Showing posts with label Devata. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Devata. Show all posts

Tuesday, 14 March 2017

Conquest over the Dasyus


(This article was first published in the Dec 2016 issue of 'The Call Beyond', monthly magazine of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, New Delhi.) 

We have unravelled many secrets of the Veda in the past few articles and have now reached the end of our series.

We have understood to not take the Veda as merely a book of ritual for the fulfilment of human desires but as the foremost book of spiritual knowledge, a profound expression of the Rishis, seers of the Truth. We have learnt to look beyond the words of the Veda and their common meaning and understand their deeper, psychological import. And thus, we have come to see the Veda as a representation of the ascent of consciousness from the darkness of Ignorance to the Infinite Truth and Beatitude of the Supramental Consciousness.

In this representation, the Veda made yajña, the physical act of sacrifice, as its centrepiece and medium for invoking a wide spectrum of deities – Agni, Indra, Saraswati, Brihaspati etc. – all symbols of psychological phenomenon of an illumined consciousness. Sri Aurobindo writes:

“The sacrifice is the giving by man of what he possesses in his being to the higher or divine nature and its fruit is the farther enrichment of his manhood by the lavish bounty of the gods. The wealth thus gained constitutes a state of spiritual riches, prosperity, felicity which is itself a power for the journey and a force of battle.”[1]

The battle here is the ongoing inner battle between the pure, illumined mind and life powers, the devas, which continuously seek an ascent towards the Truth-consciousness, and the powers of ignorance, the daityas (called dasyus in the Veda), which constantly limit and obstruct one’s progress. While the gods are the children of Aditi, symbol of Infinity, the undivided supreme consciousness, dasyus are the sons of Diti, of duality, of a divided consciousness.

Dasyus are known by various names such as Vritra, Pani, Atri, Rakshasa, Sambara, Vala, Namuchi, etc. They are all “powers of division and limitation, Coverers, Tearers, Devourers, Confiners, Dualisers, Obstructers, as their names indicate, powers that work against the free and unified integrality of the being.”

They are in strict opposition to everything pure and good that the gods and the Aryan seers stand for. The seers have the will to act, kāru, the gods perfect their action, sukratu, but dasyus oppose both and are akratu. The seers find the sacred Word, the mantra or brahma, they are its singers, brahmā, the gods are invoked by it and they uphold it, giravāhas, but dasyus are haters and destroyers of the Word, brahmadviṣaḥ[2]. 

The gods are magnanimous givers of Light, dasyus are its withholders. This withholding is sometimes symbolized by the kidnapping of cows by the demon Pani, sometimes by the obstruction of waters by Vritra – both cows and waters being symbols of Light of the Truth. The gods must constantly fight the dasyus to recover the lost Light. This is the ongoing battle within the human mind and the Vedic sacrifice is its profound representation.

Sri Aurobindo explains, “the Vedic idea was that the subconscient darkness and the ordinary life of ignorance held concealed in it all that belongs to the divine life and that these secret riches must be recovered first by destroying the impenitent powers of ignorance and then by possessing the lower life subjected to the higher… by the penetrating action of the Light and the Truth the powers of the ordinary ignorant sense-activity become subject to the Aryan.”[3]

The release of the cows and the waters is like the advent of the divine Dawn and with it comes the release of the Sun of Truth. The Light then ascends the hill of being, the lower realms of body, prana, and mind, and makes way to “the luminous upper ocean of the divine existence.”[4] This ascent to the home of the Sun, to swar, is the ascent to the state of Immortality. So is born from the Truth the supreme state of Ananda to which the Rishis aspired by the sacrifice.

With this, we conclude the series. Our aim was to present some of the most important portions of Sri Aurobindo’s masterwork, The Secret of the Veda, to help the readers understand the spiritual significance of the Veda. Readers who have found this series interesting, should be inspired to read the original work and delve deeper into the mysteries of the Veda.          


[1] The Secret of the Veda, Pg.242, Line no.25
[2] The Secret of the Veda, Pg.234
[3] The Secret of the Veda, Pg.238, Line no.10
[4] The Secret of the Veda, Pg.244, Line no.24

Human Aspiration for the Divine Truth



(This article was first published in the Feb 2016 issue of 'The Call Beyond', monthly magazine of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, New Delhi.)   

The Upanishads speak of a Truth knowing which everything here is known. They say, knowledge of this high, all-encompassing Truth is the goal of man’s life, door to his freedom.

Man thinks of himself as a mortal being, subject to birth and death; he thinks of himself as a limited being, one limited entity in this vast universe. This is his Ignorance. The Truth of his being, if known, will free him from this limited conception of self and lead him to his Immortality - amṛtam.

Sri Aurobindo explained that this idea is not only found in the Upanishads but is also at the very heart of the Veda:

“In the early Vedantic teaching of the Upanishads we come across a conception of the Truth which is often expressed by formulas taken from the hymns of the Veda, such as the expression - satyam ṛtam bṛhat,—the truth, the right, the vast. This Truth is spoken of in the Veda as a path leading to felicity, leading to immortality.”[1]

The expression, ‘satyam ṛtam bṛhat, as also the individual terms, occurs throughout the Veda. It is deeply embedded in the flow of Vedic hymns. Understanding it is fundamental to understanding the inner meaning of the Vedas.

Satyam or Truth is “the truth of divine essence, not truth of mortal sensation and appearance.”[2]  It is not the truth that one speaks of in general parlance but a higher, spiritual knowledge that removes Ignorance and reveals man’s essential immortality.

Ritam is the right activity of mind and body, regulated by the knowledge of this Satyam. It is a life founded on the knowledge of Truth.

Brihat conveys the unrestricted, infinite vastness of this Truth. Since it is the Truth of everything and nothing is excluded from it, it is vast in the absolute sense.

“The consciousness that corresponds to it (the Truth) is also infinite, bṛhat, large as opposed to the consciousness of the sense-mind which is founded upon limitation… Whoever is in possession of this truth-consciousness or open to the action of these faculties, is the Rishi or Kavi, sage or seer.”[3]


The entire scheme of Vedic symbolism and imagery is woven around the search for this luminous Truth. Man’s life is described as a journey whose destination is this Truth-consciousness. It is a struggle, a battle, against the Darkness of sense-mind which keeps us from seeing the Light of Truth.

Hence ensues the battle between devas and asuras, which is nothing but the spiritual struggle of every man in his striving for the Truth.

Sri Aurobindo writes, “The gods I found to be described as children of Light, sons of Aditi, of Infinity; and without exception they are described as increasing man, bringing him light… increasing the truth in him, building up the divine worlds, leading him against all attacks to the great goal, the integral felicity, the perfect bliss.”[4] The asuras, on the other hand, are “powers of division and limitation… powers that work against the free and unified integrality of the being.”[5]

And so, too, emerges the Vedic system of lokas:

“The Rishis speak of three cosmic divisions, Earth, the Antariksha or middle region and Heaven (Dyaus); but there is also a greater Heaven (Brihad Dyau) called also the Wide World, the Vast (Brihat)… This “Brihat” is again described as “Ritam Brihat” or in a triple term “Satyam Ritam Brihat”.[6]

It becomes clear now that they were the planes of consciousness through which man must ascend to finally reach the summit – the absolute vastness of the Truth-consciousness.


[1] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 64, Last parah.
[2] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 65, Line 5
[3] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 65, Line 9
[4] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 46, Line 3
[5] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 46, Line 12
[6] The Secret of The Veda, Pg. 45, Line 1