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Bhagavan Ramana clarifies Meaning of Dakshinamurthy Hymn

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When T.K. Sundaresa Iyer was a boy of twelve he first visited the Maharshi

on the Hill in 1908. That first meeting bonded him to Bhagavan for the

remainder of his life and, consequently, he was a witness to many marvelous

events in his Guru's presence. Here is one such incident on a holy Sivaratri

night in Sri Ramanasramam, as recorded in his book, At the Feet of

Bhagavan.

 

It was Sivaratri Day. The evening worship at the Mother's shrine was over.

The devotees had their dinner with Sri Bhagavan, who was now on his seat;

the devotees at His feet sitting around him. At 8:00 p.m. one of the sadhus

stood up, did pranam (offered obeisance), and with folded hands prayed:

" Today is the Sivaratri Day; we should be highly blessed by Sri Bhagavan

expounding to us the meaning of the Hymn to Dakshinamurthy (stotra). "

 

Says Bhagavan: " Yes, sit down. " The sadhu sat, and all eagerly looked at Sri

Bhagavan; Sri Bhagavan looked at them. Sri Bhagavan sat in his usual pose,

no, poise. No words, no movement, and all was stillness! He sat still, and

all sat still, waiting. The clock went on striking, nine, ten, eleven,

twelve, one, two and three. Sri Bhagavan sat and they sat. Stillness,

calmness, motionless-not conscious of the body, of space or time. Thus eight

hours passed in Peace, in Silence, in Being, as It is. Thus was the Divine

Reality taught through the speech of Silence by Bhagavan Sri

Ramana-Dakshinamurthy.

 

At the stroke of 4:00 a.m. Sri Bhagavan quietly said: " And now have you

known the essence of the Dakshinamurthy Hymn? " All the devotees stood and

made pranam to the holy form of the Guru in the ecstasy of their Being.

 

Ramana Maharshi: " Language is only a medium for communicating one's thoughts

to another. It is called in only after thoughts arise; other thoughts arise

after the 'I'-thought rises; the 'I'-thought is the root of all

conversation. When one remains without thinking one understands another by

means of the universal language of silence. "

 

Source: Arunachala's Ramana Volume II Book

 

--

à°“à°‚ నమో భగవతే à°¶à±à°°à±€ రమణాయ

à°ªà±à°°à°¶à°¾à°‚తౠజలసూతà±à°°à°‚

à°ªà±à°°à±‡à°®à±‡ శాశà±à°µà°¤à°®à±

 

 

 

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