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" Hindu Dharma " is a book published by Bharatiya Vidya

Bhavan which contains English translation of two volumes of the Tamil

Book " Deivatthin Kural " ; which is a collection of invaluable and

engrossing speeches of Sri Sri Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswathi

MahaSwamiji.

 

http://kamakoti.org/hindudharma/part5/chap33.htm

 

The Ten Upanasids

 

Sankara

Bhagavatpada selected ten out of the numerous Upanisads to

comment upon from the non-dualistic point of view. Ramanuja,

Madhva and others who came after him wrote commentaries on the

same based on their own philosophical points of view. These ten

Upanisads are listed in the following stanza for the names to be

easily remembered.

 

Isa-Kena-Katha-Prasna-Munda-Mandukya-Tittari

 

Aitareyan

ca Chandogyam Brhadranyakam dasa

 

Sankara has followed the same order in his

Bhasya (commentary).

 

" Isa "

is Isavasya Upanisad (Isavasyopanishad). It

occurs towards the end of the Samhita of Sukla-Yajurveda. The

name of this Upanisad is derived from its very first word,

" Isavasya " . The next, " Kena " , is Kenopanisad.

The Isavasyopanisad proclaims that the entire world

is pervaded by Isvara and that we must dedicate all our works to

him and attain the Paramatman.

 

An

elephant made of wood looks real to a child. Grown-ups realise

that, though it resembles an elephant in shape, it is really

wood. To the child the wood is concealed, revealing the elephant;

to the grown-up the animal is hidden revealing the wood.

Similarly, all this world and the five elements are made of the

timber called the Paramatman. We must learn to look upon all this

as the Supreme Godhead.

 

Marattai

maraittadu mamada yanai

 

Marattil

maraindadu mamada yanai

 

Parattai

maraittadu parmudal bhutam

 

Parattil

maraindadu parmudal bhutam

 

Tirumalar

says in this stanza that, because of our being accustomed to

seeing the five elements all the time, we must not forget that

the Paramatman is hidden in them. We must recognise that it is

indeed he who pervades them and learn to see that everything is

instinct with Isvara. Sankara expresses exactly the same idea in

his Bhasya when he speaks of " dantini daru vikare " . I

don't wish to enter into a debate as to who came first, Tirumular

or Sankara. Great men think alike.

 

The

Kenopanisad is also called the Talavakara Upanisad

since it occurs in the Talavakara Brahmana of the Jaimini

Sakha of the Samaveda. This Upanisad contains a story about

the devas. The celestials in their arrogance failed to recognise

the Supreme Being whose crown and feet are unknown. Ambika then

appeared to give instruction in jnana to Indra, the king of the

devas. She explained to him that all our power emanated from the

one Great Power, from the one Mahasakti.

 

The

Acarya has written two types of commentaries for this Upanisad,

the first word by word as in the case of the other Upanisads and

the second sentence by sentence. In his Saundaryalahari

he has the Kenopanisad in mind when he prays to Amba:

" Place your feet on my head, the feet that are held by

Mother Veda. " The Upanisads (Vedanta) are also called

" Veda-siras " , " Sruti-siras " , the

" head " or " crown " of the Vedas - the

Upanisads which are the " end " of the Vedas (Vedanta)

are also their crown. To say that Amba's feet are placed on the

head of Mother Veda means that they are held by the Upanisads. It

is in the Kenopanisad that we see Amba appearing as

Jnanambika (the goddess of jnana). " Samaganapriya " is

one of her names in the Lalitasahasranama (The One

Thousand Names of Lalita): this is in keeping with the fact that

Amba's glory is specially revealed in an Upanisad belonging to

the Samaveda.

 

What

we see is the object and who see it are the subject: the seen is

the object, the seer is the subject. We can see our body as an

object, we can know about it, know whether it is well or ill. It

follows that there is an entity other than it that sees it, the

subject called " we " . That which sees is the Atman. The

subject called the Atman cannot be known by anything else. If it

can be known, it also becomes an object and it would further mean

that there is another entity that sees: and that will be the true

" we " . The Atman that is the true " we " can

only be the subject and never the object. We may keep aside

objects like the body and experience ourselves, the

subject called " we " , but we cannot know the

" we " . " To know " means that there is something

other than ourselves to be known. It would be absurd to regard

the Atman as something other than ourselves. The true

" we " is the Atman, the Self. " Knowing " it

implies that that which knows it( " we " ) is different

from that which is known (the Self). What can be there that is

different in us from our true Self? What is it that is other than

the Self that can know the Self? Nothing. We say

" Atmajnana " which literally means " knowing the

Atman " . But is the phrase, " knowing the Atman " ,

used in the sense of a subject knowing an object? No.

" Atmajnana " means the Self experiencing itself, and

that is how " jnana " or " knowing " is to be

understood. This is the reason why the Kenopanisad says

that " he who says that he knows the Atman does not know

it " . It goes on: " He who says that he does not know

knows. He who thinks that he knows does not know and he who

thinks he does not know knows. "

 

The

Kathopanisad comes next. It occurs in the Katha

Sakha of the Krsna Yajurveda. this Upanisad contains the

teachings imparted by Yama to the brahmacarin Naciketas. It

begins as a story and leads up to the exposition of profound

philosophical truths. The Gita contains quotations from this

Upanisad.

 

What

I said just now about the subject-object relationship is

explained in depth in the concluding part of the Kathopanisad.

How do we remove the ear of grain from the stalk? And how do

we draw the pith from the reed? Similarly, we must draw the

subject that is the Self from the object that is the body, says

the Kathopanishad. " Desire, anger, hatred, fear, all these

appertain to the mind, not to the Self. Hunger, thirst and so on

appertain to the body - they are not 'mine'. " By constant

practice we must learn to reject all such things as do not belong

to the Self by " objectifying them " . If we do so with

concentration, in due course we will be able to overcome the idea

that has taken root in us that the body and the mind constitute

the " we " . We can then exist as the immaculate Self

without the impurities tainting the body and the mind.

 

The

Kathopanisad compares the spiritual exercise of

separating the Self from the body and the mind to that of drawing

off the pith, bright, pure and soft, from the reed. Before you is

the spadix of a plantain. When it wilts do you also droop? Think

of the body as a lump of flesh closer to you than this spadix of

the plantain. This spadix is not the subject that is

" we " , but the object. On the same lines you must become

accustomed to think of the body as an object in relation to the

subject that is the Self. During our life in this world itself -

during the time we seem to exist in our body - we must learn to

treat the body as not " me " , not " mine " . Moksa

or liberation does not necessarily mean ascending to another

world like Kailasa or Vaikuntha. It can be attained here and now.

What is moksa? It is everlasting bliss that comes of being freed

from all burden. He who lives delighting in his Self in this

world itself without any awareness of his body is called a

" jivanmukta " . The supreme goal of the Vedas and Vedanta

is making a man a jivanmukta.

 

Krsna

Paramatman speaks of the same idea in the Gita. He who, while

yet in this world ( " ihaiva " ), controls his desire and

anger before he is released from his body ( " prak

sariravimoksanat " ) - he will remain integrated (in yoga) and

achieve everlasting bliss. " Ihaiva " = " iha

eva " , while yet in this world. If you realise the Self, as

an inner experience, while yet in this world, at the time of your

death you will not be aware that your body is severed from you.

The reason is that even before your death, when you are yet in

this world, the body does not exist for you. So is there any need

for what is called death to destroy it? There is no death for the

man who has absolute realisation of his body being not

" he " (when you mention the body the mind is also

included in it). Where is the question of his dying if he knows

that the body is not " me " (that is " he " )? The

death is only for his body.

 

The

man who has no death thus becomes " amrta "

( " immortal " ). Hymns like the Purusasukta which appear

in the karmakanda of the Vedas also speak of such deathlessness.

This idea recurs throughout the Upanisads.

 

The

body, and the mind that functions through it, are the cause of

sorrow. All religions are agreed that liberation is a state in

which sorrow gives place to everlasting happiness. However,

according to religious traditions other than Advaita

(non-dualism), a man has to go to some other world for such bliss

after his death. Sankara Bhagavatpada establishes that true

liberation can be won in this world itself if one ceases to

identify oneself totally with the body and remains rooted in the

Self.

 

" Tadetat

asariratvam moksakhyam " , so he proclaims in his Sutrabhasya

(1. 1. 4). The word " asariri " is popularly understood

as a voice we hear without knowing its origin (disembodied

voice). It means to be without a body. " Asariratvam " ,

bodylessness (being incorporeal), is a state in which one is not

conscious of the existence of one's body. This is liberation,

says the Acaya. To remain bodyless, disincarnate, does not mean

committing suicide. When we reduce our desires little by little a

stage will be reached when they will be totally rooted out. When

they are thus eradicated, consciousness of the body will

naturally cease too. The Self alone will remain then, shining. To

arrive at such a state is not necessary to voyage to another

world. It is this idea that the Vedas and Vedanta refer to when

they say " Ihaiva, ihaiva " (Here itself, here itself) -

the ideal of liberation here and now.

 

We

have two enemies who prevent us from reaching the state of amrta

(deathlessness): according to the Gita they are desire and anger.

The basis for this is the Chandogya

Upanisad (8. 12. 1) which is a

part of the Sruti - the passage in which " priya apriya "

occurs: the words mean " what one likes and what one

hates " . The first is denoted by desire, of Kama, the second

by anger. The Chandogya Upanisad says that one who has

no body (that is one who is not conscious of his body) is not

affected either by desire or by anger. That is (it says):

" If you wish to be free from the evils of desire and anger

you ought to make ourself without your body (free yourself of our

body) right now when you are yet in this world " .

 

A

jivatman (individual self) is divided into three parts in

association with the ego: " gaunatman " ,

" mithyatman " and mukhyatman " . These are mentioned

in Sankara's commentary on the Brahmasutra.

 

Gauna-mithyatmano'sattve

putradehadi badhanat

 

Sadbrahmatmahamityevam

bodhe karyam katham bhavaet

 

 

-Sutrabhasya, 1. 1. 4

 

It

is part of human nature to believe that one's children and

friends are the same as oneself and that their joys and sorrows

are one's own. That is what is meant by " gaunatman " .

" Gauna " denotes what is ceremonial or what is regarded

as a formality. We know that our children and friends are

different from us and yet we want to believe that they are our

own.

 

The

" I-feeling " in relation to the body which is closer to

us than our children and friends is " mithyatman " .

 

There

is a state in which the pure Self is seen separate from the body

and identified inwardly with the Brahman: it is called

" mukhyatman " .

 

When

the first two - gaunatman and mithyatman - are separated from us

we will be freed from attachments to our children, friends and

the body as well as its senses. The realisation will dawn then

that " I am the Brahman " . Now there will be nothing for

us to " do " . This is the meaning of the Sutrabhasya

passage.

 

Svami

Vivekananda who wanted to rouse the people of India chose a mantra from

the Kathopanisad ( " Arise, awake " , etc) for the

Ramakrsna Mission. This Upanisad is the source of many a popular

quote. For instance, there is the mantra

which states that the Self cannot

be known either by learning or by the strength of one's

intellect. " Know that the Self is the Lord of the chariot,

that the body is the chariot and that the intellect is the

charioteer " , is another.

 

" In

the cavern of the heart the Supreme Being is radiant like a thumb of light. .

.. . . . "

 

Then

there is the mantra we recite at

the time of the " diparadhana rite " ( " Na tatra

suryo bhati. . . " ): " The sun does not shine there, nor

the moon, nor the stars. There is no flash of lightning. Agni too

does not shine there. When he (the Paramatman) shines everything

shines; all his shines by his light. " All our knowledge is

derived from that Great Light. With our limited knowledge we

cannot shed light on that Reality.

 

Later,

the Kathopanisad mentions what Sir Krsna Paramatman says

in the Gita about the cosmic pipal tree, the symbol of

samsara or worldly existence. If all the

desires of the heart are banished a man can become immortal and

realise the Brahman here itself.

 

After

the Kathopanisad comes the Prasnopanisad, the Mundakopanisad

and the Mandukyopanisad, all three being from the

Atharvaveda. " Prasna " means " question " . What

is the origin of the various creatures? Who are the deities that

sustain them? How does life imbue the body? What is the truth

about wakefulness, sleep and the state of dream? What purpose is

served by being devoted to Om? What is the relationship between

the Supreme Godhead and the individual self? These questions are

answered in the Prasnopanisad.

 

" Mundana "

means " tonsure " . Only sannyasins, ascetics with a high

degree of maturity, are qualified to study the Mundakopanisad

- that is how it came to be so called. This Upanisad speaks

of the Aksarabrahman, aksara meaning " imperishable " and also " sound " . We speak

of

" Pancaksara " , " Astaksara " and so

on. The source of all sound in " Pranava " , or

" Omkara " . Pranava is a particularly efficacious means

to attain the Aksarabrahman.

 

One

mantra in the Mundakopanisad

asks us to string the bow of Omkara with the arrow of the Atman

and hit unperturbed the target called the Brahman. Like the arrow

you must be one with the Brahman. It is also in this Upanisad

that the individual self and the Paramatman are compared to two

birds perched on the body that is the pippala tree. The

jivatman (individual self) alone eats the fruit (of karma) and

the Paramtman bird is merely a witness. This is the basis of the

biblical story of Adam (Atman) and Eve (jiva). Adam does not eat

the apple (pippala) but Eve does.

 

The

motto of the Union of India - " Satyameva Jayate " - is

taken from this Upanisad. .

 

There

is also a mantra which

speaks of sannyasins who, after being jivanmuktas in this world,

become " videhamuktas " (liberated without their body).

It is chanted when ascetics are received with honour with a

" purna-kumba " .

 

The

Mundakopanisad speaks of the jnanin thus:

" Different rivers with different names lose their names and

forms in the ocean. Similarly the knower (jnanin) freed from name

and form unites inseparably with the Brahman. "

 

Next

is the Mandukyopanisad. " Manduka " means

" frog " . Why the name " Frog Upanisad " ? One

reason occurs to me: the frog does not have to go step by step.

It can leap from the first to the fourth step. In the Mandukyopanisad

the way is shown to reach the turiya or fourth state from the

state of wakefulness through the states of sleep and dream. By

devoting oneself to (by intense meditation of) Om (that is by

aksara upasana) 2one can in one bound go up to the fourth state.

That perhaps is the reason why this Upanisad is called " Mandukya " .

According to modern research scholars, the Mandukya Upanisad

belonged to a group of people who had the frog as their totem!

(It is also said that the sage associated with the Upanisad is

Varuna who took the form of a frog. )

 

The

text of the Mandukyopanisad is very brief and contains

only twelve mantras. But it has acquired a special place among

seekers because it is packed with meaning. It demonstrates the

oneness of the individual self and the Brahman through the four

feet (padas) of Pranava. There is a famous passage occurring

towards the end of this Upanisad which describes the experience

of the turiya or fourth state in which all the cosmos is

dissolved in " Siva-Advaita " (Sivo' dvaita). Sankara

Bhagavatpada's guru's guru, Gaudapadacarya, has commented on this

Upanisad (Mandukyopanisad-Karika) and Sankara has

written a further commentary on this work.

 

Now

the Taittriya Upanisad. I had referred earlier to the

misunderstanding that developed between Vaisampayana and his

disciple Yajnavalkya. In his anger the teacher asked his student

to eject the Veda he has taught him. Yajnavalkya did as bidden.

Later the sun god taught him the Sukla-Yajurveda which had until

then not been revealed to the world.

 

It

was with the power acquired throught mantras that Yajnavalkya

beceame a gander to throw up the Veda he had first learned from

Vaisampayana. Now that master's other disciples, bidden by him

assumed the form of tittri birds (partridges) and consumed what

had been ejected by Yajnavalkya. Thus this recension of the

Yajurveda came to be called " Taittiriya Sakha " .

The name " Taittiriya " is also applied to the Samhita,

Brahmana and Aranyaka of this sakha. The Taittiriya Upanisad

is part of the Taittiriya Aranyaka and it is perhaps

studied more widely thatn any other Upanisad. Many mantras

employed in rituals are taken from it. There are three part to it

- " Siksavalli " , " Anandavalli " and

" Bhruguvalli " .

 

Sikshavalli

contains matters relating to education rules of the

brahmacaryasrama (the celibate student's stage of life), its

importance, order of Vedic chanting, meditation of Pranava. The

" Avahanti homa " is in Siksavalli. It is performed by the

acarya to ensure that disciples come to learn from him without

any let or hindrance. We know from our own experience that, even

today, as a result of performing this sacrifice, Vedic schools

which were in decay have received a new lease of life with the

admission of many new students.

 

Siksavalli

mentions " Atma-svrajya " that is eternal, a state which treanscends in

meaning the " svarajya " we are familiar with in

politics.

 

" Satyam

vada, dharmam cara " (Speak the truth, do your duty according

to dharma): such exhortations to students are contained in this Upanisad.

Students are urged not to neglect the study of the Vedas at any

time. They are asked to marry and beget children so that Vedic

learning will be kept up from generation to generation.

" Matr-devo bhava, pirt-devo bhava, acarya-devo bhava,

athithi-devo bhava " (Be one to whom your mother is a god; be

one to whom your father is a god; be one to whom your teacher is

a god; be one to whom your guest is a god) - all such mantras are

in this Upanisad. The importance of charity and dharma is

specially stresed here.

 

Earlier

I spoke to you about a " multiplication table " of bliss

in which each successive type of bliss is a hundredfold greater

that the previous one. Anandavalli is the part of the Taittriya

Upanisad in which you see this. The highest form of bliss of

ananda in this " table " is Brahmananda (the blis of

realising the Brahman).

 

Different

sheaths (kosas) of man are mentioned in this Upanisad. The first

is the " annamaya-kosa " (the sheath of food), the flesh

that grows with the intake of food. Inside it is the

" pranamaya-kosa " (the sheath of vital breath). Then

comes the " manomaya-kosa " (the sheath of mind) that

gives rise to thoughts and felings. The fourth is

" vijnanamaya-kosa " (the sheath of understanding). And,

finally, the fifth, the " anandamaya-kosa " (the sheath

of bliss). It is here that the Self dwells in blessedness. Each

sheath is personified as a bird with head, wings, body, belly -

there is a philosophical significance in this. This Upanisad

contains the oft-quoted mantra ( " Yato vaco. . .

" ). It says: " He who knows the bliss of the Brahman,

from which speech and mind turn away unable to grasp it, such a

man does not have to fear anything from anywhere. "

 

" Bhrguvalli "

is the teaching (upadesa) imparted by Varuna to his son Bhrgu.

" Upadesa " here is not to be understood as something

dictated by the guru to his student. Varuna encourages his son to

ascend step by step through his own experiments and experience.

Bhrugu performs austerities and thinks that the sheath of food is

the truth. From this stage he advances gradually through the

sheaths of breath, mind and understanding and arrives at the

truth that is the sheath of bliss. He realises as an experience

that the Atman (the nature of bliss) is the ultimate truth.

 

This

does not mean that the Taittriya Upanisad rejects the

factual world represented by the sheath of food. Whiule being yet

in this world, taking part in its activities, we must become

aware of the supreme truth. For this we must strive to make life

more dharmic, as a means of Atmic advancement. That is why even

those who have attained the sheath of bliss are admonished. :

" Do not speak ill of food. Do not throw it away. Grow plenty

of food " . Even the government has used this mantra for its

grow more food campaign. The Taittriya Upanisad

concludes with the mantra which says: " I am food, I am food,

the one who eats it.

.. . " .

 

The

Aitareya Upanisad forms part of the Aitareya

Aranyaka of the Rgveda. the name is dereived from the fact

that it was the sage Aitareya who made is widely known. A jiva

(individual self) originating in the father, says the Upanisad,

enters the womb of the mother. He is born in this world and goes

through his life of meritorious and sinful actions. Then he is

born again and again in diferent worlds. Only by knowing the

Atman does he find release from the bondage of phenomenal

existence.

 

The

sage called Vamadeva knew about all his previous births when he

was in his mother's womb. He passed through all fortresses and,

like an eagle soaring high in the skies, voyaged seeking

liberation. In this context prajnana, direct perception of the

Atman, is spoken of in high terms. It is not merely that one

attains the Brahman through such jnana (prajnana) - the fact is

such prajnana itself is the Brahman. And this is the mahavakya of

the Rgveda:

" Prajnanam Brahma " .

 

The

Chandyoga and Brhadaranyaka Upanisads are the

last two of the ten major Upanisads and is also the biggest. They

are bigger than all the other eight of the ten put together. The

first is part of the Chandogya Brahmana of the Samaveda.

" Chandogya " means relating to " chandoga " , one

who sings the Saman. The Tamil Tevaram refers to

Paramesvara as " Candogan kan " . The Zoroastrian

scripture called the Zend-Avesta could be treaced back to

" Chandoga-Avesta. "

 

Just

as there are passages in the Gita form the Kathopanisad, so

has the Brahmasutra passages from the Chandogya

Upanisad. In these two Upanisads the teachings of a number

of sages are put together.

 

The

introductory mantras of the Chandogya Upanisad refer to

Omkara as " udgita " and explains how one is to meditate

on it. A number of vidyas are mentioned like " Aksi " ,

" Akasa " , " NMadhu " , " Sandilya " ,

" Prana " , and " Pancagni " . These help in

different ways in knowing the Ultimate Reality. " Dahara

vidya " is the culmination of all these: it means perceiving

the Supreme Being manifested as the transcadent outward sky in

the tiny space in our heart. A number of truths are expounded in

this Upanisad in the form of stories.

 

From

the story of Raikva we learn about the strange outward behaviour

of one who has realised the Brahman. There is then the famous

story of Satyakama who does not know his gotra, but is accepted

as a pupil by Gautama. The guru thinks that Satyakama must be a

true Brahmin since he does not hide the truth about him. Before

the pupil is taught he is made to undergo many tests. The guru's

wife, out of concern for the pupil, speaks to her husband for

him. When we read such stories we have before us a true picture

of gurukulavasa in ancient times.

 

In

character Svetaketu was the opposite of Satyakama and was proud

of his learning. His father Uddalaka Aruni teaches him to be

humble and in the end imparts to him the mantra, " Tat tvam

asi " (That thou art), the mantra which proclaims the

non-difference between the individual self and the Brahman.

" Tat tvam asi " is the mahavakya of the Samaveda.

 

Unlike

Svetaketu, the sage Narada, who had mastered all branches of

learning, was humble and full of regret that he had remained

ignorant of the Atman. He finds enlightenment in the teachings of

Sanatkumara which are included in the Chandogya Upanisad. In

the Taittriya Upanisad Bhrgu is taught to go step by

step to obtain higher knowledge [from the sheath of food to the

sheath of bliss]. Here Sanatkumara teaches Narada to go from

purity of form to purity of the inner organs

( " antah-karanas " ). That is the time when all ties will

snap and bliss reached.

 

Another

story illustrates how different students benefit differently from

the same teaching according to the degree of maturity of each.

Prajapati gives the same instruction to Indra, the king of the

celestials, and to Virocana, the king of the asuras. This is what

Prajapati teaches him: " He who sees with his eyes, he is the

Self " . He subtly hints at the object that is behind the eye,

knowledge, etc, and that is the basis of all these. Without

understanding this, the two se themselves in a mirror and take

the reflection to be the Self. You see only the body in the

mirror and Virocana comes to the conclusion that that is the

Self. It is from this idea that atheism, materialism and the

Lokayata system developed. Although Indra also took this kind of

wrong view from his reflection, eventually [similar to the story

in the Taittriya Upanisad of Bhrgu advancing from the

sheath of food to the sheath of bliss] he goes in gradual stages

from the gross body to the subtle body of sleep and later to the

turiya or fourth state mentioned in the Mandukyopanisad -

the turiya is the Self.

 

The

Brhadaranyaka Upanisad comes last. " Brhad "

means " great " . It is indeed a great Upanisad, Brhadaranyaka.

Generally, an Upanisad comes towards the close of the

Aranyaka of the sakha concerned. While the Isavasyopanisad

occurs in the Samhita of the Sukla-Yajurveda, the Brhar\daranyaka

Upanisad is in the Aranyaka of the same Veda: as a matter of

fact the entire Aranyaka constitutes this Upanisad. There are two

recensions of it: the Madhyandina Sakha and the Kanva

Sakha. Sankara has chosen the latter for his commentary.

 

This

Upanisad consists of six chapters. The first two are the

" Madhukanda " , the next two are the

" Muni-kanda " in the name of Yajnavalkya, and the last

two are the " Khila-kanda " . NMadhu may be understood as

that which is full of the flavour of bliss. If we have the

realisation that all this world is a personification of the

Parabrahman it would be sweet like nectar to all cretures - and

the creatures would be like honey to

the world. The Atman then would be

nectar for all. This idea is expressed in the Madhu-kanda.

 

It

is in this Upanisad that the celebrated statement occurs that the

Atman is " neither this, nor this " ( " Neti,

neti " ). The Self cannot be

described in any way. " Na-iti " - that is

" Neti " . It is through this process of " Neti,

neti " that you give up everything - the cosmos, the body,

the mind, everything - to realise the Self. After knowing the

Atman in this manner you will develop the attitude that the

phenomenal world and all its creatures are made up the same

essence of bliss.

 

The

first kanda contains the teachings received by the Brahmin Gargya

from the Ksatriya Ajatasatru. This shows that kings like

Ajatasatru and Janaka were knowers of the Brahman. We also learn

that women too took part on an equal footing with the sages in

the debates in royal assemblies on the nature of the Brahman.

There was, for instance, Gargi in Janaka's assembly of the

learned. The Brhadaranyaka Upanisad also tells us about

Yajnavalkya's two wives: of the two Katyayani was like any

housewife and the second, Maitreyi, was a Brahmavadini (one who

inquires into the Brahman and speaks about it). The instruction

given by Yajnavalkya to Maitreyi occurs both in the Madhukanda

and the Muni-kanda. Here we have a beautiful combination of

story-telling and philosophical disquisition.

 

When

Yajnavalkya is on the point of renouncing the world, he divides

his wealth between his two wives. Katyayani is contented and does

not ask for anything more. Maitreyi, on the other hand, is not

worried about about her share. she tells her husband: " You

are leaving your home, aren't you, because you wil find greater

happiness in sannyasa that from all this wealth? What is that

happiness? Won't you speak about it? "

 

Yajnavalkya

replies: " You have always ben dear to me, Maitreyi. Now, by

asking this question, you have endeared yourself to me more.

" He then proceeds to find out what is meant by the idea of

someone being dear to someone else. His is indeed an inquiry into

the concept of love and affection. He says: " A wife is dear

to her husband not for the sake of his wife but for the sake of

his Self. So is a husband dear to his wife for the sake foor the

sake of her Self. The children too are dear to us not for their

sake but for the sake of the Self. So is the case with our love

of wealth. We have affection of a person or an entity because it

pleases our Self. It means that this Self itself is of the nature

of affection, of love, of joy. It is to know this Self

independently of everything else that we forsake all those who

are dear to us and take to sannyasa. When we know It, the Self or

the Atman, we will realise that there is nothing other than It.

Everything will become dear to us. To begin with, when we had

affection for certain people or certain things, we had dislike

for certain other people and certain other things. If we cease to

be attached to those people or to those things that we loved and

realise the Atman, then we will become aware that there is

nothing other thatn the Atman. Then, again, we will dislike none

and will love all without any distinction. "

 

Before

renouncing the world, Yajnavalkya held disputations on the

Ultimate Reality with Kahola, Uddalaka Aruni and Gargi in

Janaka's royal assembly. These debates, together with the

teachings he imparted to Janaka, are included in Muni-kanda. The

concept of Antaryamin (Inner Controller) belongs to Visistadvaita

(qualified non-dualism). The basis for this is to be found in

Yajnavalkya's answer to a question put to him by Uddalaka Aruni.

 

According

to non-dualism all this phenomenal world in Maya. The idea behind

the concept of Antaryamin is that if the world is the body, the

Paramatman dwells in it as its very life. Though Yajnavalkya

accepts this concept on a certain level, at all other times his

views are entirely in consonance with non-dualism. In his

concluding words to Maitreyi, the supreme Advaitin that he is,

Yajnavalkya remarks: " Even if you be little dualistic in

your outlook, it means that you look at something other than

yourself, smell, taste, touch and hear something other than

yourself. But when you have realised the Self experientially, all

these 'other things' cease to exist. That which is the source of

seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling, and so on - how can you see,

hear, taste, smell That? " Expounding non-dualism Yajnavalkya

tells Janaka (4. 3. 32), " Like

water mingled with water all become one in the Paramatman. "

" He who is freed from all desire existes as the Brahman even

when he is in the world (with his body) and when he dies is united with the

Brahmin.

 

The

two concluding chapters that form the Khila-kanda of the Upanisad

bring together scattered ideas. (If a thing is broken or divided

it is called " khila " . That which is whole and unbroken

is " akhila " . )

 

A

story in the Khila-kanda illustrates how the same teaching is

interpreted differently according to the degree of maturity of

the aspirants. The devas (the celestial race), humans and the

demons (asuras) seek instruction from Prajapati (the Creator).

Prajapati utters just one syllable, " Da " , as his

teaching. The devas who do not possess enough control over their

senses take it to mean " damyata " ( " control your

senses " ). Humans who are possessive understand the syllable

as " datta " ( " give " , " be

charitable " ). The asuras who are cruel by nature take the

same as " dayadhvam " (be compassionate).

 

A

mantra occurring in the concluding part of the Brhadranyaka

Upanisad seems to me not only extremely interesting but also

comforting. What does it say? " If a man suffers from fever

it must be taken that he is practising austerities (tapas). If he

recognises illnesses and afflictions to be tapas, he passes on to

a very high world " (5. 11. 1). [Etadvai paramam tapo

yadvyahitastapyate paramam haiva lokam jayati ya evam veda. . . ]

 

What

is the meaning of this statement and what is interesting about

it? And how is it comforting?

 

By

observing vows, by fasting, by living an austere life and by

suffering physically, we will become less attached to the body,

and the sins accumulated in our past lives will diminish. Tapas

is a way of expiating the sins of past lives. The offences

committed with our body are wiped away by the very body when it

undergoes suffering (that is by bodily tapas).

 

That

is why the Puranas speak of great men having performed

austerities. Ambika herself - she is the mother of the universe -

performs tapas. Not heeding the word of her husband Paramesvara,

she [as Sati] attends the sacrifice conducted by her father

Daksa. Because of the humiliation she suffers there she immolates

herself in the sacrificial fire and is reborn as the daughter of

Himavan. As atonement for disobeying her husband's command during

her past life and for the purpose of being united with him again,

she performs severe austerities. Kalidasa gives a beautiful and

moving account of this. How bitterly cold it will be during the

winter in the Himalaya. But in that season Parvati (that is

Ambika) performs austerities seated on icy rocks or standing on

frozen lakes. In the summer, when the sun is beating down

harshly, she does tapas with fires burning all round her.

Performing austerities with the fires on four sides and with the

sun burning above is called " pancagni-tapas " .

 

Many

great men have performed such severe austerities.

 

How

about ourselves? If they, the great men, were guilty of one or

two lapses, we cannot even keep count of our sins. But we have

neither the will nor the strength to perform a fraction of the

austerities that they went through. How then are we going to wipe

away our sins?

 

It

is when we are troubled by such thoughts that we find the

foregoing Upanisadic mantra comforting. Since ours is not a

disciplined life we keep suffering from one ailment or another.

The Upanisadic mantra seems to be directed to us: " You must

learn to think that the affliction you are suffering from is

tapas. If you do so you will be freed from your sins and

liberated. " Though the message is not given in such plain

terms, such is the meaning of the mantra.

 

We

often speak of " jvara-tapa " or " tapa-jvara "

(literally " hot fever " ). " Tapa " means

" boiling " or " cooking " . The root is

" tap " to burn. " Tapana " is one of the names

of the sun. Even if we do not perform the austerities mentioned

in the sastras, we must take it that the fever contracted by us

is the tapas Isvara has awarded us to become free from our sins.

 

When

we are down with malaria we keep shivering in spite of covering

ourselves with blankets. Our attitude now must be to suffer the

affliction in lieu of the tapas we ought to perform in the winter

months remaining on snow. Do you feel that your body is being

roasted when your are suffering from typhoid or pneumonia and a

running temperature of 105° or 106°F? You must comfort

yourself, believing that God has given you the fever as a

substitute for the pancagni-tapas you are unable to perform.

 

You

will in due course learn to take such an attitude and develop the

strength to suffere any illness. Instead of sending for the

doctor or rushing to the medicine chest you may take it easy,

telling yourself, " Let the illness take its course " .

When we happen to fall ill as a means of reducing our burden of

sin, is it right to seek a cure for it? Also we save on doctor's

fees, medicine, etc. The gain bigger that all the rest in that of

learning to take the high attitude of treating suffering as not

suffering. This is called " titiksa " .

 

All

this is briefly indicated in the Upanisadic mantra. When we keep

lamenting that we are unable to expiate our sins - when we are

unable to perform tapas - we may take comfort from the fact that

when we suffer from a disease it is God's way of making us

perform austerities.

 

In

the last chapter of the Brhadranyaka Upanisad we have

strong proof of the fact that Vedanta is not opposed to the

karmakanda. Here are mentioned the pancagni-vidya and the rites

to be performed to beget virtuous children (supraja).

JAYA JAYA SANKARA HARA HARA SANKARA

 

Thwameva Maathaa Cha Pithaa Thwameva Thwameva Bhandhuscha Sakhaa Thwameva

Thwameva Vidhyaa Dhravinam Thwameva Thwameva Sarvam Mama Dheva Dheva.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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