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Nisargadatta Maharaj

Nisargadatta Maharaj[note 1] (born Maruti Shivrampant Kambli; 17 April 1897 – 8 September 1981) was an Indian guru of nondualism, belonging to the Inchagiri Sampradaya, a lineage of teachers from the Navnath Sampradaya.

Nisargadatta Maharaj
Personal
Born
Maruti Shivrampant Kambli

(1897-04-17)17 April 1897
Died8 September 1981(1981-09-08) (aged 84)
Mumbai, India
ReligionHinduism
OrderInchegeri Sampradaya
PhilosophyNisarga Yoga
Religious career
GuruSiddharameshwar Maharaj
Quotation

Establish yourself firmly in the awareness of 'I AM'. This is the beginning, and also the end of all endeavour.

The publication in 1973 of I Am That, an English translation of his talks in Marathi by Maurice Frydman, brought him worldwide recognition and followers, especially from North America and Europe.[1]

Biography edit

Early life edit

Nisargadatta was born on 17 April 1897 to Shivrampant Kambli and Parvati bai, in Bombay.[web 1][dubious ] The day was also Hanuman Jayanti, the birthday of Hanuman, hence the boy was named 'Maruti', after him.[2][web 2][note 2] His parents were followers of the Varkari sampradaya,[web 3] an egalitarian Vaishnavite bhakti tradition which worships Vithoba. His father, Shivrampant, worked as a domestic servant in Mumbai and later became a petty farmer in Kandalgaon.

Maruti Shivrampant Kambli was brought up in Kandalgaon, a small village in the Sindhudurga district of Maharashtra, with his two brothers, four sisters and deeply religious parents.[web 4] In 1915, after his father died, he moved to Bombay to support his family back home, following his elder brother. Initially he worked as a junior clerk at an office but quickly he opened a small goods store, mainly selling beedis (leaf-rolled cigarettes) and soon owned a string of eight retail shops.[web 5] In 1924 he married Sumatibai and they had three daughters and a son.

Sadhana edit

 
Nisargadatta Maharaj met his guru Siddharameshwar Maharaj in 1933.

In 1933, he was introduced to his guru, Siddharameshwar Maharaj, the head of the Inchegiri branch of the Navnath Sampradaya, by his friend Yashwantrao Baagkar. His guru told him, "You are not what you take yourself to be...".[web 6] Siddharameshwar initiated him into the Inchegiri Sampradaya, giving him meditation-instruction and a mantra, which he immediately began to recite.[web 3] Siddharameshwar gave Nisargadatta instructions for self-enquiry which he followed verbatim, as he himself recounted later:

My Guru ordered me to attend to the sense 'I am' and to give attention to nothing else. I just obeyed. I did not follow any particular course of breathing, or meditation, or study of scriptures. Whatever happened, I would turn away my attention from it and remain with the sense 'I am'. It may look too simple, even crude. My only reason for doing it was that my Guru told me so. Yet it worked![3]

Following his guru's instructions to concentrate on the feeling "I Am", he used all his spare time looking at himself in silence, and remained in that state for the coming years, practising meditation and singing devotional bhajans:[web 7]

My Guru told me: "...Go back to that state of pure being, where the 'I am' is still in its purity before it got contaminated with 'this I am' or 'that I am.' Your burden is of false self-identifications—abandon them all." My guru told me, "Trust me, I tell you: you are Divine. Take it as the absolute truth. Your joy is divine, your suffering is divine too. All comes from God. Remember it always. You are God, your will alone is done." I did believe him and soon realized how wonderfully true and accurate were his words. I did not condition my mind by thinking, "I am God, I am wonderful, I am beyond." I simply followed his instruction, which was to focus the mind on pure being, "I am," and stay in it. I used to sit for hours together, with nothing but the "I am" in my mind and soon the peace and joy and deep all-embracing love became my normal state. In it all disappeared—myself, my guru, the life I lived, the world around me. Only peace remained, and unfathomable silence. (I Am That, Dialogue 51, April 16, 1971).[web 3]

After an association that lasted hardly two and a half years, Siddharameshwar Maharaj died on 9 November 1936.[4][web 3] In 1937, Maharaj left Mumbai and travelled across India.[web 8] After eight months he returned to his family in Mumbai in 1938.[5] On the journey home his state of mind changed, realizing that "nothing was wrong anymore."[web 3] He spent the rest of his life in Mumbai, maintaining one shop to earn an income.[web 3]

Later years edit

Between 1942 and 1948 he suffered two personal losses, first the death of his wife, Sumatibai, followed by the death of his daughter. He started to give initiations in 1951, after a personal revelation from his guru, Siddharameshwar Maharaj.[web 3]

After he retired from his shop in 1966, Nisargadatta Maharaj continued to receive and teach visitors in his home, giving discourses twice a day, until his death on 8 September 1981 at the age of 84, of throat cancer.[web 9]

Teachings edit

Style of teaching edit

Nisargadatta gave talks and answered questions at his humble flat in Khetwadi, Mumbai, where a mezzanine room was created for him to receive disciples and visitors. This room was also used for daily chantings, bhajans (devotional songs), meditation sessions, and discourses.[web 3]

Cathy Boucher notes that the Inchagiri Sampradaya emphasized mantra meditation from its inception in the early 19th century, but that the emphasis shifted toward a form of Self-enquiry with Sri Siddharameshwar.[6] Nevertheless,

Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj [...] still gave mantra initiation, with the underlying point being that the mantra was more than sound, it was the Absolute Itself which could be reverberated throughout life in all circumstance.[6]

Boucher also notes that Nisargadatta adopted a different mode of instruction, through questions and answers, for his western disciples.[6] Many of Nisargadatta Maharaj's talks were recorded, and formed the basis of I Am That as well as of the several other books attributed to him.[7]

Awareness of true nature edit

 
Nisargadatta's "I Am That" in English.

According to Timothy Conway, Nisargadatta's only subject was

...our real Identity as the birthless-deathless, infinite-eternal Absolute Awareness or Parabrahman, and Its play of emanated universal consciousness. For Maharaj, our only "problem" (an imagined one!) is a case of mistaken identity: we presume to be an individual, and, originally and fundamentally, we are not an individual, we are intrinsically always and only the Absolute.[web 3]

Nisargadatta explains:

The life force [prana] and the mind are operating [of their own accord], but the mind will tempt you to believe that it is "you". Therefore understand always that you are the timeless spaceless witness. And even if the mind tells you that you are the one who is acting, don't believe the mind. [...] The apparatus [mind, body] which is functioning has come upon your original essence, but you are not that apparatus.[8]

In Consciousness and the Absolute, Nisargadatta Maharaj further explains:

In the consciousness hierarchy there are three stages:

1. Jivatman is the one who identifies himself with the body-mind. One who thinks I am a body, a personality, an individual apart from the world. He excludes and isolates himself from the world as a separate personality because of identification with the body and the mind.

2. Next only the beingness, or the consciousness, which is the world. "I Am" means my whole world. Just being and the world. Together with the beingness the world is also felt - that is Atman.

3. The Ultimate principle that knows this beingness cannot be termed at all. It cannot be approached or conditioned by any words. That is the Ultimate state.

The hierarchy I explain in common words, like: I have a grandson (that is jivatma). I have a son and I am the grandfather. Grandfather is the source of the son and grandson.

The three stages cannot be termed as knowledge. The term knowledge comes at beingness level. I have passed on to you the essence of my teachings.[9]

Self-enquiry edit

According to Conway, awareness of the Absolute could be regained by

... a radical disidentification from the dream of "me and my world" via intensely meditative self-inquiry (atma-vicara) and supreme Wisdom-Knowledge (vijñana or jñana). "I know only Atma-yoga, which is 'Self-Knowledge,' and nothing else.... My process is Atma-yoga, which means abidance in the Self."[web 3]

Devotion and mantra repetition edit

Nisargadatta was critical of a merely intellectual approach to nondual Truth.[web 3] He had a strong devotional zeal towards his own guru,[web 3] and suggested the path of devotion, Bhakti yoga, to some of his visitors, as he believed the path of knowledge, Jnana yoga was not the only approach to Truth. Nisargadatta also emphasized love of Guru and God,[10][web 3] and the practice of mantra repetition and singing bhajans, devotional songs.[web 3][note 3]

Scriptures edit

According to Timothy Conway, Nisargadatta often read Marathi scriptures: Nath saint Jnanesvar's Amrutanubhav and Jnanesvari (Gita Commentary); Varkari Sants, namely Eknatha's Bhagavat (Eknathi Bhagavata, a rewrite of the Bhagavad Purana), Ramdas' Dasbodha, and Tukaram's poems; but also the Yoga Vasistha, Adi Shankara's treatises, and some major Upanishads.[web 3]

Nisarga Yoga edit

Nisargadatta taught what has been called Nisarga Yoga[11] (Nisarga can be translated as "nature").[12] In I Am That, Nisarga Yoga is defined as living life with "harmlessness," "friendliness," and "interest," abiding in "spontaneous awareness" while being "conscious of effortless living."[13] The practice of this form of Yoga involves meditating on one's sense of "I am", "being" or "consciousness" with the aim of reaching its ultimate source prior to this sense, which Nisargadatta called the "Self".

The second edition of I Am That includes an epilogue titled Nisarga Yoga by Maurice Frydman which includes this passage:

"This dwelling on the sense 'I am' is the simple, easy and natural Yoga, the Nisarga Yoga. There is no secrecy in it and no dependence; no preparation is required and no initiation. Whoever is puzzled by his very existence as a conscious being and earnestly wants to find his own source, can grasp the ever-present sense of 'I am' and dwell on it assiduously and patiently, till the clouds obscuring the mind dissolve and the heart of being is seen in all its glory."[11]

Nisargadatta did not prescribe a specific practice for self-knowledge but advised his disciples, "Don't pretend to be what you are not, don't refuse to be what you are."[14] By means of self-enquiry, he advised, "Why don't you enquire how real are the world and the person?".[15] Nisargadatta frequently spoke about the importance of having the "inner conviction" about one's true nature and without such Self-knowledge one would continue to suffer.[12] Nisargadatta claimed that the names of the Hindu deities Shiva, Rama and Krishna were the names of nature (Nisarga) personified,[12] and that all of life arises from the same non-dual source or Self. Remembrance of this source was the core of Nisargadatta's message:

'You are not your body, but you are the consciousness in the body, because of which you have the awareness of 'I am'. It is without words, just pure beingness. It has become soul of the world. In the absence of your consciousness, the world will not be experienced. Hence, you are the consciousness… remember what you have heard… meditate on it. Meditation means you have to hold consciousness by itself. The consciousness should give attention to itself. This consciousness is Ishwara. As there is no God other than this consciousness, worship it.' 'The knowledge "I am" is God. It is Ishwara, as well as maya. Maya is God's power. All the names of God are of this consciousness only in different forms. Remember the fact "I am not the body" and get firmly established. That is the sign of a true seeker.'[16]

The Seven Principles of Nisarga Yoga (As identified by Nic Higham, 2018) [17]

  1. Non-identification and right understanding
  2. Interest and earnestness
  3. Spontaneity and effortlessness
  4. Attentiveness to being
  5. Right action
  6. Going within to go beyond
  7. Awareness of Self

Lineage edit

Disciples edit

Among his best known disciples are Maurice Frydman, Sailor Bob Adamson, Stephen Howard Wolinsky (born 31 January 1950), Jean Dunn, Alexander Smit (Sri Parabrahmadatta Maharaj) (1948-1998), Douwe Tiemersma (7 January 1945 – 3 January 2013), Robert Powell, Timothy Conway, Wayne Dyer[18] and Ramesh Balsekar (1917-2009). A less well known disciple is Sri Ramakant Maharaj (born 8 July 1941), who received the naam mantra from Nisargadatta in 1962, spent the next 19 years with the master.[web 10][web 11] and claims to be "the only Indian direct disciple of Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj" who offers initiation into this lineage.[web 12] Sachin Kshirsagar, who has published a series of books on Nisargadatta in the Marathi language[web 13] and also re-published Master of Self Realization, says to have received the Naam (Mantra) in a dream from Shree Nisargadatta Maharaj on 17 Oct., 2011.

Successors edit

David Godman gives the following account of an explanation by Nisargadatta of the succession of Gurus in the Inchagiri Sampradaya:

I sit here every day answering your questions, but this is not the way that the teachers of my lineage used to do their work. A few hundred years ago there were no questions and answers at all. Ours is a householder lineage, which means everyone had to go out and earn his living. There were no meetings like this where disciples met in large numbers with the Guru and asked him questions. Travel was difficult. There were no buses, trains and planes. In the old days the Guru did the traveling on foot, while the disciples stayed at home and looked after their families. The Guru walked from village to village to meet the disciples. If he met someone he thought was ready to be included in the sampradaya, he would initiate him with mantra of the lineage. That was the only teaching given out. The disciple would repeat the mantra and periodically the Guru would come to the village to see what progress was being made. When the Guru knew that he was about to pass away, he would appoint one of the householder-devotees to be the new Guru, and that new Guru would then take on the teaching duties: walking from village to village, initiating new devotees and supervising the progress of the old ones.[web 14]

According to David Godman, Nisargadatta was not allowed by Siddharameshwar to appoint a successor, because he "wasn't realised himself when Siddharameshwar passed away."[web 14] Nisargadatta started to initiate others in 1951, after receiving an inner revelation from Siddharameshwar.[web 3] Nisargadatta himself explains:

The Navnath Sampradaya is only a tradition, way of teaching and practice. It does not denote a level of consciousness. If you accept a Navnath Sampradaya teacher as your Guru, you join his Sampradaya. Usually you receive a token of his grace - a look, a touch, or a word, sometimes a vivid dream or a strong remembrance.[19]

Works edit

  • Self Knowledge & Self Realisation, Bombay: Ram Narayan Chavhan, 1963
  • I Am That (ed. Maurice Frydman), Bombay: Chetana, 1973, ISBN 9788185300450
  • Pointers from Nisargadatta Maharaj (ed. Ramesh S. Balsekar), Bombay: Chetana, 1982, ISBN 978-0893860042
  • Seeds of Consciousness (ed. Jean Dunn), NC: Acorn Press, 1982, ISBN 978-0893860257
  • Prior to Consciousness (ed. Jean Dunn), New York: Grove Press, 1985, ISBN 978-8185300351
  • The Nectar of the Lord's Feet (ed. Robert Powell), Longmead en Shaftesbury (Dorset): Element Books, 1987, ISBN 978-1852300111 republished as The Nectar of Immortality, San Diego: Blue Dove Press, 2001, ISBN 978-1884997136
  • The Ultimate Medicine (ed. Robert Powell), San Diego: Blue Dove Press, 1994, ISBN 978-1556436338
  • Consciousness and the Absolute (ed. Jean Dunn), Durham: Acorn Press, 1994, ISBN 978-0893860417
  • The Experience of Nothingness (ed. Robert Powell), San Diego: Blue Dove Press, 1996, ISBN 978-1884997143
  • Gleanings from Nisargadatta (ed. Mark West), Beyond Description Publishing, 2006
  • Beyond Freedom (ed. Maria Jory), Mumbai: Yogi Impressions, 2007, ISBN 978-8188479283
  • I Am Unborn (ed. Damodar Lund and Pradeep Apte), 2007
  • The Nisargadatta Gita (ed. Pradeep Apte), 2008, ISBN 978-0984776764
  • Meditations with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj (ed. Dinkar Kshirsagar and Suresh N. Mehta), Mumbai: Yogi Impressions, 2014, ISBN 978-9382742197
  • Nothing is Everything (ed. Mohan Gaitonde), Mumbai: Zen Publications, 2014, ISBN 978-9382788973
  • Self-Love (ed. Dinkar Kshirsagar), Mumbai: Zen Publications, 2017, ISBN 978-0984776764
  • The Earliest Discourses: Meditations from 1954-1956 (ed. Shankarrao B. Daygude and Dinkar Kshirsagar), Mumbai: Zen Publications, 2020, ISBN 978-9387242388

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The American pronunciation of his first name is /ˌnɪsərɡəˈdɑːtə/ NISS-ər-gə-DAH-tə or /nɪˌsɑːrɡəˈdɑːtə/ nih-SAR-gə-DAH-tə, whereas his last name is pronounced /ˌmɑːhəˈrɑː/ MAH-hə-RAHJ or /ˌmɑːhəˈrɑːʒ/ MAH-hə-RAHZH.
  2. ^ Samarth Ramdas (17th century), the author of the Dasbodh, an important scripture in the Inchegeri Sampradaya, was a devotee of Hanuman.
  3. ^ Nisargadatta himself said to a visitor:

    I may talk Non-duality to some of the people who come here. That is not for you and you should not pay any attention to what I am telling others. The book of my conversations [I Am That] should not be taken as the last word on my teachings. I had given some answers to questions of certain individuals. Those answers were intended for those people and not for all. Instruction can be on an individual basis only. The same medicine cannot be prescribed for all.
    Nowadays people are full of intellectual conceit. They have no faith in the ancient traditional practices leading up to Self-Knowledge. They want everything served to them on a platter. The path of Knowledge makes sense to them and because of that they may want to practice it. They will then find that it requires more concentration than they can muster and, slowly becoming humble, they will finally take up easier practices like repetition of a mantra or worship of a form. Slowly the belief in a Power greater than themselves will dawn on them and a taste for devotion will sprout in their heart. Then only will it be possible for them to attain purity of mind and concentration.[web 3]

References edit

  1. ^ Jones & Ryan 2006, p. 315.
  2. ^ I Am That, pp. 6, Who is Nisargadatta Maharaj.
  3. ^ I Am That, Chapter 75, p. 375.
  4. ^ Prior to Consciousness, pp. 1–2, 4 April 1980.
  5. ^ I Am That p.xxviii
  6. ^ a b c Boucher & year unknown.
  7. ^ Nisargadatta 1973.
  8. ^ The Ultimate Medicine, (pp.54 – 70)
  9. ^ Consciousness and the Absolute, p.86
  10. ^ Rosner 1987, p. 212–218.
  11. ^ a b Nisargadatta, Maharaj (1973). I am that : talks with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj. Frydman, Maurice, 1900-, Dikshit, Sudhakar S. (2nd American ed.). Durham, N.C.: Acorn Press (published 2012). ISBN 9780893860462. OCLC 811788655.
  12. ^ a b c Nothing Is Everything The Quintessential Teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj. Gaitonde, Mohan. Zen Pubns. 2014. ISBN 9789382788973. OCLC 884814258.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  13. ^ Nic, Higham (2018). Living the life that you are : finding wholeness when you feel lost, isolated, and afraid. Oakland, CA. ISBN 9781684030859. OCLC 994000117.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Maharaj, Nisargadatta (1973). I Am That: Talks with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj. Frydman, Maurice, 1900–1976., Dikshit, Sudhakar S. (4th ed.). Bombay: Chetana. ISBN 8185300534. OCLC 56487876.
  15. ^ Maharaj, Nisargadatta (1973)
  16. ^ Gaitonde, Mohan (2017). Self - Love: The Original Dream (Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj's Direct Pointers to Reality). Mumbai: Zen Publications. ISBN 978-9385902833.
  17. ^ "Nisarga Yoga". nisargayoga.org. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  18. ^ Dyer 2007, p. 39.
  19. ^ Nisargadatta 1973, p. chapter 97.

Sources edit

Printed sources

  • Boucher, Cathy (n.d.), The Lineage of Nine Gurus. The Navnath Sampradaya and Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj
  • Dyer, Wayne (2007), Change Your Thoughts – Change Your Life, Hay House, Inc, ISBN 978-1-4019-2052-4
  • Frydman, Maurice (1987), Navanath Sampradaya. In: I Am That. Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj, Bombay: Chetana
  • Jones, Constance; Ryan, James D. (2006), Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Infobase Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8160-7564-5
  • Nisargadatta (1973), (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 27 January 2018, retrieved 19 September 2014
  • Rosner, Neal (Swami Paramatmananda) (1987), On the Road to Freedom: A Pilgrimage in India, Vol. 1, San Ramon, CA: Mata Amritanandamayi Center

Web sources edit

  1. ^ Biography of Nisargadatta Maharaj
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2009. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Timothy Conway, Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj (1897-1981), Life & Teachings of Bombay's Fiery Sage of Liberating Wisdom, enlightened-spirituality.org
  4. ^ Detailed Biography
  5. ^ Sri Nisagdatta bio at advait.org 3 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Sri Nisargdatta Quote 17 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Guru's teachings
  8. ^ Sri Nisargdatta bio in innerquest.org
  9. ^ It Is Not Real
  10. ^ Interview with Ramakant maharaj
  11. ^ Shri Ramakant Maharaj
  12. ^ Shri Ramakant Maharaj, Information
  13. ^ Marathi books
  14. ^ a b David Godman, Remembering Nisargadatta Maharaj

Further reading edit

  • Stephen Howard Wolinsky, I Am That I Am: A Tribute to Sri Nisargadatta. 2000. ISBN 0-9670362-5-9.
  • Peter Brent, Godmen of India. NY: Quadrangle Books, 1972, pp. 136–40.
  • S. Gogate & P.T. Phadol, Meet the Sage: Shri Nisargadatta, Sri Sadguru Nisargadatta Maharaj Amrit Mahotsav Samiti, 1972.
  • Neal Rosner (Swami Paramatmananda), On the Road to Freedom: A Pilgrimage in India, Vol. 1, San Ramon, CA: Mata Amritanandamayi Center, 1987, pp. 212–8.
  • Ramesh Sadashiv Balsekar, Explorations into the Eternal: Forays from the Teaching of Nisargadatta Maharaj . 1989. ISBN 0-89386-023-9.
  • Bertram Salzman, Awaken to the Eternal: Nisargadatta Maharaj: a Journey of Self Discovery. 2006. ISBN 1-878019-28-7.
  • Saumitra Krishnarao Mullarpattan (died September 2012), The Last Days of Nisargadatta Maharaj. India: Yogi Impressions Books, 2007. ISBN 81-88479-26-8.
  • Dasbodh – Spiritual Instruction for the Servant – Saint Shri Samartha Ramdas, Sadguru Publishing, 2010 ISBN 978-0-615-37327-0

DVDs edit

  • Awaken to the Eternal, Nisargadatta Maharaj: A Journey of Self-Discovery. 1995.
  • Tatvamasi – You Are That (2009), 87 min. Online

External links edit

Nisargadatta websites
  • www.maharajnisargadatta.com – a Resource website
  • www.nisargadatta.co.uk – The essential message/teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj 10 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine

Generic Web resources on Nisargadatta

  • Nisargadatta compilation of quotes from various books
  • Nisargadatta core teachings summarised from the book "The Essential Nisargadatta"
Lineage
  • Disciples of Nisargadatta Maharaj
  • Works by or about Nisargadatta Maharaj at Internet Archive
Background and biography
  • Boucher, Cathy (n.d.), The Lineage of Nine Gurus. The Navnath Sampradaya and Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj
  • Remembering Nisargadatta Maharaj, reflections of David Godman
  • Timothy Conway, Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj (1897-1981), Life & Teachings of Bombay's Fiery Sage of Liberating Wisdom
Films
  • Videos about Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj 15 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
Publications by Nisargadatta Maharaj

    nisargadatta, maharaj, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, please, help, summarize, quotations, consider, transferring, direct, quotations, wikiquote, excerpts, wikisource, october, 2020, note, born, maruti, shivrampant, kambli, april, . This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource October 2020 Nisargadatta Maharaj note 1 born Maruti Shivrampant Kambli 17 April 1897 8 September 1981 was an Indian guru of nondualism belonging to the Inchagiri Sampradaya a lineage of teachers from the Navnath Sampradaya Nisargadatta MaharajPersonalBornMaruti Shivrampant Kambli 1897 04 17 17 April 1897Bombay Bombay Presidency British IndiaDied8 September 1981 1981 09 08 aged 84 Mumbai IndiaReligionHinduismOrderInchegeri SampradayaPhilosophyNisarga YogaReligious careerGuruSiddharameshwar MaharajQuotation Establish yourself firmly in the awareness of I AM This is the beginning and also the end of all endeavour The publication in 1973 of I Am That an English translation of his talks in Marathi by Maurice Frydman brought him worldwide recognition and followers especially from North America and Europe 1 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Sadhana 1 3 Later years 2 Teachings 2 1 Style of teaching 2 2 Awareness of true nature 2 3 Self enquiry 2 4 Devotion and mantra repetition 2 5 Scriptures 2 6 Nisarga Yoga 3 Lineage 3 1 Disciples 3 2 Successors 4 Works 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 Web sources 9 Further reading 10 DVDs 11 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Nisargadatta was born on 17 April 1897 to Shivrampant Kambli and Parvati bai in Bombay web 1 dubious discuss The day was also Hanuman Jayanti the birthday of Hanuman hence the boy was named Maruti after him 2 web 2 note 2 His parents were followers of the Varkari sampradaya web 3 an egalitarian Vaishnavite bhakti tradition which worships Vithoba His father Shivrampant worked as a domestic servant in Mumbai and later became a petty farmer in Kandalgaon Maruti Shivrampant Kambli was brought up in Kandalgaon a small village in the Sindhudurga district of Maharashtra with his two brothers four sisters and deeply religious parents web 4 In 1915 after his father died he moved to Bombay to support his family back home following his elder brother Initially he worked as a junior clerk at an office but quickly he opened a small goods store mainly selling beedis leaf rolled cigarettes and soon owned a string of eight retail shops web 5 In 1924 he married Sumatibai and they had three daughters and a son Sadhana edit nbsp Nisargadatta Maharaj met his guru Siddharameshwar Maharaj in 1933 In 1933 he was introduced to his guru Siddharameshwar Maharaj the head of the Inchegiri branch of the Navnath Sampradaya by his friend Yashwantrao Baagkar His guru told him You are not what you take yourself to be web 6 Siddharameshwar initiated him into the Inchegiri Sampradaya giving him meditation instruction and a mantra which he immediately began to recite web 3 Siddharameshwar gave Nisargadatta instructions for self enquiry which he followed verbatim as he himself recounted later My Guru ordered me to attend to the sense I am and to give attention to nothing else I just obeyed I did not follow any particular course of breathing or meditation or study of scriptures Whatever happened I would turn away my attention from it and remain with the sense I am It may look too simple even crude My only reason for doing it was that my Guru told me so Yet it worked 3 Following his guru s instructions to concentrate on the feeling I Am he used all his spare time looking at himself in silence and remained in that state for the coming years practising meditation and singing devotional bhajans web 7 My Guru told me Go back to that state of pure being where the I am is still in its purity before it got contaminated with this I am or that I am Your burden is of false self identifications abandon them all My guru told me Trust me I tell you you are Divine Take it as the absolute truth Your joy is divine your suffering is divine too All comes from God Remember it always You are God your will alone is done I did believe him and soon realized how wonderfully true and accurate were his words I did not condition my mind by thinking I am God I am wonderful I am beyond I simply followed his instruction which was to focus the mind on pure being I am and stay in it I used to sit for hours together with nothing but the I am in my mind and soon the peace and joy and deep all embracing love became my normal state In it all disappeared myself my guru the life I lived the world around me Only peace remained and unfathomable silence I Am That Dialogue 51 April 16 1971 web 3 After an association that lasted hardly two and a half years Siddharameshwar Maharaj died on 9 November 1936 4 web 3 In 1937 Maharaj left Mumbai and travelled across India web 8 After eight months he returned to his family in Mumbai in 1938 5 On the journey home his state of mind changed realizing that nothing was wrong anymore web 3 He spent the rest of his life in Mumbai maintaining one shop to earn an income web 3 Later years edit Between 1942 and 1948 he suffered two personal losses first the death of his wife Sumatibai followed by the death of his daughter He started to give initiations in 1951 after a personal revelation from his guru Siddharameshwar Maharaj web 3 After he retired from his shop in 1966 Nisargadatta Maharaj continued to receive and teach visitors in his home giving discourses twice a day until his death on 8 September 1981 at the age of 84 of throat cancer web 9 Teachings editStyle of teaching edit Nisargadatta gave talks and answered questions at his humble flat in Khetwadi Mumbai where a mezzanine room was created for him to receive disciples and visitors This room was also used for daily chantings bhajans devotional songs meditation sessions and discourses web 3 Cathy Boucher notes that the Inchagiri Sampradaya emphasized mantra meditation from its inception in the early 19th century but that the emphasis shifted toward a form of Self enquiry with Sri Siddharameshwar 6 Nevertheless Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj still gave mantra initiation with the underlying point being that the mantra was more than sound it was the Absolute Itself which could be reverberated throughout life in all circumstance 6 Boucher also notes that Nisargadatta adopted a different mode of instruction through questions and answers for his western disciples 6 Many of Nisargadatta Maharaj s talks were recorded and formed the basis of I Am That as well as of the several other books attributed to him 7 Awareness of true nature edit nbsp Nisargadatta s I Am That in English According to Timothy Conway Nisargadatta s only subject was our real Identity as the birthless deathless infinite eternal Absolute Awareness or Parabrahman and Its play of emanated universal consciousness For Maharaj our only problem an imagined one is a case of mistaken identity we presume to be an individual and originally and fundamentally we are not an individual we are intrinsically always and only the Absolute web 3 Nisargadatta explains The life force prana and the mind are operating of their own accord but the mind will tempt you to believe that it is you Therefore understand always that you are the timeless spaceless witness And even if the mind tells you that you are the one who is acting don t believe the mind The apparatus mind body which is functioning has come upon your original essence but you are not that apparatus 8 In Consciousness and the Absolute Nisargadatta Maharaj further explains In the consciousness hierarchy there are three stages 1 Jivatman is the one who identifies himself with the body mind One who thinks I am a body a personality an individual apart from the world He excludes and isolates himself from the world as a separate personality because of identification with the body and the mind 2 Next only the beingness or the consciousness which is the world I Am means my whole world Just being and the world Together with the beingness the world is also felt that is Atman 3 The Ultimate principle that knows this beingness cannot be termed at all It cannot be approached or conditioned by any words That is the Ultimate state The hierarchy I explain in common words like I have a grandson that is jivatma I have a son and I am the grandfather Grandfather is the source of the son and grandson The three stages cannot be termed as knowledge The term knowledge comes at beingness level I have passed on to you the essence of my teachings 9 Self enquiry edit According to Conway awareness of the Absolute could be regained by a radical disidentification from the dream of me and my world via intensely meditative self inquiry atma vicara and supreme Wisdom Knowledge vijnana or jnana I know only Atma yoga which is Self Knowledge and nothing else My process is Atma yoga which means abidance in the Self web 3 Devotion and mantra repetition edit Nisargadatta was critical of a merely intellectual approach to nondual Truth web 3 He had a strong devotional zeal towards his own guru web 3 and suggested the path of devotion Bhakti yoga to some of his visitors as he believed the path of knowledge Jnana yoga was not the only approach to Truth Nisargadatta also emphasized love of Guru and God 10 web 3 and the practice of mantra repetition and singing bhajans devotional songs web 3 note 3 Scriptures edit According to Timothy Conway Nisargadatta often read Marathi scriptures Nath saint Jnanesvar s Amrutanubhav and Jnanesvari Gita Commentary Varkari Sants namely Eknatha s Bhagavat Eknathi Bhagavata a rewrite of the Bhagavad Purana Ramdas Dasbodha and Tukaram s poems but also the Yoga Vasistha Adi Shankara s treatises and some major Upanishads web 3 Nisarga Yoga edit Nisargadatta taught what has been called Nisarga Yoga 11 Nisarga can be translated as nature 12 In I Am That Nisarga Yoga is defined as living life with harmlessness friendliness and interest abiding in spontaneous awareness while being conscious of effortless living 13 The practice of this form of Yoga involves meditating on one s sense of I am being or consciousness with the aim of reaching its ultimate source prior to this sense which Nisargadatta called the Self The second edition of I Am That includes an epilogue titled Nisarga Yoga by Maurice Frydman which includes this passage This dwelling on the sense I am is the simple easy and natural Yoga the Nisarga Yoga There is no secrecy in it and no dependence no preparation is required and no initiation Whoever is puzzled by his very existence as a conscious being and earnestly wants to find his own source can grasp the ever present sense of I am and dwell on it assiduously and patiently till the clouds obscuring the mind dissolve and the heart of being is seen in all its glory 11 Nisargadatta did not prescribe a specific practice for self knowledge but advised his disciples Don t pretend to be what you are not don t refuse to be what you are 14 By means of self enquiry he advised Why don t you enquire how real are the world and the person 15 Nisargadatta frequently spoke about the importance of having the inner conviction about one s true nature and without such Self knowledge one would continue to suffer 12 Nisargadatta claimed that the names of the Hindu deities Shiva Rama and Krishna were the names of nature Nisarga personified 12 and that all of life arises from the same non dual source or Self Remembrance of this source was the core of Nisargadatta s message You are not your body but you are the consciousness in the body because of which you have the awareness of I am It is without words just pure beingness It has become soul of the world In the absence of your consciousness the world will not be experienced Hence you are the consciousness remember what you have heard meditate on it Meditation means you have to hold consciousness by itself The consciousness should give attention to itself This consciousness is Ishwara As there is no God other than this consciousness worship it The knowledge I am is God It is Ishwara as well as maya Maya is God s power All the names of God are of this consciousness only in different forms Remember the fact I am not the body and get firmly established That is the sign of a true seeker 16 The Seven Principles of Nisarga Yoga As identified by Nic Higham 2018 17 Non identification and right understanding Interest and earnestness Spontaneity and effortlessness Attentiveness to being Right action Going within to go beyond Awareness of SelfLineage editMain article Inchagiri Sampradaya Disciples edit Among his best known disciples are Maurice Frydman Sailor Bob Adamson Stephen Howard Wolinsky born 31 January 1950 Jean Dunn Alexander Smit Sri Parabrahmadatta Maharaj 1948 1998 Douwe Tiemersma 7 January 1945 3 January 2013 Robert Powell Timothy Conway Wayne Dyer 18 and Ramesh Balsekar 1917 2009 A less well known disciple is Sri Ramakant Maharaj born 8 July 1941 who received the naam mantra from Nisargadatta in 1962 spent the next 19 years with the master web 10 web 11 and claims to be the only Indian direct disciple of Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj who offers initiation into this lineage web 12 Sachin Kshirsagar who has published a series of books on Nisargadatta in the Marathi language web 13 and also re published Master of Self Realization says to have received the Naam Mantra in a dream from Shree Nisargadatta Maharaj on 17 Oct 2011 Successors edit David Godman gives the following account of an explanation by Nisargadatta of the succession of Gurus in the Inchagiri Sampradaya I sit here every day answering your questions but this is not the way that the teachers of my lineage used to do their work A few hundred years ago there were no questions and answers at all Ours is a householder lineage which means everyone had to go out and earn his living There were no meetings like this where disciples met in large numbers with the Guru and asked him questions Travel was difficult There were no buses trains and planes In the old days the Guru did the traveling on foot while the disciples stayed at home and looked after their families The Guru walked from village to village to meet the disciples If he met someone he thought was ready to be included in the sampradaya he would initiate him with mantra of the lineage That was the only teaching given out The disciple would repeat the mantra and periodically the Guru would come to the village to see what progress was being made When the Guru knew that he was about to pass away he would appoint one of the householder devotees to be the new Guru and that new Guru would then take on the teaching duties walking from village to village initiating new devotees and supervising the progress of the old ones web 14 According to David Godman Nisargadatta was not allowed by Siddharameshwar to appoint a successor because he wasn t realised himself when Siddharameshwar passed away web 14 Nisargadatta started to initiate others in 1951 after receiving an inner revelation from Siddharameshwar web 3 Nisargadatta himself explains The Navnath Sampradaya is only a tradition way of teaching and practice It does not denote a level of consciousness If you accept a Navnath Sampradaya teacher as your Guru you join his Sampradaya Usually you receive a token of his grace a look a touch or a word sometimes a vivid dream or a strong remembrance 19 Works editSelf Knowledge amp Self Realisation Bombay Ram Narayan Chavhan 1963 I Am That ed Maurice Frydman Bombay Chetana 1973 ISBN 9788185300450 Pointers from Nisargadatta Maharaj ed Ramesh S Balsekar Bombay Chetana 1982 ISBN 978 0893860042 Seeds of Consciousness ed Jean Dunn NC Acorn Press 1982 ISBN 978 0893860257 Prior to Consciousness ed Jean Dunn New York Grove Press 1985 ISBN 978 8185300351 The Nectar of the Lord s Feet ed Robert Powell Longmead en Shaftesbury Dorset Element Books 1987 ISBN 978 1852300111 republished as The Nectar of Immortality San Diego Blue Dove Press 2001 ISBN 978 1884997136 The Ultimate Medicine ed Robert Powell San Diego Blue Dove Press 1994 ISBN 978 1556436338 Consciousness and the Absolute ed Jean Dunn Durham Acorn Press 1994 ISBN 978 0893860417 The Experience of Nothingness ed Robert Powell San Diego Blue Dove Press 1996 ISBN 978 1884997143 Gleanings from Nisargadatta ed Mark West Beyond Description Publishing 2006 Beyond Freedom ed Maria Jory Mumbai Yogi Impressions 2007 ISBN 978 8188479283 I Am Unborn ed Damodar Lund and Pradeep Apte 2007 The Nisargadatta Gita ed Pradeep Apte 2008 ISBN 978 0984776764 Meditations with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj ed Dinkar Kshirsagar and Suresh N Mehta Mumbai Yogi Impressions 2014 ISBN 978 9382742197 Nothing is Everything ed Mohan Gaitonde Mumbai Zen Publications 2014 ISBN 978 9382788973 Self Love ed Dinkar Kshirsagar Mumbai Zen Publications 2017 ISBN 978 0984776764 The Earliest Discourses Meditations from 1954 1956 ed Shankarrao B Daygude and Dinkar Kshirsagar Mumbai Zen Publications 2020 ISBN 978 9387242388See also editMaurice Frydman Ramana Maharshi Ramesh Balsekar Samarth RamdasNotes edit The American pronunciation of his first name is ˌ n ɪ s er ɡ e ˈ d ɑː t e NISS er ge DAH te or n ɪ ˌ s ɑːr ɡ e ˈ d ɑː t e nih SAR ge DAH te whereas his last name is pronounced ˌ m ɑː h e ˈ r ɑː dʒ MAH he RAHJ or ˌ m ɑː h e ˈ r ɑː ʒ MAH he RAHZH Samarth Ramdas 17th century the author of the Dasbodh an important scripture in the Inchegeri Sampradaya was a devotee of Hanuman Nisargadatta himself said to a visitor I may talk Non duality to some of the people who come here That is not for you and you should not pay any attention to what I am telling others The book of my conversations I Am That should not be taken as the last word on my teachings I had given some answers to questions of certain individuals Those answers were intended for those people and not for all Instruction can be on an individual basis only The same medicine cannot be prescribed for all Nowadays people are full of intellectual conceit They have no faith in the ancient traditional practices leading up to Self Knowledge They want everything served to them on a platter The path of Knowledge makes sense to them and because of that they may want to practice it They will then find that it requires more concentration than they can muster and slowly becoming humble they will finally take up easier practices like repetition of a mantra or worship of a form Slowly the belief in a Power greater than themselves will dawn on them and a taste for devotion will sprout in their heart Then only will it be possible for them to attain purity of mind and concentration web 3 References edit Jones amp Ryan 2006 p 315 I Am That pp 6 Who is Nisargadatta Maharaj I Am That Chapter 75 p 375 Prior to Consciousness pp 1 2 4 April 1980 I Am That p xxviii a b c Boucher amp year unknown sfn error no target CITEREFBoucheryear unknown help Nisargadatta 1973 The Ultimate Medicine pp 54 70 Consciousness and the Absolute p 86 Rosner 1987 p 212 218 a b Nisargadatta Maharaj 1973 I am that talks with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Frydman Maurice 1900 Dikshit Sudhakar S 2nd American ed Durham N C Acorn Press published 2012 ISBN 9780893860462 OCLC 811788655 a b c Nothing Is Everything The Quintessential Teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Gaitonde Mohan Zen Pubns 2014 ISBN 9789382788973 OCLC 884814258 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Nic Higham 2018 Living the life that you are finding wholeness when you feel lost isolated and afraid Oakland CA ISBN 9781684030859 OCLC 994000117 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Maharaj Nisargadatta 1973 I Am That Talks with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Frydman Maurice 1900 1976 Dikshit Sudhakar S 4th ed Bombay Chetana ISBN 8185300534 OCLC 56487876 Maharaj Nisargadatta 1973 Gaitonde Mohan 2017 Self Love The Original Dream Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj s Direct Pointers to Reality Mumbai Zen Publications ISBN 978 9385902833 Nisarga Yoga nisargayoga org Retrieved 24 July 2018 Dyer 2007 p 39 Nisargadatta 1973 p chapter 97 Sources editPrinted sources Boucher Cathy n d The Lineage of Nine Gurus The Navnath Sampradaya and Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Dyer Wayne 2007 Change Your Thoughts Change Your Life Hay House Inc ISBN 978 1 4019 2052 4 Frydman Maurice 1987 Navanath Sampradaya In I Am That Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Bombay Chetana Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 Nisargadatta 1973 I Am That PDF archived from the original PDF on 27 January 2018 retrieved 19 September 2014 Rosner Neal Swami Paramatmananda 1987 On the Road to Freedom A Pilgrimage in India Vol 1 San Ramon CA Mata Amritanandamayi Center Web sources edit Biography of Nisargadatta Maharaj S Gogate amp P T Phadol Meet the Sage Shri Nisargadatta p 5 1972 Archived from the original on 3 March 2009 Retrieved 1 January 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Timothy Conway Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj 1897 1981 Life amp Teachings of Bombay s Fiery Sage of Liberating Wisdom enlightened spirituality org Detailed Biography Sri Nisagdatta bio at advait org Archived 3 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sri Nisargdatta Quote Archived 17 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Guru s teachings Sri Nisargdatta bio in innerquest org It Is Not Real Interview with Ramakant maharaj Shri Ramakant Maharaj Shri Ramakant Maharaj Information Marathi books a b David Godman Remembering Nisargadatta MaharajFurther reading editStephen Howard Wolinsky I Am That I Am A Tribute to Sri Nisargadatta 2000 ISBN 0 9670362 5 9 Peter Brent Godmen of India NY Quadrangle Books 1972 pp 136 40 S Gogate amp P T Phadol Meet the Sage Shri Nisargadatta Sri Sadguru Nisargadatta Maharaj Amrit Mahotsav Samiti 1972 Neal Rosner Swami Paramatmananda On the Road to Freedom A Pilgrimage in India Vol 1 San Ramon CA Mata Amritanandamayi Center 1987 pp 212 8 Ramesh Sadashiv Balsekar Explorations into the Eternal Forays from the Teaching of Nisargadatta Maharaj 1989 ISBN 0 89386 023 9 Bertram Salzman Awaken to the Eternal Nisargadatta Maharaj a Journey of Self Discovery 2006 ISBN 1 878019 28 7 Saumitra Krishnarao Mullarpattan died September 2012 The Last Days of Nisargadatta Maharaj India Yogi Impressions Books 2007 ISBN 81 88479 26 8 Dasbodh Spiritual Instruction for the Servant Saint Shri Samartha Ramdas Sadguru Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 0 615 37327 0DVDs editAwaken to the Eternal Nisargadatta Maharaj A Journey of Self Discovery 1995 Tatvamasi You Are That 2009 87 min OnlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Nisargadatta Maharaj Nisargadatta websiteswww maharajnisargadatta com a Resource website www nisargadatta co uk The essential message teachings of Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Archived 10 June 2018 at the Wayback MachineGeneric Web resources on Nisargadatta Nisargadatta compilation of quotes from various books Nisargadatta core teachings summarised from the book The Essential Nisargadatta LineageDisciples of Nisargadatta Maharaj Works by or about Nisargadatta Maharaj at Internet ArchiveBackground and biographyBoucher Cathy n d The Lineage of Nine Gurus The Navnath Sampradaya and Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Remembering Nisargadatta Maharaj reflections of David Godman Timothy Conway Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj 1897 1981 Life amp Teachings of Bombay s Fiery Sage of Liberating WisdomFilmsDVDs about Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Videos about Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj Archived 15 December 2010 at the Wayback MachinePublications by Nisargadatta MaharajI Am That pdfPortals nbsp Hinduism nbsp India nbsp Religion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nisargadatta Maharaj amp oldid 1201350171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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