About the Book
"Bhaja Govidam" of Sailkara consists of thirty one slokas. Originally they were together known as : "Mohamudgaram" i.e., "Dispeller of delusion". Because of the popularity attained by the first line, these 31 verses, came to be commonly referred to as "Bhaja Govidam". The literal meaning of this term "Bhaja Govindam" is : "Worship Lord Krsna and utter His Name."
In these slokas, which are really addressed to the entire humanity, it is emphasized that man should repeat the name of God and thereby conquer his four inner enemies: Greed, Lust, Anger and Delusion, so that he can evolve into a higher Being.
He preached Adwaita philosophy. But at the same time, he believed in Bhakti. His hymns: Soundarya Lahari, Sivananda Lahari, Hari-Sailkara Stotra, Jagannatha Asaka and this work "Bhaja Govidam", not only emphasize on Bhakti but brim with poetic beauty. Sailkara lived only for 32 years. He was the first one to consider the entire Bharat as his field of activity. His missionary zeal was incomparable. In that hoary past, Sailkara traveled all over this country three times, on foot! Sailkara's Guru Govindapada was a Kashmiri, his Guru Goudapada was a Bengali and Goudapada's Guru, Patanjali was a Tamilian! These facts show that though there were hundreds of kings and mini-kings ruling over different kingdoms, spiritually and culturally India was always one!
The ideas in "Bhaja Govindam" are relevant even today. There are several books on this work of Sankara. But, this one is unique and perhaps the largest commentary on the subject. This is the third and revised edition of Bhaja Govindam. As predicted and expected by the renowned Jurist, Sri. N.A. Palkhiwala, this book is one of the popular products of Rahstriya Sanskrit Sansthan.
About the Author
Maharajapuram Natarajan Krishnamani was born on 26th April 1948. He was a product of Ramakrishna Mission Boys' High School, Chennai. He had his collegiate education in Vaishnav College, Presidency College, and Madras Law College. He had a brief political career between 1969 and 1975. He was also a Trade Union leader at that time. In 1975, under the influence of Sri Navajata of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondichery he left politics and plunged into spirituality. Enrolled as Lawyer in 1971, he had active practice in the Madras High Court upto 1981. He was a junior of the world renowned Constitutionalist Sri M.K. Nambiar and the famous Supreme Court Senior Advocate Sri K.K. Venugopal. He shifted his practice to the Supreme Court in 1981. When he was a young lawyer of 43 years, he was designated as Senior Advocate.
Sri Krishnamani is a prolific writer. His erudite articles have appeared in leading Dailies and in leading Journals on spirituality and current Affairs. Two of his books: "Bhaja Govindam" and "Godlymen & Their Golden Words" (Two Volumes) were published by Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan. His other books include: "Sankara, the Revolutionary", "Sai on Himself', "Sankara, Adwaita and Kancimaha". "Premopanisad" (Ten Volumes), "Divine Incarnation, a Mystery", and "From Doubt to Certainty",
Sri Krishnamani was the President of the Supreme Court Bar Association, which is a prestigious position, several times, He was the President of Delhi Tamil Sangam. He received the National Law Day Award for Excellence in Civil Law in 1998. He was given Paramacarya's Seva-Ratna Award in 2005. He received "Communal Harmony Award" in the year 2005. He was the President of the Delhi Tamil Education Association running seven schools in the capital and he is associated with several other educational and social welfare organizations including. Banyan Tree School, Lady Irwin Schools, Veda Parishad, Society for Communal Harmony. Sanataan Sangeet Sanskriti, Bharat Heritage Foundation, and International Sathya Sai Centre. He was a Visiting Faculty in the School of Planning and Architecture (a Deemed university) taking classes for Post Graduate students in Building laws, He is the Chairman, All India Senior Advocates Forum - a unit of the Bar Association of India, He was in the Governing Council of National Law School at Bangalore, At present he is a Member of the Governing Council of National Law School University, Bhopal.
Foreword
We are happy to bring out the second edition and fourth reprint of Bhaja Govindam authored by Shri M.N. Krishnamani. Shri Krishnamani is not only a legal luminary and one of the leading practitioners of law in the country; he has made original contributions to the study of Sanskrit literature by his writings. Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan has earlier published another work by this scholar entitled 'Godly Man And Their Golden Words' in the series of its Golden Jubilee Publications. Through these publications, Shri M.N. Krishnamani has established his credentials as an academician with a genuine interest in ancient wisdom.
Bhaja Govindam by Shri Krishnamani is indeed a land mark in the history of study of stotra literature of Sanskrit. With remarkable insight, Shri Krishnamani here presents authentic interpretation of each and every line of this stotra. His expositions lead us to a journey in the spiritual world.
Bhaja Govindam by Sri Adi Sankaracarya is a unique poem. As an intellectual and a great philosopher, Sri Sankaracarya revolutionized the whole scenario of philosophical discourse and world view. As a poet, his writings present rare synthesis' of philosophy and aesthetic vision. He has introduced entirely a new genre through Bhaja Govindam and also a new metre pajjhatika in Sanskrit poetry. This small poem also presents a meeting ground of classical Sanskrit and new Indo-Aryan languages and transition into new idioms of poetic expression. Sankaracarya here presents the empirical, psychic and the metaphysical worlds together. Each stanza in Bhaja Govindam assumes epic proportions: Shri Krishnamani has done a life long research works on this stotra and unearthed heitherto unknown aspects.
Sri Sankaracarya was not only a philosopher and a great poet gifted with a vision in intuition, he was a great organizer also. The circle of disciples like Suresvara, Padamapada and others accompanied him during his digvijaya. They formed an academy of letters. Therefore Shri Krishnamani has rightly discussed the contribution of these disciples in the composition of the stotra 'Bhaja Govindam'.
I am confident that this revised new edition of Bhaja Govindam will be received with appreciation by scholars and lovers of Sanskrit world.
Preface
Of "Bhaja Govindam" Cakravarti Rajagopalachariar
said:
"Sri Sankara has packed into the Bhaja-
Govindam song the substance of all Vedanta
and set the oneness of Jnana and Bhakti to
melodious music".
Shri Krishnamani, a Senior Advocate of Delhi has taken time off his busy professional preoccupation to write on this celestial confluence of Bhakti and Jnana. -I feel privileged to inscribe this Foreword to this work of devotion.
The lore has it that this beautiful Hymn to Govinda is Adi Sankara's compassionate upadesa to a scholar at Varanasi who was wasting his time on the subtleties of Sanskrit grammar to turn him towards God. Adi Sankara is said to have composed on the spot, twelve verses, the "Caturdasa Manjari Stotra". Some editions set them separately. there are also some differences in speculation as to the order in which the verses occur. The "Works 'of Sankaracarya" (Sri Vani vilas Press) sets out thirty one verses of this Hymn.
The second verse refers to the imperative of "vitrsnam" the de-thirsting of worldly desires. Indeed Patanjali defines "Vairagya" as "Drstanusravika-visaya-vitrsnasya Yasikara smjna vairagyam" (Yoga-Sutra: Sadhana Pada 15)
Adwaita explains the prevailingly absolutistic standpoint of upanisidic teaching by postulating one reality and the rest of the universe as its appearance. The classic of Adwaita epistemology "Vedanta Paribhasa" of Dharmaraja Adhavarin refers to how the one non-dual consciousness appears split ino Cogniser, Cognition and the Object. Empirically this is not possible to be explained. To say that this is the work of Maya is only to recognise it as inexplicable. The purpose of valid knowledge is therefore not to attempt to solve this insoluble issue of man's spiritual quest, but to go beyond it. The profound epistemological truths are the three upanisidic concepts of the 'Brahman'; that metaphysically 'He' is the central principle of all, ethically, 'He' orders everything and theistically 'He' is the goal of all philosophical quest. The Svetaswatara posits these questions: What is the source of this Universe? Whence are we born and by what we are sustained? What is our ultimate goal? Who guides our experience of joy and sorrow? and answers them; to say that the seers intuited that the source of all this is 'Devatmasakti' It is outside the reach of the conscious working of the mind and outside the perceptive senses. It is supra-rational and perceived only by higher levels of consciousness.
"Bhaja Govindam" stresses that pursuit of wealth for its own sake is a deadly illness and that equally deluding is that entrapment of lust. The last verse speaks of the liberating force of devotion to the lotus feet of the Guru.
Shri Krishnamani has secured for the reader this purificatory grace of the Guru by his commendable elaboration of the auspicious theme of Bhaja Govindam and earnt their gratitude. He has endeavored to unfold, the great beauty of the Indian philosophical traditions and the interesting dimensions of their curiosities. He has indicated that if knowledge should shape itself into values, it needs to be turned into action. .
It is for these great values and of traditions of our ancient land that Max Muller said:
"If I were asked under what sky the human mind has most fully developed some of the choicest gifts, has most deeply pondered over the greatest problems of life and has found solutions to some of them which well deserve the attention even of those who have studied Plato and Kant, I should point to India."
By this earnest work of dedication, Shri Krishnamani has earnt the goodwill of all the Astikas.
Introduction
Bhaja Govindam was composed by Adi Sankara when he was amused to find an old Pandit taking pains to memorise by rote a particular 'Rule of Grammar' in Sanskrit called 'Dukrn Karane'. This incident happened in Varanasi (Benaras) when Sankara was on yatra with his disciples in Eastern UP in North India. When he saw that Pandit memorising the Rules of Grammar by rote, Sankara advised him on the spot that the Rules of Grammar would get him nothing at that old age and that instead of wasting his time in such pursuits; the old man should devote his time in spirituality since already he had wasted a bulk of his life-time. This was the motivation for Saizkara to come out with a garland of thirtyone flowers known together as "Bhaja Govindam".
In this context, it is interesting to remember that Sankara's Guru Govindapada came to Gaudapada only to learn Sanskrit Grammar. Sankara's Guru's Guru Gaudapada was a student of Patanjali who was a Sanskrit grammarian. He was also the author of the famous 'Yoga Sutra'. It is ironical that Saizkara is riduculing the study of grammar and the over-importance given to it by the old man in Bhaja Govindam, when his Guru, his Guru's Guru and his Guru's Guru's Guru were all great grammarians! A careful analysis of all the thirtyone slokas would show that Sankara has referred to "grammar" only as a symbolism. By "grammar" he means all mundane pursuits for one's sheer material living.
How they became thirtyone?
After the above incident, coming back to his camp with his disciples, Saizkara ruminated over this amusing event. Sankara, a lad of just thirteen years felt that like this old Pandita, the entire humanity was steeped in mundane pursuits hampering its further evolution to become Divine. The too much of animalistic existence of man throughout his life irked Sankara. Sankara does not say in these verses that everyone should become a monk even in childhood. He felt that man being too much involved and engrossed in, and too much worried about his material pursuits would ruin himself and take himself away from his real goal.
Sankara felt so, out of compassion to the entire humanity. This prompted him to initially compose twelve slokas advising the entire humanity as to how human life is a precious opportunity and how the short life-span of man cannot be allowed to be wasted in routine animal and sub-human activity. The telve verses initially composed by Sankara were together known as "Dwadasamajari". Thereafter his principal disciples numbering fourteen composed one sloka each. The total with these fourteen came to twentysix slokas. It will be difficult to find any difference between the slokas composed by Sailkara and the ones composed by his sisyas. In poetic beauty and in profundity of meaning, the slokas composed by Sankara's sisyas were of equal excellence. One has to remember that these sisyas have composed their fourteen slokas based on Sankaras teachings only and by drawing inspiration from Sankara himself.
After hearing his disciples' fourteen slokas, Sailkara was immensely pleased with their marvellous capacity in imbibing his views and in expressing those views in simple but ryhthmical Sanskrit poetry. In that pleasant mood and in that ecstasy, Sankara composed five more slokas and then brought the total of thirtyone! All these thirtyone slokas were originally given the name "Mohamudgaram" by Sankara. "Mohamudgaram" in Sanskrit means the "dispeller of delusion". Later, in view of the fame acquired by the opening verse, which starts with the words "Bhaja Govindam", these thirtyone verses came to be referred to as "Bhaja Govindam", Though fourteen of these slokas were actually composed by his sisyas, they are very much Sankara's oritinal views. However, of these sisyas, who composed the fourteen slokas and which sisya composed which particular slokas are also essentially Sankara's views, all the thirtyone slokas are broadly referred to in this book, as the work of Sankara.
An Adwaitin preaching Bhakti
It is well-known that Sankara was avowedly preaching "Adwaita philosophy" which means "non- dualism" and as a part of his 'Adwaita doctrine, he was engaged in "maya vada", i.e., theory of illusion, in which he went to the extent of claiming that like in a dream, all we see in life in the wakeful state are also unreal and an illusion and that the only reality is the Almighty as pure Divine Consciousness, formless and nameless. Pure Adwaita rejects the idea of a personal God. At this level, God is one and he is formless, all-pervasive, infinite and nameless. For an 'adwaitin it is impossible to believe in idol-worship. It is very surprising in the face of this, that such a personality, who was known as a great exponent of Adwaita to have composed "Bhaja Govindam", "Soundaryalahari", "Sivanandalahiri", "Ramanatha Astaka", "Jagannatha Astaka", "Kanakadharastavam", "Daksinamurti Stotra", etc., praising bhakti marga as the best and the most easy path. Of all these works Bhaja Govindam is marvellous since Sankara, in these thirtyone verses, emphasises the need for pure bhakti, establishing by logical arguments as to how material pursuits are pointless, and also by indicating that bhakti is the basis for other paths too, if those paths have to bear the expected fruit.
If in other paths, you go in one speed towards God, in bhakti you go in double speed! Swami Bodhananda of Ramakrsna Matha says:
"God's soul-hunger is infinitely more
intense than the soul's God-hunger."
Yes! It is very true. a Sufi Saint also said poetically:
"When the spark of love arises here, It is
reciprocated there! When love of God
emerges in thee Without doubt God also
feels love for thee"
Sri Satya Sai Baba’s following assuring words are
interesting:
"If you come one step towards Me I will
come ten steps towards you! If you come walking to Me, I will come running to you!"
The complete knowledge of God which is synonymous with Self-realisation, is the fulfillment of pure devotion. Without unsullied bhakti you may only have an idea of what Self-realisation means. But you cannot experience it without total self-surender which is the acme of pure bhakti. That is why,. though a great vedantin and an adwaitin, Sankara emphasises on bhakti as the main means. Sankara could be said to be the father of bhakti cult. It is only in the post-Sankara period, Saints like Jnana Sambandha of South India and later on other Saints like Caitanya Mahaprabhu, Tukaram, Jnaneswar, Namadeva, Kabira, Mira and other took to and propagated bhakti marga.
No conflict between the three philosophies
Bhaja Govindam. shows another important thing. The popular belief that Adwaita was opposed to Dwaita (dualism) and Visistadwaita (qualified non dualism) and that it was against worship of a personal God is all dispelled by this work of Sankara. In Hinduism for a person who looks at it on a superficial understanding, there would appear to be innumerable conflicts. On a proper understanding, there are absolutely no conflicts in it at all.
On the other hand, there is a perfect harmony. Hinduism affords a religion which is ideally suited to the modern man. If affords him maximum liberty of thought. Man craves for liberty outside as well as within. It is well known that Vedas and Upanisads are the basic spiritual books for Hindus. They are like Bible to a Christian and Quran to a Muslim. Yet, Hinduism states that after knowing and understanding the Vedas, a devotee, a Sadhaka has to reject them and go beyond them. Amrtabindupanisat says:
"After studying the Vedas, the intelligent
one who is solely intent on acquiring
knowledge and realisation, should discard
the Vedas altogether, as a man who seeks
to obtain rice, discards the husk."
In his bhakti sutra, Sage Narada says that a devotee should reject even the Vedas, upon reaching a particular stage.
Contents
Blessings : Swami Paramananda Bharati, Srngeri Sankaracarya Mutha, Srngeri
v
Preface: Hon'ble Mr. Justice M.N. Venkatachaliah (Former Chief Justice of India)
vii
Preface to 2nd edition Shri O.P. Malhotra
Letter from N .A. Palkhivala
Letter from Hon'ble Mr. Justice B.L. Hansaria
Acknowledgement
xvii
Instructions to read the book
xix
1
Mundane erudition is useless
19
2
Faith in karma alone gains contentment
31
3
Sex craving-nip it in bud
41
4
Life is ephemeral
49
5
Your relatives? Aye! your money's relatives!
57
6
Body vacated by life-force: even wife is afraid of Why bharya bibhyati?
7
Oh! Rich man! Beware! Even of your son!
73
8
Time waste is life waste
85
9
Strange indeed, is this cycle of life & death
101
10
Satsanga leads to liberation
11
Right knowledge is the way to immortality
123
12
Destroy pride, else it will destroy you
131
13
Time passes with ticks of clock, but grips of desire leave' you not'
139
14
Of what avail is the shaving of the scalp?
15
Oh! Wrinkled and bald man, old! Why not you get free from desires' hold?
151
16
Desire is a challenge, even to a sanyasi
159
17
Go beyond ritual! * Apparent contradiction * How can you see God with your limited vision?* Divine grace is a pre-requisite * Conclusion
165
18
You want bliss? Then renounce *Sadashiva Brahmendra * Real Bliss lies in Self-realisation * Conclusion
173
Fix your mind on God; bliss you get unsought
179
20
It is the right resolve which matters
185
21
Seek the company of the holy. It is not too late
193
22
Cycle of births-and-deaths; end it, Oh! Krishna!
23
How can you understand the God-intoxicated
207
24
This world is but a dream!
25
Achieve non-duality by seeing God in everyone
221
26
Equanimity leads to Divinity
229
27
Self-knowledge dispels superstitions
235
28
Three-in-one path speeding up spirituality-c. sat-nama, sat-sanga and sevd
29
What a pity? Knowingly you fall into a ditch
257
30
Stilling and killing of mind the way to God
263
You are God, playing hide and seek with yourself
271
Epilogue
281
Glossary
289
Bibliography
313
General Index
319
Index to Slokas
327
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