric touch. This energy has a very strong charge from the physical and sensual experience. Usually, this charge would be diffused quickly upon ejaculation. What tantra aims to do is harness this charge and transfer it through the energy body over a period of a few hours. After a tantric session, something that could happen is a boost in confidence, or an opening of the heart, or a looming creative idea may become clear and ripe with inspiration. The cultivation and pouring this energy into other energy regions of the body is the art of tantra. With that in mind, you might see how the practice of tantra is not just a physical practice between two lovers, but a personal and deeply spiritual practice with yourself. While cultivating that root/creative/sexual energy with your lover can be a beautiful act, it is not what defines tantra.

Here are few points to keep in mind if tantra is something you’d like to further explore:

Enjoy your physical body. Experience it as your home. Without an awareness and love of your physical experience, your cultivation of this root energy may be blocked. Physical yoga practice is a great way to connect with and understand your physical form.

Purify the body, both energetically and physically. Continue to explore yourself, what you’re made of, and how your system operates.

The idea of nonduality. See the material of the body and the other realms of the spirit as holding the same weight. One is not higher or lower than the other. Both can be experienced as one thing, each with its own contribution to the experience of existence.

See sex as a way to appreciate the body and life. Allow the idea of it being a “means to an end,” or of it being an act that leads to ejaculation, to be put aside. Experience sex as a devotion to this union of the physical and energetic bodies.
                                                                              I think i have written much more than what i intended and making it heavy in for Tantra, but like i said its just another path to pursue and i would stop to make it more confusing for others as some times i myself got confused in many of these things. And interesting thing is i even didn't scratched the surface of it.