Re: Vedas/Upanishads
From the Bhakti List Archives
• August 25, 1995
> Personally, I find the dryness of the Upanishadic / Vedantic pompous > intellectualism and denial of things earthy quite pallid in comparison to > the Vedas that are pretty much chock full of verve =) I encourage people to > give them a second look. As a suggestion, avoid common Indian authors and > commentators, they seem to hidebound by tradition and a denial of what > the Vedas express, in light of the aforementioned straitlaced and straight > faced tradition to publish the "interesting" parts or even consider them > *griN!* It's kind of like reading the Song of Solomon in a Catholic Bible - > with repeated admonitions to " wake not love before its time".. *griN!* > Which is a little different, you must admit from the sensual import of > " O cluster of Henna blossoms! Thy satchel of myrrh! " > > Oh well =) Maybe I *am* an anachronist at heart... > > - SUndar > Sundar, I am glad you put forward your opinion boldly. For an un-common *Indian* interpretation of the Vedas, read Sri Aurobindo's exciting work "The Secret of the Vedas", Sri Aurobindo Centenary Library Vol. 10. I was completely gripped by the brilliant originality of his method. His hypothesis is that Vedas used its language with dual meanings - an external ritualistic and an internal psychological one. Sri Aurobindo first rejects Sayana's commentary on the basis of its fluctuating and gross interpretation of important words. "Sayana gives to the words dhI, rtam, etc., very variable significances. Rtam which is almost the key-word of any psuchological or spiritual interpretation is rendered by him sometimes as "truth", more often "sacrifice", occassionally in the sense of Water. DhI is rendered by Sayana variously "thought", "prayer" "action", "food" etc... Moreover Sayana's tendency is to obliterate all fine shades and distinctions between words and to give them their vaguest general significance. All epithets conveying ideas of mental activity mean for him simply "intelligent", all words suggesting various ideas of force, and the vedas overflow with them, are reduced to the broad idea of strength. I found myself, on the contrary, impressed by the great importance of fixing and preserving the right shade of meaning and precise association to be given to different words, however close they may be to each other in their general sense...." As a clue to his own interpretations, Sri Aurobindo points: "The vedic sacrifice consists of three features, - omitting for the moment the god and the mantra, - the persons who offer, the offering and the fruits of the offering. .., Yajna is works, internal or external, the yajaman must be the soul or the personality as the doer. But there were also the officiating priests, hota, rtvij, purohita, brahma, ashvaryu etc.What was their part in the symbolism? ... the use of the word purohita in its separated form with the sense of the representative "put in front" and a frequent reference to the god Agni who symbolises the divine Will or Force in humanity that takes up the action in all consecration of works. ... But I found that ghrta was constantly used in connection with thought or the mind, that heaven in Veda was a symbol of the mind, that Indra represented mentality and his two horses double energies of that mentality and even that the Veda sometimes speaks plainly of offering the intellect (dhisaNA) as purified ghrta, to the gods, ghrtam na pUtam dhisaNAm. The word ghrta counts also among its philological significance the sense of a rich or warm brightness.... The fruits of the offering were in appearance purely material - cows, horses gold, offspring, men, physical strength, victory in battle. ... The word gO means both cow and light and in a number of passages evidently meant light even while putting forward the image of the cow... The cow and horse, gO and asva are constantly associated. Usha, the Dawn, is described as goMatI and asvavatI; Dawn gives to the sacrificer horses and Cows. As applied to the physical dawn, gOmatI means accompanied by or bringing the rays of light and is an image of the dawn of illumination in the human mind... A study of the Vedic horse led me to the conclusion that go and asva represent the two companion ideas of Light and Energy, Consciousness and Force, which to the Vedic and Cedantic mind were the double or twin aspect of all the activties of existence." I strongly recommend reading the full work. But, be warned that it is a massive albeit lucid work. Raghu
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