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2-What is Ved
see also
Sources of Ved, Division of Ved,
Dharm Shaastra,
Braahman,
Upanishad;
Origin of Sangeet Saam Ved;
Vaidik Devtaa;
Structure of Ved
Most Hindu religious literature is written and found in
Sanskrit
language as it was the first all-India language. Its early literature
was memorized and recited, that is why it is just impossible to date it
with any accuracy. Ved are the earliest iterature of Hindu Dharm. In the
beginning there was only one Ved, but considering it difficult to grasp by
a single person, Ved Vyaas Jee divided it into four parts -
Rig Ved, Yajur Ved,
Atharv Ved and
Saam Ved. In each of the four Ved a distinction has been made according
to content and form. Each Ved has a main book called (1) Sanhitaa; and three
ancillary books - (2) Braahman; (3) Aaranyak; and (4) Upanishad. Each Ved
Sanhitaa can have more than one Braahman, more than one Aaranyak and more
than one Upanishad attached to it. Most of the
Braahman and
Aaranyak have
lost their religious usefulness over time. Upanishad, however, have retained
their value till now.
(1) The Sanhitaa
The Sanhitaa is a collection of hymns or prayers, to God in various manifestations,
containing also formulae necessary in the sacrificial use of these hymns, known
as Mantra. The word Sanhitaa means a collection of the Mantra belonging to a
particular section of the Ved, which are either in metrical verses (Rik) or
sentences in prose (Yajus) or chants (Saam).
(2) The Braahman
The Braahman teach the practical use of the verses and the chants presented
in the Sanhitaa. However, the Braahman, though they are supposed to be only
sacrificial injunctions for purpose of ritualistic utilization of the Mantra
of the Sanhitaa, go beyond this restricted definition and contain much more
material, such as Vidhi (a directive precept), Arthavaad (laudatory or eulogizing
explanation), and Upanishad, (the philosophical or mystical import of the chant
or the performance).
(3) The Aaranyak
The Aaranyak are esoteric considerations of the practical ritual, which is
otherwise the main subject of the Braahman. The opening passage of the
Brihadaaranyak Upanishad, in which the horse-sacrifice is treated as a symbol,
would serve as an example of how a ritualistic symbol and material is used
as a cosmological concept for purpose of religious contemplation and philosophic
meditation.
(4) The Upanishad
The Upanishad, except the Eeshaavaasya Upanishad which occurs in the Sanhitaa
portion of the Yajur Veda, occur as the concluding mystical import and philosophical
suggestiveness of some Braahman or the other. The philosophical sections of the
Braahman and Aaranyak are usually detached for the purpose of study, and go by
the name of Upanishad, brought together from the different Ved to form a single
whole.
There has been a practice of calling "Sanhitaa" for the Ved. For example,
Rig Ved Sanhitaa means Rig Ved, Yajur Ved Sanhitaa means Yagur Ved. Since these
Sanhitaa are the oral preservations, their texts slightly differ from region to
region. While the most important Sanhitaa, Rig Ved, is remarkably identical
throughout the Hindu world, while Yajur Ved Sanhitaa is not. There are two main
texts of Yajur Ved - (1) Shukla Yajur Ved, which is called
Vaajsaneyee Sanhitaa
also. This also has two texts differing slightly with each other. One is called
Maadhyaandini Rescension and the other one is called Kaanv Rescension. Maadhyaandini
is almost universally accepted now. (2) Krishn Yajur Ved - in this Ved there are four
slightly varying texts available. Yet the text called "Taittireeya Sanhitaa"
is practically universally accepted out of the four. For Saam Ved and Atharv Ved only
one Sanhitaa each is universally accepted.
But all the Ved provide the same knowledge to experience the Supreme through different
paths. The Rig Ved would approach this goal through prayer and intellectual pursuits;
the Saam Ved through musical renderings of the hymns; the Yajur Ved through Yagya and
invocation of Agni to carry the message of the hymns to the Supreme; and the Atharv
Ved through Tantra or other rituals. The Ved propound and accept all forms of religious
practice in the pursuit of understanding and merging with the Supreme. Hence it is
highly secular and tolerant in its teachings by ultimately preaching.
Four Parts Related to Four Aashram
Tradition considers that the Brahmchaaree, or the celibate student (which is the first
part of the dedication of human life) occupies himself with a study of the Sanhitaa;
the Grihasth, or the householder (which is the second part of the dedication of life)
is expected to diligently perform the rituals detailed in the Braahman in relation to
their corresponding Mantra from the Sanhitaa; the Vaanaprasth, or the recluse, the
hermit (the third part of the dedication of life) rises above prayer as a chant and
performance as a ritual, and busies himself with pure inward contemplation of the more
philosophical and abstract realities hidden behind the outward concepts of divinity
and the external performances of ritual; and the Sanyaasee, or the spiritually
illumined renunciate (the fourth and concluding part of the dedicated life) occupies
himself with direct meditations as prescribed in the Upanishad, whose outlook of life
transcends all-empirical forms, outward relations as also space and time itself.
Subject Matter of the Sanhitaa
The verses of the Sanhitaa contain prayers, which seek contentment, courage,
energy, fearlessness, forgiveness, mercy, good life, happiness, health, long
life, mental growth, peace, progeny, success in general, victory, virtue, health
and zeal etc. Besides these there are prayers singing the glory of God, including
prayers for special people and special occasions. many verses deal with the
beginnings of the Universe, value of charity, death and after, Divinity in man,
idle talk, laziness, love, man to woman
[Aangiras, p 347-349]
Why Ved Are So Important?
Shankaraachaarya said this in his arguments with Mandan Mishra : "If
something is known and knowable by other means, then Ved are superfluous. Ved
clarify things which otherwise not knowable by any other means." By the
way, Ved word is derived from the root Vid - to know. So Ved helps to understand
which by other means is not possible. The sacred scripture of the Hindu communicated
by the Supreme to and revealed by Brahmaa.
Shiv says in Brihannal Tantra, Ch iv - "The Ved is Brahm, Brahmaa was
not its author, but was its publisher. It came out from Brahmaa Jee as his
breathing."
Swaamee Vivekaanand says the following about thoughts, words and objects -
"The Ved are simply words that have the mystical power to produce effects
if the sound intonation is right. If one sound is wrong it will not do. Each
one must be perfect. [Thus] what in other religions is called prayer disappeared
and the Ved became the gods. So the tremendous importance that was attached to
the words of the Ved. These are the eternal words out of which the whole universe
has been produced. There cannot be any thought without the word. Thus whatever
there is in this world is the manifestation of thought, and thought can only manifest
itself through words. This mass of words by which the unmanifested thought becomes
manifest, that is what is meant by the Ved. It follows that the external existence
of everything [depends on the Vedas, for thought] does not exist without the word.
If the word "horse" did not exist, none could think of a horse. [So]
there must be [an intimate relation between] thought, word, and the external object.
What are these words [in reality]? The Ved. They do not call it Sanskrit language at
all. It is Vaidik language, a divine language. Sanskrit is a degenerate form. So are
all other languages. There is no language older than Vaidik.
You may ask, "Who
wrote the Ved?" They were not written. The words are the Ved. A word is Ved,
if I can pronounce it rightly. Then it will immediately produce the [desired]
effect." (The origin of ancient Sanskrit is 5,000 BC; the Upanishad [are at
least] 2,000 years before that. Nobody knows [exactly] how old they are.)
Rig Ved 1.72.2 and 8 mention that the greatest service to God is to spread the
spirit of Ved with honesty, straight-forwardness, without deceit of any kind,
for all to enjoy true and spiritual happiness. By understanding the philosophy,
metaphysics, knowledge and various models contained in the Ved, we can perhaps
find viable solutions to our present social, economic, political and religious
problems.
Smriti
Based on Ved several Smriti have come into existence to make the contents simpler
and easy to understand and follow. These Smriti are the basis for Dharm Shaastra,
Mahaa-kaavya, Puraan, Aagam or
methods of worship etc. They consolidate the rules and regulations necessary to
regulate the society from time to time. As society grows and changes, Smriti
should also change. Otherwise, it will be like forcing a dress stitched for a
baby on a grown up man. That is how the Smriti written by Manu, Yaagyavalkya or
Paraashar have become outdated. (The Indian Constitution is the Smriti now being
followed in our country).
(1) What do Ved teach us?
Upanishad have originated from Ved. Then what do Ved teach us? They teach us
four things - (1) Injunctions and Prohibitions, (2) Valedictory (praise) and
deprecatory passages, (3) Mantra, and (4) Names. All these four are necessary
to understand true Dharm or religious duties from different angles, that is
why to study them is the pre-requisite to know Brahm. They are the supreme
authorities that is why one should study them with the help of a good Aachaarya.
In another way, Ved contain three eternal education - Gyaan Kaand ie, science;
Karm Kaand ie, form of deeds; and Upaasanaa Kaand ie, worship.
(2) What is the Purpose of Ved?
Study of Mathematics, computer science, etc., helps one to understand changing
Nature (!) and earn money. The purpose of Ved is to understand "who am
I".
(3) Why should one Understand Oneself?
If one cannot have an understanding of "who am I", how one can
understand other subjects which are other than "I" or the SELF.
(4) Why should Vaidik Study be Open to all?
In our times of a watchman job or an errant job requires a qualification
at least the least of all, the mental stability as qualification it is
strange to expect a subject like Ved when studied and followed in life
qualifies one to find an answer to the question "who am I".
(5) Why are Ved contradictory - once says God is one, at other times says Varun is
the best God, yet another time Sun... etc...?
Ved are inherent in creation and brought out by the "seers" - Rishi at
various points of time - i.e. known to man kind at various points of time -
NOTE: Neither it is created
by a Rishi or by any God but still it is eternal - the Rishi has said them what
they saw (Divya Drishti - Divine Sight). Besides Ved are not for one person or
for one level of people. Ved teach different class of people in different stages
in life with different mental maturity levels or nature (called Vaasanaa), that
is why it has to necessarily satisfy all. Hence one finds many contradictory
statements. This is to be expected because it deals with a subject matter which
cannot be an object of study but itself is the Subject. The suggestion by Ramana
Maharshi is to take what is suitable for one and leave the rest.
(6) How can Vaidik study
lead one to the Reality - there is nothing but SELF called Aatmaa, God, Shakti, etc.,?
Anything other than SELF is not real, including Ved, but amazingly they lead
to the Reality - like a stair case leads to a top floor. Stair case as such
is not a floor for our living but without the staircase one cannot reach the
next floor.
(7) Is there any connection between Ved learning and Sanyaasee?
No, There is no connection. In fact Sanyaasee are prohibited from chanting Ved.
Forget about Ved, Sanyaasee are not authorized to chant even Gayatri. Sanyaasee's
only Mantra is OM. Sanyaasee forsake all pleasures, comforts, relations, everything
with focus only on Self or Aatmaa or understanding "who am I".
(8) Why do Ved have Karm Kaand, if the ultimate aim is to forsake even Ved in
the quest of knowing the Self or I?
A child of say 7 years cannot get admission into PhD courses; in order to get
eligibility for PhD , the 7 yr old has to study in a "Kram" or an
order going thru' primary, middle, secondary, graduate, post graduate in this
ORDER ONLY. Not in any other order, say- start from middle school, then primary
etc. In the same way those of us who have no mental maturity or can dissociate
SELF with the ego-I or I identifying with this physical body, have to go in an
Order "Kram", starting from Sandhyaa Vandan, etc, For the sake of Kram,
Karm Kaand forms the majority or - 75% of Ved. Also the most majority can go only
in a step by step way. Like, most students have to go in step by step. Like child
prodigy there occurs straight after birth Gyaanee like Ramana Maharshi or Raamkrishn
Paramahans. In essence, observing Karm Kaand's Karm in course of time will provide
with adequate maturity to understand the Reality.
(9) Why a major portion of Karm Kaand is dedicated to ancestors?
This is so, not for the emancipation of deceased but those observing
these Karm, showing the gratitude towards those who are responsible for
this human birth. Observing Shraaddh etc, is for the benefit of the one
who is performing. But one is pushed to do these Karm telling that his
ancestors will reach heaven etc by doing those Karm, so that for the love
of departed ones one is prompted to do these Karm.
(10) Are Ved not to be read or heard by women and Shoodra?
Ved do not say so. Rather Yajur Ved, 26.2 says,
Yathemaam Vaacham Kalyaanee maa vadaani Jarnebhyah
Brahm raajanyaabhyaam Shoodraaya chaaryaaya cha Swaaya chaaranaaya
"As I preach this Ved to everybody for the welfare of the mankind
- Braahman, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shoodra, you also do in the same way."
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