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Valentines Day: A Meeting of East and West

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The 14th of February is celebrated as Valentines Day - a day of love

and commitment to eternal devotion. But it is a time of double

significance for many from the Indian Hindu diaspora as it also

marks the celebration of one of the most important days in the Hindu

Calendar, "Maha Shivratri".

 

No other festival could have quite as much significance for

Valentine's Day, as it honours Lord Shiva and his marriage to the

goddess Parvati.

 

"In Hinduism, Shiva is seen as the one who grants all our wishes,"

says Kanti Khanna, who is the co-ordinator of the Brahma Kumaris

centre in Gibraltar. "Shiva Ratri literally means 'the night of

Shiva' and it is seen as a very auspicious time when many people

will follow a strict 24 hour fast."

 

She added that the fast had a deeper meaning than just a physical

denial of food: "The meaning of a true fast is to stop feeding the

mind with negative thoughts. Shiva Ratri is our opportunity to

cleanse the mind of worry, fear, anxiety and sadness. These are

thoughts that can poison the mind."

 

The Brahma Kumaris will be holding a double celebration to cover

Valentines Day and Shiva Ratri, on Saturday 17th February from 10.30

am to 4.00 pm. Among the speakers will be Sister Jaymini, who is one

of the organisation's main teachers in the UK. She has over 25 years

of experience in Raja Yoga meditation, which is the key method that

the Brahma Kumaris use to help clear the mind and regain a sense of

peace and stability.

 

The event will focus on the true meaning of altruistic,

unconditional love from a spiritual perspective - something that is

often overlooked during Valentines Day, although it is a key part of

the meaning behind Shiva Ratri.

 

SOURCE: Panorama, Gibraltar

URL: http://www.panorama.gi/localnews/headlines.php?

action=view_article&article=1939&offset=0

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I N T R O D U C T I O N T O S H A I V I S M

 

Shaivism is practically the oldest spiritual path of the world. In India, Shaivism is millennium old, and the archeological researches from Mohenjo Daro and Harappa revealed a history going back even beyond the calcolitic age.

 

Shiva represents that hypostasis of God that is manifested as Great Savior or Great Master of the ignorant, limited beings. Any sincere, frantic aspiration towards the state of spiritual freedom is addressed in fact to this aspect of God, Shiva the Good and Kind.

 

Any sign of the manifestation of the divine grace, which is indispensable to reaching the state of supreme spiritual freedom is closely connected to Shiva. Therefore, we may even say that Shaivism can be found in any place where a strong, authentic spiritual tradition flourished.

 

In India, there are six main forms of Shaivism, from which three are essential:

1. VIRA-SHAIVA, spread mainly in the central area of India;

2. SHIVA-SIDDHANTA, in the south.

3. ADVAITA-SHIVA, the most pure and elevated form of the Kashmir Shaivism, in the northern India.

 

The tradition of the Kashmir Shaivism was transmitted from master to disciple centuries in a row, according to the method named "from mouth to ear".

 

The first fundamental work of Shaivism, attributed to Vasugupta, the first initiate of this spiritual path, who lived at the end of the VII-th century and the beginning of the IX-th century AD is named Shiva Sutra and is a compilation of aphorisms, completely hermetical for the uninitiated person, and it presents the three cardinal path in reaching spiritual freedom:

 

1. Shambhavopaya, or Shiva's Path

2. Shaktopaya, or Shakti's path or the Path of the Energy

3. Anavopaya or the Path of the limited people

 

Vasugupta mentioned that he is not the author of Shiva-Sutra, but that he found it written on a rock that came out from the water and that went back into the water after he read and memorized the text.

 

The entire written tradition (shastra) of the Shaivism is divided into three parts:

 

1. Agama Shastra - considered as a direct revelation from Shiva (God). It includes works as: Shiva Sutra, Malinivijaya Tantra, Vijnana Bhairava Tantra, etc.

 

2. Spanda Shastra - contains the doctrine of the system. The main work in this category belongs to Vasugupta - Spanda Karika.

 

3. Pratyabhijna Shastra - contains metaphysical works, with a high spiritual level, and is the least accessible to the common reader. From this category the most important works are: Ishvara Pratyabhijna of Utpaladeva and Pratyabhijna Vimarsini, a commentary of the first.

 

There are several important schools of the Shaivism, of which the most elevated belong to the Trika system. The word "trika" means "trinity" in Sanskrit and suggests the idea that in our universe, all things have a threefold nature.

 

We may express this trinity through: Shiva (God), Shakti (His fundamental creative energy) and Anu (individual, the limited projection of the divinity).

 

Trika includes several spiritual schools:

· Krama - in Sanskrit "process", "orderly succession".

 

· Kaula (Kula) - in Sanskrit "community", "family", "totality".

 

· Spanda - term that defines the Supreme Divine Creative Vibration.

 

· Pratyabhijna - term that refers to the direct recognition of the divine essence.

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