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----- Forwarded Message ----Usha Raghavan <usharvUsha Raghavan <usharvTuesday, 4 August, 2009 14:14:39Palani - Bogar - Chinese Link

http://palani.org/bhogar_biography.htm

Siddha BhoganÄthar: An Oceanic Life Story

Bhogar MahÄrshi

Bhogar receiving instructions from his teacher, KÄlÄngi NÄthar

Bhogar, traversing the sky, observes faraway places like Arabia, Rome, and China.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bhogar fashioning Lord DandÄyudhapÄni vigraha.

 

 

 

 

Bhogar worshipping Lord DandÄyudhapÄni.Click on pictures at right to visit: The Life of Bhogar in Pictures. BhoganÄthar or Bhogar, the JñÄna Guru of Babaji, in the poem “Bhogar JñÄna Sagarama†(Bhogar’s Oceanic Life Story, consisting of 557 verses, verse number 2, lines number 3 and 4), identifies himself as a Tamilian, (Ramaiah, 1979; 1982. p. 17).[1] In the same verse he states that the great Siddha KÄlangi NÄthar initiated him in JñÄna Yoga (supreme self-knowledge).KÄlangi NÄthar was born in KaÅ›i (Benares). India. He attained the immortal state of swarÅ«pa samÄdhi at the

ago of 315, and then made China the center of his teaching activities. He belonged to the ancient tradition of Nava (nine) NÄth sadhus (holy ascetics), tracing their tradition to Lord Shiva. There are nine important shrines associated with this tradition, five of which are in the HimÄlaya Mountains: AmarnÄth (where Shiva first taught Kriya Yoga to his Shakti partner, Parvati Devi), KedarnÄth, BadrinÄth (India), KailÄsanÄth, (Tibet) and PaÅ›upatinÄth (Nepal).Meanwhile, BhoganÄthar practiced Kundalini Yoga in four stages. The first three stages arc described in a later chapter on “The Psychophysiology of Kriya Kundalini Pranayamaâ€. BhoganÄthar chose the Palani Malai (mountain) in what is now southwestern Tamil Nadu as the site for intensive yogic practice (tapas) for the final stage. He attained swarÅ«pa samÄdhi at Palani, through the grace of Lord Muruga, or the eternal youth, “KumÄra SwÄmiâ€. The

KumÄraswÄmi temple at Palani became the epicenter of his activi­ties. He visited many countries astrally, and physically and through transmigration. In one of his songs BhoganÄthar claims to have flown to China at one point in a sort of airplane which he built: he held discussions with Chinese Siddhas before returning to India (Kailasapathy, 1969, p. 197-211). His visit to South America has been confirmed by accounts left by the Muycas of Chile:

“Bocha, who gave laws to Muycas, was a white, bearded man, wearing long robes, who regulated the calendar, established festivals, and vanished in time like others (other remarkable teachers who had come across the Pacific according to numerous legends of Incas, Aztecs and Mayans).†(Lal 1965, p. 20).[2] He convened a meeting of many siddhas just before the beginning of the present Kali Yuga, in 3102 BC, to determine the best way for humanity to progress along the spiritual path during the coming period of darkness. The Yoga of love and devotion, Bhakti Yoga, was chosen as being the best means. BhoganÄthar was entrusted by the siddhas with the task of defining the rituals for the worship of their favorite deity “Palani Ä€ndavarâ€, the Lord (Muruga) of Palani.Many

rituals that center around the bathing (abhishekam) of an idol of Palani Andavar with many substances, including pancha­amirtam consisting of five fruits and honey, were developed by him and continue to be followed to this day. The idol had to be created from a substance that would last throughout Kali Yuga. The most resilient of known substances, granite, was known to wear and crack after thousands of such rituals. So BhoganÄthar fashioned it out of nine secret herbal and chemical ingredients, nava pashanam, which made it harder than granite. Eight of the ingredients were combined in a mold of the idol. The ninth, was added as a catalyst, to solidify it.In recent times the scientists who attempted to determine the composition of a small sample of the material of the idol, were startled to find that it immediately sublimated when heated. Thus its composition remains a mystery to date. The traces of the substance are

contained in the ritual offerings in which it is bathed. When these are returned and consumed by the devotee, their spiritual progress is enhanced.

A mission to China and transmigrationKÄlangi NÄthar decided to enter into samÄdhi in seclusion for 3,000 years. He summoned BhoganÄthar telepathically from Tamil Nadu to China to take over his mission. BhoganÄthar traveled by sea, following the trade route. In China, he was instructed by KÄlangi NÄthar in all aspects of the Siddha sciences. These included the preparation and use of the kaya kalpa herbal formulae to promote longevity. After KÄlangi NÄthar entered into trance, BhoganÄthar assumed his teaching mission to the Chinese. To facilitate this, he transmigrated his vital body into the physical body of a deceased Chinese man, and there­after went by the name “Bo-Yangâ€. “Bo†is a derivation of the word “Bhogam†which means bliss, material and spiritual. This bliss, for which he was named “Bo-Yang†is experienced when the Kundalini shakti, the feminine primordial yin energy awakens, passes up to the crown

of the head, the seat of Shiva, the masculine yang pole, in the Sahasra cakra at the summit of the head and unites with it. The result of this integration of feminine and masculine parts of the being, or union (“Yogaâ€) of Shakti and Shiva, Yin and Yang, is Satchidananda: Absolute Existence-Consciousness-Bliss.

Transformation of his physical bodyBhoganÄthar decided to overcome the limitations of the Chinese body, with its degenerative tendencies, and prolong its life through the use of the kaya kalpa herbs long enough for the effect of Kriya Kundalini Pranayama and related yogic techniques to bring swarÅ«pa samÄdhi. In his poem Bhogar JñÄna Sutra 8, verse number 4, he describes vividly what happened after carefully preparing a tablet using thirty five different herbs:With great care and patience I made the (kaya kalpa) tablet and then swallowed it:Not waiting for fools and skeptics who would not appreciate its hidden meaning and importance.Steadily I lived in the land of the parangis (foreigners) For twelve thousand years, my fellow!I lived for a long time and fed on the vital ojas (sublimated spiritual energy)With the ojas vindhu I received the name, Bhogar:The body developed the golden color of the

pill:Now I am living in a world of gold(based upon translation by Yogi S.A.A. Ramaiah, 1979, p. 40-42).He chose three of his best disciples and his faithful dog, and took thorn to the top of a mountain. After first offering a tablet to the dog, the dog immediately fell over dead. He next offered it to his leading disciple, Yu, who also immediately fell over dead. After offering it to the two remaining disciples, who by this time were extremely nervous, and who promptly hid their tablets rather than swallow them, BhoganÄthar swallowed the remaining tablets and also fell over unconscious. Crying with grief, the two remaining disciples went down the mountain to get material to bury the bodies. When the disciples returned to the spot where the bodies had been left lying, all that was found was a note, in BhoganÄthar’s handwriting, which said:

The kaya kalpa tablets are working. After awakening from their trance I restored faithful Yu and the dog. You have missed your chance for immortality. (Ibid.)This kaya kalpa enabled BhoganÄthar to transform the Chinese body over a period of 12,000 years, during which time it developed a lustrous golden color. (The physiological transformation to the state of swarÅ«pa samÄdhi was, however, completed only later, at Palani in the final phases of Kriya Kundalini Yoga and related practices. These phases will be described in chapter 11. BhoganÄthar’s own graphic description is recorded in the poem at the end of this chapter Initiation into SamÄdhi.)In this poem Sutras of Wisdom — 8. he sings prophetically of the taking up of the practice of pranayama in modern times by millions of persons who would otherwise have succumbed to drug abuse:

Will chant the unifying verse of the Vedanta.Glory to the holy feet of Uma (the Divine Mother of the Universe. Shakti), Will instruct you in the knowledge of the sciences, ranging from hypnotism to alchemy (kaya kalpa).Without the need for pills or tablets, the great scientific art of pranayama breathing, will be taught and recognized By millions of common people and chaste young women. Verse no. I (based upon translation by Yogi S.A.A. Ramaiah, 1982, p. 40).

Becomes known as Lao-Tzu, founder of TaoismAfter this incident with the Chinese disciples, Bo-Yang became also known as Lao-Tzu, and was accessible for nearly 200 years, and trained hundreds of Chinese disciples in Tantric Yoga practices, wherein semen and sexual energies are conserved and sublimated into spiritual energies. The advanced techniques which he taught involve raising the energies from the mÅ«ladhÄra cakra corresponding to the perineum up to the sahasrara cakra during sexual intercourse with a spiritually minded partner, resulting in sublimated energy, tejas. manifesting throughout all the cells of the body. In the fifth century B.C., Confucius met Lao-Tzu Bo-Yang and afterwards said of him:I know a bird can fly, a fish can swim, and an animal can run. For that which runs, a net can be fashioned; for that which swims, a line can be strung. But the ascent of a Dragon on the wind into heaven is something which

is beyond my knowledge. Today I have met Lao-Tzu, who is perhaps like a Dragon. Among the Chinese, particularly, the Taoists, the Dragon is the symbol of Kundalini Shakti, the primordial force.At the end of his mission to China, about 400 BC, BhoganÄthar, with his disciple Yu (whom he also gave the Indian name Pulipani) and other close disciples, left China by the land route. As recorded in the Taoist literature, at the request of the gatekeeper at the Han Ku mountain pass Lao-Tzu crystallized his teachings. He did so in two books, the Tao Ching, with 37 verses, and the Te Ching with 42 verses (MacKintosh, 1971).[3]In book two he says ‘Do good to him who has done you injury’, which was also said by the contemporary Tamil Siddha, Tiruvalluvar in his Tirukkural

(Tiruvalluvar, 1968). Taoist yoga traditions con­tinue to seek physical immortality using techniques remarkably similar to those taught in Tamil Shiva Yoga SiddhÄnta.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kriya Babaji

 

 

 

 

Bhogar Nath and his young disciple Babaji Nagaraj at Kataragama, illustration from Babaji and the 18 Siddha Kriya Yoga Tradition

 

 

 

 

Kriya Babaji shrine, Kataragama

Return to IndiaAlong their way, they visited several shrines in the Himalayas and KÄmarÅ«pa, the famous Tantric Shakti shrine in Assam.[4] He composed his greatest work of 700,000 verses near Mt. Kailasa with the blessings of Lord Shiva. It was later abridged to 7,000 verses, and is known as Bhogar Sapta Kandam. He later visited Gaya, India and Arabia. Upon his return to Tamil Nadu he introduced the Chinese salts and chemistry, which he called CÄ«na-cÄram and porcelain making. He submitted his 7,000 verse manuscript for evaluation to his guru, Agastyar at Courtrallam and to an academy of siddhas there. It was endorsed by all of them as a great work.Following this, many siddhas, including Konkanavar, Karuvoorar, Nandeeswar, Kamala Muni, Satta Muni, Macchamuni, and

Sundarandar became his disciples to study the sciences of kaya kalpa and yoga. He eventually turned over his teaching mission to Pulipani.

Establishes shrine at Katirkamam and attains swarÅ«pa samÄdhiAfter performing tapas at Sathura Giri, and Shiva Gin, he went to Katirkamam in Sri Lanka to perform tapas and win the grace of Lord Muruga. Under inspiration from the Lord he established the famous Yantra shrine, representing the 1,008 petalled lotus cakra, which blossomed in Bhogar there. Next he went to Palani where he attained swarÅ«pa samÄdhi. He retired to KatirkÄmam, where Babaji Nagaraj met him around 211 AD.

Second Mission to ChinaLater, after the period of the Six Dynasties (220 to 590 AD), BhoganÄthar returned with some Tamil disciples to China. He left his mission in Tamil Nadu with Pulipani, the Chinese Siddha. During the construction of the BrihitÄ«swarar Shiva Temple in Tanjore, Tamil Nadu, around 900 AD. BhoganÄthar advised its builders as to how to raise the eighty ton capstone to the top of the temple, more than 200 feet high. This was done through his disciple Karuvoorar and another Tamil disciple who acted as intermediaries and through messages tied to the legs of courier birds, like today’s homing pigeons. At Bhogar’s suggestion a gradient ramp five miles long was built, up which the stone was pulled to the top of the temple. This was one of the most remarkable engineering feats of all times. About this time he also advised the King of Tanjore to build a small shrine dedicated to one of his greatest disciples, Karuvoorar, behind

the Bhrihiteeswarar Shiva Temple.

Current ActivitiesWhile BhoganÄthar is reported to have left the physical plane at Palani, he continues to work on the astral plane, inspiring his disciples and devotees, and even in rare instances he transmigrates into another’s physical body for specific purposes.

 

Source: Babaji and the 18 Siddha Kriya Yoga Tradition, by M. Govindan (Kriya Yoga Publications, 1991), pp. 113-118.

End Notes

 

[1] Material in this chapter is based upon the life story of the Siddha BhoganÄthar narrated by Yogi S.A.A. Ramaiah in his introduction to the third volume of the collected works of Bhoganathar, Bogar Kandam Yogam: Babaji’s Yoga of Boganathar, and notes in lectures.

 

[2] Authorities quoted by Bancroft in the Pacific States, Vol. V., 23-24.

 

[3] See ‘The Wandering Taoist’, by Deng Ming-Dao. 1983 for a contemporary account of Taoist immortals and their practices in China, and ‘The Tao and Chinese Culture’ by Da Liu. 1979 for a description of the highest goal of Taoist practices, ‘golden†immortality.

 

[4] It is here that Macchamuni (MacchendranÄtha), one of his disciples, later composed the first great treatise on the scientific art of Kriya Tantra Yoga, from which arose the Kalpia and Kapalika tantric traditions.

 

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