Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Mantras and Vidyas -- Godhead as sound






There will be born at London English folk
whose mantra for worship is in the Phiringa (foreign) language, who will be
undefeated in battle and Lords of the World -
Meru Tantra, XXIII, 17th
century


The 51 matrikas (letters of the Sanskrit alphabet) constitute the
Goddess in the form of sound. This is why Kali wears a garland of 51 skulls
and it is also why these letters are shown on the petals of the six chakras.
The yantra above is called the Tortoise Chakra (source Gandharva Tantra)
and is used to determine whether the area a practitioner is working in is
inimical or not to his worship.


Below is the Matrika Chakra. This, says Ram Kumar Rai in his excellent
Encyclopaedia of Yoga
, is to be drawn with saffron (kesara) for
Shakti worship and with
ashes (bhasma) for
Shiva
worship. It contains all the 51 matrikas and is used in the first of the ten
rites to purify a mantra (samskara) after it has been received from a guru.
On the petals of the yantra are the consonants while the vowels are in the
eight spokes. In the centre is the syllable Hsauh while in the cardinal
directions is the Bam bija and in the intermediate directions the Tham bija
mantra.



Matrika Cakra
Perhaps one of the clearest expositions of the tantrik view of mantra is
given in Sir John Woodroffe's collection of essays, Shakti and Shakta,
chapter 24.


The supreme absolute (Parabrahman) exists in the human being (jivatma) as
Shabda Brahman, the absolute as sound. Mantras are not prayers and the
relationship of the letters of the Sanskrit alphabet, whether consonants or
vowels, he says, point to the appearance of devata (divinity) in different
forms. An uttered mantra is the manifestation of a more subtle sound while
mantras themselves are forms of
Kundalini. Mantras may
be male, female or neutral. Female mantras are called Vidyas.


"By Mantra the sought for (Sadhya) Devata appears, and by Siddhi therein
is had vision of the three worlds. As the Mantra is in fact Devata, by
practice thereof this is known. Not merely do the rhythmical vibrations of
its sound regulate the unsteady vibrations of the sheaths of the worshipper,
but therefrom the image of the Devata appears." (op cit) Mantras are
masculine (solar), feminine (lunar) or neuter. A female mantra is called a
vidya, which means knowledge, while solar and neuter forms are called
mantras. Mantras are only such if they were first revealed by a rishi or
seer. Only then do they have life, according to the tradition. A mantra can
only work if it is received from a
guru who has, herself or
himself, received it in an unbroken line from its first rishi. There are,
however, exceptions to this, according to some tantras which prescribe
methods of purification for mantras received in dream. And, according to
Mahachinachara, the
Kali mantra does not rely
on the very elaborate rules usually found in the Tantras.


In describing mantras, the different tantrik texts always give their
origin or rishi as well as the metre to pronounce them. While a mantra is
divinity in sound form, a yantra is the same in geometrical form and an
image the devata in gross form. Refer also to the page on
Tattvas on the
relationship between the consonants and the 36 tattvas.



Bija Mantras


The word Bija means a seed and describes a mantra which is usually of one
syllable. There are many tantrik 'dictionaries' of the matrikas which
indicate their significance as well as the meaning of the bija or seed
mantras. This section below draws information from the Bhutadamara
(BD); the Varnanighantu (VN), alleged to be part of the

Rudrayamala
; and
the Uddharakosha (UK), ascribed to Dakshinamurti. Longer mantras are
often formed from a concatenation of these bijas. The table below is not
exhaustive, there are many more bijas.































































































Om



Shrim



Hrim



Krim



Hum


















Aim



Phat



Krom



Svaha



Klim


















Hum



Hraum



Drim



Sphem



Plrem


















Klrim Svaha



Thah



Prim



Tham Tham Thah Thah



Sphim


















Hrum



Hrum



Hskphrem



Gam



Blum




Om is the most renowned bija mantra. The Bhutadamara describes it
as the face of Kala. Revealed by Mahakala, it is the form of creation,
maintenance and withdrawal.


The bija mantra Shrim is described as Vishnupriya - the beloved of Vishnu
- that is Lakshmi, according to the UK. The syllable Hrim is called the Maya
bija. It is also Raudri, according to the Bhutadamara. The UK describes it
as the Para or supreme bija. The bija mantra Krim is described as the
pitribhuvasini, that is the goddess who dwells in the ancestral or cremation
ground,
Kali. It is also
the dravana and kledana bija.


Hum with the long letter 'u' is called the Kurcha bija and is the mantra
of the Mother worshipped by heroes (viras). The Bhutadamara also
describes it as the mantra of Mahakala. Aim is called Vagbhava bija and is
the syllable of
Sarasvati,
according to the BD. Phat is the bija of the great fire at the end of time (Pralayagnirmahajvala).


Krom is called the Krodhisha bija. Svaha, otherwise known as Thah Thah,
is Vahnijaya, representing the fire sacrifice.


Klim is the deluder of the three worlds bija, also known as Kama or
Manmatha, the Hindu god of love, often identified with
Krishna. It is the
sexual desire bija, says the BD. Hum (with the short letter 'u') is called
the
Kavacha or armour
bija. It is the bija of Chandabhairavi. Hraim is the bija which destroys
great sins (mahapataka), and is the light mantra. Drim is called the great
Kinkini (small bell) bija, says the Bhutadamara.


Sphem is the Bhairava
(Shiva) bija which comes at the end of a yuga. Plrem is the Vetala (vampire)
bija, according to the Bhutadamara.


Klrim Svaha is called the bija which causes things to tremble. It is the
Manohari and ends in Thah Thah (Svaha, see above). The mantra Prim is the
crow bija, used in works of Indrajala (magic). The UK describes this bija as
the Vagura. Tham Tham Thah Thah are the bijas in the worship of the greatly
alluring Chandika, says the BD. Sphrim is the bija of the uncanny
Dhumrabhairavi (smoky Bhairavi), also known as Phetkarini.


The bija Hrum (with long letter 'u') is the single syllable mantra of
Kalaratri, the great night of time. The same bija, but with a short letter
'u', is the mantra of Vaivasvata.


Hskphrem, says the BD, is the bija mantra of Ananda Bhairava in the form
of one's own guru.


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