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Durgaa Sapt Shatee

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Durgaa Sapt Shatee-Introduction-2

Durgaa Sapt Shatee, or Devee Mahaatmya or Chandee Paath

Our longings are fundamentally very deep and cannot be easily satisfied by temporary makeshift or a day-to-day adjustment of outer circumstances. Our desires are profound; our yearnings are very unintelligible to the outer atmosphere of our daily life. We seem to have a root which is deeper than what can be comprehended by our normal understanding of the world. We grow from all sides, and when we long for, or desire, or yearn, or aspire, we do so in a very comprehensive manner. This aspiration of the human being is really the soul's longing for freedom. All our desires are desires of the soul, ultimately. Though they look like sensory desires, mental desires, intellectual desires, social desires, etc., they are, at the bottom, the longing of the soul of the human being, which ramifies itself into various distracted rays through the operations of the mind and the activities of the senses.

Our longings are, therefore, capable of being collected into a single essential power, an inward urge, which we may call the longing for freedom. It is freedom that we ask for and it is freedom that anyone asks for. Varieties of longings and multitudes of enterprises in the world can be collected into a single focus of the soul's aspiration for liberation. And this aspiration for liberation is not merely the longing of the human being, but of all that is created anywhere on earth or in heaven. Whether it is the plant or the animal, whether it is a man or a celestial, the aspiration is this much. All longings can be boiled down into the quintessence of the longing for liberation, freedom from all sides and an ultimate supremacy over one's own self in the realization of this freedom.

The Devee Mahaatmya which is a majestic poetry in Sanskrit, describes to us the epic of the march of the human soul to its destination - the realization of this freedom - is the dramatic aspect of the great worship of the Divine Mother during these nine days of Nava Raatri, or Dashaharaa as we call it. The march of the soul is dramatic. It is not a lagging or a crawling but a beautiful, sonorous, musical advent, we may say. This is the beauty of the Devee Mahaatmya. All epics have this particular character of grandeur, uplifting the emotions, and chastening the intellect of the devotee who goes through them.

The Devee Mahaatmya, which is a part of the Maarkandeya Puraan, contains thirteen chapters which are grouped into three sections known as the Pratham Charitra, Madhyam Charitra and the Uttam Charitra. As in the Bhagavad Geetaa sometimes we are told that the eighteen chapters can be grouped into three sections of teaching, consisting of six chapters in each, the Devee Mahaatmya also, which is an epic counterpart of the methods of the Bhagavad Geetaa in its practical implementations, is capable of a division into three sections.

The march of the soul is graduated into three major steps, though there are many minor steps involved in these three major ones. While we have to rise through various rungs of the ladder of evolution, we come to three points or halting places, we may call them, where there is a complete transformation of outlook, attitude and constitution of our being. These threefold transformations of the spiritual being of the aspiring soul are dominated or presided over by three deities known as Mahaa-Kaalee, Mahaa-Lakshmee and Mahaa-Saraswatee. These three presiding forces are representative of the powers of the spirit within manifesting themselves in an upward ascent towards freedom ultimate, so that in this march of the soul to its freedom, it carries with it everything that is connected with it. The difference between the spiritual march and your march along the road or a highway is this: that while in your march on a roadway, you alone walk and nobody need accompany you, nothing need be connected with you, and you can have a free walk independently, in the spiritual march, it is not such an isolated march because you carry with you everything that is connected with you.

Now, what are the things connected with you that you carry? There are four stages of this relationship. Consciously we are related in a particular manner and subconsciously we are related in another manner altogether. Consciously, we people seated in this hall for example, have a particular sort of relationship among ourselves, but subconsciously our relationships are of a different kind altogether and they need not tally with our conscious relationship. And deeper still, we have a layer where our relationship is more akin to a unity of life than to a diversity of personality. There is a fourth stage which is incapable of any description at all. We do not know whether we are to call it a unity or a diversity, or oneness or otherness. This is the goal towards which the soul is marching. So, in the description of the Devee Mahaatmya, we are carried forward psychologically and spiritually to our destination of the ultimate realization.

There are three stages of transformation described in the three sections of the Devee Mahaatmya. The first one is where Aadi-Shakti awakens Mahaa Vishnu who was asleep, so that He may destroy or overcome the original demoniacal forces, Madhu and Kaitabh. The second stage is where the same Shakti manifests Herself as Mahaa-Lakshmee and overcomes Mahishaasur and Raktbeej. The third one is where Shumbh and Nishumbh are destroyed by Mahaa-Saraswatee. And the nine days of worship, which are referred to as Nava Raatri, comprehend these three stages adored in three days of worship, each. The final victory is called Vijayaa Dashamee, the tenth day. That is the day of Victory, where you master the forces of Nature completely and your goal is reached. When you step over nine, you enter into Infinity. Numbers are only nine; you do not have ten numbers. All the arithmetic is within nine numbers only. The whole cosmos is within nine. But when you transcend the nine, you have gone to Infinity, which is beyond cosmic relationship.

The lower powers of Nature are like dirt. We call them Mal (impurities or dirt). "Vishnukarn ­ malodbhooto hantum brahman mudyato, " says the Devee Mahaatmya. The Madhu and Kaitabha, two Raakshas (demons) are supposed to have come out of the dirt of the ear of Vishnu. The lowest category of opposition is of the nature of dirt (Mal); and psychologically, from the point of view of the seeking soul, this dirt is in the form of Kaam, Krodh and Lobh. "Kaam eesh krodh aesh rajo-gun samudbhavah", "Kaamah krodhastathaa lobhah tasmat etat trayam tyajet": It is desire and anger born of Rajas; desire, anger and greed - these three therefore should be abandoned, says the Bhagavad Geetaa. These three are the gates to hell. These three are regarded as dirt, because they cover the consciousness in such a way that it appears to be not there at all. It is like painting a thin glass with coal tar. You cannot see the glass. It is all pitch-dark like clouds. This has to be rubbed off with great effort. When this Mal or dirt is removed, you get into another trouble. Do not think that when you are tentatively a master of Kaam, Krodh and Lobh, you are a real master of yourself.

"There are more things in Heaven and Earth than your philosophy dreams of, O Horatio," said Hamlet. So do not think that your philosophy is exhaustive. There are many more things that philosophy cannot comprehend. Kaam, Krodh and Lobh are not the only enemies. There are subtler ones, more formidable than these visible foes. As a matter of fact, the subtle invisible enemies are more difficult to overcome than the visible ones. Sometimes an angry man is better than a smiling person. A smiling person is more dangerous than an angry one, because he can have a knife under his armpit." This is what we will face.

When we manage somehow to overcome this Madhu and Kaitabh, Kaam and Krodh, we get into the clutches of Mahishaasur and Raktbeej. They represent the Vikshep Shakti, the tossing of the mind. Every minute the mind changes its forms which multiply in millions. You read in the Devee Mahaatmya, how Mahishaasur changed his form. Now he is an elephant, now he is a buffalo, now he is something else. If you hit him in one form, he comes in another form.

And this is your inexhaustible opponent. His energies are incapable of being exhausted. However much you may try to oppose the Vikshep Shakti, it will manifest in some form or other. This is described in the form of the demon Raktbeej, whose drops of blood were seeds of hundreds and thousands of demons like him coming up. When the Devee severed the head of one Raakshas, the blood fell on the ground profusely and from that blood, millions cropped up. And when she killed them, again another million cropped up. So there was no end to it. If you cut off one or two desires, the desire is not over. The root is still there. Only the branches are severed. Unless the root is dug out, there is no use of merely severing the branches of the tree. So what did the Devee do? She asked Kaalee to spread her tongue throughout the earth, so that there is no ground at all for the Raakshas to walk over. They had to walk over the tongue of Kali. So huge it was. And now the Goddess started cutting their heads and when the blood fell, it fell not on the ground but on the tongue of Kaalee. So she sucked everything. Chariots and horses and demons and everybody entered her mouth. She chewed all chariots into powder.

Likewise, we have to adopt a technique of sucking the very root of desires and not merely chop off its branches. Otherwise, desires will take various forms like Mahishaasur. When we think that Mahishaasur has been killed, he comes as a buffalo, and when the buffalo is attacked, he again comes as an elephant, and if Devee attacks the elephant, he comes as a bull and attacks her. So, there is no way of overcoming these desires by merely dealing with them from outside by a frontal attack. Their very essence has to be sucked, because a desire is not an outward form or an action; it is a tendency within. You may do nothing, and yet you will have desires, because desire is not necessarily an activity.

A desired person need not be very active. He can be sitting quiet, doing nothing, saying nothing, and yet be full of desires because it is a tendency of the mind, an inclination of consciousness, that we call a desire. That can be inside, even if there is outwardly nothing. This is the Vikshep Shakti - distraction, tossing and the chameleon-attitude of desire - which attacks us; when, with Herculean efforts, we try to destroy or gain control over Kaam and Krodh, Madhu and Kaitabh. After Madhu and Kaitabh, we get Mahishaasur and Raktbeej. Thus Mal and Vikshep are the primary oppositions in our spiritual pursuit.

Ancient masters have told us that while Mal or dirt of the psychological structure can be removed by Karm Yog, by unselfish and dedicated service, Vikshep or distraction of the mind can be removed only by worship of God, by Upaasan. While Karm removes Mal, Upaasanaa removes Vikshep. But even now, we are not fully safe. While Mal might have gone and Vikshep is not there, we may have a third trouble, namely, a complete oblivion of consciousness. We will have no knowledge of anything as to what is happening. A-Gyaan or ignorance is an opposing power subtler than its effects in the form of Mal and Vikshep. Distraction and direct sensual desires are the outer expressions of a subtle ignorance of Truth - A-Vidyaa or A-Gyaan. Why do we desire things? Because, we do not know the nature of Truth. Why does a strong wind blow? Because, the Sun is covered over with clouds. The Sun is covered by the clouds first, then there is darkness, and then a gale or cyclone starts blowing from the north, breaking our umbrellas and uprooting trees. All these happen because the Sun does not shine.

Even so, when the Aatmaa is covered over by ignorance of its nature, the winds of desire begin to blow, and they come like violent storms. Impetuous is the force of desire. You cannot stand against it, because the whole of Nature gets concentrated in a desire. That is why it is impetuous and uncontrollable. All the powers of Nature get focused in a desire when it manifests itself, whatever be that desire. So the whole of Nature has to be subdued. You are not to subdue only your individual nature, but the cosmic Nature itself is to be subdued. This is what is depicted in the epic of the Devee Mahaatmya. It is the sub duel, overcoming, transformation of the cosmic Nature in the form of Tamas, Rajas and Sattwa. While Mal represents Tamas, Vikshep represents Rajas.

Sattwa is also a Gun, unfortunately. We always praise Sattwa and regard it as a very desirable thing. But it is like a transparent glass that is placed between us and the Truth. You can see through it, but you cannot go beyond it because though the glass is transparent, it obstructs your movement. It is not like a brick wall, completely preventing your vision, as Tamas does; it is not like a blowing wind which simply tosses you here and there, as Rajas does; it is a plain glass, through which you can have vision of Reality, but you cannot contact Reality nevertheless. How can you contact a thing when there is a glass between you and the thing? Yet you can see it. So they say even Sattwa is an obstacle, though it is better than the other two forces in the sense that through it you can have a vision or an insight into the nature of Reality which transcends even Sattwa. There is a glass pane and you can see a mango fruit on the other side of it. You can see it very well, but you cannot get it; you cannot grab it. You know the reason - there is a glass wall in between. Even Sattva is a subtle medium of obstruction, which acts in a double form - as complacency or satisfaction with what has been achieved, and an ignorance of what is beyond. These two aspects of Sattwa are indicated by the two personalities of Shumbh and Nishumbh. They have to be dispelled by the power of higher wisdom, which is Mahaa Saraswatee.

Action, contemplation and knowledge are the three stages through which we have to pierce through the veil of Prakriti, or the three Gun. And as I mentioned earlier, we are not individual pedestrians on the path. There is no individual movement here. It is all a total movement of everything connected with us, and no item in the world is really disconnected from us. Every thread in a cloth is connected with every other thread. When you lift one thread of a cloth, the whole cloth comes up, because of the interconnection of the warp and the woof of the cloth. Likewise, there is an internal interconnection of beings, which prevents any kind of individual effort for the sake of salvation. That is why salvation is universal, it is not individual. When you attain to the Supreme Being, you become the Universal Being. You do not go there as a Mr So-and-so or as a Mrs So-and-so. The path of Saadhaanaa also is a cosmic effort of the soul, a subtle secret which most Saadhak are likely to forget. It is not a small, simple, private effort of yours in the closet of your room, but a dynamic activity of your essential personality, internally connected by unforeseen relationships with everything in the cosmos. When you enter the path of the spirit you have also, at the same time, entered the path of cosmic relationship. A Saadhak is, therefore, a cosmic person. A spiritual seeker, an aspirant is a representative of cosmic situation. He is not an individual, though he looks like a person; and his Saadhanaa is not an individual effort, though it seems so. It is much more than what it appears to be on the surface. It is, as it were, the conversation between Nar and Naaraayan (Arjun-Krishn) Samvaad, as they call it. You and your God are face to face with each other. In Saadhanaa, in spiritual effort, you are face to face with your Maker. And the face of the Maker is universal. He is not in one spot, hiding himself in one corner.

So, the dance of the cosmic spirit, in its supernal effort at self-transcendence, is majestically described in the beautifully worded sonorous songs of the Devee Mahaatmya, where we are given a stirring account, a stimulating description of what Mahaa Kaalee did, what Mahaa Lakshmee did and what Mahaa Saraswatee did in bringing about this evolution, transformation of the whole range of Prakriti from Tamas to Rajas, from Rajas to Sattwa and from Sattwa to Supreme Vijaya, mastery in the Absolute, God-realization. All our scriptures, Puraan and epics, all our ceremonies and celebrations, all our festivals and Jayantee - whatever be the occasion for a religious performance - all this is charged with a spiritual connotation, a significance which is far transcendent to the outer rituals which is involved in their performance. Every thought, every aspiration, every ritual and every duty of ours, every action that we perform automatically becomes a spiritual dedication of the Soul, for the sake of this one single aspiration which it has been enshrining in itself from eternity to eternity. This significance is brought out in all our epics and Puraan. Whether in the Mahaabhaarat or the Raamaayan, whether in the Bhagvad Geetaa or the Devee Mahaatmya, they tell us the same account in different terminologies and with different emphases. It is always a song of the soul. The Bhagvad Geetaa is a song of the soul, the Upper Soul speaking to the lower soul. Here again, we have a similar account of the actual Saadhanaa involved in the realization of this ultimate harmony of the soul with the Upper Soul.

The spiritual practice of a Saadhak is, therefore, a confronting of the three forces of Tamas, Rajas and Sattwa, gradually, stage by stage, in their cosmic significance, forgetting not for a moment that we are not 'islands'. No man is an island. You must have heard the poet's saying: "No man is an island unto himself." That means he is not surrounded simply by oceans and cut off from things. He is connected with everything. This is the significance we have to read in our practical lives. This is the meaning we have to see and visualize in our personal Saadhanaa.

And when we learn to see the significance of the presence of divinity or the universality of God even in our private actions, we are taken care of by universal forces. We need not bother about even the smallest problem of our life. Even the littlest of our difficulty will be taken care of in a proper manner by the forces that are in the world, provided, of course, that we are able to read the significance of universality even in the most private of our actions, even in the smallest and littlest of our actions. There is no such thing as a little action in the world. Everything is important. Even the most insignificant event is a very important event; ultimately, because hidden behind it is the ocean. This significance we have to learn to read.

This is, in my humble opinion, what Guru Dev Swami Shivananda ji Mahaaraaj meant whenever he said that God realization is the goal of life. He was not tired of saying this throughout his life. We can see, in his earlier books especially, that they commence with the sentence: "The goal of life is God realization." Whatever he had to say in those books, he said afterwards. So, the first thing is to remember that the goal of life is God realization. Do not forget this. The little petty tensions and turmoil and annoyances and worries and vexations are not the goal of life. They are the obstacles that come on our way, which we have to carefully obviate and go with caution - like a pilgrim who has lost his way in this wilderness of life - and yet confident at the same time that the warmth of the spiritual sun is always energizing our personality and that we are never, at any time, any moment of our practice, completely cut off from that source of energy.

So, through the worship of Mahaa-Kaalee, Mahaa-Lakshmee and Mahaa-Saraswatee, we worship Mool Prakriti, Aadi-Shakti in her cosmic dance-form of transformation, prosperity and illumination. In the beginning, what happens to a Saadhak? There is a necessity of self-transformation . It is all hardship, rubbing and cleaning, washing, sweeping, etc. That is the first stage through the worship of Mahaa-Kaalee, who brings about a destruction of all barriers. Then what happens? There is tremendous prosperity. You become a master and a progressive soul commanding all powers, getting everything that you want. This is the second stage. In the first stage, it looked as if you were a poor person, having nothing, very weak. But, when you overcome this weakness by removing the barrier of Tamas, you become prosperous. Nobody can be as rich as a Yogi. He can command all the powers. By a thought he can invoke all things [remember Vashishth incident with Vishwaamitra], and this is Goddess Mahaa-Lakshmee working.

When Mahaa-Kaalee has finished her work of destruction of opposition, Mahaa­Lakshmee comes as prosperity. A great Yogee is also like a royal personality, because of his internal invocations, though unconsciously done, of cosmic powers. When prosperity dawns, it looks as if the whole universe is Heaven. In the first stage, it looked like hell. Afterwards, in the second stage, it looks like heaven, when Mahaa-Lakshmee begins to work. But this also is not sufficient. Knowledge should dawn. It is not Heaven that you are asking for. You want the realization of Truth. Mahaa-Saraswatee will come to help and a flood of light of Truth will be thrown, and you will see things as they are. There is no enjoyment, prosperity, richness, wealth, or any such thing. It is Truth unconnected with you in the beginning, but later on inseparable from yourself. Thus, from opposition to prosperity, from prosperity to enlightenment, and from enlightenment to Self-realization do we proceed. So, these are the truths esoterically conveyed to us in the Mantra of the Devee-Mahaatmya.

This Devee Mahaatmya is not merely an esoteric epic. It is not only a great spiritual text in the form of occult lessons; occult teachings of which I have given you an outline; but, it is also a great Mantra Shaastra. Every Shlok, every verse of the Devee Mahaatmya is a Mantra by itself. I will tell you how it is a Mantra, by giving only one instance that is the first Shlok itself. "Savarnih sooryatanayo yo manuh kathyate-shtamah. " This is the first Shlok - "Savarnih soorya-tanayah. " It is all a Taantrik interpretation and a very difficult thing to understand. But I am giving you only an idea as to what it is like. Soorya represents fire, the fire-principle. Soorya-tanaya means that which is born of the fire-principle. What is it that is born of the fire-principle? It is the seed 'Ra'. According to Taantrik esoteric psychology, 'Raam' is the Beej Mantra of Agni. In the word 'Savarnih', 'Varni' means a hook; so add one hook to 'Raam'. "Yo manuh kathyate, ashtamah."

Eighth letter - What is Manu? It is a letter in Sanskrit. Eight letters are Ya, Ra, La, Va, Sya, Sha, Sa, Ha. The eighth is Ha. Add Ha to it. Ha, Ra and one hook, make 'Hreem'. "Savarnih sooryo-tanayo yo manuh kathyateshtamah, nisamaya tadutpattim. " "You hear the glory of that," the sage says. So, the first verse means: "Now, I shall describe to you the glory of 'Hreem'." This Hreem is the Beej of Devee. But, outwardly it means, "Listen to the story of the King so-and-so, who is the eighth Manu," and all that. Thus in addition to the outer meaning, there is an inner significance of the Mantra. I am giving you only the case of one Mantra.

Like this, every Mantra is full of inner significance. And every Mantra is repeated by devotees for some purpose or the other. The Devee Mahaatmya is especially recited for averting calamities in life. Catastrophes, calamities and tensions - personal or outward, whatever they be - all these are averted by a regular daily recital of the Devee Mahaatmya. When there is war threatening a country, for example, or pestilence or epidemic spreading everywhere, or any internal tension or anxiety of any kind, the Devee Mahaatmya is to be recited. And it is a very potent remedy prescribed by seers of yore - not only for temporal terrestrial prosperity, but also for the glory of the hereafter, for illumination, for the destruction of A-Vidyaa or A-Gyaan, for overcoming Mal, Vikshep and Aavaran, and to be a fit recipient of the grace of the Almighty. Thus is the outer significance and the inner significance of the Devee Mahaatmya, and the special meaning that it has in the life of spiritual seekers or Saadhak. Glory to God! Glory to Saadhanaa! Glory to the integral character of spiritual practice! May we be blessed with this illumination, with this wisdom, with the strength to tread the path of the Spirit, to our ultimate Freedom!
(A talk given on 13th October of 1972 during the Nava Raatri worship By Swami Krishnananda)

 

 

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Created by Sushma Gupta on 3/15/03
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Updated on 12/18/12