Brahm Prakвsh a Translation and Analysis
Brahm Prakвsh a Translation and Analysis
Brahm Prakвsh a Translation and Analysis
"
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.. ..,. .
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8RAHM PRAKASH
,
TRANSLA~ION
AND.ANALYSIS
by
"
Hasina M. Jamani
A Thesis
Submitted to the Facult.y of Graduate Studies
Arts~
McGll university
Montreal
""
"
September 1985
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Author:
"
/.
HaSlna M Jaman1
""
~1,
''-itle of'Tllesis:
'--
nalysis.
1
Dep&mnt:
"-
'"
of
McGill University.
,:
1 ~
1-
,Degree:
M.A.
\.
This thesis
seeka to examine
Brahm 'PrakAsh,
a 9inn-
literary heritage of
the Nizri
The Brahm
guide an Ism'l
,.
.c
stage to
of
st~ge
progress
s~ritual
toward the
attainment of
the
'
J. _ y
Indian . religious
thesis,
8 '
phenomen9n~/,/'-
therefore,
.
examiilK
"
how
the
reconstruc~ts"
'"
r'
and
(
Brahm
Tantric
restructures. the
eiement "
form of
.\
r
,r
')
1
Ir
u~
o
..
./
.'. ,
, ,
.(
0'
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., : 1/
Hi
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, i
"
Ha ..i na M Ja~n i
, :Auteut r
!J:
Ti tre de Thse:
et une analyse.
,
L' inst i tut des t udes i Sla~iqUeS'
Dpartement:
,1
l'universi't de McGill.
Degrc
Maltrise
rligieux qu'a
communaut'
produit l'hritage
NizArt IsmA(Il!
littraire de
du ,sous-continent indien.
la
Le
compos~
tage
une
autre
dans
un progrs
spirituel
qui
;'
se fonde
indignedonc,
Praklsh, en
dcrivant le
un phenomn~
la tradition
comment
le Brahm
tantrique.
Prakish
"\
Cette
thse
reconstruit
et
"f(i i
..
:.
,.:l>.. _ _
~_
: ____'....... _ _.:::.._v__.-.. . . . . .
f"~
Il
\.
,'
iv
'.
\
Primarily,
J
l
~ppreciation
without
~Gill
th~s
to th.
thesis
debt
of gratitude
Institute of
whose 'generous
University,
oves a
Ismaili Studies,
con:tribution towars
l would, not
my
and
London,
study
at
to undertake
which
in reyiewing
he took
study and
}
for making
pat~ence
the successive
this work
drafts of
presentable. If
this
this study
0;
()
Almas / whose
enabled me ta
constant
pa~ticulatly
sUPPo,rt
from my
indebted to my
and motivation
has'
li s to
Finally,
Ra~tansi
#
-.t-
must
acknowledge
1 am
my
collegues,
Diamond
of this
\\
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.._---_.
.......
--;------
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..
Tran.liter.tion
'
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'\
Institute of
Sanskri t'and
Islamie Studies.
those belonging
vords de~ived
from
Hindu tradition,
they
For
to the
devised by
Hinu World
super-script for.
are indieated
The sub-seript
and the
respectively.
by and
l'
\ i
\
\1 '
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o
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'-----
-~-----
vi
,
;
o.
Page
,
.
Inglish Abstract ............................................. ii
R6s'UIIl ........... '
"
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
iii
Acknowlegement ~ ........................................... iv
~Transl i
Introduct ion
.................... 13
I~mA(
IIi,
a> Historical
)
t~e
ginAn Literature
................. 37
.................
41
11
j~ ~
CO~cludin9 Remarks.: 98
Notes ~ 106.
Bibl iography " oj" ............... 107
...
"
,---(iJ
" 4
",
1
?
--Introduction
'---.its
I~
1200 years
movement
. sub-divided
developmen~s
of
history,
into
of
sries
d\!veloping
\
..
in
:.
,,'
'"
'horrifi~d
W.lvan~w
sequence
the
maintains,
or
the
after
of
These
are
to others
Carmatian band
became
developments.
parallel
directIy
div~ed
and
some
a ,certain
"
Bahrain
vhich
Fa~imid
.;:...
separate
running
~hus,
time-period. 1
of
Ism<ilism,
the co1l1rse of
~_
~nd
i ts
advartced
intellectual 1 i fe
the
encyclopaedist (1
the dreaded
~entury
th
in the
fifth and the sixth centuries are all different facets of the
same
movement. 2
-Ism(tlism vas
and
may
expressed in
put
be
in
B.
infinite forms
Lewis'
words,
both dootrinal
or9anisation~1."2
Of these
its
This
9r~owth
different 'phises'
and
development in
of the
the
IsmA(ilt movement,
,j,
),
",
:2
attenti'on :"
evolution
in the
ad~ustment to Hinduism.
of
f;
its
part~cularly
Indian
in the
y' the Khj . communi ty
not only
-..J Sub-contine~t, but spread during rece~t years to th~, Afr}c.an
1
1
,l
Tnese Khjs
qonsi!de,r
,!r
,,
i
1
,
i
Ism<~!
product of the
movement
"era.
()
1
i
by
'f l
. !,
which
Nizr
Sub-continent
by
alleged to have
medieval era.
1 spt < l i sm
various
Nizri dcs
"
consider themselves
to
'0
day Nizr
into
and
was ,spread
the
pirs
Indian
who
are
Khjs
Hinduism to
As a sub-sect
." that
\
after the
dea th of
the prt.ophet
Nizr
Ism~<ls
hold
Mu:tlammad, the
di vine
themsel~es
in (Ali
/
1
the
main line of
,
k
..
,
gave their
(,
fact t'hat
th~
0;,
'0
'{)
(~ --....-~
_it."""_
..
..r.d.Jt
as
resu] t of
aIIegiance
spI it
to Imm
Imm l sm ( l'
in
the
8th century,
they
Ism( U, while
the majority
considered
brother Mns
K~im
as the successor
gave
to Imm
FPmid Caliph
followers
The
as
in Egypt,
stronghold
Nizrs, while
Musta(l, who
al-Mustn~ir'
of
another
the
followers
of his
be known as
Isim
origins to
established
followers of Agh
of his claims of
Although
at
this Nizr
.
direct linal
this Khj
Nizr
Is~(il
Ism< H branch
brother,
F~imid Caliph
Presently,
Alamt.
Nizr,
to be known
younger
Bohrs. The
occurred.
son,
eldest
came to
trace its
major split
they
of Shi<
are
the
community
considers
itself as
not the
the Ism(l
element had
well-known,
has been
an
area of
concern
for the
nascent
"
IsmA<tlt
da<wa from
IsmA<tlism
in the
pre-FAtimid
times.'
Indian Sub-continent
The emergence
of
can, therefore,
be
F~imid
b>
It
is
l smA <t 1 i
pre-F~imid
and
al1eged
element
that
had
the
earliest
wi th
India
contact
came
which
the
to
the
pr ior
establ i shment of the FAt im~d Cal ipha te, f rom the time of dawr
al-!!!.!., when one wing
in'Hind and
Sind. MUQammad bin Ism< il, the seventh lmm of the Ism< His
is himself
taken
refuge
authenticity
regarding
in
Sind.'
of
such
the
S.M.
informa t ion
ear1y
Ism<ili
however,
doubts
provided ... by
activities
in
to have
the
Juwayni
the
Indian
Sub-con t inen t 10
The
Ism<U sources,
on the
other
hand, first
make
Thi s
establishment of a Ftimid
Caliph,
al-Aziz, sent
al-Shaybn 'with
a military
escort,
which took Multan in 977 <in the medieval era Multan and Uchh
constituted Upper Sind>.
continued to
the
si tuation
be read there
in
Sind
Ftimid Caliphs
until raids
of
MaQmud f:'()f
This vas
Ghazna
temporil'r*i 1y
brought
Ghaznavids. When
F~imids
the
under
the
the Ghaznavids'
who
authori ty over
Sind
for a
ru le rapidly
while had
century until
domination
of
degenerated,
succumbed, again
seized
than a
Sind by the
GhOrids in
The
subsequent history
the
of the
Ism< lts is
13
genera11y
J.
maintains
references
activities
in the
quest ionable
Hollister,
occasi6nal
to
through
these
two
MalQidah
Sub-continent .14
But,
centuries,
or
Carmation
spart from
regarding l sm < t 1
information
this
activities
in
Nizr s on
the
the
and pirs,
Indian
scene.
movement
is
who are
Sub-continent at
Thi 5 l sm (Hi
supposed
to have
least from
arrived to
the thirteenth
the
century
onwards.
Al though,
considered
the
Nizr
continuation
movement,
of the
1
~
,'
which make
distinct 'phase
in
the
in
same
Ism!< tH
can
be
movement
fact,
of
stand out
Ism< Hism.
as a
EarBer
6
domi~tion
Isma<tlt
in
Sind
at
least
until
information together
completely
from
facilitated
the penetration
GhQrid
with the
the
fact
in Sind,
Their
p~esence
of the
Nizri
could
have
da<wa into
the
rise and
there is no
development of
However,
Moreover, the
Khejls
vith whom
ve are
themselves to have
the
"
arrivalof
concerned in
this study
the
Nizrt dcis
and
pirs
consider
to Islam by
to the
Indian
whose da<va
activities
in the
rise
of
entire movement as it
developed in
,/
the
Nizlri
dl< is
and
in
the
Indian
Sub-cont inent.
II
)
An attempt to study any
~1
7
'
the community'5
ginn
indigenous literature
ginn
i5
literature
composed
appe~ation
constituting
Indian
several
pirs who
activities
in the
entire corpus
given
of
Tlie term
to a
devotional
vernacular
the
collective
in
almost
ginAns. The
body
of
compositions
languages.
This
gin!n,
are believed
to have
Indian Sub-continent,
earried on
on
da(wa
behalf of
the
1
;
1i
i
j
j
are
seen as
product of
Satpanth
religion. However,
to
of this
Brahm Praksh
to study a gin'"
<Divine Illumination>
from the
called the
ginn corpus.
It has been made the focus of our study for two reaaons:
l
a> ~he ginn Brahm praks~ ia attributed to the authorship of
. Shams al-Otn,
initial
phase t;>f
the Nizri
is
a~leged
to
IsmA(Ilt da(wa
tepresent the
in the
Indian
H~npuism
in a nev environment
.,
l'
which
exhibits
Although this
the entire
ginan
the
c~ncept
Brahm
i8
PrAsh
understanding a
an
i5
dealt
Satpanth
some manner
vith in
an
important
composi t ion
for
of IsmA c 1lism,
of
is echoed in
literature, it
essence
nev converts in
the Sub-continent.
Yet, another reason
that
of sumiran
the concept
among the\ presen t
religious
to
system
adheres as a
an
a significant
Ism<ll!
upon him
formulated
for
a set
the
of'birth or
practise
of
the
Nizart
to
jam8<lt khi na
be 9bserved
in their
for
the
purpose.
Among
of these
made inc'umbent
duties, although
institutionalised - as a part
be held in the
A~.
various
/
<House of
the
system. The
place
murtd <believer>
otherwise, imposes
obligations
which
occupiea
thisi ginn ia .
upon
not
~ties,
an Isml t 1lt
obli
murtd.
tory, have
been
is
oall or majlis. 16
\
\
IsmA< tH murtd
up for dhikr
murtd in
practises which
spi~itually
progressinq
Illumination <darian>
For
practise
IsmA(i11 murd is
of
given a
personal
to
him.
<inner>
Illumination.
composition
self
on earth.
as
bandagi,
an
(~
The
initiate
towards the
to study
known
is
Hence, the
attainment of
forms the
i!m
or
aid a
of darian
dhikr, also
.(
towards the
this
are believed to
The attainment
baeis for
remains
the basis
of
to
to deve10p his
attainment
Brahm Praksh
supposed
of
spiritual
forms an
important
a fundamental
practise
The
composed
ginAn
Brahm
PrakAsh
conai,sts
of
in a
mixture
of old
Gujarat'i
and
150
couplets,'
Hindi. It
is
, states and
,,
stages towards
6abda
"-
','
of the
mystica1
(-
the realhation
<True Word>,
off
breaks
~.el's8ness
"
-----_.-._-
.!!!!
<Azam
to
give
fairly
of
vadous
asctic
of t'he
,Ofs.
detailed
account
practises
which
""'~~
It
then
of
the
ar~
not
'"
.~
~-_
':1ft':"
'r
..
_-~-
..
. ' .
)
, eentred on attainins . t:he brahm
continues to nalle
~,
brahm s'ukh,
The
ti"
blisr- !t thn
their'
absorption in the
attai';ed
sa~ Asbda.
sec~ion
last
<divine
by their absolute
~--:----
!!!.!h
10
of
the' work
deals
with
the
ecstatic
-"
th~
contempla.tion of
1
1
1
1
to offer a background to
f,
the introduction
of Satpanth or
!i
into the
basis for
understanding the
type and
nature of
Is~<tlism
vhich
evolved in the Indian Sub-continent
Chapter Two
text of
orthe
the Brahm
study offers
Praksh into
a translation
English.
Chapter
of the
Three is
divideCl- into
describing
two sections.
the verious
'\,
The
ginn Brahm,
PrakAsh, while
stages of
the
to belong
largely to
v.~ll-formulated
system of
thought, namely
religious phenomenon.
background' into
yocabulary
()
that aspect of
appears
indigenous
similar
the
a brief
tradition whose
the Tantric
to
I~dian
Brahm
ginAn
PrakAsh.
el..ment in i ta
.,~~~-
fra vork, so
~"'--*"---,---
.........-
as to make
~--~~-_._~~._--
"
it an
/
/
..
1
1
1
11
integral
aspect
of
IsmACtl! thought,
still
retained
...
and
-'!'he 'l'eKt
The copy of
to us hy
the 'ginAn
.". iF
a photocopy
1~2l.1.
for
j
of the'
India. l
Initially two
'
pUblished by
Lljt DevrAj
in
India in
book form
vith a
few other
major ginAns
of
fro~
Brahm,PrakA~h
Sangrah", or Compilations of
Holy GinAns,
the earlier
for
our
versOn available
choice is
the
to us. l
Yet, another
'
significant
variations
in
~he
of
copy
reteins alfferent
the
~nuscript
which of the
.(
word-terms.
,tvo
AS ve
Devrlj copy
do not have
in a position
is closest to the
ori~inBl,
show the
us~
Bceess to
te determine
but referewces
of
the LAljt
publiahed .by
_----------
_....
12
hi.
v s extensivley
1
taken'
over
by
the
ninetfen-seventies.
The
.
li~erature~
Gujarati
which
script from
the
publication task
has
in
the
is
early
written
-)
'r
in
been
original
transliterated into
Kh&jki script
for
l'
was
the
the
-{
13
Not.. to Introduction
lW.
Ivanov, IsmAili
Literature,
A Bibliographical
Survey, <Tehran: Tehran"university Press, 1963>, 5.
,
3Ibid.
Of the fev studies that have been undertaken, Azim
Nanjt offers us an excellent historieal background of ~he.
Niz4rt movement in his vork: The Niz8.rI Isma< il.! Tradition in
the Indo-Pakistan
sub-ContInint,<Oelmar: Caravan
BookS;
~4>7:FOr a good background of IsmiCI1! penetration into the
Indian Sub-continent see, Derryl Maclean, "Religion' and
Society
in
Arab S~nd,"
<Ph.D.. dissertation;
McGill
University,1984>. A fev interesting studies ha~ also been
undertaken on the ginln literature. See our Bibliography.
IW. Ivanov, "The Sect of Imam Shah in Gujarat," Journal
of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. XII
<1936>,20.
<London:
:rr96O>, 85-87. -
Khakee, The
Da~Avatara
44.
IIW. Ivanov, "Satpanth," Collectanea,Vol. 1 <1948>, 6-8.
l'Jo N. Hollister, ~ Shia of India, <London: Luzac and
Company, Ltd., 1953>, 346.
'
14
See J.H.
11J.
N. Hollister maintains, that in the thirteenth
century, one comes across activities of the A1amOt Assassins
'in the Indian Sub-contin~nt, when the GhOrid ru1er, Al
al-Dtn MU9ammad Shah Khwarazm is alleged to have been
assassinated by the AlamQt emissaries. Yet, another episode
ia believed to have taken place j,n 1236 in Delhi during the
reign of Queen Radiyya. This incident claiming to show a
continuity of Carmatian activity with that of the Nizris,
reports a group of Carmations under the leadership of one Nr
Turk who gathered at Delhi. They, it is alleged, attacked the
masiid and a riot ensued . It is su9gested by some scholars
tht the NOr Turk referred to in this account is the same as
NOr Satgur, who according to the Nizrt sectarian ~ccoun~s is
considered the first Nizr missionary to have come to the
Sub-continent. However, nothing authentic can be established
regarding this connection. For details on the. contr'oversy
see, The Shia, 3'8-350.
!!!
c-
. ..
15
Chapter!
Brie! Background g! the Rizar!
in
l!!!.(li! d (!! t
'To
study
an
aspect
of
the
1iterary
tradition
movements, such
Sub-continent;
as
the
it
Nizir
is fundamental
in its
Ehought and
only.in this
Ism 1 tls
that
of
the,
the
history,'be
understood ",clearly.
It is
this chapter
development
Indian
ch~racte5istic
of
of
concerns
itse1f
the
with the
da(wa
in
For this
spread' and
the
lndian
<
a1!ege~
to have resulted
The sectarian
sources of
the Nizri
Ism e lis
of
v
the
.as
to
sep"rate
'dr.... tlcally.
the
In the
course.
~3th
of
century,
the
Ism(tl~
the Nizir
movement
I~(tl~s,
0'
.,..
..
.'
---,-----------
.
,
.~
1)
16
a!ter the
sch~sm
und~rgoin9
were
';
al~Mu~taryir
The
Nizf
and
Musta' l
in
Yemen, which
~alQ
of
And
with
the" third
"
which established
associated itself
Ism< li~tn.
riyyib
?
~ulayQ.id
the
dynasty
adherents
was Nizr
of
Ism(ilism
.
its stronghold at
AlamOt and
which under
entered in the
,words of B.
n'
leadership of
th~
Lewis na period
of intensive development in
ation and
poli~ical
'ft'
~a~an-i-~abb~
for a
dram~t ic
which
was
Nizrs.
played
an important
and
[t wast at AlamOt
whil~
doctrine and in
that a
dramatica1~y
"~his
event
te
significant event
separate
was the
the Fimids
proclamation
of the
Nizrs. 2
The evertt
and
of the
took place
Qiymah
al-~1m, the
of Qiymah
mar-ked , a , ""
IjasaI\.
Cala
dhikrih al-Salm
established
once
the
and for,
al~
the
According to
under
tbe classical
the Fimids,
doctrine, as
,;
i t was . bUilt-'-("'
religious phi<losophy
was
17
seen 'in
the form of a
who
Godhead
is
"unknowab1e,
Throu9h
hi 5 amr
inacce,isible,
ineffable,
<command> and
through the
the Supreme
-",..'
Whfch
~o
rst
a series of Intelligences,
what
was
termed as
the
('lam
order
to
wi thin
beings.
provide
represented by
lower among
principles.
the
th,e
l;iudd al-Din
The higher
( lt
respectively.
system,
W~
Imms
after
ma?har s of
him
was
worshippers>, the
lesser cosmic
the fi r st
These came to
the
'F~imids,
human
scheme
turn to the
and
among
thi s
<hierarcy of
above.
the
hierarchy
his
prophet,
and
religious
"1 sm
Intelligences mentioned
wi th
whom corresponded in
"1
three
be identified
succeeding
Imms
the three
the
epiphanic
l ntell i gences on
the earth.
A fundamental
principle underlying
this cosmic
scheme
\)
was
~hat
the full
ch~ i
f'
process.
These
.only in
as much as
they formed
"
existed, and
an integra1
had meaning
aspect
of the
var~
The
whole system.
18
components
before.
For
50
on.
example, the
would have to
second Intelligence
For man,
Intelligence, which
formed for
relation to
stood in
him his
was the
path he
goal i.e.
attaining
As
conjunct
hierarchy,
to
the Ism<l
view of history
theosophy
Each
cycle
heen
six
began with
cycles
already
Revelation,
and
al-Qiymah <the
the
advent of
the
Each of the
the
seventh"would
Q' im wi th
ne~
proclamation
the
religion.
of
It was represented
of Prophecy.
There had
his W$.
Mu~ammad
Prophet
had
one Revelation
Grand Ressurection>.
The
and
vertical
typological
scheme of Cycles
of
developed a
a Prophet and
scheme
hor~zonta) scale by a
on the
cosmic
this
end
to another
wi th
This would
power
to'
Qiyma t
also mark
~brogate
the
1o
Qiymah by
Hasan
(al
dhikrih
al-Salm marked the end of the primacy of the Shar' a and the
beginning of the
soul
in
was placed
prominence.
The religion
life of the
of
Qiymah
19
established the
priority of
now
the Imm
second Intelligence
corresponded
to the
first
authority
to make
Consequently,
the
and his
lav
goal
of
be1iever,
equal to
knowing
God.
The
F~imid
the
guard
it.
traversing
the
religious
The
.11
than simply
in the
Intelligence,
itself
rather
office.
out100k of
the
The doctrine
the priority of
the Orthodox
stream
of Qiymah in
its strongest
but a1so
of Sh<
Islam.
distinguished them
Along
12
assertion of
with this,
general
the defeat
of
devastation of the
Mongols.
went
underground
victims to the
Their stronghold at
AlamOt was
for several
They tell
centuries.
survived
The
Nizr
"
,
l
in order
to avoid
further
we
now come
to
background,
Sub-continent wher..
initial
penetration
an
the
traces
its
this
Indian
not the
origiJl
'1
20
It constitutes
a distinct
phase from
the earlier
Ism(ili
It is from
supposed
to
have
,ptrs
and
full of
W.lvanow,
persecution
Nizri
and to
is hardly
to
the
Indian
complications.
Ism(ili
pirs,
avoid making
d< ts
controversies and
the
their
order
aims and
guise.
~Ofi
in
According
The
ambitions
activities in
to obtain
information pertaining
to their
sectarian
Ismcili
But
accounts. 15
avoid
As a result there
pirs or their
to
to
since
history are
the
the
sectarian
extent.
to the convertedmasses,
myth
and legend
to a
large
The spread
da(wa
in the
phases:
two
The
establishment of the
figures, NOr
sourc~s
Satgur and
of the
can be
al~~tn.
da(wa in Sind,
_~
____________L __
seen into
dacwa is
Shams
Nizri Ism<ili
three
associated vith
The
sectarian
This
21
by the
consolidation of
the Nizrt
conversion and
organisation of the
l5th century.
da<wa with
its massive
Nizri community
final phase was
by the
marked by
and the Imm Shhis; this phase led to the termination of the
;-
Khj
sectarian
accounts
mention
the
first
the history
of the Nizr!
Sub-continent.1'l
Nizri
the arrivaI of
a legendary
a~
lsm<!l da(wa
It' is difficult
in the
to ascertain
the
it difficult, to
the establishment
of the Nizri
period of
Ism(ili da(wa in
the Sub-
continent.
The
sectarian sources
regarding NOr
they are
was
furnish
Satgur, but it
dubious.
sent either
preach on behalf
It is
by
shrine
l '
alleged
hardly need be
al-Mustan,ir,
27th Imm
to be
with certain
the
tbat
ef
F~imid
~asan
Nizr~.s.l
NOr
NOr Satgur
Caliph,
the Sub-continent 1
later date by
of the
dates
mentioned that
us
to
'
(aIl dhikrih
Furthermore,
Satgur at
or
Navsari
a
in
22
Gujarat, mentions
the year of his death as 1094. 20
-,
coincides with
the date
of the
death of
al-Mustan,ir, the
w.
branches of pir&n&
This date
Ivanow is
Sayyids establish d at
after the
Navsa~i
vith
having estab1ished
Sub-continent
is
the Nizri
Ism(!l
shrouded, details
da(wa in
regarding
the
second
This is
community
converts
Sabzav&ri.
in
at
evidenced
Upper
the
Sind
hands
of
presently they
spiritual leader. 23
in Sind and
by,--the
presence
call
themselves
who
the
Nizr
of a
large
'Shamsis',
Shams
~ec09nise
Since it is to
Pir
Shams
is supposed to
Multan. 22
the
al-Dtn
as their
we will deal
Traditions
aCQuired
for
'~urroundin~
h~m
many
identities.
Shams
the
has
various
II
.. -
_ .,60
23
Person~lities,
Shams al-Dtn
MUQammad, the
Nizlri Imam
and
In attempting
id~ntities,
a ginn
SatveQiji Vel. z4
MUQammad Shh,
Nizri
the
Sabzavri.
Imm
ginn
of the
available to us ls
confuses Shams
Nizris
with
in
with Shams
The ginn
says that
attributed to
al-Din
This particular
purpose~.
claiming the
was fundamental
lineage in
for
the son
order
to
direct descent
~laiming
Immah for
himself.
hereditar1~
to establish
authenticate his
from
of Imm
Nizri da'wa in
Vel
Mu~ammad,
Imm Shams
15th/16th centuries,
direct
Shams
SatveQiji
al-Din
Pir
al-Dtn
claims.
"
1
By
~tr
could then
As
ginn is
'.
to Nar
state,ment
al-Dtn Sabzavri
and travelled to
the
'This
confusion of
is attributed
figure in the
astonishing
Nizri Imm.
M~mmad
28th
The
equates Shams
This ginn
an active
IsmCilt da(wa.
Mu~ammad,
the
for
the
identification
Shams-i-TabrizI, it has
Imam Shams
al-Otn.
ImAm
of
also,been d~e to
Shams al-Otn
Ptr
Shams
vith
",
to have
-_ _._--,----..
24
cau~e
Shams
vith
the tvo.
Imam
amal9ama~ion
Shaml,
in
due
course
resulted
The
Sub-continent, there
first
in
the
activ~
of Ptr
is a
are apparently
Shajra '<genealogical
three versions.
tree>.found
in
the
, ,
f~ll
of
AlamOt.
"
"
have come
The
into
second
attributed
to
contact with
He is said
version
Shams
is
the
obtained
al-Dtn himself.
from
They
the
refer
ginns
to
his
his gin&ns,
given
a~
Samvat
ChandrabhQ y!! ,
However,
in Chenab
when we
is
come across
earried on
Shah is
mentioned.'
AlamOt periode
Oisim ShAh
AlamOt, as i8
name of
ImAm Qisim
belongs to
the post
by the
25
Mongols in
and their
the history of
the NizAris
r
The child of the last
stage.
Imam of
al-Dtn.
ShAh, is said to
of the
time, then
Thus, if
the period
be Shams
of Shams'
activity
century.~l
a li;tle known schism which took place upon the death of ImAm
Shams.
them
(.
Two
giving
branches of
allegiance
the IsmA<tlts
to Qsim
were tormed,
Shh.
The
one of
attempt
to
linking
Kashmir.
by one
Ptr
Shams
to
Qsim.~3
Kashmir
Since
travelled
in
1502.
through
Tibet
the
NQrbakhshtya
sect
in
son of Sayyid
Shams
MUQammad NOrbakhsh,
Ptr Shams
and Kashmir,
is
supposed
it
appears
to
have
that
The confusion
is further clouded
by the tact
that the
'1
1
i
26
order to make
Despite all
the historieal
is credited
motion and
to vhom is alao
da<wa into
ginn corpus
The figure in
is attributed is
there is
~adr al-Ot~.
non-Ism'il!
sources,
in
the
sources
credit
1 sd <il t
eommunity.
He 15
al-Din with
da<wa
said
Khwja."
Nizlri Isma'il!
i
1
,t
al-Dtn vas
is a
made
and
to
The
having
with
Khj
as a
valuable
and the
sectarian
the
organized
the
having
eongregational
!
succeeded by
~adr
consolidated
have established
the word,
bis son
who
one
l4/15th centuries."
~adr
establish
He is considered
a historical personality.
,Oft . in
~adr
al-otn as
NizAri
From
a key role
~asan
use for a
kbw!ja.
Kabir
Pir
al-Dtn.
f.,
27
This
al-Oin
sectar~an
over
pirtan.
According
to
the
Nizri
Tj al-Oin as a
pire
It is alleged that Tj
early~age
to the shock
najrAnA or offerings to be
submitted to the
The
endowed
NizAr sources
with
mention that
pirtan
the
by
established
himself at
activities.
perhaps
taking
~ommunity
at
independent
Gujarat.
the
1ine
The Imam
death
and
of
carried
son, Mar
the
of
'Ptr
Shh was
out his
Mu~mmad
turbulence
Tj
never
Nevertheless,
Imam.
Gujarat and
advantage
Imim
a1-0tn,
dacw.
ShAh, who
within
set
organised
the
Imam
Shaht
a1-Mustan,ir
II,
in response
he
the
up
an
sect
in
to
this
community to
book
as a
(-
ShAhts and
ptr. l
'
To
exhorting the
avoid further
1-
.,
t
the
t ~
28
,.
Imams
appainting
community.
With
Vaktls
the crisis
<agents>
to
administer
the age
the,
of the
.t
The split
community into
"li>
tvo branches.
The
iS'used specifically
the
followers
of the
Nizri
Imms
time onwards,
are known
as
Khjs.
Kh6js, they
do
not consider
themselves
to have
any
Sub-continent,
pr~blem.
appealing
the
Nizri
pirs
states, that
nev
converts
faced
critical
w.
from Hinduism.
the meaning and
Ivanow
spirit of
He further states:
phase
of the
of
the
pirs was to
whole
project Islam
development
of
as the
Hinduism.
f
29
t~
According
them, the Qur'in was the las; and the final Ved,
completing,
abrogating,
revelations.
prepar~tory
In
this
phase,
and
superseding
theory,
Hinduism
(1
just as
the
was
earlier
~erely
etc.,', in
By
following
this
enter
that
pi~s
strategy, the
constituted a
entirely
different
world
of
Hindu
mentality.
culmination
of
utilization of the
the Hindus
Hinduism
was ,projected
of Islam as
came
as upheld' by the
VaishQavas.
The
through
theory of'
Lord VishQu,
have been
Naklanki or
In this Kali
<~>.
awaiting
Kalki <stainless> to
ginins attributed
'
.-
well>.
He preached
indeed
(AIt,
Mullammad.
the
last Avatra
manifest himself.
as
It was
be seen,
to Shams al-Oin,
apart
from the
in the Brahm
other
Praksh as
manifest~d
during the
h~
time
superimposed
of
the
Prophet
the Shi (i
fOrDlOf
..
known
l
l
j
1
1
..
f:f .~'..
,-
~,
t
"
30
,'.
,-
)'
re1ating
con'tinui ty of
Hindu tradition
~igures,
attempted
Islami~
into
to project ft
tradition.
figure of Brahma
instance, the
and by,
For
the creator,
the daughter of
the Prophet
The
w.
as
Ivanow
the foundation to
of further
great progress
ane potentialities."4'
was the creation
innovative synthesis in
for
Hinduism
from
conv~rts
<Satpanth>...
pirs
new
that the
stat~s,
One of
Mu~ammad."
resuJt was,
the seeds
~f F~imah,
with tnat
These
various
projecting the
long
of"'n
and
short
true
p~th
c,ompositions
i~
which
,commonly
definee
as
wcontemplativ'e" o~
.".,.,
Meditative knowledge.""
the
word
ginn
In the
refers to
Nizr Ismcl
those
to
,conversion.
theThe
Indian
Ismcl
wri&ings
whose
Sub~continent'
ginSn literature
tradition,
for
preach~ng
constitutes
almost
and
the
-t
r
.1
entire
corpus
community.
31
of
indigenous literature
Consequently, it forms
ceremonies
in
the
Indian Sub-continent.
as
still recited
conducted
by
regard ginns
ginns are
preserved
sacred literature.
as
a part
their jam(t
The present
of the
Most of
religious
w.
khan.
of the ginns."
Ivanow
He records
by the Ism( ili d( 15 and prs at least from the 13th century
until the
early part
of this
century when
the composition
,.
50
as oral
tradition.
It
is,
therefore, difficult
ascertain when
writing of
the ginns
actual1y began.
to
The
f rom older
ones, i t
is
1736.
Since this
believed tha t
the task
of
the khjki or
earl i est
the
.0
of
Sindhi
This
writing
script represents
in
proto-Nagari
32
characters.
The
Nizr Ismc ls
in the
history of
in order
to
preserve
to the
Indo-Muslim literature.
Ismcl doctrines
within
foster a sense
to be unique
the
of communal
Khjk script.
At least
Multani, punjabi,
are used in
the ginns:
Kacchi.
The
languages used in the ginns reflect the areas from which the
manuscripta of the ginn may have originated.
of ginns,
they are
devotional
type
composed in
of
the style
literature
usually
either
written in
in
the
form
popular
of
MOSt
The ginns
are of
pada <verse>
forme
of
of the
characteristic
As to the form
varying lengths,
Each stanza
chaupi
<quatrains>
more verses
do exist
or
of
is
doh
<couplets>.
Stanzas containing
literature, but
The longer ginns
f
1
t
f
i,
on the whole
Y!l
contain a form of
in the
a minor <nindo,
ginn
two forms.
given a title.
appendix called
~>
or major
33
with
composer
the
of
bhait
the
or
ginn.
the other.54
signature,
This feature
identifying
is
common
One of the
the
to
the
55
Rga <music>,
therefore, is one
the ginns.
Rga
"\
is a name given to a
believed to create
the mind
of a
This is the
is meant
listener
~nd
puts him
to be
sung on
whieh colours
into a
Each rga is
certain mood.
specifie occasions
for a
specifie
50
a particular pir
because each
ginn has
a number
This is true
of themes
running
.,1
l
(
Hovever,
a preliminary
classification
attempted in
34
survey
work may
be offered
in
the absence
follows:
i>
detailed
The classification is
57
ginns belonging
of
of a
Hindu
themes
and
concepts
to
The VaishQavas
to the earth.
manifested themselves
Satpanth Ism<lism to
Vaishfiava belief, by
Satpanth
the
Nine Avatras of
and the people
the incorporation
explain
The
5 '
of the tenth
be a completion
of this
Imm of the
The aecounts
of traditional figures of
Hindu mythology
~
ean
included
be
Harisehandra,
this
Draupad
eonsidered as models
Hindus.
in
the
and
These mythologieal
and
~he
brothers
as
are
seen lifted
and
righteousness, into
such
figures are
Pndava
tradition.
Figures
category.
Ism(il
is a model
of chastity
tradition, where
she
35
i i>
deal
The
second category of
with cosmological
again we
Islam.
l '
and
those that
eschatological theories.
find a variety of
Here
Hinduism and
In
yet
another
Srjanhr", an Islamie
ginAn
the~ry
"Dhan
has
dhan
Rjo
been utilized.
!Y
Both these
iii>
in nature, aimed at
instructing
iv>
converts
The ginns
or fifty
The fourth
meant to
v>
The fifth
'lnd
the
last category
this
category
deal
vith
mystical
includes
The gin'ns
belon~ing
relation-ships
those,
to
to
be
This is exemplified
rt
r
t{
36
in the gin!ns
as a spiritual relation-ship
mOrid, who
1
f
and a
post-AlamOt
- 1
,
as ve
have seen
developed
concept~
above, according
of
lmmah,
to the
stands
in
In this category,
emphasis
mentioned above,
similar te
of
is on the
these
mystical
The
compositions,
establishment of a
personal and
orde~
attainment of
mokta <liberation>
The ginns of
~rom
as
For
human life
on earth.
the path a
and contain
category
instructions of-how
belong
the
Bujh
Niranjan
to attain
and
it. Tc
the
Brahm
Praksh.'
And it
attention".
th~
is to the
Chapter
Brahm Prak&sh
Brahm Praksh,
II offers a
into English.
that ve now
translation of the
Chapter
text of
III focusses
turn our
--
on
37
1
Hot ~ ChaPter !
lB. Lewis, The
Nicolson, 1967>, 36:--
Assassins,
<London.:
Weidenfeld
and
Ibid.
, l b id., '95.
IIbid.
ri
1
38
}
Mubin <Bombay,
the incorporation of
Chunara,
Noorun Mubin, Revise
by Jaffarali
Sufi, 'l'hird edition, <Bombay: Ismailia Association
for India, 1951>, 215-216.
Muha~
uJ.
N.
6'.
_~
__________
.~_L
_ _ _ _ __
Publishe by
...
39
1
j
it
!
,l
"A.
,
,
6Ibid., 24.
.IG. Khakee,
Linguistic, 46.
WThe
Da sa
Avatara
of
.'
Plr
Shams
as
Ivanow, "Satpanth, 27
... t'w.
Iv~nov,
An
A:
Guide, 174-181.
-Ibid.
1
J
r
j
40
62.
c.
'Ibid., 14.
lmami Ismailia
Association
for India,
A
'Shia
Collection of Ginans ~ the Great Saint. Ptr Shams, Bombay;
1952.
,. Ibid.
'lIbido
'2for
listing of
W. Ivanow
Guide,
174-81.
....
.)
41
CHAPTIR
li
42
12
13
14
15
Worshipping to the
and keeping devout
bliss.
~angam
16
17
tl8
19
20
Worship~ing
21
22
\.,
43
, ,23
1
(
25
26
~usterity
towara
27
28
29
. 30
31
32
33
34
>
44
35
36
37
38
40
41
42
43
44
"
..
45
45
46
47
48
blis~.
49
50
51
52
53
55
56
57
4)
46
58
59
60
61
62
64
65
66
67
68
47
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
"
78
79
48
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
8'9
One who perce ives the sabda within the limits of the
human form,
did not understand the meaning of surati sabda.
90
91
49
92
93
94
95
97
98
99
100
101
102
50
103
104
105
...
106
107
108
personally
109
110
III
112
113
51
114
115
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
52
Eliminate aIl other doubts trom the self,
and engrave just One Name within.
125
126
127
128
129
130
Innumerable
eras and days passed,
In these 4 souls vere liberated, who overcame ignorance.
131
132
133
134
135
53
136
137
138
139
140
141
v
(
143
144
145
146
54
147
149
150
55
Chapter !!!
Brahm Prakash, An Analysis
section
<!>
KhOjs view
spiritual
include
both these
progress
on
description of
ginns as
directives for
the spiritual
path.
mystical 'stages'
The
a murid's
These
ginns
and 'states'
and
the~.
Tantric tradition.
mystical stages
dealt with in
.would
be
approaches
p~enomenon,
in the
Brahm Praksh
interesting
the Brahm
to draw
Praksh
parallels
and
describe the
are similar
to those
Although, it
betveen
the Bujh
the
the
Niranjan
two
56
a recent
study on
the Bujh
Niranjan questions
Praksh vould be
available
in
the corpus
the,only other
in
which
long composition
the mystical
important,
the
ginns in
several other
the corpus.
of
and in a
key Tantric
theme
manner. More
the
terms
found used in
study of
the Brahm
also determine
expression in
the Nizr
to what
has found
system of thought
Ism~l
in the
Indian Sub-continent.
Our aim
in this chapter
examine the
is, therefore, to
tradition of the
intention is not
will
be
to dea! in
limi ted
to
detai~
examining
,)
those
appear to
find similar
It is
essential
to
Tantric
background,
Praksh to exp~ess
as the
of them, but
aspects
take into
key
However, our
vith elther
tradition which
gin'ns.
Nizrt 1 sm ( !! t s.
terms
of
Tantric
expressions in
the
consideration
the
used in
the
Brahm
appear to
Yoga
of
the
Tantric tradition.
Hence,
ve
will
Ha~ha
discuss
57
primarily the
basis,
we
e~perience
Yoga framework.
Ha~ha
shall
is
attempt
to
expressed in the
Brahm Praksh.
First,
Then on
explain
the
how
Ha~ha
the
mystical
ginns, specifically
Yoga
in the
on the Tantric
tradition is appropriate.
a Yoga
that this
northern India at
its Buddhistic
discipline <sdhan-sastra>.
Yoga tradition
had
form and
later in
its
been popularized
form
Nth Yogis
of
Ha~ha
Buddhism.'
~aivite
It
were propagators
Yoga
which
was apparent1y
counter-parts
tradition
and some
northern and
had
of
of
its
~aivite
and exponents
origins
Siddhas,
its esoteric
of the
form by
the
through the
the
in
century, initially in
It
in
Nt~
that
jargon
of sorne
Mahyna
Yogis,
the
Tantric
spread in
Indian
the
the
Sub~continent
These Nth
known as Gorakh
of Gorakhnth
cannot be
NthvYo~s,
Although the
ascertained, scholars
the 9th and
l~th
agree
centuries in
popularity.
The
influence of
58
these
Nt~
Yogis
the Medieval
among
era on
the
.'
:.o<p
mai~tains
C. Vaudeville
whose
chief exponent
that
the so-called
was Kabr,
appears to
nirguQ Bhakti,
be
heavily
50
Nath-panth esoter ic
vocabulary.
and
the
compatability of
This is
Shattr
seem
to
have
of Nth-panths.
found
Orders,
~Ofi
eviden'ce~bY
we find a
large
of
portion
Nth-panth esot
in
titl,s
of
ic
to
the ginns
Nth
indicate that
jargon.
s.
structure
There are
as
i2g!,' abadhu
The liberal
express
to
reflect
numerous references
use
of
mystical
terms such
terms
their
<avadhOta>,
their
terms
expression in
my tical
experience,
key Tantric
which
itself
.)
59
suggests a connection between the
fol10wing
the
Praksh.~O
.. Personalities
pa th
as
such
in
outl ined
as
by hav i ng
Kabir,
the
Brahm
Guru
Nnak,
either disciples
contact
with
of Gorakhnth
Gorakhnth. 11
The
or to
Brahm
to have had
have come
Pra kash
into
ment ions
1l
ft
whether Shams
the
/~
al-Din,
ginn Brahm
Gorakhnth
Praksh,
himself.
the Nizri
But
had
the
indica te a l ink
nce
of ascertaining
pir to whom
is attributed
anyairect
connection
simil~rities
found in
between the
their
with
carried on
Hence,
10
60
Hatha Yoga 2.! kuoc;)alint-6akti !2.9!
As
Ha~ha
Yoga
is believed
to
have
J.
Mahyna Buddhism
which has
Ha~ha
word
formed
The
of body
basic
identical in
however,
concept ion
a11 the
behind
Tantric schools.
transcendent state.
The
to be
Yoga
The
wi th
pract ices
a Yogi,
sahaja -a Supreme,
To realize
Yoga' sinee
aim of
'realized'.
sun
difficult postures
the
~aivite is to attain
is coneeived as
means the
whether Buddhist or
to be .attained
ha
'difficult
are usual1y
The
wo~ds,
14
word signifies,
extremely strenuous
most
gradually impregnated
maintains, is
the human body
spiritual truth is
state, therefore,
the' realization' of
the sdhan,
body.
Through
As the
Nth-panth Yogis
are Saivites,-
their form
,J~
Ir'
of
61
Ha~ha
Yoga
~akti,
characteri zed
the female
by the
is vieW'ed
aimed at
'sahaja'
is W'orshipped as
for t(em.
The
union of
Nth-panth sdhan
Siva and
Basing themselves
the active
as inactive.
realizing the
to
Divinity ~iva.l' In
this form
prominence attached
Sakti, which
is
is
is to be
In order
the kUQQalin i
emphasi 5 on
~akti.
Ha~ha
lt
to realize this
i s pointed
Yoga in
whole body
con5ciou~nes5,
which the
actua lly
and truly
Yoga.
'spell'
mantra
play a
vi ta l
meru-daQQa
is
un i ted W' i th
that part
~akti of
the Lord
'
che1p of
However,
role in
of the
Ha~ha
Accordingly,
considered
identified with
creative sustaining
requires the
peculiar 'geography'
kUQQalini
Yoga lays
of
the
of
that it
spinal cord
Ha~ha
<serpent> power,
out that
called kUQQalin-sakti
Yoga i5
merging, the
are
the
'word' or
the
human
body and
body i tsel f ,
i ts esoter ic
the
aspects
the main
axis of
ca~led ~-daQ9a
as
a mantra,
of this
pivot
of
super- imposed
the human
<by analogy
the
body is
the
vith Mount-Meru,
universe>.
ser les
Along
of
the
chakras
62
of vital
lot uses.
be six in aIl.
forces.
Hence
21
they become
objects of
mysteries
of
Each
c reat i on.
chakra
is
in
i tself
Thus, the
fi rst chak ra
mOldhra-chakra,
meru-daQQ.a,
si tuated
vhich i5
and the
lowest of
at
extreme
between
the
the
end
anus and
a11 i s
the
the
of
the
ger'li taIs;
situated between
chakra,
gagana-maQQala
also
i5 also
The
known
as
gagana-maQQala.
called
the 'moon',
This
22
since
it is
place of Param-~iva
Supreme Being.
Yogt, as
the attainment
of thi 5 stage
is the goal of a
is equated
or the
wi th the
2 3
\.
2 '
i~rtant
Out
role
of these, three
in the
Ha~ha
n9ts in particular
Yoga.
The iQ
meru-daQQa.
pUigalA,
19' and
through
of vi tal
play an
or ingal
and
sides of the
main
63
respectively.25
Susumn
or Sukhman,
prop~~rly as
or more
channel
situated within
ident i f ied
the i'rlner
the
mOldhra,
meru-daQQa to the
the skull.
It i s
triveot.
who bathes at
It
is said
to
po int of the
the sahasrra in
is known as
channel is
vi th the spinal
spinal cord. /
the third
rt is claimed by the
to the highest
27
mok~a
<salvation>."Za
the cosmic
in a
dormant state. z,
the
techn ique
of
kUQ9alint-akti and
The
various exercises
Hatha Yoga
a im
at forcing her
this highest
at
where she is
pertaining to
waking
up
upwards along
point, the
to reach the
the
the meru
known as sukhman.
50
In her
sa~asrra.
kUQ9alint unites
with
64
Param-Siva 1 in the gagana-maQ9ala.
Yogt are rewarded
and he
Here,
: he is able to drink
attains mahlsOkha
or 'supreme
bliss' which
is the
Hovever, the
act i vat i on of
they unite
vith
the sulehman
according
According to C.
each
II
of
mantras reproduce
express.
The repetition
or spells are
'germ-syllables' or alesara,
which
is
endoved
the bija
50
This
the trivei.
syllables',
j'pa as merely
in
mantra is a
essent ia lly
the mysterious
of this mantra is
a repetition <uccara> is
vith
and inwardly,
state that
they
hail-sa 1 which
intention
behind
Hence
Nlth Yogis.
to
them i s
ajpajpa
is
the
to
per f ect
curb
the
called ajpajpa
according
i t is inter iorized as
or silent jpa.
syllable
when
of the
65
The kUQQalin
is lifted through
Smaral)8 of
the mantra
from the place where she lies coiled up in the .mQlidhra, the
lowest base.
The aim
sahasrra.
But to
reach
make the
the
kUQ4alin reach
hi ghest state,
the
meru-daQ9a.
the sukhman
var i ous
, the
experience or
eestasy, and
fixation on
of
attained.
progress
At
33
of the
of real i ty,
type
the
in the
on her way
central channel
symbol i z i es a
Each chakra
s'piritual
the
upwards through
specifie
is to
each
each
of degrees
ehakra,
the
Ha~ha
is eharacterized by a persistent
, inwardness'
and' upwardness' I f
Theref9re 1
in
Ha~ha
Yoga
sana,
bandha -appropriate
control methods>
which aim
vithin
and
the body
at
at holding
conceived
postures
a11 the
breathing techniques.
gestures,
and
vi tal vinds
The
Yogis
to the paralysing of
as the controller of
- The
66
the mind,
final victory
stage, which
over his
call "killing
or unmani
proper breathing
enemy, the
state.~
of the
results from
the Yogi's
man co-incides
with the
-.s--
techniques.
Through the
Hence
repetition of
the
Ha~ha
Yoga
in the suceess of
pract ices.
aspect remains
actualized
and
frame-work of the
to be
what
considered.
is
the
Ha~ha
How
nature
Yoga,
is the
of
the
67
~iranjan.
68
'C. Vaudeville, Rabir, 86-87.
Ibid., 120.
'Aziz Ahmad, Studies in Islamic Culture in the Indian
Environment, <Oxford: Clarencon Press, 1964>. 137-3~
lSee our translation of the Brahm praksh abbve,
particularly verses 41-58. Henceforth the translation will
be referred to as BP.
11 See art icles on "Gorakhnth", "Rabi r" ,
in B. Walker, Hindu World, 2 vols.
"Nnak" etc.,
Yogis,
l'Ibid.
20e. Vaudeville, Rabr, 130.
21The six centres or chakr~s are: mOldhra <at the base
of the spinal column>; svadhist ana <at the "root of the male
organ>; mankpOraka <in the region of the navel>; anhata
<the heart lotus>; viuddha <in the throat> and j~ <between
the eyebrows, within the skull>.
The chakras or otuses are
chief characteristic element of ~a~ha Yoga. A few of these
are referred to in the ginns as welle
For further details
see M. Basu, Tantras, ~ General St udy, <Calcut ta:
l ndia,
1976>, 125-127.
Z2C. Vaudeville,
Kab~r,
130.
Z3Ibid.
ZG.WBri9gs, GorakhnAth, 308.
ZIC. Vaudeville, Kabtr, 131.
69
H1bid.
2 '1 bide
21
Ibid.
2'Ibid., 131-32.
UIbid., 129.
llIbid.
32C. Vaudeville explains "The migratory bird ham-sa, in
Vedic tradition, symbolizes the Supreme Being. In the Tant~ic
Saiva tradition, it represents Siva. But it also, designates
the indi v idual soul <~i va> espec i811y in i ta pur i f ied st-ate,
when it merges into t e Universa1 soul, paramham-sa.".Kablr,
129. For details also see, G.W. Briggs, Gorakhnith, 307.
33G.W. Brig9s, GorakhnAth, 322.
~
j
Cl
70
Section
Tantric Il...nt
apecificallx
<~
!n
the ginlns,
that the
key technical
esoteric
tradition appear
similar to
Praksh.
vas
It
terms of
found in the
tho~~
for i t was f
this
ginn Brahm
found expression in
opens
vith
a large extent.
look
at
the
the Nizr
This section,
basic
concept;on\
Brahm
Praksh
is seen
proceeds to examine
Brahm Praksh
upon the
ginns
broadly
major composition.
seems to
Ha~ha
ln our
As we proceed, our
Yoga.
Ha~ha
as
1t
context of
super-impose a
Shi< t form
then
that the
,
of Islam
discussion on
in chapter
the nature
one above,
falling under
we classified
five categories.
the ginns
It vas
as
maintained
71
mysticQ1
category
The
personalized form
t~
G~d.l
essential
is the
feature
pevelopme~t
of relation-ship
Lord in order to
termed as
of an
betveen an
of harmony
vith God>.
above, stands
1
the relation-ship
murid.
reality of
ve have seen
an Ism c tH
The culmination
a murid
of this relation-ship is
se en as a
1.
The
expressions
mystical
a't
ginns
are,
therefore,
,
primarily
out of
72
the establishment
those ginns
~f
which in popular
devotional literature
of the
r>
We
ar,e \ere
speciUcally
concerned
experience.
They
the
various
into the
therefore, act
as guides
'"
,
The followlng
relation-ship to
rny~tical\\
experience on the
'\t
.
\
realizatio~
focus on the
desc~e
These ginns,
the
with
a glimpse
be cultivated
between a
,the~vigil,
'.
composition of this
esoteric patn
contains
detailed
instructions
about
Pra~sh,
outlines the
ginn corpus
how
to
as
but also
follow
it.
the discussion
of the esote r le
Praksh
va rious
the
path described in
mys t ical
stages and
the Brahm
the
resul t i ng
to the establishment of
relation-ship between a
a spiritual
- that reference
te the Tantrie
such as Uigal,
et~.
pingal, sukhman
key terms
The
used in
the text to
...
>
ex pe rie n ce,
desc r ibe
the mystical
oceupy a
,."..
Tantrie
primarily
Praksh
Our'-- purpose
tradition.
to
outline
have seen
above,
of the
in
the
the underlying
pages
theme
of
below
the
is
Brahm
we
a~
these soteric
terrns employed
in the
ginn and
what
As the
title of the
of the
by an
di vine
cefllt:ral idea
The attainment
attempts
of
Praksh seems to
to explain
how
divine
mok~.
order to attain
The text
based.
Lord.
individua} in
Brahm Praksh
is
the
have been
this vision
is
",
from
stage
absorption
self-heod
to
stage of
in the
<True Word> as
experience
unfathomable depths
te experience
Brahat Poraksh
mystical
c _
the divine.
is on the mystical
of
to
eventual
one's own
The
emphas i s of
inner
the
sat abda
of the Lord.
'1.
...,
74
The
~abda.
the divine
at length
is
sat
properties of the
presented
as
being
It Fs transcendent in
transcendent and i
that it stretches beyon
both
the sense
As it states:
At
the same
every level of
time, the
sat
is all-Pervading
~abda
at
the ontological
Hence,in
order
for
murid
to
contemplation.
experience
~abda,
the ginn
sat sabda
submerged in the
Consequently
it
the
res'ults
i~
the
In other words,
,focus, the centre
<contemplation> of
,,#
organised.
the sat
For
~abda fprms
a significant
pr~tiQ~" whih
seems to
75
~Ofs
btini self
whic~
Sumiran of
a murd
in order
is initiated
to experience
Focussing on
discusses
how thl
at length
develops a
stage of
murid's inner
depths
as leading
relation-ship
between
the divine
one's
sumiran
him from
stage to
eventual absorption
own
inner
self
within
practise of
of
into developing
mystical
mystical experience to
unfathomable
the
and
the
in the
hood
~abda
to
which i5
establishment of
Lord
and
which
the Lord i5
an
relation-ship between
establishment of
inner reality of
We
shall,
a spiritual
therefore,
see
below
how
the
exe~plified
as
the
of the Imm.
Brahm
praksh
76
The
ptrshh appears
~abda,
entire ginn
corpus.
as a
dhikr word
Numerous references
are found
the
in the
new convert,.1
shh
Therefore,
<!lill.>.
in almost
for
<guru> and
equivalent
to
gqr..nar. '
In Nizri
epithet
Ism(lism, the
( Al ,
referring to
Ism(ils. lD
Since
< Al
t*
institution of
lmmah in
then
aIl the
refer to
context
the
allusion
necessarily refer
the Imm.
word pirshh
the first
is
Imm
considered
essence, the
prshh
to the relation-ship
as an
of the
Nizr
represent
to
word pirshh,
Nizr Ism<l
to
is seen
Imms.
in
the
11
would
Taken
ginns
between a
the
in
must
murid and
BP 2
'
of his spiritual
77
with
attainment in
reality of the
God. However,
it
praksh establishes
mystical path
in the text
remains to
the identity
be
attaining union
seen
of the
Imm. This
how the
Brahm
sabda through
how it leads
the
a murid
In order to
down
the
mystical
practise
states
and
exp1anation of the
practise
contains
stages
in
descriptions
the
of
of
various
providing
in the
ginn.
of
the sabda
off
into
esoteric path.
the
10
describing
speak of
due
the
to
the
verses
The
in a curious
resulting ecstasy
uselessness
form
#1
instructions to a
manner
and
the vision of
of
various
have attained the divine bliss due to their focus on the oame
t
61 and. culminates
-,
j'
-1
78
in discussing
experience of
Excluding the
gets a fair
and realization
one's own
of the
inner self-hood.
verse Il to
60, one
illustrated in the
Brahme Praksh.
As we proceed, we
path
similar
and
the experience.
esoteric terms
Yoga
i5
theory
terms
of
incorporates
terms of
path will,
ginns
esoteric vocabulary of
the
Ha~ha
tradition,
It appears that
vocabulary to
the
demo~strate
Ha~ha
key
technical terms
to
the
the ginn
explain its
mystical
those of
the
Ha~ha
Yoga
,
these
reference
principes similar to
conform to
It is important
significance of these
mystical
inevitable.
therefore,
the
this
ginns in
to
As
the Tantric
a similar
reference
path.
in the
part of the
Path in
in severa1
technical
voc~bulary
is found
Aithough
have
to
th~ory
what extent
and what
the
meaning
li
been
given in
the
Brahm
~Praksh.ll'
Demonstratin~
the
~rahm
,-'
Praksh state:
79
The
tone
exhortation.
<master>,
of
these
It
says
first
that
for anything
which
the
few
sat
verses
sabda
communicates
is
that
is
our
a vision
the.relization, the
of
guru
or
Since a
on the mystical
focus should be
the guru
Therefore, sumiran
signifiSfnt practise
of the
of the
absolutely on
sabda forms
mystical path.
the most
Indicating the
the practise
repetition
through
of
the sabda
the
is
tongue. The
primarily a
verbal
conscious
repetition
is
Such an
allusion to
the practise
of sabda
is clearly
,.,
80
After
the
abda
is
repeated
constantly
it
becomes
The
internalization of the
ajlpajlpa or
silent repetition.
contemplates the
abda is referred
One of
the verses
to as
in the
corpus states:
objective behind
through every
control
the
i~ernalized,
the
constant
breath i5 to focus
mind
from
practise of
on the sabda,
deviating.
Once
the
the
sabda
which would
dhyn
is
states:
...
verS~5
81
months of practise,
second stage as
Here the
for six
where the
a period
of nine months.
It is
from nbhi that the dhyn rises from the 'west' ta go towards
the
'sky'.
In other
words,
the
method which
the
Brahm
the dhyn.
The
mystical
appear similar
stages
described in
to the chakras,
the
which as
Brahm
Praksh
intimated earlier,
the Haha
peculiar,geography
Yoga theory.
To reiterate,
main axis of
in the
the human
Yoga practise,
point of the
the aim
of a
with attainment
Yogi is
R~aching
meru-daQa.
which
of the meru-daQa.
cosidered stags of
progress achieved.
l '
to reach
to this
In the
the highest
highest stage, a
of bodily immortality.
are super-imposed
body.
on the
The
various chaKras
merU-daQg8 are,
progress or indicators of
therefore,
the level of~
,.,
\ \
82
In
the Tantric
Yoga system
the 8im
of a
Yogi is
to
coiled
the symbol of a
up at
the
base
of
The
column.
mystical experience
dormant state.
begins to
Once it
Yoga
Ha~ha
is
to
at~ain
It
of a
the
Yogt is
experience
o~
the
characterized by
towar~s
sahaja. 11
appears
functioning of
the basis of
,1
to reach
actualize
The practise
"kuQQalint.
sleep, it
that
the
under-lying
principle
Ha~ha
the
Yoga forms
~inn.
the
For
f
r~aches
the
n~hi
appars to refer to
of the
dhyn is
to wake
the
kU~9a~in
and
83
The
stage
nbhi
t ime.
or
navel
ie,
The
of
therefore,
vi tal
for a longer
importance of
~erse
mDldhra, the
says
that the
lowest centre
mDl-lotus,
should be
<arteries> ingal
channels of
also
known
kept firm,
and pingal
with the
and" the
as
la
The two
considered ta
su~umn
be
or sukhman
that the meeting of these three nas in the nbhi forces the
kUQQalin 'upwards' to
to eventually
experience the
highest point
of the rneru-daQga.
itself
the
concentration
dhyn
divine in
remains
on the
sabda
21
unt i l
is
of chakras
the sahasrra,
Therefore, in
such
t ime
absolute. Such
the
the nbhi
that
an
the
intense
and
~he
sukhman in
the nbhi.
This
84
merging,
as mentioned
above, forces
As
the kuQalin
upwatas
ginn maintains:
what
Praksh.
pasehim
or
paecham <west>
only allusion
~e
ln
is found: in a
the
Brahm
verse from
the
corpus:
ve~e
through the
spinal
may mean
that the
dhyn rising
west to
reach the
sky takes
column.
Thus, it
is
the
22
from the
the route
spinal column
nQhi
of the
which
i5
23
the
su~um~,
Ha~ha
of the meru
of
the
three principle
Higal and
said to
nQs,
namely
This is becau5e
pa5S round
85
while the sukhman pierces through it and reaches the highest
point.
It is
the kUQ9alini
to travel in
order to
--kUQ9alini in
reaches the
'incomprehen~ible
show'.
,.
verses of ,...<
the
Br~hm
like-wise alludes to
the sky,
Hence, reference
the sukhman.
akasa, or
reach its
an
need elaboration.
The following
Praksh state:
(,
akasa
<sky>.
Here
he
is
said
to
experience
1
inexpressibl~
show.
The
above verses of th
an
..;
ginn refer to
.,
86
as he
progresses through
For instance,
his
and reaches
d~yn
various types of
the akasa.
water-fall; then
a flute
etc. Accompanying
before
But
the
considering
experiences signify, it
this is
what
these
is essential to know
religious
primarily what
In the Tantric
\.
beglns
1
'"
its inward
"'
kU99alin
akasa. z ,
'where
the
successively pierees
Akaa or
vacuum, is
according to
sukhman. The
the chakra
the space
ascending
and reachs
abOve the
sy~tem/'
the Taftric
i5 arou5ed, it
the
throat,
limitation of
the
f'
sense i5
When a Yogi
removed.
~acuum
as akssa,
has succeeded in
~ighest point, he i5
th,
said toYxperien~e
spinal cotd known
25
Associated
with
awakeni~g
the
which are
the
kUQQalini
Yogi in
the
Ha~ha
are
others, .L~y
stages
for a
of
ma~ing
pierc~,
Yoga
are
qertain
"
2'
..-
Sound'.call~d
in the
sounds
are
heard
in
the
n!9.!
is sa id to ,be latent
'O be hea~rd
various
wi thi~. "Di,f't'erent
cent~,s,
o;,~~~as
,
,
-\';.! .. ~,.~
87
1
,
..,
,
super-imposed upon
through them in
vibration
the meru-daQ9a,
as the
v~
and
'
the
speak of
experienced by a
The
saduna.
Yogi as he
verses
Nda, is
form
becomes
progresses
above
point.
purest
kUQ9aIini passes
as
maintain
that
sound of a flute
initial~y
the
which is melodious.
becomes
known in the
is
~et
another type of
During contemplati6n,
Praksh is
not explicit
of brightness.
about this
type of
verse in a
ginan from
88
he teels as
the practitioner is
Various
are
~xperience~
highest state. In
deep ocean of
li~ht.
the eyes.
become calm,
manifested to him as
sparkle in front of
he reaches the
experiences chiefly
appearing as one
to have
mind on
>
It maintains that
the
mind
sits calmly
at
the
trikuti.
Ha~ha
in
The
anihata manner
refe~ence
to
Yoga refer
to the
"
89
triveol
or
the
confluence
i~gall,
of
na"la, as 'shown
sukhlUni. These
above,
the
ar~
and
the
n,,,ts
th~ee
of the sukhmaml.
pi~gala
in , the
skul1. It
is
also
knovn
as the
creation.
gaga na
maQqala,
indicates:
Although th_
tht! gin4ns"
i ts meaning is
in numerous
places in
A verse in
not clear.
a iloko
of srati is
C.
not elear
Vaudeville, attempting
even in the
to explain
Ha~ha
Yoga
the various
Ha~ha
sound r
nAda is a
,Yoga
Ha~ha
characteristic fea,ture
of a
c~me
in
the
equivalence to
n!9!.
The
Nath-panthl writings
w~uld
sug~est'
such
an
abda-Y09a.~a
-.
f
~
.'"'
1
j
1
.'
"
90
A somewhat
Rhv!.,
e~planation
clear
tradition was
anc:ient
abda-surati
Yoga,
:s
the
and it is
by S,A.
N'th-panth!
such a
path in
to hear
the n.da,
;hich as
highest state of
a Yogt:s
t~
was maintained
Yogt is
Anlhata nlda
progresse
This
One'.s, He
in'fact., is that
practise
attain sahaja
surati-tebda,
of the
concentrated
further maintains,
ebda,
on the
50
Aabda
that
,both mind
alone, in
end breeth
are
that the
Yogt
order
mOk,a.
in the
In a
like manner,
t#
-'
i. e'.
absolutely on
the
the tabda
mind and
the
itself, the
breath
are
murld has
higbest state. To
having eliminated
for himself
the fear
of life
liberation
from the
bonds
The
when
ettainment of
eq~l
focus.ed
reeched the
i5 interpreted as
and deeth.
of life
and
to the attainment of
".
','
"
')
, i
"
"
This stte,
91
h~ever,
states:
"
ha~
elaborated in the
fra.e-vork
of
Brahm Ptakash is
the
h~s
in.ard
T.n~c traditio~.
jou~ney
based on
In
Brehm PrekAsh,
conducted through
~he
practise of
He
through in
hi.
vhich in
the Yoga
control'
technique.
eventually results
theory is
tllrou,gh ~e
in ,the tuning
attaining
iabda practise,
closely connected
Thil ~ontrol"
sldhana to.ards
it
is
of the mind
vith breeth
,mainteined,
and focussing
"nner in
both the
Ha~ha
Yoga
and the
gin'n Brahat
"
92,
Praksh.
said to attain.sahaja.
However,
the Brahm
referr~ng
prakash,
to
a path
and
'
, ,
results
similar
to
a Yogt's
sakaja,
maintains
that 'the
,)
., highest state
is pervaded
therefore, brings us
by the
to a reconsideration 'of
\
signifies.
t~e
path
murtd
sabda i tself.
The sabda,
'
through sabda,
progresses thrQugh
sabda, and
the
-As
intimated earlier,
th~
abda
on the
..editates
,
uturity he
given
a~tains
to be seen
It remaina
super-lmpos.s' Sht( t
the
and
at th!s
given as a
maintai,ns that
vord, at
the Named,
which is
~s
height . of
-.
spiritual
that ~s mOk,a
form of Isl. . by
a murld
f-&
him.
Brahm Prakl.h
,
state of the Yogis with that of the 'abda, i.e. the Named.
1
'/:'
by
uslng the
Da . . Avatlra
1be
his cr.atur
As seen above
theories holds
that the
vorld
is created \ in
2. 'rhare
L~rd Vi.~u
_infests
..
~g
~imselC/iD
------
/
(-
..
./
_ r
"
..
"
~ 1)
n,JI
.'
':!I(, .
,
-
"
0'
'.
'1
l'
~
93,
t~n
1
1
incarn
ti'o'ns' during the four
'1
'-
the
:Dv.-..:a:.c:.:~a, he
~espective
.
.'
t~t th~ t
forms
and t"o
& ~
the present
in thru
age kno"n
the 'tenth
as Kali-fuga
vatAra kno"n
. ').
y.JI In
nth'Avat~ra h~nifested
as
the
the
~l~ains
!!!!-ISi!
,
.
.,'
to
Corre
'expected
idea
of
Maklanki .
... IP 137.
Naklanki
who ,is
the
,\
to the
Sh!lah,
as i .
eipectea
"
well~known,
Ima.,
and whe,n
IP '139.
.
the Mahdt
is'
he ,manifests
The ~once,t of
the soul
Imlmah in
NaheU i.
.)1
, ln
PraUab :be
6abda
~~il
1
is given aa a
1l'an
'l'efer. to
In
fi~st .1'"
of
_lzlrl 1"'(11i . .
1
tbe
Si,nce, ~ Al! is
l '
word
"
>
&
"
/"
,. .
"
'1
,\
"'~
... - p
.)
.'
.U~~S.d to
g,
of i~mah
general.
Therefore,
if
in essenc,
the sUllira'n
vord
is given
as
"
l'
and
the Imam.'
pr,~kash
Consequent.ly,
as'a
.urld
of th. Lord,
-1
conclude.,
"--Il
a,
.f
r
,~
''.
'
'
95 '
1~-16.
!i Anand ~
<1 have met 'the Satgur today~; Satgyr bliitiya !!ID
lifilye, <Hov vould you knov when you have met the Lord>;
~,
list~n9s
of" the
ginlns in
the
'A translation of, the text of the Brahm Prakash bas been
olfered in Chaptet l~e.
'G. Khat.e, "Th. Das. Avatara of the Satpanth Ismailia
and the Imam Sbahis of Indo-Pat, <Ph.D. diesertatron,
Harvard University, 1972>.
,
,
;"
'Ibid.,.
-,
l'Ibid. According
been replaced not too
However, the lai.ShAh!
Tbe7 even calI the j!R!
..ntra or ..glc
nterpre st;a mantra as
rt;.
)
.. 1
11~.
___
..._..' _ ._ _ _
'!"':.
",.....-
~V.IQ."\l'9_._t.H_'
........_ _
_,_
...!(:....
f....,._~
,,
l'
'.
Shah
and._ shah
96
i.
used
for
the
"'
liDescription of the variou8 preeesses
of the Ha~ha Yoga
is limited to the- more important details,' 8ufficlent 'to
elucidate the mystical path ,outlined in the Brahm PrakAsh.
1-
"
'
l 'Sayyid
ImAm
ShAh tatha bAja . sallidona gin'nno,
<Boalbay: Ismailia Association for In la, 197 >, 136
III
ulbid., 140.
~IIt is
interesting ta note that even the time priod
8pecified for meditation in the ginAn is in accordance:with
the initial period of the rogtc p~actises.
,
Ir
:"B~
"C.
l,
"Ibid., 3"2.
J'Shia I._i
r_ili, ,Asaqi,tion
-SadarcUnn. 9inann6, so.baf, 1971, 28.,' "
for
India,' Plr
,
.
..
")
97
Mukh!
\
!li
'l,"SlokO Moto,"
in
'JC.
Kabtr, 135.
Lal~t.
Devr4j, n.d.
V.udevil~e,
Shams
"BP, 135-137.
"
Por details
on
the Dasa
Avatira
~ li "
,,,)
'1"
)
.., ,
,!
.' "t
)
'1
,1
i
i
,1
theory into
the
no~
'important sinee
predominant1y
in the
concept constitutes a
entire
corpus,
sig~ificant
of
~umiran
but a1so
praetise
appear
sinee
- hart
thi.
!!~khyil
This , study
,
has led
indige~ous Indian
II>
(J
to revealing
the incorporation
"
of
Brahm Prakish.
0
in the text
o
the esoterie
path -
the various
to find its
~is
in the
,J..
Ha~ha
thou~ht~
On
..../
.. J,
doctrine,
vhich
implies
that
a purely
the
Hfnd~
fundamental
If
.'
tho~ht.
i
\
co
esoteric vocabulary of
l
the Tantrikas a
'
Sh~(!
"
between the
g~nn
..
through the
Their "form of
Math
Yogis
Yog~ focu~sed
who were
Lord iva.
which
sahaj~
is
~quated
A MAth
-attaining the
for
~~ivites
basically
him.
R transcendent state
aims at
own body,
which' is
On the '"other
hand, it is important t6
appe~rs
it
instead of
to do
the
Nath Yogts is
&Qy,
50
~~ivite
vaiShQav~S~b~str~cture
. found.' A murid,
path ~initiates
mystical
uSi:n~
,i t was
the path
t~e Ha~~a
Yoga
of the
through
the practise
of
iabda,
progresses
culminates in
through
the
abda
p~rvade9 'by
a state
and
the
the sabda
experience
it!\eif:
This
~he
heiglit
'
.\
.'
\
-- - - _
..._-...., . . "'-...
'
!~......,.,.....~.,..,;;:,~;\i,~.-..----~--.,...._-_~-
.,..J.,.
,r
,.1 '.
100
1
Brti~
Praksh
ut i 1 i zing the
A
VishQu, according
theory of
to this theory
of
the
Named
the VaishQavas.
by
Lord
incarnates himself
in ten
Ava tras. Of these, ni ne are bel i eved to have been mani fested
in
past
yuga s,
manifestation of
ginn
that
manifested himself
of
the
the
VaishQavas
maintalns
Imm
and
thi s
tenth
and that he is
Ism< lis.
are
awaiting
the
known as
Naklanki.
The
Avatra
has
TaHng
into
a1ready
the first
consideration
this
"-
sign if ican t
di f ference between
the
g inn
and the
Tan tric
~econd,
the
BraM Prksh i s
a ginn from
the corpus,
The Tantric
only text to
eaaier
to
reach
clear conclusions.
ginns, it
seems that
But,
been the
because
of
the
the Dasa
Avatra
the
doctrines
of
the
Nizri
Ismi< lBs
in
the
1 ndian
101
corpus.
with
compositions attrjbuted
to Shams
al-Oin, the
author of the
vocabulary is
found in
last of
the compositions
early 19.0' s
the composition
use
alleged
5f
Tantric
attributed to
l
process ceased
the
'
death in
...
and the
ginn
An attempt
to understand why
found expression in
the
technical
princ iple
ginns,
T~is
vocabulary
itself.
which is found to
Tantrism appears
i.o
the
underlying
'-
t~e
Yoga
Ha~ha
terminology.
be similar in both
is expressed
a consideration of
Since
of
to have
tnown
aS sandhabhaa,
explained as
n!re appropriately
as "a symbolic
something different
than what is
'twilight language'
language used
expressed by
or
to sign i fy
the words."l
terms
but
and concepts
li terally,
many uncertaint
ies
,
and
any aspect of
To
cite
one
common
example 1
i"8.,
pi figal
and
the
sukhmana are the three princ iple ndis in the esoter ic aspect
H8~ha
102
have seen
play an
i~por;;nt
role
in the
commentar ies on
Tantras offer
For instance
the
technical
vocabulary of
them that
us."
"whatever exists in
These
interpretation. The
subt'.e body,
the Saraswat1.
,GangA
is
Thus, accordin9
within
unnecessary.
the
body
From thi5
useless.
symbolic
as the Gan9
to them
of the
sultbman as
for example
clearly
that
exists in
then
follows
mn/~ould~develoP
assume
i9 i5 referred to
as a
It i5 maintained by
therefore,
nQis,
these n9ts.
is conceived
the
if the
pilgrimages
aIl forms
of
himself to control
are
formaI
is within
these natural
term i9 has
In
the
Brahm
connect ion vi th
could
have in
these key
th'eir importance in
Praksh
re~lize
know what
are
the esoteric
used
But
meanin9 these
the cryptic
in
aspect of
other symbolic
the ginns.
terms
nature of
It is
terms
the
extent.
expression in
the
l sptA ( tl t ginins
to
such a
large
103
sought to penetrate
soil, the
They had
appealing
to
the diCts
to present Islam in a
society
i nto
crovning
phase
of the
was
maintain~d
ptrs and
the
It
whole
faced a
critical
which
it
sought
to
development
of
Hinduism.
Consequently,
the
efforts
critical integration
of
the
ptrs
of Hindu-Mu-slim
resulted
thought which
in
in turn
discussed Aboye
Iad c tlism to
vere basically
those found
geared to
to Islam.
and
,~ft
works
The
convey
Hence, one
of thought reflected in
in 8hakti
the
the ginns
of the
Indian
Sub-cont inent. 1
~hou9ht
reflecte
in the
there is
Indian Sub-contfnent
during the medieval
Brahm PrakAsh,
evidence
Yogt s in the
era. Since
it was
Moreover,
there are
evidences
that
the society
into
'
.
104
been
of mystical trends.
largely
under
tradition. References
of
influence
in the text
that it is
the
These mystics
of Brahm
thought
prevalent
during
of
the
appear te
the
Tantric
Praksh suggest
medieval
era.
Nearly
ascetic
practises
contemplation of the
which
are
not
centred
on
i t continues to
attained the
the Brahm
NAnak,
Praksh.
Nmdev,
evidence
Personalities
Tantric influence
attempted to
etc.
Gorakhn~h,
penet~ate
are
in them.'
such a
such
as Kab1r,
those
Hence,
Guru
whose
works
if the
pirs
Yet,
Tantrism may
which the
factor
another
not have
which
perhaps
been entirely
indicates
an alien
that
thought upon
a Sht< t form
of Islam.
Reference of
marked similarity of
show a
Yoga system.
'7
the
Brahm Pratlsh
vi thin the
Inde-Musli.
society bas
not
--
~--_.
-- ----,'------_.
1
~'Il
!,
105
Umm
al-kitab and
fo~warded
in the Umm
level, it would
rel~tion-ship
between
Ha~ha
Yoga
However,
Indo-Musli~
examining
context,
ginn
the use of
Brahm ,Praksh
the Tantric
the
in
vocabulary and
in a Hindu
make it
which is
an integral aspect
still reflected
in a
of Ism<tlism.
50
An aspect
fundamental practise
the
of the
106
(.
Hot
1
P.C Bagchi~ Studies in the Tantras,
Calcutta University Press, 1975>:-27=21.
<Calcutta:
Central
1 slamic
1 ranian
-~
.....
,-,,,"-~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
-~
_.~
___ _..
_
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