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Discourses on Soundaryalahari - An Article from The Hindu

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advaitin, thehindu@v... wrote:

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This article is emailed to you by Ram Chandran ( rchandran@c... )

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Source: The Hindu (http://www.hinduonnet.com)

 

Discourses on the Soundaryalahari

 

BHAGAVADPADA SANKARA'S SOUNDARYALAHARI: An exposition by Sri

Chandrasekharendra Saraswati Swamigal of Kanchi Kamakoti Peetam;

Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Kulapati Munshi Marg, Mumbai-400007. Rs.

600.ADI SANKARA Bhagavadpada was perhaps the world's greatest

philosopher mastermind. As a mere child, he displayed quite

astonishing powers of mind so much so that he was hailed as a

child prodigy. He mastered the Vedas and the Sastras with avidity

altogether extraordinary.

 

He became a sanyasin at an unusually young age and traversed the

length and breadth of India on foot, discoursing on the sacred

scriptures, which had yielded to his unusual power of

apprehension, a whole system of Vedanta affirming the relative

unreality of the phenomenal universe and the exclusive Reality of

Para Brahman.

 

He was a great poet and mystic. His poetic vision was sustained

by an amazingly acute imaginative sensibility. His vision

embraced the whole gamut of Hindu deities and other sacred

entities like the rivers Ganga and Yamuna.

 

The hymns to the various deities and other sacred entities have a

transcendent philosophic content, an ineffable affirmation of

vital truth, which takes various forms to delight and transport

the human ear and eye.

 

Among the greatest of these hymns are two - Sivanandalahari and

Soundaryalahari - one evoking Lord Siva and the other the

Universal Mother, Sri Jagadambi, Sarada, Lalitha, Maha

Tripurasundari.

 

These hymns are classics of their kind and they evoke a rapturous

admiration, which thrills and stimulates not merely the poet in

each of us but also the mystic in each one of us. The second work

is a rapturous evocation of Jaganmatha in all Her varied forms

and moods, while the first does the same with reference to Lord

Siva.

 

Needless to say, the hymns have evoked illuminating commentaries.

Soundaryalahari has more than 10 commentaries, which have been

published under the auspices of the Kanchi Kamokoti Sankara

Pitha, edited by Rajarama Sastri and A. Kuppusami Sastri.

 

Two rare commentaries are based on the still incompletely

explored resources of the Royal Library of Nepal. Among the

better known are commentaries by Lakshmidhara, Arunamodini,

Sowbagyavardhini and Dindima.

 

To the impressive body of commentaries on this great hymn, we

have now to add the transcendental exposition of Soundaryalahari

by the great saint, sage and mystic, Sri Chandrasekherandra

Saraswati Swamigal.

 

His 100 years of spiritual ministry on our planet constitute a

glorious chapter in the spiritual history of mankind. Spanning

the whole of the 20th century as he did, he became a fount of

wisdom and compassion to all mankind.

 

In the book under review, we have a world of delight and

aesthetic insight.

 

The sage discourses with effortless ease and grace on the

manifold forms of the Devi, the Divine Consort of Lord Siva,

whose functioning is entirely dependent on Her sakti, the dutiful

wife whose "Tatanka mahima'' kept Siva unharmed by the "Kalakuta"

poison which He had swallowed out of compassion for mankind.

 

The Mahaswamigal dwells lovingly and long, on the sheer beauty of

the Devi, the uncapturable essence of which the Paramacharya

reveals to us with a joyous sense of ilan, such ineffable beauty

becomes Truth, the Advaitic Truth. The Devi and the Lord are Para

Brahman in the Ardanareeswara form.

 

The sage deals with the intriguing reference to "Dravida sisu''

in the poem. He points out very gently that it could hardly be a

reference to the 6th century A.D. saint Gnanasambandar.

 

The reference here is to Sankara himself, who as Lakshmidara

points out as deputising for his father at the family temple to

the Devi.

 

This is further confirmed by a hymn discovered by the scholar,

Dr. C. R. Swaminathan.

 

In concluding his discourses, the Swamiji deals most wonderfully

with the very last "Pradipajwalabi'' verse as a conclusive

manifestation of a modesty truly divine.

 

The gifted translator has provided us with a brief sketch of Sri

Sankara's life, which is most satisfying. We must however point

out that the story of Ubhaya Bharati challenging Sankara on

Kamasutra is utterly baseless and improbable.

 

Would a Sanyasini - she had become that, after her husband

Mandana Misra had taken to sanyasa - have so far deviated from

sheer propriety as to challenge a sanyasin on a topic which

sanyasins should not even dream about?

 

We accord a most hearty welcome to this third instalment of

English translation of the glorious discourses of the great sage

of Kanchi.

 

S.R.

 

Copyrights: 1995 - 2001 The Hindu

 

Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are

expressly

prohibited without the consent of The Hindu

--- End forwarded message ---

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