Dashnami Sannyasin belongs to one of the 10 orders (dashnami, “ten names”) established
by the great philosopher God-man Shankara in the 8th century ce and still
flourishing in India and in the world today.
HISTORY OF
DASHNAMI TRADITION
Dashnami
Sampradaya One of the major achievements of Acharya Shankaracharya was to
organize the Hindu monasticism. He divided the Hindu monks into ten sects
called "Dashnami" and organized them under four heads with the
Headquarters at Dwaraka in the West, Jagannatha Puri in the East, Rameswaram in
the South and Badrikashrama in the North. These became the four sacred
"Dhams", "Holy Places" of the Hindus. He also enumerated
other details of the order of Hindu monks grouped under these heads for their
identity. Although there are today a number of Hindu monastic sects, the most
authentic are the ten established by Acharya Shankaracharya .
Dashnami
Sannyasins
Sanaka,
Sanandana, Sanat-Kumara and Sanat-Sujata were the four mind-born sons of Lord
Brahma. They refused to enter the Pravritti Marga or worldly life and entered
the Nivritti Marga or the path of renunciation. The four Kumaras were the
pioneers in the path of Sannyasa. Sri Dattatreya also is among the original
Sannyasins. The Sannyasins of the present day are all descendants of the four
Kumaras, Dattatreya and Sankaracharya.
Sri
Sankaracharya, regarded as an Avatara of Lord Shiva and the eminent exponent of
Kevala Advaita philosophy, established four Maths (monasteries) one at
Sringeri, another at Dvaraka, a third at Puri and a fourth at Joshi Math in the
Himalayas, on the way to Badrinarayana shrine.
Sri Sankara
had four Sannyasin disciples, viz., Suresvara, Padmapada, Hastamalaka and
Totaka.
Suresvara
was in charge of Sringeri Math,
Padmapada
was in charge of Puri Math,
Hastamalaka
was in charge of Dvarka Math
Totaka was in charge of Joshi Math.
The
Sannyasins of Sringeri Math, the spiritual descendants of Sri Sankara and
Suresvacharya, have three names, viz., Saraswati (or sarasvati), Puri and
Bharati.
The
Sannyasins of the Dvaraka Math have two names, viz., Tirtha and Asrama.
The
Sannyasins of the Puri Math have two names, viz., Vana and Aranya.
The
Sannyasins of the Joshi Math have three names, viz., Giri, Parvata and Sagara.
The Dashnamis
worship Lord Siva or Lord Vishnu, and meditate on Nirguna Brahman. The Dandi
Sannyasins, who hold staff in their hands, belong to the order of Sri Sankara.
Paramhansa
Sannyasins do not hold staff. They freely move about as itinerant monks.
Avadhutas
are naked Sannyasins. They do not keep any property with them.
The
Sannyasins of the Ramakrishna Mission belong to the order of Sri Sankara. They
have the name Puri. Then, there are Akhada Sannyasins, viz., Niranjana Akhada
and Jhuni Akhda. They belong to the order of Sri Sankara. They are Dashnamis.
They are found in the Uttar Pradesh State only. Rishikesh and Haridwar are
colonies for Sannyasins. Varanasi also is among the chief abodes of Sannyasins.
~ Sannyasin Sivadhyanam Saraswati
Sannyasa
By Paramahamsa Satyananda
By Paramahamsa Satyananda
Sannyasa is
easy; you do not need any education to take sannyasa. In ancient times, in the
vedic period, the age for sannyasa was accepted as seventy-five and above. At
that age, people would leave their homes and set out for a life of
renunciation. Even the kings would follow this dictum. They had seen the world,
and vairagya, non-attachment, was natural to them, bhakti was natural to them.
A person’s mind changes at the age of seventy-five. However, this vedic
tradition of sannyasa did not last for long, because the fact remains that
sannyasa is such a vritti, tendency, that it can manifest at any age within a
person. It is not necessary to wait till you are seventy-five.
People like
Shukadeva and Sanat Kumar were born with the sannyasa instinct; they had the
bhava, propensity, for sannyasa from the day they were born. There have been
many other such great men and women. At the age of eight, Shankaracharya
experienced the sannyasa bhava. Lord Buddha experienced it at the age of
thirty-six. Lord Mahavira ran away from the altar at his wedding to take
sannyasa. Therefore, the thinkers in society advocated that the tradition of
sannyasa be open to everyone.
The first
condition
When
someone takes sannyasa at a young age, however, they have to deal with many
things which one does not need to deal with during old age. For example, I no
longer need to deal with desire or attachment, but if a boy or girl of ten,
fifteen or eighteen comes to sannyasa, there is much they have to unravel.
Towards this end, all ashrams from the times of Buddha, Mahavira and
Shankaracharya have ruled that the first condition of sannyasa is to cut off
all bonds. If you can cut the bonds of the mind and the body, the external and
internal bonds, then come to sannyasa life. If you cannot, then do not come.
This is the first rule.
When a
young boy or girl comes to the sannyasa ashram, they are not taught asana,
pranayama, dharana, dhyana and the Bhagavad Gita to begin with. The first thing
they learn is to cut off bonds. After accepting sannyasa, one no longer has any
connection with family, race or religion, whether external or internal. One is
pure, satchidananda spirit, not the body. Such a person, who can free the
spirit from the bonds of society and desires, may take to sannyasa life. This is
the first condition, and it eliminates 99.99 percent of people, in the same way
that a sieve separates chaff from flour.
You want to
take sannyasa and also say to your father, “Father, I am well. These days I
look after the accounts office.” It does not work. Sannyasa is not a job; in a
sense, it is suicide. Until such time that you cut off your head, you will not
get a new head. If you want to save your old ways and also take sannyasa, you
will have neither, everything will finish. If you want sannyasa, you will have
to get rid of the old mind.
In the
first step of sannyasa, this elimination takes place. After that, the aspirants
stay in an ashram and help to run it. In some ashrams people are fed the whole
day through. All sannyasins join in this activity and they do the same work the
whole day through. In Rishikesh there are many such ashrams; they run
hospitals, schools, Sanskrit classes, and so on. The Swaminarayan sect in
Gujarat runs colleges. Sannyasins are able to perform the varied duties well because
all their ties have been cut off. Their mind is now at one place; they do not
call their parents. This is not enforced either. The bonds of the world, maya
and mind cannot be cut off forcefully. A light awakens and one realizes, “I am
Swami Satyananda.” Who is Swami Satyananda? This body is not Swami Satyananda,
it will go to the grave. Who then is Swami Satyananda? Who am I?
Material
life and sannyasa life
Sannyasins
realize that they cannot evolve by living in the world. One may earn money by
living in the world, enjoy the company of the opposite sex, satisfy desires,
look after one’s comfort, but one cannot know oneself. If someone wants to know
himself while living in the world, he will have to be a very special person,
like King Janaka or Ramakrishna Paramahamsa. Not everyone can do this.
It is
possible to realize God while living a material life, but for most people this
is a principle, not the reality. If your mind is running after wife, children,
promotion and legal cases, which mind will you give to God? You have only one
mind. If you had two minds, this would have worked – one mind in the world, the
other with God. Surdas has written:
Udho man
naahin dasa-beesa
Eka huto so
gayo Shyaama sanga kaun araadhai eesa.
(The gopis
say) O Uddhava, we do not possess ten or twenty minds. The only mind we had has
gone with Shyama (Krishna), who now should worship the absolute God (that you
speak of)? There is only one mind, whether you focus it on God or in the world.
What you
can do while living in the world, however, is to prepare for the day when
vairagya awakens in you and you have perception of God. Most people get married
at twenty-five, retire at sixty, and then travel about or do similar things.
Where is God in your life? To realize God you do not have to do anything, you
only have to know yourself. God is within. This is the truth; know just this
much. Idol worship, visiting temples, prayer, worship, etc. are fine. They have
to be done to appease the mind, because our religions prescribe them. But God
is within. It has been said:
Sarva
niwaasee sadaa alepaa tuhe sanga samaaee
Puhupa
madhya jyon vaasa vasata hai,
mukura
madhya jasa chhaaee
Vaise hee
Hari vasai nirantara,
ghatahi
khojahu bhaaee.
He lives
everywhere. He remains untouched by all. He permeates you. Just as fragrance
dwells in the flower and the image in the mirror, the Lord lives within you
eternally. Search for him within your own self.
God is
verily within me, and God is also outside me. Jita dekhoon, Sita Rama.
“Wherever I look, there is Rama.” The essence of God is subtle, and it is
beyond the scope of the senses, mind, dream, wakefulness or death. That
effulgent God is within us. Grihastha ashrama is the preparation for this
realization, and sannyasa ashrama is its postgraduate stage. Therefore, nothing
remains in sannyasa ashrama.
What
happens in our ashram? We make buildings, prepare food, teach the kanyas,
that’s all. But when a sannyasin performs a task, he must do it with the
feeling that he is serving the Almighty. The feeling that one is an accountant
or in-charge should not be there.
The freedom
of sannyasa
There are
many traditions of sannyasa in India. Among them the Dashnami tradition to
which we belong is very strong. Dashnami sannyasins live freely and
independently. We do not take the government’s help; we are not dependent on
its monetary help or support. We build our own life. A sannyasin must always
remain self-reliant.
Besides
Dashnami, there is the Vaishnava tradition. Vaishnavas are largely found in
Puri, Ayodhya and Mathura. They are called sadhus. The third sannyasa tradition
is Udasi, founded by Guru Nanak’s son, Srichandra. There is another sect of
Brahma Kumaris. They are a very strong and honest people, not hollow. In this
way, many are working for the cause of sannyasa.
All the
sects of sannyasins in India live like a donkey without its owner. No one
controls them. They do not live in ashrams by profession. What kind of a
sannyasin is he who is controlled by someone? Such a person cannot be a
sannyasin. A sannyasin controls himself. He must decide for himself whether or
not he wants to drink poison, smoke, have attachments. Society cannot tell a
sannyasin what he should or not do. He must decide for himself, only then is he
a sannyasin.
Sannyasa is
a very big tradition of this country and it will remain that way because it is
not dependent on the support of the government. Sannyasins do not live to
please or be pleased by anyone. We do not want anything from anyone. We are not
a religious sect, we are not interested in spreading religion. I used to visit
so many different countries, but I did not convert anyone to Hinduism. Why
should you change someone’s religion?
A sannyasin
should remain completely independent. If he does not like it somewhere, he
should be able to just pick up his bags and leave. Kabir has said,
Mana laago
mero yaara phakeeree men
Jo sukha
paavon Raama bhajana men,
so sukha
naahin ameeree men
Premanagara
men rahani hamaaree,
bhalee bani
aaee sabooree men
Haatha men
kundee bagala men sonta,
chaaro disi
jaageeree men
Aakhira
tana yaha khaaka milega,
kahan
phirata magarooree men.
My mind is
engrossed in the life of a recluse. The pleasure that lies in the chanting of
the Lord’s name does not lie in riches. Listen patiently to all that people
say, the good and the bad, and live a life of simplicity. I live in the city of
love, my contentment gives me happiness. All I possess is a yoga danda and a
water pot, and I move about everywhere. This body will become one with ashes,
why then do you assume pride?
Whether a
sannyasin lives in a palace or hut, he should live like a recluse.
You might
have read the life stories of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Swami Vivekananda and
Anandamai Ma. There have been many others like them. My guru, Swami Sivananda,
was a big doctor, and even after establishing such a large ashram, he lived
simply. There are many examples of such ideal sannyasins.
~ Sri
Paramahamsa Swami Satyananda Saraswati
The Dashnami Sannyasa, Sannyasin the twice-born
Renunciation
By Swami
Niranjanananda Saraswati
In the
early hours of the morning, as birds were leaving 'their warm nests in search
of a meal, find the rising sun was colouring the eastern sky with brilliant
morning colours, the lone figure of a lady stood under a Coconut tree with
tears in her eyes, totally oblivious to the soft breeze murmuring through the
leaves. She was gazing at the figure of a boy aged not more than tight years,
with shaved head, dressed in ochre-colon red robes and holding a staff and
kamandalu in his hands, walking away with firm and determined steps towards a
destiny unknown. She watched him until be was swallowed up in the distance by
the tall mango, coconut, betel nut and other tropical trees surrounding the
tiny village of Kaladi in Kerala State. A long time she stood there hoping
against hope that the child who had walked away would return. In her heart she
knew it was not to be. She wiped the tears, stifled a cry and murmured softly,
"Shankara, may Lord Ashutosha protect and guide you".
Later on
she was silting in front of her village hut. Her son, Shankara bad left the
home and village that morning- Where to? She did not know. In search of Guru
and Truth, so he had said. She felt drowsy and in that state she remembered
events leading to his birth. What a joyous time that was, unforgettable!
Shankara's
father was named Sivaguru and was the only son of Vidyadhara. Although Sivaguru
did not want to involve himself in the life of a householder, at the request of
his father he returned from his Guru ashram and had married. After the death of
Vidyadhara, apart from fulfilling the responsibilities and. obligations towards
the small family, Sivaguru dedicated himself lo the study and teaching of the
shastras. Sivaguru and his wife Vishishta Devi, were reaching middle age and
both yearned for a son. After discussion they had come to the Vrisha mountain
near the village, and there in the temple they worshipped Lord Chandra
Maulishwar Shiva with all their devotion. How hard those days were! They used,
to survive on berries, roots and the fruits of trees and worshipped prayed and
fasted. Their bodies were beginning to be affected by such a rigorous
discipline.
Before the
end of their austerity, one night Sivaguru had a dream. In this dream Lord
Shiva appeared before him and said in a voice full of compassion, "My Son,
I am pleased with your devotion. Tell me your wish and I shall fulfil it".
In the dream Sivaguru had fallen to the feet of his Lord and had said,
"Bless me with a long-living omniscient son", Smilingly the Lord
said, 'If you want an omniscient son then he shall have a short lifespan. It
you want a long-lived son then he shall not be omniscient. Tell me whether you
wish for an omniscient or long-lived son". Sivaguru prayed that his son be
omniscient. The Lord said, "Your wish, shall be fulfilled. You shall have
an omniscient son. I myself will come to your family as your son''. So saying
the Lord disappeared.
Sivaguru
had woken up from his reverie, gently awoke Vishishta Devi and told her about
the dream. How happy they were to know that the Lord's grace was with them.
They soon completed their worship and returned to the village.
She
remembered well the day of Shankara's birth in the year 686 A.D., on the
twelfth day of Vaishakh Shukla panchami. People said that the sun had stopped
moving in the sky to gaze at the new-born babe. Birds flocked to the house and
sang the praise of the child while the wind gently caressed his body. All the
brahmins of the Nambudiri clan had gathered to bless this divine child. How
happily his father had given away land, wealth and cows to the brahmins, and
they had, after observing the auspicious signs of Shiva on the body of the
child, named him Shankara.
Her child
was very special. As he grew, all noticed that he was silent, daring and of
very sharp intellect. He had been able to read and remember by heart much
literature in his native tongue, Malayalam. He had also read and remembered the
ancient Vedas, Vedanta, Upanishads, Ramayana, Mahabharat and the Puranas, His
ability knew no bounds. Sivaguru was delighted with this divine ability of the
god-child. He decided that after Shankara had completed five years, he would
perform the Upanayana Samskara and send him to gurukula for further training,
but it was not to be so.
Sivaguru
died soon after and Vishishta Devi left with Shankara for her father's place
after completing the last rites of Sivaguru. She never forgot the last desire
of her husband, and when Shankara completed five years, she came back to her
village home, performed his Upanayana Samskara and sent him to Gurukula.
She
remembered that people commuting between the ashram and village came and told
her about Shankara. How he had surprised everyone with his clear, sharp
understanding and pronunciation of the scriptures. Whatever he was taught he
remembered, and soon became the joy of his teachers. In a short span of two
years he had completed the study which would normally have taken twenty years
and had mastered Upanishads, Puranas, History, Dharma shastras, Nyaya, Samkhya,
Patanjali, Vaisheshika and other traditional literature.
Somebody
had recently told her that Shankara also possessed miraculous powers. They had
told her that, as per the rules of the gurukula, the disciples had to go for
bhiksha. Once while Shankara was out for bhiksha, he came upon a very pour
family who gave him an amla fruit as they had nothing else to give. Moved by
their poverty and devotion, Shankara had prayed to Goddess Lakshmi, and soon
that pour family's shack was covered with golden amlas which had rained from
the sky. This news had traveled all over the country.
Shankara
was a gifted son, she mused. How otherwise would he be able to bring the river
to their doorstep! She remembered that once while she had gone for a bath in
the river Alwai, which flowed near the village, she had swooned and fallen to
the ground-Shankara, aged seven, had found her and carried her home. Afterwards
he decided that propitiating Lord Ashutosha, he would bring the river to the
door of their home so that his mother would not need to undertake the arduous
journey every morning. He had prayed and prayed and sure enough, after the next
monsoon, the river changed her course and began to flow in front of their home.
One day
some learned brahmins had visited their humble abode, and charmed by Shankara's
wit, wisdom and intellect, they had requested to sec his horoscope. They bad
said that he would be a teacher of great renown and a parivrajaka, and that his
life would be short. He would die either at the age of eighty sixteen or
thirty-two. They had left after giving their blessings to the family. Since
that day Shankara had not been the same. He had expressed his desire to take
sannyas. He had said that without sannyas there was no scope for self-knowledge,
and without self-knowledge, no scope for moksha. She had very firmly stated to
Shankara, "As long as I am alive, I cannot give you permission for
sannyas".
How she had
misunderstood Shankara! Had she forgotten that it was the Lord Himself in the
form of her son? Her motherly affection wanted Shankara to be the bastion of
her old age, but the Lord wanted him to be the bastion of humanity. One day she
had gone with Shankara to the river Alwai for a bath when a crocodile grabbed
hold of Shankara's foot and was pulling him into the deep waters. Shankara
cried to his mother, 'Mother, a crocodile is pulling me in. This is the last
moment of my life. Permit me to adopt sannyas, and thus die happily knowing
that I will attain moksha'.
She felt
the pang of utter grief and desolation after seeing her beloved Shankara in the
clutches of the crocodile. Not a single bather or fisherman was able to help
Shankara out of his predicament. Soberly she said "So be it my son, I give
you permission for sannyas". Then she fainted and did not remember what
happened afterwards.
People told
her afterwards that some fishermen had come and captured the crocodile in their
nets and had brought Shankara to the river bank where healing balm had been
administered on his wounds by a local doctor. Rumours were going around that
after Shankara had taken the vow of sannyas, the crocodile vanished. Some were
speculating a divine hand in the episode. To her it did not matter what the
truth was, for her beloved Shankara was alive.
When she
was returning home with Shankara He said, "Mother, I cannot enter the
house now as I am a sannyasin. I shall stay under a tree". She became
speechless and replied, "What are you saying? How long do you think I will
live? Renounce home after my death but remain with me for as long as I live. Do
you not have certain obligations towards me?"
Shankara
talked to her full of love and compassion and convinced her of his
determination by saying, "At your instructions by the river I took sannyas. The
Lord has saved me from the crocodile and it is his wish which I must now obey.
With your blessings I shall attain yoga siddhis and tattwa jnana. In your last
hours you just have to remember me and I shall appear beside you, and you shall
have darshan of your Lord. After all, he is the source of everything that is
holy and auspicious. Believe me mother, whatever I am saying will happen. Bless
me so that I can unhesitatingly tread the path of dharma and sannyas". She
was silently listening to her young boy saying unbelievable things. Could she
believe her ears? She did believe. After all, be was a God-child, and she his
mother. She blurted out, "So be it! Wholeheartedly I give you my blessings
so that you can achieve whatever you aspire for".
This event
had happened the day before. After reaching home he had helped her organise a
proper sannyasa ceremony. Next morning he himself lit the fire and, as per
tradition, initiated himself, She dressed him in his ochre-coloured robes, gave
him a staff and a kamandalu. The whole village had come to see this event and
later they all followed Shankara to the edge of the village to see him depart.
When he could be seen no more they all returned, sad and with tears. Only she
remained standing frozen under the coconut tree, hoping against hope that her
son Shankara would return.
She opened
her eyes and looked at the verandah where she now sat alone, and where she had
sat so many times with Sivaguru before, and later listening in rapture to
Shankara reciting Sanskrit mantras from the Vedas. Today she was alone but she
knew that the Lord was with her, just as he was with Shankara. Filled with the
warmth of the Lord's glow inside her, slowly she got up and whispered softly,
''May the Lord guide your every step toy Shankara".
Training With
Guru
It was dark
inside the cave. Oil lamps were burning in the corner, giving just enough light
to see the outline of those who were sitting there. In the dim light one could
make out two people, one ancient, ageless, with matted hair, white beard and
frail body covered in ochre coloured robes, sitting on some kind of high
pedestal which was covered with a tiger skin; a staff and kamandalu kept beside
him. The other person was just a boy of not more than eleven years, in the
dress of a Sannyasi, sitting below him listening silently and intently to what
the ancient one was saying.
"You are
born with the grace of the Lord to re-establish the Vedic precepts, I have been
waiting for you for many years at the instructions of my Guru for conveying to
you the precepts of dharma. Now that you have learned everything, my duty is
over and I am free lo attain samadhi. You will proceed to eternal Kashi and
there have darshan of the Lord who will guide your future work". Govindapada
then closed his eye's Shankara, the young boy, silently bowed before his Guru
and silently left the solitude of the cave beside the river Narmada at
Omkareshwar, Govindapada heard the silent footfall of Shankara leaving the cave
and his mind was diverted from samadhi to Shankara. He remembered how he had
come out of his years long samadhi the day Shankara had reached the cave at
Omkareshwar. The Lord had willed it to be so.
He had
heard stories about Shankara, that he had taken only two months to walk from
Kaladi (Kerala) to Omkareshwar, beside the river Narmada (presently Madhya
Pradesh). An incredible feat for someone as young as he, just eight. Where was
the Narmada? Who would guide him there? Shankara knew that the Narmada was
somewhere north of his village, and had heard of an ancient one who was
supposed to he waiting for someone. How much difficulty he had faced when
crossing deep forests and jungles, rivers and mountains, meeting with wild men
and animals; but nothing bad deterred the young boy.
He was very
brilliant. All the elders, sannyasins and other disciples admired and respected
him. In just three years Shankara mastered everything. The first year he had
mastered Hatha yoga; second year, Raja yoga. As a result of that he attained
many spiritual powers and siddhis. The third year Govindapada taught Shankara
the highest truth of Gyana yoga, Aparokshanubhuti, and the secrets of dharana,
dhyana and samadhi. It was indeed an honour to have such a disciple. In those
times of decay in dharma, a lot of hopes were pinned on Shankara.
He also
remembered that during the monsoon season just this year, when he was sitting
in samadhi, the waters of the Narmada started to rise as if to inundate the
cave. There was panic and pandemonium amongst his disciples. Shankara had
calmly put an earthen pot in front of the cave and all the waters of the
flooded Narmada were drawn into it. How surprised all had been to witness this
miraculous feat!
Afterwards
when Govindapada heard of this event, he blessed Shankara by saying, ''I heard
from my Guru Gaudapada, and he had heard from his Guru Sukadev that one would
come who would contain the hundred currents of the Narmada in an earthen pot.
That person shall assimilate all the Vedic teachings in the Brahmasutras to
revive the dharma, I know now that they were referring to you. I bless you in
your work".
Acharya
Guru Govindapada was satisfied with Shankara. He was an incarnation of the
Lord, and would set things right. Govindapada had completed his mission. His
waiting was over and he would now enter mahasamadhi. He concentrated his mind
at the eyebrow center, mentally bowed and offered a prayer to his Guru and the
Lord, centered the pranas in sahasrar chakra and attained mahasarnadhi.
Mission
It was
afternoon. Although the sun was shining high in the sky, it was quite dark
inside the small hut. Within, one could make out two old figures, one lying on
a cot all covered up with blankets, and the other crouching beside the prone
figure on the bed. The figure crouching beside the bed was that of an old maid
who served Vishishta Devi, the mother of Shankara, and the figure on the bed
was Shankara's mother who was sick, delirious and unconscious. The whispered
came of '"Shankara" escaped from her lips from time to time. Doctors
had come, and had given her treatment and medication but nothing seemed to work
on that frail body. Ultimately the doctors bad said that only the grace of Lord
Ashutosha would be able to make her healthy, and had slowly left the hut,
leaving Vishishta Devi in the care of the old maid who had served her since the
day Shankara was born.
The old
maid knew about the promise that Shankara had made his mother when he had taken
sannyas and left home in search of his Guru. "In your last hour you just
have to remember me and I shall appear beside you, and you shall have darshan
of your Lord". But where was he now? Why had he not come? She knew that
Shankara would come, but when ? "Shankara please come'', was the only
thought that kept appearing in her mind over and over again.
News of
Shankara's achievements and glory had preceded him. He was the talk on
everyone's lips. How happy his mother used to be whenever someone brought the
news of Shankara from far-away lands. She would hear the news with silent tears
of joy in her eyes, then go to the temple and offer worship to Lord Ashutosha
and distribute prasadam to all the children in the village.
After the
mahasamadhi of his Guru, Govindapada, Shankara had left Omkareshwar with some
sannyasins and had gone to Varanasi. There he chose a solitary place near the
Manikarnika Ghat for his stay- Daily he would give discourses to aspirants who
would come to him, many times out of curiosity, and many times with an earnest
desire to imbibe the wisdom of Shankara. Slowly his fame began to spread. Many
used to come with the purpose of trying to defeat Shankara with their arguments
and debates, but in the end they were defeated and would feel blessed to hear
the truth from one so young.
It was at
Varanasi, the maid mused, that Shankara met a boy named Sanandan, another young
prodigy, who had come to study the scriptures and who became a disciple of
Shankara. Later on he was named Padmapada.
Stories
were told that at Varanasi, Adya Shakti Bhawani and Lord Mahadeva had blessed
Shankara. The Adya Shakti had appeared in the form of a woman mourning over the
corpse of her dead husband which lay in her lap, and asking all for assistance
to perform his final rites. Shankara was going for a bath with his followers
and requested the lady to move the corpse from the path, and she replied,
"Why don't you ask the corpse to move?". Shankara said. "Mother,
why are you so disillusioned? How can a corpse move? It has no power, no
shakti". That woman answered, ''Then why, O Yogi, do you profess that
Brahman without Shakti is the Creator?" Shankara was astonished and the
woman along with the Corpse just vanished before his eyes. He realised that it
was the Adya Shakti who had come to open another dimension of reality for him,
and had thus blessed him.
On another
occasion when Shankara was again going for a bath, Lord Mahadeva appeared in
the guise of an ugly Chandala accompanied by four dogs. Shankara addressed him
by saying, ''Move out of the way". The Chandala laughed and said, ''Whom
are you asking to move, the body or the spirit? The Atman is omnipresent and
the body is merely its container. From the Atmic viewpoint, is there a
distinction between the reflection of the sun in the waters of the Ganges and
the same reflection of the sun in wine? Is this your wisdom?". Shankara
was aghast, the realisation dawned on him, and he bowed before the Chandala,
who disappeared, and Lord Mahadeva appeared in his full glory to bless Shankara
and instruct him, saying ''Re-establish the Vedic precepts and propagate the
same amongst the masses. Write a commentary on the Brahmasutras of Vyasa. You
are born of me for the welfare of mankind".
At Kaladi,
his mother heard that after this encounter with the Lord, Shankara had decided
to go to Badarikashram for completing the mandate of the Lord. He had left
Varanasi with his followers and had travelled by foot passing many towns and
tirthas, giving discourses, inspiring people to renovate temples, organising
systems of worship according to the Vedic tradition. What an enormous task and
arduous journey for someone just twelve! She was proud of being his mother.
Eventually
Shankara reached Vyasashram in Badarika, area. This was the place where sage
Vedvyasa had dictated the great epic Mahabharata to Ganesha, who had become his
scribe. Here Shankara spent four years, taught his followers the vedic truths
and wrote commentaries on the Brahmasutras, twelve Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita,
Vishnu Sahasranaam, Sanatsujatiya, Srutis and Smritis. Afterwards he travelled
to the pilgrimage centres in the Himalayan region.
After
completing his travels in the Himalayas, Shankara came to Uttar Kashi and
there, as if knowing that his lifespan of sixteen years was coming to an end,
lost himself in contemplation of the Supreme Self, People said that it was here
that Sage Vedvyasa came to Shankara in the guise of an old man and, after a
lengthy discussion with Shankara, was very pleased with his commentary on the
Brahmasutras and other texts. He blessed Shankara with another extension of
sixteen years and instructed him to guide the masses, who had deviated from
this original path due to the power politics of many sects and traditions, back
to the fold of spiritual and Vedic precepts. Hearing this story Vishishta
Devi's joy knew no bounds. She knew that with the blessings of the Gods and
saints, Shankara was going to live and that he had a great mission to fulfil.
After
receiving instructions from Sage Vedvyasa, Shankara travelled with his
disciples and followers through the regions of north eastern India and came to
Prayag, where Kumaril Bhatta lived. He had waged an interminable war against
the foreign and non-vedic influences which were trying their best to destroy
the foundations of Vedic Dharma. In the course of his drive to re-establish the
Vedic precepts, Kumaril Bhatta had offended, his own teachers, and as a
repentance against the sin was in the process of self-immolation. It was at
this time that Shankara came before him wanting to discuss the Sanatana ideals
with him. Kumaril Bhatta told Shankara to find Mandan Mishra who would be able
to discuss the same with him, and by defeating Mandan Mishra, Shankara would
become the champion of the Vedic cause.
The old
maid remembered the day when some travellers had come and told about the defeat
of Mandan Mishra and Shankara's miraculous powers. How was the story? The maid
started to think, Shankara had reached Mahishmati town located between the
Narmada and Mahishmati rivers, and there requested Mandan Mishra to enter into
a debate with him, as that was the will of Kumaril Bhatta. Mandan Mishra was a
disciple of Kumaril Bhatta and accepted the debate as it was the will of his
teacher.
The debate
between the two started, with Mandan Mishra's wife, Ubhaya Bharati who was very
learned and considered to be an incarnation of Goddess Saraswati, as the judge.
The debate was very dynamic and interesting, and continued for eighteen days,
at the end of which Mandan Mishra conceded defeat and offered to become a
disciple of Shankara.
Ubhaya
Bharati had then come forward and requested Shankara for an opportunity to
enter into a debate with him, as according to the Sanatana ideals, the wife was
the other half of the husband, and her husband would not be fully defeated
unless and until she was defeated also.
Shankara
agreed and the debate between the two continued for another eighteen days. When
Ubhaya Bharati questioned Shankara about the erotic arts and sciences, Shankara
became silent as he had no knowledge of the same, and asked for one month's
time to find the right answers, which was granted to him by Ubhaya Bharati.
Shankara
left Mahishmati and went to a cave, where he sat in meditation. His disciples
brought him the news that a king named Amarak from a nearby province had just
died. Immediately Shankara took this opportunity to transfer his soul to the
body of the king, after leaving his ascetic body in the care of his disciples,
and in the span of one month learned all there was to learn in the royal palace
about the erotic arts and sciences. Before the completion of the month, he again
left the body of the king and re-entered his own, then went to Ubhaya Bharati,
answered all her questions, and won the debate. Mandan Mishra became a disciple
of Shankara and was named Sureshwaracharya. It was astonishing to the maid that
the toddler who had played on her lap, now had the ability to transfer his soul
from one body into another. Wonders never cease with Shankara, she thought.
After
Mahishmati, Shankara went with his increasing number of followers towards
western India and visited many holy places, tirthas, before coming to Sri
Shaila. People talked amongst themselves that at Sri Shaila, one Kapalika by
the name of Ugra Bhairava became a disciple of Shankara with the purpose of
eliminating him at the first opportunity. How low a person can fall, the maid
thought. Shankara, young and compassionate, did not suspect anything and soon
Ugra Bhairava invited him to a Kapalika ritual where he would sacrifice
Shankara. Shankara readily went with him, and if it had not been for the
ever-alert Padmapada, who cared for the welfare of Shankara, and saved him by
invoking. Narasimha (the man-lion incarnation of Vishnu), Shankara would have
died at the hands of the Kapalikas, his sworn enemies. The maid shuddered at
this thought, ''May God forbid!'' she muttered under her breath.
In his
travels, Shankara had come to Harihara Tirth, and there as he was going to the
temple for darshan of Ambika, a young couple came with their new-born dead
child and placed him at the feet of Shankara, begging for his life. Shankara in
his compassion, prayed to Goddess Bhagavati, and in front of the multitude of
his followers, disciples and visitors to the temple, the child moved his body,
opened his eyes and began to wail.
Shankara
gave life to a dead child. Had he not also given speech to a dumb boy? Yes, he
had. The maid tried to remember how. Shankara had gone to Sri Beli, accompanied
by hundreds of followers, and there a brahmin family brought their boy of
thirteen, who had been dumb since his birth, to be blessed by Shankara.
Shankara had asked that boy in Sanskrit, "Who are you? Whose son are you?
Where are you going? Where have you come from? What is your name? Answer me,
for I get a special feeling when I see you". That young boy had brightened
up upon hearing Shankara and had replied in clear Sanskrit, "I am not a
man, nor divine, nor spirit, neither a brahmin, norkshatriya, vaishya nor
sudra, nor a brahmachari, nor a householder, nor a renunciate, nor an ascetic.
I am the embodiment of Self''. Thus the mute boy had spoken, and his parents
then offered him to Shankara who later initiated him and named him Hastamalaka.
Shankara
then came to Sringagiri (Sringeri) where he established the Math and a temple
where he installed Sri Yantra and invoked Goddess Saraswati. There another boy
joined him, who was later initiated and named Trotakacharya, "At present
Shankara is in Sringeri", thought the maid.
There was a
soft knock at the door. The maid came out from her reverie and looked at the
prone figure on the bed. The blanket had slipped. She gently covered the body
with the blanket, and heard Vishishta Devi murmur the name of Shankara.
"Is he going to come as promised ?" thought the maid. Again there was
a knock at the door of the hut. Who could be there at this hour? It was nearing
evening and the people of the village were busy winding up their activities of
the day and preparing for the evening meal. She went to open the door.
Outside it
was just evening, and in front of the door a God-man was standing, young and
radiant like a mini sun. She was stunned! Who could he be? The God-man bowed
before the old figure of the maid and said, "How is mother?" The
maid, recognising the young man, gave a cry of joy and tears broke out of her
ancient eyes. Shankara had come at last! How had he come? Well, all those
questions would wait. She grabbed the young hands of Shankara with her old
withered hands and pulled him towards the cot where his mother lay.
Shankara
placed his bands on top of his mother's head, and in a soft voice full of love
said, "Mother, your Shankara has come". These words brought instant
reaction and the eyes of Vishishta Devi fluttered open. In the meantime, the
maid had lit a lamp and brought it near the cot, so that mother and son could
gaze at each other. Vishishta Devi's eyes were moist with tears of joy to see
her son now big and great, acclaimed as the Vishwa Guru (Guru of the Universe)
by the masses. She clasped his head covered with saffron robes in her trembling
hands, pulled the head to her and smothered his forehead with kisses.
Shankara
said to his mother, "I have come to serve you. Remove all your sorrows and
get well soon". His mother said, "My son, seeing you, all my sorrows
have disappeared. I am happy. The body is suffering due to old age and the near
and dear ones have caused a lot of trouble. I fit was not for the maid and her
care I would have died a long time ago. Lock after her when I am no more. Now
have a bath and a meal''.
After the
bath and hastily prepared meal which the maid had made ready, Shankara came to
his mother. His mother then said to him, "I am preparing for my departure.
My last wish was to see you. You have come and now nothing remains for me, I
just wish to attain the abode of my Ishta". Shankara lovingly said, "Mother,
once you know the ultimate Self, you will attain liberation".
And he then
started to impart the transcendental wisdom to her Vishishta Devi said to him,
"I am not versed In this lore; I am uneducated. How will I realise the
Self which is beyond speech and mind? My Shankara, show me the divine form of
the Lord, so that I can look at it with my eyes and consider myself blessed''.
Shankara
remained silent for a while, then said to his mother. "Mother, close your
eyes and merge your mind in your Ishta Devata. That way you will have his
darshan". Then in a voice full of compassion, he prayed and invoked
Mahadeva and Narayana, His mother had the divine darshan of her Lord in full
blazing glory, not even remotely comparable to the brilliance of a thousand
suns in the heavens, blessed Shankara by placing her frail hands on top of his
head and said, "May Lord Ashutosha protect and guide your destiny, and may
you be an able instrument of his Will"- Thus saying, she gave up her
mortal frame on the lap of her beloved Shankara.
I Must Walk
Alone
The sun was
reflecting from the snow-capped mountain and the sky was clear blue. Wisps of
white cloud hung in the heavens, and the few high flying birds made the glory
of the Himalayan sky even greater. It was a desolate region where there were
hardly any trees. The terrain was barren, with pieces of rock jutting out from
the ground like eternal sentinels guarding the mountain passes. The whole
scenery was vibrating with an inner beauty. Padmapada, along with
Sureshwaracharya, Hastamalaka and Trotakacharya, watched the receding figure of
their master, Shankara, walking alone towards Kedarnath barefoot on the
snow-clad Himalayan mountains, towards a solitary place which Shankara had
decided would be his final resting place.
At the age
of thirty-two, the final year of his life, Shankara came with a multitude of
his disciples to Badarikashram and gave final instructions to his disciples to
carry on with the work of propagating and preserving the Sanatana Vedic
precepts, which by now had taken a great hold over the masses of the country,
and all opposition from non-Vedic foreign influences and sects had dwindled
away. Afterwards he called his four close disciples and said, "The purpose
of my adopting this body is over. Now all of you prepare yourselves by becoming
the living examples of the highest Vedantic truth and propagate the same in all
corners of the land. The Divine Will which directed this self, will also
continue to guide you. Now let me go''. Thus saying, he had left Radarikashram
with the four disciples heading towards Kedarnath over snow. laden hilltops,
and at one point stopped them from proceeding further with him by saying,
"The path which I shall walk now will be without human company, so stay
here". The disciples had begged him to allow them to go further with him
but he had said, "I have no use for human help, for the Lord will lead me
now," And declining all help he went on alone. The disciples, now alone,
sat on the snow from where they had watched their Guru go towards the deep
Himalayan ranges, each one lost in his own thoughts. They had a mission to
fulfil which had been assigned to each one of them by their Guru.
Their minds
went back to the time when Shankara was at Sringeri discussing and teaching the
Vedantic reality to his followers, when suddenly he had adjourned the class in
the middle of his discourse and had gone to his room. The disciples had
followed him, and there he told them that his mother on her deathbed was
remembering him and he was needed. They could follow him as soon as they were
able to manage the affairs of the Math which had been recently established.
They had asked him how he would be able to cover that long journey without any
prior travel arrangements. Shankara had laughed and said, "The Lord will
provide a way". Then he had cloyed himself in the room and when the room
was again opened by his disciples, Shankara was not found in it. People believed
that he had flown with the help of his yogic powers to his ailing mother.
When the
disciples arrived at Kaladi, they found that Shankara's mother had left her
mortal frame, and that it was Shankara himself who had performed her final
rites as per her wishes, and had then given the family wealth to the old maid
and made her comfortable.
While
Shankara was in Kaladi, the King of Kerala State, Rajashekhar, approached him
and requested him to stay on for a longer period and to reorganise the Vedic
tradition in the State for social development.
After
spending some time in Kerala, Shankara left "with his followers to travel
and to instil the faith of the masses in the Dharma. He was accompanied by King
Rajashekhar of Kerala and King Sudhanwa of Karnataka with all their retinue.
The chanting of mantras by the disciples of Shankara vibrated the hearts and
minds of all who met them. Town after town, village after village, many tirthas
and countless temples were visited and a new direction was given to the people.
They had
reached Madhyarjuna tirtha, where Shankara addressed a large group of pundits
on Advaita Vedanta philosophy in the temple of Lord Shiva, When questioned
about the validity of his Advaita system, Shankara had meditated and prayed to
the Lord to give the wise some sign, and a divine voice was heard from the
heavens saying, "Advaita is the Truth", This voice was heard by all
those present.
After this
event, Shankara went to Sri Rangam via Rameshwaram. In Sri Rangam, he had a
debate with the head of the Vaishnava, sect along with his followers and taught
them the five maha yajnas comprising:
1.
Brahmayajna - study of scriptures; 2. Pitriyajna-offering to the ancestors; 3.
Homayajna - agnihotra, etc. 4. Baliyajna - serving the creatures of the Lord,
and 5. Nriyajna- service and care of guests.
Many of the
Vaishnavas at Sri Rangam became his followers.
Then,
travelling, Shankara came to Prayag and Varanasi where he held discussion with
the heads and followers of the Samkhya system: Shaivas, Shaktas, Mimamsakas,
Ritualists, Charvaks, Yogis, followers of various tantric branches, worshippers
of Lakshmi, Saraswati. Ganapati, etc., and infused the zeal of Vedic aspiration
in them. From Varanasi, Shankara went to Saurashtra and visited many tirthas in
that region, established another Matha at Dwarika, and held debates with the
followers of Samkhya, Buddhist and Jain schools of thought. Then he travelled
on to Kashmir, where in a temple at Srinagar he composed the famous Saundarya
Lahari hymn. Afterwards he travelled to Bihar, Bengal and Assam, where he won
the hearts of everyone with his clear concept, understanding and teaching of
the Vedic tradition and Dharma.
It was in
Pragjyotishpur (Assam ) that Shankara was taken ill with fistula, recalled the
disciples still sitting in the snow-capped hills of Kedarnath. Assam was famous
for its vamamargi buddhist tantric practices and teachers, especially the
region around Pragjyotishpur, which was in own as Kamaroopa, where the famous
temple of Kamakhya lay, which Shankara had visited. It was here that the
buddhist tantrics lead by Abhinava Gupta had come to challenge Shankara to a
debate, and were defeated by his deep insight and wisdom.
Unable to
accept defeat, they had performed tantric rituals and Shankara started to feel
the pangs of fistula. Pus and blood began to flow accompanied by terrible
pains. The disciples were concerned but Shankara, despite his suffering and
deteriorating health, was fully equipoised and calm. His disciples had felt
that he would not live long and once again it was Padmapada who had come to
know of the malicious intention of Abhinava Gupta, and performed Shanti karmas
to neutralise the effects of the tantric influence. Sure enough, soon Shankara
regained his health and vigour.
After this episode
Shankara came with his disciples to Gaudadesha (presently Northern Bengal) and
inspired the king to propagate the Vedantic precepts in the region. It was here
that Shankara had the darshan of his Guru's Guru, Acharya Gaudapada. One
evening when Shankara was contemplating alone beside the river Ganges, the
radiant figure of an ancient Sage materialised in front of him. The figure
said, "Dear Shankara, you have received the ultimate knowledge for
liberation from my disciple Govindapada. I am content that you have performed
the great feat of re-establishing the Vedic Dharma and have written
commentaries on the scriptures. Ask something of me".
Shankara
replied, ''O great Guru, your vision is like the living vision of the Supreme
Lord. Grant the boon that I may lose myself in the contemplation of the Supreme
Self, which is truth, Consciousness and Beatitude". The vision then
blessed Shankara with raised hands and dematerialised. After a few days
Shankara travelled to Nepal and Tibet and awakened the zeal of Dharma in the
people of those states, then slowly but surely directed his steps towards
Badrikashram and Kedarnath.
The sun was
slowly settings and a soft chilling breeze began to blow in the hills where the
disciples sat with heavy hearts looting again at the footsteps of Shankara
imprinted on the snow, going towards infinity. Finally, they got up and bowed
to the footprints and just one sentence formed on their lips, "Victory to
Shankara, the Vishwa Guru, the Acharya, the Preceptor of the Kali Age. Victory
to Shankaracharya." Slowly they walked down towards Badarikashram. They had
a mission to fulfill, and many miles to walk before they rested.
Work &
Establishments
There are
many beliefs which give a different account of the final departure of Shankara.
Some say that Shankara left his mortal frame in Mount Kailash after visiting
the cave of Dattatreya, Where he "was blessed by him. Others believe that
he left his mortal frame to Ranchi, while yet others believe that he merged his
body with the deity at Parashuram Temple at Trichur in Malabar state. However,
most historians agree that it was in the region of Kedarnath that Shankara
attained the ultimate merger with the Supreme.
Whatever
the belief, all accept that no one else could have done in many lifetimes what
Shankara was able to do in his short life-span of thirty two years. He changed
the total religious and spiritual structure of India, reorganised the scattered
groups of Sannyasins, and gave a solid direction to the Vedic movement which is
still being followed with full enthusiasm by countless aspirants and seekers
all over the world.
This great
God-man with far-reaching inner vision, organised the ancient tradition of
sannyas and collected all ascetics, renunciates, yogis and sadhus who wondered
aimless and directionless throughout the length and breadth of India, under the
one banner of the Vedic tradition. He established in the course of his
wanderings, four Pithas or Maths in the tour comers of India, in each of which
one of his disciples was installed to load the sannyasins and to guide the
propagation of the Vedic precepts.
They are as
follows:
1. KALIKA
MATH: Location- Dwarika in Western India, Acharya - Hastamalaka, Veda - Sama
Veda, Vakya - Tattwamasi, Sampradaya - Keetawar, Title -of sannyasins
associated with this Math - Tirtha, Ashram.
2. VIMALA
MATH: Location - Puri in Eastern India, Acharya - Padmapada, Veda - Rik Veda,
Vakya - Prajnanam Brahma, Sampradaya - Bhogawar, Title - Vana, Aranya.
3. JYOTI
MATH: Location - Badarikashram in Northern India, Acharya - Trotakacharya,
Veda -Atharva Veda, Vakya - Ayamatma Brahma, Sampradaya - Anandawar, Title -
Giri, Parvat, Sagar.
4. SHARADA
MATH: Location - Sringeri in Southern India, Acharya - Sureshwaracharya, Veda
- Yajur Veda, Vakya - Aham Brahmasmi, Sampradaya -Bluriwar, Title - Pari,
Bharati, Saraswati.
These maths
are also known by their town names of Dwarika, Govardhan, Joshi, and Sringeri
Math.
~ Paramahamsa Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati
~ Paramahamsa Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati
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