JPN Trakru
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JPN Trakru


J.P.N. Trakru

J.P.N. Trakru

 

Reaching Out

Abhinavgupta


by JPN Trakru

King Lalitaditya of Kashmir brought Atrigupta from Kanoj to Kashmir around AD 740, and requested Atrigupta to settle and live in Kashmir permanently. Another Scholar Sangmaditya who had married a Brahmin girl came to Kashmir in the course of his wanderings. Both Sangmaditya and Atrigupta were Saiva scholars and came to settle down in Kashmir. In the same period, the great Shankaracharya, who flourished between AD 780 and 820 visited Kashmir and was honoured there. The period between AD 750 and 900 appears to be full of activity in the field of Saiva monism in Kashmir.  And the fact that King Lalitaditya brought Atrigupta from Kanoj and requested him to settle permanently in Kashmir suggests that kings of Kashmir were also interested in this activity.

King Lalitaditya ordered a good house to be built on the bank of the river Vitasta (Jhelum) on a plot opposite the temple of Sitamusmalin (Siva) for Atrigupta to settle there permanently. A big jagir was granted to him for maintenance.

Atrigupta was a very learned Brahmin. He had attained scholarship in all branches of Knowledge in general and Siva shastra in particular. Atrigupta belonged to the Agastya gotra and was the ancestor of Abhinavgupta. Abhinavgupta’s grandfather was Varagupta. He was also a great scholar and a devotee of lord Siva. The Scholastic traditions were maintained in the family from generation to generation.

Abhinavgupta’s father, Narsimhagupta alias Cukhulaka was also a great scholar and had equal proficiency in all the Shastras. He too was a great devotee of Siva. Vimlakala  was Abhinav’s mother; she was a pious and religious lady. Narsimhagupta and Vimlakala made a happy couple and carried on household duties not for any worldly attachment but because it was ordained by the Shastras. Their family atmosphere was thoroughly religious and scholarly. Abhinavgupta was born to this couple between AD 950 and 960.

Abhinavgupta rose to the position of Acharya of the Siva sects in Kashmir by his exposition of the Siva philosophy and practice of life of a Siva yogi. It is believed among Saivas that it is only yoginibahu who can properly understand and intelligently propound the tenets of Siva monism. Hence he is believed to be a yoginibahu. According to Siva tenets the parents desirous of a son of the status of a yoginibahu, should rise above all worldly desires at the time of meeting. The mother should identify herself with Shakti and the father with Shiva. It is traditionally believed in Kashmir that Abhinavgupta was born of a yogini.

Abhinavgupta studied Mahabhasya under his father Cukhulaka. He was well versed in grammar. His proficiency in grammar is evident at every point in his writings. Pandit Vamancarya Jahalkikar says that Abhinav was sent to a pathshala when he was just a boy. His teachers were highly impressed by his versatile intelligence and keen memory. 

Abhinavgupta, born in a family, which had a long tradition of scholarship and devoutness to lord Siva. He spent every day of his life in an atmosphere, which was surcharged with scholarly and devotional spirit. Besides his parents, his family consisted of uncle Vamanagupta, a younger brother Manoratha and five cousins. His uncle Vamanagupta was a scholar and a poet. Abhinava studied under him for sometime. Abhinavgupta had an insatiable desire for learning, he studied different shastras under different teachers and even travelled out of Kashmir to do so. The teachers and the subjects he studied under them, are as follows:

Name of Teacher Subject
Narasimhagupta (his father)  Grammar
Vamanatha    Dvaita Tantra
Bhutiraja Brahmavidya
Bhutirajatanya Karma and Trika Darsana
Bhatta Induraja Dhvanyaloka
Bhatta Tauta Dramaturgy
Sambhunatha (from Jalandhara) Kaulgama

Abhinavgupta was greatly attached to his mother but while he was still a boy, the cruel hands of death snatched his mother away from him. After his mother's death the only center of attachment was his father, the focus both for his filial and papillary love. But his father also soon afterwards, renounced his worldly life and took the order of the saniyasin. These events turned away Abhinava's mind from all worldly attachments and he took to the path of devotion towards lord Shiva. The change was so firm that he made up his mind never to marry. This was a turning point in his life and it put an end to his interest in secular literature and his domestic life. Thenceforth he went from teacher to teacher in quest of Agamic knowledge, which would advance his spiritual leanings. His great work Tantraloka bears testimony to the great zeal with which he pursued the study of Agamic literature and the proficiency that he attained in it. His study of Agamas  appears to have begun under Lakshmangupta. He studied all the three branches of Agamic lore viz Krama, Trika, and Kula.  Pratyabhinjna system is a branch of Trika system.

Branches of monastic Shivasim Subject

Spanda     Prtyabhijna    Karma     Kula         

Teachers under whom he took guidance   

Vasugupta           Kallata          Bhaltenduraja     Somananda    Utpaladeva      Lakshamangupta  Bhairava      Sumatinatha        Helraja           Bhutiraja     Mukula         Sambhunatha

All these branches in monastic Saivism agree to the concept of ultimate principal. They have however shown different methods of realising that ultimate. Abhinavgupta having read and practiced all these methods was a proper person to synthesize them into one common system acceptable to all. He did that in his famous epitomic Tantraloka, a statement based on Shastra, Yukti and Anubhava. Which gave him the honour of being recognized as Acharya of all the sects.

Monastic Shiva Philosophy

It will be easy for us to get an idea of the philosophy of the Saiva system from Pratyabhijna literature. Saivasim both in theory and practice is open to all without any restriction of caste. One who has keen desire for knowledge and liberation is free to study and practice Saivism.  However there is a distinction between one who desires to practice Saivism and attain liberation in his life and the one who is keen on the study of Saiva philosophy with all its intricacies. For a simple follower of Saiva ritual, only firm determination will suffice but in the case of a person interested in Saiva Philosophy, determination alone will not do, he must posses knowledge of Vedas, Vedangas, six systems of Philosophy, Grammar and Tarka. Then only will he be able to understand and appreciate the necessity of the arguments in Pratyabhijna. The aim of all the systems of Indian philosophy in general and Pratyabhijna in particular is to help the individual in realization and to point out ways and means by which that end is to be achieved i.e. removing the evil of ignorance. All the systems of Indian philosophy hold that ignorance is the cause of bondage (Bandana) and only Knowledge is the cause of Moksha (liberation). Bondage according to Saiva philosophy is due to impurity (mala) which is of three types viz.1. Anavamala    2) Karmamala  3) Mayamala. They are explained as under:

Anavamala : This is innate ignorance, it consists in the loss of universality and cosequent forgetfulness of its true nature. It is mere consciousness of supposed imperfections.

Karmamala : It is of the nature of indefinite desire. The impurity of innate ignorance (Anavamala) is the condition of indefinite and limitless desire. It is a potential desire, which as such has no definite object. But when it actualises, it is responsible for countless association of the self with creations of Maya.

Mayamala : It is psycho-physical limitations, all that the self is associated with because of the said two impurities.

For Saiva Philosophy, the self-realization brings with it, an understanding in which there is a new interpretation and appreciation of the universe. According to this system, therefore, self-realization is self-recognition (Pratyabhijna). Self-realization in fact is a matter of divine grace, which comes through the agency of a guru. It may also come directly without the agency of guru. 

Every person knows that it is his soul, which knows and acts. Philosophy tells us that man's soul is identical with the universal soul. We are not conscious of the universal power of knowledge and action which is already there in us, because of the innate ignorance (Ajnana) which works as an impediment in the knowing of the real power of the soul. Unless we are made conscious of them we shall never recognize the nature of the soul and be conscious of it. It is to make us conscious of the power of knowledge and action, that Pratyabhijna is necessary. Our knowledge got from the reading of the philosophical books is intellectual (Bauddha jnana). It is not spiritual (Paurusa Janana).  The intellectual knowledge can only give us an idea of the universal power of the self. That does not suffice for liberation. It is only the spiritual knowledge that liberates us. The consciousness of these powers in us can change our whole personality so much that our attitude of viewing life becomes altogether different. This new and different interpretation of the universe, which leads us to extreme happiness, is the result of Pratyabhijna. The Pratyabhijna, therefore, removes our limited power of knowledge and action in respect of the soul and reveals before us the same soul in its universal form, the recognition of which leads us to happiness and gratification.

Conclusion

Abhinavgupta was the greatest Acharya of monastic Saivisim in Kashmir, his place among the ex-founders of monastic Saivasim is the same as that of Shri Shankracharya in expounding the advaita Vedanta. For Saivas in Kashmir, he was the final authority in the matter of Saiva thought and ritual. In the field of poetics and aesthetic thought, writers in that field have acknowledged him as the final authority. The absolute monastic thought of India flowed through two currents namely the Advaita Vedanta of Sankara and Saiva darsana of Abhinavgupta, one started from Nigama (veda) and other from Agama (Monistic Saivisim) But ultimately they meet in the same point in the form of realization of the absolute as One.

[Ref: Abhinavgupta  by  G .T. Deshpande]

Division of India


by JPN Trakru

My official tours took me to different parts of India. During the course of my travel I met people from different walks of life. On discussing the partition of India, I found majority of the people held  Nehru responsible for division of India. Recently, I read a book titled ‘The Man Who Divided India’ by Rafiq Zakaria.  He holds Jinnah wholly and solely responsible for the partition of India. I have attempted to give a gist of the details as enumerated in his book in chronological order.

Early years of Jinnah :

He did not have purely conventional Islamic background and therefore had no religious acceptance among the generality of Muslims. Jinnah could neither read the Quran nor did he say his prayers or fast during Ramzan. He did not perform Haj either. He was a bright and smart man having natural aptitude for law, which he studied in England. During his two years stay in London he practiced the art of oratory and specialized in cross examination. He loved to argue and score points.

Political Initiation :

Jinnah returned from England to Bombay where he applied for a job as Presidency Magistrate and got a temporary appointment. Subsequently he practiced law. He did not have any contact with his parents except his younger sister Fatima who came to live with him and served him as his companion for the rest of his life.

While in  Bombay he was drawn into politics and came in contact with Dadabai Nauroji, and later with Sir Ferozsha Mehta. He felt more comfortable with westernized Parsis than orthodox Muslims. He found the Congress more to his liking and not only attended but also took active interest in the deliberation of the 20th Annual Session of the Congress held at Bombay in December 1904. He later went to London as a Congress Member, with a delegation led by Gopal Krishan Gokhale where they pleaded for a larger share in administration for Indians. During this travel, he came in close contact with Gokhale who found Jinnah a young progressive Muslim, free from any communal prejudice. In his early days he was against the division of India favoured by orthodox Muslims like Sir Sayyed Ahmed Khan. Jinnah stood solidly by the agitating Hindu Bengalis during Hindu–Muslim agitations in 1906. Jinnah refused to join the All India Muslim League founded in Dhaka as a counter force to the Congress. By such actions, Jinnah became the darling of the Congress leaders. In 1906, the Viceroy assured Muslim leaders of Dhaka of a separate electorate. Jinnah strongly reacted against it,  fearing that the British policy of divide and rule would eventually harm the Muslims and deprive them of participation in national life. Jinnah collaborated with the Congress and actively worked against the Muslim communists calling them as the enemies of the nation. He deprecated the separatist policy advocated by the Muslim League.

However despite the protest by the Congress, the British made a provision for separate electorate for the Muslims in the Indian Council Act of 1909. At the 25th session of the Congress held at Allahabad in 1910, Jinnah moved a resolution condemning provision of reserving separate seats for Muslims in municipalities and other local bodies. He said it would sow the seeds of division between Hindus and Muslims. Despite this resolution Jinnah did not hesitate to take personal advantage of it and contested the election to the Viceroy’s Executive Council from the reserve Muslim constituency of Bombay and got elected. It was a turning point in his political carrier but he pursued it cautiously. He cleverly managed the contradictions in the two streams of communalism and nationalism. He also took care not to antagonize the Hindus while working for Muslims. 

The generality of Muslims felt alienated from him after he refused to support the Khilafat movement. But Gandhi supported it. Though isolated, Jinnah did not give up his efforts to unite the Hindus and Muslims to obtain constitutional reforms safe guarding the interests of the Muslims. The worst blow that he suffered was the rejection of his amendment to the Nehru Report of 1928. At first, the Hindus distrusted him but later even the Muslims doubted his motives. Consequently he was so disheartened that he decided to give up politics and retire in London. There too he made futile efforts to find new political pastures by trying to enter the House of Commons.

Jinnah however could not rest content for long, his burning desire was to be in the limelight and this drove him to regain his position. He came back to India with a new determination. From an avowed nationalist, he became an arch communalist. He took a aggressive anti-Hindu stand and concentrated all his energies on mobilizing the Muslims. He made it his mission to unite the Muslims and activate the morbid League. He became a born–again Muslim, hoping to rise on the convenient shoulders of communalism. In the process, he discarded Hindus but he could not easily mix with illiterate Muslim masses. He felt comfortable only among the western educated elite. Despite the arrogance in his approach, he managed to become the darling of the Muslims. He exploited their religious leaning and inculcated in them the fear of Hindu domination. He coined the two nation theory, stressing on vital differences between the Hindus and  the Muslims. He convinced the Muslims that Hindus would never share power with them. There sole objective, he told them was to oust the British and establish Hindu raj and subjugate them, so as to avenge the alleged atrocities committed by the medieval Muslim rulers.

His approach was totally changed from that of his earlier days until the last seven or eight years of his life. With this changed approach he made himself politically vulnerable, the British now accepted him as the authentic representative of the Muslims and eventually the Congress too conceded that status to him, even if unwillingly. He felt truly elevated when he was equated with Gandhi. He steadfastly pursued his objective to partition the country. He used every political means and organizational measures to counter his opponents and often had better of them. He did not deviate from armchair politics and still managed to win over the Muslim masses. He missed no opportunity to pour venom on the Congress and the Hindus but always kept the British on his side. Within the League, he was able to have complete sway. Jinnah’s weapon was not logic but debating skills in which few could equal him. Also there are indeed few instances in History were a leader had been able to achieve so much by doing so little except through play of words. He once remarked that he got Pakistan by using the services of his secretary and a typewriter.

It was purely a political move to fulfill his obsessive ambition. He played his game so cleverly that he not only amassed a huge following of the illiterate masses but also gathered around him such lieutenants who obeyed him blindly. He silenced his opponents and thus emerged as the unchallenged leader ‘The Quaid-I-Azam’ (the great leader).  Jinnah had no doubt used Islam to obtain his Pakistan but as soon as it came into existence, he clarified that he would run the newly born state on modern western lines. He believed in concentrating all powers in his hands and made that clear when he appointed himself as the Governor General of Pakistan. He had vowed that he would provide Muslims a separate homeland to free them from Hindu domination. But what has really happened is that they have been permanently enslaved, two thirds of them to the Hindus and remaining one third which constitutes Pakistan to power brokers and drug peddlers. A noted Pakistani author Ahmed Rashid has pointed out Pakistan has become the hotbed of the biggest smuggling racket in the world enmeshed with Pakistani smugglers, transporters, drug barons’ bureaucrats, politicians and army officers.

Inner Strength


by JPN Trakru

Man is born with a blue print from the past as a carry forward of all his deeds or misdeeds. With a new environment and a fresh opportunity provided he can try once again to mend his ways or plug in the pot holes, which he mined on his last sojourn. If you are lucky enough to come across a divine Guru, as a guide to light your path, think yourself blessed. The inverting darkness of ignorance that discriminated you from the light house of your Atma, that was your birth right, can be spiritually lifted with the loving benevolent father once again beckons you into ‘His’ fold.

The simplicity of Siddha path is open to one and all to heal us in Body, Mind and Soul in order to reverse the process from where we stand today. No prerequisites are required except the will to be healed. When faith in your own stamina is lost, it has an easier inflow towards another way of life, not hard to tour. Avdhoot Baba Shivananda’s (He is belongs to the Siddha lineage initiated by Bhagwan Nityananda) approach is so unbelievably simple that it is hard to believe the results till they actually show up. With simple chanting of god’s name, that is proclaimed as beneficial by every religion, Baba takes you to inaccessible dimensions. In fact, he does it all single handedly on the strength of his own Sadhana, what he transfers to us is sheer grace, a divine blessing and a benediction.

Chanting :
Most unobtrusively, revered Baba asks the audience to just sit with their eyes shut, and he undertakes to do the rest himself. With this one singular gesture which seems the easiest for any seeker to fulfill, he achieves tremendously. The total misleading by the eyes that has become the gateway of perception to all the senses of the body potential are immediately given the “shutters down” order to disconnect with the entire outside panorama at one stroke! The reversed sight or the insight is immediately switched on to the internal hemisphere on its first step towards unbounded infinity. There one contacts the essential ingredients of the human frame viz. the basic breath rhythm, the seven Chakras through which all outer stimuli makes an entry and the mind ego connection that separates us from the substratum-the Atma. Exploring within the higher domains through meditation seems to take one directly to the path of self-realization or the realization of what the self looks like today and what it can become after the cleansing process.

Value of Chanting :
Each body cell has its own frequency. With each movement, there is vibration and sound. To create harmony they have to move in unison. To create harmony they have to move in unison. Whenever, rhythm or harmony is disrupted there will be disease and disorder. One of the pivotal practices of Siddha marg is chanting. Congregational chanting has a most significant effect on the body and mind and due to the vibrating energy that it produces. Human cells respond to pure vibrations born of mantras of the Holy name and thus internal harmony is restored. Of all healing sounds that are the most potent, are redeeming names of God that have transforming powers to purify and lift one to a higher state of awareness. Its importance lies in making it the centrifugal force of life. Chants calm, clear and help the mind to rejuvenate beyond compare. Each word uttered leaves a subtle impression, erasing by its positivity the previous negative imprints. The pure syllables of the names of God are a powerful breakthrough into the mass of irrelevant thought process. They open up the higher state of awareness, bringing in clearer perception of us. Bathing in these purifying sounds opens up our heart, especially when we invoke ‘His’ presence and consequently we feel uplifted. Then our most stubborn and inborn faults are dissolved and annihilated.

Many of us visit the Babulnath temple. What do we find there? Yes! there is a Shiva ling with a snake coiled up around him in three and a half circles. Above this idol of Shiva ling and snake, housed over a stand with three legs is an earthen pot filled with water. There is a hole in this pot from where water is dripping down below. That’s how we offer water to Shiva as a mark of obeisance. In exactly the same manner there is a ling in the Muldhara Chakra of every human being. Kundalini Shakti-the serpent power-is coiled around Muldhara Chakra exactly in three and a half circles. Kundalini in Muldhaara Chakra is in dormant form. From Sahastrasar Chakra, elixir drips down on the shivaling drop by drop. The tripod like contraption in Shivaling is comparable to the three nadis i.e. Ida, Pingla and Sushana.

Ida and Pingla represent the force of the Moon and Sun respectively. This is a beautiful symbolic description of Shiva. It has been said that man is a replica of God. Our Siddhas have imparted this sacred knowledge in our Vedas, Puranas, Upnishads and other holy scriptures.

Shivpanchakshri Mantra 'Namah Shivaya' :
This mantra is drawn from the five elements of nature namely, Earth, Sky, Water, Air and Fire. This mantra is capable of cleansing up all these elements. Seed of this bija mantra has all the characteristics of its parent body. Shiva panchakshari mantra is evolved from the five seeds of aforesaid natural elements (Namah Shivaya) NA- consecrates Prithvi Tatav. Ma- Jal Tatva, Shi- energizes Agni Tatva, VA- Energizes Vayu Tatva and finally YA- Energizes Akash Tatva. ‘OM’ purifies Brahma Tatva and crown Chakra. 


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