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Yama - Nachiketa
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VAJASRAVAS desired that he would give away all he had. He had a son named Nachiketas.As the boy saw the gifts being given, his heart was filled with respect and devotion, and he pondered : "The
realm of undelight is his portion who makes a gift offering
of kine that have drunk their last drop of water and eaten the
last herb, have been sucked to the last drop of milk and have
worn out their organs." "You have been made to wait here for three days without food, a Brahmin and a guest. Accept my salutations, may all be well with me." This meant, in modern language, "Do be kind enough to pardon me." Yama meant to suggest through this eminently human attitude that he was, in spite of being Death, no uncultivated boor! He continued, "Nachiketas, since you have been waiting here for three nights, you should demand three boons from me." Nachiketas too accepted the apology with courtesy without another word, and asked for the first boon thus : "My
dear father must be getting anxious on account of my disappearance,
thinking that I have been gripped by death and would not return.
You please give him peace of mind, remove the feeling of displeasure
he has about me, and grant that when I return from your abode
a free man, may he recognise me and receive me with joy. This,
then, O Yama, will be the first boon I desire." Nachiketas went on, "It is said: there is no fear in heaven, you too are not there, nor is there the dread of old age, people live in great joy when, after crossing beyond both hunger and thirst and passing to the other shore of sorrow, they come to heaven. O Death, you know about that heavenly Fire, speak to me about It, I am listening with faith. The dwellers in heaven have gained immortality .Please tell me about this mystery. This is the second boon I desire." The Lord of Death said in reply, "Nachiketas, listen then to the mystery of this Fire. I have knowledge of this Fire. The Fire takes one to the world of Infinity. The Fire is the basis of this universe. He is abiding in a cave, hidden within our secret being." Yama explained to Nachiketas further, "The Fire is the beginning of creation." He also revealed the secret knowledge about the method of kindling this Fire, the number of bricks and their types needed in piling the altar. Nachiketas listened to all this with great attention, and repeated to the Lord of Death what he had thus learned. Death was pleased and said to him again, "Nachiketas, I am much pleased with you, so I grant you another boon, namely, that the mystery of the Fire which I have revealed to you will be named after you; henceforth people will call it the Fire of Nachiketas. I also give this garland of many forms, take it." What this garland stood for was explained a little by Death, in the same language of symbols which he had used in revealing the mystery of the Fire. He said, "One who lights the three Fires is united with the Three, and goes on performing the three Works, passes beyond life and death. He then comes to know that adorably Deity who is born of the Supreme; knowing him he attains to the supreme Peace." Yama
went on dwelling on the same mystery , perhaps making it still
more mysterious. Nachiketas
answered, "Well, there rises a doubt as to the beings who
depart from hence: some say they continue to exist, others say
they do not. I want to know the truth of this matter, you please
give me this knowledge. This is the third boon I ask." But,
as we have no doubt seen by now, Nachiketas was not to be put
offlike that. He exclaimed, "But this is strange ! Even
the gods find it a matter for debate, you too are saying it
is not easily grasped. But I am not going to have another like
you to speak to me about this matter. And I do not consider
any other boon worth having, as compared to this." Yama
went on adding to the list of desirable things, in the hope
that perhaps in the end the boy could be won over . " All
the desirable things that are hard to get on this mortal earth,
you can demand exactly as you please. Charming damsels with
their chariots and song and dance, than whom there is nothing
more acceptable to men -all this I shall give you for your enjoyment
at will. But do not ask any more about death." Yama
did not find it possible to put him off any more. He went on
expounding his secret knowledge to Nachiketas. He began with
that secret Word which Nachiketas had already received and grasped
all by himself. Yama
taught Nachiketas about the mystery of the Fire as the second
boon. The fruit of this knowledge, the gain it brings has been
described. It is the winning of the heavenly world where one
enjoys immortality; it is a world of delight where death itself
is not, nor old age and fear and sorrow, nor hunger and thirst. The problem is: does not all this amount to what the Gita describes as "a mixed word"? Nachiketas desired to know, as his third boon, which of the two opinions concerning the state of the embodied being on his departure from here after death, namely, that he continues to exist or ceases to be, is the real truth of the matter. But has not the mystery of what lies beyond death been already revealed by what has been said, in connection with the second question or boon, about attaining the heavenly world, enjoyment of immortality, the companionship of the gods and so on ? Where then is the point in asking the same question again ? As
an initial clue to the problem, we must keep in mind . In his third boon, Nachiketas wants to know if there is beyond the physical death any surpassing of death. Granted that heaven is attained, but what happens after that, beyond the heavenly world? For, this too is sometimes said that the enjoyment of heaven is only for a time, no matter how long that time be; after the term is over, one has to come back to earth, death has to be encountered over again. In this view, if the soul of man be immortal, the immortality does not go beyond heaven, it is nothing more than the enjoyment of heaven. In
fact, the Upanishads speak of two kinds of imniortality. One
is temporal immortality, that is, living for ever, the other
is beyond time, in the ultimate Reality or the supreme Truth;
one is cosmic, the other transcendental. What Nachiketas desired to know was this. The gods are temporal beings. However big and mighty they may be, they who endure for ever with a life eternal and have no death, cannot know the secret of death. They may live beyond the pale of death and death is foreign to them. But they are ignorant of the Truth that is beyond time, that has to be reached through death and by passing to the other shore of death. That is why Yama says that the gods are full of doubts and puzzled about this matter. But Yama himself is in possession of this knowledge, he is aware of the Truth that lies beyond him, on the other shore. Nachiketas says to Yama, "Since I have been able to find you, I am sure of gaining this knowledge; there is none other so wise who can speak about it." The reason is that Yama has been called Vaivasvata, he is born of Vivasvan, the Sun-god, Surya Savitri. Surya
Savitri stands for the highest Knowledge, He is the Supreme
Consciousness from which comes the creation of the universe.
Yama is the Life-Force, the Ordainer of the worlds with their
rhythms of life. He is here in this manifestation of the play
of life the representative of Savitri, and Fire is his vehicle,
instrument or symbol. Just as Surya is Vivasvan, the Supreme
Effulgent One, Yama is likewise the Cosmic Being, all cosmic
power and universal force are his. Surya is supra-cosmic, belongs
to the Beyond. Fire is cosmic, belongs to our worlds. Or, to
put it more exactly, Surya is the point of transition from the
Beyond to these worlds; Fire is such a point from the worlds
to the Beyond. By
following the path of the triple Work, Nachiketas could achieve
the temporal realisation. What he needed now was the realisation
beyond time, this is what he demanded as his third boon: after
the knowledge of the worlds the Knowledge of the Supreme, the
transcendental realisation after the cosmic. Nachiketas gained this knowledge, the entire method of the Yoga as revealed to him in person by the Lord of Death. Freed from all impurity and the possibility of death, he attained the supreme state. Anyone else who would follow his path would likewise obtain this realisation of the Self, even as Nachiketas did. |