The Vedas and Upanishads For Children, Roopa Pai 2019 PDF
The Vedas and Upanishads For Children, Roopa Pai 2019 PDF
The Vedas and Upanishads For Children, Roopa Pai 2019 PDF
FOR CHILDREN
ROOPA PAI
Illustrations by Sayan Mukherjee
First published in 2019 by Hachette India
(Registered name: Hachette Book Publishing India Pvt. Ltd)
An Hachette UK company
www.hachetteindia.com
Roopa Pai asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
Photographs sourced from Wikimedia Commons and attributed on page 412, which is to be
considered an extension of the copyright page.
Wikimedia Commons photographs have been accessed on 26 November 2018 and any changes in the
status of copyright after this date are not legally binding for any and all versions of this book. Any
omissions are unintentional and regretted, and, following written communication, will be rectified in
the next edition.
All rights reserved. No part of the publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system
(including but not limited to computers, disks, external drives, electronic or digital devices, e-readers,
websites), or transmitted in any form or by any means (including but not limited to cyclostyling,
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versions) without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form
of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being
imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The views and opinions expressed in this book are the author’s own and the facts are as reported by her.
The publishers are not in any way liable for the same.
All efforts have been made to verify the copyright ownership of photographs as well as the correctness
of the information included in this edition.
Originally typeset by
by Manmohan Kumar, Delhi
THE KNOWLEDGE
First off, the Vedas
1. So What’s the Big Deal about the Vedas?
2. Nature Songs of the Cattle-Herders
3. The Gods of Big Things
4. A-One, A-Two, A-One, Two, Three, Four
5. A Feast of Hymns
THE SECRET
Next up, the Upanishads
6. So What’s the Big Deal about the Upanishads?
7. Mastermind!
8. Shankara’s Faves – The Top Ten Upanishads
9. Isha: The Upanishad of the Sameness of All Things
10. Kena: The Upanishad of ‘Whence-Came-It-All’?
11. Katha: The Upanishad of the Secret of Eternal Life
12. Prashna: The Upanishad of the Peepul Tree Sage
13. Mundaka: The Upanishad of the Big Shave
14. Mandukya: The Upanishad of the Frog
15. Taittiriya: The Upanishad of the Partridges
16. Aitareya: The Upanishad of the Glory of Being Human
17. Chandogya: The Upanishad of the Sacred Metre
18. Brihadaranyaka: The Great Forest Upanishad
And, in Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Select Bibliography
Image Copyright Information
BEFORE WE BEGIN
Hello, hello! It’s lovely to meet you!
You are standing there (or sitting here) reading this for one of two reasons. You have either:
(a) bought this book (or your parents have thrust it on you, believing this is an ‘improving’ book), OR
(b) you are browsing through it at a bookstore or library, wondering if it’s worth taking home.
Whatever your reason, chances are that, like many people, you only have a vague understanding of
what the Vedas and Upanishads are. So let’s very briefly ‘define’ the two first.
The Vedas are some of the oldest texts known to humankind. They are considered sacred texts and
mainly comprise hymns of praise to the elements that sustain us – the sun, the rain, the fire, the wind,
the water. Oh, and they came out of the land that we today call India. (To get the Veda 101, flip to The
Knowledge, on page 1.)
The Upanishads are part of the Vedas, and therefore, also thought to be sacred. They are the last
and newest ‘layer’ of the Vedas (this is India we are talking about, so even this ‘new’ layer was added
about 2,700 years ago), but they are not hymns at all – in fact, many are stories, and / or conversations
between teacher and student. And what are these stories and conversations mainly about? Unravelling
the answers to very fundamental questions, the kind that human beings of all regions and races have
struggled with forever. Questions that, astoundingly enough, we still have no clear answers to, despite
all the progress we’ve made in the last 3000 years! (To get up close and personal with the Upanishads,
go to The Secret, on page 123.)
What are some of these fundamental questions? Let’s see now.
• Where did the universe come from?
• Who am I?
• What is the purpose of my life?
• Is there a God, and if so, who/where/in what form is He/She/It?
• What is death?
• How can I be hundred per cent happy all the time?
• How do I decide what the right thing to do is in a particular situation?
(Are these questions that bother you? If yes, keep reading!)
Of all the different answers people across the world have come up with to these questions, it seems
that the old, old answers of the Upanishads are among the most convincing, for a significant number of
Indians – and non-Indians – swear by them to this day. If you’d like to find out what some of those
answers are, this book is a good place to start. You can decide what YOU feel about them once you
have finished reading. You may end up agreeing with the ancients, you may disagree vehemently, or
you may be on the fence, BUT – get this – the sages would be happy with you whichever you are – an
agree-er, a disagree-er, or a doubter!
To the agree-ers, the sages would say, ‘Glad you agree! But agreeing is not enough. You have to try
out our recommendations – on the secret of happiness, say – and find out if it actually works for you.
Oh, and don’t forget to come back and tell us – and everyone else – what you discover, for the point of
knowledge is to share it.’
To the disagree-ers, they would say, ‘Wonderful! Why don’t you spend some time thinking about
the same questions? Read other texts that have different answers, talk to tonnes of wise people who
have other ideas, process all of it through your own head and heart – and when you think you have
some answers, come back to us? We love a good debate!’
To the fence-sitters, they would say, ‘Ah, sceptics! Those who question everything, who will not
believe what someone else says is the truth, who are not content until they find the answers for
themselves. We totally respect your kind – as long as you just don’t sit there on that fence, but actively
seek the truth yourself. We’d love to know what you find out, when you do!’
Because, you see, the sages of the Upanishads were never in the business of making other people
believe what they themselves knew for a fact. Instead, they were ardent seekers of the secrets of the
universe, and they were on this great quest simply to satisfy their own curiosities. Once the secrets had
been revealed to their trained, disciplined minds in a sudden, unexpected flash of inspiration, however,
they couldn’t wait to share them with everyone.
Here’s the remarkable part, though – these sages did not want wealth, or power, or even fame in
return. In fact, so unconcerned were they about such things that they did not even attach their names to
their magnum opuses, the hard-won results of their years and years of intense thought experiments!
What the sages did hope to achieve by sharing the secrets they had discovered was to inspire people
to seek the truth for themselves. What they dearly wanted was to help their fellow humans realize that
life could be a joy if it was lived the right way, and that the human spirit was limitless, chock-full of
untapped power and potential.
My friends, they wanted to tell us, you are all prisoners in a ‘misery yard’, which has such high
walls that you believe, mistakenly, that the yard is the world. But we – we have been beyond the walls,
and we have found there a world of utter bliss. You can get there too, and guess what – you don’t even
have to be dead for that to happen! All you need is the courage to commit to the journey and to all the
hardships you will encounter along the way. Here, we’ve drawn you a rough roadmap to that world
beyond the walls – use it!
That’s what the Upanishads are about – a rough roadmap to living in such happiness in this world
that it begins to feel like Heaven itself. And this little book is a first, very basic key to the map.
So, what do you think? Feel like taking a stroll down ye olde Indian route to joy and freedom?
What are you waiting for, then – turn the page!
THE KNOWLEDGE
First off, the Vedas
१
SO WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL
ABOUT THE VEDAS?
ight. Let’s kick this section off with a fun quiz, designed to test how
Did you guess (e) – all of the above? That’s the right answer! Bet you got
that right because you’re the sort of person who picks ‘all of the above’ when
that option exists. But that’s perfectly fine – now you know what the Vedas
are, somewhat.
Now, did you notice that the word ‘texts’ was used a lot in the answer
options? You will be hearing that word a lot in this book – get used to it.
Why do we have to call the Vedas texts, though? Can’t we simply call them
‘books’ instead? Nope. Because they weren’t really ‘books’ – no one wrote
them out or printed them on paper/birch bark/palm leaves and then bound the
pages together. Not for a long, long time, anyway. Plus, the dictionary
definition of ‘text’ is ‘written or printed work, regarded in terms of its content
rather than its physical form’. That makes ‘texts’ the most appropriate word
to describe the Vedas – and the Upanishads too – because, in the beginning –
wait for it – neither had a physical form at all!
No, seriously. For almost 2,000 years, the 20,000-plus verses of the
Vedas were passed from generation to generation purely via oral transmission
– they were never written down! Do you realize what that means? Both
teachers and students had to know them by heart! (Want to attempt that as a
project for your next summer vacay?) The oldest Veda, the Rig, was probably
written down for the first time as recently as 500 CE. What is even more
fascinating is the accuracy with which the texts, and the ‘tunes’ they were set
to, were conveyed from teacher to student. (How did the ancients ensure that
the oral transmission of their most sacred texts didn’t turn into a game of
Chinese whispers? Find out in ‘Learning the Vedas by Heart (and Ear and
Tongue and Mind)’ on page 14.) It is those verses, intoned exactly as they
were 3,500 years ago, that you hear at Hindu pujas, weddings and funerals, in
Hindu temples, schools and homes, and in the ‘Vedic chanting’ classes now
trending across the globe. Gives you the goosebumps, wot?
2. What does the word ‘Veda’ literally mean?
a. Holy
b. Word of God
c. Knowledge
d. Duty
If you ticked anything other than (c), sorry! The word ‘Veda’ does not
mean Holy, or Word of God, or Duty. The root word of Veda is ‘vid’, which
is also the root word of vidya, which, as you probably know, means
knowledge. (That’s why this whole section is called – ta-daa! – ‘The
Knowledge’.)
3. In all, how many Vedas are there? (If you are the sort who pays
attention in social sciences class, you’ve got this one nailed.)
a. 16
b. 4
c. 9
d. 3
Yup, (b) is the right answer. There are officially four Vedas. In
chronological order, they are the Rig Veda, the Yajur Veda, the Sama Veda
and the Atharva Veda (sometimes called the Atharvana Veda). Apparently,
this last, the Atharva, is a bit of an interloper that sneaked in later – in the old,
old texts, the Vedas are referred to as the Trayi Vidya – the three-fold
knowledge, not four-fold.
4. Who ‘composed’ the Vedas? (Why is the word composed enclosed in
quotation marks? You’ll find out below.)
a. A bunch of nameless rishis
b. Veda Vyasa
c. Valmiki
d. Agastya
And the answer is... (a)! Unlike the Mahabharata, which is believed to
have been composed by Vyasa, and the Ramayana, said to have been
composed by Valmiki, the Vedas were put together, over centuries, by
several anonymous rishis or sages. However, Vyasa (whose name literally
means ‘compiler’) is believed to be the one who collected the vast and
sprawling body of literature we know today as the Vedas. He then classified
all the different, random bits of it, decided which portions went together and
compiled those into chunks, and then divided those chunks into four separate
Vedas. For accomplishing this mammoth task in such an efficient, organized
manner, he was given the title ‘Veda Vyasa’ – the compiler of the Vedas.
Oh, and about the quotation marks around ‘composed’. They are there
because the Vedas are actually considered to be ‘authorless’ – i.e., texts that
were not ‘composed’ by anyone, not even by that bunch of nameless rishis.
Instead, it is believed, the Vedas were revealed to these rishis when they were
in the kind of deep trance that is achievable only through years and years of
disciplined meditation. This makes the Vedas part of what is called Shruti, or
‘heard’ literature. In contrast, other ancient Hindu texts, like the Puranas, the
Ramayana and the Mahabharata, are part of Smriti, or ‘remembered’
literature.
Hindus believe that Smriti texts were composed by humans, and came out
of everything their authors had seen, experienced, understood and
remembered. Such texts are allowed to be tweaked, edited, added to and/or
rewritten all the time, since everyone’s experience is different, no one’s
memory is hundred per cent accurate, and no human work is without flaws.
Shruti texts, on the other hand, are believed to contain eternal, universal
truths that could possibly have had divine origins. (Divine origins? Does that
mean the ancient rishis heard the Vedas being recited by a disembodied voice
in the sky? Find out in ‘How to “Hear” the Song of the Universe’ on the
facing page.)
That’s why it was so important that Shruti texts be preserved exactly as
they were ‘received’. Got that? Good.
5. Around how many years ago were the Vedas composed?
a. 10,000 years ago
b. 2,000 years ago
c. 5,000 years ago
d. 3,500 years ago
If your train of thought while answering this question went something
like – We’ve already had a, b, c and e as the correct options in previous
questions, so (d) is a dead ringer for the right answer this time, you would be
on the right, um, track. The Rig Veda, the oldest of the four Vedas, has been
indeed dated to circa 1500 BCE, which makes the Vedas about 3,500 years
old.
We just talked about how the Vedas are part of what many Hindus consider
sacred literature called ‘Shruti’ or ‘heard’ wisdom, and how it is believed that
these texts were not composed by humans at all but were revealed (via
confidential sources, suspected to be divine) to certain rishis who were
considered worthy of it.
How do you imagine these revelations happened? Did the rishis hear a
voice from the sky speaking the Vedas, while bathing them in golden ‘God-
light’? Or was it an inner voice (located approximately in the region of each
rishi’s gut) that revealed the universe’s greatest secrets to him?
Metaphorically speaking, neither answer is too far off the mark! It was most
likely a combination of the two, happening at the same time, give or take the
God-light.
What does that mean? To understand that, you must first understand who
these rishis were. Very often, rishis are depicted as people who grew weary
of the world and its trials and tribulations, and ‘retired’ (notice how the word
‘tired’ is already in it?) to the forests to pursue a life of meditation and quiet
contemplation. But here’s the thing – true rishis were not escaping the world
at all! In fact, it was the world, with its infinite wonders and apparent
randomness, which fascinated and engaged them more than anything else.
These men and women were intellectuals whose thoughts went well beyond
the perimeter of their careers and home-fires and their own small lives. These
seekers of truth had a burning desire to unlock the mysteries of the world –
What is the purpose of life? What happens to us after death? Is there a God?
For them, going to the forest was a huge sacrifice, but one they were very
willing to make – it was a way to get away from distractions, so that they
could focus all their energies on this one great quest.
When you are willing to make such big sacrifices and are so focused on
your goal, all kinds of magic happens. We see examples of it all around us all
the time, whether we are talking about the greatest scientists or sportspeople
or musicians. Even though science is rigorous, and rational, and methodical,
the greatest scientific discoveries are often made by a leap of imagination, an
‘I-feel-it-in-my-gut’ sixth sense. The world’s best sportspeople, when they
are in their element, are no longer human but superhuman. The world’s best
musicians are able to transport us to realms we have never dared to suspect
actually exist – places where logic and rationale and science become
irrelevant and only emotions abound; when the guitarist in your favourite
band gets into his stride at a concert you are watching live, you scream and
weep for no reason you can explain, you want to hug strangers.
When people talk about such moments, they use the word ‘inspired’ a lot
– it was an inspired guess, they may say, an inspired stroke. They cannot
themselves explain how it happened – how they connected two unrelated
things in a way no one had before, how they knew exactly where to position
themselves for that ‘impossible’ catch on the boundary. Almost always, they
are also reluctant to take credit for their idea or achievement entirely,
especially because they know of so many other talented people who were
working just as hard as them towards the very same goal, but did not get
there. ‘It suddenly came to me,’ they say, their voices full of wonder, ‘I just
knew.’
It was possibly the same with the rishis of Shruti literature. One fine day,
years and years after they had begun pursuing their quest by doing all the
right things – training their minds, learning to focus their energies, not
checking WhatsApp more than once a year, eating right, keeping fit (hey, try
sitting – or standing – in one position for hours and hours every day,
meditating, and see if you can do it without eating healthy and being fit!) –
they had a moment of pure inspiration. They ‘heard’ the song of the universe
– the answers to the big questions came to them, they knew.
Exciting, right? Now for the more important question. Can you learn how
to hear the song too? Can those wise rishis teach you to how to get to that
flash of inspiration in whatever quest of excellence you are engaged in –
math, dancing, poetry, basketball?
Before we go there, let us try and understand what inspiration is. In the
modern world, psychologists break inspiration down to a combination of
instinct (a hardwired-in-our-DNA, natural response to the world, which all
animals have, and which comes from inside); reason (a learned response to
the world, which only humans are capable of, and comes from outside); and
intuition (or gut-feel, or sixth sense), which is a combination of the two, a
way to leap from Step A to Step E without ever going through Steps B, C and
D.
The rishis of ancient India had different words to describe the same
phenomenon. They preferred to think of inspiration as a benediction that
came from a divine source. Was this source outside of them, or inside? For
the rishis, who believed that the Universal Energy that pervades everything in
the universe (Brahman) was exactly the same as the indestructible energy
they carried inside themselves (Atman), the answer was a no-brainer. From
both inside and outside, of course!
If you think about it, they were completely spot-on. Inspiration – for a
play you are writing for your school’s annual day, your science project, a
‘fusion’ dish (like a dosaffle – dosa batter cooked in a waffle iron and topped
with cinnamon-sugar and ghee) that you have just invented – comes both
from outside (let’s say from current affairs, Elon Musk and Masterchef
Australia, respectively) and inside. After all, it is in your mind that you
connect something you already know (dosa) with something you’ve seen on a
cooking show (waffles). Add your intuition about tastes and textures to the
mix, and you bring the two together in a unique, special way.
But if someone asked you to give them a step-by-step account of how you
actually came up with the idea for a dosaffle, would you be able to do it? Not
really, right?
And that’s why, just like a scientist cannot give you a formula for making
a scientific discovery, and a musician cannot tell you exactly how to write a
great piece of music, the rishis of the Upanishads do not pretend that they can
teach you how to find inspiration. Like the others, they can only tell you what
they did to get to that point in their own quest, caution you about the
difficulties you may encounter along the way and give you tips for how to get
over them, besides coaching you in technique and ritual and discipline (and
diet!). They might also add an important injunction: Keep your mind open,
turn your receivers on, or you may not hear the messages the universe is
sending you at all! Then, with a pat on your back and a blessing on your
head, they will send you on your way.
Because, you see, the long and winding road to that blinding, exhilarating
stroke of inspiration – Shruti – has to be journeyed alone. You will have to
make the sacrifices, you will have to practise the discipline, you will have to
keep the faith. And then, maybe, just maybe, and only if you are considered
worthy, you will ‘hear’ the universe singing to you. Maybe, just maybe, the
magic will happen, and you will be rewarded with the ultimate inspiration –a
brief, tantalising, breathtaking glimpse of the Brahman within you, without
you.
Seems like something worth trying for, don’t you think?
S and among the most beautiful hymns to the nature gods that we have,
did not come to us from a society of scholars who had read fat books,
maxed their exams, or graduated from universities. They came instead from
simple people who lived close to the land, slept under the stars, and had a
close connection with their horses and dogs, and the sheep, goats and cattle
that they herded.
Who exactly were these people? Where did they come from? No one is
hundred per cent sure – after all, we’re talking about people who lived 3,500
years ago. What’s more, these people did not believe in permanence – they
did not write things down, draw pictures on rocks for us to puzzle over
thousands of years later, or build anything that would last a century, leave
alone millennia. They only left us their words, thousands and thousands of
them, and their thoughts – about how the universe worked and what the
purpose of human life was and why we should not be afraid of death. And
they made pretty darn sure that we would get to hear all those words and all
those thoughts (well, a LOT of them, anyway) long after they had composed
them, by not putting them down on perishable material like paper or bark or
cloth; instead, they put them in the best safekeeping boxes in the world –
people’s memories.* All we know, or think we know, about these people
comes from analyzing these words and thoughts.
*Yes, yes, we know – human memory is notoriously unreliable. But the guardians of the sacred
knowledge – the Chosen Ones – were those whose ordinary minds had become extraordinary simply
through the unwavering discipline and training their owners had put them through. Remember Sherlock
Holmes’s ‘Memory Palace’, a many-tiered RAM in his head, organized and catalogued so finely that he
could always reach for one particular memory and pull it out when he needed it? Yup, this was that
kind of thing, except there wasn’t just one ‘born genius’ like Holmes in ancient India, there were
hundreds, who had become ‘geniuses’ through practice.
And what have we figured out so far? There are conflicting theories, but
one of the most popular ones over the last few decades is that these people
were horse-riding tribes of nomadic goatherds and cattle-herders from
Central Asia (the area roughly occupied by today’s Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan) who found their way to India
(specifically the Punjab and its surrounds) around 1500 BCE. In their
literature, these tribes referred to themselves as Arya (say aar-ya) – ‘the noble
ones’.
Experts who lean towards this theory believe that the reason that Arya
tribes left Central Asia was because overgrazing and drought had made their
original homelands, the grasslands called the steppes, unlivable for
themselves and their animals. To ensure less crowding and better
opportunities for all in their search for new pastures, they say, the Arya split
up. One branch went east towards Mongolia, one west towards Anatolia
(Turkey) and one south towards Bactria (the area north of the Hindu Kush
mountains). From Bactria, the Arya divided again, one branch moving west
towards Iran, and the other east towards India. This second branch – whose
people these experts refer to as the Indo-Aryans or the Indo-Iranians – settled
first in the Punjab and later in the Gangetic plains.
The timing of the grand entrance of these mystery people – the Arya –
onto the Indian history stage is crucial. We first encounter them around the
same time that the people of the Harappan Civilization – who had lived and
thrived on the banks of the Indus and her tributaries in the Punjab for over a
thousand years – abandoned their vast, flourishing cities and mysteriously
disappeared. (Want to know a little more about the Harappans? Check out
‘Pashupati’s People’ on page 54.)
This little detail leads to the other popular theory, this one more recent,
about the origin of the Arya. What if the chariot-driving, horse-riding, dog-
loving, weapon-wielding Arya were not foreigners at all, but Harappans
themselves who had quit their riverside cities after a great flood and spread
out across northern India and further west and east, to re-emerge centuries
later as the composers of the Vedas? Or what if they were an entirely
different indigenous set of Indian people?
Let us leave that question to the scholars and academics to wrangle over.
What is not disputed is that it was the Arya who introduced the Iron Age into
India (the Harappans had only known the use of the softer bronze and copper)
and that it was also they who gave India and the world the oldest of the
languages in the Indo-European family of languages, the perfectly formed
‘mother language’ Sanskrit. (That isn’t an exaggeration, by the way; the
anglicized name for the language – Sanskrit – actually comes from the words
‘samskruta’, which literally means ‘perfectly formed’! In fact, in the
beginning, ‘samskruta’ was the adjective used to describe the language of the
ancient texts – the language itself was simply called ‘bhasha’, or language.
So ‘samskruta bhasha’ simply meant ‘the perfectly formed language’.)
As the pastures in the north-west were consumed and the rivers that
sustained their crops changed course or dried up because of changes in
climate, the Arya, having now split into five main tribes, began to move
slowly east across northern India. Over the next thousand years, they
colonized the Doab – the fertile land between the two great rivers Ganga and
Yamuna – and became farmers. Each Arya tribe split into clans as they went
along, fighting each other to establish their own little areas of control, called
janapadas. By the 6th century BCE, the many little janapadas had been
consolidated into sixteen larger ‘kingdoms’ called mahajanapadas, which
stretched between the Himalayas in the north and the Vindhyas in the south,
and from the western (Arabian) sea to the eastern sea (the Bay of Bengal).
The Arya referred to their new land as Aryavarta (say aar-yaa-varta) – Abode
of the Noble Ones.
One of the mahajanapadas was Kuru (does that name ring a bell?), which,
the Mahabharata tells us, was the land of the... yup, the Pandavas and the
Kauravas! Another was faraway Gandhara, in today’s Afghanistan, from
where the beautiful princess Gandhari was brought to Kuru as the bride of the
blind prince Dhritarashtra. A third was Kosala, the kingdom of the Ikshvakus,
whose most famous king was... right, Rama from the Ramayana! There was
also the mahajanapada of Magadha, from where Ashoka Maurya and the
Guptas ruled, and that of Kashi, with its holy cities of Varanasi (revered as a
pilgrimage centre for thousands of years) and Sarnath (where Buddha gave
his first sermon).*
*Isn’t this all a bit confusing? Weren’t Ashoka and the Guptas people who actually existed while Rama
and the Kuru princes were merely characters in stories? Well, here’s the thing – Hindus classify the
Ramayana and Mahabharata not under the Puranas, which are considered stories, but under a separate
genre called Itihasa (from iti-ha-asa – Sanskrit for ‘this is how it happened’), or history. Even though
they accept that every single event mentioned in the epics may not have happened exactly in that way,
they firmly believe that the main thread of the narratives describes real events, people, kingdoms and
dynasties.
But back to the Arya. The Arya tended not to stay in the same place for
too long, at least in the beginning. Their on-the-go lifestyle made it somewhat
pointless for them to build great cities or temples or palaces, and it seems
they truly did not care for such things.** After all, the scholarly ones among
them carried all they needed to know in their heads, and as for the others,
their greatest wealth – horses and cattle – were fully capable of moving with
them.
**Well-planned cities and a script (that we haven’t yet been able to decipher) were two hallmarks of
the Harappan Civilization. Considering that such an advanced civilization had been around in India for
a thousand years before the Arya appeared on the scene, it seems somewhat insane that we would have
to wait another thousand years after that for other cities to be built and a new script to be developed.
But from all the evidence we have so far, that seems to be what happened!
What the Arya did care about, however, was pleasing their gods. Like all
other early agrarian civilizations, they lived equally in awe of the formidable
power and beauty of Mother Nature, and fear at her capriciousness.
Naturally, just like the Egyptians, Chinese and Mesopotamians, they turned
the elements – the sun, the earth, the rain, the rivers, the dawn, the thunder –
into gods, and set about composing extravagant hymns of praise to each one.
After all, if the gods were not kept happy, how could the Arya hope to ensure
that the rain fell at the right time and the rivers did not flood (or dry up!) and
the sun shone just so and the earth gave forth enough of herself to sustain
their crops, their animals and themselves? (Who were the gods of the Arya?
Are they the same gods Hindus worship today? Find out in Chapter 3: ‘The
Gods of Big Things’ on page 42.)
Realizing that, at the end of the day, even the most flattering praise was
merely lip service, and the gods would probably expect something more
solid, the Arya devised elaborate sacrifices called yagnas. There were
different yagnas to wrest different boons – long life, success in war, a
bountiful harvest, many fine sons – from the gods, but they were all
accompanied by the chanting of songs of praise and they were almost always
conducted in the presence of the sacred fire, Agni. Into Agni’s all-consuming
maw went the various offerings – ground rice, cooked pulses, milk, soma
(Soma? Wozzat? To find out, check out ‘“Theobroma” Soma – Elixir of the
Gods’ on page 38), and the all-important ghrita, aka desi ghee (and you
wondered why ghee is such an indispensable ingredient in the Indian
kitchen!) – that were believed to please the gods.
In the beginning, animal sacrifices were also a huge part of yagnas.
Thousands of animals, including cattle and horses (these animals were
dearest and most precious to the Arya, so giving them up to the gods was a
huge sacrifice), were offered to the gods.
Phew. Yagnas sound like a serious amount of work, right? But the
payback was worth it – if a yagna was done right, Agni the divine messenger
would ensure that the offerings were conveyed dutifully to the gods being
propitiated, leaving them with no choice but to rain the right blessings down
on the earthly petitioners. (Yup, that was the belief then – you had the power
to persuade the gods to do what you wanted, assuming you performed all the
prescribed rituals in the correct way!)
Now, how could the yajamana (say yaja-maana) – the king or merchant
who hosted the yagna and provided all the money needed for the firewood,
the offerings, the sacrificial animals and everything else – ensure that the
yagna was conducted in exactly the right way? He requested the scholars, the
ritual experts who knew all the mantras by heart, to come and officiate at the
ceremonies. For this service, he paid them a generous fee. Simple!
So if worship and yagnas were such a big part of Arya life, didn’t they
require, like the Egyptians, special temples where sacred ceremonies could be
conducted? Nope. Whether the yagna was a small private one for one’s
immediate family or a ginormous community one with thousands of people
attending, all it required, apart from a sacrificial post where animals could be
butchered, was a yagna kunda, a fire altar, which was a pit to contain the
firewood and oilseeds that sustained the sacred fire for the duration of the
ceremony. Pits were built and consecrated (i.e., made pure for worship by the
sprinkling of holy water, the chanting of mantras and other rituals) just before
the yagna, and must have been dismantled soon after, since no remains of
ancient fire altars have ever been found (these people were clearly sticklers
for the ‘Leave No Trace’ policy that modern conservationists urge us to
follow when we go camping and hiking).
Yagna kunds were of many different shapes that were variations of the square
The square was considered to be the sacred geometrical shape for the
kunda. But instead of settling for a simple square, the Arya played around
with the basic shape to come up with all kinds of interesting variations – a
kunda could be a right-angled rhombus (a square standing on one of its
corners), a rectangle (two squares placed side by side), a set of triangles (each
of which was a square cut in half), or a many-pointed star (which, if you
think about it, is nothing but a rotating square). The most interesting shape
that we know of, used for the most important yagnas, and built out of a
specified number of bricks, each made to specified dimensions (ancient
Indians were nothing if not nerdy, especially where numbers were concerned)
was the hawk- or falcon-shaped altar.*
*Can you come up with your own cool shapes for yagna kundas, using just squares? To make it more
challenging, try and come up with patterns in which the number of squares used is a multiple of nine –
nine squares, or eighteen, or twenty-seven, or 108... Nine was a number sacred to the Arya, so any
number whose digits added up to nine also made the cut. Try it!
Whoever gave the cacao plant its Latin name was clearly smitten by its best-
loved product, chocolate. He, or she, named the plant Theobroma (literally,
‘food of the gods’) cacao. If the modern method of botanical classification
had been around during Vedic times, there was surely only one plant that
would have earned that ecstatic descriptor – the mountain plant, soma, from
which was produced the (possibly intoxicating and/or hallucinogenic) ritual
drink, soma, which was worshipped as a god called (what else but) Soma.
Soma (both the god and the drink) was vital to every yagna, for it was the
favourite drink of Indra, Lord of the Heavens and the No. 1 god in the Arya
pantheon (So Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva were not the No. 1 Vedic gods?
Nope. They were seriously minor gods then. For more details on gods old
and new, see ‘Who or What did the Arya worship? Element-ary!’ on page
45). Copious quantities of soma were offered to Indra by pouring it into the
yagna fire, while the even more copious quantities left behind, after having
been ‘blessed’ by the gods, were consumed by the mantra-chanting priests,
the yajamana and his guests, and anyone else who had the right connections.
As you can imagine, both Soma and soma were exceedingly popular –
after all, the brew was supposed to confer immortality (or at least the feeling
of being immortal) on the drinker, as well as improving vitality and vigour in
‘body, mind and intellect’, and bestowing on him the ability to see the ‘light
of the gods’. It would have been great to test its powers for ourselves;
tragically, we simply have no idea how to brew a draught of soma today.
Considering that so many Vedic rituals and chants and beliefs have
survived until the present day, it is a real shame that the recipe for soma
hasn’t. While the Rig Veda indicates clearly that it was a plant product, made
by (1) extracting the juice from the leaves and/or stalks of a certain mountain
plant, (2) purifying it by straining through a cloth, and (3) mixing it with curd
or milk, flour, water and perhaps honey, no one has so far been able to
conclusively identify the mystery plant itself! We are also told that soma
achieved its full potential when the juice was extracted from plants gathered
by moonlight (sounds like something out of a witch’s recipe book, right?),
which was probably why the Arya eventually promoted Soma the god of the
drink to Soma the moon god.*
How did we entirely lose the knowledge of this fabulous plant? After all,
Indians – especially Indian grandmothers – have always had a deep
knowledge of all kinds of healing, nourishing and revitalizing herbs and
spices. That wisdom has come down to us in two ways – one, via texts related
to Ayurveda, the Indian system of medicine (which is enjoying a huge
resurgence today); and two, by word-of-mouth transmission across the
generations. The fact that no knowledge whatsoever exists on the soma plant
is puzzling, and probably indicates that the plant wasn’t local at all, but
imported from somewhere far away in the Hindu Kush mountains,
specifically for the purposes of the Vedic yagnas, until the whole thing
became too unviable for one reason or another.
Once the original plant became unavailable, the Arya began to use a
substitute from the Himalayas – most scholars think it likely that it was a
plant called somalata – for their yagnas. Somalata has similar (but not
identical) effects on the body and mind as soma, which is why it continues to
be used as an offering at yagnas even today.
*Many ancient cultures had a god of intoxicants in their pantheon. The Greeks, for instance, had a god
of the grape harvest, wine-making and wine, who was very popular. Do you know his name? The
Romans knew the same god by a different name. Do you know what his Roman name was?
I entire lives in the lap of nature – waking each day to a glorious sunrise,
retiring to bed as another beautiful sunset painted itself into a starry,
starry night in the upturned bowl of the sky above, watching lightning split
the dark sky in a spectacular storm as you hurried to shelter with your flock
under a rocky overhang, dancing in abandon when rain-bearing clouds
gathered and burst above your head, filling the rivers after a particularly
merciless summer – where would you look for your gods? In those very
elements, of course! And that’s exactly what the Arya did.
The Arya believed that our universe was just one of the many universes
that made up the multiverse. In their minds, our universe was divided into
three ‘planes’ or lokas – Bhuh, Bhuvah and Svah. Bhuh was the earth, Svah
the sky and Bhuvah the space in between the two. There were gods in each of
these three lokas – the fire, earth and the rivers were all Bhuh deities; the
wind, rain clouds, thunder and lightning were gods who inhabited Bhuvah;
and the sun, moon, the dawn and the stars were the gods who looked down on
them from Svah. By and by, though, the Arya ended up sending all their gods
up to Svah.
Considering that the Arya composed the Vedas and the Upanishads,
which are the main scriptures of the religion we know as Hinduism, were the
gods of the Arya the same as the gods the Hindus revere today? Yes and no.
While a few Vedic gods, like Mitra and Ushas, are all but forgotten today,
others, like Indra, who were all-powerful and top-of-the-heap then, are now
treated as minor gods. On the flip side, gods like Vishnu, who languished
way down the god hierarchy in Vedic times, have zoomed to its highest rungs
today. As you can see, the theory of evolution applies to gods and goddesses
as well –they evolved too, depending on the whims, concerns and aspirations
of the humans who worshipped them.
Words used to describe gods have evolved as well. One of the most
startling evolutions has been in the meaning of the word ‘asura’. Today, we
understand the word asura as demon – a stereotypically dark-skinned and
malevolent being who causes chaos in the world and trouble in the heavens.
We see asuras today as the negative counterparts of the fair-skinned, sweeter,
nobler suras, or devas. The ancient Arya, however, saw asuras quite
differently. To them, all their gods, including their chief god Indra, were
asuras. There were good ones and bad ones (and fair-skinned ones and dark-
skinned ones, one would imagine) among them, but asura* simply meant a
powerful, superhuman being who could bring joy or destruction to humanity.
*In fact, this is one of the linguisitic ‘clues’ that historians who believe that the Arya came into India
from outside use to support their theory. Ancient Persian, the language of the Zoroastrian holy book,
the Zend Avesta, has several words in common with Vedic Sanskrit. Only, in Persian, the ‘s’ sound is
replaced with the ‘h’ sound – the drink soma in the Vedas becomes ‘haoma’ in the Zend Avesta, for
instance, and Sapta Sindhu, the group of seven sacred rivers in the north-west of India, becomes Hapta
Hindu. This similarity of language, say experts, is one strong indication that both the Iranians (who
were Zoroastrian) and the Arya originated in the same place in Central Asia. Even the two religions
were similar – both involved fire worship. Now, with all this background info, can you guess where the
first part of the name of the almighty Zoroastrian god, Ahura Mazda, came from? That’s right – Asura!
• Varuna – Lord of the Seas, rivers and the waters, Varuna was an asura
with serious anger-management issues. (If you have ever seen a stormy
sea, you know where that association came from.) Varuna was rarely
mentioned alone in the Vedas, though – he was part of a twin identity
called Varuna-Mitra. Mitra was the gentler side of Varuna, the Dr Jekyll to
Varuna’s Mr Hyde, the friend that humans could appeal to when they
wanted the temperamental god’s blessings. Even though Mitra is no longer
venerated as a god, his spirit lives on in the Sanskrit word for friend –
mitra. Varuna–Mitra’s other big responsibility was maintaining order, or
rita, in the universe – things like making sure that the sun rose, the earth
turned, the seasons changed, the tides rose and fell like clockwork, and so
on.
• The Maruts – The sons of Rudra and Diti, the Maruts (also called the
Rudras) were violent storm gods who roared like lions as they wielded
their weapons of lightning and thunderbolts. Another set of Diti’s sons
were called Daityas (who became the ‘bad’ asuras), while her sister Aditi’s
sons, the Adityas, grew up to be the ‘good’ asuras.
• Ushas – The most exalted goddess of the Vedic Arya, second only to
Indra, Soma and Agni, beautiful Ushas was the Goddess of the Dawn.
Each morning, as she rode across the sky from east to west in her golden
chariot drawn by cows or red horses, paving the way for Surya the sun
god, she chased away the demons of darkness, roused everyone and
everything from slumber, set things in motion and sent everyone off to do
their duties. In other words, Ushas was Supermom. (Who was Ushas’s
sister? Yup, Ratri, the night!)
Ushas, the Goddess of the Dawn
• Vayu – He was the Lord of the Winds then, and continues to be the Lord
of the Winds today. ‘Wind’ did not mean just atmospheric wind, though –
Vayu was also the ‘wind’ in all living things, the very breath of life, or
prana.
Vayu, the Lord of the Winds
• Brihaspati – To the ancient Arya, Brihaspati was a wise sage who was
counsellor to the gods and the guru of the devas (or the good asuras).
Today, we also know him as the planet Jupiter and the god of Brihaspati-
vaar, or Thursday.
• Dyaus Pitr and Prithvi Mata – The parents of everything contained on
heaven and earth, Dyaus Pitr (say dhowsh-pitruh) can be translated as Sky
Father and Prithvi Mata as Earth Mother. Given that Sanskrit is among the
oldest of the Indo-European languages, and remembering that Dyaus Pitr
is a heavenly father, can you guess what the Greek version of his name
was? Zeus Pater – Father Zeus! And what planet’s name do you think Zeus
Pater inspired? Jupiter, of course!
• Apas – In Sanskrit, the word apas literally means ‘the waters’. Whether as
rivers, rain or the sea, the waters were deities by themselves to the ancient
Arya. Apas, together with Vayu (air), Agni (fire), Prithvi (earth) and
Dyaus or Akash (space) were the five elements – the Panchabhuta – that
the Arya believed made up everything in the world, including the human
body.
• Vishnu – With only six suktas dedicated to him in the Rig Veda, Vishnu in
the Vedic Age was nowhere near being the Supreme Being that Hindus
revere him as now. But he was even then hailed as the supporter of the
earth and the sky, a close friend of Indra’s and a resident of the highest
abode (Paramam Padam) where all souls go when they escape from the
cycle of rebirth. He was often also equated with light, Surya, and referred
to as Suryanarayana, a name that persists to this day.
• Rudra – Rudra ‘the Roarer’, who shared many attributes – like wild
matted hair, for instance – with the later Hindu god we know as Shiva, was
the archer god of the storm and the hunt, his shining arrows streaking
across the sky as lightning. Again, there are only five suktas addressed to
him, which tells us he was a relatively minor Vedic god.
In the Vedas, Rudra is referred to both as Ghora, the terrifying one, and
Aghora, the peaceful one, but his general demeanour seems to have been
more terror-inducing than reassuring. The fact that Hindus use the names
Rudra (fierce) and Shiva (kind) interchangeably for him even today tells
us that he is still believed to have both those aspects to his personality.
Rudra, who had a whole arsenal of pills and potions at his command, was
also revered as Vaidyanatha, the physician of physicians.
Now here’s the cool part about Rudra – he also shared some attributes
with a god of the even more ancient Harappan people! Archaeologists
have named his Harappan equivalent Pashupati, Lord of the Beasts,
because of the way he was depicted by them. Could that indicate that the
Arya were really the later Harappans, and therefore natives, not
foreigners?
(Want to know a little more about the Harappans and the mysterious
Pashupati? Check out ‘Pashupati’s People’ on page 54.)
• Saraswati – The goddess of knowledge that Hindus revere as Saraswati
today was not the Saraswati of the Vedic Arya. To them, she was simply
the ‘greatest of rivers’. Scholars believe that the earliest parts of the Rig
Veda must have been composed when the Arya lived on her banks in the
north-west of India, around 1500 BCE. They have also been puzzling over
the identity of the river that the Arya referred to as Saraswati. Whichever it
was, Hindus consider the Saraswati, along with the Ganga and Yamuna, as
one of their three most sacred rivers, and believe that she merges with the
other two at the Triveni Sangam (the holy spot where three rivers meet) at
Prayag in Prayagraj (earlier Allahabad) in Uttar Pradesh.
• Yama – Ever wondered how Yama got to be the Hindu god of death?
Well, according to the Rig Veda, he won the position simply because he
was the very first human to die and find his way to heavenly realms! As
the ruler of the departed, it was his job to come down to earth on his
buffalo, collect souls released from dying bodies and offer them safe
passage to his kingdom.
Phew. All done. And if you thought that was a long list of gods and
goddesses, think about the number of Hindu gods there are now! How come?
Well, the Arya made it a habit to keep adding all the local gods and
goddesses to the large bunch they already had. Luckily, that divine bunch
was accommodating enough, scooting over cheerfully to make place for all
the new ones that arrived.
The thing to remember, however, is that while the Arya worshipped all
these different deities, they believed that all of them were only manifestations
of one Supreme Being, the formless, nameless one they called Ishvara. In the
Upanishads, which were composed 1,000 years after the Vedas, this Supreme
Being came to be called Brahman.
One destination, many possible routes – Hinduism sounds like a Google
map, wot?
PASHUPATI’S PEOPLE
A short intro to the original champions of ‘Jahan Soch,
Wahan Shauchalay’
Some 5,000 years ago, i.e., 1,500 years before our Veda-chanting Arya made
their appearance on the Indian stage and around the same time that the
world’s first cities were coming up on the banks of the river Nile in Egypt,
and the rivers Euphrates and Tigris in Mesopotamia (today’s Iraq), a very
advanced civilization – we refer to it today as the Harappan Civilization –
was flourishing on the banks of our own Sindhu (Indus) and Saraswati rivers.
The people of this civilization were best known for their brilliant urban
planning. Over a vast area stretching from Shortugai on Afghanistan’s
Russian border to Daimabad in Maharashtra and from Sutkagen Dor on the
Makran coast near Iran to Alamgirpur near Delhi, they built great cities with
straight roads, granaries, working sewerage systems, and houses with built-in
bathrooms and flushes! They traded with Mesopotamia and Egypt both via
land and sea routes, grew crops like barley and wheat, and left behind
pottery, beads, terracotta toys, jewellery, beautifully cast figurines in bronze
and mysterious seals for us to find and puzzle over thousands of years later.
They even left behind a script, which we haven’t been able to decipher yet. In
fact, we don’t even know what their land was called – we think it was called
Meluhha because the Mesopotamians left records of trading with a country
called Meluhha in the east.
The statue of the ‘priest king’ from Mohenjo-Daro
And when we talk priests, can the gods be far behind? Again, we have no
idea of Harappan gods, but there is one fascinating seal we have found that
has had everyone excited for the longest time. The seal is only about an inch
square, and damaged to boot, but if you squint hard at it, you can see that it
shows a seated male figure. Experts believe that figure could represent a
Harappan god who, with the addition of a few tweaks and changes, is still
being worshipped as a major Hindu god today!
They came to that conclusion through the kind of deductive process we
all follow when faced with a puzzle – we overlap the knowledge we have
with what is before us, and make some inspired guesses. The process must
have gone somewhat like this:
• Observation: The figure on the Harappan seal is sitting cross-legged.
Deduction: Ah! That looks like the lotus pose in yoga, the ‘padmasana’,
so maybe this is a yoga teacher of some kind, or even, dare I say it, a god
of yoga?
• Observation: He has three faces, one facing forward and two in profile.
Deduction: Ah! Many Hindu gods are shown with more than one head, so
this guy is definitely looking more like a god now.
• Observation: He is wearing some kind of headgear, with two beautifully
curving horns.
Deduction: Ah! Many Hindu gods are associated with animals – the horns
could mean this god is associated with a bull.
• Observation: The horns enclose what looks like a fountain or a plant.
Deduction: Hang on a minute! When the fountain and the horns are taken
together, they look like a... trident! Many Hindu gods are associated with
their own special weapon. Omg, I think I know which Hindu god this is!
• Observation: Around him are carved several animals – a tiger, an
elephant, a rhino, a buffalo and a deer.
Deduction: Ah! This could mean that this figure was revered as the ‘Lord
of All Creatures’. Omg, omg, another name of the Hindu god I was
thinking of before is Pashupati, which means ‘Lord of All Creatures’. I
know who this is, it has to be him – this is an ancient, ancient version of…
you guessed it – Shiva!
And that was how the figure on the broken seal got his name – Pashupati!
Of course we will never know for sure (or at least until we decipher the
Harappan script, and maybe not even then) whether that figure really
represents a Harappan god, and if that god was really a predecessor of the
Shiva we are familiar with today.
In fact, so far, we don’t even know what happened to our great city-
building ancestors and why they disappeared so mysteriously around 3,800
years ago. One popular theory is that a great drought forced the Harappans to
move east and south on the subcontinent, but it doesn’t explain why they did
not build up a grander civilization somewhere else, and how their advanced
knowledge of urban design and planning died out entirely.
Hmm. Maybe there is a totally different explanation. Maybe the
Harappans were beamed up en masse into passing alien spaceships. Maybe,
with the blessings of Pashupati, they colonized an entirely new planet.
Maybe, when they pass overhead in the dark of a winter night, they shake
their heads sadly at how we are destroying ours. Maybe.
The jury is still out on this one. What is your theory?
४
A-ONE, A-TWO, A-ONE, TWO,
THREE, FOUR!
The symbiotic tale of four Vedas and a yagna
ow that we are somewhat familiar with the history of the Vedas, we
N can get to the important matter of what the Arya used them for.
As you know by now, the religion of the Arya primarily centred
around the ritual sacrifice they called yagna. But what was the yagna
‘concept’ really about?
Well, a yagna was actually a mega-feast hosted by humans for the gods!
Most of the hymns of the Vedas were essentially invitations to these VIPs,
laced with praise and blandishments, and loaded with descriptions of all the
delicious food on offer, to tempt the gods into RSVP-ing with an enthusiastic
‘Wouldn’t miss it for the world!’ Of course, the inviting had to be done just
right, and the food prepared and served just so, or the gods would either not
arrive or stomp out in a huff in the middle of the yagna, which would not do
at all – a lot of devotion and effort and money would go down the drain then,
the yajamana would make a zero return on investment in terms of boons
received, and worse, incur a round of divine punishments to boot.
Why did the Arya throw such ginormous parties for their gods? Was it
only because they feared their wrath? Not really. A yagna was performed for
many reasons, chief among them being to show gratitude to the gods for
always being there – as sunlight, rain, wind, fertile earth, rushing rivers and
overall protectors – and to return that favour in some small measure, so that
the sacred cycle of give-and-take between gods and humans was kept in
motion. Yagnas were also the Arya way of nourishing their gods with food,
drink and adoration, to ensure that they regained the strength and lustre they
had lost combating river-blocking dragons, cow-concealing demons and other
enemies of humankind – for if the gods were not nourished, who would stand
in the way of the forces of destruction that constantly threatened the world?
Equally importantly, yagnas were performed by the rich and powerful not
just for their own benefit but for the noble cause of ‘loka kalyan’ – the
welfare of the world – because the Arya believed, as we still do, that it was
unselfish acts like these that helped tot up brownie points in their karma
accounts for their next life.
And that’s why it was so important to have the right priests in place,
chanting the right hymns from the appropriate Vedas, and doing all the right
things as far as the yagna prep, event flow and offerings went, to ensure a
perfect yagna for the yajamana.
How did the hymns of the four Vedas fit into this picture? Did one priest
know all of them by heart or did it take a whole battalion of them to pull off a
successful yagna? Let’s take a little detour to examine the Vedas in a little
more detail, shall we?
THE SAMHITA
The Samhita part of each Veda is the oldest layer, and the simplest to
explain. The Samhita, which simply means ‘collection’, is that part of the
Vedas that is called ‘liturgy’ in English. Liturgy is the actual set of hymns
that are chanted during the rituals of public worship in any religion (in
Sanskrit*, the Vedic hymns are called mantras).
*All the Samhitas are in Vedic Sanskrit, which is an ancient form of the language that we know today
as Sanskrit. It wasn’t until the 5th century BCE, when the great scholar Panini put down the rules of
Sanskrit grammar, that Sanskrit became a ‘formal’ language that could be taught, written and spoken in
exactly the same way by everyone. In the beginning, Sanskrit was written using a number of different
scripts derived from the Brahmi script used in Emperor Ashoka’s time, but today its official script is
Devanagari, the same ‘washing-line’ script we use to write Hindi.
THE BRAHMANA
Unfortunately, the Samhitas, like a lot of the archaic poetry you are forced to
study in school and college today, were written in language that was often too
obscure and difficult to understand. So an interpretation, which explained the
significance and meaning of each mantra and ritual, apart from providing
minute details on how each ritual was to be carried out, was later added on to
each Veda. This layer is called the Brahmana. (Note: Different opinions as
to the real meaning of the mantras ensured that there was often more than one
Brahmana for a Samhita – we are not called the ‘Argumentative Indians’ for
nothing!) Mercifully, the Brahmanas were written in straightforward prose.
THE ARANYAKA
As centuries went by, many deep thinkers among the later Arya found
themselves questioning the mostly literal interpretations in the Brahmanas.
They pondered questions like – ‘Sure the poet says ‘‘Surya’s chariot has one
wheel and seven horses” here, but what did he or she really mean? Maybe the
seven horses are actually the seven colours of the rainbow and the one wheel
means they all combine to make one colour, the white of sunlight? Maybe the
seven horses indicate the five senses, the mind and the intellect, and Surya is
the one who controls all of them so that the one wheel of our awareness is not
pulled in seven different directions at the same time?’
See how this sort of thing can be fun? And how you can go on endlessly?
The cool part is that when wise, well-meaning people sit down to do this,
they can come up with the kind of creative interpretations that truly expand
our understanding. They can urge us to read between the lines, to not accept
things at face value, and seek the truth beyond what the eyes see and the ears
hear.
The rishis who meditated in the deep dark of the jungles, passing their
experiences and learnings along to students in their forest academies, were
among the wisest, most free-thinking and most imaginative people of the
Vedic Age. Their questions (including the ones they asked themselves) and
their fresh, new interpretations of the hymns of the Samhitas, form the third
layer of the Vedas – the Aranyakas. (Why ‘Aranyakas’? Well, in Sanskrit,
‘aranya’ means forest, and these thinkers usually lived in the forests. Ergo.)
THE UPANISHAD
The Aranyakas seem to flow naturally into the last section of the Vedas – i.e.,
the Vedanta or the Upanishads – because the latter are also deep and
philosophical thoughts on life, the universe and everything. But the
Upanishads also stand by themselves, because, unlike the Aranyakas, they do
not refer to the Vedic rituals or the Samhita at all. It’s quite possible,
therefore, that the Upanishads were composed independently, quite separate
from the Vedas (after all, they were composed a millennium later!) and were
then tacked on to the Vedas as their fourth and final layer because the
thoughts in them seemed to progress directly from the Aranyakas. [In fact,
the oldest and largest of the Upanishads, the Brihadaranyaka, literally means
‘The Giant (or Expanded) Aranyaka’.]
As you can see, the Samhitas are the ‘real’ Vedas – the other layers are
only more and more advanced interpretations of them. Also, while the
division between the Samhitas and the Brahmanas is quite clear, the lines
between the other three sections are pretty fuzzy, with one merging merrily
into the other*. There is also a clear division between the first two layers and
the later two – the first two form the ‘doing’ or action part of the Veda –
hymns to be sung, rituals to be performed – while the last two are the
‘thinking’ or wisdom part – questions to ponder over, lessons to live by.
PS: Can you guess what the ‘action’ section and ‘thinking’ section are called
in Sanskrit? Here’s a clue – the Sanskrit word for section is ‘kanda’ (say
kaanda). Now think about what the Sanskrit words for action and wisdom
are, and you will have your answer.
(Ans: Karma Kanda and Jnana Kanda)
The Sama Veda Samhita is a subset of the Rig Veda Samhita, consisting of
a selection of 1,875 of its verses (yup, no new material there). What makes
this Samhita special, though, is that these 1,875 verses are set to music, which
explains how this particular Veda gets its name – ‘saaman’ is Sanskrit for
‘song’. It also explains why the Sama Veda Samhita is meant to be heard, not
read. When they began to be written down, the verses were musically
‘notated’ too – in other words, the ‘tune’ to which the verses must be sung
was clearly marked (similar to how a musical score is written down in
western sheet music), which means that when we ‘sing’ verses from the Sama
Veda, we are singing them in exactly the same tune as they were sung 3,000
years ago! In fact, all Indian classical music and dance traditions consider the
melodies in the Sama Veda to be part of their original roots. But Sama Veda
hymns are neither quite sung like songs nor chanted like the Rig Vedic
mantras. They fall somewhere in between the two – a melodious chanting,
shall we say? The melodies are believed to have existed before the Sama
Veda itself, with words from the Rig Vedic hymns being fitted into those
melodies as best they could.*
*Remember that bit from the 1965 film The Sound of Music where Maria teaches the von Trapp kids a
melody – Sol Do La Fa Mi Do Re / Sol Do La Ti Do Re Do – and the youngest, Gretl, protests – ‘But
they don’t mean anything!’? Remember how Maria answers, ‘So we put in words. One word for every
note. Like this – When- you- know- the- notes- to- sing / You- can- sing- ’most- a-ny-thing!’? The
Sama Veda ‘songs’ are believed to have been constructed in exactly the same way.
Unlike the Samhitas of the Rig Veda and the Sama Veda, the Yajur Veda
Samhita is a mix of prose and verse. The verse part, while not identical to the
Rig Veda verses, borrows liberally from them. The prose part, on the other
hand, is original, and comprises the ‘formulae’ recited during a sacrifice as
the offerings are being poured. In fact, the name of the Veda itself comes
from the Sanskrit ‘yajus’, which means sacrifice. (Yajus is also the root word
of... yup, yagna!)
Now, even though the Vedas had stringent methods of oral transmission,
some variations are bound to creep in over three millennia. The story goes
that Veda Vyasa, the compiler and editor of the Vedas, taught the Yajur Veda
to his student Vaishampayana, who in turn taught it to twenty-seven of his
students, who taught it onwards in their own shakhas or schools. Over time,
we ended up with two variants of the Yajur Veda Samhita – the so-called
Shukla (Sanskrit for ‘white’ or ‘bright’) Yajur Veda, and the Krishna (‘black’
or ‘dark’) Yajur Veda, considered ‘dark’ because it was not organized as
meticulously as the Shukla, and was therefore confusing. (Hey, Arya! Your
colour biases are showing!)
Most scholars believe that the Atharva Veda Samhita is not directly
connected with the other three, because this one has less to do with liturgy
and gods and philosophical ruminations, and more with the everyday fears
and hopes and troubles of common people. The Atharva Veda’s name origin
is different from the rest of the Vedas too – it is named after the sage
Atharvan, who – interesting sidelight alert! – is believed to be the man who
discovered how to make fire by rubbing a pair of sticks together!
This fourth Samhita is a motley mix of many unusual and somewhat
bizarre things – spells to ward off nightmares and disease, prayers to
individual herbs to do their job as healers, mantras to chant while a broken
bone is being set, praise for the motherland and the mother tongue, and even
incantations to wake a dead person so that he can go and meet his ‘deader’
ancestors. True story.
In fact, there are so many prayers to plants and herbs, and the verses
display such a vast knowledge of the healing properties of each, that the
Atharva Veda Samhita is believed to be the inspiration behind the Indian
system of medicine, Ayurveda! Both the great ancient Indian healer Charaka,
who left us the Charaka Samhita, a fat compendium on Ayurveda, and the
ancient Indian doctor and surgeon, Sushruta, who wrote the Sushruta
Samhita, a medical manual listing 1,120 illnesses and their treatment, along
with surgical procedures that include tooth extraction, fracture management
and cataract surgery, acknowledge the Atharva Veda Samhita as one of their
main inspirations. Cool, hunh?
Now, armed with all this information about the Vedas, back to the main
pastime of rich and powerful Arya – the yagna!
You can see why this was a great gig for the priests – at the end of each
yagna, the yajamana rewarded each of them with generous amounts of
dakshina, or fees, not only to express his gratitude for a job well done but
also to buy himself insurance from their curses and ill-will. Win-win all
around!
Filed away all that macro info about the Vedas? Super. On to the micro
now, in the next chapter!
THE ORIGINAL ‘BEAT POETS’
A brief introduction to the many rhythms of the Vedas
We meditate
On the effulgent glory of that Divine Light, Savitr –
May He illuminate our understanding.
Did you notice that the first line of the Gayatri mantra has only seven
syllables? No one is sure why that is so; perhaps it is because the words were
pronounced a little differently in Vedic times. When it is recited today, to
keep the sanctity of the Gayatri metre, some people split the word and say
‘varen-iyam’.
2. The Ushni – With two paadas of 8 syllables and one of 12, the Ushni has
exactly four syllables more than the sacred Gayatri.
3. The Anushtubh – The favourite metre of the post-Vedic poets, the
Anushtubh is used extensively in the verses of the Rig Veda, the
Mahabharata, the Ramayana and the Bhagavad Gita, apart from the
Puranas and ancient scientific works in Sanskrit. This famous prayer to
Ganesha is composed in the Anushtubh metre. Can you calculate the
number of paadas, the number of syllables per paada, and the total number
of syllables of this metre?
Vakratunda mahakaya
Surya koti samaprabha
Nirvighnam kurume deva
Sarvakaryeshu sarvada
4. The Brihati – Like the Anushtubh, this one also has 4 paadas, except, in
the Brihati’s case, the third paada has 12 syllables instead of 8.
5. The Pankti – This chanda has 5 paadas, each with 8 syllables, making 40
syllables in all.
Let’s pause here for a moment. Have you noticed a pattern, a
progression, in the five chandas we’ve looked at so far? If yes, you will
know, without reading further, exactly how many syllables the next
chanda, the Trishtubh, should have. Make your guess now, and then read
on to check if you got it right!
6. The Trishtubh – The second most favourite metre of the Rig Vedic poets
after the Gayatri, the Trishtubh is used extensively in ancient Sanskrit
drama, epic poetry and literature. It is also used in the Bhagavad Gita to
great dramatic effect in Chapter 11. Here’s how it’s done.
In chapters 1 through 10 of the Gita, sitting in the palace at Hastinapura,
the royal charioteer Sanjaya describes the scenes from the epic battle
about to begin at Kurukshetra to the blind king Dhritarashtra, in verse that
uses a calm and measured Anushtubh metre. By chapter 10, the rhythm
has lodged itself in the reader or listener’s mind, and he is unconsciously
keeping beat.
In Chapter 11, when in response to Arjuna’s request, Krishna reveals
his terrifying Vishwaroopa form to him, the metre of the verse suddenly
changes to Trishtubh as Arjuna (and Sanjaya) become incoherent with
bliss and wonder and fear at the vision of this cosmic Krishna. The change
of beat catches the listener unawares, shakes him out of his complacency,
and delivers the kind of mega-goosebumps that that mega-moment
deserves. Clever technique, huh?
But how many syllables and how many paadas in the Trishtubh? Take a
look at Verse 15 from Chapter 11 of the Bhagavad Gita, the point at which
Anushtubh turns to Trishtubh, and find out for yourself!
7. The Jagati – The longest metre among the ancient ones, the Jagati is used
a lot in post-Vedic Sanskrit literature. The shloka below is the third shloka
from the Bhagavata Purana (for more info on the Bhagavata, see ‘The
Fifth Veda’ on the next page). It exhorts poets and romantics, sinners and
liberated souls, to read the Bhagavatam so that their souls may be
liberated. As before, do a quick (or s-l-o-w) reading of the shloka and see
if you can tell how many paadas, how many syllables per paada and how
many syllables in all the Jagati has!
Ans: 4 paadas, 12 syllables per paada, 48 syllables in all. Did you notice
how the number of syllables went up by 4 in each chanda, until 24
syllables in the Gayatri became 48 in the Jagati?
The Bhagavata Purana – One of the eighteen major Puranas, this one is a
complete eulogy to Krishna and Krishna-bhakti (devotion to Krishna).
Contrary to the idea that rigid worship to the accompaniment of mantras
chanted by the upper-caste guardians of the Vedas was the only way to God,
this Purana declares that simple, honest love for Krishna can get you to the
exact same place. Most of the popular stories about Krishna’s birth and
childhood that you may know are from this Purana, which is mainly narrated
by Shuka, the son of Vyasa (he’s everywhere, this sage!). Composed around
the 8th century CE (quite recently in the Veda calendar, that is), the Bhagavata
was the first Purana to be translated into a European language – a French
translation of a Tamil translation of the text came out in 1788.
The Natya Shastra – An ancient treatise on theatre, drama, dance and music,
the Natya Shastra, believed to have been composed by the sage Bharata, is
the root text for all Indian classical dance and theatre forms. (The name of
one of our main classical dance forms, Bharatanatyam, comes from this
sage’s name.)
In the Natya Shastra, the arts were seen as a medium through which to tell
the stories of the gods and the epics to common people, so that they learnt,
just as well as the scholars, how to lead a good and virtuous life. As for the
artiste, it was his or her responsibility to be the bridge between the humans
and the gods. To this day, all genres of Indian classical music and dance tell
the same sacred stories and follow the same philosophy. If, at the end of a
particularly accomplished Indian dance or music performance, you feel a rush
of emotions jostling within you – joy, sadness, wonder, heroism, peace, and
above all, a sense of having been transported to other realms – it didn’t
happen by chance, and it didn’t happen only to you; it was exactly what the
performer was aiming for! Now you know.
The Divya Prabandham and the Tevaram – Down south, Tamil votes for
what constitutes the Fifth Veda are divided between the Divya Prabandham, a
collection of verses extolling the greatness of Vishnu and his avatar Krishna,
composed by the twelve Tamil saints called the Alvars; and the Tevaram, a
collection of devotional verses dedicated to Shiva, composed by three of the
sixty-three Shiva-worshipping poet-saints called the Nayanars.
Time to vote for your pick now! If you want to exercise the NOTA (none
of the above) option because you want to nominate a different text entirely,
that’s fine too. This is a land of a billion opinions. Another one cannot hurt.
AWESOME THREESOME
Here come the top three Vedic yagnas!
The Ashwamedha – The best known of the three, the Ashwamedha featured
an ashwa, or horse, as the medha, or offering, and was meant to establish a
king as the undisputed ruler of his empire.
Only a powerful king could perform the long-running (minimum
duration: one year!) Ashwamedha yagna, not only because it was expensive
but also because it involved taking on several hostile armies during the
period. Here’s how it worked: First, the horse, usually a young and healthy
stallion, was ritually purified and sent off without a rider or reins in the north-
easterly direction. Along with the horse went a hundred soldiers and officers
handpicked by the king.
As the horse roamed freely through the kingdom, and often beyond it,
back home, the king and his priests kept the yagna fires burning, making
offerings each day to the gods. Whenever anyone – a neighbouring king, a
rebellious vassal, an ambitious young warrior – challenged the horse, either
by not allowing it to pass, or by stealing or capturing it, he would have to go
to war with the king’s soldiers. Letting the horse pass unchallenged meant
accepting the king as your overlord.
At the end of the year, if the stallion returned unchallenged, the king
would declare himself supreme ruler of all the lands his horse had passed
through. His queens would then beg the horse’s forgiveness (because he was
about to be sacrificed – sad but true). In the grand culmination of the yagna,
the ashwa would become the medha for the gods.
In the Ramayana, years after he had sent Sita away to the forest, Rama
performed the Ashwamedha Yagna. Since the yagna required the queen to be
present, and since Rama had never stopped thinking of her as his beloved, his
wife and his queen, he got a statue of her cast in gold and had it stand in for
her. The consecrated horse was set free to roam where it willed, and no one
dared to stop it. Until two young challengers at the forest hermitage of sage
Valmiki not only captured the horse but also took on Rama’s soldiers with
such great skill and valour, defeating all of Rama’s brothers one by one, that
Rama himself was forced to finally intervene.
Can you recall the young challengers’ names, and their identities?
Ans: The twins Lava and Kusha, who were Rama and Sita’s sons.
As long as the yagna fire burned, King X was treated not like a king but a
demigod. There were various fun activities that he was involved in too – like
a chariot drive-by, a display of his (hopefully decent) archery skills, a cattle
raid (which tested his skill and strategy at stealing other people’s cows) and a
game of dice.
In the Mahabharata, after Yudhishthira was crowned king at his glittering
new capital city, Indraprastha, he performed the Rajasuya Yagna. Hundreds
of kings from all over attended, accepting him as their overlord. The
Kauravas attended not as guests, but as the Pandavas’ fellow-hosts, while
Krishna was given the status of Most Honoured Guest. This made another
guest, the king of Chedi, furious. This king had hated Krishna ever since the
latter had carried away Rukmini, who had been betrothed to him (not
Krishna’s fault, really, Rukmini had begged him to carry her away). He
began to insult Krishna publicly and viciously, and got his head taken off
with Krishna’s chakra for his pains. What was this king’s name? (Ans:
Shishupala.)
The Soma – Unlike the other two yagnas, the Soma Yagna was nobler,
meant for the welfare of humanity. There was no horse involved, but there
was, expectedly, a tonne of soma. The soma offered in such copious
quantities was believed to strengthen and rejuvenate the gods and put them in
a good mood, and the yagna itself was meant to cleanse the air of toxins and
pollutants. Whichever way you looked at it, therefore, health, happiness and
prosperity for all was guaranteed.
While no one has performed the Ashwamedha or Rajasuya yagnas in a
long, long time, the Soma Yagna continues to be performed in India.
According to Wikipedia, the most recent large-scale Soma Yagna was
performed in Gujarat as recently as 2017!
Yeah, yeah, we know. The very word ‘ritual’ sounds unfashionably old,
smells of mothballs, feels like sweat and uncomfortable clothes and
mumbling around a fire, and smacks of blind faith. Rituals are certainly not
the kind of thing a modern and secular young person might want to associate
himself or herself with.
But what is a ritual, anyway? The dictionary defines it as ‘a religious or
solemn ceremony consisting of a series of actions performed according to a
prescribed order.’ Which is exactly what the Vedic rituals were, and exactly
the kind of ritual you were thinking about. But here’s another definition from
the same dictionary – ‘a series of actions or type of behaviour regularly and
invariably followed by someone.’ These were the kinds of rituals
recommended by the Upanishads – rituals like reflecting on things before
arriving at a decision, for instance, questioning everything, looking beyond
the differences on the outside to the sameness on the inside. But they
recommended that you perform these rituals religiously, i.e., with the kind of
rigour and fervour that is normally associated with religion. Because rituals
can be important!
A hymns, in the body of ancient sacred literature called the Vedas. And
that’s even if you consider just the first section of the Vedas, what we
have earlier called the ‘real’ Vedas, i.e., the Samhitas. Since there is no way
that the one small book you are holding just now can introduce you to all
those suktas, here is a selection instead. Alternately lyrical, deeply
philosophical and fabulously imaginative, all these suktas are taken from the
Rig Veda Samhita, the oldest and largest of them all.
Now, what are the hymns of the Rig Veda about? Well, mostly about the
Arya gods. More hymns in the Rig Veda – 289 to be precise – are addressed
to Indra, the Lord of Heaven and the god of the rain and the storm, than to
any other. There are also a substantial number addressed to Agni and Soma.
And while the hymns to their gods are beautiful, and full of wonder and
praise, there are other hymns in the Rig that are far more interesting. Mostly,
these hymns are from the Mandalas (sections) that bookend the text –
Mandala 1 and Mandala 10 – which are believed to have been added later.
There are stories there about how the universe was created, prayers to the
horse that was sacrificed and eaten as part of the famous Ashwamedha yagna,
funeral chants, powerful mantras, and spells against rivals, bad dreams and
insomnia.
The nine hymns featured here are a mix of these, and have been very
loosely translated - they are simply meant to give you a sense of what they
are about. Do look elsewhere for a more faithful and complete translation.
Every culture and every religion in the world has its own belief system about
how the universe was born, and how man and his fellow creatures came to
be. All creation myths are set in a vague time period in the past – usually
referred to as ‘In the beginning’, or ‘At that time’ or simply, ‘Then’. They
each carry in them certain truths and world views that are dear to the cultures
that tell the stories, and the hopes and beliefs of the society that created them.
Creation myths also hugely impact and influence the way people in those
societies see themselves in relation to the universe. Understanding a culture’s
creation myths can help you understand why the people of that culture
behave the way they do. Do people believe, for instance, that everything in
our universe is a product of intelligent design, that it was the Great Designer
in the sky who created it, or do they believe that the universe began with a
Big Bang? Do they believe that humans are the most superior of all species,
with a divine charter to rule the world, or do they see all the world’s creatures
as interconnected and coming from one single source of primordial energy?
Do they see creation’s timeline as a, well, line, with a beginning of the world
and an end of the world, or do they see it as a cycle, in which everything that
has been, will be again? You see how each of these beliefs can make people
live their lives very differently? That’s the power of creation myths!
Many early stories and myths travelled between places and people. This
is one reason that many cultures have similar stories of creation, although
each is tweaked a little to suit that particular culture. The most popular kinds
of creation myths include ones in which:
• creation proceeds from the thought, word or dream of a divine being; He,
She or It creates the universe ex nihilo (cool-sounding Latin phrase
meaning ‘out of nothing’), i.e., it is not fashioned out of some pre-existing
raw material. Christian, Islamic and Jewish mythologies feature this kind
of creation myth.
• creation results from the dismemberment (the action of cutting off the
limbs of a person or animal; no, seriously!) of a primordial being.
(Primordial sounds like a scary word but isn’t. It just means something
‘that existed at the beginning of time’.) Different parts of the being then
become different parts of the cosmos. This kind of creation myth exists in
Babylonian and Norse mythology, to name only two.
• creation happens by the hatching of the cosmic egg. This hugely popular
creation story is found in Egyptian, Greek, Finnish, Polynesian, Chinese,
Norse and many other mythologies.
• creation begins with God sending a bird or an amphibian, the earth diver,
to plunge into the waters of the primordial ocean to bring up mud from the
bottom, using which land is created. This myth is popular with the Native
Americans, the Russian Tatars, the Siberian Yukaghirs, among others.
Needless to say, our Arya had their own creation myths as well. Their
attitude to it, however, was – ‘Why settle for one creation myth when you can
have several?’ The good thing about this kind of approach was that it kept the
debate open – after all, new data could turn up any time that proved or
disproved one or more of your myths! More seriously, though, this variety of
creation myths can be seen as proof of the Arya’s great humility in the face of
the awesome, wondrous universe that sustained and nourished them. These
guys, like few others, were not too arrogant, too afraid or too embarrassed to
shrug and say, ‘We think this may be the way it happened, or this, or this, but
tbh, we don’t know.’
Here are four of the Arya creation myths, each presented as a hymn in the
Rig Veda.
Probably the most popular one of all, this story is about a golden egg –
‘Hiranyagarbha’ in Sanskrit – that rose out of the deep dark of the all-
encompassing floodwaters, containing the seed of everything in the universe.
The heat of the fiery seed caused the egg to split – the top half of the shell
became the sky, the bottom half the earth, and both were - and are - held in
place by the Supreme Being, an all-pervading energy who himself became
the atmosphere, the space between the earth and the sky.
Although most cultures believe in the concept of a primordial ocean,
Hindus have a very particular understanding of ‘the waters’. They associate it
with the all-consuming flood, MahaPralaya, which causes the dissolution of
the universe at regular intervals (each interval is about 311 trillion years long,
so you can rest easy!). Once the Great Dissolution has occurred, creation
must begin all over again. It is in the depths of the MahaPralaya floodwaters
that Hiranyagarbha is believed to arise.
Now let’s get to the hymn itself. Translating an ancient version of a
language can be very difficult, particularly because there is no way to tell
what some words meant in the context of the civilization that produced it.
One of the biggest debates among translators of this hymn is whether a
question mark should be placed after the repeating line – ‘Who is the god we
worship through our offerings’ – or not. It makes sense both ways, but the
meaning is quite different in each case. If you read the line as a question, it
sounds as if the Arya did not know who he was; if you read it as a statement,
they sound almost smug in their certainty of his identity. At the end of the
hymn, they give him a name – Prajapati, Lord of All Creatures.
Stanza 4 in the translation below says that the floodwaters and the egg
came from Prajapati (by which you deduce that the egg was outside of
Prajapati), but it also says that Prajapati was inside the egg! Eh?
Vedic hymns use such seeming contradictions a lot – it makes the hymns
confounding if you try and make sense of them through logic. But that
perhaps was exactly the message the ancient sages were trying to convey to
us! God, Supreme Being, Energy, whatever you wish to call the life-force
that sustains everything in the universe – is not easily definable. He cannot be
described using our paltry words and metaphors, he lies beyond the grasp of
our limited human intellect, and neither our senses nor our minds can ever
hope to ‘see’ him in any form or fashion. It is only when we set aside our
desire to fit him into our boxes of understanding – logic, rational thinking,
seeing, hearing, feeling – that we may be able to experience the wonder of it
all.
And while you’re wondering how to do that, let’s salute the Vedic sages
for not sitting on the fence at least on the prickly chicken-and-egg problem –
they believed, clearly, that it was the egg that came first.
In the beginning
Before anything else was,
Was Hiranyagarbha, the Golden Egg,
The Lord of All Creation,
The one who held in place the earth and sky –
Then
There was nothing that was non-existent, nor anything that was,
No air, no light, no heaven, no space,
No death, no life, no night, no day.
Darkness hidden in darkness -
Cleaving into
Above and below, giving and receiving, seed and womb,
It swelled the universe
Where chaos was rife, with power and life;
If God is a reflection of ourselves, and vice versa, surely God built his house,
the universe, as we build ours? Surely he would need to sculpt things and
weld things and carve things? In this hymn, the Supreme Being is called
Vishwakarma – literally, Maker of the Universe – and he is seen as sculptor
and architect, blacksmith and carpenter.
With a pragmatic understanding that nothing can be created anew if what
already exists isn’t destroyed first, the hymn starts with a sacrifice where
everything is consigned to the consuming fire by the High Priest,
Vishwakarma. After completing the act of creation, the divine priest takes
himself out of the picture. He, literally and metaphorically, fires himself, by
turning himself into an offering, by becoming Agni.
But back to the creation part. If he offered everything, everything, as a
sacrifice before he began, what in heaven’s name did he build the world
with? Read on to find out!
PS: This is the even more frustrating part of the Vedic hymns – you go to
them looking for answers, and often come away with more questions than you
had before! But through this no-doubt aggravating technique, they teach us
great lessons – you can never know it all, the really important questions have
no (simple) answers, the world is full of mystery and wonder, and, most
importantly, it is often as much fun, if not more, to employ the fabulous gift of
your intellect to fashion and ponder the questions, as it is to arrive at
answers.
All of earth’s creatures, those that eat and those that do not
Are formed from only one quarter of him,
The other three quarters cover everything about and above them.
From him was born Virat, and from Virat was he –
They begat each other, see?
PS: Hindu religious ceremonies no longer feature soma the drink, but the
Soma Mandala is still very relevant. To this day, several of its hymns are
chanted as part of a ceremony called the Pavamana Homa – a purifying
ritual that is performed either when a new space is being inaugurated for
use, or to cleanse a space of negative, toxic influences.
*Shraddha is the daughter of the sun. The word shraddha also means dedication, and its use here is
perhaps meant to remind listeners that the preparation of soma was a sacred task that required one to be
conscientious and focused.
O Indra!
Make me
A bull among my peers,
A conqueror of my rivals,
A slayer of my foes,
An emperor among men,
A possessor of cows –
In short, make me like you!
O Indra!
May no one hurt or hate me,
May my enemies cower at my feet.
Like the two ends of the bow
Tied down by the string,
I tie you down, O Lord of Speech –
Press down upon the tongues of my rivals
Make them speak humbly to me.
O Enemies!
Here I come
As the conqueror of your minds,
As the conqueror of your deeds,
As your conqueror in battle,
As your leader and vanquisher!
I tread on your heads as you gather at my feet –
Now speak! as frogs croak when out of water,
Speak! as frogs croak when out of water.
*Sapatna is Sanskrit for a male enemy or rival, while Sapatni is the word for a female enemy. Sapatna
Naashana translates to ‘destruction of male enemies’ while Sapatni Baadhana (the title of another
hymn) translates to ‘abolition of female rivals’. The Arya made no bones about calling a spade a spade!
Sangacchadhvam samvadadhvam
Sam vo manaamsi jaanataam
Devaa bhaagam yathaa poorve
Sanjaanaanaa upaasate
Before you ask, nope, the Upavedas have nothing to do with the original four
Vedas. So what are they, then? Well, while the Vedas are the more theoretical
and contemplative texts, the Upavedas used the Vedas as inspiration to spin
off entirely new disciplines of study and practice. Just like engineering or
architecture is really applied physics and/or chemistry, the Upavedas are the
applied Vedas.
Which Indian systems of study qualify to be called Upavedas? There are
four, each associated with one of the four Vedas.
• Dhanurveda –The art of warfare and the martial arts. Although
Dhanurveda literally translates to ‘knowledge of archery’, it is a catch-all
term for yuddhakala (the art of war), aayudhavidya (the knowledge of
arms), veeravidya (the science of being a warrior), shastravidya (say shuh-
stra, not shaastra, the science of weaponry) and svarakshaakala (the art of
self-defence). Apart from archery and sword fighting, it incorporates the
old Indian favourite – mallayuddha, or wrestling (any wonder we are
winning Olympic medals in the sport these days?), and dvandvayuddha, or
the art of the duel, which is a battle fought between two mighty warriors
instead of two mighty armies (much less blood that way). Dhanurveda is
associated with the Rig Veda.
• Sthapatyaveda – The ancient Indian art and science of architecture. It
includes the theory of Vaastu Shastra, which is based on the philosophy
that the design of a building must be integrated with nature and that there
are certain symmetries and patterns that work better than others. It is really
a collection of ideas - not rigid rules but helpful suggestions - on how
space should be organized inside and outside a building, depending on
which spaces are used for what purpose. Since the Yajur Veda contains
information about building too, although mainly on the sacred patterns for
yagna kunds, the Sthapatyaveda is associated with the Yajur Veda.
Situation 2. Let’s say you believe that people who work harder than others
and put in more time at their jobs should get paid more (but of course, duh!).
As a result of getting paid more, they will get richer than everyone else, build
themselves bigger houses and drive fancier cars, buy themselves many acres
of farmland, start big factories that will produce goods that will make them
even richer, and so on. Sure, a family of four may not necessarily need that
much land or that much space or that much money, but hey, they worked
harder and made the sacrifices and they deserve their privileges!
Unfortunately, your friend doesn’t agree at all. She thinks that people who
have more than they need should share their wealth with people who don’t
have enough. She believes that if such people don’t share voluntarily, they
should be forced to – either by their religion (many religions insist on this,
some even specifying what percentage of a person’s wealth should be shared
with the community), their government (by way of taxes, for instance – the
more you earn, the more tax you pay), or by the law (since 2013, it is
mandatory in India for companies that earn a certain amount of money
annually to spend two per cent of their net profits on something called CSR,
or Corporate Social Responsibility, where they plough that money back into
the community by either sending donations for disaster relief, sponsoring
research in deadly communicable diseases, supporting government schools or
poor villages, and so on).
You think this is patently unfair. To be forced to give away part of what
you have rightfully earned is Simply Not OK. Your friend is disgusted at
what she sees as your small-mindedness and lack of social responsibility, but
you don’t back down. After all, if you keep backing down every time
someone questions or looks down upon your beliefs, you will soon have no
principles to live by at all. Sometimes, and about some things, one has to be
completely inflexible.
Now, what do you think the Vedas would recommend in each of the two
situations? What would they have to say about your decisions on flexibility in
each case? There are four possible options – pick one.
1. They would totally agree with your decisions in both the cases.
2. They would say you should be completely inflexible in both situations.
3. They would say you should be completely flexible in both situations.
4. They would disagree with your decisions in both cases.
What option did you pick? If you picked 1, 2 or 3, so sorry, but those are
the wrong options. Option 4 is the right option – the Vedas would
recommend that you should be inflexible in Situation 1 and flexible in 2.
Hang on a minute, you say – how do you know that for sure? After all, there
was no Netflix in the Vedic Age, so surely the Vedic sages could not have
commented on it!
Sure, but it is not Netflix itself, but the ritual of watching one episode a
day that we are talking about here. You could easily replace Netflix with a
Vedic ritual and ask – would the Vedic sages be OK with a student skipping
the ritual or tweaking it occasionally if he ‘made up for it’ later by doing a
double yagna or something? Of course they wouldn’t. In the case of the
following of a ritual, the Vedas demand complete compliance – it has to be
done at the recommended times, in the recommended way, and no convenient
short-cuts or ‘adjustments’ are allowed.
Similarly, replace the question of the rightness or wrongness of a forced
contribution to society with the Vedic concept of how the universe was
created. Many religions and cultures are pretty inflexible in their beliefs about
creation – in many states in the USA, for instance, schools do not teach
Darwin’s theory of evolution because the authorities do not believe man
evolved from apes; they believe that it was God who created man, fully
formed – but the Rig Veda itself offers several alternative creation stories. It
is very flexible about its beliefs, and is not shy to admit that it isn’t sure, that
it does not know the truth, and is willing to keep an open mind until it does.
Do you have to go by what the Vedas say? Not at all. But the philosophy
of ‘Be inflexible about your rituals but flexible about your ideologies’ has
some good points. We have spoken about the benefits of rituals earlier (see
page 84) so we don’t need to go there again. As for beliefs and ideologies,
they are not ‘facts’* but ‘opinions’, which is why it is always better to keep
an open mind to allow new data, fresh opinions and alternative points of view
around and about them, to enter. If you don’t, the wonderful and never-
ending process of learning is stymied, and you are left with a stagnant
ideology that will, sooner or later, begin to smell a little funky.
*Of course, the Upanishads recommend that everything, even so-called facts, must be routinely and
thoroughly questioned.
But what if you continue to stick to your original beliefs after you have
thrown open your mind, after you have closely examined and seriously
considered the alternatives, and with all the respect they deserve? That’s
absolutely fine! As an extra bonus, you would have Gandhiji’s approval. ‘I
do not want my house to be walled in on all sides and my windows to be
stuffed,’ he once said. ‘I want the cultures of all lands to be blown about my
house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown off my feet by any.’
THE SECRET
Next up, the Upanishads
६
SO WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL
ABOUT THE UPANISHADS?
ight. Time for another quiz! Now that you have read about the Vedas
R in the previous chapters, you have already got some clues, so go right
ahead!
1. What, exactly, are the Upanishads?
a. A part of the Vedas
b. Philosophical ideas and concepts that are based on the Vedas
c. Conversations, usually between a teacher and a student, on complex
questions like ‘What is death, really?’ ‘Who am I, really?’ and even,
‘What is reality, really?’
d. The set of texts on which the Bhagavad Gita is based
e. All of the above
Did you guess (e) all of the above? But of course you did! You already know
what the Upanishads are, from the previous chapters, duh.
What’s important to remember is that the Upanishads are not just part of
the Vedas, they are also often based on the ideas set out in the Vedas. They
question, analyze and interpret the earlier parts of the Vedas, and move the
Veda conversation forward. Hang on a minute, they say, so we’ve all been
chanting all the hymns and performing all the sacrifices and rituals that the
Samhitas and Brahmanas have prescribed, for centuries. Can we now ask
why (or if!) this ritual stuff is important? In fact, can we put the rituals aside
for a bit and brainstorm about the really important questions like –
- ‘Since we are all going to die in the end anyway, what is the point of this
life?’ or
- ‘Those gods that we are always offering things to so that we can have
wealth, power, health, sons, whatever... do they really exist or did we
create them because it makes us feel better to imagine there is someone
powerful up there who we can arm-twist into giving us what we want
simply by chanting the right mantras?’ or
- ‘Never mind the gods and the heavens and contentment in the afterlife –
are there ways in which we can be truly content on earth? And if so, what
are those ways?’
That’s pretty cool, don’t you think? That a sacred text (Veda) should have
a section (Upanishad) that questions everything it has itself said? No wonder
the doubting, inquiring, seeking Upanishads have found many, many fans
both in India and elsewhere, and become far more popular than the Vedas
themselves.
2. In all, how many Upanishads are there?
a. 10
b. 1,875
c. 200
d. 100,000
The correct answer is... (c) – there are about 200 Upanishads (give or take
a few) in all. Luckily for us, scholars better and wiser than most of us can
ever hope to be, have decided that only ten of those are what they call the
Principal Upanishads. Phew.
Since the Upanishads are part of the Vedas, they also belong to Shruti, or
‘revealed’, literature, which means we have no idea who composed them.
However, some of them recount conversations of certain sages – including
Yagnavalkya (say yaa-gnya-val-kya), Uddalaka Aruni, Shvetaketu, Shandilya
and Sanat Kumara – with their students, learned kings like Janaka, or other
scholars, notable among them Gargi (one of the very few women mentioned
in the ten Principal Upanishads). It’s fair to conclude, therefore, that these
rishis were responsible for at least some of the main ideas in the Upanishads.
3. When were the Upanishads composed?
a. Between 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE
b. Between 1200 BCE and 900 BCE
c. Between 700 BCE and 1 CE
d. Between 1 CE and 300 CE
It’s (c) again! The Upanishads were all ‘revealed’ between 700 BCE and 1
CE.
Since the Upanishads are often based on the earlier sections of the Vedas,
they themselves were obviously composed well after those sections. But the
timeline is all very confusing, and it is almost impossible to date them
accurately. The only thing scholars can say with any confidence is that the
oldest Upanishads (which include most of the Principal Upanishads) could
not have been composed before the 7th or 8th century BCE, and the youngest
ones (the youngest among the Principal Upanishads, i.e. – several others were
composed much later, some as recently as 600 years ago) in the last century
before the Common Era. That’s a 700-year window, but hey, when those 700
years are over 2,000 years ago, it doesn’t make all that much of a difference
to us, does it?
The Upanishads are also often referred to as Vedanta (say ved-aan-ta),
which translates to ‘end of the Vedas’ (veda + anta). They are the last section
of the Vedas, which of course makes them Vedanta in a very literal way, but
they are also the most difficult-to-grasp part, which is why they were always
taught to students towards the end of their Vedic studies, once their minds
had been well trained in a certain way of thinking. There is a third important
reason they are called Vedanta – once you’ve absorbed the wisdom of the
Upanishads, the rishis seem to be telling us, you will never need to return to
the study of the Vedas again, because the Upanishads contain all their
wisdom, and more, in them.
4. What does the word ‘Upanishad’ literally mean?
a. The smaller, or minor, Veda
b. Dialogues of the wise
c. Sitting close to, but at a lower level
d. Up and down (derived from the Hindi ‘upar-neeche’)
The right answer is (c) – once again!
(Ha! Bet you didn’t expect that googly – three c’s in succession! Also, if
you answered (d) – ‘The word Upanishad means Up and Down – from the
Hindi words ‘upar-neeche’, think again – Hindi/Hindustani developed as a
language thousands of years after Sanskrit!)
The word Upanishad is a combination of three Sanskrit syllables – upa,
which means to move closer to, or be close to; ni, which means ‘at a lower
level’; and shad, which means ‘to sit’.
So ‘Upanishad’ literally translates to ‘sitting close to someone, at a lower
level’. But what does it mean metaphorically? Think about it. We know that
the Upanishads were never meant to be read; like the rest of the Vedas, they
were meant to be heard (remember they were originally only communicated
orally!). Even more than verses or words, they were sacred ‘sounds’. To be
able to catch every nuance of the speaker’s voice and every teeny change in
tone and emphasis, therefore, it made sense to sit close to him or her. Plus,
the teachings of the Upanishads are often referred to as the ‘paramam
guhyam’ – The Ultimate Mystery, The Secret of Secrets. They would be
revealed only to the deserving, the ‘closest circle’.
What happens when you sit really close to the speaker, especially when
that person is your teacher? Well, you are forced to concentrate – you cannot
fidget, or text anyone, or sneak a look out of the window. Also, by the very
act of shad – sitting down – you are making a commitment to yourself and
the speaker; you are indicating that you are there to give him or her your full
attention and are in no hurry to go anywhere. As for the ni, it is there to
remind you that if you really want to learn what someone has agreed to teach
you, it is important to humbly accept, for the duration of the lesson at least,
that you are at a ‘lower level’ intellectually than he or she is.
So what the Upanishads teach us, by their very name, is a universal,
eternal truth: if you approach learning with focus, dedication, humility, a
receptive mind and respect for the teacher, there is very little chance that you
will not move closer to understanding what is being taught. The best part is
that, because the Upanishads are often structured as a dialogue between a
teacher and a student, they also show us by example that the learning and
teaching process works best when it is a two-way street. What you can take
away from the most revered of our ancient texts is that it is not only OK, but
essential, to question your teachers and parents when you don’t understand,
or agree with, what they are teaching. See? You can totally leverage the
Upanishads and their ‘universal, eternal truths’ to garner support for your
cause – in the 21st century!
And that’s the First Big Deal about the Upanishads – although they were
composed 3,500 years ago, when the world was a very, very different place
(but human nature was very, very much the same), they teach us ways of
being and thinking that we can use to live better, more fulfilling and more
contented lives today.
Sure, there are parts in them that are too obscure for many of us to
understand, too repetitive, or too irrelevant to our modern lives, but the fact
that they also teach, encourage and celebrate the questioning of everything –
including the holiest of holy cows, the idea of God – makes them pretty much
‘modern’, even scientific, in their approach to the world.
The Second Big Deal about them is that the ideas first expressed in the
Upanishads have become the basis of what most Indians believe is the
purpose of life, the meaning of death, and the nature of the entity called God.
Their biggest influence has been on Hinduism, but they have also impacted
the central ideas of other religions founded in India, such as Jainism,
Buddhism and Sikhism. (And of course, the plot lines of our biggest religion,
Bollywood.)
Here are some of those Big Ideas. How many have you heard of before?
1. Samsara or the Cycle of Rebirth: When you die, it’s only your body that
dies. Your soul simply moves on and makes its home in another body. If
you’ve been good in this life, you are born human again and can proceed
further on your journey to ultimate happiness. If you haven’t been so good,
you might just end up as some other creature in your next life (like, say, a
cockroach) and have to work your way up the hierarchy of creatures, until
you are human again and have the ability to choose to do the right thing, or
not.
4. Moksha or Liberation: Human life is full of toil and trouble. The highest
goal of human life,* the way to true and lasting happiness, lies in breaking
free of samsara’s golden chains. If you are hardcore about performing your
Dharma and doing good, thoughtful Karma in this lifetime, you may have
a chance of getting there. After roughly two million more lifetimes of good
behaviour. (Hey, no one said this gig was easy!)
* Moksha wasn’t the only life-goal recommended by the ancient Indian sages – there were three other
equally important ones. (To find out what they were, go to page 152.)
The Third Big Deal about the Upanishads is the set of conclusions all
that questioning and analysis threw up. Those conclusions are so wise, so
secular and so liberal that it makes a lot of sense to revisit them today, at a
time when the world seems more divided than ever before. Here are some of
the main ones:
• God is not Santa Claus. God is not making a list and checking it twice, to
see if you’ve been naughty or nice – the good and bad things that happen
to you are simply the result of the natural law of your own Karma. God
does not demand from you worship, or that you flog or starve yourself to
gain favour. God did not create you, as a mirror image or otherwise. God
simply – hold your breath – IS you! Just as God is every other creature and
tree and river and mountain in the world.
• You contain the universe. You are not minuscule or insignificant – you
are luminous, magnificent, large enough to contain the universe! For there
is only one Universal Energy, one Supreme Consciousness, that is inside
(each of) us and around (all of) us. We may each call it by a different name
– Shakti, Shoonya, Allah, Yahweh, Ahura Mazda, God – but that only
reflects our own individual choices and tastes (hey, it’s a free country!). In
the Upanishads, this supreme, all-pervading energy is called Brahman (say
Bruhm-mun).
• You were not created by God, you ARE God. The point of your life as a
human being is to realize that Atman is Brahman, i.e., You are God. No,
seriously. Also, that everybody around you is God too. When you truly see
this truth, and embrace it, when you realize that everyone – despite their
different skin colours and ‘weird’ ways of speaking and eating and
worship and whatnot – is just you in a different form, it is somewhat
unlikely that you will insult them or despise them or want to destroy them
(because by doing that, you are only insulting or despising or destroying
yourself).
Instead, you will begin to revel in the fact that you can live so many
different lives at the same time, that you can be man and woman and child
and white and black and brown and Dutch and Eritrean and Peruvian and
Kurd and Jew and Muslim and Parsi and vegetarian and non-vegetarian and
Rafa Nadal and P.V. Sindhu and tree and river and dog and bird and anything
or anyone else you want to be. You will make it the focus of your life to
understand all those different versions of you, by making each of them your
teacher. You will engage in conversations and interactions with them that are
marked by humility, respect, gratitude and an open mind (just like the
Upanishads have taught you). And you will learn from their mistakes, and
rejoice in their successes, and share in their grief, and live their experiences,
and become a finer, wiser person each day because of it.
In other words, you will move closer to becoming the God that you are.
In their own land, the Upanishads have been known and revered for over
2,500 years. Their explosive, original ideas influenced Vardhamana
Mahavira, who founded Jainism in the 6th century BCE, and Gautama
Buddha, who founded Buddhism about a hundred years later.* When
Buddhist missionaries travelled to far-flung parts of Asia, like Sri Lanka,
Japan, China, Korea, Tibet, Mongolia and Bactria** to spread their religion
in the 2nd century BCE and after, they took Upanishadic ideas like
reincarnation and Moksha with them, making them popular in the Far East.
*There is some disagreement about this among scholars – while some say Upanishadic ideas influenced
Jainism and Buddhism, others insist it was the Buddha’s ideas that influenced the Upanishadic sages.
Until we can date the Upanishads accurately, this argument looks likely to continue. Most non-scholars,
however, are simply happy to enjoy the wisdom of these ideas, wherever they originally came from.
** A historical region in Central Asia that today would cover parts of Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan.
But how – and when – did word of humankind’s oldest, and arguably among
the most original philosophical ruminations get out to the western world?
Thereby hangs a fascinating tale.
The year, so the story goes, was 1640. Prince Dara Shikoh, firstborn son
and heir apparent of Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, was on holiday in Kashmir
with his beloved wife Nadira Banu when he first heard of the ancient texts
called the ‘Upanekhats’ (his word for the Upanishads).
Like his great-grandfather Akbar before him, Dara was a liberal who had
always been fascinated by mysticism and spirituality, and believed that no
matter what the name, there was only one God. Like Akbar, he would also
devote a large part of his life to finding common ground between Hinduism
and Islam.
Most excited to hear about this sacred literature that his Hindu subjects
assured him was among the holiest of the holy, he convened a gathering of
scholars from the great city of Banaras (now Varanasi) at his Delhi palace on
the banks of the Yamuna, the Manzil-e-Nigambodh, and had them explain to
him every possible meaning of the fifty or so Upanishads they had at their
disposal. Over the next few years, he personally translated (so it is believed)
all those 52 Upanekhats into Persian, finding several parallels between their
teachings and those of the Quran, especially with respect to their ideas about
the oneness of God. In fact, he became convinced by the end of it that the
‘hidden book’ of wisdom – the Kitab al-maknun – mentioned in the Quran
was none other than the Upanishads.
In 1656, Dara Shikoh’s translation was published as the Sirr-e-Akbar
(The Greatest Mystery), bringing upon his head the wrath of orthodox
Muslims, chief among them his ambitious younger brother Muhiuddin,
otherwise known as Prince Aurangzeb. A bitter battle for succession was
brewing, and Aurangzeb saw his chance. In 1659, after having usurped the
throne and declared himself Emperor, he denounced crown prince Dara as a
heretic and had him beheaded.
Given that anything associated with Dara was now a hot potato, Sirr-e-
Akbar should have by rights disappeared into the mists of history, never to be
seen again. And that might have well happened, if it hadn’t been for Dara
Shikoh’s personal physician, Monsieur Francois Bernier.
M. Bernier had got himself a ‘super-fast’ medical degree after an
intensive three-month course in his home country in the 1650s.
Unfortunately, that abbreviated degree did not allow him to practise on
French territory, and so, a few years later, M. Bernier took off to the East to
do what he really wanted to – travel. He reckoned he could also put his
medical skills to use along the way, but never imagined he would end up
where he did – as part of the team of royal physicians who attended the
Mughal emperor himself!
When the good doctor went back to Paris in 1671, after also having
served as Emperor Aurangzeb’s doctor for a dozen years, he carried a copy of
Sirr-e-Akbar back with him. Hanging out with Dara Shikoh’s Sanskrit pandit
had given Bernier himself a deep insight into the Upanishads, and he was
very attached to the translation. Within Bernier’s own circles, the Upanishads
thus became known.
From top: An amazing three-way connection: Mughal prince Dara Shikoh, French Indologist M.
Anquetil–Duperron and German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer
PS: Dara Shikoh’s palace, the Manzil-e-Nigambodh, was called that because
it stood close to the Nigambodh Ghat, Delhi’s oldest ghat for performing
Hindu funeral rites. Believed to have been first set up by Pandava prince
Yudhishthira himself, the ghat is also thought to be the spot where another
landmark mythological event occurred. The story goes that the Vedas had
been lost to humanity after Lord Brahma, believed to be their originator, was
cursed by Yamuna, and lost his memory as a result. When, relenting, Yamuna
returned the Vedas to her banks, she did so at the Nigambodh Ghat. A
grateful Brahma took a dip in her holy waters, and wisdom was restored to
the world.
In fact, the word ‘Nigambodh’ literally translates to ‘understanding of the
Veda’. Pretty cool that the prince who helped take the ‘understanding of the
Veda’ to the world lived at that very spot, wot?
७
MASTERMIND!
Presenting – tan-tan-taraa! – the Ultimate Challenge:
The Conquest of the Mind
irca 700 BCE. Elaborate, expensive and inflexible rituals had taken
THE MENTALISTS
The ‘true message of the Vedas’ was only one outcome of the whole exercise
of questioning. All those years spent in deep and focused contemplation
helped these thinkers travel well beyond the Vedas, to unknown realms. The
cool part was that these realms were not outside of themselves – they didn’t
travel to the top of Mt Everest or darkest Peru or the frozen wilds of
Antarctica – but deep inside their own minds!
Thousands of years before psychoanalysis was a thing, these sages
explored the least probed recesses of the human mind and played around with
different states of consciousness (the state of being awake, the dream state,
the deep-sleep state – Inception, anyone?). They discovered, to their wonder
and delight, that the world inside our minds was just as vast, complex,
stunningly beautiful and dangerous to negotiate as the world outside, and far
more difficult to conquer. More importantly, they found that while the joy
that came from conquering the world outside was short-lived, if only because
that world was constantly changing, the deep contentment that came of
conquering the world inside was not only long-lasting and unchanging, but
also made the conquest of the outer world seem, well, less important.
That is an exciting enough thought in itself, but before you go haring off
to conquer your inner world, it might be a good idea to ask what you are
actually supposed to be looking for when you plumb the depths, or how you
will know that that world has been conquered. It might also help to find a
wise teacher to help you get there, for the Upanishads are categorical that no
one can go on this journey without an experienced guide.*
*How does one find that wise and experienced spiritual guide? Just like one finds the perfect tuition
teacher – by looking around, getting recommendations from friends and seniors, taking a few trial
classes and asking yourself some hard, honest questions at the end of it. Questions like – Do I feel
comfortable around this teacher? Do I understand a concept better after she has taught it to me? Does
she allow me to ask questions (which are sometimes admittedly dumb)? Does his teaching style involve
pushing me hard or letting me be? (Both methods work, but for different kinds of students – the trick
lies in picking a teacher whose style works for you.)
The analogy does not end there. Just like you may have to suffer several bad or unsuitable tuition
teachers before you find the right one, you may have to try out several spiritual guides for size before
you settle on a good one. Here’s what’s vital, though:
• Even after you think you’ve found him or her, make sure you keep questioning yourself about what
you want from a teacher, and reflecting on whether your teacher fulfils those conditions.
• Be careful not to stay with a particular teacher simply because ‘everyone says he’s the best’.
• Most importantly, always remember that spiritual guides come in all shapes and forms – they need
not be wearing saffron or white or green or have long beards or shaven heads. Anyone who lives his
or her own life gently, calmly, compassionately, responsibly and cheerfully is a great guide!
Once the ancient sages had themselves ‘arrived’, they hastened to share their
revelations with the world. Which was great.
The trouble was, these revelations were spread across sprawling
collections of poetry and prose, and were almost always oral in transmission,
making them almost impossible to access in their entirety by people who had
livelihoods to earn and families to take care of. Moreover, the thoughts
expressed in them often bordered on the mystical, and spoke of ideas and
places and experiences that ordinary people, even the most imaginative and
intellectually adept among them, could not fully fathom.
The precious wisdoms may have been lost to common folk but for the
efforts of a small, select band, who began to put down their own
interpretations of these wisdoms in simple terms that everyone could
understand. They made sure to include lots of relevant examples as well, so
that more people could benefit.
The best-known of these ancient ‘CliffsNotes’ to the Upanishads are the
Brahmasutra and the Bhagavad Gita. Together, the sacred triad (that
number again!) of the Upanishads, the Brahmasutra and the Bhagavad Gita is
considered to be the true and complete Vedanta (distillation of the Veda),
containing all the guidance you need in your quest for the Brahman inside
you.
The Brahmasutra, composed by a sage called Badarayana, is difficult to
date accurately, but it was probably composed around the time when BCE
turned to CE (or a couple of hundred years earlier, or a couple of hundred
years later – you know how this goes). It comprises a set of 555 sutras, or
verses, divided among four chapters that neatly and brilliantly collate,
organize, classify and summarize all the lessons and wisdom of the sprawling
Upanishads.
There’s more to like about the Brahmasutra – like a good NCERT science
lesson, it starts by introducing the Topic (Brahman), goes on to the Definition
(What is Brahman?), does a ‘Review’ of different theories about it (What do
the Hindu texts say about Brahman? What about the Buddhist texts? And the
Jain texts?), clears up apparent contradictions within the Upanishads
themselves, lays down the steps of the ‘Process’, all the way to the ‘Result’,
Moksha, in a step-by-step bullet-point format, and concludes with the ‘Uses
and Benefits’ of setting off on the Great Brahman Quest.
The Brahmasutra works great as a handy guide to the Upanishads for the
logical learner who wants his facts straight, but for the romantic who prefers
his wisdoms laced with a nice dose of spectacle and melodrama (which is
most of us), another kind of treatment was needed. Enter, stage right, the
Bhagavad Gita, the most compact, comforting and accessible friend, mentor
and teacher of the Upanishads that anyone could want. By cleverly locating
some of the most complex philosophical ideas in the world on a battlefield,
with a war about to begin, Veda Vyasa, the author of the Gita, takes the
lessons of the Brahmasutra out of the textbook and into the laboratory,
shifting it dramatically, and effectively, from Theory to Practicals. By
delivering the Upanishads’ highest wisdoms via a conversation between two
best friends, both of whom we know so well from a time much before the
war, he grabs our attention and converts ‘Pure Philosophy’ into living
‘Applied Philosophy’.
Wow – 360-degree learning, anyone?
#LIFEGOALS
Purushartha – the Hindu mission statement for the ideal
human life
While it is quite common, even essential, for countries and businesses to have
clearly articulated goals and aspirations, it is not often that you find a religion
that has one. We are not talking rules here – every religion has those by the
bushel – but a set of recommendations on how to lead a good and upright life.
Here are the four goals, called Purushartha, of human life, as conceived by
the sages of ancient India.
• Dharma – Doing your duty, fulfilling your responsibilities (to yourself,
your family and your community), leading a morally upright life and living
up to your potential, whether you are student or daughter or father or
teacher or boss or doctor or construction worker.
• Kama – The pursuit of pleasure. Yup, the Vedic sages were so woke that
they even put the pursuit of pleasure down as a legitimate goal of human
existence! Love, affection and anything that pleased the senses or was
considered enjoyable – a beautiful sunset on a beach holiday, the smell of
the earth after the rain, listening to a concert by your favourite pop star, the
feeling of your dog’s soft fur, slurping up your grandmother’s kheer,
hanging out with your friends – were all considered not only good, but
necessary ingredients in a life well-lived. Once again, though, pleasure had
to be chased within the rules of Dharma – going to a movie on the day
before your exams wouldn’t work, for instance, because it would clash
with your Dharma as a student, which would demand that you spend that
time studying.
• Moksha – The quest for ultimate happiness and the most complete and
blissful kind of freedom. While Dharma, Artha and Kama are all worldly
pursuits, and are very important – after all, we all do live in the material
world – Moksha urges you to be detached from those very same worldly
pleasures, i.e., love, hate, wealth, success!
Eh? How can all four be the goals of human life if one of them,
Moksha, is at complete odds with the other three, or at least two?
Expectedly, the ancient sages debated this question a lot – until they found
a way to reconcile the two, with a killer concept called ‘Nishkama Karma’
(action without attachment). It was Krishna who explained the concept to
Arjuna, and through Arjuna, to us, so famously in the Bhagavad Gita –
‘Do your duty (i.e., enjoy your concert, or go work at a job), but don’t
become attached to the result of that action.’ In other words, go work at a
job, but don’t make earning money (or loving your job) the object of your
work; love your friends as much as you like, but don’t expect that they
should love you back in exactly the same way; study as hard as you can to
fulfil your Dharma as a student, but don’t fret if you don’t top the class as
a result. Do that, they said, and the effects of being ‘worldly’, i.e.,
pursuing pleasure and wealth, will not bind you, and you will be free.
Got that? Sure. Cool concept? Maybe. Easy to follow in real life? We-
ell…
८
SHANKARA’S FAVES – THE TOP
TEN UPANISHADS
Lists, rankings, peace prayers and other essential
Upanishadic basics
1. Isha
2. Kena
3. Katha
4. Prashna
5. Mundaka
6. Mandukya
7. Taittiriya
8. Aitareya
9. Chandogya
10. Brihadaranyaka
Wait. Stop. Don’t just skim the list! Pause, and actually read the list,
saying the words in your head or aloud. Of course the words probably don’t
mean anything to you right now, but don’t worry about that. Instead, focus on
their sound and cadence, like students did in the old times.
Notice what a nice rhythm the names have when spoken in sequence, and
how the number of syllables progresses steadily from two – in Isha, Kena,
Katha, Prashna – to three – Mundaka, Mandukya – to four – Taittiriya,
Aitareya. Then comes the anomaly, the three-syllabled Chandogya, but
perhaps that was snuck in there to help you catch your breath, so that you’d
have enough left in the tank for the formidable, six-syllabled, final one – the
dense and sprawling BRI-HAD-AAR-AN-YA-KA.
Wasn’t that fun? Onward!
Now, each Upanishad – not just these ten here but every other one as well
– is part of one Veda or another (as we discussed not so long ago, the
Upanishads are the fourth layer of the Vedas). So let’s put down the list
again, this time connecting each Upanishad to its Veda.
1. Isha – Yajur Veda (Shukla)*
2. Kena – Sama Veda
3. Katha – Yajur Veda (Krishna)*
4. Prashna – Atharva Veda
5. Mundaka – Atharva Veda
6. Mandukya – Atharva Veda
7. Taittiriya – Yajur Veda (Krishna)
8. Aitareya – Rig Veda
9. Chandogya – Sama Veda
10. Brihadaranyaka – Yajur Veda (Shukla)
*Remember we talked about two versions of the Yajur Veda in Chapter 4? To recap, one version, the
one in which the four layers of the Veda are neatly separated and organized, is called the Shukla Yajur
Veda, and the other, in which the four layers are all a bit mixed-up, is called the Krishna Yajur Veda.
Moving on. Each Upanishad is not only associated with a particular Veda,
but also with a special invocation or prayer called a Shanti Mantra, which is
essentially a prayer for peace. Before you start reading an Upanishad – or,
more correctly, ‘listening’ to a teacher explain its essence to you – it is
recommended that both of you chant the peace prayer associated with it.
Right, now let’s put down our list of Upanishads yet again, this time
tagging each with its respective Shanti Mantra. You can skip this list if it
feels like too much information for now, but you will be able to come back to
this ready reckoner any time you need to.
1. Isha – Yajur Veda (Shukla) – Aum poornamadah poornamidam
2. Kena – Sama Veda – Aum aapyayantu mamaangaani
3. Katha – Yajur Veda (Krishna) – Aum sahanaavavatu
4. Prashna – Atharva Veda – Aum bhadram karnebhih
5. Mundaka – Atharva Veda – Aum bhadram karnebhih
6. Mandukya – Atharva Veda – Aum bhadram karnebhih
7. Taittiriya – Yajur Veda (Krishna) – Aum sahanaavavatu
8. Aitareya – Rig Veda – Aum vaang me manasi pratishtithaa
9. Chandogya – Sama Veda – Aum aapyayantu mamaangaani
10. Brihadaranyaka – Yajur Veda (Shukla) – Aum poornamadah
poornamidam
What is the point of the Shanti Mantras? And why should they be recited
before the study of an Upanishad? Simply because the sounds and words of
these mantras are believed to create an atmosphere that quietens the mind and
facilitates learning. As a collateral benefit, they also help calm the
community and the environment around the student. Which isn’t that hard to
believe, considering that all of them end with that most calming of calming
phrases – ‘Aum Shantih Shantih Shantih’.
Why three Shantihs? One explanation is that it is because the mantra
invokes three kinds of peace – peace in the mind (easy enough to
understand), peace in speech (i.e., an absence of extreme emotions like anger,
fear, hate, great joy or excitement when one speaks, because it is only then
that the mind can think – and the tongue can speak – clearly and rationally)
and peace in the body (a steady pulse, a deep rhythmic breath, a happy gut).
Another explanation is that the triple Shantih calls for peace within oneself,
peace in the community and environment, and peace in the universe. Both
theories are quite lovely, don’t you think?
The other nice thing about the Shanti Mantras is of course, their
aspiration. Seriously, who could have a problem with prayers that ask for
nothing other than peace, not only for oneself but for everyone else as well?
(FYI, you don’t have to restrict yourself to chanting these mantras only
before you study the Upanishads, you can chant them at any old time at all –
when you’re feeling stressed and want to calm yourself down, just before you
begin a particularly challenging music or maths lesson, when your two best
friends are mad at each other, when you have just had a huge family row, or
simply when you are feeling wonderful and calm and want to share your bliss
with the world!)
The third thing (everything related to the Upanishads seems to come in
threes!) is that these mantras aren’t the I’ve-never-heard-them-before kind of
verses. Many of you are probably familiar with at least a couple of them and
may even have chanted them at home or at school, without ever knowing that
they had such a deep connection with the Upanishads.
Time now to take a closer look at the Shanti Mantras – how many do you
recognize?
Aum!
I pray
That my words make their home in my mind,
That my mind makes its home in my words,
That the knowledge of my true self reveals itself to me,
That my mind and my speech work in harmony to help me
understand,
That I do not just hear the lesson, but understand it,
That what I learn and practise night and day is never lost to me.
May this Divine Truth that I speak today
Protect my teacher
And protect me.
Aum Peace Peace Peace.
Simple enough to understand, this prayer asks for mind and speech to
work harmoniously, as one unit. What are you really asking for here? That
your monkey-mind doesn’t jump around, completely distracted, thinking
about the fun party you have been invited to this evening, while your mouth
repeats words after the teacher. (Remember, ‘repeating after the teacher’ was
a HUGE part of learning in the days of oral transmission – today, you would
probably pray for your eyes and mind to be in harmony – so that you are not
just looking at the teacher, your mind is actually processing what she is
saying as well – or for your fingers and mind to be in harmony – so that you
are not playing Hangman with your seat partner but actually making notes
about the lesson.)
The part where the chanter prays for knowledge to be retained is also
important – please, God, I’ve done my bit and studied hard, now can you
please, pretty please, help me remember all of it in the exam hall? The prayer
ends with a lovely wish for the teacher – now that’s something you probably
don’t think about doing, but should!
Aum!
I seek blessings
That my limbs, speech, breath, eyes, ears, strength
And all my senses be nourished;
I pray
That I may never deny Brahman or be disloyal,
That Brahman may never forsake or reject me;
I, the seeker, ask
That all the wisdoms of the Upanishads
Shine in me,
That they all shine in me.
Aum Peace Peace Peace.
Aum!
That is complete, and This is complete,
From That completeness comes This completeness;
If you take completeness away from completeness,
Only completeness remains.
Aum Peace Peace Peace.
Aum!
May He in the Highest Heaven
Protect both of us, teacher and student;
Nourish both of us together
So that we may work together with great energy,
So that we may learn from each other,
So that our learning is effective,
So that we steer clear of dispute and discord.
Aum Peace Peace Peace.
With its strong message that learning is a two-way process in which both
teacher and student are mutually benefited, this is a great prayer to put up in
classrooms and school corridors. If the part about ‘learning from each other’
is something you may want to draw your teachers’ attention to, the part
petitioning for an absence of dispute and discord is probably something your
teachers wish you would keep in mind. The plea that both teacher and student
be protected and nourished is important too – it tells us that learning is not
effective unless both parties are equally committed to the task and participate
in it with a healthy respect for each other.
PS: This may also be a great way to approach conversations in general,
even when, say, you are in the middle of an argument with a friend. Treating
the other person as your teacher (since you don’t know his point of view and
are trying to ‘learn’ it from him), giving him your full attention and respect,
and listening with an open mind may be the shortest and most sure-shot route
to resolving conflict.
Aum!
Ye gods, bless us
That we may hear words that are pleasant
And see things that are blessed,
That we may live our lives in ways that nourish you.
O great Indra, O All-Knowing Poosha,
O Garuda, destroyer of evil, O great teacher Brihaspati,
Take care of us, blessed ones!
Aum Peace Peace Peace.
ADI SHANKARA
The boy saint who restored the Vedanta
Some 1,500 years after the oldest Upanishads had been composed, and over a
thousand years (give or take a few centuries) after the clearest, most concise
and most creative compilations of their wisdoms – the Brahmasutra and the
Bhagavad Gita – had been put together in the north of India, a baby boy was
born in the little town of Kaladi in what is now Kerala, in the deep south. His
fond parents named him Shankara, but more about him in a bit.
Let’s first look at what had transpired in the country after the ten great
Upanishads had been composed. The Vedic religion, which had receded
somewhat from centre stage under Emperor Ashoka – who had embraced
Buddhism – was seeing a resurgence, thanks to the generous patronage of the
Hindu kings of the mighty and long-lived Gupta empire. On the ground,
however, things had gotten pretty chaotic among the inheritors of the ancient
texts. Scores of contradictory and downright confusing interpretations had
sprung up, and dozens of popular sects had mushroomed under the broad
umbrella of the religion we call Hinduism today.
Among these sects were atheistic ones like the Charvaka; ritual-loving
ones like Mimamsa, which embraced the Vedas and rejected the revelations
of the Upanishadic sages as a bunch of mystical mumbo-jumbo; and others
like the Samkhya, which believed that while it was quite possible that a God
existed, we shouldn’t waste time over Him because our lives, our actions and
our choices were guided only by our own free will. This diversity of thought
and belief was wonderful, and the debates they generated mind-expanding;
the only shame was that the followers of these sects fought so much with
each other.
A lot of other action had also happened over the same thousand years.
The practitioners of the Vedic religion had crossed the Vindhyas and
travelled south, taking their gods and their philosophical ideas with them. The
no-longer-new religions of Buddhism and Jainism had travelled too and won
themselves a country’s worth of new recruits while the Hindu sects
squabbled. Meanwhile, Christianity and the brand-new religion of Islam had
made a quiet but definite entry via the south-western coast.
Fortunately for Hinduism, splintered and anxious with this bubbling of
sects and opinions, a new and charismatic sage – a towering intellectual who
not only knew the original, liberal core of the scriptures like the back of his
hand but could also present them simply and lucidly – showed up around the
8th century.
No one realized at first that the messiah had arrived. Far from the matted
dreadlocks and snow-white beards of the old sages, this one had a shaven
head and no facial fuzz – he had, in fact, barely begun to shave. He was
sixteen years old, and his name was Shankara.
Who was this boy Shankara? When was he born? Where did he get his
spiritual inspiration from? What was his life like? When did he die? Sadly,
we simply don’t know. All we have on Shankara today is the stuff of legend
and folklore, so we cannot be sure of any of it. But that doesn’t really matter,
because there are some really lovely stories there, like this one about how the
eight-year-old Shankara arm-twisted his widowed mother into letting him
become a monk.
Once, when the two were bathing in the river (so the story goes), a
crocodile clamped its jaws on Shankara’s leg and began to drag him down.
‘You have never given me permission to become a sannyasi, Mother,’
yelled Shankara, ‘at least give it to me now, in my last moments, so I can die
happy!’
‘You have my blessing!’ sobbed his petrified mother. Instantly, the croc
let Shankara go.
Soon after, the grateful eight-year-old set out happily on his chosen path.
The story goes that he walked some 2,000 kilometres from his home in
Kaladi to the ashram of his chosen guru, Govinda Bhagavatpada, on the
banks of the river Narmada in central India. When the guru asked him who he
was, the boy answered, ‘Neither fire nor air not water nor earth nor space am
I, but the indestructible Atman that is hidden inside all names and forms.’
Impressed with the boy’s instinctive understanding of the ultimate reality, the
guru accepted Shankara as his disciple.
In the next four years, Shankara attained mastery of the scriptures.
Around this time, an intense monsoon broke. The Narmada was in spate, its
dark, roiling waters rising wildly and threatening to flood a cave where
Bhagavatpada sat in the deepest of deep meditative states, Samadhi. The
students of the gurukul were in a tizzy, for they were completely forbidden to
disturb their guru when he was in Samadhi. It was Shankara who placed his
kamandala at the mouth of the cave then, calmly proclaiming that it would
contain the floodwaters within itself. To everyone’s wonder, that was exactly
what happened. When the guru later heard what had happened, he blessed
Shankara, saying, ‘Just as you contained the flood in your little kamandala,
may you distil the essence of the scriptures into your writings.’
Encouraged by his guru’s words, Shankara began to write commentaries
on the Upanishads, the Brahamasutra and the Bhagavad Gita. At the age of
sixteen, he was done with the writing, and ready, with his guru’s blessings, to
embark on the next phase of the journey – spreading the good word. For the
next sixteen years, Shankara walked across the length and breadth of the
country, spreading the explosive and egalitarian message of the philosophy
called Advaita* and engaging in public debates with scholars who espoused a
different point of view on what the scriptures said or the right way to live.
* One of the three most popular schools of Vedantic thought of the past millennium, Advaita (which
means ‘not two’) philosophy takes its cue from the Upanishads, reiterating that there is no difference,
none at all, between Atman (one’s indestructible soul) and Brahman (the constant, unchanging reality
that is the life-force of the universe). In other words, there is no ‘other’ – beyond our bodies and our
minds and our intellect, we are all the same and we are all divine. Advaita thought existed before
Shankara, but he is its best-known and most influential teacher.
Gurus who came after, like the 11th century saint Ramanuja and the 12th century teacher
Madhvacharya, however, disagreed with Advaita, saying that it only suited monks who had rejected the
world. Both also accused Shankara of considering only those sections of the Upanishads that supported
his own theories. The world, said Ramanuja and Madhva, was real, not something you could detach
from and wish away, and the path to liberation lay in embracing one’s worldly responsibilities and
fulfilling one’s duties as householders and soldiers and priests, all the while leading morally upright
lives.
They came up with their own different and more ‘practical’ philosophies, which they said
encapsulated the true message of the Upanishads.
Ramanuja’s version was Vishishta-advaita, which believes that Atman and Brahman are not the
same (i.e., you are not God), but agrees that every Atman can attain Brahman because they share the
same divine essence. Madhva’s radically different version was Dvaita, which insists that Atman and
Brahman are not at all the same. There is only one Brahman, and while some Atmans can attain
Brahman by choosing to do what is morally right, those Atmans that insist on choosing to do the wrong
thing are doomed forever.
Despite their differences with Advaita, or perhaps because of it, both Vishishta-advaita and Dvaita
found their own loyal sets of followers. To this day, these three schools of Vedantic philosophy
continue to influence millions of Hindus in India and across the world.
Shankara was also a most efficient organizer, with a great vision to boot.
In the course of his travels, he established the Chaturdham [aka Char Dham,
the four centres of Advaita in the four corners of the country – the Sringeri
Math in Sringeri (in present-day Karnataka), the Sarada Math in Dwarka
(Gujarat), the Jyotir Math in Badrinath (Uttarakhand) and the Govardhan
Math in Puri (Odisha)] – put his most enlightened followers at the head of
each, and entrusted each Math with the guardianship and propagation of one
of the four Vedas.
He also continued to write extensively. Apart from some eighteen
commentaries on existing texts, including ten of the Upanishads, Shankara
left as his legacy twenty-three books explaining every nuance of the Advaita
philosophy and seventy-two beautiful devotional hymns that are sung to this
day.
Then, having made sure that the main teachings of the Vedanta, as he saw
them, had been restored to the front and centre of the Indian philosophy
stage, he went off on an expedition to the holy site of Kedarnath, and was
never seen again. At the time he left, Shankara was all of thirty-two.
But his life’s work had been done. To this day, some 1,200 years after his
death, he is loved, revered and celebrated as one of the Jagadgurus – Supreme
Teachers – of the Upanishads.
Now that you have read this far, have you noticed one big difference between
the Vedas and the Upanishads? That’s right – while the Vedas describe
rituals and invoke gods of one particular culture or people, the Upanishads
talk about universal truths that anyone from any culture can relate to and live
by. But perhaps what is even more wonderful about the latter is that they
allow for several interpretations, including some seriously contradictory ones
– the debate is never over, the jury is always out.
In the next ten chapters, as we skim (very lightly, and in no way
exhaustively!) the surface of the ten greatest Upanishads, you will have a
chance to experience their power, beauty and wisdom for yourself (finally!).
And you will see what a...
Aaaarghhh! Enough with the build-up already! On to the No. 1
Upanishad on the Muktika’s list – the Isha!
९
ISHA
The Upanishad of the Sameness of All Things
In which we learn that the single-minded pursuit of
knowledge can, um, throw you into the most blinding
darkness
Aum!
That is complete, and This is complete,
From That completeness comes This completeness;
If you take completeness away from completeness,
Only completeness remains.
THE BACKSTORY
t a mere eighteen verses (one version has only seventeen), the Isha
THE STORY
RENOUNCE AND REJOICE!
Shloka 1
Ishaavaasyam idam sarvam yat kim cha jagatyaam jagat
Tena tyaktena bhunjeetaa, maa grudhah kasyasvid dhanam
Mahatma Gandhi once said, famously, that if all the Upanishads and all
the other Indian scriptures were suddenly and irretrievably lost to humankind,
and only the first verse of the Isha Upanishad (the one above) were left in the
memory of the Hindus, Hinduism would live forever.
His words may seem an exaggeration, but if you take a closer look, the
verse does seem to contain a lot of the core principles of Hinduism – (a) your
soul is divine, i.e., you are divine, for the Supreme Being lives within you;
(b) setting aside external appearances, no other animal, vegetable or mineral
is really different from you because it contains the same divine essence as
you do; and (c) to ‘renounce attachment’ to things and people is the only way
to bliss.
How can ‘renouncing attachment’ bring bliss? Well, although something
‘appears’ to be yours – your parents, your high rank in class, your position as
vice prefect at school, even your opinions – it really isn’t. In fact, says the
Isha, you have only been given all of it as a gift, a blessing, on short-term
lease, by the One who actually owns it all. Which is why, getting too attached
to any of it is foolish. It’s like getting attached to a book you have borrowed
from the library and insisting that it is yours simply because it is in your room
at this moment, even though you know you have to return it the next day.
Of course, ‘renouncing attachment’ to your parents does not mean you
don’t care what happens to them (just like ‘renouncing attachment’ to a
library book does not mean you can let your dog chew it up). It just means
that you treat their time with you, and yours with them, as a precious gift. It
means that you respect them and their right to guide you in ways that seem
right to them. It means you don’t get mad at them because they seem to
favour your sibling over you, or because they decided to go off on a holiday
by themselves (how selfish are they!). Instead, says the Isha, be grateful for
all that they have done for you. When you do this, i.e., flip that perspective
switch inside your head, you stop thinking of your parents as your property
and stop expecting them to treat you, and you alone, as the centre of their
universe. In other words, you ‘renounce attachment’ to their actions towards
you.
The concept of renouncing attachment to your opinions, your prejudices,
your fears, your loves and your hates is easier to understand, but is equally
difficult to practise (what might help, somewhat, is to sing ‘Let It Go’ from
the movie Frozen at the top of your lungs while you’re trying to renounce
something, like, say, your dislike for the partner you’ve been saddled with for
the history project). You do see why this renouncing must be done, though,
right? If you don’t, you will eventually turn into a petty, bitter and angry
person, and you certainly don’t want that.
Think about it. When you stop having expectations of other people, and
are grateful instead, when you are willing to keep an open mind to let fresh,
exciting and contradictory opinions flow in, leading to a more informed,
empathetic and better understanding of situations and people, what else but
bliss can follow?
PS: Now ask your parents to read this section, substituting ‘children’ for
‘parents’ in the para about renouncing attachment to parents, and watch...
ahem... their reaction. It’s your Dharma as their child to make sure the Isha’s
wisdom reaches them too!
These two shlokas need no real explanation, but their egalitarian message,
which follows from shloka 1, is vitally important. When you see every person
around you as having the same essence as you, you will be less likely to
dislike or hate him or her; instead, you will see their victories as your
victories, their happiness as your own.
The real source of our unhappiness comes from seeing others as different
from us; all our negative emotions – envy of others’ successes, anger at other
people’s attitudes towards us, revulsion at the way others look or dress or act,
or at the gods they worship or the food they eat – stem from the delusion that
they are different from us.
The same thing applies to our relationship to other creatures – animals,
birds, insects. When we judge them in relation to ourselves – as lovable or
repulsive, threatening or non-threatening, useful or irrelevant – we
unconsciously place a value on their lives, deciding which creatures (or trees,
or mountains) are more important than others, and which, therefore, are more
deserving of our respect, care and protection.
If we see ourselves ‘in every being there is’, however, we become
instantly conscious of how each of them fits into the ecosystem of the
universe in a complex but vital way. We understand, deep down and for real,
that every creature has as much of a right to its life as we do to ours.
Suddenly, every creature’s pain will begin to resonate with us; never again
will we be able to turn a blind eye to atrocities against animals, trees, rivers,
the air, the earth.
The Isha insists that the ‘separateness’ that we see between us and
everyone and everything else is like a veil drawn over the eyes of our souls. It
exhorts us to rip the veil apart and see the world for what it really is – a place
in which the countless wonderful manifestations of the One gather to dance
and play. Once we realize this, it is only one more step to treating our fellow
creatures right.
Eh? A man who delights in knowledge will come to a worse fate than one
who is happy to wallow in ignorance, i.e., someone who is content doing
mindless action? Yup, according to the wise sage who composed the Isha
(Nope, we haven’t got our lines crossed here)!
How can that be? After going on and on about how the world outside is a
delusion and an illusion, how can the Isha sit there and tell us, smugly, that
the man who believes that there is a world of the spirit (that which is not
visible) that is greater than the material world (that which is visible),* is
hurtling towards a night darker than someone who believes the opposite?
*You will hear the word ‘material’ used a lot when the scriptures are discussed – material world,
material possessions, material pleasures. What does the word really mean? Well, the root word of
‘material’ is ‘matter’, so material means anything that is made of matter, anything that you can touch
and feel and see, that has form and that you can measure. Material things are things like wealth,
measured by possessions; or success, measured by your position in a race or in an organization; or
power, measured by how many people you can influence. Even something like beauty (of the body) is
material, for the body is matter too. The word ‘physical’ is often used interchangeably with ‘material’,
because it means the same thing. The ‘opposite’ of material (and physical) is spiritual, and it refers to
the spirit of something, its essence, which cannot be seen or touched or measured, but can only be
experienced. Spiritual ‘things’ are feelings, thoughts, emotions, happiness, grief... Most scriptures of
most religions will advise you not to give too much importance to physical or material things, and to
focus instead on spiritual things.
Because, boys and girls, the operative word for a good life, a blissful life,
a blessed life, is balance. Extreme beliefs (whichever end of the spectrum
they may sit on) and exclusionary beliefs (i.e., beliefs that exclude every
other belief) simply do not wash with the sages of the Isha. It’s all very well
to believe that the Real Truth can only be experienced by meditating in a
forest, but hey, everyone has responsibilities to fulfil in the material world as
well! The pursuit of Moksha has to be balanced by the pursuit of Dharma,
Artha and Kama! Escaping your responsibilities to go after a selfish pursuit,
however noble it may seem, is simply not A-ok by the Upanishads.*
*It was not A-ok by Krishna either, in the Bhagavad Gita. When Arjuna wanted to escape his
responsibilities as a warrior and a king, and run away from the battlefield, because he simply could not
bear the thought of bringing down his nearest and dearest in a bloody war, he saw himself as doing the
noble thing. Krishna was quick to point out that he was kidding himself, and this was exactly the kind
of there’s-no-escape lecture poor Arjuna got.
Krishna’s larger message, as is the message of the Isha, is to all of us – the householder’s life (in
your case, the student’s life) with its never-ending, never-changing routine of work and responsibility,
is no less noble than the hermit’s life, which is spent in prayer and meditation. What’s more, the
rewards of the worldly life, when it is lived with the understanding that there is something beyond the
material, are just the same as the rewards of the ascetic life. Hurray!
Again, while it may be true that what cannot be experienced by the senses
is What Really Counts, we are unfortunately born into bodies that can only
experience the world via the senses. Denying and rejecting the beauty and
endless variety of the world of the senses while chasing Things That Really
Matter is just as bad as denying and rejecting the sublime world beyond the
senses, and spending your life chasing Things That Don’t Really Matter.
In fact, if you have the knowledge of this truth, and yet your action is not
in keeping with it (i.e., you live your life as if the material world and its
rewards – fame, power, wealth – was everything), your sin is greater than that
of the ignorant person, who lives a life of pure action simply because he
doesn’t know any better. Similarly, if you know that the scriptures say that
every creature is equal, but don’t follow it up with appropriate action (i.e.,
you treat your fellowmen badly), yours is a ‘sin of commission’ and thus
deserving of a greater punishment than those who haven’t bothered to go to
the scriptures at all, for theirs is merely a ‘sin of omission’. You see why
those who live by knowledge alone are condemned to a worse fate than those
who live by ignorance (or action) alone?
And therefore, says the Isha, do your Dharma, fulfil your responsibilities,
do the right thing, be a role model. In short, live fully and joyously in the
material world, performing the kind of actions that make it a better place for
everyone around you. But know, always, that there is a world beyond what
you can see and hear, which can only be gained by (1) believing in the
underlying unity of all things and (2) being detached from the ups and downs,
the praise and scorn, the joy and grief, and every other pair of opposites that
are an inseparable part of living in the material world.
In other words, tena tyaktena bhunjeetaa – renounce and rejoice!
The tone of the Isha changes suddenly here, as if the composer was
suddenly overwhelmed with devotion. Shlokas 15 and 16 are addressed to
Pooshan, another name for the sun, and end with the resounding declaration
So’ham Asmi ! – I am He!
So’ham Asmi is not traditionally considered one of the four Mahavakyas,
or Great Pronouncements, of the Vedas, but it is essentially saying the same
thing every other Mahavakya is – I am He, Thou art That, You are God.
*Does that bring to mind a similar plea from another beloved Indian work? Yup, the plea that Arjuna
made to Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna displayed his cosmic Vishwaroopa form, as
brilliant as a million suns, on the battlefield of Kurukshetra! ‘Dim your brilliance, Lord,’ Arjuna begs
him then, ‘so I may behold what is behind the light.’ Krishna obliges, but the Truth is so awesome and
so terrifying that Arjuna cannot bear to look upon it.
REMEMBER, REMEMBER!
Shloka 17
May breath merge into immortal breath!
As body turns into ashes – Aum!
O Mind, remember what’s done, remember!
Remember what’s done as you go home!
While the 18th and last shloka of the Isha, which is also the last shloka of the
Shukla Yajur Veda Samhita, is a simple and fairly typical prayer to Agni for
blessings and guidance, the penultimate one, Shloka 17, seems a little out of
place as far as its content is concerned. It has the same heightened emotional
tone as the previous two shlokas, but is nowhere near as ecstatic. Instead, it is
an urgent exhortation chanted over a funeral pyre to the mind and intelligence
of the person who has died, asking him to remember all the deeds of his life
just past, for they will impact and influence his next life.
We will never know why the composer of the Isha decided to bring this
particular verse into it, but that does not reduce its impact or importance in
any way. In fact, so long is the shadow cast by this particular shloka that it is
used as part of Hindu funeral rites to this day.
Aum!
I seek blessings
That my limbs, speech, breath, eyes, ears, strength
And all my senses be nourished;
I pray
That I may never deny Brahman or be disloyal,
That Brahman may never forsake or reject me;
I, the seeker, ask
That all the wisdoms of the Upanishads
Shine in me,
That they all shine in me.
THE BACKSTORY
nother short Upanishad, the Kena is part of the Sama Veda, the Veda that
Krishna, in the Bhagavad Gita, hailed as the loveliest of the four. The
A Kena has a rather unusual structure. Of its four chapters, the first two
are in verse and are philosophical reflections, while the last two of are
written in prose, and relate a story and its epilogue. The whole Upanishad
takes the form of a dialogue between teacher and pupil. Its name, as in the
case of the Isha, is taken from the first word of its first shloka.
What does the Kena broadly deal with? There are two main subjects:
(1) Nothing happens, nothing moves, nothing is possible, without desire,
so whose desire is it that moves the universe? From where, from whom,
does that desire originate? (Kena is Sanskrit for ‘from whom’ ); and
(2) The difficulty – even for the gods – of understanding the nature of
Brahman the Supreme.
As always, before getting into the Upanishad, take a minute to reflect on
its Shanti Mantra (you’ll find it on the previous page) and ask that its wisdom
may shine in you.
THE STORY
The teacher and the pupil sat in companionable silence under the peepul tree,
ready to begin the day’s lesson. The boy was a little fidgety this morning, his
eager, shining face more impatient than usual. He was a rare one, this boy,
thought the teacher, with his many, many questions, his insatiable curiosity
and his willingness to work harder than his fellows – he would go far.
Chuckling to himself, he decided to put the boy out of his misery without
delay.
‘So,’ said the teacher, ‘tell me, what burning question has troubled you all
night? What do you want to learn from me today?’
‘Oh sir,’ began the student, ‘From whom comes all of it – my thoughts,
my sight, my hearing?
‘Who is He
Who makes my mind soar and my speech flow,
And my eyes see and my breath grow,
And my ears hear and my thoughts go?’ *
*Being a modern, rational, science-loving 21st century student, who does not believe in all this god
mumbo-jumbo, you might well ask the same questions of your science teacher, changing the ‘Who is
He who...’ to ‘What is it that...’ His or her answers, however, may not be much clearer, or more
satisfying, than those of the teacher here, because even science does not have answers to these
questions yet. More than 2,500 years after the Upanishads were composed, the Great Secret, the Eternal
Mystery of Life, is still just that – a thrilling secret and a ginormous mystery.
Ah, the big one. All his best students got to that one at some point. The
teacher took a deep breath. ‘Son,’ he said –
‘He is
The hearing behind hearing, the speech behind speech,
The sight behind sight, in a place beyond reach.’
The student listened, rapt. He didn’t quite understand what that meant,
but he wasn’t going to interrupt, not yet.
‘He is
What words cannot express, seed of all that is uttered;
What the mind cannot grasp, by which thought is bestirred;
The wellspring of hearing, itself never heard.’
That sounds so beautiful, thought the student. But what does it mean?
The student nodded. It was all a little hazy still, but he thought he had a
fair idea of Brahman now. Brahman was clearly not Indra or Agni – ‘not the
one they deem’. He clearly wasn’t someone you could please and get favours
from by pouring ghrita and soma into a fire – he was wayyy more
complicated than that.
‘I think I understand,’ said the student. ‘Thank you.’
The teacher smiled to himself. If only Brahman was that simple to
‘understand’, if only he could be ‘understood’ at all by the limited human
intellect! He looked at the young upturned face and shook his head. Some
tough love was called for.
‘If you think “I know it well”, son, perhaps you do, but know that you
know only a tiny, tiny part, which He chooses to reveal to us here on earth.
For there is one part of Brahman that dwells among the gods, and that – that
you have yet to discover. Ergo, back to your toil! Think about what I have
told you, meditate, contemplate – there’s a long, long way to go yet!’
The student flushed.
The teacher was impressed in spite of himself. The boy was not one to be
cowed easily. Perhaps it was time to take him a little further. ‘You see, my
boy,’ he said, ‘the difficulty with Brahman is this –
The student’s face fell. How would he ever know Brahman then? If his
teacher was to be believed, it was a futile quest. Clearly, Brahman was not
someone who could be understood, he could perhaps only be experienced.
But the ones who had experienced Him, it seemed, could not share the
experience, because they didn’t even realize it had happened!* But the
teacher was speaking again.
Well, that was a bit of hope there, at last! thought the student to himself.
That was something he could try to work towards. If he treated all his
fellowmen and fellow creatures like he treated himself – with respect and
kindness – maybe, some day, he too would experience Brahman. But the
question still remained – would he recognize Him when he did?
The teacher’s voice broke into his soliloquy. ‘Let me tell you a story,’
said the teacher, ‘of how the gods were once humbled.’
‘I am all ears, sir,’ smiled the student. Trust his teacher to know when to
break a low mood, with one of his stories! The stories were fun on the
surface, but they usually came with a hidden lesson. He leaned in eagerly to
give it his full attention.
‘Once upon a time,’ began the teacher, ‘a great war was fought
between the gods and the demons. The gods won and started to
congratulate themselves, feeling invincible in their victory. ‘We did it,
boys!’ they exulted. ‘We did it all by ourselves! How cool are we!’
They did not pause for a moment to reflect, or to give thanks to the
real reason behind their success, who was Brahman.
Seeing this, Brahman made himself visible to them. Drunk on
their success, they did not recognize Him. ‘What is this strange
apparition?’ they wondered. ‘Better send someone to find out if it is
friend or foe.’
After a quick discussion, Jatavedas (he was more often called
Agni) was picked to be the one to approach the apparition. Agni was
powerful and fearless – with his torrid breath, he could turn anything
to ashes in a twinkling.
‘All right, then,’ said Agni, and he reached the apparition in a few
quick strides.
‘Who are you?’ the apparition asked him. ‘Why, I am Fire,’ said
Agni. ‘They call me Jatavedas.’
‘Uh-hunh. And what sort of power do you have?’
‘I can burn up the whole world,’ boasted Agni. ‘Like, everything
on earth!’
The apparition said nothing. Instead, it placed a blade of grass in
front of Agni, saying, ‘Show me.’
Agni smiled. Mustering up all the firepower at his disposal, he
breathed plumes of scorching flame at the challenger. The blade of
grass lay there, as fresh and green as before.
Agni returned to the gods, very shaken. But he did not reveal what
had happened. ‘I could not find out who that Being is,’ he said
shortly, and took his place among the gods.
The gods turned to Wind. ‘Maybe you can find out for us, Wind?’
they said. ‘You are among the strongest of us all.’
Wind smiled. ‘That I am,’ he said and walked jauntily towards the
apparition.
‘And who are you?’ said the apparition.
‘Me?’ said Wind, a little put out that the Being did not already
know him. ‘I am Matarishvan, the Wind!’
‘I see,’ said the apparition. ‘And what sort of power do you have?’
‘I can carry away the whole world,’ boasted Wind. ‘Like,
everything on earth!’
The apparition did not reply. Instead, it placed a blade of grass on
the ground, saying, ‘Impress me.’
‘You can’t be serious!’ chuckled Wind. And he huffed at it a little.
Nothing happened. He puffed at it some more. Nothing happened.
Baffled, Wind loosed upon it a hurricane, with all the power at his
command. But the blade of grass remained exactly where it was, not
lifting off the ground by so much as a whisper.
Humbled and sore, Matarishvan returned to the gods. But he did
not reveal what had happened. ‘I could not find out who that Being
is,’ he said curtly, and went away to lick his wounds.
‘Maghavan,’ said the gods to their king, Indra. ‘There’s something
strange afoot. You’d better go yourself and find out who or what it is.’
‘Right,’ said Indra, and off he went towards the apparition. But
the moment he got close to it, it disappeared. In its place appeared the
beauteous Uma, daughter of Himavat, the snow mountain.
‘Fair lady,’ said Indra, ‘I wonder if you know who or what that
strange apparition was.’
‘That?’ said Uma. ‘That was Brahman, of course. Did you not
recognize him?’ Indra shook his head.
‘Look at you all,’ chided Uma, ‘celebrating Brahman’s victory as
your own! Do you not see that all your power and glory comes from
Him, and Him alone?’
Instantly, Indra realized the truth of Uma’s words. He returned to
the gods, ecstatic, singing Brahman’s praises.
‘Know this, my son,’ continued the teacher, ‘that Agni, Vayu and Indra
are considered among the greatest of the gods, for it was they who
approached closest to Brahman. Know this – that Indra surpasses the other
two, for he was the one to whom the identity of the Being was revealed.’
The student bowed. How cleverly his teacher had comforted him, by
letting him know that even the gods did not quite ‘get’ Brahman, that even
they did not know Him when they saw Him, without some help from
someone wiser than them – in this case, the goddess Uma. A surge of hope
filled the student’s heart. If the gods had Uma, he had his teacher to help him!
‘Now join me, if you will,’ said the teacher, ‘in a prayer to the Supreme
One.’
‘It would be my pleasure and privilege, sir.’
‘That was a great story, sir,’ said the student. ‘I know now that I can
never hope to approach or recognize Brahman without your help. So teach
me, sir! Teach me the Secret! Teach me the Upanishad!’
The teacher placed his hand on the boy’s head, blessing him. Such
impatience to learn, such eagerness to uncover the greatest mysteries of the
universe! Blessed were the teachers who found students like these.
‘It has already been taught to you, my son,’ he said. ‘This is the
Upanishad, this is the great secret about Brahman. Be moderate in your
thoughts and actions. Exercise self-restraint. Perform the rituals. Serve self
lessly. Live the wisdom of the scriptures. Stay honest to yourself.
‘That is how the demonic in you is slain and the divine nourished. That is
how Brahman is attained.’
THE AFTERSTORY
How do you describe someone or something that, by definition, is
unperceivable, inconceivable and, well, indescribable? The Upanishads tell
us that neither does language have the words nor imagination the pictures to
describe the phenomenon we know as Brahman. Nor can our senses grasp
Him (not at all surprising, that, considering that our senses are pretty limited;
our ears can’t even hear the range of frequencies that dogs can!).
Worse, all the methods we have of classifying something – by type,
quality, function or special attribute (in Sanskrit, jaati-guna-kriya-
visheshanaih) – fail spectacularly when it comes to describing the One – for
He is, again by definition, beyond classification!
Given these insurmountable constraints, the only way to get closer to a
‘profile’ of Brahman is by contradiction – saying two seemingly
contradictory things about Him – or by negation – stating what He is not
rather than what He is, a technique called Neti, Neti – not this, not that. By
eliminating all the possibilities that were not true, the sages hoped to take us
closer to what was; sort of like what good detectives or doctors do –
eliminating possibilities one by one to arrive at the identity of the perpetrator
of the crime, or the disease.
The teacher in the Kena does this via statements like ‘To whomsoever It
(the Supreme Truth) is not known, to him It is known; to whomsoever It is
known, he does not know he knows.’
Wow! That makes it all crystal clear. Not!
But never mind that for now.
One good lesson that you can take away from all this seeming
obfuscation is this – if it is a given that you will not recognize Brahman when
you see Him/Her/It, simply because you don’t know what It looks like,
wouldn’t it makes sense to treat everyone and everything like you would
Brahman? Just to make sure that you don’t miss It when and if It does choose
to come into your sights – maybe as the old and frail person standing behind
you in a queue, maybe as the hoity-toity aunty honking at you at a traffic
light, maybe as one of the 171 trees that the City Corporation has decided to
chop to make way for yet another flyover, or maybe as something else
altogether?
You bet it does. What does that mean, though – ‘treating everyone like
Brahman’? Well, if you knew that someone or something was the One
Supreme Power of the universe, without which you could not yourself exist
or live a happy, comfortable, sentient life, how would you treat it? With equal
parts respect, gratitude, love and reverence, right? If that Power was in
trouble, you would rush to its aid, if It was losing its spirit, you would move
heaven and earth to cheer It up, because you knew your very survival
depending on It being vibrant and cheerful. In short, you would treat It as you
would treat yourself.
And that’s really what ‘seeing’ Brahman really means – seeing the power
that sustains the universe not just in the sun and the rain and the earth, but in
every tree and rock and creature and person around you, and treating them all
as you would treat yourself.
Do it!
११
KATHA
The Upanishad of the Secret of
Eternal Life
In which a teenager coolly walks up to Death and has a
long conversation with him
Aum!
May He in the Highest Heaven
Protect both of us, teacher and student;
Nourish both of us together
So that we may work together with great energy,
So that we may learn from each other,
So that our learning is effective,
So that we steer clear of dispute and discord.
THE BACKSTORY
The Katha Upanishad (aka the Kaathaka Upanishad or the Kathopanishad) is
one of the most popular, most beloved and most studied Upanishads of all.
Part of the Krishna Yajur Veda, its impact has extended well beyond Indian
shores, its philosophy inspiring writers like British poet Edwin Arnold
(whose translation of it is called ‘The Secret of Death’), British novelist W.
Somerset Maugham (who used a phrase from one of its verses as the title of
one of his novels, The Razor’s Edge), Irish poet W.B. Yeats and American
essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson (whose poem ‘Brahma’ encapsulates the
Katha’s philosophy), apart from philosophers like German greats Max
Mueller and Arthur Schopenhauer.
The jury is still out on when the Katha was written – while scholars they
agree that it was written after the 7th century BCE, they differ about whether it
was written before the Buddhist texts (thus influencing them) or after (thus
being influenced by them). Be that as it may, there are other, more
interesting, things about the Katha, like the wordplay in its name.
The Katha is pronounced KaTHa – with a hard TH, as in the Hindi word
meeTHa (sweet) – which means ‘distress’ in Sanskrit. This seems apt, as the
Upanishad kicks off with the distress of the teenager Nachiketa. But if
pronounced Katha, with a soft ‘th’, the word means story, legend or report,
all of which apply too, for this Upanishad reports a conversation between the
teenager Nachiketa and the god of Death, Yama.
The Katha is composed as two chapters, each with three sections. It
narrates the legend of Nachiketa, a boy so steadfast in his pursuit of Moksha
that he demanded that the god of Death teach him the secret of eternal life
(sounds ironic, but who else but the god of Death would know all about life
beyond it, eh?).
It is no wonder then, that today, Nachiketa has become a metaphor for
single-mindedness of purpose. Swami Vivekananda, who loved the
Kathopanishad, once said that if he could get hold of a dozen boys with the
faith and focus of Nachiketa, he could turn ‘the thoughts and pursuits of this
country into a new channel’. In fact, even the Swami’s rousing call to the
youth of India – ‘Arise, awake, and stop not until the goal is reached!’ can be
traced to a verse in the Katha, which begins with the words ‘uttishtatha
jaagrata’ (‘Arise! Awake!’ – see page 228).
But enough with the prelude. On to the story!
THE STORY
Once upon a time, the sage Vaajashravas, famous across the land for his
generosity, was giving away all that he possessed. His young son, Nachiketa,
stood by his side as a good son should, and Vaajashravas was well-pleased.
Nachiketa was well versed in the word of the scriptures and had always
had an unshakeable faith in them, just as he had in his father. But as he
silently watched the scene, the spirit of the scriptures entered him and nudged
that faith awake, turning it from a blind, passive thing that accepted what it
was told, into ‘shraddha’ – a faith that believed intensely, but was not afraid
to question, analyze and respectfully demand answers. The trusting child was
gone, never to return; in his place stood a curious, sceptical young man who
saw the hypocrisy of those around him with a sudden clarity.
‘What is my father doing?’ thought Nachiketa to himself. ‘These cows he
is giving away – old, weak, devoid of milk – what use are they to anyone?
This kind of joyless gift is surely not what the scriptures recommend? Surely
there is no place in Heaven for the man who gives such gifts as these?’
Convinced that his father hadn’t realized what he was doing, Nachiketa
decided to alert him before it was too late.
‘Father,’ he began. Vaajashravas took one look at his son’s face, noticed
the change in him and understood what he was about to say. Brusquely, he
motioned to Nachiketa to keep silent and went on with his gift-giving.
Nachiketa was stunned. His father knew full well that what he was doing
was a hollow, empty thing! But he was pretending that the gifting was more
important than the gift, the ritual more worthy than its purpose. This was far
worse than he had imagined! Worried that no rewards awaited such a man in
the afterlife, the dutiful son came up with a master plan – he would request
his father to give him away as well. For Nachiketa knew well that he was his
father’s dearest possession – if his father gave him away, the gods would
regard it as the ultimate sacrifice, and Vaajashravas would gain all the
blessings of Heaven.
‘Sir,’ he said, ‘you are giving away all that is yours. To whom, pray, will
you give me?’ His father pretended not to hear. ‘Sir,’ said Nachiketa again,
‘to whom will you give me?’ Vaajashravas did not turn around. ‘Father,’ said
Nachiketa for a third time, stubbornly, ‘to whom will you give me?’
Riled, Vaajashravas whirled around. ‘You?’ he yelled. ‘I will give you
away to Death! Happy now?’
Nachiketa started as if he had been slapped. But his dismay lasted only a
moment. His father had spoken and it was his duty to honour his father’s
word.
Vaajashravas, by now ashamed of his outburst, was casting about for
ways to make amends when he saw the steely determination in his teenager’s
eyes. ‘I did not mean that, Nachiketa, you know I didn’t!’ he begged.
‘Forgive me, lad, don’t leave me!’
‘Father, don’t fret,’ said Nachiketa calmly. ‘Everyone must make this
journey some day – you told me so yourself. After all,
‘This isn’t necessary at all, sir, but thank you, I will,’ said Nachiketa,
delighted at the unexpected turn of events. No one had told him that Death
was so affable. Oh, he would make those boons work for him, and how!
‘For my first boon, sir, I ask that my father’s temper be cooled. I cannot
bear the thought of having upset him, so if you could ensure that he is well
disposed towards me when I return...?’
‘Not bad,’ thought Death to himself, impressed. ‘Of all the possible
things, the boy asks for this!’ Aloud, he said, ‘You may rest assured on that
point, my boy. Any father, on seeing his beloved offspring released from the
jaws of Death, cannot be anything but ecstatic.’
Nachiketa bowed, his heart brimming with gratitude. ‘Thank you, sir. For
my second boon, then, I request instruction. I have heard that in the place we
call Heaven, there is no fear. The reason? You, sir, cannot enter there! There
is no old age, either, they tell me, in Heaven, no sickness of mind or body or
spirit, only the greatest joy. You, Lord of Death, are the master of the yagna
that throws open the doors of Heaven to mortals – teach it to me!’
‘Gladly,’ said Death. And he proceeded to teach Nachiketa the secrets of
the great fire sacrifice that leads to Heaven – exactly how to build the altar –
how many bricks, their dimensions, the angles at which they were to be laid
and so on, what offerings to prepare, which incantations to recite; and all the
rest of it. The boy listened intently. When Death had finished, the boy
repeated it all back to him, verbatim, not a word missed.
‘What a joy you are to teach, Nachiketa!’ exclaimed the delighted
teacher. ‘I’m throwing in a special reward for you – henceforth, this fire
sacrifice shall bear your name. That man who has performed the Nachiketa
yagna three times; who lives in perfect harmony with three people – father,
mother and teacher; who faithfully executes the triple rite – performing the
sacrifice, studying the scriptures and giving alms to the needy in the true
spirit of giving; he goes beyond death and attains everlasting peace. Such a
man shakes off the dread noose and crosses over to realms joyous, never to
return!’
Nachiketa bowed, overcome. ‘Thank you, sir.’
‘Now, ask for your third boon!’
Nachiketa hesitated. What he was about to ask for was enormous,
audacious, unprecedented. Death, he felt deep in his gut, would resist, and
resist mightily. Did he, Nachiketa, have it in him to wrest this boon and also
to honour it afterwards? Did he really have the single-mindedness of purpose,
the dogged determination, that it would take? Or should he just settle for
something more commonplace and easier to fulfil?
‘Stop it!’ he chided himself. ‘Stop second-guessing yourself! Look at the
opportunity before you – how many people are privileged enough to get an
audience with Death himself? You know this is the question that has plagued
you, and humankind, forever. What could be a nobler quest than to learn the
answer, so that generations to come may benefit from it? Go on, ask!’
‘For my third boon, Sir,’ said Nachiketa, ‘I would like an answer to the
most important question of all.’
‘Ask, boy,’ said Death, indulgent, unsuspecting.
‘When a man dies, sir, there are some people who say “It’s all over now.
He’s dead.” There are others who say, with great conviction, “He still lives.”
What is the truth, sir? What happens after death?’
Too late, Death realized he had been blindsided. ‘Even the gods are not
sure of the answer to that one, Nachiketa,’ he stammered. ‘It’s a very
complex thing to grasp. Ask for anything else, my boy. but do not, I beg you,
press me for the secret of death!’
‘I believe you,’ returned Nachiketa calmly. ‘But if the answer is as
complex as you say it is, where in the world will I find a better teacher than
you to explain it to me? I’m afraid I cannot change my wish.’
‘How about,’ said Death eagerly, changing his tack, ‘I make you an offer
you can’t refuse?
But Nachiketa was steadfast. ‘Oh Lord of Death,’ he said, smiling sadly,
‘how could I ever find pleasure in life again, however long it be, now that I
have gazed upon your face? For as long as I live, O King, you will stalk me
like a spectre, your shadow tainting every fleeting breath of worldly
happiness. No, sir, it isn’t life that interests me any more, but death. Tell me
the secret, reveal to me the Great Mystery. I will settle for nothing less.’
Death sighed. This one would not be shaken from his goal. ‘Listen, then,’
he said.
***
‘Two kinds of action constantly present themselves to us, Nachiketa,’ said the
Lord of Death. ‘One is good action, the other merely pleasant. The first leads
to good things – peace, contentment, lasting joy, the welfare of the world; the
second leads to pleasure, sure, but selfish pleasure that does no one any good,
and does not last.
‘On the surface, there seems not to be much difference between the good
and the pleasant, but we must choose wisely, for the choice is entirely ours to
make.
‘The wise reflect deeply on the two choices and pick the good, which
gives perennial joy, even if that joy should take long to arrive, and involve
hard work, many sacrifices and plenty of self-doubt. The ignorant, on the
other hand, led only by their senses, greedy for short-term gains and seeking
instant gratification, pick the pleasant one every time. Worse, they go around
congratulating themselves on the choice they made, believing that they are
the wise. “There is only this world, there isn’t any other,” proclaim these
foolish men. “When my body dies, I die. So I take only what pleases the
body, and enjoy the world to the fullest!” Such men, Nachiketa, are like the
blind who are led by the blind. They never escape my coils – they die a
hundred deaths as they blunder from life to life.
‘Only a few realize that the body is not the Self, that when the body dies,
the Self remains – untainted, unchanging, eternal. It is the rare person who
hears the Self speak, and rarer still is the person who recognizes that it is Him
who speaks. Wondrous is the person who can teach someone else about Him,
and more wondrous is he, who, on finding such a teacher, is able to glean that
knowledge.
‘For you can talk about Him all you will – debating His nature, arguing
about what He is and isn’t; and you can think about Him, and study the
scriptures, and listen to all the discourses you like, but you will never attain
Him via those routes, for He lies beyond the grasp of reason, beyond the
reach of the intellect. Find a good teacher, however, and He is easily gained.
‘You, Nachiketa, are among the rarest of the rare. I laid before you every
kind of treasure known to man and you rejected them all without a second
thought – you chose the good over the pleasant! You have grasped the truth
of the Self, dear boy. Blessed is the teacher who has a seeker like you to
question him!’*
*Here, as is so many other places, the Upanishads point out how a worthy student is just as rare a
species as a worthy teacher. Next time you want to blame your teachers for something, take a moment
to reflect on whether you’ve done your part towards being an ideal student!
Smaller than the smallest, vaster than the vastest, the Self lives within the
heart. Stop striving in vain – submit instead to His will, embrace with
equanimity everything that comes your way, sacrifice your anxiety about the
outcome of your work. Thus will your mind be tranquil, thus will you behold
His glory in yourself.
For He is closer to you than you know but farther away than you can
imagine. Sitting still, He moves everything; lying down, He goes everywhere.
And though He abides in everyone, He only reveals Himself to a few.
The unrighteous cannot reach Him, nor they whose minds are not
composed. The man who controls not his senses cannot know Him, nor he
who gives not a thing his complete dedication.
He who consumes both priest and king like a dish of boiled rice and
gobbles up death itself like the curry on top, who can truly know where to
find Him, until He decides to reveal Himself?
***
What are the main messages in this passage? One, of course, is clearly stated
– the death we talk about is only the death of the body, not the soul, which is
our one true Self.
But there seems to be another big message here as well: no matter how
hard you work towards something, how sincerely, or how single-mindedly, it
is impossible to achieve what you set out to, or scale the pinnacle of your
particular mountain, unless your effort is also touched by divine grace. Or, as
the Kathopanishad puts it, unless ‘He decides to reveal Himself’.
O charioteer, hold firm the reins and control your skittish horses,
which pull in every direction! O Intellect, understanding that worldly
desires lead only to sorrow, train the Mind to be one-pointed, and
draw the senses to yourself!
But enough about Plato. Let’s talk now about the Bhagavad Gita, which
borrows so heavily from this section of the Katha. Apart from the argument
about the slayer and the slain, Krishna also uses the chariot allegory to
instruct Arjuna on who or what his Self really is. The fact that their
conversation happened in a chariot, where he, the Lord of Wisdom, was
Arjuna’s charioteer, is not a random coincidence at all! Also, by choosing
Krishna as his charioteer, Arjuna had declared, loud and clear, his shraddha
to the highest goal. Later, Krishna would choose to reveal Himself to Arjuna,
thus blessing his effort with the elusive divine grace. You see how, with all
this on his side, Arjuna could not but win – not just the earthly war he was
fighting with the Kauravas but also the bigger war he was fighting with
himself?
To believe implicitly in a world that you cannot experience with your senses,
to choose always the good path over the pleasurable, to be so dedicated to
your quest that no earthly temptation can divert you, even while everyone
around you mocks at your ‘idealistic nonsense’ – all of it demands a rare
brand of courage.
What does that kind of courage translate to in the real world? Not paying
a bribe to get something done, perhaps, even though you know it will delay
things for you, and require you to make many trips to do it; or skipping a
friend’s impromptu party because you have already promised your granddad
you will play chess with him; or taking issue with your mom, respectfully,
when you believe she is not treating the domestic help right; or picking up the
litter on your street each Sunday, even though your neighbours never step in
to help (in fact, they don’t even stop throwing stuff out of respect for your
efforts; instead, they hasten to discourage you, assuring you that you are
wasting your time and should be studying instead).
Do you see how displaying this kind of courage will eventually make you
a better person, in your own estimation if not in anyone else’s? Sure. But is it
something that you’d rather avoid? Oh, most certainly! See how the sages
were so on point when they declared that the path to self-realization was as
sharp as a razor’s edge?
All the body’s ‘gates’ – eyes, nose, ears, mouth – He in his wisdom
turned outwards; therefore, willy-nilly, we look outside us for our
happiness. But the wise sage looked inside himself, and beheld the
Self within.
When death comes to the body, and the Self breaks free
And vanishes quicker than eye can see,
What remains is the Word that holds the key –
This, indeed, is That!
**The ‘city with the eleven (or nine) gates’ is a common metaphor for the body in Indian
philosophy and storytelling. The nine gates of the body are the nine ‘openings’, all of which face
outwards – the two eyes, the two nostrils, the two ears, the mouth, and the two openings down under
through which stuff is discharged (women have three, of course, but the sages were, as usual, not
thinking of them when they wrote this). Sometimes, eleven gates are mentioned – the two extra ones
are the navel and what is called the ‘brahmarandhra’ (Brahma’s passage), the opening at the top of the
skull which closes up as a baby grows. Hindus believe that it is through the brahmarandhra that the life-
force, or Brahman, enters the foetus, and it is through it again that the soul leaves once the body dies.
***The Self, or Atman, is often sweetly described as the ‘thumb-sized Being’. Perhaps the sages
reckoned that if the Self had to reside in the heart, it should logically be of a size that fits in it.
Metaphysics was all very well, but sometimes things had to be anatomically correct too, what? Unlike
with some other religions, Hinduism has never been in conflict with science, considering scientific
theories as just one more way of looking at the world, so this isn’t such an outlandish theory.
BACK TO NACHIKETA
Did you think it was a bit odd that Nachiketa dropped off in the middle of the
Upanishad? Never fear, he returns triumphantly, right after the bit about Etad
vai tat, to conclude the Upanishad.
Thus did Nachiketa, having gained this knowledge from Death himself,
conquer death and gain everlasting life. And so may every other who realizes
this truth, and knows his inner Self thus, be free.
Aum Shantih Shantih Shantih ||
THE AFTERSTORY
It’s interesting to note that the main protagonist in the Kathopanishad is not a
wise sage or one of the gods, but a teenager. Could it be that the composer of
the Katha, having taught a bunch of teenagers himself, or perhaps having
raised a couple of his own, realized that none but a teenager would be as
disgusted at a beloved parent’s hypocrisy as Nachiketa was? Or be so
determined to establish his own identity that he would undertake as risky and
unprecedented an adventure as a visit to the abode of Death? Or have the
sheer chutzpah, when he got there, to ask Death so many difficult questions,
confident that he would eventually be returned to the world of the living?
It is a likely theory. And whether true or not, it holds a lesson for all teens
and almost-teens – Be like Nachiketa. Ask the difficult questions. Shake up
complacency. Question tradition. Challenge authority respectfully. Undertake
rigorous journeys – sticking to a tough exercise routine, going at calculus
until you’ve cracked it, training for a half-marathon, learning a new language.
Bring fresh eyes and minds and perspectives to existing social structures and
practices, and back it up with the hard work and the sacrifices needed to pull
them down or make them better.
It’s in your young, powerful hands to fulfil your potential and make the
world a better, fairer, kinder place. Go for it!
१२
PRASHNA
The Upanishad of the Peepul Tree Sage
In which six questions go in search of a teacher
Aum!
Ye gods, bless us
That we may hear words that are pleasant
And see things that are blessed,
That we may live our lives in ways that nourish you.
O great Indra, O All-Knowing Poosha,
O Garuda, destroyer of evil, O great teacher Brihaspati,
Take care of us, blessed ones!
THE BACKSTORY
nce upon a time, there was a great war between the Devas and the
THE STORY
Once, in days long past, six men – called Sukesha, Satyakama, Gargya,
Kausalya, Bhargava and Kabandhi – who were all true seekers of Brahman
and had spent most of their lives engaged in austerities and contemplation,
decided to visit the great sage Pippalada. They had all, you see, reached a
plateau in their spiritual enquiry, and try as they might, were unable to
progress to the next level. Realizing that they needed a guru to answer the
questions that plagued them, they went to meet Pippalada, carrying fuel for
sacrifice, as it was customary for students to do.*
*Whenever students went to start instruction with a teacher, the practice was to take with them a load of
firewood, which would be used as fuel in the sacrifices the teacher performed at the gurukul.
Metaphorically speaking, however, the firewood symbolized the student’s commitment to the sacrifices
that would be demanded of him in the long, hard and lonely path to knowledge.
Pippalada welcomed them warmly. Then he said, ‘Live with me for a year
as my students do, practising self-restraint, chastity and faith. At the end of
the year, you can ask me your questions, and if I know the answers, I shall
most certainly share them with you.’
So the six men lived with Pippalada for a year, doing all the jobs that
novice students did. At the end of the year, they approached him again, and
Kabandhi asked his question.
Prashna 1: Where did all the creatures in the world come from?
‘Bhagavan*,’ said Kabandhi, ‘where, truly, do all the creatures in the
world come from? Where, indeed, do they take their birth?’
And Pippalada answered: ‘Prajapati, being the Lord of All Creatures, had
a desire for creatures, quite naturally. Once, he did great penances, and from
the heat generated inside him, produced a pair of twins – rayi (matter), which
was female, and prana (energy), which was male – thinking, ‘Now these two
will go forth and multiply, producing all manner of creatures for me to
enjoy.’ And they did.
‘What is rayi or matter? Everything that has a form is rayi, and so also are
things that are formless, like the mind. But matter remains just that – matter –
until it is infused with prana, energy. The moon is simply matter, but the sun
is prana**, for it is only when the sun rises and illumines the whole world –
east and west, north and south – that everything comes alive. It is only when
he throws his light on the moon that she comes alive. Verily, Kabandhi, the
sun is both the prana of the universe, and Vaishvanara, the spark of life in
every creature.
* Say bhaga-vuhn.
**Similarly, the night, when everything is asleep (read: dead) is considered rayi, while the day, when
everything is vibrantly alive, is prana. Neither rayi nor prana is complete without the other. It is only
when the two – rayi and prana, matter and energy, female and male – come together and become one
that life can result.
‘In the cycle of a man’s life, there are two paths available to him – the
northern and the southern. Those men who perform rituals and do acts of
charity for selfish ends, not recognizing the essence, the prana, in those
rituals, are bogged down by rayi, and they take the southern route; they return
to the material world, the world of rayi, again and again. But those who seek
true knowledge, practising chastity and self-restraint, keeping the faith, they,
dear Kabandhi, soar with prana along the northern route, and gain the realms
of the fearless, radiant sun, eternal source of all lifebreaths, never to return.’
Prashna 2: Of all the different powers that define an intelligent, engaged
living being, which one is the most important?
Then Bhargava asked his question.
‘Bhagavan,’ said Bhargava, ‘who are the gods that support life in the
body? Which of them make a being “alive” to everything around itself? And
which among them is the greatest?’
And Pippalada answered: ‘The five elements, dear Bhargava – space,
earth, fire, water, air – of which the body is made, these are the gods that
support the body. But speech and mind, sight and hearing – they are the gods
that light up the inanimate body, turning it into a self-aware, intelligent being
that can engage with the world around itself.
‘Let me tell you a story about these four gods, As they appeared in the
body, one by one, each boasted, “I, and only I, am what truly sustains and
supports the body.’’
‘Only after they had all spoken did Prana the lifebreath show himself.
“Do not delude yourselves,” he said. “Without me – call me energy,
lifebreath, what you will – who is present in the body as five distinct breaths,
the body would not survive.”
‘“Ha!” mocked speech and mind, sight and hearing. “Show us!”
‘“I will,” said Prana, and he made as if to leave, proceeding swiftly
upwards towards the brahmarandhra, the passage at the top of the human
head through which life enters and leaves a body. And the gods that light up
the body, all four of them, found themselves being pulled upwards and out,
willy-nilly, in Prana’s wake, just like bees are “pulled” behind the queen bee
when she leaves the hive.
‘“Mercy!” cried the gods. “We believe you now. When Prana leaves, so
do all the other faculties – none can exist without the lifebreath!”’*
*This is clear enough, but just to reiterate – when breath leaves a body, so do thought, speech, and the
faculties of seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting and feeling. The vital being that existed before – talking,
laughing, enjoying a beautiful sunset or a dish of pani puri – is gone. What remains is simply matter,
rayi, a body made up of the five elements.
‘When the fire of life is extinguished, the mind draws the senses back into
itself. Then, together with Prana, and aided by Udana, it readies for rebirth (if
that was its desire at the time of death) or to move to higher realms (if that
was its last thought).
‘The wise who know prana thus, Kausalya – how it is born, how it enters
the body, where its five different manifestations live, both in the body and
outside it, and how it is related to the individual Self, Atman, and the
Supreme Self, Brahman – they become immortal, yea, they become
immortal.’
‘By and by, the warmth of dreamless sleep irradiates the body. The mind
is finally stilled, and the body finds itself at last in the bliss of true repose.
Just as birds wing their way back to the tree when they are weary, everything
in the body returns to its true resting place, the Self.
‘In dreamless sleep, earth, water, fire, air and space, eyes and ears, sight
and sound, nose and palate, smell and taste, skin and touch, tongue and
speech, hands and feet, things that are held and paths that are walked, things
excreted and that which excretes, things emitted and that which emits, mind
and intellect, imagination and reason, self-awareness and ego, belief and
understanding, light and life, things that are illuminated, rayi, and things that
the breath, prana, brings alive – all of them, all of them, find their repose in
the Self.
‘It is He, Gargya, this Self in which everything reposes, that is truly the
seer, the hearer, the smeller, the feeler, the taster, the doer, the perceiver, the
knower, the thinker, the experiencer, the Person in the body. And this Person
himself reposes in the higher self – the immortal, imperishable, Supreme Self
that is Brahman.
‘He who knows the Self in the body – the formless, stainless, shadowless
Self on which rest the five elements, the vital breaths and the various
intelligences – as the constant, shining, imperishable, Supreme Self – such a
one, dear Gargya, knowing the whole truth, becomes the truth.’
Prashna 5: Is that very difficult thing called meditation even worth the
effort?
Then Satyakama asked his question.
‘Bhagavan,’ said Satyakama, ‘if a man were to meditate on the sacred
syllable Aum for his whole life, what rewards would he win through that
meditation?’
And Pippalada answered, ‘That sound Aum (say Om*), Satyakama, is
verily Brahman, both the higher one (Supreme universal spirit) and the lower
one (the Self in every individual). Only by contemplating deeply on Aum,
without distraction, may a man reach either.
*In Sanskrit, when the vowel sound ‘aa’ is followed by the vowel sound ‘uu’, the resulting sound is not
‘aauu’ or ‘ow’, but ‘oh’. A+u+m, therefore, is not Aauum or Owm, but Ohm.
‘Even a man who only meditates on the first sound, A, wins rewards. He
comes quickly back to earth after death, led by the verses of the Rig Veda,
blessed with the qualities of austerity, chastity and faith, to lead a full and
happy life in the world of men.
‘A man who meditates on the first two sounds, A and U, is conveyed after
his death to intermediate worlds, ruled by the moon, by the rituals of the
Yajur Veda. There he enjoys a glorious life until the fruits of his Karma are
depleted, after which he returns to earth again.
‘But he who meditates on all three sounds of Aum – A, U and M – he is
escorted after death to the abode of the sun by the melodious chants of the
Sama Veda, where he becomes one with the light, never to return.
‘These three sounds – A, U and M – if meditated upon separately, dear
Satyakama, cannot lead a man beyond death. Wise is the sage who meditates
on all of them as one, letting the sound of ‘Aum’ resonate in his heart without
pause as he goes about his work both in the outer world and the inner, for he
is freed forever from fear. He crosses beyond old age and death, and attains
that which is serene, that which is luminous, and that which is peace
everlasting.’
Prashna 6: Help! A seeker asked me about the person with sixteen parts –
and I had no idea what he meant!
Then Sukesha approached Pippalada and asked his question.
‘Bhagavan,’ said Sukesha, ‘Hiranyanabha, the prince of Kosala, once
came to me and said: “Sukesha, do you know the person with the sixteen
parts?” I did not, so I told him so. He did not say a word as he got back onto
his chariot and departed. Now tell me, sir, who is this person of the sixteen
parts?’
And Pippalada answered, ‘Right here, Sukesha, within your body and
mine, is the Person from whom, in whom, the sixteen parts are born. This
Person, the Self, thought to himself, “There must be something that comes
into the body when I do, filling it with life, and leaves when I leave,
withdrawing life. I must create such a thing.”
And so he created (1) Prana, the lifebreath. From the lifebreath came (2)
faith or shraddha, and from faith came (3) earth, (4) water, (5) fire, (6) space,
(7) air, (8) the senses, (9) the mind, and (10) food, for everything needs fuel
to grow and move. From food came (11) energy, from energy (12) the
penances we undertake, (13 ) the hymns we chant, (14) the actions we do,
(15) the worlds we do and do not inhabit, and (16) the names of everything in
these worlds, for it is only once a thing has been named that it can stand apart
from the others.
‘But just as rivers entering the ocean from every side lose their individual
names and forms and become, simply, the ocean, so does the separateness of
the sixteen parts of a person disappear and become, simply, the Person, no
sooner than the Self is known. That one, the Person, is beyond name and
form, immortal.
‘Know the Person, dear Sukesha, as the one by whom, in whom, the
sixteen parts are held together, just as spokes are held together in the hub of a
wheel, and you will see beyond name and form, and go beyond death.’
Then, to the six seekers, the sage Pippalada said, ‘That is all I know about
that Supreme Brahman, higher than whom there is nothing else.’
And the students bowed to their teacher, and sang his praises, saying,
‘You, indeed, are our father, who has taken us across the sea of ignorance to
the other shore.’
Praise the supreme seers! Homage to the supreme rishis!
THE AFTERSTORY
Afterstory 1: The Upanishadic Classroom
Aum!
Ye gods, bless us
That we may hear words that are pleasant
And see things that are blessed,
That we may live our lives in ways that nourish you.
O great Indra, O All-Knowing Poosha,
O Garuda, destroyer of evil, O great teacher Brihaspati,
Take care of us, blessed ones!
THE BACKSTORY
hristmas 1918. In the bitter cold of a Delhi winter, leaders of the
But back to the 33rd session of the INC, which is remembered for the
many resolutions that were passed during that week, demanding complete
self-governance for India. What is often overlooked about this session,
however, is a rather significant sidelight – Pt Malaviya’s recommendation
that the Congress, and India, look to a particular Sanskrit phrase – Satyam
eva jayate – The Truth Alone Triumphs – as their beacon and anchor while
they fought the good fight. So powerfully did the sentiment of this mantra
resonate, not just with the members of the INC but also with the people of
India, that when India became independent, the founding fathers chose to
adopt it as our nation’s motto, and had it inscribed at the base of the lion
capital we chose for our country’s emblem.
The National Emblem of India
Great story. But we are talking about it here because? Because this phrase
– Satyam eva jayate – is part of – you guessed it! – a verse in the Mundaka
Upanishad. The whole line reads – ‘Satyam eva jayate na anritam’ – Truth
alone triumphs, not falsehood.
Like the Prashna, the Mundaka Upanishad, as you would know after
seeing its Shanti Mantra, is also considered to be part of the Atharva Veda.
Its sixty-four verses are divided into three Mundakams or chapters, each with
two sections. As with so many others, this Upanishad is also cast as a
dialogue between a teacher, the sage Angiras, and his student, the
householder Shaunaka.
The word Mundaka has its roots in ‘mund’, which means ‘to shave’.
(Remember when you and your family were invited to a baby’s mundan?
And how that baby’s shrieking while his or her head was shaved was part of
your nightmares for weeks after? Yup, that kind of mund.) What does
shaving have to do with this Upanishad? There are a couple of theories. One
says that this Upanishad is aimed at sannyasis or monks, they of the shaven
heads, and that its higher truth is accessible only to those who have
renounced the world. [Which is a bit odd, considering the student asking the
questions here is not a hermit or a brahmachari (celibate bachelor) but a
householder.] Another theory suggests that the mundan suggested by the
name Mundaka is a ‘shaving away of ignorance’, which anyone who
understands this Upanishad will experience.
Whatever. The important thing is the subject of the Mundaka. More than
any other Upanishad, this one is scathing about those who revere rituals
above all, believing that if they do ‘right action’ – perform rituals according
to the rules, give charity, et al – the rewards of immortality will be theirs. The
Mundaka insists that right action, even when done in the right spirit, can at
most lead you to what it calls a ‘lower truth’. Of course, attaining this ‘lower
truth’ helps create the discipline and platform needed to launch yourself into
the bigger quest for the ‘higher truth’, the knowledge of Brahman,* but
mistaking the lower truth for the higher, or believing that the former is all
there is, marks one out as an ignoramus.
*The Mundaka refers to this higher truth as ‘Vedanta’. This is arguably the earliest recorded use of this
famous, oft-used word!
The famous Upanishadic metaphor of the two birds on a tree, one restless,
the other content – is also from the Mundaka Upanishad. Never heard that
story? Time you did, then. Read on!
THE STORY
Brahma arose as the first among gods, creator, protector, guardian of the
world. And to Atharvan, his beloved firstborn son, he revealed the knowledge
of Brahman, which is the root of all knowledge. That knowledge Atharvan
revealed to Angir in ancient times, and Angir to Satyavaha, and Satyavaha to
Angiras.
One day, the householder Shaunaka went to pay the sage Angiras a visit,
carrying firewood as every student does, and asked, ‘What is it, Bhagavan,
knowing which everything else may be known?’
‘There are two kinds of knowledge, the higher and the lower, that a man
must know, Shaunaka, so the wise tell us,’ replied Angiras. ‘The lower
knowledge is held in the four Vedas, in grammar and phonetics, linguistics
and metrics, astronomy and etymology, ritual and poetry. The higher
knowledge, on the other hand, is one by which the Imperishable One is
grasped.’
‘Now let me tell you a story, Shaunaka, about two birds on a tree. They
are inseparable, these two, always within sight of each other, always coming
to rest on the same tree. One of them is usually perched on a lower branch –
let’s call her the “lower bird” – the other, golden and radiant, perches on a
higher one. The lower bird knows well that her companion is around,
somewhere near her, and dearly wants to spend more time with her, but even
as the thought crosses her mind, she spots a luscious-looking fruit. Waves of
desire wash over her, wiping the thought of her friend from her mind, and she
hops eagerly towards the fruit and begins to eat, enjoying the taste of it.
‘Once she has finished, her mind begins to drift towards her friend again,
but suddenly, another fruit catches her eye, even more juicy-looking than the
last. Friend forgotten, she races towards it greedily, even though she is no
longer hungry. She gobbles this one up too, and as she is scooping up the last
bits, she spots yet another fruit. She thinks about waiting a while, even till the
next day, but she is suddenly nervous and insecure. “What if that fruit is not
there tomorrow?” she asks herself. “What if some other bird grabs it? What if
I never find any other fruit again and, horror of horrors, die of starvation?”
Working herself up into a state, she hops frantically to the new fruit and
swallows it too.
‘And what of her friend, the higher bird? She does not move at all from
her perch. She sits there, calm and composed, undistracted by all the
delicious-looking fruit around her, quietly watching the frenzied activity
below. She is not troubled by the fact that her friend does not seem to want
her company, for she trusts that she will arrive eventually, when she is ready.
‘So this lower bird continues hopping from fruit to fruit, until, one day,
something completely unexpected happens. She takes a bite of the fruit that
has just popped into her line of sight, and... gags. The fruit is bitter, so bitter
that it is almost unbearable! As she wallows in self-pity, she remembers her
friend, the higher bird. “Oh, how good it would feel to narrate my tale of woe
to a friend who truly understands!” she thinks, and looks up, seeking her.
And there she is, that golden-hued friend, patiently waiting, exactly where
she had first perched.
‘Full of gratitude, and feeling vaguely guilty that she has neglected her all
this while, the lower bird begins to fly up to her friend, but it is a long
journey, and soon enough, her mind – and her eyes – begin to wander.
Needless to say, they soon light upon... what else but another succulent fruit!
All thoughts of her friend vanish, and she flutters away towards it, to begin
her cycle of frantic, pointless activity all over again.’
Angiras paused, and Shaunaka smiled.
‘Thank you for that beautiful story,’ he said. ‘I understand now. The
lower bird is the lesser Self, comprised of the senses, the mind and the
intellect. The higher bird is the Supreme Self. Both of them rest in the tree
that is the body. But the lower Self is too distracted by the luscious fruit, the
temptations of the material world, and chases after them, forgetting the friend
who accompanied it here, who is even now waiting, patiently, above. Only
when she comes across a bitter fruit – a bitter life experience – does the lower
Self finally go in search of the higher one, looking for solace, compassion
and reassurance.’
‘That’s not all,’ said Angiras. ‘When the lesser Self finally reaches the
Supreme Self, on its tenth, hundredth, thousandth attempt, it realizes that it
had been deluded on this count as well – there has never been another bird!
As she merges into that golden radiance that has been her constant
companion, it finally dawns on the lower bird that the friend she had looked
up to and adored is... none other than herself!’
‘How I wish I could get there myself some day, Venerable One!’ sighed
Shaunaka.
Angiras was touched by the yearning in the student’s voice. ‘As you can
see, saumya,’ he said, ‘this flight towards the higher bird is not an easy one. It
cannot be attempted by the weak, the witless, or those who flounder
aimlessly through life. But through right knowledge, and the constant
practice of chastity, and by living a life of truth, you can most certainly get
there.
‘Satyam eva jayate na anritam – it is truth alone that triumphs, not
untruth. Casting off desire, walk the paths laid out by truth alone, and you
cannot but reach the supreme abode of Truth, where dwells the Imperishable
One. Just as the rivers flowing into the ocean lose their name and shape and
disappear into it, so does he who has understood well the meaning of Vedanta
lose name and form as he becomes one with the Immortal.
‘Know this, Shaunaka – he who knows the supreme Brahman becomes
Brahman Himself. It is only to those who perform the rites (with dedication),
know the scriptures (and understand them), make themselves the offering in
the inner sacrificial fire (with faith) and are devoted to Brahman, that the
knowledge of Brahman may be revealed.’
Tad etat satyam. This is the truth. This is what the sage Angiras declared,
in ages long past.
All hail the wise sages! All hail the great seers!
THE AFTERSTORY
What is our takeaway from the Mundaka Upanishad? It begins by saying that
performing rituals and doing good action, like giving charity to the needy,
takes one to the realms of the gods, and then proceeds to roundly condemn
the people who do exactly that, calling them ‘moodhaah’ or fools. So should
you, or should you not?
Let’s see now. While it’s true that it talks of ritual-performers with
disdain, the Mundaka also clarifies, almost immediately, that the people it is
calling ignorant are those who believe that the ritual is all there is to it, or
those who only follow the word of the scriptures, not its spirit. We all know
people like that. People who, for instance, spend an hour in prayer each
morning at home, or visit places of worship, and drop undisclosed amounts
into the donation box there, and so on, but who will also kick a dog out of
their way on the street, snarl at a beggar child who comes to their car
window, or treat the waiter at a restaurant like scum. It is such people that the
Mundaka calls ignorant fools, for they haven’t understood the core message
of whichever scripture they follow.
But even such people, says Angiras, who are proficient in the ‘lower
knowledge’, gain rewards – after all, they have performed the rituals (all of
which help them develop discipline), studied the scriptures (which are full of
wisdom) and done some charity. But if they think that just doing those
actions is going to give them the kind of mental peace they are seeking, they
are so mistaken. Anyone who snarls at a child or hurts an animal without
cause is clearly full of anger and bitterness and hate, and is the sort of person
who sees those who are not his own as different, and therefore threatening or
repulsive. Never mind Heaven, such people make their own lives, and the
lives of those around them, absolute hell. The most incredible part? They
think they are among the best people in the world because they’ve done their
charity and said their prayers! What else would you call such people but
ignorant fools?
On the other hand, if you can see the essence of the Supreme Soul in
every person and creature and tree and shrub, you will be full of love, not just
for yourself but for everything around you. You will perform your duties and
fulfil your responsibilities to your family, your community and the world –
for instance, help your parents clean up the kitchen without being asked,
cheerfully take on a tiny role in the school play without being resentful about
the classmate who bagged the bigger one, join a rally against a plan to build a
parking lot in place of a charitable hospital, and so on – with as much
dedication and enthusiasm as you would fulfil a responsibility to yourself
(like spending an hour watching TV after school, because you’ve worked so
hard that day; or treating yourself to a giant chocolate milkshake because
you’ve been running two kilometres every morning).
What’s more, you will do all the nice stuff you do for everyone else for
no other reason than that it makes you feel good, just like watching that hour
of TV or having that milkshake does. You will not expect mom or dad to
thank you for your help, or your friends to pat your back for playing even
your tiny role with gusto, or want to be featured in the newspapers the next
morning as the youngest person who took part in the protest rally.
See what happened there? You focused hundred per cent on joyful effort,
and zero per cent on the outcome of that effort. In the process, without even
realizing it, you left anger, bitterness, jealousy, resentment, hate and
expectation behind. You threw yourself into the work, whole-heartedly,
dedicatedly, joyfully, but completely ‘renounced’ the results of that work. In
other words, you became detached from the outcome of your actions, thus
gaining the ‘higher knowledge’.
THE BACKSTORY
any ancient Indian texts tell the story of Janaka, the great
One night, the great king Janaka fell asleep, as usual, on the soft pillows
and silken sheets draped over the soft mattress on the gilded cot in his royal
bedchamber (you get the idea – King Janaka was wealthy beyond your
wildest dreams). But no sooner had he drifted off into a deep sleep than he
was woken up again, by a commotion right outside his door.
Janaka sat up instantly, all his senses on high alert, as the general of his
army rushed in. ‘All is lost, O King!’ cried the general. ‘The enemy has
stormed our gates and is swarming across the city, making for the palace. We
must leave before it is too late!’ Leaping out of bed, the king grabbed his
sword and followed the general through the safe route out of the palace and
into the forest, along with his most trusted soldiers.
In the dark depths of the forest, however, the king was fatefully separated
from his companions. For three days and three nights, Janaka roamed the
forest alone, finding nary a morsel to eat. On the fourth day, exhausted and
ravenous, he stumbled upon a few edible roots. Relieved, he dug them out
with his bare hands and was about to begin eating when two wild boars
rushed out of nowhere and gobbled the roots up. Janaka let out a howl of
frustration, and immediately wished he hadn’t, for in the next instant, he
heard a yell of triumph – ‘I think I’ve found one of them!’
Janaka reached for his sword, but realized too late that he had lost it while
crossing a river the previous day. Picking himself up with the last ounce of
his strength, he began to run. But the enemy soldier had him within his
sights! As the horse thundered towards him, Janaka turned around and saw
the soldier draw his bowstring and let the arrow go...
‘Sire, sire! Wake up! What has happened to you? Why are you
screaming?’
Janaka sat up and looked around him with wild, disoriented eyes, his
heart thudding in his chest, his body – and the luxurious sheets that draped
his soft bed – drenched in sweat. His queen was by his side, looking very
concerned.
‘Calm down, sire,’ she said soothingly. ‘You have had a nightmare, that’s
all. However bad it was, it is over now. You are back in the real world.’
But Janaka would not be quieted. ‘I wish it were that simple, my queen,’
he said, in between shallow, ragged breaths. ‘But it isn’t. The question is,
which one is real – this world, with you in it, or that world, where I was about
to be killed by the arrow of an enemy soldier? Is this real, my love, or is that
real?’
Worried, the queen called in, by turns, the royal physician, the prime
minister, the general of the army (this was not a good idea at all, as you can
imagine!), the queen mother and everyone else she thought might be able to
help. But to each one, the king would only ask one question – ‘Is this real, or
is that real?’ And he was never satisfied with their answer – ‘This, of course,
my king!’
Eventually, the great sage Ashtavakra* – literally, ‘the one with eight
deformities’ – who happened to be passing through Mithila, arrived at the
palace gates and asked to see the king. When the king asked him his question
– ‘Is this real, or is that real?’ – Ashtavakra let out a full-throated laugh, and
whispered, with a wink, ‘Neither of them is, O King!’
Instantly, Janaka lit up with happiness. ‘A-ha!’ he said. ‘That makes me
feel so much better. Although, if that is true, it begs the question – “Then
what is real?’’’
*Ashtavakra’s mother, Sujata, was the daughter of the sage Uddalaka. She was married to one of her
father’s favourite students, Kahoda, who was also a teacher in Uddalaka’s gurukul. When she was
pregnant with Ashtavakra, Sujata made sure she sat in on all the lessons taught by her father and her
husband, so that her child would benefit from them. Once, when Kahoda was teaching, he
mispronounced a word several times. The baby in the womb squirmed every time his father made the
mistake, until, after he had done it for the eighth time, he could bear it no longer and cried out, ‘This is
the eighth time you’ve mispronounced the word, Father!’ Furious at being humiliated in front of his
students, Kahoda laid on his son a terrible curse, that he be born with eight deformities. Ashtavakra’s
appearance made him the butt of all jokes, but he grew up to fulfil the promise he had shown in the
womb and became a great Vedantin, a most revered teacher of the Vedanta.
‘It does,’ agreed Ashtavakra. ‘But first, let me ask you a question – would
you say, O King, that you were present, actually present, in your nightmare?’
‘I most certainly was!’ said the king, shuddering. ‘I heard the twang of
the bowstring, felt the warm, fetid breath of the boars...’
‘All right,’ said Ashtavakra. ‘And would you say you are here now, in
this palace, reclining against soft pillows as you lie on these silken sheets?’
‘I guess I would.’
‘Well then,’ said Ashtavakra, ‘there’s your answer. Neither is that real,
nor is this real. But you, O King, who were present there and are present here
– you, and only you, are real.’
‘When you say “I” am real, do you mean my physical body, which is here
now?’ said Janaka, puzzled. ‘Or do you mean my dream body, which fled the
palace while my physical body still lay supine on this bed? Who am “I”?’
‘A-ha!’ said Ashtavakra. ‘Now that’s the real question, isn’t it?’
And he proceeded to deliver to the king a long discourse on many
different subjects, including of course, the answer to Janaka’s real question –
‘Who am I?’ We know that discourse today as the Ashtavakra Gita.
Ohhh-kay. But what does this story have to do with the Mandukya
Upanishad? Well, the core question at the heart of the Mandukya is the one
that Janaka asked Ashtavakra! What’s more, the Mandukya uses the same
device, of different states of consciousness – the wide-awake state, the dream
state, and the deep-sleep state – to bring its message home.
At just twelve mantras, the Mandukya is the shortest Upanishad of them
all, but it packs a serious punch by addressing one of the most fundamental
questions – Who Am I, Really? – that human beings have grappled with since
the beginning of time. No wonder Adi Shankara declared that the Mandukya
contained within its (very small) nutshell the entire wisdom of the
Upanishads. Rama, the hero of the Ramayana, apparently believed that too.
In the Muktika Upanishad, he tells Hanuman – ‘If you had to pick just one
Upanishad to master, Vayuputra, pick the Mandukya, and you will reach your
goal of self-realization!’*
*Before you start celebrating – ‘Understand just one Upanishad to gain ultimate bliss? I can totally do
that!’ – remember that this advice was for Hanuman, who, through the sheer power of his devotion to
Rama, was well on his way to becoming a realized soul. As for other, less advanced seekers – ahem! –
Rama goes on to say that depending on where they are in the hierarchy of realization, they would need
to study the ten Principal Upanishads, or the thirty-two major ones, or, um, all 108 of them. Yeah, life’s
tough like that.
One of the other interesting things about this particular Upanishad is that
the detailed commentary on it – the Mandukya Kaarika (composed by a sage
called Gaudapada, who was the guru to another teacher called Govinda
Bhagavatpada, who was – yup, the guru to Adi Shankara – read more about
him on page 169) – is as well known as the Upanishad itself. In fact, the text
of the Upanishad has never been found independently - we only have access
to it because it is the first chapter of the Mandukya Kaarika!
Now, where does the name Mandukya come from? One theory is that
since the word Manduka means frog in Sanskrit, and the metamorphosis of a
frog from tadpole to adult is a common metaphor for spiritual growth and
enlightenment, ‘Mandukya’ is an apt name for an Upanishad that helps in this
growth. Another says that the Upanishad was composed by a sage called
Manduka. A third combines the two and speaks of Varuna, the god of the
realms of water and sky and a venerated rishi himself, taking the form of a
frog to sing the praises of the cosmic vibration Aum (which is the other
subject that the Mandukya Upanishad concerns itself with). Pick your
favourite!
How does the Mandukya link the question of who we are to the
significance of the Pranava (another word for Aum)? Very creatively! By
mapping the three states of consciousness to the three sounds that come
seamlessly together to form the sacred syllable, the Mandukya explains not
only who we all really are, but also how, by meditating on the Pranava, we
can realize that truth about ourselves.
THE STORY
And the teacher said, ‘The whole world, everything that you can see, feel,
perceive, intuit, deduce, understand, is that imperishable sound, that cosmic
vibration – Aum! It is what has been, what is, and what will be, and it is
beyond these three, beyond time itself, this Aum!’
The student nodded. He could believe that about the Pranava. Each day,
he felt its enormous power resound through his being when he chanted it
before the start of a prayer or at the end of a lesson, meditated on it, or heard
it being chanted in the quiet of a forest clearing by his fellow students. It
calmed him deeply, those three sounds that coalesced into the Aum – the
vast, expansive ‘A’ vibrating in his abdomen before it rose into his chest as
the more focused ‘U’, which radiated through his upper body before it rose
even further, into his head, as the rounded, sonorous ‘M’, where it
reverberated, it seemed to him, in harmony with the hum of the very
universe.
But if you had asked him which his absolute favourite bit was, he would
have picked without hesitation the brief pause right after the chant, when the
last of the M still hung, soundless, in the air; that moment of utter peace and
quiet, even blankness, between one ‘Aum’ and the next. Everything around
him – mountains, trees, people, earth, sky – and his own physical body
seemed to melt away in that golden moment, losing shape, form and name as
they merged into each other and into the cosmos, just as the A melted into the
U and the U into the M. His breath was momentarily stilled, and the universe
itself seemed to be held – by him! – in suspended animation. The student
shivered. Even the memory of that moment made his hair stand on end.
‘This Aum, my boy, is Brahman – it is the whole, it is all of it, there is
nothing else. And this soul, ayam atma...’
The teacher paused, and the student felt his breath catch in his throat. He
knew, somehow, that the teacher was about to reveal something momentous.
‘Ayam atma Brahma!’ said the teacher, and the student felt a delicious
awe run through him. ‘This Atma inside you, your individual soul, that
Atma... is Brahma. You, my boy, are God!’
There it was. No frills, no flourishes, no mystical riddles. A simple fact of
life, simply delivered. Ayam atma brahma. This Self is God. What was left to
be said?
If only one knew how to truly feel like God, though, how to reach and
claim that utterly calm, utterly compassionate, utterly non-judgmental, utterly
content part of oneself!
‘Just like Aum has four parts – A, U, M and the pause after...’ The
student looked up, startled – had the teacher read his mind? ‘...the Self or the
Atma has four feet on which it stands, four ways in which it experiences the
world and itself. These are the four states of consciousness.
‘The first is the wakeful state – jagrita (say jaag-rita) – which you and I
are in now. In this state, the Self is turned outwards, conscious only of the
external world – engaging with it, interacting with it, consuming it,
processing it, making sense of it. It is as if the Atma is Vaishvanara himself,
the Universal One of the seven limbs, who straddles the cosmos like a
colossus, who is the cosmos. His head is the sky, his eyes the sun and moon,
his ears all of space, his breath the wind, his speech the Vedas, his heart the
world, his feet the earth – he is the doer of all actions, the thinker of all
thoughts, the enjoyer* of all things.
*In the Upanishads, enjoyer just means ‘someone who experiences’. All the experiences that one
‘enjoys’ are not necessarily what we would consider joyful ones. But looking at an experience as either
good or bad, scary or reassuring, pleasant or unpleasant, is human folly. If, as your true Self does, you
look at an experience simply as something to be lived through and learnt from, any experience can be
‘enjoyed’. See why it makes sense to connect with your true Self?
‘As the Vaishvanara in the body, the Atma, in the wakeful state, is the
doer of all the body’s actions, the thinker of all the mind’s thoughts, the
consumer and enjoyer of all the material things it takes in through its nineteen
mouths. Which are, of course,
- the five senses, plus
- the five organs of action (the mouth that speaks, the arms that grasp, the
legs that move, the anus that eliminates waste, the organs that reproduce),
plus
- the five breaths* that convert the air the body breathes and the food it eats
into the fuel that sustains life, plus
- the four forms of the ‘mental body’ (antahkarana) – which are the mind
(manas) that thinks thoughts and feels emotions; the intellect (buddhi) that
sifts through the thoughts and emotions generated by the mind to decide
the right course of action; the ego (ahamkara) that mistakes the body and
mind and intellect for the Atma and calls them ‘I’; and the memory (chitta)
which remembers and forgets selectively, and thus influences the mind and
the intellect.’
*For a quick refresher on the five breaths, check out Sage Pippalada’s answer to Prashna 3 in the
Prashna Upanishad, on page 244.
‘I can’t think of anything I want more in the world than to experience turiya,
sir,’ said the student, ‘for it seems to me that it is a combination of true
knowledge (sat), true consciousness (chit) and true bliss (ananda). But if I
can’t even experience the Atma as Prajna, how can I ever hope to experience
it as turiya, which is beyond Prajna?’
‘There is a way,’ the teacher said. ‘And I will teach it to you.’
The student sat up, delighted and expectant.
‘You see, my boy, turiya is contained in the Omkara, in the syllable
‘Aum’. Meditate on the Omkara with faith, devotion and true understanding,
and you will enjoy not just the first three states of consciousness, but also
what lies beyond them, while you are fully conscious.
‘The first sound of the Omkara – A (say aa) – is Vaishvanara, for it is the
first letter of the alphabet, just as Vaishvanara is the first state of
consciousness. Chant A with devotion, giving thanks to the visible universe
as you do, and you will master your senses, and thus master Vaishvanara.
Then will you become the first among equals, and obtain your heart’s desire.
‘The second sound – U (say oo) – comes from ubhayatva, or
‘intermediate’, and stands for Taijasa, for it is the intermediate state of
consciousness. Chant U with dedication, worshipping the invisible universe
within you and without you, and you will master your dreams, and thus
master Taijasa. Then will you be blessed, and your descendants will all tread
the path of the spiritual life.
‘The third sound of the Omkara – M (say mm) – comes from ‘im’ – ‘to
merge’ – and represents Prajna, in which state everything merges and
becomes one. Chant M with faith, and you will still your mind. Your sense of
“I”, your sense of separateness from everything else in the universe, will fall
away from you and you will see the oneness of all things, and enjoy Prajna in
the conscious state. So will the measure of your understanding grow, and you
with it.
‘The fourth part of the Omkara – that infinitesimal, infinite pause between
one Aum and the next – has no letter, no sound and no characteristics. It is
beyond description and ungraspable, cannot be heard and cannot be spoken
of – but it contains within it the three sounds of the Omkara, which contain
the entire universe. This is the supreme state of turiya. This is Atman, your
true self. This is Brahman.
‘Meditate on the pause, knowing Aum as turiya, knowing Aum as your
true Self! He who knows this, and meditates on the Omkara, unceasingly,
consistently, with faith and devotion, becomes the Omkara, and realizes his
true self.’
THE AFTERSTORY
Afterstory 1: Need help with a school report? Never fear, the Upanishads
are here!
Don’t you just love how logically, how scientifically, even, the sages of the
Mandukya Upanishad approached an entirely new field of study? The field,
of course, was ‘states of consciousness’, and as far as we know, these men
were among the first in the world to focus on this subject. How did they do
it?
Actually, how would you do it? If you had been given a project to
research something that had never been researched before, on which no data
exists, either on the Internet or otherwise, where would you start? Let’s say
your project was to create a PPT presentation on the ‘littering pattern’ on the
street outside your school. The report would have to include not only
information on how and where littering happens, by whom, and when, but
also suggestions on how it can be controlled. Got that? Great. Now put this
book away for ten minutes, and think about the steps you would need to take
to create your presentation.
All done? Now let’s do a quick rundown of the steps the Mandukya sages
used to arrive at their own brilliant presentation – The States of
Consciousness and How They Relate to Aum (aka the Mandukya
Upanishad). Then we can compare their steps and yours. Here goes.
•Step 1: Don’t assume; observe.
Instead of saying, ‘Hey, there are two states of consciousness, the waking
and the sleeping – everyone knows that!’ or ‘Hey, let’s declare that there are
eight states of consciousness, spin a fabulous story around each and dazzle
our audience with tonnes of colourful slides – that’s what really counts in
these things!’, the sages sat down and observed their own minds, extensively,
obsessively, trying different thought experiments (can the mind observe the
mind?), reflecting deeply on tricky questions (is daydreaming a separate state
of consciousness? Maybe not, because the body is still receiving stimuli from
the external world, same as in jagrita), and brainstorming with fellow
explorers.
•Step 2: Organize your data; then analyze and classify it.
Once they had made their observations and had their data together, the
sages sliced and diced it many ways (jagrita-Vaishvanara / swapna-Taijasa /
sushupti-Prajna) to come up with three separate states of consciousness.
Then, after considering the question, ‘But how do we remember enjoying the
bliss of deep sleep, given that the mind is not functional in that state?’ they
deduced that there must be a fourth state, beyond the mind, just as
astronomers today deduce the location of an invisible black hole by the
behaviour of objects around it.
•Step 3: Communicate your findings in a lucid manner.
The sages of the Upanishads were never content to perform their
experiments for their own sake. They believed it was their sacred duty to
share their findings with as many people as possible, so that the knowledge
was not lost to humanity. So they gave each of their four states names (the
fourth state was indescribable, so they simply went with ‘The Fourth’), put
them down in logical sequence, and described each briefly but clearly. Like
the best communicators and teachers, they started with the known (the
waking state) and then took their audience, step by step, to the unknown
(turiya). To make the presentation less dry (God knows there are too many of
those!), they used poetic, even trance-y language (for instance, here’s how
they described turiya – ‘adrishtam avyavahaaryam agraahyam alakshanam
achintyam avyapadeshyam’ – that which cannot be seen, discussed, or
grasped; that which has no defining qualities, is beyond thought, and cannot
be described in words) and rich visual imagery (‘seven limbs, nineteen
mouths’).
Ans: ‘Ayam atma Brahma’ – This Self is Brahma. This is the Mahavakya of
the Atharva Veda.
१५
TAITTIRIYA
The Upanishad of the Partridges
In which we learn that each of us is really a
Matryoshka doll
Aum!
May He in the Highest Heaven
Protect both of us, teacher and student; Nourish both of us together
So that we may work together with great energy,
So that we may learn from each other,
So that our learning is effective,
So that we steer clear of dispute and discord.
THE BACKSTORY
emember that hilarious exchange from the movie Shrek, where Shrek
THE STORY
SHIKSHAVALLI – THE CREEPER OF INSTRUCTION
See how cleverly the teacher in the Shikshavalli connects the obvious
(what connects the teacher and the student? Knowledge) to the somewhat
obscure (what connects the fire and the sun? Water)? All kinds of small
jumps and big leaps of imagination are needed to wrap one’s head around the
idea of a God who resists definition, and the underlying sameness of things
that seem very different from one another. What better way to help students
develop those skills than to nudge them towards it by degrees, as the teacher
does in this anuvaka?
Anuvaka 5 – A Mystical Sound Garden
Remember we talked about the three holy vibrations in the previous section?
The three that have become an inseparable part of the Gayatri Mantra today,
even though they are not part of the original mantra? Well, according to the
Taittiriya, they are Bhur, Bhuvas and Suvah – did you guess them right? As
always, the sages of the Upanishads compare the three sounds, which anyone
can chant, to different elements of the cosmos, thus connecting the personal
to the universal. By repeating these powerful sounds while meditating on
them, says the Taittiriya, you can master not only your own senses and
thoughts, but the entire universe. For you are not only a microcosm of the
universe, but the universe itself.
Bhur, Bhuvas, Suvah are the three holy sounds. To these, Mahachamasya
added a fourth – Mahas, which is the Self, Brahman.*
*As you will see in the verses that follow, Mahas also refers to the cosmic vibration, Aum, which, as
the Mandukya Upanishad tells us, is no different from Brahman.
In the Vedic Age, as you know, students returned to the real world to take up
the real business of life after spending up to a dozen years in disciplined
study, work and play in the safe space of the gurukul. They were strapping
young men by then, ready to earn a living, shoulder the responsibilities of a
householder’s life and become upstanding members of their communities.
But before they left them for good, their fond gurus were wont to issue a last
set of stern instructions. Like this one:
In other words, this teacher in the Taittiriya is saying – live a full, rich
and upright life, but never, ever stop learning and passing on what you’ve
learnt. Whether you are student or teacher, self-learning – svaadhyaaya – is
vital, because the pursuit of knowledge, when it becomes a joyful, lifelong
enterprise, staves off boredom and depression, keeps the brain agile and
ensures that you stay engaged with a constantly changing world. As for
teaching – pravachana – why, that is super-important too, for not only is the
passing on of knowledge a noble act in itself, but it’s also one of the best
ways to get a better understanding of what you have learnt – you have to
know something really well before you can teach it to someone else.
More importantly, one in the absence of the other is incomplete – gaining
knowledge without passing it on is selfish, and simply passing on what you
learnt a long time ago, without bothering to update your knowledge with
more recent information, is a disservice both to yourself and your student.
Taken together though, so the Upanishad tells us, svaadhyaaya–pravachana
are magic. Try it and see!
Did you notice how, in points 16 and 17, the quality of gentleness is held
up as being something to look for in a mentor? You can, and should, look up
to people who are smart and successful and qualified and cool, of course, but
unless they are also gentle – alooksha – say the Upanishads, be careful about
making them your role models. That’s a wise, heart-warming piece of advice
if there ever was one.
The Taittiriya talks about the Self as being veiled in five separate sheaths –
the panchakosha. Each sheath or kosha feels so real that we are often
deceived into believing that one of the sheaths is who we are. Let’s try to get
past the panchakosha, one by one, and see if we can reach Supreme Bliss.
***
Now then, when you ask yourself the question – ‘Who am I?’ – what is the
first, most obvious answer that comes to mind? The body, of course. ‘I am
my body,’ you say. ‘The colour of my skin and hair and eyes, this particular
kink in my pinky finger, the way my hair frizzes on a humid day, the smell of
my sweat, my incipient beard, my crooked teeth – these are all uniquely me.
This is who I am.’
Great. Now, what are you made of? In other words, what is your body,
which you identify as you, made of? You might say your body is made of
blood and muscle and bones, or go a little deeper and say it is composed of
cells and tissues, or go even more basic and say it is built of carbon, hydrogen
and oxygen. The Upanishad, however, takes a macro view. Essentially, says
the Upanishad, your body is made of nothing but... food. It is food, after all,
that grows your body, makes it possible for it to carry out its functions and
gives it the strength to do what it does – walk, swim, cycle.
But hang on a minute – is your body really you? For the body changes
every year, every day, every minute (approximately ninety-six million of
your cells die every minute and ninety-six million new ones are added within
the same time), but the person you think of as ‘you’ remains unchanged.
Your memory, your intelligence, your awareness, tells you that the little baby
in that cute photograph on the fridge is as much you as the toddler with the
goofy grin in the family album, who is as much you as the fourth-grader with
missing front teeth, who is as much you as the tenth-grader who was just
voted captain of your house at school.
Let’s say, just for the sake of argument, that someone was in an accident
and shattered a joint, which then had to be replaced with a metal one – would
he still be he? Of course he would, even though his body has changed
irrevocably. Do you see why, therefore, your body cannot be you? There is
something else, clearly, that is the real you.
The Upanishad calls this first sheath, i.e., the ‘body sheath’ the
‘Annamaya Kosha’, or the food sheath. It is part of you, but since ‘you’ can
see it and feel it and smell it, it cannot be you. The real you is the guy inside,
the one seeing and feeling and smelling the body. The body is the object, not
the subject. You – the experiencer and enjoyer of the body – are the subject.
Therefore, you are not the body sheath.
So ignore the material* sheath, the Annamaya Kosha, for now, and let’s
go deeper.
*As explained earlier in the book, material simply means ‘something that is made of matter’.
***
What keeps the body alive, apart from food? Why, it’s the lifebreath, prana,
without which the body is but inanimate matter! The next kosha, the next
sheath, therefore, is the Pranamaya Kosha, the Sheath of the Lifebreath. The
Taittiriya asks you to think of this sheath as also having the shape of your
body, with different breaths taking on different shapes – Prana is the head,
Vyana the right arm, Apana the left. It rests on the earth, this human-shaped
Pranamaya Kosha, and is filled with space.
***
One thing that we have established during this search for the ‘real you’ is that
the real you is aware, conscious, capable of thought. We have discovered that
the body, which you think of as you, is not you, because of two reasons – (1)
it changes, and (2) it is the observed, not the observer; the object, not the
subject. Now we can add a third parameter to the list, which will determine
what is really you and what isn’t. The third parameter is this: can the ‘you’
that you think of as you, think for itself? Both the body and the lifebreath fail
the test of ‘Is this really me?’ on the third count as well – neither the
Annamaya Kosha nor the Pranamaya Kosha can ‘think’. There is something
else that is doing the thinking, and that is the mind. Let’s take a closer look at
this mind sheath, then, the Manomaya Kosha.
Once again, says the Taittiriya, imagine it as having the shape of a man,
with the Yajur Veda as the head (naturally, since the Taittiriya is part of the
Yajur Veda, it considers this Veda the highest!), the Rig Veda as its right side
and the Sama Veda as its left. The body of this man-shaped mind sheath is
made up of knowledge, and it stands on the foundation of the Atharva Veda.
The mind may be Brahman, but is the mind – the intellectual part of you,
the tool you use to make sense of the world around you – you? The Taittiriya
declares that words return from this layer – i.e., we are able to interact with
the external world in an intelligent, articulate way from this layer, which
makes it far more powerful than the body sheath and the breath sheath. In
fact, the mind sheath permeates both the body and the breath – it is the mind
that directs both of them to do what they do. But to decide conclusively if the
mind sheath is you, let’s put it through our three-part test.
Can ‘you’ observe the workings of your mind? Of course you can.
Therefore, the mind is an object, just like the body and the breath, not the
subject. Does the mind change in its abilities? Of course it does. When you
were younger, you did not understand physics as well as you do now, maybe,
or maybe you’ve forgotten a language you spoke very well as a toddler.
Therefore, it is not unchanging, while ‘you’ are. Can the mind think ‘for
itself’? Not really. It is influenced very much by what ‘you’ read or watch or
feel. What have we got then? Epic fail on all three counts! Therefore, you are
not the mind.
So ignore the mental* sheath, the Manomaya Kosha for now, and let’s go
deeper.
*Oh come on, you know what mental means!
***
The mind directs the body and the breath, but what is the mind directed and
supported by? By Understanding, or Intellect, the part of you that takes in
stimuli and information from the external world, processes it using the mind,
analyzes how it feels about it, and decides, using its discernment, how to
react to it. This is the sheath of perception, emotion, intuition, discretion, of
right and wrong, ethics and morality – the Vijnanamaya Kosha.
***
Where does true understanding come from? And wise, unbiased judgment?
And integrity? Or, to reverse that, what is it that surfaces when you are at
your most content – when you’ve finished a tough project that you have
slaved over for days, say, or when you are immersed in learning a piece of
music that you love deeply, or when your mindspace is speedily thinking up
ideas for raising money for the kids of the construction workers who are
building a new wing in your school? What is it that you experience, for a few
fleeting moments or hours, when you are living so intently, intensely, in the
moment that the world itself seems to fall away from around you, and you are
not conscious of your body or breath or mind or intellect, when your thoughts
are not jumping around like monkeys, and you feel a vast, all-embracing love
for, or a complete detachment from, everything and everyone around you?
I feel joy, did you say? Delight, contentment, peace, love? If you are
feeling any or all of these things at any point, says the Taittiriya, you have
succeeded in shedding all the four sheaths we’ve talked about so far and
entered the realm of Anandamaya Kosha, the spiritual Sheath of Bliss. When
that happens, you see the world as it truly is, you understand that you are no
different from anyone else, and that no one is any different from you, and you
are able to see the way forward with crystal clarity, undistracted by your own
emotions and feelings and prejudices.
The Sheath of Bliss also has the shape of a man, who has love as his
head, joy as his right side and delight as his left side. His body is permeated
with bliss, ananda – it is the heart of him, his very soul. And he stands,
straight and tall and true, this man, on a foundation of ecstasy that is
Brahman himself.
Know ye –
If a man denies Brahman, he denies himself,
If a man affirms Brahman, he affirms himself;
For he is Brahman, and Brahman is he.
How does one describe the great, grand joy that comes of realizing the Self,
especially when so few have been there, done that? The Taittiriya comes up
with a cool ‘device’ – a bliss ladder!
Take a young man, a good young man who is well-read and well-built and
strong. Imagine that the wealth of the whole world is his.
That is a single measure of human bliss.
A hundred measures of human bliss is as one measure of bliss for the
gandharvas,
A hundred measures of gandharva bliss is as one measure of bliss for the
pitris,
A hundred measures of pitr bliss is as one measure of bliss for the devas,
A hundred measures of deva bliss is as one measure of bliss for Indra,
A hundred measures of Indra bliss is as one measure of bliss for
Brihaspati,
A hundred measures of Brihaspati bliss is as one measure of bliss for
Prajapati,
A hundred measures of Prajapati bliss is as one measure of bliss for
Brahman –
Which is also the measure of bliss enjoyed by one who has realized the
Self and is free of desire.*
*So how many times a measure of human bliss is a measure of Brahman-bliss? You do the math.
Bhrigu went to his father, Varuna, and said to him, ‘Sir, teach me about
Brahman.’
But Varuna, who was clearly not the kind of teacher who believed in
spoon-feeding his students and certainly not the kind of parent who
mollycoddled his children, sent him away with a flea in his ear.
‘Food, lifebreath, sight, hearing, mind, speech – first spend some time
meditating on these things, learning about them,’ he said. ‘Think about where
they come from, what they are sustained by, where they go when a man dies.
That is Brahman. Come back to me when you have some answers.’
And Bhrigu, never one to cross his father, went away and did his
penances, and discovered that food was indeed Brahman. From food all
creatures are born, on food are they sustained, and into food they pass when
they die.
But he wasn’t fully satisfied. So he went back to his father and said: ‘Sir,
teach me about Brahman.’
‘Go and do your penances again,’ said Varuna, ‘and you will discover
Him for yourself.’
So Bhrigu went away and did more penances, and discovered that
Brahman was the lifebreath. From the lifebreath indeed were all creatures
born, by lifebreath they were sustained, and to the lifebreath they returned
upon death.
But he wasn’t entirely satisfied. So he went back to his father and said:
‘Sir, teach me about Brahman.’
‘Go and do your penances again,’ said Varuna, ‘and you will discover
Him for yourself.’
And so it went on, over and over, until Bhrigu, through intense meditation
and reflection, discovered that Brahman was not only food and lifebreath, but
also mind, perception and bliss.
This is how Bhrigu realized the Self, and thus realized Brahman. Those
who, like him, discover the Self for themselves,* will never lack for food.
They will have offspring, fame, wealth, and the radiance that comes from
sacred knowledge. So concludes the Taittiriya.
THE AFTERSTORY
Remember we talked about the five sheaths that conceal our true nature?
There’s a fun addendum to that story – according to the Taittiriya, even the
Anandamaya Kosha is not our ultimate destination. After all, a sheath, by its
very definition, covers or conceals something, which in this case is the truth.
So what lies behind, beyond the final sheath?
The Anandamaya, in a manner of speaking, is the tiniest Matryoshka.
And what do you find when you prise her two halves apart? Precisely!
Nothing. Or, if you look at it another way, Everything, for the game is now
over, and the secret has been revealed – there is no need to seek any more.
It’s exactly the same with the Anandamaya Kosha. When it has been
peeled back, say the sages of the Upanishads, what you are left with is
Atman, or Pure Consciousness, your true Self, which does not judge, which is
untainted by thoughts and actions, past and present, right and wrong, fear and
pain, joy and peace. And that pure consciousness is both nothing and
everything, which is why it is referred to both as Shoonya (nothingness) and
Poorna (completeness).
Pretty cool, hanh?
१६
AITAREYA
The Upanishad of the Glory of Being Human
In which we get to enjoy yet another story of how the
universe was created
Aum!
I pray
That my words make their home in my mind,
That my mind makes its home in my words,
That the knowledge of my true self reveals itself to me,
That my mind and my speech work in harmony to help me understand,
That I do not just hear the lesson, but understand it,
That what I learn and practise night and day is never lost to me.
May this Divine Truth that I speak today
Protect my teacher
And protect me.
THE BACKSTORY
ver stood at the edge of a cliff after an exhausting climb uphill and, gazing at
the panorama of sky and land sprawling before you, thought to yourself,
‘How insignificant we humans are in this vastness, and yet, what airs
E we give ourselves!’? Ever sat on the seashore and, fixing your eyes on
the faraway horizon where a shining sun is rising out of the water,
painting the world a million shades of gold, whispered, ‘I am as a grain of
sand on this beach, completely inconsequential to the business of the
universe!’ Ever lay down beneath the upturned bowl of a night sky studded
with stars, and exclaimed, overwhelmed and diminished by the size of the
cosmos, ‘Who am I, after all? Just a small creature living “on an insignificant
planet of a humdrum star lost in a galaxy tucked away in some forgotten
corner of the universe in which there are far more galaxies than people”.*
Sighhh.’?
Of course you have! And whoever was around you in each of those
situations – friends, family, the random stranger you just befriended –
probably nodded and sighhhhed along with you, shaking their heads at the
incontestable truth of your words.
Well, you can thank your lucky stars none of the sages of the Upanishads
were around you at that point. Had they been, they would have smacked you
smartly on the head, shaken you hard, and ordered you to Stop.That.Sighhhh-
ing.Right.Now!
For the Upanishads take entirely the opposite view of man’s place in the
cosmos. In a hundred ways, in scores of different Upanishads, they proclaim
the joyful truth that you are not insignificant, or irrelevant, or inconsequential
to the cosmos. How can you be, they ask, when you contain the cosmos?
How can you be, when you are the cosmos? You are Vaishvanara, the
Universal Being, insist the Upanishads – embrace your bigness! You are
Brahman, the Supreme Consciousness – acknowledge your greatness! When
you look up at the night sky, don’t think of the stars as bigger or brighter, or
different from you – breeeeathe them in, make them yours!
Did you think it was by diminishing yourself, or thinking of yourself as
infinitesimal against the enormity of the universe – by being ‘humble’, in
other words – that you became a better person? Perish the thought! For it is
only when your sense of ‘I’ becomes big enough to include the whole
universe, say the Upanishads, that you will truly respect every other creature
and thing in it; only when you are able to see yourself in everything around
you, will you realize that there isn’t, there can never be, anything vaster than
you.
While other Upanishads bring home this truth in ways mystical and
metaphorical, as part of a bunch of other things they are talking about, the
Aitareya Upanishad makes the joyous celebration of being human its central
theme, through yet another lovely story of creation. Packed to the gills with
fantastic imagery and non-stop action, this story describes how the gods that
animate, populate and hold up the cosmos came to be the exact same ones
that animate, populate and hold up the human body – in other words, you.
The Aitareya is part of the oldest Veda, the Rig, and is therefore probably
also part of the oldest group of Upanishads. The name Aitareya literally
means ‘descendant of Itara’ – the sage Mahidasa, who is sometimes credited
with composing this Upanishad, is also referred to as Aitareya, ‘descended
from sage Itara’.
Enough with the backstory! Now let’s go find out how the universe was
created!
*This is part of a quote by the brilliant and wise American scientist and astronomer Carl Sagan, his
answer to the question ‘Who are we?’ But Sagan was far from dismissive about the significance of
human life. Elsewhere, he has also said, ‘Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a
human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.’
THE STORY
In the beginning, there was only the one, the Self, Atman. Nothing else,
whatsoever, was. Nothing so much as blinked. And He thought to Himself,
‘Let me create the worlds.’
So He brought the worlds out of Himself – high-up Ambhas, realm of
rain and floodwaters, supported by the sky; Marichi, realm of the glittering
specks, stretching across the intermediate regions, brought to life each day by
the rays of the sun; Mara, the earth, kingdom of the mortal; and beneath it,
Apa, world of the waters.
Then he thought to himself, ‘Here are the worlds. Now I must create
guardians for each.’ And from the waters, he drew out Purusha, the Person,
gave him a shape and brooded him, like a hen broods her eggs to hatch them.
And from that man who had been brooded –
- A mouth opened. And from the mouth sprang speech, and from speech,
fire.
- A pair of nostrils bloomed. And from the nostrils gushed breath, and from
breath, air.
- Two eyes fluttered open. And from the eyes leapt sight, and from the light
of sight, the sun.
- A pair of ears uncurled. And from the ears came hearing, and from
hearing came the four directions of space, for sound to travel through.
- A swathe of skin unfurled. And out of the skin grew hair, and from hair,
trees and plants.
- A heart blossomed. And from the heart came the mind, and from the
mind, the moon.
- A navel popped. And from the navel proceeded the downward breath,
Apana, and from that breath, death.
- A male part emerged. And from the male part came life-giving waters.
***
Once these gods – fire, air, sun, moon, space, water – were created, they all
fell into the ocean here, the vast ocean of samsara. And the Self thought to
himself, ‘I must infect them with hunger and thirst, for hunger and thirst are
desire. Without desire, nothing will be created, no work will be done.’ And so
he did.
Then those gods said to the Self, ‘Find us a body in which to live, so that
we may eat and drink and work and play and satisfy our hunger and thirst. So
the Self brought the body of a cow to them, but they shook their heads. ‘That
will not do at all.’ Then the Self brought them the body of a horse, but they
shook their heads. ‘That will not do at all.’ Then the Self brought them the
body of a man and they exclaimed with joy, ‘Now that is what we call well
made!’ For a man is indeed well made.
‘Go on, now,’ said the Self, ‘enter and establish yourselves in your
respective dwellings.’ So –
- Fire became speech and entered the mouth.
- And air became breath and entered the nostrils.
- And the sun became sight and entered the eyes.
- And space became hearing and entered the ears.
- And the plants and trees became body hairs and entered the skin.
- And the moon became the mind and entered the heart.
- And death became the out-breath and entered the navel.
- And water became life-giving water and entered the male part.
Then hunger and thirst, who had been left behind, began to clamour,
‘Find us also a dwelling!’ And the Self said, ‘Oh, all right! You can live in
the same dwelling as the deities and share in whatever they are offered.’ And
that is why, to whichever deity man makes an offering – whether the deity is
wealth or power or the spiritual life – hunger and thirst gobble it up, and
always want more.
***
Then the Self thought to himself, ‘Now here are the worlds, and here are the
guardians of those worlds. Now I’d better create some food for them.’ So he
brooded the waters like a hen broods her eggs, until something firm and solid
emerged from it. And that something was food.
But no sooner was it created than it tried to run away, fearful of being
eaten. And man, the first being with a body, tried to seize it, except he did not
know how.
First he tried to seize it with speech. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by talking about food. Oh
well.
Then he tried to seize it with his breath. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by smelling food. Oh well.
Then he tried to seize it with sight. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by looking at food. Oh
well.
Then he tried to seize it with hearing. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by hearing about food. Oh
well.
Then he tried to seize it with the skin. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by touching food. Oh well.
Then he tried to seize it with his mind. But that didn’t work. If it had, we
would have been able to satisfy our hunger simply by thinking about food.
Oh well.
Then he tried to seize it with Apana, the downward breath of digestion.
And he succeeded! For it is truly the digestive breath that seizes food for the
body, and it is the digestive breath that is nourished by food.
***
Then the Self thought to himself, ‘How will all this carry on without me? The
city of the body needs a lord to enjoy the doings of the body. I must stick
around!’ And he thought to himself, ‘How shall I enter this man? Which shall
be my dwelling?’ And he thought to himself, ‘If speaking is done through
speech and breathing through breath, if seeing is done through sight and
hearing through hearing, if feeling is done through skin and thinking is done
using the mind, then who am I? What is my function?’
The Self split the man’s head along its birth fissure, closed since
babyhood, and entered, finding three abodes for himself, which are the three
states of consciousness – the waking state, the dreaming state, and the deep-
sleep state.
When he came to life inside the body, the Self looked around to see if
there was anyone else there. But he only saw the One, Brahman, and no one
else, and cried, ‘Idam aadarsham iti – I have seen this!’
Therefore He is called Idandra, he who sees. But the gods call him Indra,
he who lies beyond the senses. Because the gods like being cryptic like that.
***
Don’t you love those little snarky asides the sages throw in, like the very last
line above? The only thing missing at the end of it is an eye-roll emoji. The
line is completely unnecessary to the story, but the storyteller was probably
annoyed with the inscrutable ways of the gods that day, so he decided to get
his own back. These little side jokes are also a great way for the sage to
connect with his audience – suddenly, he loses that intimidating halo and
becomes one of them.
Also, did you notice that the storyteller does not reveal what the Self
decided its function would be? He tells us how the Self entered the body and
where it chose to live and what it saw when it first became conscious inside
the body, but he doesn’t reveal the most important part – the Self’s function.
He saves that for the end of the Upanishad. But before that, he inserts a little
instructional note on the ‘three births’ of the Self. Read on to find out what
they are.
***
Life begins in a man’s body, strong, swift, gathered from the vitality of his
limbs. It is the Self, indeed, that bears the Self. This is the Self’s first birth.
When man releases life into woman, a new life begins. This is the Self’s
second birth.
The mother nourishes the child in her womb, as the life of her life, breath
of her breath; that’s why she should herself be nourished. This is the father’s
responsibility, and he fulfils it, remembering that it is his own Self he is
nourishing. Thus is the world kept going. In time, the child emerges from the
mother’s body. This is the Self’s third birth.
The child grows, taking the place of his father, adding to the good deeds
of the father, continuing his work in the world. And this goes on, over and
over, across generations – first the father becomes the son, then the son
becomes the father. Thus is the world kept going.
***
And now for the big reveal – what function did the Self choose for itself in
the human body?
‘Who is this Self, anyway? Who is the one we venerate here?
Is it the one which helps us see? Is it the one which helps us hear? Is it
the one which helps us smell, taste? Is it that which makes speech possible?
Is it the heart and the mind? Is it thought and desire? Is it Awareness?
Perception? Insight? Intuition? Understanding? Cognition? Purpose?
Memory? Intention? Impulse? Control? But these are all just different names
of Intelligence, they are all only servants of the Self.
This Self is Brahman, it is the primordial father Prajapati, it is all the
gods. It is the five immense beings – earth, wind, space, the waters, light. It is
all creatures great and small – born of eggs, born of wombs, born of sweat,*
born from sprouts; it is horses, elephants, cows and men; it is all beings that
walk, and all beings that fly, and all beings that neither walk nor fly.’**
*Born of sweat? Yup. Sometimes these sweat-born creatures were also described as being born of heat,
or moisture, but since a combination of heat and moisture is sweat, that word covers all the bases. What
are these creatures born of sweat and heat and moisture, though? All kinds of creepy-crawlies –
mosquitoes, lice, ticks, mites and bugs that come out of nowhere (or so it seemed to the ancients)! Now
we know that mosquitoes are born from eggs, but those eggs are laid, and hatch, in standing water,
especially in the hot summer months. In that sense, the ancients were not too far off the mark.
**In other words, plants and trees. Rocks and metals don’t fit into this category, because they are not
living, breathing creatures. Even non-living things are believed to carry the essence of Brahman, but in
them, it is dormant, pure potential energy, which cannot become kinetic energy without external help.
The Self is Prajna, Knowledge. Prajna guides all, sees all, is the foundation
of all else. Prajna is the eye of the world; on Prajna is the world supported.
Prajnanam (say praj-naa-nam) Brahma. Knowledge is God.
Those who realize this truth live in joy, and go beyond death.
THE AFTERSTORY
Afterstory 1: The Small Matter of the Mechanics of Rebirth
So you know now, after reading the Aitareya Upanishad, that the Self is
believed to have three births – the first happens when a soul finds its way into
a man’s body, the second when a baby is created, and the third when the baby
is born.
Ever wondered how the first birth of the Self happens? What are the
actual mechanics involved in rebirth? How does a soul enter a man’s body?
Are millions of souls floating around us as disembodied spirits, waiting for a
man to lower his guard so that one of them can sneak into his body, fighting
off all other souls who have the exact same idea?
There could be a million theories, but one of the most popular in
Hinduism is a fascinating one, involving the water cycle, photosynthesis,
digestion of food in the body, the assimilation of food, and a lot more. Here’s
how it goes.
When the body dies, the soul leaves for the heavenly realms, where it has
a great time until the credit in its good Karma account drops to zero and it is
forced to fall back into the sea of samsara. It does this ‘falling back’ in a
literal way, seeding itself into a cloud and dropping to the earth as rain. The
rain seeps into the soil, and rises as sap in plants, taking the soul along with
it. Nourished by water and sunshine, the plant, the only being that can
manufacture its own food, grows and matures, creating leaves and fruit and
seed for other less capable creatures (less capable in terms of being able to
manufacture their own food, that is), to enjoy and grow strong on.
When a man eats a plant (or eats the meat of a herbivore that has feasted
on plants, or eats the meat of a carnivore that has feasted on herbivores), the
sap enters his body, where it is digested and assimilated. Part of the
assimilated food – including, most importantly, the soul part – becomes all-
powerful, life-giving water, ‘drawn from the vitality of his limbs’. When the
seed in a woman is nourished, a new life begins. Nine months later, a baby is
born.
Hurray! The soul has successfully made its way back into a freshly
minted human body!
Afterstory 2: Spot the Mahavakya – Part 2!
Aum!
I seek blessings
That my limbs, speech, breath, eyes, ears, strength
And all my senses, be nourished;
I pray
That I may never deny Brahman or be disloyal,
That Brahman may never forsake or reject me;
I, the seeker, ask
That all the wisdoms of the Upanishads
Shine in me,
That they all shine in me.
THE BACKSTORY
emember when we talked about the different rhythmic structures, or metres,
of the Vedic shlokas, in Chapter 4? Remember what ‘metre’ is called in
Sanskrit?
THE STORY
PRAPAATHAKA 4
Satyakama lived with his mother Jabala (say ja-baa-laa) in a village at the
edge of a forest. Like everyone else in the village, he had heard of the great
sage Gautama, who taught students in his gurukul somewhere deep inside the
forest. All of Satyakama’s friends were happy enough living their small,
circumscribed lives – tending to the cows, swimming in the village pool,
playing with the other boys and generally raising hell when they felt like it –
but Satyakama, who was about twelve, had always been curious and deeply
introspective by nature, and dreamed of bigger things.
One night, he was lying down with his head in his mother’s lap, when the
desire to do something more with his life came upon him like a flood.
‘Mother,’ he said, sitting up, ‘I would dearly like to study the Vedas at Rishi
Gautama’s gurukul. But I hear one of the first questions gurus ask, before
they accept you as a student, is who your father is. So tell me, mother – who
is my father?’
Jabala baulked. This was one question she had hoped she would never be
forced to answer. She looked into her little boy’s eager face and wished he
didn’t have these big, impossible dreams – everyone knew teachers of the
Vedas only accepted brahmin, kshatriya and vaishya students, and she
couldn’t be sure at all that Satyakama’s father had belonged to one of those
varnas.
For a brief instant, Jabala considered lying to her son, creating a rosy
backstory about a fond brahmin father – life would be so much easier for him
if he, and everyone else, believed that. But she rejected the idea almost
immediately. He was such a good, honest child – how could she, who had
spent all these years raising him to be just such a one, now ask him to base
his future on a lie? No, she would simply place before him the bald,
unadorned truth and hope that he – and she! – could deal with the rejection
that the world was sure to heap upon him.
‘I don’t know who your father is, Satyakama,’ she said. And cupping the
suddenly worried face in her hands, continued, ‘But no one can deny that I
am your mother, and that my name is Jabala. So when the teacher asks, tell
him what I told you and tell him also that your name, therefore, is Satyakama
Jaabaala.’
The next morning, a cheerful Satyakama set off for Rishi Gautama’s
gurukul. Jabala watched him go, her heart in her mouth, praying that the guru
would find it in his heart to let her boy down gently. When he got to the
ashram, Satyakama bowed before Gautama and said, in a high, clear voice,
‘Sir, I want, more than anything, to live with you and be taught the scriptures.
Please do me the honour of accepting me as your student.’
Gautama beamed. Such eagerness in one so young, such clarity about
goals, was rare – it was usually the parent who was chafing at the bit, wanting
his ward to be accepted at the gurukul. ‘What is your lineage, saumya?’ he
asked. ‘Who is your father, and your grandfather before him?’
‘Now that I’m afraid I do not know, sir,’ said Satyakama, whose name
means ‘one who hankers after nothing but the truth’. ‘When I asked my
mother, this is what she said: “I do not know who your father is. But no one
can deny that I am your mother, and that my name is Jabala.” And so, sir, my
name is Satyakama Jaabaala.’
Gautama was overwhelmed. ‘None but a brahmin would speak the truth
so fearlessly!’ he declared joyously. ‘Fetch the firewood quickly, my boy,
and let us begin.’
fter Satyakama had been initiated, Gautama picked out 400 of the
A feeblest and skinniest of his cows and handed them to his newest
acolyte. ‘You are now responsible for their care,’ he said. ‘Look after
them well.’
‘Of course, sir,’ said Satyakama, thinking to himself, ‘I will not return,
sir, until I have swelled this herd to a thousand healthy cows.’ And he drove
the cows into that part of the forest where the grass was sweetest and most
plentiful, and threw himself into their care.
Years rolled by. Satyakama was blissfully happy in the lap of nature. He
spent his days looking after the cows, and his evenings in quiet
contemplation. One afternoon, when he was dozing under a tree, Satyakama
was awakened by a voice calling his name. It was the bull.
‘Satyakama,’ said the bull, who was really the god of the air, Vayu, ‘you
have succeeded in your endeavour, saumya. We are now a thousand. Take us
back to the teacher’s house.’
‘I will, Bhagavan,’ said Satyakama.
But the bull wasn’t done speaking. ‘You have taken such good care of us,
and that kind of love and dedication needs to be rewarded. Let me tell you
what I know about Brahman, although that is only a quarter of what Brahman
really is, just one of his four feet.’
‘Thank you, Bhagavan,’ said a grateful Satyakama.
‘Listen, then,’ said the bull. ‘There are four directions – east, west, north
and south – and these form one foot of Brahman, called Prakashavan (say
prakasha-vaan), the Shining. Understand that Brahman rules every direction,
and you will become the ruler of far-flung worlds, and shine in this one.’
Satyakama bowed.
‘When the time comes,’ said the bull as it moved back into the herd, ‘the
fire will tell you about another quarter, another foot, of Brahman.’
The next morning, Satyakama began to drive the herd back to Gautama.
That night, he penned the cows, lit a fire and sat next to it, warming himself,
when he heard a voice call his name. It was the fire, which had suddenly
blazed up.
‘Satyakama,’ said the fire, who was really the god Agni, ‘Let me tell you,
saumya, about another quarter of Brahman.’
***
As you can see, there are two distinct parts to this story. The first part is
about Rishi Gautama accepting Satyakama as his disciple, and the second is
about Satyakama learning about Brahman from the birds and the beasts.
While both parts have lessons for us, the first part carries a far more
important truth.
From all we have read about the gurukuls of the Vedic age, we know that
there were very strict rules of eligibility for students – they had to be male (in
most cases), and they had to belong to the brahmin, kshatriya or vaishya
varna. Why the story of Satyakama is so important is that it reveals, in very
clear, simple prose, that while those rules existed, they were not altogether
inflexible – when an evolved guru who truly understood the spirit of the
scriptures came across a prospective student who displayed honesty, courage,
dedication and a passion for learning, he could, and often did, choose to
disregard the rules.*
*And that’s a great lesson to take away from the Upanishads. Rules are meant to be followed, of
course, but since rules are made by humans, to suit a particular time, place and culture, it is our
responsibility as thinking individuals to re-examine them from time to time, and to challenge, tweak or
change them when they seem unfair, unsuitable or no longer relevant.
Satyakama, we are told, was the son of the maid Jabala, who was in a
profession that involved manual labour. In other words, she was a shudra by
occupation. But a boy’s lineage was traced through his father’s varna, not his
mother’s, so if Satyakama’s father had belonged to one of the other three
varnas, he still stood a chance of being accepted. Not knowing what caste
your father belonged to, or even who he was, was a far worse social sin than
knowing that he was a shudra.
And yet, and yet, Gautama accepted Satyakama as a student. In the story,
he justifies his action by declaring that ‘no one but a brahmin’ would have
spoken an inconvenient truth so fearlessly. In saying this, Gautama, and
through him, the authors of the Chandogya, are echoing what Krishna
declared so unequivocally to Arjuna in a famous shloka in the Bhagavad Gita
– it is neither birth nor occupation, Arjuna, that determines a man’s varna,
but his nature. (More correctly, it is Krishna who echoes Gautama in the Gita
– the Gita is the condensed version of all Upanishadic wisdom and was
composed well after the early Upanishads).
Krishna goes on to explain this further. Those who are calm and
compassionate, possess great self-control and self-discipline, make no
distinction between people, and are role models to everyone around them in
knowing the right thing to do in every situation – such men and women (and
boys and girls), reveals Krishna, never mind the family they are born into, are
brahmin by nature. Knights in shining armour who plunge into the battlefield
at every given opportunity, defending what is right, fearlessly leading heroic
campaigns against all manner of unfairness and injustice, never turning their
backs on the good fight – whether it is against a bully in the playground, a
law that doesn’t honour the country’s Constitution, or animal cruelty – such
people are kshatriya by nature. Those who are willing to brave the heat and
dust of the marketplace to create and sell the products and services that
society needs to function, thus keeping the wheels of trade and economy
turning – such people are vaishya by nature. And those happy cogs in the
wheel who want to be neither thinkers nor activists nor entrepreneurs, but are
content executing work and giving their best to the job at hand with no desire
for personal glory – such people are shudra by nature.*
*By Krishna’s classification, which ‘nature-category’ do you think you most identify with? Of course it
is entirely possible that you have bits of all four in you, but some self-reflection will reveal which one
is most dominant in your nature. This is important to know, for acting according to one’s nature (i.e.,
staying true to yourself) is, according to the Gita, one of the vital keys to happiness.
In Part 2 of the Satyakama story, we are told that Satyakama was taught
about Brahman not by humans but by the birds and the beasts and the
elements. What can we take away from this? That we discover more about
ourselves and the universe when we spend quiet time by and with ourselves,
preferably around trees and animals? Perhaps.
And while lessons from trees and animals may be difficult to arrange at
short notice, be sure to put aside some time each day for quiet contemplation.
Maybe you can reflect about your day, all the things you have to be grateful
for, all the things you did today that you would have done differently if you
could have another chance, and all the things you will do better tomorrow. At
the end of a week or two, evaluate what that quiet time by yourself has done
for you – has it helped you discover more about yourself? Do you feel
calmer, more grateful, more in control of each day?
Yes? Great! Stick at it, and one day, while you’re walking along the
street, as happy as a clam, you might hear a koel calling your name!
And what of Satyakama’s belief that his knowledge of Brahman would
not be complete unless he had been taught it by a ‘proper’ teacher? Think of
it this way. Sure you can learn to play the guitar using all the lovely video
turtorials that people put up on YouTube, but once you have learnt the basic
chords, would your skills be enhanced far more quickly if you had a few one-
on-one sessions with a good teacher? What do you think?
PRAPAATHAKA 6
hen Shvetaketu, the beloved son of the sage Uddalaka Aruni, was
W of age, his father said to him, ‘There has never been a one in our
family, saumya, who was a brahmin only by birth. They were all of
them well versed in the scriptures, and so should you be.’
So Shvetaketu went away to a gurukul to be educated, and when he came
back to his father’s house twelve years later, he had grown into a handsome
(and somewhat conceited) young man, with self-assured (and somewhat
arrogant) eyes, and more than a hint of a swagger, for he thought himself a
master of the Vedas.
Deciding that his son needed taking down a peg or two, Uddalaka said to
him: ‘Welcome home, son! Congratulations on completing your education!
You are now familiar with that wisdom, I hope, by which you can hear the
unheard, think the unthought and know the unknown?’
‘Eh?’ Shvetaketu was taken aback. His shoulders slumped a little and his
arrogance retreated. ‘I thought I had learnt a lot and discovered a lot these
past dozen years, sir, but I’m afraid I am not familiar with the wisdom to
which you refer. Perhaps it is best that you teach it to me.’ And he sat at his
father’s feet, his face upturned and eager, and it was as if twelve years had
rolled away in an instant.
‘I will tell you, my son,’ said Uddalaka. ‘It is like this. If you know well
the essence of something, you will “know” everything that carries that
essence, even if it takes on a hundred different forms that bear a thousand
different names.’
Shvetaketu was puzzled.
‘It is like this, saumya. By knowing a lump of clay – its texture, its feel,
how it moves on a wheel or in your hand – you understand intimately
everything that is fashioned out of it, even if you have never seen those
different forms or known their names, for their true reality is not their forms,
or their names, but their essence, which is clay.’
Shvetaketu’s face cleared a little. He nodded.
‘It is like this, saumya. By knowing just one trinket made of copper, one
knows and understands everything else made of copper, for everything else is
just a name, just a form, whose true reality is copper.
‘It is like this, saumya. By observing closely just one pair of nail-clippers
made of iron, one understands everything else made of iron, for while we
may give iron different names and forms, we know the underlying reality of
all those forms and names is just this: iron.
‘It is like this, saumya. By understanding the one true reality of the
universe, you understand every other thing in the universe, never mind that it
is present in a million different forms with a billion different names.’
Shvetaketu sat up straighter. ‘That makes a lot of sense, Father. But all
those wise men who taught me all these years never taught me about this one
supreme reality, the one universal essence, by understanding which
everything in the universe may be understood. Please do teach it to me, sir!’
‘Very well, saumya. Listen carefully now.
‘In the beginning, there was only Being, and only that, without a second.
Now, some people will tell you that in the beginning, there was only Non-
Being, and only that, without a second. But that theory has always seemed
flawed to me, for how can all this Being that we see around us emerge from
Non-Being? How can anything emerge from Non-Being? I prefer to think of
Being – not Non-Being – as the first.’
‘I agree,’ said Shvetaketu.
‘Now this Being said to itself, “Come now, let me become many.” And it
began to emit heat, which is essential for life. And the heat, not to be
outdone, thought to itself – “Now let me become many. Let me propagate
myself.” And the heat produced water, which is essential for life. (And that’s
why, when a man feels hot, he sweats, and when he feels stressed, he weeps,
for heat emits water.)
‘Now the water, not a one to sit around quietly twiddling its thumbs,
thought to itself – “Let me become many.” And out of water came food. (And
that’s why, when it rains, there is no shortage of food.)
‘Now look around you, Shvetaketu, at all the creatures in the universe.
All of them are only born in three ways – from sprouts, from eggs and from
creatures. And the Divine Being thought to itself, “Let me infuse life into
these three – sprouts, eggs and creatures.”
‘That life-essence, Shvetaketu, combined with heat, water and food in a
million different ways to produce a million different manifestations of the
original Being. There is nothing in the universe that isn’t a mix of these!
‘Realizing this, the ancient sages were well pleased, and said to
themselves, “Now nothing in the world, however new and different it looks,
can surprise us, for we know that it is made only of these three – heat, water,
food – and we know that its life-essence is the essence of the one original
Being. Truly, there is nothing else.”’
Shvetaketu was struck with wonder. ‘Really? Then tell me, father, how
do these three divinities – heat, water and food – manifest in my body and in
yours? Which part of my body is heat, father? Which part water? Which part
food? Tell me, sir, for I must know.’
‘Very well,’ said Uddalaka. ‘Now listen. All the food that you eat splits
into three parts. The densest part passes out of the body, the not-so-dense part
becomes flesh, and the lightest, airiest portion becomes the mind.
‘All the water that you drink splits into three parts. The most viscous part
passes out of the body, the less viscous part becomes blood, and the lightest,
airiest part rises in the body and becomes the breath.
‘All the heat that you eat* splits into three – the coarsest becomes bone,
the not-so-coarse portion marrow and the lightest, airiest part becomes
speech.
*’Heat that you eat’ translates to food like oil and ghee, which are produced by the application of heat –
to oilseeds in the case of oil and to butter in the case of ghee. It also translates to the heat of the sun,
which we ‘eat’ through our skin, and which, modern science tells us, provides the body with vitamin D,
important for building bones. Which is exactly what the Chandogya says the ‘heat that we eat’ turns
into!
S his consciousness like a storm crashes into the coast. The essence of his
being, the thing that made him him, was no different, apparently, from
the essence of the universe! The same energy that allowed him to think and
understand and remember and imagine and speak also caused the sun and the
stars to shine and the seas to rise and the rain to fall. He, Shvetaketu,
contained within him the power of the cosmos!
‘Tell me more, sir,’ cried Shvetaketu, ‘teach me more!’
‘So be it, saumya,’ said Uddalaka.
‘Now consider the bees that gather nectar all day from a variety of
different flowers and turn them into golden honey. Once the honey is ready,
the different nectars are no longer able to say, “I am the nectar of this
flower”, or “I was gathered from that flower”, for their individual
sweetnesses have now merged into a homogeneous, delicious whole. In the
same way, son, do all the individual, separate, different existences you see
around you – be it tiger or wolf, boar or lion, worm or moth, gnat or mosquito
– merge into pure Being. That is what they all become, when they pass from
their physical bodies, with no memory of ever having been separate or
different from each other.
‘That is the Self, the Atman, of the world. That is the finest, most subtle
essence of everything, the soul of everything, the root of everything, the
scaffolding on which everything else stands. That is the true. That is the real.
And That is your Self, your Atman, too.
‘That Thou Art, Shvetaketu, Tat Tvam Asi!’
‘T
tomorrow.’
‘So be it, saumya,’ said Uddalaka.
‘Put this chunk of salt in a pot of water and come back to me
Isn’t that a beautiful story? Don’t you love the fact that the teacher uses so
many examples from daily life, so many metaphors, to explain a concept that
he knows the student will find hard to grasp? Doesn’t it make you feel all
warm and fuzzy that the teacher refers to the student so often as ‘saumya’ –
dear one? [By the way, this is not only because Shvetaketu happens to also be
his son – throughout the Upanishads, teachers refer to their students as
saumya, and students to their teachers (whether they were human or beast or
bird) as ‘Bhagavan’ – powerful, respected, worshipped, blessed, prosperous
(in wisdom) – indicating that the relationship is one based on deep and
mutual love, and respect.] Doesn’t it send a thrill running down your spine
each time you read that tremendous declaration – That Thou Art, Tat Tvam
Asi?
As you have probably guessed by now, Tat Tvam Asi is the third of the
four Mahavakyas – Great Pronouncements – of the Upanishads that we have
encountered in this book so far. Keep your eyes peeled for the fourth! PS:
Easy-peasy. It has to be part of the next Upanishad, since it is the last one on
the list.
THE AFTERSTORY
In the first section of this chapter – ‘The Backstory’ – we talked about how
the answer to most (all?) questions raised in the Chandogya was ‘Brahman’.
Is this the ultimate cop-out by the Vedantic sages, then? Were they in fact
pulling a fast one on us all? Were they being deliberately obscure because
they did not know the answer themselves?
Not really. In fact, these sages were the first to even engage with the kind
of fundamental questions that the Chandogya concerns itself with – Where
did the universe come from? What is it made of/pervaded by? What makes it
tick? Who are we, really? What is it that allows a ‘physical system’ like the
body, which you can touch, see, smell, taste and hear, to produce a ‘mental
system’ like the mind and intellect, which you are aware of and can locate in
the region of the brain, but cannot see? What is it in turn that allows a ‘mental
system’ to produce an ‘emotional system’ that you are aware of but cannot
locate in the body (do feelings emerge from the brain or from the heart, or
from somewhere else altogether)? What is it, or who is it, inside each of us
that allows us to experience our feelings, thoughts, ideas, memories? What is
the nature of reality – how can we call this moment – this present, current
moment at which we are reading this particular phrase – real, if it has receded
into the past, into dreamlike memory, by the time we are done reading this
sentence?
The Vedantins’ answer to all these questions was Brahman, which simply
means – Consciousness. (Did you think Brahman meant God? Naaah.) And
what does consciousness mean? The thing that allows all humans to be self-
aware, the ability that we all have to think of ourselves as ‘I’. Do you know
what’s even more remarkable? At least two of the questions that the
Upanishads concerned themselves with deeply 2,500 years ago – (1) What is
the universe made of/pervaded with?; and (2) What is consciousness? – are
two questions that STILL remain among the Top Five Unanswered Questions
in science today (google it!).
The Vedantins believed that both ‘Space’ (here and there, inside and
outside, me and you) and ‘Time’ (then and now, today and tomorrow), the
two concepts by which we have always measured and understood reality, are
both illusions (quantum physics, anyone?) created by our consciousness,
which is the only true reality there is. Consciousness, they said, is itself
boundless (not limited by space) and timeless (not part of past, present or
future) – it has simply always been, and always pervaded everything. In fact,
they said, there is nothing else besides it – this entire universe, and
everything in it, is simply a projection of that Consciousness, an amusing
game it plays with itself, as ephemeral as a dream. In a sense, say the
Vedantins, the universe, and everything in it, is nothing but a giant VR game!
Aum!
That is complete, and This is complete,
From That completeness comes This completeness;
If you take completeness away from completeness,
Only completeness remains.
THE BACKSTORY
merica, 1911. A bright young American, from one of the country’s
T.S. Eliot’s ‘The Waste Land’ includes a story from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad
Yup, the troubled genius we have been talking about all this time is none
other than T.S. Eliot!* And we are talking about Eliot and his epic poem here
because the last section of the poem – ‘What the Thunder Said’ – the only
part of the poem that isn’t so gloomy, is inspired by a story in the
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (BU)!
(Check out the original ‘What the Thunder Said’ story from the BU at the
end of this chapter and then google ‘The Waste Land’ to read the poem,
particularly the last section. Make sure you have a good guidebook by your
side, for the poem is itself a sprawling forest, riddled with difficult references
to this and that.)
*You may be interested to know that he also wrote a lovely book of poems called ‘Old Possum’s Book
of Practical Cats’, which was adapted by Andrew Lloyd Webber into the smash-hit musical Cats! Ring
a bell?
The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, which is part of the Shukla Yajur Veda and
among the oldest Upanishads, lives up to the first part of its name – ‘brihad’,
which means vast, ginormous – by being the largest of the Upanishads. As
for the ‘aranyaka’ part, if you understood it literally, as ‘of the forest’, then
the BU is ‘The Ginormous-Forest Upanishad’. That would be appropriate
too, for you could spend months and years walking its main path and
exploring its many detours. Here’s a startling bit of trivia – together with the
also-giant Chandogya, the BU constitutes two-thirds of all the Upanishadic
literature that has survived to this day!
Clearly, it would be a futile exercise to try and touch upon all the themes
addressed by the BU in its six giant chapters, or adhyayas, in this little book.
Instead, we shall focus on a few stories and a few engaging themes. If you
want to find out more, go ahead – the BU has been around for almost 3,000
years and isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.
THE STORY
ADHYAYA 1
P gods. The demons, who were older, were misguided, selfish, grasping
and always willing to trample over others; in short, they were not the
best role models for their younger siblings. Fortunately, younger siblings are
often smarter, so the gods did not look to their brothers, but to their own
sweet natures, for guidance, and tried their best to be kind, virtuous and
unselfish. Unfortunately, younger siblings are also often bullied, and so it
was with the gods. Their older brothers were always snatching things from
them – Heaven, for instance. Fed up, the gods decided to perform a big
yagna, and overcome their exasperating brothers by means of the power of
the High Chant, the Udgitha, Aum.
So the gods went to Speech, and said, ‘O Speech, we beg you, chant the
Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Speech chanted the Udgitha, thus gaining for the
gods the great joy that comes from being able to say things. As for itself,
Speech asked for the ability to say only what was pleasant, and received it.
This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this pleasant Udgatri*, the gods’
yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said, wringing their hands. ‘We can’t let
that happen!’ So they rushed at Speech and pitted it with unpleasantness. And
that is why we often say awful things.
*The Udgatri, or the priest who chanted the verses of the Sama Veda at the yagna (in this case,
Speech), could ask for gifts both for the yajamana (in this case, the gods) and for himself. If the
chanting was done right, both would receive the boons they desired.
With their first Udgatri gone, the gods went to Smell, and said. ‘O Smell,
we beg you, chant the Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Smell chanted the
Udgitha, thus gaining for the gods the great joy that comes from being able to
smell. As for itself, Smell asked for the ability to smell only what was
agreeable, and received it. This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this
agreeable Udgatri, the gods’ yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said,
wringing their hands. ‘We can’t let that happen!’ So they rushed at Smell and
pitted it with disagreeable things. And that’s why we often smell things that
make us screw up our noses.
With their second Udgatri gone, the gods went to Sight, and said. ‘O
Sight, we beg you, chant the Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Sight chanted the
Udgitha, thus gaining for the gods the great joy that comes from being able to
see. As for itself, Sight asked for the ability to see only what was beautiful,
and received it. This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this beauty-filled
Udgatri, the gods’ yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said, wringing their
hands. ‘We can’t let that happen!’ So they rushed at Sight and pitted it with
ugliness. And that’s why we often see things that make us weep.
With their third Udgatri gone, the gods went to Hearing, and said. ‘O
Hearing, we beg you, chant the Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Hearing chanted
the Udgitha, thus gaining for the gods the great joy that comes from being
able to hear. As for itself, Hearing asked for the ability to hear only what was
harmonious, and received it. This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this
calm Udgatri, the gods’ yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said, wringing
their hands. ‘We can’t let that happen!’ So they rushed at Hearing and pitted
it with disharmony. And that’s why we often hear things that make us
anxious.
With their fourth Udgatri gone, the gods went to the Mind, and said. ‘O
Mind, we beg you, chant the Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Mind chanted the
Udgitha, thus gaining for the gods the great joy that comes from being able to
think. As for itself, Mind asked for the ability to think only good thoughts,
and received it. This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this righteous
Udgatri, the gods’ yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said, wringing their
hands. So they rushed at Mind and pitted it with evil. And that’s why we
often have terrible thoughts.
The gods, now desperate, went to Prana, the lifebreath, and said. ‘O
Breath, we beg you, chant the Udgitha for us at the yagna.’ Breath, without
which there would be neither gods nor demons, chanted the Udgitha, and
asked for nothing for itself. This threw the demons into a tizzy. ‘With this
noble Udgatri, the gods’ yagna is sure to be a success,’ they said, wringing
their hands. So they rushed at Breath and tried to pit it with all manner of
vice.
But just as a clod of earth hurled against a rock smashes into bits and flies
off in all directions, the demons who rushed at Breath were smashed to bits
and destroyed. And that is how the gods won, and the demons were
destroyed. Anyone who understands this – that the Breath is the only pure,
true thing in the body, and meditates on it – crushes his demons and becomes
one with his true Self.
***
Did you enjoy that story? It seems simple, even simplistic, a ‘repeating fable’
to keep a child entertained, but it is in fact, like every other story in the
Upanishads, deeply symbolic, giving us plenty of food for thought.
From the story, it is clear that while the Upanishadic sages believed that
the eyes, ears, nose and tongue were pure matter, part of the physical body,
they thought very differently of Sight, Hearing, Speech and Smell. In fact,
they gave these last the status of deities – deities who enabled the eyes to see,
the ears to hear, the tongue to speak, and so on. It is also clear that the sages
believed that these very same faculties, since they had all been infiltrated by
demons,* were flawed, limited and not to be entirely trusted.
*And why were they infiltrated by demons? Because they all asked for the wrong boon – they asked to
be able to see, hear, smell only what was pleasant, thereby creating room for what was ‘unpleasant’! It
is only when you see certain things as pleasant or agreeable that other things, in comparison, become
automatically unpleasant and disagreeable. This is really the core message of the Upanishads – there is
no ‘other’. Joy is no different from sorrow, agony is no different from ecstasy, you are no different
from Brahman. It is only your own delusion, the ’veil of Maya’, that prevents you from seeing that
supreme truth.
Does that mean you cannot believe everything you see or hear? Of course
it does! How can you seriously doubt that, living as we are in the age of fake
news, where entire videos and sound bytes can be doctored and turn normally
gentle people into lynch mobs? But the sages were not talking about the
deviousness of 21st century technology in the Upanishads; their beliefs
stemmed from something far more basic.
Say you see two schoolmates fighting. Your mind and heart turn instantly
against the one whom you see as giving the other a hard time. Sure, our first
instinct is to root for the underdog, but it is right or fair to take a stand like
that without finding out more? How can you be sure that what you can see
and hear at the current moment is all there is to the story? Can your eyes ‘see’
and your ears ‘hear’ the backstory – the circumstances that have led to this
showdown? Even the mind, the sages tell us, has been defiled by the demons,
and we can agree – the mind is also influenced hugely by our own personal
experiences and biases, and therefore cannot be trusted.
What then, can we trust? How can we make sure that we see people and
situations with compassion, clarity and true understanding, and are not
swayed by what our senses tell us and what our mind wilfully nudges us
towards? By disciplining the senses using the reins of the Mind, which are
held by the charioteer called Understanding. One great way to do that,
according to sages of every stripe, is the practice of meditation. And the best
way to ease your way into meditation, so the ancients tell us, is to close your
eyes, shut the world out and bring the entire focus of your attention to your –
ta-daa! – breath.
For while the senses are not only unreliable but dispensable,* and are
withdrawn into the mind in sleep (with the mind itself being withdrawn into
the breath in deep sleep), the breath, as long as a man lives, is constant,
steadfast and true, never forsaking him, whether he is awake, dreaming, or in
deep sleep. What’s more, it does not influence, question or judge a man’s
decisions; it is simply the silent witness to them. To the Vedantins, who
equated Brahman with that which was unchanging, everlasting and
dispassionate in the cosmos, the breath was the perfect metaphor for the
Brahman within the body.
*Remember the story in the Prashna Upanishad where the senses are bragging about how each of them
is the greatest, until Prana makes as if to leave the body and all the senses find themselves being
dragged out in its wake? The story is repeated in the BU – here, Prana leaving the body is described
thus: ‘As a great horse pulls up the stakes to which it is tethered when it breaks free, so does Prana
uproot all the other senses when it leaves the body.’ What a powerful image, don’t you think?
How can you get started on your own journey to true understanding? By
taking a step back and examining a situation thoroughly before jumping to
conclusions. By listening with an open mind and heart to both – or all fifteen
– sides of a story before you decide who is right and who isn’t (or even that
no one side is entirely right or entirely wrong at all). By reflecting on every
opinion you are about to express, to examine it for your own ends and biases
– are you blaming one person over another because one of them is your
friend or someone you want to impress, or are you crucifying someone
simply on the basis of his or her past behaviour? By not letting yourself be
influenced by your emotions – anger, fear, hate, love. That is how you crush
your demons and nourish your gods, both of whom live within you.
And can you guess what would really help you do all of the above?
Exactly! Taking several deep, calming breaths!
Now comes the chanting of the mantras for purification. When the priest of
the Sama Veda sings the introductory verses of the Saman, the yajamana of
the sacrifice must silently recite to himself these three verses from the Yajur
Veda:
The Big Fat Secret the gods don’t want you to discover
‘Right. Let’s say I take your word for it that a man will become whole,
infinite, realized, by knowing Brahman. That begs the question – “What did
Brahman himself/herself/itself know that enabled it to become Brahman?’’
‘Good question! You see, in the beginning, when there was only Brahman
and no one else, Brahman thought to itself, “Aham Brahmasmi – I am
Brahman”, and that very self-awareness made it whole, infinite, self-realized.
The same thing happened to the gods who came after. When they realized
who and what they really were, they said, wonderingly, to themselves, “Aham
Brahmasmi – I am Brahman,” and became whole. It is the same among the
wisest seers, and among ordinary humans too. The moment a man realizes
“Aham Brahmasmi – I am Brahman”, he becomes the whole universe. Not
even the gods can do anything about it then, for he becomes them!
‘If a man bows before another deity, however, saying “He is one, I am
another,” then he doesn’t get it at all. As men use cattle and sheep for their
own ends, thus do the gods use such men for their own ends. Knowing how
painful it is for a man to lose even a single head of cattle, imagine how much
more painful for the gods to lose even one such man!
‘And that’s why the gods are not at all happy with the prospect of men
getting to know this ultimate truth, this great secret – Aham Brahmasmi.’
***
Aham Brahmasmi – I am Brahman – is considered the fourth of the Great
Pronouncements – or Mahavakyas – of the Upanishads. It is also, along with
Tat Tvam Asi, the best known of the Mahavakyas. But is that all it means?
How can you get Aham Brahmasmi into your day-to-day life?
The answer lies in the very first lines of the answer above. ‘Brahman
thought to himself “I am Brahman”, and he was.’
A story with two endings illustrates this rather well.
Version 1: An anxious student approached his teacher and asked him,
‘Do you think I can achieve this (task)?’ Like every good teacher, this one
too turned the question right back at the student – ‘What do you think?’ The
student pondered for a moment. ‘I don’t think I can.’ The teacher smiled.
‘There’s your answer. You cannot (achieve the task).’
Version 2: An anxious student approached his teacher and asked him,
‘Do you think I can achieve this (task)?’ Like every good teacher, this one
too turned the question right back at the student – ‘What do you think?’ The
student pondered for a moment. ‘I think I can.’ The teacher smiled. ‘There’s
your answer. You can.’
The moral of the story is clear enough. It is your own self-belief (or lack
of it) that makes things possible (or not). Believe that you are whole,
complete in yourself, content in yourself, that you have no need for validation
or approval from anyone else (or a god outside of you, like the misguided
man in the story) and you will be whole, you will be Brahman – it’s as simple
as that!
But, be warned, says the BU, the gods will try their best to foil your
attempts at self-realization. They will put in your way the demons of fear,
self-doubt, guilt, weariness, all of which will weaken your will and make you
say ‘I don’t think I can’ – for if they did not, who would go to them asking
for solace and strength, and offer them coconuts and prayers and gold? Who
would they then send scurrying to temples and other places of worship?
But, say the Upanishads, if you stay strong, and disciplined, and focused,
and give your hundred per cent to everything you do, treating your work as a
great sacrifice that you are performing for the good of the universe, and
expect nothing in return for it – sooner or later, the veil of Maya will fall
away, and you will discover that you contain everything you need – love,
strength, peace, contentment – within yourself. Brahman will bloom within
you, luminous and radiant, and the universe will resound with the joy of your
discovery – Aham Brahmasmi!
ADHYAYA 2
Not all the treasures of the world – A conversation between Maitreyi and
Yagnavalkya
Once, the great sage Yagnavalkya sat his wife Maitreyi down beside him and
said to her, ‘Maitreyi, I have completed my responsibilities as a householder
and it is time for me to move on to the next stage in my life.* I want to spend
more time henceforth in reflection and contemplation, and I will not be able
to stay here much longer. But before I go, I want to divide all that I have
between you and Katyayini.’
*According to the ancient Indian texts, human life is divided into four age-based phases or stages,
called ashramas. Each ashrama has recommended activities and pursuits, combining into a ’complete’
experience through a lifetime.
For the first twenty-four years of his life (in today’s terms, approximately until he finishes a
Master’s degree), a young man is expected to focus entirely on his education. He is expected to remain
single and not be distracted by romantic relationships. (Plus, no smartphones.) This is the student stage,
or the Brahmacharya Ashrama.
For the next twenty-four years, until the age of forty-eight, a man is expected to live in the larger
community – finding a job, getting married, educating his children, taking care of his parents and
contributing to society in whatever way he can. This is the busiest, most productive stage of a man’s
life, when he works to sustain both the generation before and after him, and raise worthy children to
sustain the community in the future. This is the householder stage, or the Grihastha Ashrama.
For the next twenty-four years, between the ages of forty-nine and seventy-two, a man is expected
to gradually hand over the reins of his household and/or his business to the next generation, and take on
the role of an adviser, always available to the young ’uns when they need him, but otherwise allowing
them to run their own ships in the way they think fit, so that they in turn can flower into their own full
potential. Thus gradually distancing himself from attachment to his family and home in the retirement
stage, or Vanaprastha (say vaana-prasta) Ashrama, he prepares for the next life-stage. (In the story, this
is the stage Yagnavalkya wanted to move to, which is why he wanted to divide his possessions among
his wives).
From seventy-two onwards, a man is expected to remove himself from all ties of family and society
(at least emotionally, if not physically) and lead the equivalent of an ascetic life, full of prayer,
reflection and contemplation. This is the renunciation stage, or Sannyasa Ashrama.
Pretty neat, don’t you think? The age divisions and recommendations seem to echo what naturally
happens as people get from the age of twenty-four to forty-eight to seventy-two, especially with regard
to their attitudes. Sure, you are still at the Brahmacharya stage, but you can see what those in other
ashramas are doing and thinking by taking a look at your older cousins, parents and grandparents. Make
sure you include the women too – now that they are just as educated as men are, the ashrama
recommendations would apply to them too.
Maitreyi was heartsick to hear of her husband’s imminent departure, but she
had always known this day would come, so she took the blow with good
grace and asked, ‘You talk of dividing your property, sir, but tell me this – if
the wealth of the entire earth were mine, would that make me immortal?’
‘Eh?’ said Yagnavalkya. ‘What kind of a question is that? If all the
wealth of the earth were yours, you would simply live, while you were alive,
like very rich people do. But you certainly would not be able to buy
immortality, however wealthy you were.’
‘What will I do with half your property, then?’ said Maitreyi. ‘I want
none of it. Give it all to Katyayini, who loves such things. As for me, teach
me something that will help me become immortal.’
‘Beloved!’ cried Yagnavalkya, well pleased. ‘You have always been dear
to me and now you have made yourself dearer by asking me to share what is
closest to my heart. Come, sit beside me, and I will tell you what you want to
know. But make sure not just to hear what I say, but also to reflect on it as I
speak.’
Maitreyi nodded. ‘I promise, sir.’
‘Why does a wife love her husband, dearest? Not for his sake, but her
own – he makes her Self happy. Why does a husband love his wife? Not for
her sake, but his own – she makes his Self content.
‘Why are children loved, dearest? Not for their own sake but their
parents’ – they make their parents’ Self joyful.
‘It is the same with everything else – priestly power and royal power,
wealth and the gods, the universe and all the creatures in it – they are all
loved not for their own sake, but for the sake of one’s own Self.
‘Is it not clear, then, Maitreyi, that it is the Self that one should direct
one’s attention towards? That it is the Self that should be thought about,
reflected on, meditated upon? That once one knows the Self, one understands
everything else? That it is only by knowing yourself that you know the
world?
‘Fie on the priest who believes his priestly power comes from outside of
his Self. Fie on the king who believes his royal power comes from outside of
his Self. May the gods forsake anyone who believes the gods live outside of
his Self. May all creatures abandon anyone who believes that those creatures
lie outside of his Self. May the Infinite reject anyone who believes that the
Infinite rests outside of his Self.
‘You see, Maitreyi, as the sound of a drum cannot be fully understood by
someone who knows not both drum and drummer, neither can one fully
understand the sounds of a conch or a lute without knowing both instrument
and musician.
‘As clouds of smoke arise, unbidden, from a fire overlaid with damp fuel,
so from the breath of Brahman have arisen, effortlessly, all the Vedas,
Upanishads, poetry, history, ancient lore, the arts and the sciences.
‘As all the waters converge into the ocean, all touch into the skin, all
smells into the nose, all visible forms into sight, all sounds into hearing, all
thoughts into the mind, all wisdom into the heart, all action into the hands
and all movement into the feet, so does everything in the universe converge
into the Self.
‘As a lump of salt thrown in water cannot be taken out of it again,
although it makes every drop of that water salty, even so, beloved, does the
individual Self dissolve in limitless Being and cannot be separated from it,
although that Being itself carries in it the essence of every individual self.
The Being arises at birth with the Self and departs with it at death. After
death, therefore, there is no separate self, no awareness, nothing.’
Maitreyi blanched. ‘After death, there is nothing? You are confusing me,
sir, I am bewildered.’
‘Reflect once more, calmly, on what I have said, beloved – where does
the sense of separateness come from? From the limited body, which
perceives itself as different, separate, from everything around it. But once the
body is gone and the Self dissolves into the Immense Being, there is no
“other” to perceive, don’t you see? When there is no other to see, and no eyes
to see it with, what can you see? Nothing. When there is no other to smell,
and no nose to smell it with, what can you smell? Nothing! When there is no
other to hear, and no ears to hear it with, what can you hear but nothing?
When there is no other to think about, and no mind to think about it with,
what is thought but nothing? When there is no other to know, and no intellect
to know it with, what can you know but nothing?
‘Tell me, Maitreyi, by means of what can one perceive the one who
perceives it all? How, beloved, can one know the Knower when he himself
has become it?’
***
In this famous Upanishadic story, known not only for Yagnavalkya’s insights
into what it means to be immortal but also for the fact that it is one of the few
stories that features a woman as the seeker of truth, Maitreyi, who is not
interested in worldly possessions, asks her husband to teach her how to go
beyond death.
And what can we take away from his answer? That as long as we think
we are our little, flawed, limited, perishable bodies, we most certainly cannot,
will not, be immortal, for the body decays and dies from minute to minute,
until one day, it stops functioning altogether. But once we understand that
who we are, what we are, is pure energy, pure consciousness, pure being –
everything changes!
Sure, for the present, we are energy and consciousness contained in a
physical body (and it is that energy that is the reason the body is able do what
it does). But when the body is gone, the energy that sustained us simply goes
back to becoming part of the energy that sustains the world, pushing plants
up from the soil, keeping the earth in her orbit and the sun and moon in
theirs, bringing atoms together to make molecules, giving tigers the power to
roar and deer the strength to run.
The great advantage of being able to see yourself as cosmic energy is the
sudden and stunning realization that everything and everyone you see around
you is in fact the same energy, poured into a dazzling, mind-boggling,
fabulously diverse and absolutely wonderful array of bodies and forms and
shapes. It is the same energy that enables each of those forms to do its own
fascinating set of things, just as it is the same electricity that enables a
vacuum cleaner to suck up dust and an X-ray machine to see your bones.
Once that switch is thrown, you will see everyone and everything as part of a
multi-armed, multi-headed, multitalented, multidimensional, limitless you.
That cosmic energy, so the Upanishads tell us, has been around since
before the earth existed, is the reason the world exists and will be here well
after the universe as we know it is gone. And since you have now had the
realization that YOU are that cosmic energy, it stands to reason that you will
be around forever too. Does that sound a bit like immortality? You bet it
does!
ADHYAYA 3
If you aren’t familiar with that line above – ‘It ain’t bragging if you can back
it up!’ – it is actually a well-known quote by one of the most charismatic,
cheeky and beloved sportspeople of the twentieth century, the iconic
Muhammad Ali, but it works quite well as a title for this story from the BU.
This story also features the sage Yagnavalkya,* this time interacting with the
only other female seeker we find mention of in the Upanishads, Gargi
Vachaknavi. Here’s how it goes.
*It is believed, in fact, that it was Yagnavalkya himself who composed the BU, or at least a large part
of it, since his conversations form such a big part of the Upanishad.
anaka, the king of Videha, had just finished a great sacrifice and was
J handing out generous gifts to all and sundry. Many learned sages had
come from as far afield as Kuru and Panchala, and Janaka, eager to find
the wisest among them, fastened bags containing ten gold coins each between
the horns of a thousand cows, drove them all into a pen and announced,
‘These cows are for the wisest among those present here. Step forward and
take them if you believe you are the one!’
While everyone else hesitated, Yagnavalkya stepped forward and said to
one of his students, in a voice that carried, ‘Drive the cows home, son.’ The
boy cracked a huge smile. ‘Hail the prince among sages!’ he said, and
joyfully drove the cows away. Furious, the other sages came down upon
Yagnavalkya like a tonne of bricks. ‘The man is beyond presumptuous!’ they
fumed among themselves. And at him, they snarled, ‘You really believe you
are the wisest among us, do you?’ Yagnavalkya shrugged. ‘We all bow to the
wisest one here, I’m sure,’ he said, ‘but we know, don’t we, that what we are
all really after are the cows?’
The irreverent answer, which hurt more because it was the truth, only
served to get the other sages even more riled up. ‘Let’s have a debate, then,
and we shall see if you are indeed the wisest!’
Thus began a right royal debate at King Janaka’s court. It lasted for days,
with the most learned men in the land – Ashvala, Arthabhaga, Lahyayani,
Chakrayana, Kahola, Uddalaka* – questioning Yagnavalkya on the
technicalities of the yagna layout and chants, and the nature of Death,
Brahman and the Self. He answered them all satisfactorily and they were all
forced to eventually admit defeat.
*Remember him from the Chandogya Upanishad? That’s right, Shvetaketu’s father!
ADHYAYA 4
O will not answer any of his questions.’ But then he remembered that
the last time he had been at Janaka’s court, he had offered the king a
boon and the king had asked for nothing but the right to ask the sage
questions. Yagnavalkya sighed, resigning himself to another volley.
The moment he had been respectfully received and seated, Janaka began.
‘Yagnavalkya, what is the source of light for a man in this world?’
‘The sun, Your Majesty,’ replied Yagnavalkya. ‘For it is by his light that
a man sits, goes out, does his work, and returns.’
‘Quite right,’ said the king. ‘And when the sun sets, what is the source of
light for a man in this world?’
‘The moon, Your Majesty, for it is by his light that a man sits, goes out,
does his work, and returns.’
‘Quite right. And when the sun and moon have both set?’
‘Then fire is our light, Your Majesty, for it is by that light that a man sits,
goes out, does his work, and returns.’
‘And when the fire has died out?’
‘Then the voice is our light, for even if it is too dark for a man to see his
own hand, he goes straight to the spot from where he hears a voice.’
‘Quite right. But when the sun has set and the moon is dark and the fire is
out and the voice is stilled, what then is the source of a man’s light?’
‘His Self, or Atman, your Majesty. It is by the light of the Self that a man
sits, goes out, does his work, and returns.’
‘And what Self is this?’
‘That person that is neither the body nor the mind, neither sight nor
hearing, but pure awareness, the light within the heart – he is indeed the Self.’
And so it went, with Janaka asking question after question, and
Yagnavalkya, bound by his promise to the king, answering him patiently.
They talked of the exact mechanics of Death and the blissful world of
Brahman where the Self reposes between one life and the next. They
discussed the oneness of the Self with Brahman and how there was really no
difference at all between the two. And then they came to the tricky question
of how exactly a man’s destiny is fashioned. Was a man’s destiny determined
even before he was born? Was there any way he could change it? How did
one man become ‘good’, and another ‘bad’?
And Yagnavalkya said, ‘O King, what a man becomes depends entirely
on his own actions. If his actions are good, he himself becomes good; if they
are bad, he himself becomes bad.’
‘But what makes a man act?’ asked the king. ‘What if he performs no
action at all?’
‘Ah, but a man cannot perform “no action at all”,’ smiled Yagnavalkya.
‘For the root of all action, good or bad, is desire, and a man is made of
nothing but his desire.’
‘Know this, Your Majesty,
***
Learn to control your desire, and you can control your destiny! Really? Yes!
Control your desire for TV time before an exam, and you will be able to
focus better on your studies and crack the exam. Control your desire for junk
food, and you will be healthier. On the flip side, don’t control your desire to
sneak a look into your friend’s answer paper, and be marched off the
principal’s office. Don’t control your desire to lie to your parents, and suffer
a truckload of guilt over it.
Even situations where controlling your desire seems like a bad idea could
end up working for you! For instance, let’s say you control your desire for
that pricey new phone, becoming an outcast among your friends as a result.
(PS: If this happens, you might want to review those friendships.) Now, you
can cry quietly about it, or you can let your parents know how their action (of
not getting you a new phone) has ruined your life. Chances are, your parents
will be guilted into getting you something else that you really want,* which
they may not have otherwise. See what you did there? You controlled your
destiny!
*You wish! – Signed, Your Parents
Jokes apart, think very, very carefully about your actions before you do
them, for you become your actions. And it is the little, everyday actions that
count just as much, or more, than the big, grand, one-off actions. ‘I’m going
to cheat a little today, and that’s OK, because from tomorrow I’m totally
going off it,’ may sound good as an excuse for cheating when you say it to
yourself, but don’t be fooled – in the grand scheme of things, every single
action counts.
This is not in the sense that there is someone sitting in the clouds
recording your every deed in a giant register, which she will use to decide
whether you will go to Heaven or Hell after you die, but in the sense that you
can decide, for yourself, how you want to fashion your life, right here on
earth, and then proceed to make that dream come true – simply by being
vigilant about your actions.
That’s a tremendous superpower. Use it mindfully!
ADHYAYA 5
What The Thunder Said
O humans and demons – lived with him as his students. When they
came to the end of their education, they each went to him, seeking a
final piece of advice.
‘Venerable One,’ said the gods, ‘What advice do you have for us?’
‘Da,’ said the Supreme Father. And then he asked them, ‘Have you
understood?’
‘We have, Father,’ they said. ‘Da is for Damyata (say daam-yata). You
are telling us to exercise self-restraint.’
‘You have understood,’ said Prajapati, and he was well pleased, for his
sons, the gods, were unruly and given to excess, and indulged too often and
prodigally in the pleasures of the flesh.
Then it was the turn of the humans.
‘Father,’ said the humans. ‘What advice do you have for us?’
‘Da,’ said he. And then he asked them, ‘Have you understood?’
‘We have,’ his human sons answered. ‘Da is for Datta. You are asking us
to give, and give generously.’
‘You have understood,’ said Prajapati, and he was well pleased, for his
sons, the humans, were inclined to be selfish and greedy, hoarding more than
they needed, never letting go of what they considered their own.
Then it was the turn of the demons.
‘Most respected sir,’ said the demons. ‘What advice do you have for us?’
‘Da,’ said the Creator. And then he asked them, ‘Have you understood?’
‘We have, sir,’ his demon sons answered. ‘Da is for Dayadhvam. You are
telling us to be compassionate.’
‘You have understood,’ said Prajapati, and he was well pleased, for his
sons, the demons, had a cruel streak, and did not hesitate to harm and kill in
the pursuit of their own ends.
Each stormy night, so that Prajapati’s children never forget, the divine
voice of Thunder repeats the supreme teaching – ‘Da-Da-Da! Damyata!
Datta! Dayadhvam!’
***
Da-da-da! Bet you are never going to be able to hear the voice of thunder
again without going – Umm, what were those teachings again?
And that’s great, for all three teachings are really meant only for us,
humans! You see, each of us contains in ourselves both god and demon – for
are we not all, at different times, given to indiscipline, excess, selfishness,
greed and even cruelty – in thought, word and deed?
When we live life king-size, going overboard with food, fizzy drinks,
money, laughter, device-time, we are displaying the god side of our
personalities – we are generous at that point, unlike humans, and perhaps
even compassionate, unlike the demons, for we ourselves are so full of joy.
But there is such a thing as ‘too much of a good thing’ – excess drains us in
ways we do not immediately realize. When you feel you are overdoing
something, therefore, pause, gather yourself, and pull back, remembering the
teaching – Da! Damyata!
When we get all petty and possessive about what we consider ‘ours’, we
are displaying the human side of our personalities. We could be practising
severe self-restraint, which makes us godlike, at the same time, and being
compassionate too, thus keeping our demons at bay, but our small-
mindedness will give us away and reveal us to be mostly human. When you
catch yourself being too human, remember the teaching – Da! Datta! – and let
go.
When we are unnecessarily mean to someone, or fly into a rage, we are
displaying the demon side of our personalities. Even if we are being highly
disciplined at that time – as Prajapati asked the gods to be – or being
generous with our time or money – as Prajapati asked the humans to be – the
fact that we are essentially being cruel outs us as demons and brings about
our downfall. The next time you are about to say or do something that could
hurt someone, remember the teaching – Da! Dayadhvam! – and check
yourself.
fter my book The Gita for Children was published in 2015, everyone