Vashistha
Vashistha | |
---|---|
Information | |
Spouse(s) | Arundhati |
Children | Śakti Maharṣi |
Maharishi Vashistha (Sanskrit: वशिष्ठ, वसिष्ठ, IAST: Vaśiṣṭha, Vasiṣṭha, Thai: Vasit, Tamil: வசிட்டர், Telugu: వశిష్ఠ) is one of the Saptarishis(seven great Rishis) in the seventh, i.e. present Manvantara or age of Manu.[1] Vashistha is a manasputra of God Brahma. He had in his possession the divine cow Kamadhenu and Nandini her child, who could grant anything to their owners. Arundhati is the name of wife of Vashista. RigVeda 7:33 mentions Vashishtha Rishi as son of MitraVaruna and Urvasi.[2][3]
Vashistha as one of 9 Prajapatis, is credited as the chief author of Mandala 7 of Rigveda. Vashistha and his family are glorified in RV 7.33, extolling their role in the Battle of the Ten Kings, making him the only mortal besides Bhava to have a Rigvedic hymn dedicated to him. Another treatise attributed to him is Vashistha Samhita – a book on the Vedic system of electional astrology.
Arundhati & Maharishi Vashistha Pair Of Stars
Mizar is known as Vashistha and Alcor is known as Arundhati in traditional Indian astronomy.[4] The pair is considered to symbolise marriage(Maharishi Vashistha and Arundhati were a married couple) and in some Hindu communities, priests conducting a wedding ceremony allude to or point out the constellation as a symbol of the closeness marriage brings to a couple.[5] Since Vashistha was married to Arundhati, he was also called Arundhati Nath, meaning the husband of Arundhati.[6]
In Vinaya Pitaka of Mahavagga(I.245)[7] section, the Buddha pays respect to Maharishi Vashistha by declaring that the Veda in its true form was declared to the Vedic rishis "Atthako, Vâmako, Vâmadevo, Vessâmitto, Yamataggi, Angiraso, Bhâradvâjo, Vâsettho [vashishta], Kassapo and Bhagu"[8] and because that true Veda was altered by some priests, he refused to pay homage to the altered version.[9]
Vashistha is believed to have lived on the banks of Ganga in modern-day Uttarakhand. The place was also the abode of sage Vyasa along with Pandavas, the five brothers of Mahabharata.[10]
Works
Maharishi Vashistha is believed to have narrated Vishnu Purana along with Rishi Pulatsya. He has also contributed to many Vedic hymns and is seen as the arranger of Vedas during Dwapara Yuga. He is believed to have appeased Rishi Parasara, who was proceeding to curse Rakshasas to be non-existent.[11]
As Family Priest
Maharishi Vashistha was family priest of many kings across different yugas or ages. The notable one being king Saudasa, who once hunted down one of two rakshasas in the form of tigers. The tiger that escaped vowed to take revenge on the king. During one of the sacred offerings to Sage Vashistha by the king, the rakshasa appeared incognito as a Sage and prepared food made out of human flesh. The Sage who came later was offered the food. Knowing that it was made of human flesh, he cursed the king and later knowing that it was because of the action of the rakshasa, he reduced the curse to twelve years as he could not take back the whole curse.
There was another king Nimi who requested the Sage to conduct sacrifice for 100 years. Maharishi Vashistha was busy at the time with a similar yagya for Indra, the king of celestial deities and said he would return to do the yagya. After 500 years, when he came back, he found that king Nimi was doing the yagya with another Sage Gautama. He cursed the king that he would cease to exist in bodily form; the king cursed the Sage the same and both curses took effect. It is believed Maharishi Vashistha was born to Mitra and Varuna.[11]
As per one legend, Maharishi Vashistha wanted to commit suicide by falling into river Sarasvati. But the river avoided it by splitting into hundreds of channels. The geological evidence of Sarasvati getting split into multiple channels is associated with this legend.[12]
In Ramayana, Maharishi Vashistha was the royal priest of Ayodhya and was teacher of Rama and his brothers, the main hero of the epic. He was the first one to realize that Rama was an incarnation of Lord Vishnu.
Conflicts With Sage Vishwamitra
On one of his exploits, King Kaushika, who would later go on to become Vishwamitra and his soldiers took rest in the hermitage of Maharishi Vashistha. The whole army was well-fed and taken care of by the sage. The king doubted the possibility and expressed his surprise to the sage as to how he was able to take care of the whole arrangements. Maharishi Vashistha replied,
"O king, this feast that you have partaken with your kinsmen, has been provided by my calf Nandini, who was gifted to me by Indra. You must know that she is daughter of Indra's cow Kamadhenu. She provides me with everything I need."
King Kaushika was surprised and he planned to attain the cow by all means. He expressed a desire to the sage for obtaining Nandini from him. Maharishi Vashistha politely refused to give the cow to the king. Maharishi Vashistha was not tempted by the offer of untold wealth that was made by Kaushika for the cow, which can readily yield all the riches in the world.
The King grew exceedingly angry and he insulted Brahmarishi with harsh words. He also ordered his soldiers to seize the cow and drive it to his kingdom. Nandini was daughter of Kamadhenu and hence she forcefully protested against the soldiers. Maharishi Vashistha saved the cow by destroying all of king's army with his superhuman powers. King Kaushika went on to do penance to become Brahmarishi, to match Vashistha. He was initially conferred the name Vishwamitra and the title Rajarishi.
In one of the later encounters, Vishwamitra cursed king Harishchandra to become a crane. Maharishi Vashistha accompanied him by becoming a bird himself. There were several such instances of violent encounter between the sages and at times, Brahma, god of creation, had to interfere.[11]
The Vashistha Head
A copper item representing a human head styled in the manner described for Vashistha has been dated to around 3700 BC in three western universities using among other tests carbon 14 tests, spectrographic analysis, X-ray dispersal analysis and metallography.[13]
The head was not found in an archaeological context as it was rescued from being melted down in Delhi and has also been seen of questionable veracity as it bears a legible inscription and could simply have be created by recycling material from older copper.[14]
Maharishi Vashistha Temples
There is an Ashram dedicated to Maharishi Vashistha in Guwahati, India. This Ashram is situated close to Assam-Meghalaya border to the south of Guwahati city and is a major tourist attraction of Guwahati. Vashistha Temple is situated in Vashisht village, Himachal Pradesh. Vashistha Cave, a cave on the banks of Ganges River at Shivpuri, 18 km from Rishikesh is also locally believed to be his winter abode and houses a Shiva temple, also near by is Arundhati Cave.
Guru Vashistha is also the primary deity at Arattupuzha Temple known as Arattupuzha Sree Dharmasastha in Arattupuzha village in Thrissur district of Kerala. The famous Arattupuzha Pooram is a yearly celebration where Sri Rama comes from the Thriprayar Temple to pay obeisance to his Guru at Arattupuzha temple.
A new temple and ashram are under development in the hills of Vagamon, Kerala, S. India as seat for ayurveda and other Vedic wisdom http://www.vasishtashram.org/
See also
References
- ↑ Woodroffe, Sir John (1913). "Introduction and Preface". Mahānirvāna Tantra: Tantra of the Great Liberation. London: Luzac & Co. OCLC 6062735.
- ↑ "according to Rig Veda 7.33:11 he is the son of Maitravarun and Urvashi" Prof. Shrikant Prasoon, Pustak Mahal, 2009, ISBN 8122310729, 9788122310726.
- ↑ Born of their love for Urvasi, Vasiṣṭha thou, priest, art son of Varuṇa and Mitra;
And as a fallen drop, in heavenly fervour, all the Gods laid thee on a lotus-blossom - ↑ V.Chandran. Astronomy Quiz Book. Pustak Mahal, 1993. ISBN 978-81-223-0366-7.
... the seven rishis in the constellation Saptarishi (Ursa Major) ... In Vasishta (Zeta), its tiny companion star is named after Arundhati, the wife of Vashisht ... today known by their Arabic names Dubhe (Kratu), Merak (Pulaha), Phekda (Pulastya), Megrez (Atri), Benetnash (Marichi) and Mizar (Vashisht) ...
- ↑ M.K.V. Narayan. Flipside of Hindu Symbolism: Sociological and Scientific Linkages in Hinduism. Fultus Corporation, 2007. ISBN 978-1-59682-117-0.
... At this time, the pundit shows the couple the Arundhati star in the sky to suggest closeness of the married couple. ... the star Vashisht of the Big Dipper constellation (Saptarishi Mandalam) and it is the star system called Mizar ...
- ↑ Gopal, Madan (1990). K.S. Gautam, ed. India through the ages. Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 70.
- ↑ P. 494 The Pali-English dictionary By Thomas William Rhys Davids, William Stede
- ↑ P. 245 The Vinaya piṭakaṃ: one of the principle Buddhist holy scriptures ..., Volume 1 edited by Hermann Oldenberg
- ↑ The Vinaya Pitaka's section Anguttara Nikaya: Panchaka Nipata, P. 44 The legends and theories of the compared with history and science By Robert Spence Hardy
- ↑ Strauss, Sarah (2002). "The Master's Narrative: Swami Sivananda and the Transnational Production of Yoga". Journal of Folklore Research. Indiana University Press. 23: 221. JSTOR 3814692. – via JSTOR (subscription required)
- 1 2 3 Wilkins, W.J. (2003). Hindu Mythology. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld (P) Limited. pp. 380–2. ISBN 81-246-0234-4.
- ↑ Agarwal, D.P. (1990). "Legends as models of Science". Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute. pp. 41–42. JSTOR 42930266. – via JSTOR (subscription required)
- ↑ Hicks and Anderson. Analysis of an Indo-European Vedic Aryan Head – 4500-2500 B.C., in Journal of IE studies 18:425–446. Fall 1990.
- ↑ Bryant, Edwin (2003). The quest for the origins of Vedic culture : the Indo-Aryan migration debate. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0195169478.
Literature
- Atreya, B L (1981) [1935)]. The Philosophy of the Yoga Vashista. A Comparative Critical and Synthetic Survey of the Philosophical Ideas of Vashista as presented in the Yoga-Vashista Maha-Ramayan. Based on a thesis approved for the degree of Doctor of Letters in the Banaras Hindu University. Moradabad: Darshana Printers. p. 467.
- Atreya, B L (1993). The Vision and the Way of Vashista. Madras: Indian Heritage Trust. p. 583. OCLC 30508760. Selected verses, sorted by subject, in both Sanskrit and English text.
- Vālmīki (2002) [1982]. The Essence of Yogavaasishtha. Compiled by Sri Jnanananda Bharati, transl. by Samvid. Chennai: Samata Books. p. 344. Sanskrit and English text.
- Vālmīki (1976). Yoga Vashista Sara: The Essence of Yoga Vashista. trans. Swami Surēśānanda. Tiruvannamalai: Sri Ramanasramam. p. 29. OCLC 10560384. Very short condensation.