Glimpses Of Vedic Literature

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Item Code: NAE235
Author: Kireet Joshi
Publisher: STANDARD PUBLISHERS (INDIA)
Edition: 2012
ISBN: 9788187471646
Pages: 253
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 9.0 inch X 6.0 inch
Weight 520 gm
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Book Description
About The Book

Vedic Literature is a most precious treasure of Indian wisdom. The literature is vast, and includes not only the four Vedas but also Brahmanas, Aranyakas and Upanishads. As a part of the history of India, this literature constitutes a source material for understanding various aspects of Indian culture as it has grown and developed over millennia. For every lover of India, therefore, it becomes essential to turn to the portals of the Vedic literature.

An attempt has been made in this book to present to a beginner some of the most important portions of this vast literature. The Veda contains secret knowledge, and the language used to express that knowledge is symbolic and therefore, not easily intelligible. Sri Aurobindo, has, in his great work Secret of the Veda, expounded his discovery of the secret knowledge that is contained in the Veda. An attempt has been made to reflect that discovery while expounding selected passages which have been collected in this book.

India is passing through a period of Renaissance, and it is felt that the recovery of the knowledge contained in the Veda is an essential task, since the future can securely be built only if it is based on the foundations which were built in the ancient times. This book will, therefore, be found relevant to the needs of all those who are keen to conceive and formulate a meaningful vision of the future of India.

About The Author

Kireet Joshi (b. 1931) studied philosophy and law at the Bombay University. He was selected for l.A.S. in 1955 but in 1956 he resigned in order to devote himself at Pondicherry to the study and practice of the Integral Yoga of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother. He taught Philosophy and Psychology at Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education at Pondicherry and participated in numerous educational experiments under the direct guidance of The Mother. In 1976, Government of India invited him to be Educational Adviser in the Ministry of Education. In 1983, he was appointed Special Secretary to the Government of India, and held this post until 1988. He was Member-Secretary of Rashtriya Veda Vidya Pratishthan from 1987 to 1993. He was appointed Vice Chairman of the UNESCO Institute of Education, Hamburg, from o 1987 to 1990. In the Ministry of Education, he was in-charge of Higher Education of National Commission on Teachers, Languages, Youth Affairs and UNESCO affairs. He had been the Chairman of Auroville Foundation, Chairman of Indian Council of Philosophical Research (ICPR) and is advisor to Govt. of Gujarat in Department of Higher Education.

His published works include: Sri Aurobindo and Integral Yoga, Sri Aurobindo and The Mother, Education for Character Development, Education for Tomorrow, Education at Crossroads, Philosophy and Yoga of Sri Aurobindo and other Essays, Veda and Indian Culture, Vedic Vangamaya Ek Jhalak and Ved aur Bhartiya Sanskriti etc.

Introduction

There are a number of people in our country who have heard of the Veda but have practically no idea of the Vedic literature and its contents. There is, therefore, a need to present to them a few introductory notes, which might provide some basic information about the Vedas, Brahmans, Aranyakas and Upanishads, which constitute the core of the Vedic literature. it is to meet this need to some extent that these notes have been attempted.

These notes avoid scholarly discussions. They do not even touch the fringe of the Vedic literature and, therefore, the series of these notes has been entitled “Glimpses of Vedic Literature”. It is hoped that these notes will provide to readers some such basic information, which would stimulate them to turn to larger books on the subject.

The significance of the Veda lies in the following facts:
1. The Veda is acknowledged as the earliest available literary composition of humanity;
2. The text of the Veda has substantially remained uncorrupted for over two thousand years, and the sanctity of the text has prevented interpolations, alterations and modernising versions;
3. The Veda has been regarded as authoritative in the entire tradition of the Vedic literature, which covers not only the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas and the Upanishads, but also the Puranas, and doctrines of orthodox philosophical schools, which continue to develop up to the present day, besides the teachings of most of the saints and sages of India;
4. The Veda contains secret knowledge,—knowledge of the highest spiritual truth of which the human mind is capable and its relationship with the world and the individual and collective life in the world and on the earth.

The difficulty in uncovering the secret of the Veda is very great because the language of it is symbolic and it has double aspect. The Rishis who composed the hymns of the Veda, arranged the substance of their thought in a system parallelism in which the key words signify cosmic forces beings and at the same time indicate to their internal external powers. Those, therefore, who do not grasp the internal powers of these forces and beings, are likely to miss secret and the meaning really intended to be communicated.

This secret was known to the Upanishads. Indeed, the entire Indian tradition acknowledges that behind the external meaning, the Veda contains a secret internal meaning. But the secret meaning came to be ignored in course of time, and the general impression became widespread that the Veda is a book of rituals and myths very much incomprehensible. Fortunately, during the second decade of the last century, Sri Aurobindo studied the Veda not only in the light of various interpreters but also in that his own yogic experiences, and discovered the internal secret of the Veda, which he expounded in two of his great works, “The Secret of the Veda” and the “Hymns to the Mystic Fire.”

Sri Aurobindo found that Yaska and Sayana need to be studied for the outward meaning of the symbols used in the Veda as also for the commonplace, traditional significances and explanations. He also found that European scholarship has obliged us to adopt the critical method of comparative research, which still needs to be perfected. From Maharshi Dayananda, he received the clue to the linguistic secret of the Rishis as also the idea of the one Supreme Reality, which is described variously in the form of numerous gods and goddesses. But it was in the Upanishads that he found the real key to the understanding of the psychological and philosophical ideas of the Vedic Rishis. Above all, Sri Aurobindo discovered in the Veda those secrets, which he had happened to arrive at through his own yogic realisations.

As we read Sri Aurobindo’s work on the Veda, we feel convinced that the latter is a book of knowledge and that it is not, contrary to the view of many modern interpreters, confused in thought or primitive in its substance, a medley of heterogeneous or barbarous elements, but is a composition having overarching unity, in spite of being the compilation of contributions of hundreds of Rishis, old and new. We find that the Veda is self-conscious in its purpose and purport, even though that is veiled, sometimes thickly and sometimes transparently. The Veda, we find finally, never loses sight, even for a single moment, of its aim to arrive at he loftiest realisations of consciousness as also their applications to human problems and perfectibility.

The most important discovery of the Veda was that of a pane of consciousness where activities and manifestations are only of the Truth and the Right (satyam, ritam). Rishis called that consciousness “Rita-Chit”, “Truth-consciousness”. The Vedic Rishis had found out methods by which the human mind can find an entry into that consciousness and can then be liberated from the human limitations.

It is here that we find direct relevance of the Veda to our own times. If we study the root cause of the crisis through which humanity is passing today, we shall find that it has arisen from the inability or refusal of human consciousness to transcend its limitations, even when the surpassing of these limitations is very much imperative and urgent. The problems of war and peace, environmental degradation, misuse of scientific and technological advancement, mechanical and dehumanising hugeness of structures of organisation and governance, breakdown of the value systems, downward pull of the unbridled search for wealth and pleasure and of exploitation and domination demand effective solution. Moreover, these solutions are required to serve as the alchemy by which human limitations can be broken and surpassed. It is for this reason that Sri Aurobindo has stated that the secret concealed in the Vedas, when entirely discovered, will be found to formulate perfectly that knowledge and practice of a divine life to which the march of humanity after long wanderings in the satisfactions of the intellect and the senses must inevitably return.

As is well known, Sri Aurobindo discovered that very plane of consciousness of Truth and Right, which the Vedic Rishis had discovered and he called it the plane of the Supermind. Not that he arrived at this discovery after studying the Veda. His was not derived knowledge but what he discovered of the Supermind on his own got confirmed by what he later learned from the Veda and the Upanishads.

In keeping with the tradition of the Vedic knowledge, which welcomes new discoveries and new developments, Sri Aurobindo not only developed what has now come tobe called Integral Yoga, which absorbs in its synthesis all essential elements of the Vedas and the Upanishads as also of the other yogic traditions but also envisaged a new aim. That new aim is not only attainment of the Supermind by ascending its greater and greater heights but also making the Supermind descend on the earth so that humanity can take the next evolutionary step by a process of mutation of the human species.

This is not the place to enter into the subject of the supra-mental manifestation on the earth. However, it would be sufficient to state that Sri Aurobindo has shown how that manifestation is directly relevant to the needs of the contemporary crisis.

But how can that manifestation be accomplished without the recovery of the knowledge of the Supermind that is already formulated in the Veda? Many, who are not acquainted with the inner meaning of the Veda, have an impression that the Veda contains simply prayers and prescriptions for sacrifices, religious rites and ceremonies. This is a misconception and, therefore, needs to be removed, articu1arly when the modern mind is apt to dismiss anything that is related to rituals and mechanical ceremonies connected with religious creeds and beliefs.

Let us make it clear that the realisations which the inner meaning of the Veda brings out can be attained and practised independently of religious rituals and ceremonies. It may also be mentioned that the religious tradition, which looks upon the Veda as its origin, acknowledges that there beyond religion the practice of Yoga, which aims at bringing transformation to consciousness by methods which are psychological and not ritualistic. It is this Yogic practice is described in its depth, loftiness and integrality in Veda. The Vedic prayer, in its internal aspect, is fundamentally an aspiration, which is not mechanical, but spontaneous and an irresistible process of quest. The Vedic sacrifice is, in its internal character, an act of self-offering so that the egoistic consciousness is abolished from all the psychological processes. The Vedic gods are in their internal character cosmic powers and beings representing different aspects of the one Ultimate Reality.

Sri Aurobindo has discovered, through the internal evidence of the Veda itself, what each cosmic power and being (Godhead) stands for. The names of the Godheads are keywords, and if the inner meanings of these keywords are known, it becomes easier to understand the secret of the Veda. For example, according to Sri Aurobindo, Agni stands for the Illumined Will, Indra for Illumined Intelligence that can bestow Divine Light, Savitri is the Creator and Increaser, Usha the Spiritual Dawn, Bhaga the Supreme Enjoyer, Vayu the Master of the Life Energies, Brihaspati the Power of the Soul, Ashwins the Lords of Bliss, Vishnu the All-Pervading Godhead and Soma the Lord of Delight and Immortality. These and other keywords and their inner meanings become very useful to all those who want to practise Yoga and get verified the truths of the Vedic knowledge.

It may be added that Yoga is scientific in character, since it is non-dogmatic and emphasises the processes of observation, experimentation, comparison, experience and verification of experience by means of abiding realisation. The contents of Yogic realisation are not creeds or beliefs but are articles of knowledge, which can be repeated through fresh experimentation, and also can be expanded, sublimated and surpassed or integrated into the higher states of knowledge.

When we enter into the Veda, we should underline its Yogic character, and should feel free to inquire, question and ask for verification. Students of the Veda must be pure seekers, free from prejudices and pre-possessions, always ready to undergo askesis and selfless and unegoistic search. The Vedic Rishis were great seekers and what they have described in the Veda are the records of their search, their methods of search as well as the results of their search. Their call is to make of us such seekers as they were.

The purpose of these notes is not to enter into the vast and profound contents of Vedic knowledge; the purpose is much more limited. It is only to help a beginner to get acquainted with an outline of the development of the Vedic literature starting from the Vedic Samhitas up to the Uanishads. It is just to introduce to the beginner the ABC of the Vedic literature; for the rest, there are a number of important and valuable books and it is hoped that these notes will make it easier for the beginner to enter into the deeper and vaster ocean of the Vedic literature and knowledge.

Contents

Introduction7
Part I
1The Four Vedas17
2Rigveda21
3Rigveda (contd.)27
4Vedic Concepts of the Ultimate Reality33
5Vedic World - Knowledge37
6Yajurveda43
7Yajurveda (contd.)47
8Samaveda55
9Atharva Veda59
10Brahmanas65
11Brahmanas (contd.)71
12Aranyaka Literature81
13Upanishads85
14Upanishads (contd.)91
15Upanishads (contd.)97
16Upanishads (contd.)105
17Upanishads (contd.)111
18Kathopanishad117
19Kathopanishad (contd.)121
20Taittiriya Upanishad127
21Taittiriya Upanishad (contd.)133
22Taittiriya Upanishad (contd.)139
23Mandukya Upanishad145
24Mundaka Upanishad153
Part II
25The Veda in the Light of Shri Aurobindo167
26Yogic Science and Vedic Yoga187
27Vedic Ideals of Education and their Contemporary Relevance197
I. Our Contemporary Search197
II. Vedic Knowledge198
III. Vedic System of Education202
IV. Relevance of Vedic System of Education to Our Needs207
28Spirituality, Science and Technology217
29Yoga, Religion and Morality221
30Yoga, Science, Religion and Philosophy229
31Yoga and Knowledge239
Validity of Yogic Knowledge240
Internal knowledge242
Elementary Methods and Techniques for Internal Knowledge243
Three Movements Leading Up to Realisation246
Yoga and Science248
Index251
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