Shava Sadhana
Shava Sadhana
Shava Sadhana
Shava sadhana (śāva sādhanā) is a Tantric sadhana (spiritual practice) in which the practitioner sits on a
corpse for meditation. Shava sadhana is part of the vamachara ('heterodox') practice of worship, which is
followed by the esoteric Tantra.[1]
Shava sadhana is regarded as one of Tantra's most important, most difficult and most secret rituals. Tantric
texts as well as oral tales detail the process of the ritual and also tell its importance. The purpose of
practicing the ritual range from knowledge, propitiating a deity, material motives, even dark objectives to
gaining control over the spirit of the deceased. There are strict rules that need to be followed in the ritual,
even in selection of a suitable corpse for the ceremony.
The purpose to do shava sadhana varies from person to person. An aim of shava sadhana is to unite the
Kundalini with Param Shiva.[3] From a yogic or Tantric point of view, it signifies detachment from the
physical world, and uniting with the Absolute, identified with the male god Shiva, the Divine Mother Shakti
or the abstract Brahman. The detachment leads to freedom from Samsara (the cycle of birth, death and
reincarnation) and the adept goes beyond the orthodox concepts of purity and impurity; auspiciousness and
inauspiciousness. The ritual is done using a corpse, considered a highly impure and inauspicious symbol in
traditional Hinduism.[1] Since it deals with directly encountering death, it is believed to lead to non-death,
symbolized by longevity, wealth and power. The ritual is said to erase the fear of death from the
practitioner's mind. It may also be conducted to placate a personal deity. For Aghoris, the purpose is not
spiritual, but simply to acquire the skull for rituals or gain power over the soul of the deceased so that he can
act as a medium to other spirits or acquire powers to control them. Andre Padoux interprets shava sadhana
as black magic which is done to accomplish evil motives.[1]
Bhattacharya suggests that the Tantrika may even murder to get hold of a suitable corpse for shava sadhana.
A young chandala boy may be intoxicated and then killed by the tantrika by deceit. However, Professor
McDaniel notes that tantrikas she met in Tarapith disagreed. They believed that the appropriate corpse is
chosen by the Goddess herself and murdering someone for the ritual is interfering with the Goddess'
work.[1]
Some corpses are taboo for shava sadhana: that of a Brahmin (priest caste), of a cow (sacred Hindu animal),
of a woman, of an aged man (age not specified), of a leper, of an "untouchable", of a beardless man, of a
man whose genitals are not clearly visible, a man who died due to suicide or starvation/famine, of an
apostate, and of a hen-pecked man.[2] Though corpses of women are forbidden by the Tantrasara, a Tantric
priest from Bolpur, West Bengal described how people used to use the corpse of a virgin girl for shava
shadhana. The girl is believed to become the goddess Kali's vessel and speak in the ritual.[4] In absence of
human corpses or carcasses of specified animals, the carcass of any animal can be used. If even it is
unavailable, a human figurine of Darbha (grass), rice, barley etc. can be used. In case an effigy cannot be
made, sesame is sprinkled on the ground.[2]
According to Hindu belief, death happens on two levels: a physical death and a ritual death. The latter
happens only after the kapala kriya ritual of the funeral, when the skull of the burnt corpse bursts or a hole
is opened in it so the prana (life force) exits it. The corpse used for shava sadhana thus in an intermediate
stage between life and death.[1]
Process
Shava sadhana is conducted generally on a new moon day.[1] The Tantrasara suggests for the eighth or
fourteenth lunar day in a fortnight as well as Tuesdays are suitable for the ritual.[2]
The sadhaka is left alone with the corpse in the night.[1] The Tantrasara recommends the following for the
ritual: a shmashana (cremation ground) or cemetery, or an abandoned house, a riverbank, a mountain, a
battlefield, near a bilva tree or any other lonely place.[2] The ritual is generally done in a shmashana.[1][3]
Siddha pithas, sacred places reputed to grant siddhis may be preferred for the ritual.[5] The sadhaka repeats
a mantra while bringing the corpse to the designated site of the ceremony to purify it.[6]
In Shakta ritual as described in the Tantrasara, the corpse is worshipped with flowers and invoked as a
form of Bhairava (a form of Shiva) and the seat of the Goddess and requested to awaken to please the
Goddess.[6] The corpse is washed and placed on tiger or deer skin or a bed of kusha grass.[1][6] The hair
and feet of the corpse may be tied. The corpse is believed to be a vessel of power while the rite is performed
and tying the hair ensures that the energy does not escape.[1][2] Another interpretation states that the
bondage reflects the practitioner's desire to control the spirit of the corpse.[6] Then, the sadhaka will sit on
the corpse for meditation.[1] In Shakta narratives, betel nut is put into the corpse's mouth and it is turned on
its back and smeared with sandalwood paste. Shakta sandhakas draw a yantra on the back of the corpse and
sit on it. The 64 yoginis and the guardians of the directions are worshipped with vegetarian offerings. The
corpse-seat is again worshipped and the practitioner mounts the corpse like one sits on a horse.[1][6] Another
tradition says that the practitioner is expected to sit in Virasana ("the heroic pose").[5] The Tantrasara
narrates that the practitioner should get off the corpse to draw a triangle or protective circle around him and
the corpse or again to scatter mustard or sesame seeds in all directions.[6]
While meditating, the practitioner (whose goal is detachment) should think on what makes the corpse (who
was alive till a day after) different from him and other living beings and thus discover the knowledge of the
living force within all living beings. He (or she) identifies with the corpse and contemplates on the
ephemeral nature of the body, whose dissolution leads to the discovery of the living force within.[1][3]
The sadhaka may also meditate on a deity.[1] Offerings to the deity are put in the corpse's mouth.[6] The
practitioner may perform pranayama and meditate on his guru and the deity in his mind.[6] He can also
practice japa (repetition of a mantra or a deity's names or epithets), till the corpse promises him to grant his
wish.[2] He may encounter an Akashavani (a voice from the skies) which may try to tempt him with
material things.[5] He will experience terrifying visions and sounds as well as temptations; however the
practitioner should remain untouched and concentrate on the meditation. Upon successful completion of the
sadhana it is believed that the residing deity of the sadhana( Maa Tara / Mahadev ) appears before the
sadhaka and the sadhaka would be blessed with Brahma-gyan and mantra-siddhi (a supernatural power to
use a mantra) or become one with Shiva / shakti. Uniting with Shiva-shakti is said to lead to detachment, a
characteristic of the ascetic god. Shiva is himself equated with shava, the corpse. As the vessel of Shiva, the
adept becomes an avadhuta, a mystic who is beyond egoic-consciousness, duality and common worldly
concerns.[1] The Tantrasara says that a voice may ask for more offerings or bless the practitioner by
granting his wishes.[6] Only rarest of the rarest sadhakas such as Krishnananda agamavagisha , sadhaka
bamakhepa and ramprasad sen are said to have completed this sadhana successfully and believed to have
seen the divine vision of Devi kali and Tara.
Shakta practitioners are said to have a theophany of the Goddess, in the form of a young girl or woman or
in the sky or she may possess the corpse. The Shakta practitioner is considered to be a child of the Divine
Mother, who is surrounded by fear, tormented by ghosts and demons and overcome with love towards her
and needs to be rescued by the Mother. When the Goddess is said to possess the corpse, the corpse is
considered sacred as a murti or vessel of the divine spirit. The head of the corpse is said to turn towards the
devotee and begins speaking affectionately (or sometimes terrifyingly) with him. The devotee then asks for
a boon (spiritual or worldly) that the Goddess is compelled to grant. Some practitioners regard that his own
body becomes a corpse while performing the ritual. The Goddess fills life into him by possessing him.[1]
A sadhaka who becomes afraid when the corpse comes alive and falls inside the protective circle, dies;
while one who falls outside is doomed to eternal insanity. The one who remains resolute is blessed with
moksha (salvation) and "occult powers". Persons who practice shava sadhana with lower goals may be
blessed with siddhis, but those in turn may lead to their downfall.[5]
At the end of the ritual, the corpse is freed from his bondage of rope and bathed again. The corpse is buried
or immersed in a body of water. All articles of worship are also cast into the water.[2] The untying of the
rope and immersion of the corpse is believed to release the contained energy, accumulated while the ritual
was on.[1]
Although it is generally recommended to be performed alone in a deserted place, a sadhu who performs
shava sadhana may be sometimes aided by his Tantric female consort, who are known as uttara sadhika.
She stays within the protective circle and helps the sadhu if he is getting distracted by the spirits. The sadhu
may also call upon his guru (not physically present at the site) to protect him in the ritual.[4]
References
1. June McDaniel (9 July 2004). Offering Flowers, Feeding Skulls : Popular Goddess Worship
in West Bengal (https://archive.org/details/offeringflowersf00mcda). Oxford University Press.
pp. 123 (https://archive.org/details/offeringflowersf00mcda/page/n133)–132. ISBN 978-0-19-
534713-5.
2. S.C. Banerji (1 January 2007). A Companion to Tantra (https://books.google.com/books?id=p
mpwLdmvcggC&pg=PA28). Abhinav Publications. pp. 28–30. ISBN 978-81-7017-402-8.
3. Andre Van Lysebeth (1 January 2001). Tantra: The Cult of Feminine. Motilal Banarsidass.
pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-81-208-1759-3.
4. David Gordon White (2001). Tantra in Practice. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-
81-208-1778-4.
5. Lalan Prasad Singh (2010). Tantra, Its Mystic and Scientific Basis. Concept Publishing
Company. pp. 163–164. ISBN 978-81-8069-640-4.
6. David R. Kinsley (1998). Tantric Visions of the Divine Feminine: The Ten Mahāvidyās (http
s://archive.org/details/tantricvisionsdi00kins). Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 208 (https://archive.or
g/details/tantricvisionsdi00kins/page/n213)–210. ISBN 978-81-208-1522-3.