A View of Santhigiri Ashram

A View of Santhigiri Ashram
Lotus Parnasala and Sahakarana Mandiram , Santhigiri Ashram, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala
Showing posts with label Hindu Reformers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hindu Reformers. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2020

What Should be the Dharma of a New India?

What is the reason behind the enslavement of Hindus for a thousand years? Why Hindus are unable to be united despite the best efforts of so many great souls? Why Hindus are unable to assert their cultural identity and freedom in their motherland? Why Hindus suffer the onslaught of conversions and distortion of the idea of Bharat? What should be the religion of a New India? The discussion here explains the whole background of these issues.
There are three spiritual systems in the world that embrace all spiritual visions. The first one is the Manvantara Spiritual Order or Sanatana Dharma (Jnana tradition of Rishis). The second one is the Trimurti Order, in which three major sects are integrated into a single order under the idea of Creator, Preserver, and Destroyer, by the authors of Puranas. For this reason, the Trimurti system can also be referred to as Puranic Hinduism or Smartha tradition. Some Indologists call it Brahmanical Hinduism too, because a Brahmin is extolled as a Deva (Brahmana Devo Bhava) and therefore, superior to all other castes.
The third one is Prophetical Religions that promote faith in the One God through the medium of a Prophet.
The Manvantara Spiritual Order is centered around Manu, who is God in creation mode. Manvantara Spiritual Order upholds the concept of Brahm or Paramatma, the One God of the universe. Between the Paramatma and man, there is only one medium - His messengers, i.e. the sages, seers, and gurus.
Although the Abrahamic religions believe in One God and the mediumship of a Prophet, their worldview, as well as the idea of creation, is crude. Moreover, the Abrahamic religions lack important concepts such as Cosmic Time Order, Evolution of Jeevas through various Lokas, the theory of Karma, and Reincarnation.
The Puranic tradition through the eighteen Puranas and Itihasas propagates the idea of Trimurti and the large family of deities under them for worship. There are hundreds of sects and schools of thought under the Trimurti Order. There are no fixed laws or common rituals. There is total freedom to be a believer or a non-believer. There is no spiritual authority also to interfere or control the freedom of people in the matter of faith. Although freedom of individuals is commendable, there is rampant misuse of this freedom and a person is able to escape without any punishment even if he denounces the faith.
Hinduism has six philosophical systems. One can find the roots of all thoughts in the world in these philosophies. Among the philosophies of Hindus, Vedanta occupies an important place as it is the basic thought-current of the Vedas and Upanishads. Advaita Vedanta, a branch of Vedanta, has been placed on the highest pedestal by all great thinkers in the world as man’s ultimate spiritual thought-process. Nevertheless, the Advaita philosophy of pure Non-Dual Truth (i.e. God, the Absolute Truth alone exists) has not been found favor with many god-fearing sages in Trimurti Order itself. Madvacharya was one of the main opponents of Advaita Vedanta. He advocated Dvaita philosophy (accepting the medium of a Guru or Devata to achieve the state of Advaita, i.e. the non-dual state of Absolute Truth.
It is against the Will of God to consider what God has created imagining itself to be the Creator as suggested by the saying ‘Aham Brahmasmi’ (I am God), said Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru. Navajyothi Sri Karunakara Guru reveals that ‘Ahama Brahmasmi’ is a major error that had occurred in Indian spirituality. Any evil spirit can be elevated to the level of God by this concept.
Is there any difference between Sanatana Dharma and Puranic Hinduism? This is an important question that all practitioners of Hinduism should give a thought to. Since both these systems draw from a common source, it is difficult to distinguish the difference. The fundamental principles of Sanatana Dharma rest on the concept of Manu and the world teachers (Kalanthara Gurus) appearing in the epoch of Manu. Manu is the originator of every episode of creation, i.e. the Kalpa and Manvantara time cycles.
14 Manus prepare the blueprint of every solar system in a Kalpa and guide the Jeevas (souls) in their spiritual evolution through the Yuga cycles. For this reason, Sanatana Dharma is also known as Manu Parampara or Manvantara Spiritual Order. The Rishis have even mentioned the name of 14 Manus. We are living in the seventh Manvantara and the Manu is Vaivasvata Manu.
The Manvantara Spiritual Order believes that all human beings came from a Single Source, i.e. Manu, the Cosmic Purusha. So Manu is God in creation mode. The man was created in the image of that Cosmic Purusha. For this reason, Manu is mentioned as the Progenitor of mankind, the Supreme Father. The purpose of life is to evolve and to merge with the Cosmic Purusha and attain Mukthi. The Abrahamic religions borrowed this idea from Indian spirituality and prospered.
For achieving Mukthi, the soul incarnates innumerable times. A Kalanthara Guru guides the evolution of souls. Manu Parampara means the spiritual brotherhood of these gurus and the dharma revealed by these Mahatmas become the Veda. Sanatana Dharma is the spiritual culture of these Mahatmas or Rishis. At the beginning of every yuga, the Veda gets revealed through the Kalanthara Guru under Manu Parampara. Sanatana Dharma means the eternal or everlasting dharma guiding the spiritual evolution of humanity. By its own definition, Sanatana Dharma is the God-ordained spiritual system universally applicable to all people.
In contrast to the basic tenets of Sanatana Dharma, the Trimurti order identifies itself with the Karamakanda of Vedas and the mythology in the Puranas that extol the supremacy of gods and worship of deities through mantra and `tantra. The Vedas were revealed in the earlier Yugas, i.e. Satya Yuga, Treta, and Dwapara and that was the dharma of those ages. While the basic principles remain the same, the modes of worship and spiritual authorities change in every Yuga. This change is applicable to Kali Yuga also. It is a science related to evolution through the Manvantara time order.
The above said truth was first revealed by Sri Krishna. But the orthodoxy did not welcome the change and continued to stick on to the old system. When they refused to accept the Yuga Dharma of Kali Yuga, God gave the message in various ways through Lord Buddha, Lord Mahavir, and so many other Mahatmas highlighting the spiritual transition in Kali Yuga. Unfortunately, their efforts did not succeed. Then God sent other messengers in different parts of the world in order to implement the dharma of Kali Yuga by force or choice. In short, India was left behind in this spiritual transition or advancement.
The worship of Devatas, the performance of Siddhis, etc. belong to past ages - Treta Yuga and Dwapara Yuga. Kali Yuga is the age of Jnana or spiritual realization. Kali Yuga is the stepping stone to Satya Yuga, the all truthful age. So the souls must attain necessary qualifications to be promoted to Satya Yuga by achieving spiritual excellence in Kali Yuga through a realized Guru. For this reason, even the Devatas want to be born in Kali Yuga in Bharat, the scriptures say. However, the orthodoxy portrayed Kali Yuga as a ruinous Yuga because the old ways of worship lose significance in Kali Yuga. Kali Yuga is the age of spiritual and material advancement. All people have equal opportunities to evolve into Satya Yuga. This is an age for correction of mistakes that occurred in the previous Yugas.
The other schools of thought have not accepted the orthodox Trimurti order, the Puranic Hinduism because of its time-barred worship system and caste-based division of society. The birth of different spiritual movements in India like Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, and sects like Kabir Panth, Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, etc. and religious conversions of Hindus to Islam and Christianity can be seen in the light of this rift. The only way to prevent the disintegration of Hindus is to follow the Manvantara Spiritual Order, i.e. Sanatana Dharma in its purity. This forms the discourse of Navajyothi Sree Karunakara Guru, the great Guru in prophecies.
In the Trimurti system, the nucleus of society is the temple and the priest. In Sanatana Dharma, the nucleus is the Ashram and a Trikala Jnani Guru, who sits in the Ashram for the guidance of society. Every Grihasthashrami (householders) is thus guided by Guru. When the Griha (family) gets linked with Ashram and Guru, that becomes Grihasthashrama Dharma. Grihasthashrama Dharma can be fulfilled only through the guidance of Guru.
India has distanced itself from the Ashram culture and therefore, Gurus are not given a proper place in the society. The main reason behind it is the spiritual distortion prevailing at present. Today, gurus and ashrams proclaim the glory of Sanatana Dharma without knowing the true spiritual framework of Sanatana Dharma.
The Kalanthara Guru has control over the whole people, including the government. That is the concept of governance in Sanatana Dharma. In ancient times, the kings governed the country under the guidance of such Gurus only. Sanatana Dharma envisages a singular control over society. As there are no divisions of caste, creed, gender, etc. there is an absolute sense of unity.
In the Trimurti order, this unity and singular control are not possible because of the importance of three main sects, which have different deities as objects of worship and different Karmakanda and philosophies as well as different spiritual authorities. While one sect considers Siva as the Originator, the other as Vishnu, and yet another as Brahma, Goddess, and so on. The people are divided among unequal caste groups. And there is no possibility of getting united under a singular spiritual authority as different deities and priests are the media between man and God. All efforts to unite Hindus have so far failed because of this spiritual disunity and social fragmentation.
Friction exists between these two thought currents from ancient times. The concept of Yuga Dharma through the cycles of Yugas and Manvantaras is fundamental to the inner teachings of Sanatana Dharma. It’s time the Hindu society and its leaders review the original concepts in order to confront the forces that threaten their very existence in their motherland Bharat.
Only through the acceptance of the Manvantara Spiritual Order Hindus can unite and confront the onslaught of outside religions and bring peace to the world. India can again rise to the status of Vishwa Guru and show others the right path. The spiritual movement of Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru is a beginning in this direction.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

What is Ailing Hinduism?

Much before the advent of Christianity and Islam, India gave the world the monotheistic view of God and theories related to the creation, the evolution of life, time concept, karma, reincarnation, etc. Although the Vedas venerate gods that are organic to the cosmic apparatus, they go beyond and present us the concept of formless and manifest facets of God. The formless God is called Brahman, who with a desire to create the universe manifested Himself as the Cosmic Purusha. So Purusha is the First Born of God, the kinetic form of the unborn, unknowable God. Vedas and Upanishads clearly say the formless Brahman made Him known by appearing in the form of a Cosmic Person. Borrowing this Vedic idea Bible writers say that God created man in His own image.
According to the theory of creation in Hindu scriptures, Purusha remained in the fluid of the universal egg for a long time and finding Him alone, He split himself into two, as a man and a woman with a desire to create. (His first creations were sages or rishis, it is said). The name of the Purusha is Manu and the woman Satarupa. It is mentioned further that from this pair the human race originated; hence Manu is considered the progenitor of mankind. These ideas of creation traveled worldwide and took regional forms. The Purusha began to be worshipped in various forms and names in subsequent ages. The Hindus equated Him with the trinity gods Siva, Vishnu, Brahma and so on. In the prophetical religions, Purusha is worshipped as the Father in Heaven, Allah, etc. The Manu became the myth of Adam in Christianity and Islam.
Manu in Indian spirituality is the Creator himself, not just the human ancestor. Manu is God in creative mode. For this reason, the world-time is named Manvantara after Manu’s name by the primordial rishis. Therefore, Indian spirituality is monotheistic in essence although not in practice currently. The concept of a monotheistic God originated in India. However, during the course of time, certain socio-spiritual distortions occurred in India. The Vedic scribes re-wrote Purana Samhita (mythological treatise which was one in the beginning) and portrayed Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva as the authorities of creation probably to bring these pre-Vedic traditions together. They altered the Manvantara time calculation subservient to trinity god Brahma instead of Manu, according to the revelations received through Sri Karunakara Guru. Manu lost all significance. During the long ages of editions and re-editions of Vedic texts in the hands of Vaidikas, the history of Manu was lost except his name. The Vedic priests not only made trinity gods equal to Brahman but made the community of priests too equal to a god. They instituted a hierarchical caste system that gave no spiritual rights to others. The other communities were prohibited from learning Vedas and rituals and were left to worship evil spirits and tribal gods.
According to Manu Parampara or Sanatana Dharma, only Trikala jnani (all-knowing) gurus are the spiritual authorities in every yuga. Sri Ram was the Guru of Treta yuga and Sri Krishna of Dwapara Yuga. The object of Worship in Sanatana Dharma is Brahman alone, the formless Supreme Light, through the medium of an epochal Guru, who appears in every age. From the beginning of this new age Kali Yuga (which began approx. 5200 years ago), God sent great souls like Sri Krishna, Sri Buddha, Mahavir, Guru Nanak, Kabir Das, and others. However, the Vaidikas brought these great souls under the Trimurti system through interpolated Puranas which portrayed them as avatars of one or the other gods. For example, is the myth of Sri Krishna and Sri Buddha who are mentioned as avatars of Vishnu in the Puranas. The great Mahatmas and their words were not recognized in order to promote the monopoly of Vaidikas.
Further, Vedanta philosophy brought great spiritual distortion in the minds of people as its real essence was misunderstood. The people became full of ‘ahamkara’ or ego-ness as they were taught to think they are Brahman (Aham Brahmasmi). Any sinful person and even an evil spirit can become equal to God in this way. A person can attain Brahman only after cleansing all karma doshas and pitru doshas (karmic and genetic imprints and debilities) through many reincarnations and after crossing many spiritual stages. A fully realized Guru who knows the past, present, and future and who is the spiritual authority of age is necessary for such spiritual cleansing and a spiritual voyage through the cosmic egg.
Thus the Sanatana spiritual order was distorted. God sent other messengers like Moses, Jesus and Prophet Mohammad outside India and tried to re-establish Sanatana Dharma world-view. Since the origin of Sanatana Dharma is in India, the prophets of Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) did not get revealed the full idea of the secret of creation and related knowledge with regard to the evolution of life, the theory of karma, reincarnation, etc. So Christianity and Islam present only a dogmatic half-baked view of God and creation. Only Sanatana Dharma presents an all-encompassing inclusive world view. Sanatana Dharma is time tested, eternal and the divine plan for spiritual evolution.
God sends an epochal Guru, a Kalanthara Guru in every age. Accordingly, He sent another great reformer, a divine messenger to India as the spiritual authority of this new age - Kali Yuga. The name of that great Soul is Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru (1927-1999), whose abode is in Thiruvananthapuram, at the southern tip of India, in Kerala. The great Guru’s spiritual intercession cleanses the individual and family from all karmic and genetic sins and leads one to peace and divine joy. The Guru has led thousands of families to the new order - Guru Margam getting rid of all caste, gender, and religious segregations. In the new order, the venerable is only Brahman, the One God. Mediators are not priests, but the all-knowing Guru and his lineage of realized spiritual masters.

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Why Hinduism Has to Evolve?


We have only one religion – the Religion of Liberation’, said Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru (1927-1999), the founder of Santhigiri Guru Parampara about the path of Dharma he founded. Guru Dharma deals with principles related to the spiritual scheme of time cycles (Yuga Dharma), wisdom transmission (Guru Dharma) and the laws concerning soul’s transmigratory journey for the fulfilling experience of non-dual consciousness. Guru revealed the way for experiencing the pure vision of non-dual Truth living in the duality of phenomenal existence.
We might take time cycles i.e. Yugas, Manvantaras, and Kalpa as some obscure concepts from an unknown past. Just like time in the form of day and night as well as year and season is bound to human destiny, Yugas and Manvantaras are the measurements of infinite time, related to the origin and evolution of life and consciousness in the solar system. The solar system has come into being with such matchless perfection by the Will of Brahman, the Transcendental Light (Brahma Prakasham).
How can the Absolute Nondual Truth create a world of plurality is a question that continues to perplex man.  Existence cannot come into being from non-existence, declare the Upanishads (Chandogya Upanishad, VI.II.1). Although the Divine Light is non-dual primordial consciousness and also the basis for phenomenal existence, it creates the world of plurality with names, forms, qualities and different potencies by launching itself through a primordial kinetic urge (Adi Sankalpam).
Adi Sankalpam means the first thought or the Word of God as reflected in the Upanishads as ‘May I Be Many’, ‘May I Create the World’. (Chandogya Upanishad, VI.II.3, Aitareya Upanishad, I, Taitiriya Upanishad, II.vi.i). This primordial urge, the spontaneous self-expression of the nondual Truth creates the boundaries of time and space as well as the whole phenomena of existence, the cosmic plan.  
Some religions are against anthropomorphizing God, as they argue that the Absolute Truth is arupi, i.e. formless. Advaita Vedanta even deny that the creation is only a mirage, an illusion.  However, the argument is only partially true.
Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said:
‘Although God is arupi (formless), there is swarupam (form). When we say the love of God, we should imagine a ‘swarupam’ (an embodiment) for God in mind, because God indeed is a ‘swarupam’. Saying that God is omnipresent and interpret in some other way, we would never be able to understand God’.
The pure absolute consciousness has to first transform itself into an entity for the purpose of creation, the scriptures reveal. The Brihadaranya Upanishad mentions: ‘In the beginning, this was but the Self in a form similar to that of a Man’. (Rig Veda, 10.90.2, Yajurveda 31:18, Aiteraya Upanishad, 1:1:3).
This progenitor is known as Manu in Indian cosmology. He is the first born of God, the Purusha or the Hiranyagarbha of the Vedas and Upanishads and the Logos in western theology. The Indian rishis calculated the age of the universe in terms of Manvantara after the name of Manu, the archetypal Guru, the primordial Purusha, through whose volition (sankalpa) every solar system comes into existence. Man has lost the awareness about this archetypal heavenly father. Therefore, Indian rishis calculated the age of the universe in terms of Manvantara, the age of a Manu.
Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said:
‘Manu Parampara (lineage) is to provide God’s dharma to the world. It is a long time now since we have reached to this helpless state of not knowing about Manvantara, Chaturyuga, how many chaturyugas constitute a Manvantara…’
Nine heavenly bodies revolve around the sun creating the conditions for the origin, sustenance, and evolution of human life. The Rishis revealed that a Manvantara has seventy-one age-quartets or Chaturyugas (306,720,000 human years) consisting of Satya, Treta, Dwapara, and Kali, which cyclically evolve to a pre-determined goal of perfection. Then another solar system begins with the next Manu. Fourteen such archetypal Manus appear in an episode of creation called Kalpa.
‘When we talk about the origin of the universe, the yuga-cycles and dissolutions happen with such a long age. Manvantara comes at the transition to another yuga-cycle after dissolution’ (Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru).
This process of creation goes on infinitely, without a beginning and end, which explains the theory of an expanding universe with its billions of galaxies and the possible existence of countless solar systems. Therefore, the Indian name for God is Brahman, which means that which expands.
‘There is a measure of Brahma Prakasham (Divine Light) for the movement of the solar system’ said Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru. The universe moves on the wheel of time, therefore, the human race cannot move forward without the proper awareness of time. Time is the synonym for change. Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said about it as avastha bhedam (change of nature or stage).
‘Evolving through each age, developing through centuries, we are crossing stages. When we say ‘avastha bhedam’, the stage from a base entity to a Deva is a unique stage (avastha) of ours’ (Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru).
When Darvin’s theory of evolution is taken further to ethereal planes (mandalas), the soul of man further evolves into the status of greater luminous bodies of a deva, Rishi, sanyasi and other higher levels of manifestation. The soul goes through ten spiritual stages of transformation, according to the Guru. The worlds mentioned in the Bhagavata Purana and other texts relate to these stages of soul evolution.
After the age of Kali, the Chaturyuga cycle again begins with Satya, Treta, Dwapara, and Kali. Satya Yuga is the age of perfection, when God realization is direct, according to the Rishis. While the perfected souls in Satya Yuga adorn the heavens as radiant entities and merge with Brahman (the absolute nondual state) at the end of a Kalpa, souls in the various states of evolution such as an animal, human, deva or a rishi also have to go through the long process of evolution through the cycle of ages. The soul might go down in the process of evolution when righteous dharma and karma are violated.
The present age is the Kali Yuga of 28th Chaturyuga, with 43 Chaturyugas to go, to complete this Manu cycle. Kali Yuga is a period of spiritual perfection. The spiritual order of Kali yuga requires that man attains necessary soul luminance to qualify for the all perfect Satya Yuga, rectifying the mistakes that might have happened in the karma and dharma of previous yuga cycles dwapara and treta.  Sanatana Dharma is related to this eternal spiritual order.
However, the mediums of revelation, as well as the modes of application, change from time to time because of socio-environmental changes and human errors that trigger periodical civilizational changes. This change is continuous. Spiritual guides appear for various durations such as 1000, 2000, 3500 or 5000 in a yuga cycle.
‘When the Treta Yuga is completely traversed in the order of Yuga Dharma, an ideology cannot remain more than 5000 or 10000 years. With the passage of time, many failings come in those ideologies’ (Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru).
In view of the above, Yuga Dharma embodies the concept of age-specific renewal of the Dharmic order.
Karunakara Guru said: ‘Yuga Dharma is not only for any particular caste, religion or person. Yuga Dharma is for the whole world… we should know what is Yuga Dharma. There is no use taking up all the four without following what is to be followed in each Yuga. But, we have a tradition that has taken up all the four’.
The ways of worship and social laws of bygone ages (Treta and Dwapara) are practiced in Kali Yuga against the age-specific spiritual order of Sanatana Dharma. The regime of Mahatmas and their spiritual guidance pertaining to Kali Yuga according to the concept of yuga dharma are ignored. Sri Ram, the guru of Treta and Sri Krishna, the guru of Dwapara, whose spiritual incumbency belonged to their respective ages, as well as the rituals and the sacred chants of those yugas are followed in the Kali Yuga. The rights and wrongs of the past yugas are repeated arresting the age-related spiritual evolvement.
While the Vedic tradition portrayed Kali Yuga as an age of ruin, Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said that Kali is the best age after Satya Yuga since it is an age of spiritual evolvement. The revelations of Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru regarding the Dharmic order of Kali Yuga deserve serious attention:
*. We should make changes according to the time. Time will not step aside for us. Since this is the age of Kali, what is required is the propagation of Dharma suitable to Kali Yuga.
*. If the time of Deva in the Treta and Dwapara had been fulfilled through mantra and tantra, it has to be fulfilled through austerities and knowledge (tapas and jnana) in the age of Kali.
* Most jnanis have not been able to understand what the Dharmic order of Kali Yuga is.
* In order to implement Kali Yuga Dharma, a correction and a new path is required. The new path is to develop a good character among the people.
The effort for the transition to Kali Yuga Dharma had begun from Sri Krishna. After Sri Krishna, the Upanishad Rishis, Sri Buddha, Mahavir and other Mahatmas tried to rejuvenate the jnana tradition of India. However, their efforts remain unfulfilled because of spiritual distortions.
Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru referred to it as ‘the error that denied Guru Dharma in the name of Vedic dharma’. Guru said that there would be a change only when we accept the path opened by the Mahatmas:
‘What is required first is the removal of ignorance. That only will lead to victory. What is required for that? We should understand the vision of Mahatmas; should think about it and then try to actualize it. Thus, if we strive step by step, we can reach the desired shore…. Our destined karma is to knock at the door and find out the self-sacrifice of every great soul, that they did for our sake…Mahatmas are the means to love truth and to know the karma with discrimination.’
But the Mahatmas did not get the desired status in India. The Rishi tradition gave way to the Vedic tradition which tried to cement the Trimurti tradition, the worship of trinity gods (Siva, Vishnu and Goddess) and their large family of gods, divinities and gurus under it. The Hindus of India are thus divided into many sects and caste groups leading to their spiritual disunity.  Therefore, the efforts to unite Hindus have always failed.
 Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said:
‘An effort has taken place to unite us through Vaishnava, Shaiva and Sakteya traditions. But people would not be united in that way because these three had come in three different ways. What is required for unifying is some awareness.’
The mistake prevailing in the world now is that the dharma of the fourth epoch (Kali Yuga) has not been implemented here. Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru said that the worship of One Almighty God has to be perfected in Kali Yuga. The doctrine of One Absolute God was put forward by India first. However, for the last few millenniums, Vedic tradition functioned without giving respect to the jnana tradition; therefore, Yuga dharma could not be established here.
The idea of One God worship was propagated by prophets such as Moses, Jesus, and Mohammad in West Asia, which has spread throughout the world. But in the prophetic religions, there is no clear concept about cosmic time order – about the Yugas and Manvantaras. They also do not accept the theory of spiritual evolution, reincarnation, etc.
Nature has an inherent character to evolve the soul to its Absolute status through a series of evolutionary incarnations. There exists, also a divine intervention that creates or directs this rhythmic evolution. The uniqueness of Indian spirituality is this idea of a divine intervention, in the form of a spiritual embodiment that exists as the ‘witnessing authority of all actions and knowledge (Karma-Dharma-Saakshi, i.e. Guru Incarnation). Indian spirituality considers the relationship between an enlightened Guru - who is the embodiment of absolute realization- and the souls who are struggling to attain freedom from the chains of imperfection as the fundamental dharma for the evolvement and fulfilment of all living beings. 
The path of Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru is the hope for the whole human race to unite spiritually. It is an opportunity for Hinduism and India to evolve with universal acceptance.

Mukundan P.R.
Senior Coordinator, 
Santhigiri Social Research Institute
Thiruvananthapuram

Reference:
Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru, A Dialogue on Human Prospect, Santhigiri Publications
Mukundan P.R., The Riddle of Manu, Manvantara Avatars and World Teacher Prophecies, Santhigiri Publications
Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru, The Liberating Dharma, Santhigiri Publications


Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru - A World Spiritual Reformer


Life

 

Two thousand five hundred years after Buddha, Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru was in the tradition of divine incarnations. This benevolent Soul lived for seventy-two years and left the earthly abode on 6th May 1999.  Twentieth-century, the period of His birth is related to the period in the prophecies referred to as ‘The End of Times’ in the Bible or ‘Setting in Motion the Wheel of Dharma’ in the Buddhist tradition, in the cycles of spiritual transition. 

 

The life of Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru, as well as the prophecies, is a highly correlated subject, which could be understood only through research into humanity’s spiritual history and Guru’s revelations.  The spiritual path of Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru is a corrective process in the Manvantara order.  Guru never preached religion in the traditional sense.   His teachings focus on the science of spiritual evolution as revealed from the Light.  Guru brings to the fore the refined base of human life and the hope of the new world order as envisioned by sages and prophets, pulling down the dividing walls of creed, color, and caste promising the age of harmony, love, and peace.

 

The prophecy regarding Mahdi Imam in the Islamic tradition is apt for Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru:

 

‘He (Hazrat Mahdi) will walk among them, move through their markets and walk where they walk, but they will not recognize Hazrat Mahdi until Allah gives them leave to recognize him, just as He did with the Prophet Yusuf…’

 

Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru was born on 1 September 1927 at Chandiroor near Cherthala town in Kerala in an ordinary peasant family.  Guru’s father died when He was one and a half years.  Guru became aware of spiritual experiences in his childhood.  He discovered that there was always a form within Him filling Him.  Words came from this form. His body was like a mike, a mere instrument through which that form spoke.  It continued till He was nine. Only after that, He began to play and talk, like a normal child.  At the age of nine, He went to a traditional village school (kutipallikoodam) where children learned to read and write by practicing on the sand.  He studied there for three years.

 

After mother’s remarriage, He began to live with His mother and stepfather.  After two years, He decided to join an Ashram.  He was just 14 years old then.   His teacher helped Him to reach Agamananda Ashram in Kalady.  The person who took Him dropped Him at the gate of Agamananda Ashram and left.  However, the Ashram refused admission to him as He was only a child.  Left alone, He walked towards Aluva and providentially reached Advaita Ashram, founded by Sri Narayana Guru.  He was there for two years before being transferred to Sivagiri Mutt at Varkala.  He spent seventeen years in Sivagiri Mutt and its branches at various places during which time He underwent a great deal of agony.

 

The desire to find a spiritual guide grew strong in Him, and finally, he found a Guru.  His name was Khureshia Fakir, a Sufi saint, who lived near Beema Masjid in Thiruvananthapuram.  He was popularly known as Pattani Swami, as his ancestors were Pathans from Afghanistan.  Guru started getting certain experiences. He continued in Sivagiri Mutt and its branches for a few years.  During this period, He faced lots of hardships and hostility from the associates, who made false allegations against him.

 

As He grew tired of certain tendencies in His associates, He wanted to leave Sivagiri.  He returned the keys to those in authority and went to Pattani Swami with the intention of staying with him.  However, Pattani Swami sent him back to Sivagiri.  Guru returned reluctantly. But after a few months, Pattani Swami came near Sivagiri Mutt and sent for Guru. Pattani Swami informed Him that there would be a change soon from Sivagiri Mutt, which turned out to be true. Guru left Sivagiri Mutt and settled down at a hill nearby Sivagiri Mutt. People used to call Guru as Santhi because He conducted rituals in Sivagiri Mutt. The hill where Santhi lived came to be known as Santhigiri.

 

After about six months, Guru decided to meet His spiritual mentor, Pattani Swami. Pattani Swami asked Him to stay and go only after getting further spiritual experiences. Guru wandered along with Pattani Swami and His disciples in the forests and hills near Thakkala. In between Pattani Swami praised Guru lavishly in front of other disciples saying that He was a great soul! In those days, Guru got a unique spiritual experience. It was His fourth day at Thakkala. Nine of them were lying on the floor in a row along with Pattani Swami. It was around three o’clock in the morning. Suddenly Guru felt that the whole world was in a whirl and that he was tiny like a mustard seed, which was being torn apart at that time. Pattani Swami gave Him a slap and asked, “Hey, did you get scared?” “No, not in my heart of hearts!” Guru replied. “Ah! There is hope, then,” Pattani Swami said.

 

Even so, it was as if He had lost His senses. When He walked on the road, He would see approaching vehicles but would not realize that He had to move aside. His Guru sent for Parameswaran Pillai, another disciple of his, and instructed, “You must take leave from your office for a few days and take care of him”. So Parameswaran Pillai took leave from his job and took care of Guru. During the day he would take Guru to all the holy places in that region. Guru was able to see the deities and other subtle beings abiding at such spots, but the dark powers never came in front of Him.

 

Pattani Swami and the disciples returned to Thakkala.  On the way, Pattani Swami pulled away Guru’s clothes and gave a tattered rag to wear.  He gave Him a slap and ordered Him to run away. This led to lonely wandering and Guru gained tremendous spiritual experiences.  Pattani Swami, who listened to his experiences hugged Guru and said, ‘Now you go wherever you like, you will get everything’. They parted and Guru returned to Varkala Santhigiri.  He went through several mystical experiences for the next six and a half years. At the end of the first five and a half years itself, people who were closely associated with Him also started getting spiritual experiences.

 

After seven years and three months, three persons came to the Ashram after the morning bath as if to offer worship.  In the same month, there was a sudden increase in popularity and visitors started pouring in hundreds daily.  People started informing Guru that it was enough to tell Him about their diseases. They would be rid of the diseases almost immediately. After seven months, men and women alike, many who were visiting the Ashram started developing the faculty of darshanam (visions). Those who got this perception were around fifty. This happened inspite of their lack of understanding of this experience and lack of knowledge as to how to develop it.  Still, it happened. Unusual as it was, this became a subject for discussion among people. What is more, all these people found all their prayers being granted. Guru was not doing anything special that could be responsible for all this.

 

Three years passed like this. People started showing increased love and respect. Among those who had the faculty of darsanam, three persons—a female and two males—began to excel.  They started getting visions concerning matters useful to others.  The female was an adult and so was one of the males. The other male was just a boy. For almost a year this situation continued. Then some of what they perceived went wrong. When they erred frequently for a period of time Guru felt that they themselves were responsible for these faults. In fact, Guru chastised them severely. That did not improve them. Their readings became more and more erroneous, and conse­quently hardships increased. A variety of difficulties arose in numerous ways.

 

Earlier, if a cure for a certain illness was predicted to take place by a certain date through a certain prescription, it would have happened ten days before time. Now an illness could not be fully cured even after the foreseen time. This erroneous trend became worse, and soon three-fourths of what was being seen was of no use. Guru kept scolding the three persons with darshanam for all this. Around this time the visitors also started turning slightly hostile.  Guru began to search for the cause of this hostility, but there was no chance of tracing it.

 

Basic to the Hindu worship is the worship of the Trimurti.  In spite of doing all that is prescribed in this system, there was neither relief nor release from the crisis. This struggle lasted for nearly one year. Even the persons endowed with darshanam were going through dif­ficulties without any relief. Eventually an asariri (clairaudience or word from the Divine) was received which directed Guru to stay away. Guru should not be seen by even two persons at a time, so He stayed quietly without making a move for two months. The directive was repeated forbidding further stay at the Varkala Ashram.

 

Guru had built a small shelter near Pothencode, on the outskirts of Thiruvananthapuram for an Ashram, which is now known as Santhigiri. Someone had been engaged to light a lamp there daily. When the second warning came Guru realized He should not continue at Varkala.  He left immediately for Santhigiri.  As its neighborhood was practically unpopulated in those days, one could live in peace. During this period two lines of mantra had been revealed to two persons, each receiving one line. They were told to chant these lines and make it potent.  However, Guru did not allow this chant as it happened to include His name. Those who were hostile spread a rumor that Guru was driven out from Varkala. Everyone believed it since He was not seen around the place.  They had no way of getting to know the truth. 

 

After nine months at Santhigiri, Guru received another directive from the Light forbidding Him to do anything for a period of two and a half years.  But nine months after this directive the Trimurti and the rishis under them asked Guru to start treating the sick who came for help. Thus work began again. Almost immediately the number of daily visitors went up to nearly three hundred.  Within a period of three weeks, sixty ailing persons were healed in the Ashram premises itself. At that time there was no shelter to lodge people. There were no other facilities either. People who came to stay rested and slept on the grass. They were exposed to both the heat of the sun and the cold of the night. They chose to ignore these hardships in their own interest.

 

Within three months, however, an impasse developed suddenly like the previous one at Varkala. The sick could not be cured fully. In the meanwhile, there was an annunciation that two lines gave earlier as mantra (they were received from the Light to two disciples- a man and a woman) should be chanted:  


'Aum Sree Karunakara Guru Parabrahmane Namah, Aum Sree Karunakara Guru Satyapradaya Namah. Thus this chant came to be used for prayer and sankalpam and people with severe diseases began to be healed. Again there was a directive. Guru was to withdraw from such work for three and a half years. Work was stopped accordingly. Then He was asked to go on a journey.

 

Guru set out as a group of four, including a child of ten years old. This child had had an experience of darshanam already. She had also lived in the Ashram for some days. None of those who had darshanam regularly was asked to join this trip. There was a reason for not taking them. Guru had begun to suspect something. Certain powers at the level of the devas—those we understand as gods— were misleading Guru and the disciples. This was what happened even in the earlier impasse. In fact, it grew clear that the signals received from these powers now were false. Therefore, it was decided to refuse the guidance of these powers.

 

Guru thought it was due to the mistake of the disciples through whom intimations were received. Guru scolded and thrashed them. But it was all futile. The deadlock became severe. Finally, it became clear that the mistake was in the intimation itself. When Guru was thus in turmoil, unable to realize the reason behind the impasse, he became angry and said to the disciples who had the visions: “Throw away this junk.” Saying thus he locked himself in the ‘Parnasala’.

 

He did not allow anyone to see him. He entered into deep meditation. It was time for food, but Guru did not get up. He did not accept even water. Completely detached, he remained in meditation. Others in the ashram also did not eat food. The congregation of people now began to pray in unison. It was past noon. The prayers continued. Through intimation, it was informed to Guru that he should get up and take food. But, Guru refused. He vowed that he should know the truth for certain. Otherwise, he would not even touch drinking water. The spiritual powers from whom the intimations were being received now became alarmed and afraid.

 

In the afternoon, at 4 p.m., a bright Radiance appeared. It was a pure white radiance never seen before. Word was received from that Light. “Suffered a lot, isn’t it?  Never mind, everything will be alright. Now Guru and all others should take food. Wait for Me again at 5 p.m.” Accordingly, all people, including Guru, took food. When it was five minutes to five, instructions were received from the Light about the things to be done. It was the opening of a new chapter and actions were initiated as per the words from that Light. With this, almost all the powers in the spiritual planes started to resist Guru. These included countless evil spirits, rishis, sanyasis, gurus, and even the Trimurti (trinity gods). The resistance and misguidance of these divinities were now clearly perceived.  All this was known through visions. Word came on how to safeguard from this spiritual crisis. During this time, the problems of sick persons became acute. Those who were possessed screamed and jumped in trance. Lunatics shouted and ran in all directions. The atmosphere in the ashram became chaotic with the terrible actions and screaming of the afflicted people.

 

The only way to overcome the spiritual resistance from the subtle cosmic beings was prayer.  It took many days of fasting and prayers, which were repeated many times, to subdue the belligerent spiritual and depraved forces wielding enormous siddhi – miraculous power.  It was indeed a fierce spiritual war as it entailed a seminal and epochal spiritual change in the world. All devotees obeyed the instructions of Guru based on the intimations from the Light. People prayed sitting on the uneven ground full of gravel. They prayed incessantly, foregoing sleep and food, disregarding the harsh sun, rain or mist. Several people fainted. It was an epochal spiritual war in which the weapons of the victorious were their innocent and heartfelt prayers. The merciless spiritual powers, however, persisted.

 

Eventually, it was the divine intervention from Sri Krishna that ended the crisis.  Sri Krishna came and revealed to the disciples that it would be enough to pray to Guru and all the hindrances would be removed. Thus, the disciples got the conviction that the intimations from the deities were incorrect. Guru advised them not to depend on the intimations from the deities and to take instructions from the White Transcendental Light alone. The revelation was received to the effect that the devotees should chant only the ‘Akhanda Naamam’ (the mantra received from the Light with Guru’s name) and act in accordance with the intimations from the Transcendental Radiance.

 

The countless souls and demonic powers in the spiritual sky were consigned to the fire of the radiance of Brahman. Thus the meaning of Guru’s life and the intent of Godly Will were clarified. It marked the completion of Guru’s spiritual stature. Lord Sri Krishna stood guard to this spiritual transition and helped Guru with an utmost vigil and a divine mission. After Guru’s spiritual completion, Sri Krishna went back with an instruction to the disciples of Guru: “From now on, do everything in Guru’s name and you shall overcome all problems.”

 

Guru filled the universe as the Totality of Dharma. The Will of Brahman was fulfilled.  The followers of Guru adopted a worship system based on faith in One Universal God, the Brahman. As per  the divine intimation, they accepted the path of Guru - ‘Guru Margam’ - and began worshipping Him as the medium to the Transcendental Light. The work of spiritually deviated souls against the will of God has been always evident in the world and it worked in the case of Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru also. On completion of the spiritual mission in the mortal world, Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru left His physical body on 6th May 1999.  Presently Her Holiness Sishyapoojita Amrita Jnana Tapaswini leads the spiritual mission of Navajyotisri Karunakara Guru.

 

 

Teachings

 

Navajyotisree Karunakara Guru once mentioned that His path is Vimochana Matam, i.e. the Liberating Dharma. A few aspects that make this Guru Parampara different from other guru traditions may be surmised thus:

 

For the Guru, God is Parabrahman, the Supreme Light. There is no second God. His light pervades in everything and everyone. God is known only through his Creation. One should live in accordance with the divine order accepting the Will of God. Guidance comes from God through the medium of Guru, and liberation comes through Guru’s grace. For the Guru Parampara the Word of Guru or Guruvani is Veda. It serves as the Holy Scripture for the followers. The Word of Guru is equated with Truth, Truth with Guru, and Guru with God.

 

A seeker cannot evolve spiritually without a Guru. Self-effort in the form of yoga, meditation, visiting temples and other religious places does not elevate the soul spiritually if one is without a realized Guru. Guru, however, accepted the existence of various spiritual entities that inhabit the cosmos. However, they are not to be worshipped in this age as these divinities seek rebirth in Kaliyuga to work out their own liberation through the divinely commissioned Guru in order to be guided to Satya Yuga, the age of spiritual perfection. Therefore, Guru rejected the worship of such spiritual entities and religious lore that promotes sectarian concepts of God. According to the teachings of the Guru, the Trimurti gods including Brahma were gurus of bygone cosmic ages who came for the spiritual guidance of humanity. However, their spiritual incumbency in this age is disowned.


Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru did not favor the concept of Maya which postulates that the world is an illusion and rejected the equation of individual soul with Brahman as exemplified in the Vedantic aphorisms such as ‘Aham Brahmasmi’ (I am Brahman) and ‘Tat Twam Asi’(You are That). He said that Jeev Atma is only a reflection or the ray of the Supreme Light, not the Supreme itself.


The Guru’s idea of creation differs from the puranic myths, which mention that god Brahma is the Creator. Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru reveals that every solar system(s) in which all living beings have their abode is created through the medium of Archetypal Manus, who is said to be the first self-projection of God and through whose ideation or Sankalpa manifests the visible universe consisting of planetary units and stellar systems. Because of this, the Indian rishis calculated the age of the cosmos in terms of Manvantara after the name of Manus. A Manu is God manifest, the primordial Purusha mentioned in the Vedas and Upanishads, the divine entity who creates our local universe consisting of twelve zodiacs, twenty-seven stars, and nine planets. This Manu, therefore, is not to be related to the author of Manusmriti, one of the dharmic treatises in Hinduism.


The great rishis have said that God is pure Consciousness and Light indefinable. However, God transforms Himself into a Cosmic Person (i.e. Manu) wishing to create our universe. Various divinities, humans and other sentient and insentient beings in the solar system get evolved through a long process of cyclical evolution by the limitless potential of knowledge and action potential (jnanashakti and kriyashakti) and ideation (sankalpam) of this Cosmic Person. 
The pathetic religious discords today arise owing to the ignorance about this natural spiritual order. Every sect claims that theirs is the only way to God or the true path, which produces discord and conflicts in society.

 

Numerous gurus, seers and prophets of different calibers come for a different duration such as 500, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500 or 5000 years according to the socio-spiritual condition of society. Sri Ram, Sri Krishna, Sri Buddha, Mahavir, Zarathustra, Moses, Jesus Christ, Prophet Mohammad, Guru Nanak, and others were great preceptors who appeared for such spiritual renovation during historical intervals. This process of spiritual renovation goes on until the end of a cosmic age that has a length of billions of years. The spiritual evolution of humanity is not limited to 2000 or 5000 years. Therefore, no prophet or guru can claim to be the final messenger of God or the only way to God. It is this spiritual culture or character of Indian spirituality known as Sanatana Dharma (the eternal spiritual order) that makes it eternally relevant, vibrant, and tolerant of other religions.


Although not subscribing to the tenets of established religions, Guru’s Liberating Dharma teaches a follower to respect all world teachers and their sacrifices in a deserving manner since they belong to the brotherhood of mahatmas who came for the spiritual reformation of humanity at various historical intervals. However, their mission remains incomplete, which is evident from the present conflicts and civilizational crisis, which necessitated a spiritual renewal by another World Teacher. Navajyoti Sri Karunakara Guru is the World Teacher presiding over this spiritual renewal.


Guru disapproved of the hierarchical caste system and opened the path of spiritual redemption for all irrespective of their caste or religious identities. The followers of Guru belonged to all castes and occupations especially the marginalized communities. While repudiating the caste system, Guru, however, said that Varna concept, wrongly misinterpreted as a jati (caste) is the classification of human temperaments (vasana) based on the quality of one’s thoughts and actions. Varna of a person cannot be determined based on birth in a particular family or community. Sometimes, in the same family itself, one can find all Varna types.


There are no formal rituals for initiation into the faith of Guru. Anyone with faith in Guru, irrespective of religious and caste status, can join the faith. The only ritual formula for all spiritual performances and lifecycle ceremonies is the chanting of the divine Guru mantra that was revealed from the Light. Verses from texts like Guru Gita and mantras from Upanishads extolling the glory of Guru and Almighty God is also recited for the purpose of worship.


The Ashram of Guru is regarded as the sacred place of pilgrimage. To live in accordance with the guidance of Guru is more important. To make willing sacrifices for the protection and perpetuation of guru paramapara is an essential ingredient of the faith. All Vedic rituals superintended by brahmins through tantra and mantra and worship of Devi-devas are rejected in favor of direct guidance from the Guru. After the physical departure of founder Guru, guidance comes through the anointed preceptors with the power of visionary faculties or ‘seeing’.

 

Remembrance of God by chanting the sacred Guru mantra and leading ethical life as householders helping each other is the path of karma and dharma suggested for the householders. Guru established a self-reliant model of commune life, where all believers lived under one roof engaged in different occupations so that it reduced the burden of life by way of cooperative living. The sanyasis are required to live in accordance with God’s will as socially responsible persons, not as recluses who live detached from community life. Although there is a group of sanyasis and brahmacharis belonging to both genders in the Ashram, Guru did not want sanyasis to wander aimlessly as mendicants. He was opposed to such meaningless renunciation. The sanyasis of Guru supervise community life. The members of the commune engage in self-sustaining enterprises with a vision to help society with exemplary products and services.

 

According to the Guru, the society and government should be guided by the wisdom of an all-knowing sage who functions by the Will of God. Guru was concerned about the wrong direction of society, of the painful conflicts and social disunity. Guru believed that only through the spiritual upliftment of householders, especially women, the desired spiritual renaissance can take place in the world. Guru gave importance to bhakti (devotion) and self-sacrifice for the divine cause in order to change both the quality and structure of social life. The basis for social regeneration advocated by Guru is essentially spiritual, ethical, and family-oriented. Guru personally guided householders in every aspect of life and life-cycle ceremonies. A new guru parampara is born with a divinely commissioned Guru to guide its social and religious life. Guru’s message is not merely of liberation but also of social action.


Guru initiated a unique spiritual performance known as Gurupooja or Pitrusudhi by which the devotee is freed from inauspicious karma of ancestors, the bad and good deeds of one’s past and present lives and also from the consequences of erroneous religious practices handed down by ancestors. This is a purely contemplative spiritual intercession performed by the incumbent spiritual head for releasing the devotees from negative karmic and spiritual influences. After a few generations, several mahatmas and other high souls waiting for rebirth in this age will be born in the families thus purified. With that, the spiritual renovation of humanity would be complete.


Guru founded a universal spiritual path based on the faith in the Oneness of God and Humanity in fulfillment of the wishes of great rishis, sages, and prophets who came in the past. The teachings of Navajyotisree Karunakara Guru deal with the questions of spiritual evolution, spiritual hierarchies, cosmic time order, astral pollution, soul transmigration, purification of karmic, ancestral and spiritual errors, and the possibility of spiritual intervention from time to time in the spiritual evolution of humanity. The path of Guru can be referred to as Jnana Margam – founded on the monotheistic principles of Sanatana Dharma.


Mukundan P.R.