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=======UNDERSTANDING HINDUISM======== Click on underlined words to open paragraph Vyasa Dictated and Ganapati Wrote Ganesh - Eight Manifestations THE SIGNIFICANCE OF
GANAPATI
In Sanskrit language, there are more than one
meaning attached to a word. For example, the word GO means cow as well as sense organs.
Gopal means cowherd. Gopal also means a yogi whose sense organs are completely under his
control. This dual meaning enables poets to bring out their best on the physical plane as
well as on the spiritual plane. Similarly, a common Sanskrit word to denote elephant is GAJA. Here Gajanan means elephant faced - a name for Ganapati. But the word Gaja has a much deeper connotation. GA indicates gati, the final goal towards which the entire creation is moving, whether knowingly or unknowingly. JA stands for janma, birth or origin. Hence GAJA signifies GOD from whom worlds have come out and towards whom they are progressing, to be ultimately dissolved in Him. The elephant head is thus purely symbolical. We observe creation in its two fold manifestation as the microcosm (sukshmanda) and the macrocosm (brahmanda). Each is a replica of the other. They are one in two and two in one. The elephant head stands for the macrocosm (representing vastness or bigness), and the human body for the microcosm. The two form one unit. Since the macrocosm is the goal of the microcosm, the elephant part has been given greater prominence by making it a head. The Chandogya Upanishad has pronounced a philisophical truth as TAT-TVAM-ASI, THAT- THOU -ART. It simply means "You, the apparently limited individual, are in essence, the cosmic Truth, the Absolute". The elephant-human form of Ganapati is the iconographical representation of this great Vedantic dictum. the elephant stands for the cosmic whereas the human stands for the individual. The single image reflects their identity. Vedanta is the synthesis of the `within' and the `without'; the macrocosm and the microcosm. The study of this `within' of nature through an inquiry into the `within' of man, who is the unique product of nature`s evolution, is religion according to Indian thought. The synthesis of the knowledge of the `without' , which the physical sciences give, and the `within' which religion gives, is what India achieved in her Vedanta. This she calls BRAHMA - VIDYA or philosophy; God or Brahman(`BRAHMAN' is the Upanishdic term for the Supreme Reality, God) standing for the totality of reality, physical and non-physical. Brahma - vidya is Sarva - vidya- pratishtha (philosophy is the basis and support of all knowledge) says the Mundaka Upanishad (i.i.i.). The Ganapati Upanishad identifies Lord Ganesh with the Supreme Self. Lord Ganesh represents the Pranava (AUM) which is the symbol of the Supreme Self. Taitiriya Upanishad (1.8.1.) states: "AUM ITI BRAHMAN -AUM is Brahman (GOD). AUM is all this . Nothing can be done without uttering it. This explains the practice of invokong Lord Ganesh before beginning any rite or undertaking any project. Lord Ganesh removes all obstacles on the path
of the spiritual aspirant, and bestows upon him worldly as well as spiritual success. So
he is called VIGNA VINAYAKA or VIGHNESHWAR. Sauti said: Brahma having thus spoken to Vyasa, retired to his own abode. Then Vyasa began to call to mind Ganesha. And Ganesha, obviator of obstacles, ready to fulfil the desires of his votaries, was no sooner thought of, than he repaired to the place where Vyasa was seated. And when he had been saluted, and was seated, Vyasa addressed him thus: O guide of the Ganas! Be thou the writer of the Bharata which I have formed in my imagination, and which I am about to repeat. Ganesh, upon hearing this address, thus answered: I will become the writer of the work, provided my pen do not for a moment cease writing. And Vyasa said unto that divinity: Wherever there be anything thou dost not comprehend, cease to continue writing.
When the mind is devoted to materialistic pursuits of acquiring wealth (artha) and fulfilling ones desires (kama) in the righteous manner (dharma), it is Treta Yuga in which the Rajo guna (Rajas) predominates.
The Dhumra-varna incarnation is of the nature
of Shiva-Brahma, to conquer the Asura Abhimaan (pride). Index Alphabetical <
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