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Gayatri Mantra

The Gāyatrī Mantra (Sanskrit pronunciation: [ɡaː.jɐ.triː.mɐn.trɐ.]), also known as the Sāvitri Mantra (Sanskrit pronunciation: [saː.vi.triː.mɐn.trɐ.]), is a sacred mantra from the Rig Veda (Mandala 3.62.10),[1] dedicated to the Vedic deity Savitr.[1][2] It is known as "Mother of the Vedas".[3]

Gayatri Mantra written in the Devanagari script.
Gayatri Mantra personified as the goddess Gayatri, surrounded by the Tamil Om symbol, with the mantra written in it. From left clockwise: Brahmi as Pratah Sandhya (Morning), Maheshwari as Madhyanika Sandhya (Afternoon), Pranava Rishi and Vaishnavi as Sayam Sandhya (Evening).

The term Gāyatrī may also refer to a type of mantra which follows the same Vedic meter as the original Gāyatrī Mantra. There are many such Gāyatrīs for various gods and goddesses.[3] Furthermore, Gāyatrī is the name of the Goddess of the mantra and the meter.[4]

The Gayatri mantra is cited widely in Hindu texts, such as the mantra listings of the Śrauta liturgy, and classical Hindu texts such as the Bhagavad Gita,[5][6] Harivamsa,[7] and Manusmṛti.[8] The mantra and its associated metric form was known by the Buddha.[9] The mantra is an important part of the upanayana ceremony. Modern Hindu reform movements spread the practice of the mantra to everyone and its use is now very widespread.[10][11]

Text edit

The main mantra appears in the hymn RV 3.62.10. During its recitation, the hymn is preceded by oṃ () and the formula bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ (भूर् भुवः स्वः), known as the mahāvyāhṛti, or "great (mystical) utterance". This prefixing of the mantra is properly described in the Taittiriya Aranyaka (2.11.1-8), which states that it should be chanted with the syllable oṃ, followed by the three Vyahrtis and the Gayatri verse.[12]

Whereas in principle the gāyatrī mantra specifies three pādas of eight syllables each, the text of the verse as preserved in the Samhita is one short, seven instead of eight. Metrical restoration would emend the attested tri-syllabic vareṇyaṃ with a tetra-syllabic vareṇiyaṃ.[13]

The Gayatri mantra with swaras is,[12] in Devanagari:

ॐ भूर्भुव॒ स्सुवः॑
तत्स॑ वि॒तुर्वरे᳚ण्यं॒
भर्गो॑ दे॒वस्य॑ धीमहि
धियो॒ यो नः॑ प्रचो॒दया᳚त् ॥

In IAST:

oṃ bhūr bhuvaḥ suvaḥ
tat savitur vareṇyaṃ
bhargo devasya dhīmahi
dhiyo yo naḥ pracodayāt
– Rigveda 3.62.10[14]

Dedication edit

The Gāyatrī mantra is dedicated to Savitṛ, a Sun deity. The mantra is attributed to the much revered sage Vishwamitra, who is also considered the author of Mandala 3 of Rig Veda. Many monotheistic sects of Hinduism such as Arya Samaj hold that the Gayatri mantra is in praise of One Supreme Creator known by the name Om as mentioned in the Yajur Veda, 40:17.[15][16]

Translations edit

The Gayatri mantra has been translated in many ways.[note 1] Quite literal translations include:

  • (1947): "We meditate on the effulgent glory of the divine Light; may he inspire our understanding."[21]
  • (1953): "We meditate on the adorable glory of the radiant sun; may She inspire our intelligence."[22]
  • Sri Aurobindo: "We choose the Supreme Light of the divine Sun; we aspire that it may impel our minds."[23] Sri Aurobindo further elaborates: "The Sun is the symbol of divine Light that is coming down and Gayatri gives expression to the aspiration asking that divine Light to come down and give impulsion to all the activities of the mind."[23]
  • Sri Chinmoy: " We meditate on the Transcendental Glory of the Deity Supreme,Who is inside the Heart of the Earth, inside the Life of the Sky and inside the Soul of the Heaven. May He stimulate and illume our minds.".
  • Stephanie W. Jamison and Joel P. Brereton: "Might we make our own that desirable effulgence of god Savitar, who will rouse forth our insights."[24]

Literal translations of the words are below:

  • Om - The sacred syllable, pranava;
  • Bhur - Bhuloka (physical plane);
  • Bhuvah - Antariksha (space);
  • Suvah - Svarga Loka (Heaven);
  • Tat - Paramatma (Supreme Soul);
  • Savitur - Isvara (Surya) (Sun god);
  • Varenyam - Fit to be worshipped;
  • Bhargo - Remover of sins and ignorance;
  • Devasya - Glory (Jnana Svaroopa ie Feminine / Female);
  • Dheemahi - We meditate;
  • Dhiyo - Buddhi (Intellect);
  • Yo - Which;
  • Nah - Our;
  • Prachodayat: Enlighten / inspire.

More interpretative translations include:

  • Sir John Woodroffe (Arthur Avalon) (1913): "Om. Let us contemplate the wondrous spirit of the Divine Creator (Savitri) of the earthly, atmospheric, and celestial spheres. May He direct our minds (that is, 'towards' the attainment of dharmma, artha, kama, and moksha), Om."[25]
  • Ravi Shankar (poet): "Oh manifest and unmanifest, wave and ray of breath, red lotus of insight, transfix us from eye to navel to throat, under canopy of stars spring from soil in an unbroken arc of light that we might immerse ourselves until lit from within like the sun itself."[26]
  • Shriram Sharma: Om, the Brahm, the Universal Divine Energy, vital spiritual energy (Pran), the essence of our life existence, Positivity, destroyer of sufferings, the happiness, that is bright, luminous like the Sun, best, destroyer of evil thoughts, the divinity who grants happiness may imbibe its Divinity and Brilliance within us which may purify us and guide our righteous wisdom on the right path.[27]
  • Sir William Jones (1807): "Let us adore the supremacy of that divine sun, the god-head who illuminates all, who recreates all, from whom all proceed, to whom all must return, whom we invoke to direct our understandings right in our progress toward his holy seat."[28]
  • William Quan Judge (1893): "Unveil, O Thou who givest sustenance to the Universe, from whom all proceed, to whom all must return, that face of the True Sun now hidden by a vase of golden light, that we may see the truth and do our whole duty on our journey to thy sacred seat."[29]
  • Sivanath Sastri (Brahmo Samaj) (1911): "We meditate on the worshipable power and glory of Him who has created the earth, the nether world and the heavens (i.e. the universe), and who directs our understanding."[30][note 2]
  • Swami Sivananda: "Let us meditate on Isvara and His Glory who has created the Universe, who is fit to be worshipped, who is the remover of all sins and ignorance. May he enlighten our intellect."
  • Maharshi Dayananda Saraswati (founder of Arya Samaj): "Oh God! Thou art the Giver of Life, Remover of pain and sorrow, The Bestower of happiness. Oh! Creator of the Universe, May we receive thy supreme sin-destroying light, May Thou guide our intellect in the right direction."[31]
  • Kirpal Singh: "Muttering the sacred syllable 'Aum' rise above the three regions, And turn thy attention to the All-Absorbing Sun within. Accepting its influence be thou absorbed in the Sun, And it shall in its own likeness make thee All-Luminous."[32]

Syllables of the Gayatri mantra edit

Gayatri meter, called Gayatri Chandas in Sanskrit, is twenty-four syllables comprising three lines (Sk. padas, literally "feet") of eight syllables each. The Gayatri mantra as received is short one syllable in the first line: tat sa vi tur va reṇ yaṃ. Being only twenty-three syllables the Gayatri mantra is Nichruth Gayatri Chandas ("Gayatri meter short by one syllable"). A reconstruction of vareṇyaṃ to a proposed historical vareṇiyaṃ restores the first line to eight syllables. In practise, people reciting the mantra may retain seven syllables and simply prolong the length of time they pronounce the "m", they may append an extra syllable of "mmm" (approximately va-ren-yam-mmm), or they may use the reconstructed vareṇiyaṃ.

Textual appearances edit

Hindu literature edit

The Gayatri mantra is cited widely in Hindu texts, such as the mantra listings of the Śrauta liturgy,[note 3][note 4] and cited several times in the Brahmanams and the Srauta-sutras.[note 5][note 6] It is also cited in a number of grhyasutras, mostly in connection with the upanayana ceremony[35] in which it has a significant role.

The Gayatri mantra is the subject of esoteric treatment and explanation in some major Upanishads, including Mukhya Upanishads such as the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad,[note 7] the Shvetashvatara Upanishad[note 8] and the Maitrayaniya Upanishad;[note 9] as well as other well-known works such as the Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana.[note 10] The text also appears in minor Upanishads, such as the Surya Upanishad.

The Gayatri mantra is the apparent inspiration for derivative "gāyatrī" stanzas dedicated to other deities. Those derivations are patterned on the formula vidmahe - dhīmahi - pracodayāt",[36] and have been interpolated[37] into some recensions of the Shatarudriya litany.[note 11] Gāyatrīs of this form are also found in the Mahanarayana Upanishad.[note 12]

The Gayatri mantra is also repeated and cited widely in Hindu texts such as the Mahabharata, Harivamsa,[7] and Manusmṛti. [8]

Buddhist corpus edit

In Majjhima Nikaya 92, the Buddha refers to the Sāvitri (Pali: sāvittī) mantra as the foremost meter, in the same sense as the king is foremost among humans, or the sun is foremost among lights:

aggihuttamukhā yaññā sāvittī chandaso mukham; Rājā mukhaṃ manussānaṃ, nadīnaṃ sāgaro mukhaṃ. Nakkhattānaṃ mukhaṃ cando, ādicco tapataṃ mukhaṃ; Puññaṃ ākaṅkhamānānaṃ, saṅgho ve yajataṃ mukhan.

The foremost of sacrifices is offering to the sacred flame; the Sāvittī is the foremost of poetic meters; of humans, the king is the foremost; the ocean’s the foremost of rivers; the foremost of stars is the moon; the sun is the foremost of lights; for those who sacrifice seeking merit,

the Saṅgha is the foremost.[38]

In Sutta Nipata 3.4, the Buddha uses the Sāvitri mantra as a paradigmatic indicator of Brahmanic knowledge:

Brāhmaṇo hi ce tvaṃ brūsi, Mañca brūsi abrāhmaṇaṃ; Taṃ taṃ sāvittiṃ pucchāmi, Tipadaṃ catuvīsatakkharaṃ

If you say you brahmin are, but call me none, then of you I ask the chant of Sāvitrī, consisting of three lines

in four and twenty syllables.[39]

 
Gayatri Japa. 1851 lithograph
 
A statue representing the Beatles was unveiled in Liverpool in 2015. Each of them features a symbol expressing a milestone in their respective lives. On the back of George Harrison's belt is engraved the Gayatri Mantra written in Sanskrit.
 
Cher, performing the song titled Gayatri mantra, at the concert Classic Cher, Oxon Hill, Maryland on 19-03- 2017. Dressed in the Indian style, she is riding a mechanical elephant.

Usage edit

Upanayana ceremony edit

Imparting the Gayatri mantra to young Hindu men is an important part of the traditional upanayana ceremony, which marks the beginning of study of the Vedas. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan described this as the essence of the ceremony,[21] which is sometimes called "Gayatri diksha", i.e. initiation into the Gayatri mantra.[40] However, traditionally, the stanza RV.3.62.10 is imparted only to Brahmana. Other Gayatri verses are used in the upanayana ceremony are: RV.1.35.2, in the tristubh meter, for a kshatriya and either RV.1.35.9 or RV.4.40.5 in the jagati meter for a Vaishya.[41]

Mantra-recitation edit

Gayatri japa is used as a method of prāyaścitta (atonement). It is believed by practitioners that reciting the mantra bestows wisdom and enlightenment, through the vehicle of the Sun (Savitr), who represents the source and inspiration of the universe.[21]

Brahmo Samaj edit

In 1827 Ram Mohan Roy published a dissertation on the Gayatri mantra[42] that analysed it in the context of various Upanishads. Roy prescribed a Brahmin to always pronounce om at the beginning and end of the Gayatri mantra.[43] From 1830, the Gayatri mantra was used for private devotion of Brahmos. In 1843, the First Covenant of Brahmo Samaj required the Gayatri mantra for Divine Worship. From 1848-1850 with the rejection of Vedas, the Adi Dharma Brahmins use the Gayatri mantra in their private devotions.[44]

Hindu revivalism edit

In the later 19th century, Hindu reform movements spread the chanting of the Gayatri mantra. In 1898 for example, Swami Vivekananda claimed that, according to the Vedas and the Bhagavad Gita, a person became Brahmana through learning from his Guru, and not because of birth. He administered the sacred thread ceremony and the Gayatri mantra to non-Brahmins in Ramakrishna Mission.[45] This Hindu mantra has been popularized to the masses, pendants, audio recordings and mock scrolls.[46] Various Gayatri yajñas organised by All World Gayatri Pariwar at small and large scales in late twentieth century also helped spread Gayatri mantra to the masses.[47]

Indonesian Hinduism edit

The Gayatri Mantra forms the first of seven sections of the Trisandhyā Puja (Sanskrit for "three divisions"), a prayer used by the Balinese Hindus and many Hindus in Indonesia. It is uttered three times each day: 6 am at morning, noon, and 6 pm at evening.[48][49]

Popular culture edit

  • George Harrison (The Beatles): on the life-size statue representing him, unveiled in 2015 in Liverpool, the Gayatri mantra engraved on the belt, to symbolize a landmark event in his life (see picture).
  • A version of the Gayatri mantra is featured in the opening theme song of the TV series Battlestar Galactica (2004).[50]
  • A variation on the William Quan Judge translation is also used as the introduction to Kate Bush's song "Lily" on her 1993 album, The Red Shoes.
  • Cher, the singer/actress, in her Living Proof: The Farewell Tour, in 2002-2005, sang Gayatri mantra while riding a mechanical elephant. She later reprised the performance during her Classic Cher concert residency in 2017-2020 and Here We Go Again Tour in 2018-2020 (see picture).
  • The Swiss avantgarde black metal band Schammasch adapted the mantra as the outro in their song "The Empyrean" on their last album "Triangle" as a Gregorian chant.[51]
  • The film Mohabbatein (2000) directed by Aditya Chopra which came under controversy when Amitabh Bachchan recited the sacred Gayatri Mantra with his shoes on leading some Vedic scholars in Varanasi to complain that it insulted Hinduism[52]
  • In the game Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak (2016), Gayatri Mantra can be heard being sung during the destruction of Gaalsien flagship, Hand of Sajuuk, in the final mission of campaign, Khar-Toba.
  • The HBO show The White Lotus (2021) features a character singing a version of the Gayatri Mantra multiple times throughout the first season.

Other Gāyatrī Mantras edit

The term Gāyatrī is also a class of mantra which follows the same Vedic meter as the classic Gāyatrī Mantra. Though the classic Gāyatrī is the most famous, there are also many other Gāyatrī mantras associated with various Hindu gods and goddesses.[3]

Some examples include:[53]

Vishnu Gayatri:

Om Narayana Vidmahe Vasudevaya Dheemahi, Tanno Vishnuh Prachodayat

Krishna Gayatri:

Om Devakinandanaya Vidmahe Vasudevaya Dheemahi, Tannah Krishnah Prachodayat

Shiva Gayatri:

Om Tatpurshaya Vidmahe Sahasrakshaya Mahadevaya Dheemahi, Tanno Rudrah Prachodayat

Ganesha Gayatri:

Om Ekadantaya Vidmahe Vakrantundaya Dheemahi, Tanno Danti Prachodayat

Durga Gayatri:

Om Katyayanyai Vidmahe Kanyakumaryai Dheemahi, Tanno Durga Prachodayat

Saraswati Gayatri:

Om Vagdevyai Cha Vidmahe Kamarajaya Dheemahi, Tanno Devi Prachodayat

Lakshmi Gayatri:

Om Mahadevyai Cha Vidmahe Vishnupatnyai Cha Dheemahi, Tanno Lakshmih Prachodayat


See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ A literal translation of

    tát savitúr váreṇ(i)yaṃ
    bhárgo devásya dhīmahi
    dhíyo yó naḥ pracodayāt


    is as follows:

    • tat - that
    • savitur - from savitr̥, 'that which gives birth', 'the power inside the Sun' or the Sun itself
    • vareṇiyaṁ - to choose, to select; the most choosable, the best
    • bhargoḥ- to be luminous, the self-luminous one
    • devasya - luminous/ radiant, the divine.
    • tatsavitur devasya - "of that divine entity called Savitṛ"
    • dhīmahi - whose wisdom and knowledge flow, like waters
    • dhiyoḥ - intellect, a faculty of the spirit inside the body, life activity
    • yoḥ - which
    • naḥ - our, of us
    • pracodayāt - to move in a specific direction.
    • cod - to move (something/somebody) in a specific direction.hina
    • pra - the prefix "forth, forward."
    • pracud - "to move (something/somebody) forward"
    • prachodayāt - "may it move (something/somebody) forward"; inspires
  2. ^ The word Savitr in the original Sanskrit may be interpreted in two ways, first as the sun, secondly as the "originator or creator". Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Maharshi Debendranath Tagore used that word in the second sense. Interpreted in their way the whole formula may be thus rendered.
  3. ^ Sama Veda: 2.812; Vajasenayi Samhita (M): 3.35, 22.9, 30.2, 36.3; Taittiriya Samhita: 1.5.6.4, 1.5.8.4, 4.1.11.1; Maitrayani Samhita: 4.10.3; Taittiriya Aranyaka: 1.11.2
  4. ^ Where it is used without any special distinction, typically as one among several stanzas dedicated to Savitar at appropriate points in the various rituals.
  5. ^ Aitareya Brahmana: 4.32.2, 5.5.6, 5.13.8, 5.19.8; Kausitaki Brahmana: 23.3, 26.10; Asvalayana Srautasutra: 7.6.6, 8.1.18; Shankhayana Srautasutra: 2.10.2, 2.12.7, 5.5.2, 10.6.17, 10.9.16; Apastambha Srautasutra: 6.18.1
  6. ^ In this corpus, there is only one instance of the stanza being prefixed with the three mahavyahrtis.[33] This is in a late supplementary chapter of the Shukla Yajurveda samhita, listing the mantras used in the preliminaries to the pravargya ceremony. However, none of the parallel texts of the pravargya rite in other samhitas have the stanza at all. A form of the mantra with all seven vyahrtis prefixed is found in the last book of the Taittiriya Aranyaka, better known as the Mahanarayana Upanishad.[34] It is as follows:
    ओम् भूः ओम् भुवः ओम् सुवः ओम् महः ओम् जनः ओम् तपः ओम् स॒त्यम्।       ओम् तत्स॑वि॒तुर्वरे॑ण्य॒म् भर्गो॑ दे॒वस्य॑ धीमहि।
          धियो॒ यो नः॑ प्रचो॒दया॑त्।
          ओमापो॒ ज्योती॒ रसो॒ऽमृतं॒ ब्रह्म॒ भूर्भुव॒स्सुव॒रोम्।
  7. ^ 6.3.6 in the well-known Kanva recension, numbered 6.3.11-13 in the Madhyamdina recension.
  8. ^ 4.18
  9. ^ 6.7, 6.34, albeit in a section known to be of late origin.
  10. ^ 4.28.1
  11. ^ Maitrayani Samhita: 2.9.1; Kathaka Samhita: 17.11
  12. ^ Taittiriya Aranyaka: 10.1.5-7

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Rig Veda: Rig-Veda, Book 3: HYMN LXII. Indra and Others". www.sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Gayatri Mantra". OSME.
  3. ^ a b c Swami Vishnu Devananda, Vishnu Devananda (1999). Meditation and Mantras, p. 76. Motilal Banarsidass Publ.
  4. ^ Staal, Frits (June 1986). "The sound of religion". Numen. 33 (Fasc. 1): 33–64. doi:10.1163/156852786X00084. JSTOR 3270126.
  5. ^ Rahman 2005, p. 300.
  6. ^ Radhakrishnan 1994, p. 266.
  7. ^ a b Vedas 2003, p. 15–16.
  8. ^ a b Dutt 2006, p. 51.
  9. ^ Shults, Brett (May 2014). "On the Buddha's Use of Some Brahmanical Motifs in Pali Texts". Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies. 6: 119.
  10. ^ Rinehart 2004, p. 127.
  11. ^ Lipner 1994, p. 53.
  12. ^ a b Carpenter, David Bailey; Whicher, Ian (2003). Yoga: the Indian tradition. London: Routledge. p. 31. ISBN 0-7007-1288-7.
  13. ^ B. van Nooten and G. Holland, Rig Veda. A metrically restored text. Cambridge: Harvard Oriental Series (1994).[1] 8 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Guy L. Beck (2006). Sacred Sound: Experiencing Music in World Religions. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-88920-421-8.
  15. ^ Constance Jones,James D. Ryan (2005), Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Infobase Publishing, p.167, entry "Gayatri Mantra"
  16. ^ Roshen Dalal (2010), The Religions of India: A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths, Penguin Books India, p.328, entry "Savitr, god"
  17. ^ Vivekananda, Swami (1915). The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda. Advaita Ashram. p. 211.
  18. ^ Monier Monier-Williams (1882). The Place which the Ṛig-veda Occupies in the Sandhyâ, and Other Daily Religious Services of the Hindus. Berlin: A. Asher & Company. p. 164.
  19. ^ Forrest Morgan, ed. (1904). The Bibliophile Library of Literature, Art and Rare Manuscripts. Vol. 1. et al. New York: The International Bibliophile Society. p. 14.
  20. ^ Griffith, Ralph T. H. (1890). The Hymns of the Rigveda. E.J. Lazarus. p. 87.
  21. ^ a b c Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli (1947). Religion and Society. Read Books. p. 135. ISBN 9781406748956.
  22. ^ S. Radhakrishnan, The Principal Upanishads, (1953), p. 299
  23. ^ a b Evening talks with Sri Aurobindo (4th rev. ed.). Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Publication Dept. 2007. pp. 58–59. ISBN 978-81-7058-865-8.
  24. ^ Stephanie Jamison (2015). The Rigveda –– Earliest Religious Poetry of India. Oxford University Press. p. 554. ISBN 978-0190633394.
  25. ^ Woodroffe, John (1972). Tantra of the Great Liberation (Mahānirvāna Tantra). Dover Publications, Inc. p. xc.
  26. ^ Shankar, Ravi (January 2021). "GAYATRI MANTRA".
  27. ^ Sharma, Shriram. Meditation on Gayatri mantra. AWGP Organization.
  28. ^ Jones, William (1807). The works of Sir William Jones. Vol. 13. J. Stockdale and J. Walker. p. 367.
  29. ^ Judge Quan, William (January 1893). . The Path. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010.
  30. ^ Appendix "C", Sivanath Sastri "History of the Brahmo Samaj" 1911/1912 1st edn. page XVI, publ. Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 211 Cornwallis St. Calcutta, read : "History Of The Brahmo Samaj Vol. 1 : Sastri, Sivanath-Internet Archive". 1911.. Retrieved on 23 November 2020.
  31. ^ "MEDITATING ON GAYATRI MANTRA".
  32. ^ Singh, Kirpal (1961). The Crown of Life (PDF). p. 275.
  33. ^ VSM.36.3
  34. ^ Dravida recension: 27.1; Andhra recension: 35.1; Atharva recension: 15.2
  35. ^ Shankhayana grhyasutra: 2.5.12, 2.7.19; Khadira grhyasutra: 2.4.21; Apastambha grhyasutra: 4.10.9-12; Varaha grhyasutra: 5.26
  36. ^ Ravi Varma(1956), p.460f, Gonda(1963) p.292
  37. ^ Keith, Vol I. p.lxxxi
  38. ^ Bikkhu, Sujato (2018). Majjhima Nikaya translated by Bhikkhu Sujato.
  39. ^ Mills, Laurence (2020). To Sundarika-Bhāradvāja on Offerings.
  40. ^ Wayman, Alex (1965). "Climactic Times in Indian Mythology and Religion". History of Religions. The University of Chicago Press. 4 (2): 295–318. doi:10.1086/462508. JSTOR 1061961. S2CID 161923240.
  41. ^ This is on the authority of the Shankhayana Grhyasutra, 2.5.4-7 and 2.7.10. J. Gonda, "The Indian mantra", Oriens, Vol. 16, (31 December 1963), p. 285
  42. ^ Title of the text was Prescript for offering supreme worship by means of the Gayutree, the most sacred of the Veds. Roy, Rammohun (1832). Translation of Several Principal Books, Passages and Texts of the Veds, and of Some Controversial Works on Brahmunical Theology: and of some controversial works on Brahmunical theology. Parbury, Allen, & co. p. 109.
  43. ^ Roy, Ram Mohan (1901). Prescript for offering supreme worship by means of the Gayutree, the most sacred of the Veds. Kuntaline press. So, at the end of the Gayutree, the utterance of the letter Om is commanded by the sacred passage cited by Goonu-Vishnoo 'A Brahman shall in every instance pronounce Om, at the beginning and at the end; for unless the letter Om precede, the desirable consequence will fail; and unless it follow, it will not be long retained.'
  44. ^ Sivanath Sastri "History of the Brahmo Samaj" 1911/1912 1st edn. publ. Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 211 Cornwallis St. Calcutta
  45. ^ Mitra, S. S. (2001). Bengal's Renaissance. Academic Publishers. p. 71. ISBN 978-81-87504-18-4.
  46. ^ Bakhle, Janaki (2005). Two men and music: nationalism in the making of an Indian classical tradition. Oxford University Press. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-19-516610-1.
  47. ^ Pandya, Dr. Pranav (2001). Reviving the Vedic Culture of Yagya. Vedmata Gayatri Trust. pp. 25–28.
  48. ^ Island Secrets: Stories of Love, Lust and Loss in Bali
  49. ^ Renegotiating Boundaries: Local Politics in Post-Suharto Indonesia
  50. ^ Battlestar Galactica's Cylon Dream Kit
  51. ^ "Analysis: Schammasch - "Triangle"". Metal Lifestyle. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  52. ^ "Amitabh Bachchan in Hot Water Over Gayatri Mantra with Shoes". Hinduism Tonday. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  53. ^ Swami Vishnu Devananda, Vishnu Devananda (1999). Meditation and Mantras, pp. 76-77. Motilal Banarsidass Publ.

Sources edit

  • Bloomfield, Maurice (1906). A Vedic Concordance: Being an Alphabetic Index to Every Line of Every Stanza of the Published Vedic Literature and to the Liturgical Formulas Thereof; that Is, an Index to the Vedic Mantras, Together with an Account of Their Variations in the Different Vedic Books. Harvard university. ISBN 9788120806542.
  • Dutt, Manmatha Nath (1 March 2006). The Dharma Sastra Or the Hindu Law Codes. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4254-8964-9.
  • Lipner, Julius J. (1994). Hindus: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-05181-1.
  • Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli (1994). The Bhagavadgita: With an Introductory Essay, Sanskrit Text, English Translation, and Notes. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-81-7223-087-6.
  • Rahman, M. M. (1 January 2005). Encyclopaedia of Historiography. Anmol Publications Pvt. Limited. ISBN 978-81-261-2305-6.
  • Rinehart, Robin (1 January 2004). Contemporary Hinduism: Ritual, Culture, and Practice. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-905-8.
  • Vedas (1 January 2003). The Vedas: With Illustrative Extracts. Book Tree. ISBN 978-1-58509-223-9.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Gayatri Mantra with proper pronunciation and intonation (Yajur Veda)
  • Gayatri Mantra sung (length: 1:43:11).

gayatri, mantra, gāyatrī, mantra, sanskrit, pronunciation, ɡaː, triː, mɐn, trɐ, also, known, sāvitri, mantra, sanskrit, pronunciation, saː, triː, mɐn, trɐ, sacred, mantra, from, veda, mandala, dedicated, vedic, deity, savitr, known, mother, vedas, written, dev. The Gayatri Mantra Sanskrit pronunciation ɡaː jɐ triː mɐn trɐ also known as the Savitri Mantra Sanskrit pronunciation saː vi triː mɐn trɐ is a sacred mantra from the Rig Veda Mandala 3 62 10 1 dedicated to the Vedic deity Savitr 1 2 It is known as Mother of the Vedas 3 Gayatri Mantra written in the Devanagari script Gayatri Mantra personified as the goddess Gayatri surrounded by the Tamil Om symbol with the mantra written in it From left clockwise Brahmi as Pratah Sandhya Morning Maheshwari as Madhyanika Sandhya Afternoon Pranava Rishi and Vaishnavi as Sayam Sandhya Evening The term Gayatri may also refer to a type of mantra which follows the same Vedic meter as the original Gayatri Mantra There are many such Gayatris for various gods and goddesses 3 Furthermore Gayatri is the name of the Goddess of the mantra and the meter 4 The Gayatri mantra is cited widely in Hindu texts such as the mantra listings of the Srauta liturgy and classical Hindu texts such as the Bhagavad Gita 5 6 Harivamsa 7 and Manusmṛti 8 The mantra and its associated metric form was known by the Buddha 9 The mantra is an important part of the upanayana ceremony Modern Hindu reform movements spread the practice of the mantra to everyone and its use is now very widespread 10 11 Contents 1 Text 1 1 Dedication 1 2 Translations 1 3 Syllables of the Gayatri mantra 2 Textual appearances 2 1 Hindu literature 2 2 Buddhist corpus 3 Usage 3 1 Upanayana ceremony 3 2 Mantra recitation 3 3 Brahmo Samaj 3 4 Hindu revivalism 3 5 Indonesian Hinduism 3 6 Popular culture 4 Other Gayatri Mantras 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksText editThe main mantra appears in the hymn RV 3 62 10 During its recitation the hymn is preceded by oṃ ॐ and the formula bhur bhuvaḥ svaḥ भ र भ व स व known as the mahavyahṛti or great mystical utterance This prefixing of the mantra is properly described in the Taittiriya Aranyaka 2 11 1 8 which states that it should be chanted with the syllable oṃ followed by the three Vyahrtis and the Gayatri verse 12 Whereas in principle the gayatri mantra specifies three padas of eight syllables each the text of the verse as preserved in the Samhita is one short seven instead of eight Metrical restoration would emend the attested tri syllabic vareṇyaṃ with a tetra syllabic vareṇiyaṃ 13 The Gayatri mantra with swaras is 12 in Devanagari ॐ भ र भ व स स व तत स व त र वर ण य भर ग द वस य ध मह ध य य न प रच दय त In IAST oṃ bhur bhuvaḥ suvaḥ tat savitur vareṇyaṃ bhargo devasya dhimahi dhiyo yo naḥ pracodayat Rigveda 3 62 10 14 Dedication edit See also Surya The Gayatri mantra is dedicated to Savitṛ a Sun deity The mantra is attributed to the much revered sage Vishwamitra who is also considered the author of Mandala 3 of Rig Veda Many monotheistic sects of Hinduism such as Arya Samaj hold that the Gayatri mantra is in praise of One Supreme Creator known by the name Om as mentioned in the Yajur Veda 40 17 15 16 Translations edit The Gayatri mantra has been translated in many ways note 1 Quite literal translations include Swami Vivekananda We meditate on the glory of that Being who has produced this universe may She enlighten our minds 17 Monier Monier Williams 1882 Let us meditate on that excellent glory of the divine vivifying Sun May he enlighten our understandings 18 19 Ralph T H Griffith 1896 May we attain that excellent glory of Savitar the god So may He stimulate our prayers 20 S Radhakrishnan 1947 We meditate on the effulgent glory of the divine Light may he inspire our understanding 21 1953 We meditate on the adorable glory of the radiant sun may She inspire our intelligence 22 Sri Aurobindo We choose the Supreme Light of the divine Sun we aspire that it may impel our minds 23 Sri Aurobindo further elaborates The Sun is the symbol of divine Light that is coming down and Gayatri gives expression to the aspiration asking that divine Light to come down and give impulsion to all the activities of the mind 23 Sri Chinmoy We meditate on the Transcendental Glory of the Deity Supreme Who is inside the Heart of the Earth inside the Life of the Sky and inside the Soul of the Heaven May He stimulate and illume our minds Stephanie W Jamison and Joel P Brereton Might we make our own that desirable effulgence of god Savitar who will rouse forth our insights 24 Literal translations of the words are below Om The sacred syllable pranava Bhur Bhuloka physical plane Bhuvah Antariksha space Suvah Svarga Loka Heaven Tat Paramatma Supreme Soul Savitur Isvara Surya Sun god Varenyam Fit to be worshipped Bhargo Remover of sins and ignorance Devasya Glory Jnana Svaroopa ie Feminine Female Dheemahi We meditate Dhiyo Buddhi Intellect Yo Which Nah Our Prachodayat Enlighten inspire More interpretative translations include Sir John Woodroffe Arthur Avalon 1913 Om Let us contemplate the wondrous spirit of the Divine Creator Savitri of the earthly atmospheric and celestial spheres May He direct our minds that is towards the attainment of dharmma artha kama and moksha Om 25 Ravi Shankar poet Oh manifest and unmanifest wave and ray of breath red lotus of insight transfix us from eye to navel to throat under canopy of stars spring from soil in an unbroken arc of light that we might immerse ourselves until lit from within like the sun itself 26 Shriram Sharma Om the Brahm the Universal Divine Energy vital spiritual energy Pran the essence of our life existence Positivity destroyer of sufferings the happiness that is bright luminous like the Sun best destroyer of evil thoughts the divinity who grants happiness may imbibe its Divinity and Brilliance within us which may purify us and guide our righteous wisdom on the right path 27 Sir William Jones 1807 Let us adore the supremacy of that divine sun the god head who illuminates all who recreates all from whom all proceed to whom all must return whom we invoke to direct our understandings right in our progress toward his holy seat 28 William Quan Judge 1893 Unveil O Thou who givest sustenance to the Universe from whom all proceed to whom all must return that face of the True Sun now hidden by a vase of golden light that we may see the truth and do our whole duty on our journey to thy sacred seat 29 Sivanath Sastri Brahmo Samaj 1911 We meditate on the worshipable power and glory of Him who has created the earth the nether world and the heavens i e the universe and who directs our understanding 30 note 2 Swami Sivananda Let us meditate on Isvara and His Glory who has created the Universe who is fit to be worshipped who is the remover of all sins and ignorance May he enlighten our intellect Maharshi Dayananda Saraswati founder of Arya Samaj Oh God Thou art the Giver of Life Remover of pain and sorrow The Bestower of happiness Oh Creator of the Universe May we receive thy supreme sin destroying light May Thou guide our intellect in the right direction 31 Kirpal Singh Muttering the sacred syllable Aum rise above the three regions And turn thy attention to the All Absorbing Sun within Accepting its influence be thou absorbed in the Sun And it shall in its own likeness make thee All Luminous 32 Syllables of the Gayatri mantra edit Gayatri meter called Gayatri Chandas in Sanskrit is twenty four syllables comprising three lines Sk padas literally feet of eight syllables each The Gayatri mantra as received is short one syllable in the first line tat sa vi tur va reṇ yaṃ Being only twenty three syllables the Gayatri mantra is Nichruth Gayatri Chandas Gayatri meter short by one syllable A reconstruction of vareṇyaṃ to a proposed historical vareṇiyaṃ restores the first line to eight syllables In practise people reciting the mantra may retain seven syllables and simply prolong the length of time they pronounce the m they may append an extra syllable of mmm approximately va ren yam mmm or they may use the reconstructed vareṇiyaṃ Textual appearances editHindu literature edit The Gayatri mantra is cited widely in Hindu texts such as the mantra listings of the Srauta liturgy note 3 note 4 and cited several times in the Brahmanams and the Srauta sutras note 5 note 6 It is also cited in a number of grhyasutras mostly in connection with the upanayana ceremony 35 in which it has a significant role The Gayatri mantra is the subject of esoteric treatment and explanation in some major Upanishads including Mukhya Upanishads such as the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad note 7 the Shvetashvatara Upanishad note 8 and the Maitrayaniya Upanishad note 9 as well as other well known works such as the Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana note 10 The text also appears in minor Upanishads such as the Surya Upanishad The Gayatri mantra is the apparent inspiration for derivative gayatri stanzas dedicated to other deities Those derivations are patterned on the formula vidmahe dhimahi pracodayat 36 and have been interpolated 37 into some recensions of the Shatarudriya litany note 11 Gayatris of this form are also found in the Mahanarayana Upanishad note 12 The Gayatri mantra is also repeated and cited widely in Hindu texts such as the Mahabharata Harivamsa 7 and Manusmṛti 8 Buddhist corpus edit In Majjhima Nikaya 92 the Buddha refers to the Savitri Pali savitti mantra as the foremost meter in the same sense as the king is foremost among humans or the sun is foremost among lights aggihuttamukha yanna savitti chandaso mukham Raja mukhaṃ manussanaṃ nadinaṃ sagaro mukhaṃ Nakkhattanaṃ mukhaṃ cando adicco tapataṃ mukhaṃ Punnaṃ akaṅkhamananaṃ saṅgho ve yajataṃ mukhan The foremost of sacrifices is offering to the sacred flame the Savitti is the foremost of poetic meters of humans the king is the foremost the ocean s the foremost of rivers the foremost of stars is the moon the sun is the foremost of lights for those who sacrifice seeking merit the Saṅgha is the foremost 38 In Sutta Nipata 3 4 the Buddha uses the Savitri mantra as a paradigmatic indicator of Brahmanic knowledge Brahmaṇo hi ce tvaṃ brusi Manca brusi abrahmaṇaṃ Taṃ taṃ savittiṃ pucchami Tipadaṃ catuvisatakkharaṃIf you say you brahmin are but call me none then of you I ask the chant of Savitri consisting of three linesin four and twenty syllables 39 nbsp Gayatri Japa 1851 lithograph nbsp A statue representing the Beatles was unveiled in Liverpool in 2015 Each of them features a symbol expressing a milestone in their respective lives On the back of George Harrison s belt is engraved the Gayatri Mantra written in Sanskrit nbsp Cher performing the song titled Gayatri mantra at the concert Classic Cher Oxon Hill Maryland on 19 03 2017 Dressed in the Indian style she is riding a mechanical elephant Usage editUpanayana ceremony edit Imparting the Gayatri mantra to young Hindu men is an important part of the traditional upanayana ceremony which marks the beginning of study of the Vedas Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan described this as the essence of the ceremony 21 which is sometimes called Gayatri diksha i e initiation into the Gayatri mantra 40 However traditionally the stanza RV 3 62 10 is imparted only to Brahmana Other Gayatri verses are used in the upanayana ceremony are RV 1 35 2 in the tristubh meter for a kshatriya and either RV 1 35 9 or RV 4 40 5 in the jagati meter for a Vaishya 41 Mantra recitation edit Gayatri japa is used as a method of prayascitta atonement It is believed by practitioners that reciting the mantra bestows wisdom and enlightenment through the vehicle of the Sun Savitr who represents the source and inspiration of the universe 21 Brahmo Samaj edit In 1827 Ram Mohan Roy published a dissertation on the Gayatri mantra 42 that analysed it in the context of various Upanishads Roy prescribed a Brahmin to always pronounce om at the beginning and end of the Gayatri mantra 43 From 1830 the Gayatri mantra was used for private devotion of Brahmos In 1843 the First Covenant of Brahmo Samaj required the Gayatri mantra for Divine Worship From 1848 1850 with the rejection of Vedas the Adi Dharma Brahmins use the Gayatri mantra in their private devotions 44 Hindu revivalism edit In the later 19th century Hindu reform movements spread the chanting of the Gayatri mantra In 1898 for example Swami Vivekananda claimed that according to the Vedas and the Bhagavad Gita a person became Brahmana through learning from his Guru and not because of birth He administered the sacred thread ceremony and the Gayatri mantra to non Brahmins in Ramakrishna Mission 45 This Hindu mantra has been popularized to the masses pendants audio recordings and mock scrolls 46 Various Gayatri yajnas organised by All World Gayatri Pariwar at small and large scales in late twentieth century also helped spread Gayatri mantra to the masses 47 Indonesian Hinduism edit The Gayatri Mantra forms the first of seven sections of the Trisandhya Puja Sanskrit for three divisions a prayer used by the Balinese Hindus and many Hindus in Indonesia It is uttered three times each day 6 am at morning noon and 6 pm at evening 48 49 Popular culture edit George Harrison The Beatles on the life size statue representing him unveiled in 2015 in Liverpool the Gayatri mantra engraved on the belt to symbolize a landmark event in his life see picture A version of the Gayatri mantra is featured in the opening theme song of the TV series Battlestar Galactica 2004 50 A variation on the William Quan Judge translation is also used as the introduction to Kate Bush s song Lily on her 1993 album The Red Shoes Cher the singer actress in her Living Proof The Farewell Tour in 2002 2005 sang Gayatri mantra while riding a mechanical elephant She later reprised the performance during her Classic Cher concert residency in 2017 2020 and Here We Go Again Tour in 2018 2020 see picture The Swiss avantgarde black metal band Schammasch adapted the mantra as the outro in their song The Empyrean on their last album Triangle as a Gregorian chant 51 The film Mohabbatein 2000 directed by Aditya Chopra which came under controversy when Amitabh Bachchan recited the sacred Gayatri Mantra with his shoes on leading some Vedic scholars in Varanasi to complain that it insulted Hinduism 52 In the game Homeworld Deserts of Kharak 2016 Gayatri Mantra can be heard being sung during the destruction of Gaalsien flagship Hand of Sajuuk in the final mission of campaign Khar Toba The HBO show The White Lotus 2021 features a character singing a version of the Gayatri Mantra multiple times throughout the first season Other Gayatri Mantras editThe term Gayatri is also a class of mantra which follows the same Vedic meter as the classic Gayatri Mantra Though the classic Gayatri is the most famous there are also many other Gayatri mantras associated with various Hindu gods and goddesses 3 Some examples include 53 Vishnu Gayatri Om Narayana Vidmahe Vasudevaya Dheemahi Tanno Vishnuh PrachodayatKrishna Gayatri Om Devakinandanaya Vidmahe Vasudevaya Dheemahi Tannah Krishnah PrachodayatShiva Gayatri Om Tatpurshaya Vidmahe Sahasrakshaya Mahadevaya Dheemahi Tanno Rudrah PrachodayatGanesha Gayatri Om Ekadantaya Vidmahe Vakrantundaya Dheemahi Tanno Danti PrachodayatDurga Gayatri Om Katyayanyai Vidmahe Kanyakumaryai Dheemahi Tanno Durga PrachodayatSaraswati Gayatri Om Vagdevyai Cha Vidmahe Kamarajaya Dheemahi Tanno Devi PrachodayatLakshmi Gayatri Om Mahadevyai Cha Vidmahe Vishnupatnyai Cha Dheemahi Tanno Lakshmih PrachodayatSee also editSavitr Om Dhi Hindu thought Vedas Metre poetry Notes edit A literal translation oftat savitur vareṇ i yaṃbhargo devasya dhimahidhiyo yo naḥ pracodayatis as follows tat that savitur from savitr that which gives birth the power inside the Sun or the Sun itself vareṇiyaṁ to choose to select the most choosable the best bhargoḥ to be luminous the self luminous one devasya luminous radiant the divine tatsavitur devasya of that divine entity called Savitṛ dhimahi whose wisdom and knowledge flow like waters dhiyoḥ intellect a faculty of the spirit inside the body life activity yoḥ which naḥ our of us pracodayat to move in a specific direction cod to move something somebody in a specific direction hina pra the prefix forth forward pracud to move something somebody forward prachodayat may it move something somebody forward inspires The word Savitr in the original Sanskrit may be interpreted in two ways first as the sun secondly as the originator or creator Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Maharshi Debendranath Tagore used that word in the second sense Interpreted in their way the whole formula may be thus rendered Sama Veda 2 812 Vajasenayi Samhita M 3 35 22 9 30 2 36 3 Taittiriya Samhita 1 5 6 4 1 5 8 4 4 1 11 1 Maitrayani Samhita 4 10 3 Taittiriya Aranyaka 1 11 2 Where it is used without any special distinction typically as one among several stanzas dedicated to Savitar at appropriate points in the various rituals Aitareya Brahmana 4 32 2 5 5 6 5 13 8 5 19 8 Kausitaki Brahmana 23 3 26 10 Asvalayana Srautasutra 7 6 6 8 1 18 Shankhayana Srautasutra 2 10 2 2 12 7 5 5 2 10 6 17 10 9 16 Apastambha Srautasutra 6 18 1 In this corpus there is only one instance of the stanza being prefixed with the three mahavyahrtis 33 This is in a late supplementary chapter of the Shukla Yajurveda samhita listing the mantras used in the preliminaries to the pravargya ceremony However none of the parallel texts of the pravargya rite in other samhitas have the stanza at all A form of the mantra with all seven vyahrtis prefixed is found in the last book of the Taittiriya Aranyaka better known as the Mahanarayana Upanishad 34 It is as follows ओम भ ओम भ व ओम स व ओम मह ओम जन ओम तप ओम स त यम ओम तत स व त र वर ण य म भर ग द वस य ध मह ध य य न प रच दय त ओम प ज य त रस ऽम त ब रह म भ र भ व स स व र म 6 3 6 in the well known Kanva recension numbered 6 3 11 13 in the Madhyamdina recension 4 18 6 7 6 34 albeit in a section known to be of late origin 4 28 1 Maitrayani Samhita 2 9 1 Kathaka Samhita 17 11 Taittiriya Aranyaka 10 1 5 7References edit a b Rig Veda Rig Veda Book 3 HYMN LXII Indra and Others www sacred texts com Retrieved 29 September 2020 Gayatri Mantra OSME a b c Swami Vishnu Devananda Vishnu Devananda 1999 Meditation and Mantras p 76 Motilal Banarsidass Publ Staal Frits June 1986 The sound of religion Numen 33 Fasc 1 33 64 doi 10 1163 156852786X00084 JSTOR 3270126 Rahman 2005 p 300 Radhakrishnan 1994 p 266 a b Vedas 2003 p 15 16 a b Dutt 2006 p 51 Shults Brett May 2014 On the Buddha s Use of Some Brahmanical Motifs in Pali Texts Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies 6 119 Rinehart 2004 p 127 Lipner 1994 p 53 a b Carpenter David Bailey Whicher Ian 2003 Yoga the Indian tradition London Routledge p 31 ISBN 0 7007 1288 7 B van Nooten and G Holland Rig Veda A metrically restored text Cambridge Harvard Oriental Series 1994 1 Archived 8 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Guy L Beck 2006 Sacred Sound Experiencing Music in World Religions Wilfrid Laurier University Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 88920 421 8 Constance Jones James D Ryan 2005 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing p 167 entry Gayatri Mantra Roshen Dalal 2010 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin Books India p 328 entry Savitr god Vivekananda Swami 1915 The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Advaita Ashram p 211 Monier Monier Williams 1882 The Place which the Ṛig veda Occupies in the Sandhya and Other Daily Religious Services of the Hindus Berlin A Asher amp Company p 164 Forrest Morgan ed 1904 The Bibliophile Library of Literature Art and Rare Manuscripts Vol 1 et al New York The International Bibliophile Society p 14 Griffith Ralph T H 1890 The Hymns of the Rigveda E J Lazarus p 87 a b c Radhakrishnan Sarvepalli 1947 Religion and Society Read Books p 135 ISBN 9781406748956 S Radhakrishnan The Principal Upanishads 1953 p 299 a b Evening talks with Sri Aurobindo 4th rev ed Sri Aurobindo Ashram Publication Dept 2007 pp 58 59 ISBN 978 81 7058 865 8 Stephanie Jamison 2015 The Rigveda Earliest Religious Poetry of India Oxford University Press p 554 ISBN 978 0190633394 Woodroffe John 1972 Tantra of the Great Liberation Mahanirvana Tantra Dover Publications Inc p xc Shankar Ravi January 2021 GAYATRI MANTRA Sharma Shriram Meditation on Gayatri mantra AWGP Organization Jones William 1807 The works of Sir William Jones Vol 13 J Stockdale and J Walker p 367 Judge Quan William January 1893 A COMMENTARY ON THE GAYATRI The Path Archived from the original on 14 June 2010 Appendix C Sivanath Sastri History of the Brahmo Samaj 1911 1912 1st edn page XVI publ Sadharan Brahmo Samaj 211 Cornwallis St Calcutta read History Of The Brahmo Samaj Vol 1 Sastri Sivanath Internet Archive 1911 Retrieved on 23 November 2020 MEDITATING ON GAYATRI MANTRA Singh Kirpal 1961 The Crown of Life PDF p 275 VSM 36 3 Dravida recension 27 1 Andhra recension 35 1 Atharva recension 15 2 Shankhayana grhyasutra 2 5 12 2 7 19 Khadira grhyasutra 2 4 21 Apastambha grhyasutra 4 10 9 12 Varaha grhyasutra 5 26 Ravi Varma 1956 p 460f Gonda 1963 p 292 Keith Vol I p lxxxi Bikkhu Sujato 2018 Majjhima Nikaya translated by Bhikkhu Sujato Mills Laurence 2020 To Sundarika Bharadvaja on Offerings Wayman Alex 1965 Climactic Times in Indian Mythology and Religion History of Religions The University of Chicago Press 4 2 295 318 doi 10 1086 462508 JSTOR 1061961 S2CID 161923240 This is on the authority of the Shankhayana Grhyasutra 2 5 4 7 and 2 7 10 J Gonda The Indian mantra Oriens Vol 16 31 December 1963 p 285 Title of the text was Prescript for offering supreme worship by means of the Gayutree the most sacred of the Veds Roy Rammohun 1832 Translation of Several Principal Books Passages and Texts of the Veds and of Some Controversial Works on Brahmunical Theology and of some controversial works on Brahmunical theology Parbury Allen amp co p 109 Roy Ram Mohan 1901 Prescript for offering supreme worship by means of the Gayutree the most sacred of the Veds Kuntaline press So at the end of the Gayutree the utterance of the letter Om is commanded by the sacred passage cited by Goonu Vishnoo A Brahman shall in every instance pronounce Om at the beginning and at the end for unless the letter Om precede the desirable consequence will fail and unless it follow it will not be long retained Sivanath Sastri History of the Brahmo Samaj 1911 1912 1st edn publ Sadharan Brahmo Samaj 211 Cornwallis St Calcutta Mitra S S 2001 Bengal s Renaissance Academic Publishers p 71 ISBN 978 81 87504 18 4 Bakhle Janaki 2005 Two men and music nationalism in the making of an Indian classical tradition Oxford University Press p 293 ISBN 978 0 19 516610 1 Pandya Dr Pranav 2001 Reviving the Vedic Culture of Yagya Vedmata Gayatri Trust pp 25 28 Island Secrets Stories of Love Lust and Loss in Bali Renegotiating Boundaries Local Politics in Post Suharto Indonesia Battlestar Galactica s Cylon Dream Kit Analysis Schammasch Triangle Metal Lifestyle Retrieved 16 April 2020 Amitabh Bachchan in Hot Water Over Gayatri Mantra with Shoes Hinduism Tonday Retrieved 16 January 2021 Swami Vishnu Devananda Vishnu Devananda 1999 Meditation and Mantras pp 76 77 Motilal Banarsidass Publ Sources editBloomfield Maurice 1906 A Vedic Concordance Being an Alphabetic Index to Every Line of Every Stanza of the Published Vedic Literature and to the Liturgical Formulas Thereof that Is an Index to the Vedic Mantras Together with an Account of Their Variations in the Different Vedic Books Harvard university ISBN 9788120806542 Dutt Manmatha Nath 1 March 2006 The Dharma Sastra Or the Hindu Law Codes Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4254 8964 9 Lipner Julius J 1994 Hindus Their Religious Beliefs and Practices Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 05181 1 Radhakrishnan Sarvepalli 1994 The Bhagavadgita With an Introductory Essay Sanskrit Text English Translation and Notes HarperCollins ISBN 978 81 7223 087 6 Rahman M M 1 January 2005 Encyclopaedia of Historiography Anmol Publications Pvt Limited ISBN 978 81 261 2305 6 Rinehart Robin 1 January 2004 Contemporary Hinduism Ritual Culture and Practice ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 905 8 Vedas 1 January 2003 The Vedas With Illustrative Extracts Book Tree ISBN 978 1 58509 223 9 Further reading editL A Ravi Varma Rituals of worship The Cultural Heritage of India Vol 4 The Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture Calcutta 1956 pp 445 463 Jan Gonda The Indian mantra Oriens Vol 16 31 December 1963 pp 244 297 A B Keith The Veda of the Black Yajus School entitled Taittiriya Sanhita Harvard Oriental Series Vols 18 19 Harvard 1914 Gaurab Saha https iskcondesiretree com profiles blogs gayatri mantra detailed word by word meaningExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Gayatri Mantra Gayatri Mantra with proper pronunciation and intonation Yajur Veda Gayatri Mantra sung length 1 43 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gayatri Mantra amp oldid 1187000404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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