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Yogi

A yogi is a practitioner of Yoga,[1] including a sannyasin or practitioner of meditation in Indian religions.[2] The feminine form, sometimes used in English, is yogini.

Bronze figure of a Yogi in Dhyana (meditation) by Malvina Hoffman

Yogi has since the 12th century CE also denoted members of the Nath siddha tradition of Hinduism,[3] and in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, a practitioner of tantra.[4][5] In Hindu mythology, the god Shiva and the goddess Parvati are depicted as an emblematic yogi–yogini pair.[6]

Etymology

In Classical Sanskrit, the word yogi (Sanskrit: masc yogī, योगी; fem yoginī) is derived from yogin, which refers to a practitioner of yoga. Yogi is technically male, and yoginī is the term used for female practitioners.[4] The two terms are still used with those meanings today, but the word yogi is also used generically to refer to both male and female practitioners of yoga and related meditative practices belonging to any religion or spiritual method.

The term yogini is also used for divine goddesses and enlightened mothers, all revered as aspects of the mother goddess, Devi.[7]

A yogi, states Banerjea, should not be confused with someone practicing asceticism and excessive self-mortification.[2]: 297 

Hinduism

In Hinduism the term yogi refers to an adherent of yoga.[1]

Textual references

The earliest evidence of yogis and their spiritual tradition, states Karel Werner,[8] is found in the Keśin hymn 10.136 of the Rigveda,[note 1] though with the terminology of Rudra who evolved into Shiva worshipped as the lord of Yoga in later Hinduism.[8] The Hindu scripture Rigveda uses words of admiration for the Yogis, whom it refers to as Kesin, and describes them as follows (abridged):[8]

Carrying within oneself fire and poison, heaven and earth, ranging from enthusiasm and creativity to depression and agony, from the heights of spiritual bliss to the heaviness of earth-bound labor. This is true of man in general and the [Vedic] Keśin in particular, but the latter has mastered and transformed these contrary forces and is a visible embodiment of accomplished spirituality. He is said to be light and enlightenment itself. The Keśin does not live a normal life of convention. His hair and beard grow longer, he spends long periods of time in absorption, musing and meditating and therefore he is called "sage" (muni). They wear clothes made of yellow rags fluttering in the wind, or perhaps more likely, they go naked, clad only in the yellow dust of the Indian soil. But their personalities are not bound to earth, for they follow the path of the mysterious wind when the gods enter them. He is someone lost in thoughts: he is miles away.

— Karel Werner (1977), "Yoga and the Ṛg Veda: An Interpretation of the Keśin Hymn"[8]

The term yogin appears in Katyayana Shrauta-sutra and chapter 6 of Maitri Upanishad, where the implied context and meaning is "a follower of the Yoga system, a contemplative saint".[9]

The term sometimes refers to a person who belongs to the Natha tradition.[3] They usually belong to Shaiva tradition, but some Natha belong to the Vaishnava tradition.[10] In both cases, states David Lorenzen, they practice yoga and their principal god tends to be Nirguna, that is a god that is without form and semi-monistic,[10] influenced in the medieval era by the Advaita Vedanta school of Hinduism, Madhyamaka school of Buddhism, as well as Tantra and Yogic practices.[11][12]

 
A 10th-century Yogini statue from Tamil Nadu, India. She is seated in an asana, and her eyes are closed in meditative state.

The Yoga-Bhashya (400 CE),[13] the oldest extant commentary on the Yoga-Sutra offers the following fourfold classification of yogis:[14][15]

  1. Prathama-kalpika (neophyte/beginner, devotional)
  2. Madhu-bhumika (one who has begun to enjoy the spiritual pursuits without effort)
  3. Prajna-jyoti (the advanced practitioner who knows spiritual concepts)
  4. Atikranta- bhavaniya (those who have attained what can be taught, achieved siddhas, and are on their personal path to ultimate insights)

Sexuality

A yogi or yogini aspires to Brahmacharya (Sanskrit: ब्रह्मचर्य), which means celibacy if single, or non-cheating on one's partner.[16][17]

There have been two parallel views, in Hindu texts, on sexuality for a yogi and yogini. One view asserts restraint in sexual activity, towards monk- and nun-like asexuality, as transmutation away from worldly desires and onto a spiritual path.[18] It is not considered, states Stuart Sovatsky, as a form of moralistic repression but a personal choice that empowers the yoga practitioner to redirect his or her energies.[18] The second view, found particularly in Tantra traditions according to David Gordon White, asserts that sexuality is an additional means for a yogi or yogini to journey towards and experience the bliss of "one realized god-consciousness for oneself".[19] In the second view, sexuality is a yogic practice,[20] and one broadly revered through the lingamyoni iconography of ShivaParvati, the divine yogi–yogini in Hindu mythology.[21]

Ethical duties

Both a yogi and a philosopher are seekers of an absolute truth. But they differ in their modes of approach. A philosopher advances in the path of rational logic (theory) and wants to intellectually understand the Truth. A yogi advances in the path of self discipline (practice) and aspires to spiritually realize truth.

—Akshaya Banerjea, Philosophy of Gorakhnath[2]

A yogi or yogini lives by other voluntary ethical precepts called Yamas and Niyamas.[22][23] These include:[24][25][26]

  • Ahiṃsā (अहिंसा): nonviolence, non-harming other living beings[27]
  • Satya (सत्य): truthfulness, non-falsehood[16][27]
  • Asteya (अस्तेय): not stealing[27]
  • Dayā (दया): kindness, compassion[28]
  • Ārjava (आर्जव): non-hypocrisy, sincerity[29]
  • Kṣamā (क्षमा): forgiveness[28]
  • Dhṛti (धृति): fortitude
  • Mitāhāra (मितहार): moderation in diet both in terms of quantity and quality
  • Śauca (शौच): purity, cleanliness
  • Tapas: austerity, persistence and perseverance in one's purpose[30][31]
  • Santoṣa: contentment, acceptance of others and of one's circumstances as they are, optimism for self[32]
  • Dāna: generosity, charity, sharing with others[33]

Nath siddha

 
A sculpture of Gorakhnath, a celebrated yogi of Nath tradition and a major proponent of Hatha yoga.[34]

According to David White,

[S]iddha means 'realized, perfected one',[note 2] a term generally applied to a practitioner (sādhaka, sadhu) who has, through his practice (sadhana), realized his dual goal of superhuman powers (siddhis, 'realizations', 'perfections') and bodily immortality (jivanmukti).[35]

Respect

Archeological evidence suggests that in some contexts and regions, yogi of the Nath Siddha tradition were respected and recognized in India. For example, inscriptions suggest a general of the Yadava king Ramacandra donated a village to a yogi in 13th-century.[36] Near Mangalore, that later became a hub of Nath yogis, a monastery and temple was dedicated to yogis in the 10th century.[36]

David Lorenzen states that the Nath yogis have been very popular with the rural population in South Asia, with medieval era "tales and stories about Nath yogis such as Gorakhnath, Matsyendra, Jalandhar, Gopichand, Bharthari, Kanhapa and Chaurangi" continuing to be remembered in contemporary times, in the Deccan, western and northern states of India and in Nepal.[10]

Persecution

In some contexts, adds White, the term yogi has also been a pejorative term used in medieval India for a Nath siddha, particularly on the part of India's social, cultural and religious elites.[3] The term siddha has become a broad sectarian appellation, applying to Saiva-devotees in the Deccan (Maheśvara siddhas), alchemists in Tamil Nadu (siddhars or sittars), a group of early Buddhist tantrikas from Bengal (mahasiddhas, siddhacaryas), the alchemists of medieval India (rasa siddha), and a mainly north Indian group known as the Nath siddhas.[35] The Nath siddhas are the only still existing representatives of the medieval Tantric tradition, which had disappeared due to its excesses.[37] While the Nath siddhas enjoyed persistent popular success, they attracted the scorn of the elite classes.[37]

 
17th century Hindu female Nath yogis. The earliest records mentioning female Nath yogis (or yogini) trace to 11th century.[38]

According to White, the term yogi, has "for at least eight hundred years, been an all-purpose term employed to designate those Saiva specialists whom orthodox Hindus have considered suspect, heterodox, and even heretical in their doctrine and practice".[1] The yoga as practiced by these Yogis, states White, is more closely identified in the eyes of those critics with black magic, sorcery and sexual perversions than with yoga in the conventional sense of the word.[39]

The Nath Yogis were targets of Islamic persecution in the Mughal Empire. The texts of Yogi traditions from this period, state Shail Mayaram, refer to oppressions by Mughal officials such as governor. The Mughal documents confirm the existence of Nath Yogis in each pargana (household neighborhoods), and their persecution wherein Nath Yogis were beheaded by Aurangzeb.[40]

Resistance to persecution

According to David Lorenzen, the religious groups in Hinduism that militarized and took up arms following the Muslim conquest of India, to resist persecution, appeared among the Nath or Kanphata yogis, often called simply yogis or jogis.[41]

The warrior ascetics were institutionalized as a religious order by Gorakhnath and were expanding in the 13th century, after the establishment of the first Islamic Sultanate in India. They interacted and cooperated with fakirs of Sufi Muslims.[42] The yogis feature prominently in Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire period official documents, states David White, both in terms of impressing the ruling elite in the Muslim administration and awards of receiving land grants in some cases such as by Akbar, as well as those yogis who targeted the elite merchants and disrupted the business of administrative Islamic elites in urban areas.[42][43] In other cases, yogis from the Shaivism, Vaishnavism and Shaktism traditions of Hinduism marshaled armed resistance against the Mughal and British colonial armies.[42][43]

Cultural contributions: founding Hindu temples

The history of Nath yogis has been diverse, such as in the 11th and 12th centuries, when Buddhists in South India converted to Nath siddha traditions and helped establish Shiva Hindu temples and monasteries.[44]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Sanskrit Original: (Wikisource of the Keśin hymn); Rigveda 10.136, 2nd millennium BCE
  2. ^ Compare Siddhartha Gautama, one of the names of Buddha.

References

  1. ^ a b c White 2012, p. 8.
  2. ^ a b c A. K. Banerjea (2014), Philosophy of Gorakhnath with Goraksha-Vacana-Sangraha, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120805347, pp. xxiii, 297-299, 331
  3. ^ a b c White 2012, p. 8-9.
  4. ^ a b Rita Gross (1993), Buddhism After Patriarchy, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0791414033, pages 85–88
  5. ^ David Gordon White (2013), Tantra in Practice, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120817784, pp. xiii–xv
  6. ^ Stella Kramrisch (1994), The Presence of Siva, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0691019307, pp. 305-309, 356
  7. ^ Vidya Dehejia and Thomas B. Coburn (1999), Devi: The Great Goddess, Smithsonian Institution, ISBN 978-3791321295, p. 386
  8. ^ a b c d Werner, Karel (1977). "Yoga and the Ṛg Veda: An Interpretation of the Keśin Hymn (RV 10, 136)". Religious Studies. 13 (3): 289–302. doi:10.1017/S0034412500010076. The Yogis of Vedic times left little evidence of their existence, practices and achievements. And such evidence as has survived in the Vedas is scanty and indirect. Nevertheless, the existence of accomplished Yogis in Vedic times cannot be doubted.
  9. ^ yogin, Monier Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary (2008 revision), Cologne Digital Sanskrit Lexicon, Germany
  10. ^ a b c David N. Lorenzen and Adrián Muñoz (2012), Yogi Heroes and Poets: Histories and Legends of the Naths, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-1438438900, pp. x–xi
  11. ^ David Lorenzen (2004), Religious Movements in South Asia, 600-1800, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195664485, pp. 310-311
  12. ^ David N. Lorenzen and Adrián Muñoz (2012), Yogi Heroes and Poets: Histories and Legends of the Naths, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-1438438900, pp. 24-25
  13. ^ Rosen 2012, p. 72.
  14. ^ Feuerstein 2000, p. 343.
  15. ^ SH Aranya (1983), Yoga Philosophy of Patanjali, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0873957281, pp. 334-337
  16. ^ a b Arti Dhand (2002), "The dharma of ethics, the ethics of dharma: Quizzing the ideals of Hinduism", Journal of Religious Ethics, 30(3), pp. 347-372
  17. ^ Yajnavalkya tells Gargi in verse 1.55 of Yoga Yajnavalkya that one who copulates (मैथुन) only with and always with one's sexual partner is a Brahmachari; see "योगयाज्ञवल्क्य १-५५" (Sanskrit text of "Yoga Yajnavalkya"), SanskritDocuments Archives (2009)
  18. ^ a b Stuart Sovatsky (1987), "The pleasures of celibacy", Yoga Journal, March/April Issue, pp. 41-47
  19. ^ White 2012, pp. 1–6.
  20. ^ Machelle Seibel and Hari Kaur Khalsa (2002), A Woman's Book of Yoga, Penguin, ISBN 978-1583331378, pp. 108-109
  21. ^ Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty (1981), Siva: The Erotic Ascetic, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195202502, pp. 262-263
  22. ^ K. N. Aiyar (1914), Thirty Minor Upanishads, Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 978-1164026419, chapter 22, pp. 173-176
  23. ^ Lorenzen, David (1972). The Kāpālikas and Kālāmukhas. University of California Press. pp. 186–190. ISBN 978-0520018426.
  24. ^ "योगयाज्ञवल्क्य प्रथमोऽध्याय" (Sanskrit text of "Yoga Yajnavalkya"), SanskritDocuments Archives (2009)
  25. ^ Āgāśe, K. S. (1904). Pātañjalayogasūtrāṇi. Puṇe, India: Ānandāśrama. p. 102.
  26. ^ Svātmārāma; Sinh, Pancham (1997). The Hatha Yoga Pradipika (5th ed.). p. 14. ISBN 9781605066370. अथ यम-नियमाः अहिंसा सत्यमस्तेयं बरह्यछर्यम कश्हमा धृतिः दयार्जवं मिताहारः शौछम छैव यमा दश १७
  27. ^ a b c James Lochtefeld, "Yama (2)", The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Vol. 2: N–Z, Rosen Publishing. ISBN 9780823931798, p. 777
  28. ^ a b Stuart Sovatsky (1998), Words from the Soul: Time East/West Spirituality and Psychotherapeutic Narrative, State University of New York, ISBN 978-0791439494, p. 21
  29. ^ J Sinha, Indian Psychology, p. 142, at Google Books, Volume 2, Motilal Banarsidas, OCLC 1211693, p. 142
  30. ^ W. O. Kaelber (1976). "'Tapas', Birth, and Spiritual Rebirth in the Veda", History of Religions, 15(4), pp. 343–386
  31. ^ S. A. Bhagwat (2008), "Yoga and Sustainability". Journal of Yoga, Fall/Winter 2008, 7(1): 1-14
  32. ^ N. Tummers (2009), Teaching Yoga for Life, ISBN 978-0736070164, p 16–17
  33. ^ William Owen Cole (1991), Moral Issues in Six Religions, Heinemann, ISBN 978-0435302993, pp. 104-105
  34. ^ Akshaya Kumar Banerjea (1983). Philosophy of Gorakhnath with Goraksha-Vacana-Sangraha. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. xxi. ISBN 978-81-208-0534-7.
  35. ^ a b White 2012, p. 2.
  36. ^ a b White 2012, p. 94.
  37. ^ a b White 2012, p. 7.
  38. ^ Alf Hiltebeitel; Kathleen M. Erndl (2000). Is the Goddess a Feminist?: The Politics of South Asian Goddesses. New York University Press. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-0-8147-3619-7.
  39. ^ White 2012, p. 9.
  40. ^ Shail Mayaram (2003), Against History, Against State, Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0231127301, pp. 40-41, 39
  41. ^ David Lorenzen (2006), Who Invented Hinduism?, Yoda Press, ISBN 978-8190227261, pp. 51-63
  42. ^ a b c David Gordon White (2011), Sinister Yogis, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0226895147, pp. 198-207
  43. ^ a b William Pinch (2012), Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1107406377, pp. 4-9, 28-34, 61-65, 150-151, 189-191, 194-207
  44. ^ White 2012, pp. 94–101.

Sources

External links

  •   Yoga/Yoga Tales at Wikibooks
  •   Media related to Yogi at Wikimedia Commons

yogi, other, uses, disambiguation, yogi, practitioner, yoga, including, sannyasin, practitioner, meditation, indian, religions, feminine, form, sometimes, used, english, yogini, bronze, figure, dhyana, meditation, malvina, hoffman, this, article, contains, ind. For other uses see Yogi disambiguation A yogi is a practitioner of Yoga 1 including a sannyasin or practitioner of meditation in Indian religions 2 The feminine form sometimes used in English is yogini Bronze figure of a Yogi in Dhyana meditation by Malvina Hoffman This article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Yogi has since the 12th century CE also denoted members of the Nath siddha tradition of Hinduism 3 and in Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism a practitioner of tantra 4 5 In Hindu mythology the god Shiva and the goddess Parvati are depicted as an emblematic yogi yogini pair 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Hinduism 2 1 Textual references 2 2 Sexuality 2 3 Ethical duties 2 4 Nath siddha 2 4 1 Respect 2 4 2 Persecution 2 4 3 Resistance to persecution 2 4 4 Cultural contributions founding Hindu temples 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksEtymologyIn Classical Sanskrit the word yogi Sanskrit masc yogi य ग fem yogini is derived from yogin which refers to a practitioner of yoga Yogi is technically male and yogini is the term used for female practitioners 4 The two terms are still used with those meanings today but the word yogi is also used generically to refer to both male and female practitioners of yoga and related meditative practices belonging to any religion or spiritual method The term yogini is also used for divine goddesses and enlightened mothers all revered as aspects of the mother goddess Devi 7 A yogi states Banerjea should not be confused with someone practicing asceticism and excessive self mortification 2 297 HinduismIn Hinduism the term yogi refers to an adherent of yoga 1 Textual references Further information Yoga Vasistha Yoga Yajnavalkya Yoga kundalini Upanishad and Yogasutra The earliest evidence of yogis and their spiritual tradition states Karel Werner 8 is found in the Kesin hymn 10 136 of the Rigveda note 1 though with the terminology of Rudra who evolved into Shiva worshipped as the lord of Yoga in later Hinduism 8 The Hindu scripture Rigveda uses words of admiration for the Yogis whom it refers to as Kesin and describes them as follows abridged 8 Carrying within oneself fire and poison heaven and earth ranging from enthusiasm and creativity to depression and agony from the heights of spiritual bliss to the heaviness of earth bound labor This is true of man in general and the Vedic Kesin in particular but the latter has mastered and transformed these contrary forces and is a visible embodiment of accomplished spirituality He is said to be light and enlightenment itself The Kesin does not live a normal life of convention His hair and beard grow longer he spends long periods of time in absorption musing and meditating and therefore he is called sage muni They wear clothes made of yellow rags fluttering in the wind or perhaps more likely they go naked clad only in the yellow dust of the Indian soil But their personalities are not bound to earth for they follow the path of the mysterious wind when the gods enter them He is someone lost in thoughts he is miles away Karel Werner 1977 Yoga and the Ṛg Veda An Interpretation of the Kesin Hymn 8 The term yogin appears in Katyayana Shrauta sutra and chapter 6 of Maitri Upanishad where the implied context and meaning is a follower of the Yoga system a contemplative saint 9 The term sometimes refers to a person who belongs to the Natha tradition 3 They usually belong to Shaiva tradition but some Natha belong to the Vaishnava tradition 10 In both cases states David Lorenzen they practice yoga and their principal god tends to be Nirguna that is a god that is without form and semi monistic 10 influenced in the medieval era by the Advaita Vedanta school of Hinduism Madhyamaka school of Buddhism as well as Tantra and Yogic practices 11 12 A 10th century Yogini statue from Tamil Nadu India She is seated in an asana and her eyes are closed in meditative state The Yoga Bhashya 400 CE 13 the oldest extant commentary on the Yoga Sutra offers the following fourfold classification of yogis 14 15 Prathama kalpika neophyte beginner devotional Madhu bhumika one who has begun to enjoy the spiritual pursuits without effort Prajna jyoti the advanced practitioner who knows spiritual concepts Atikranta bhavaniya those who have attained what can be taught achieved siddhas and are on their personal path to ultimate insights Sexuality A yogi or yogini aspires to Brahmacharya Sanskrit ब रह मचर य which means celibacy if single or non cheating on one s partner 16 17 There have been two parallel views in Hindu texts on sexuality for a yogi and yogini One view asserts restraint in sexual activity towards monk and nun like asexuality as transmutation away from worldly desires and onto a spiritual path 18 It is not considered states Stuart Sovatsky as a form of moralistic repression but a personal choice that empowers the yoga practitioner to redirect his or her energies 18 The second view found particularly in Tantra traditions according to David Gordon White asserts that sexuality is an additional means for a yogi or yogini to journey towards and experience the bliss of one realized god consciousness for oneself 19 In the second view sexuality is a yogic practice 20 and one broadly revered through the lingam yoni iconography of Shiva Parvati the divine yogi yogini in Hindu mythology 21 Ethical duties Both a yogi and a philosopher are seekers of an absolute truth But they differ in their modes of approach A philosopher advances in the path of rational logic theory and wants to intellectually understand the Truth A yogi advances in the path of self discipline practice and aspires to spiritually realize truth Akshaya Banerjea Philosophy of Gorakhnath 2 A yogi or yogini lives by other voluntary ethical precepts called Yamas and Niyamas 22 23 These include 24 25 26 Ahiṃsa अह स nonviolence non harming other living beings 27 Satya सत य truthfulness non falsehood 16 27 Asteya अस त य not stealing 27 Daya दय kindness compassion 28 Arjava आर जव non hypocrisy sincerity 29 Kṣama क षम forgiveness 28 Dhṛti ध त fortitude Mitahara म तह र moderation in diet both in terms of quantity and quality Sauca श च purity cleanliness Tapas austerity persistence and perseverance in one s purpose 30 31 Santoṣa contentment acceptance of others and of one s circumstances as they are optimism for self 32 Dana generosity charity sharing with others 33 Nath siddha A sculpture of Gorakhnath a celebrated yogi of Nath tradition and a major proponent of Hatha yoga 34 According to David White S iddha means realized perfected one note 2 a term generally applied to a practitioner sadhaka sadhu who has through his practice sadhana realized his dual goal of superhuman powers siddhis realizations perfections and bodily immortality jivanmukti 35 Respect Archeological evidence suggests that in some contexts and regions yogi of the Nath Siddha tradition were respected and recognized in India For example inscriptions suggest a general of the Yadava king Ramacandra donated a village to a yogi in 13th century 36 Near Mangalore that later became a hub of Nath yogis a monastery and temple was dedicated to yogis in the 10th century 36 David Lorenzen states that the Nath yogis have been very popular with the rural population in South Asia with medieval era tales and stories about Nath yogis such as Gorakhnath Matsyendra Jalandhar Gopichand Bharthari Kanhapa and Chaurangi continuing to be remembered in contemporary times in the Deccan western and northern states of India and in Nepal 10 Persecution In some contexts adds White the term yogi has also been a pejorative term used in medieval India for a Nath siddha particularly on the part of India s social cultural and religious elites 3 The term siddha has become a broad sectarian appellation applying to Saiva devotees in the Deccan Mahesvara siddhas alchemists in Tamil Nadu siddhars or sittars a group of early Buddhist tantrikas from Bengal mahasiddhas siddhacaryas the alchemists of medieval India rasa siddha and a mainly north Indian group known as the Nath siddhas 35 The Nath siddhas are the only still existing representatives of the medieval Tantric tradition which had disappeared due to its excesses 37 While the Nath siddhas enjoyed persistent popular success they attracted the scorn of the elite classes 37 17th century Hindu female Nath yogis The earliest records mentioning female Nath yogis or yogini trace to 11th century 38 According to White the term yogi has for at least eight hundred years been an all purpose term employed to designate those Saiva specialists whom orthodox Hindus have considered suspect heterodox and even heretical in their doctrine and practice 1 The yoga as practiced by these Yogis states White is more closely identified in the eyes of those critics with black magic sorcery and sexual perversions than with yoga in the conventional sense of the word 39 The Nath Yogis were targets of Islamic persecution in the Mughal Empire The texts of Yogi traditions from this period state Shail Mayaram refer to oppressions by Mughal officials such as governor The Mughal documents confirm the existence of Nath Yogis in each pargana household neighborhoods and their persecution wherein Nath Yogis were beheaded by Aurangzeb 40 Resistance to persecution According to David Lorenzen the religious groups in Hinduism that militarized and took up arms following the Muslim conquest of India to resist persecution appeared among the Nath or Kanphata yogis often called simply yogis or jogis 41 The warrior ascetics were institutionalized as a religious order by Gorakhnath and were expanding in the 13th century after the establishment of the first Islamic Sultanate in India They interacted and cooperated with fakirs of Sufi Muslims 42 The yogis feature prominently in Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire period official documents states David White both in terms of impressing the ruling elite in the Muslim administration and awards of receiving land grants in some cases such as by Akbar as well as those yogis who targeted the elite merchants and disrupted the business of administrative Islamic elites in urban areas 42 43 In other cases yogis from the Shaivism Vaishnavism and Shaktism traditions of Hinduism marshaled armed resistance against the Mughal and British colonial armies 42 43 Cultural contributions founding Hindu temples The history of Nath yogis has been diverse such as in the 11th and 12th centuries when Buddhists in South India converted to Nath siddha traditions and helped establish Shiva Hindu temples and monasteries 44 See alsoList of yoga schools List of Hindu gurus and sants Ngagpa RishiNotes Sanskrit Original Wikisource of the Kesin hymn Rigveda 10 136 2nd millennium BCE Compare Siddhartha Gautama one of the names of Buddha References a b c White 2012 p 8 a b c A K Banerjea 2014 Philosophy of Gorakhnath with Goraksha Vacana Sangraha Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120805347 pp xxiii 297 299 331 a b c White 2012 p 8 9 a b Rita Gross 1993 Buddhism After Patriarchy SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791414033 pages 85 88 David Gordon White 2013 Tantra in Practice Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120817784 pp xiii xv Stella Kramrisch 1994 The Presence of Siva Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691019307 pp 305 309 356 Vidya Dehejia and Thomas B Coburn 1999 Devi The Great Goddess Smithsonian Institution ISBN 978 3791321295 p 386 a b c d Werner Karel 1977 Yoga and the Ṛg Veda An Interpretation of the Kesin Hymn RV 10 136 Religious Studies 13 3 289 302 doi 10 1017 S0034412500010076 The Yogis of Vedic times left little evidence of their existence practices and achievements And such evidence as has survived in the Vedas is scanty and indirect Nevertheless the existence of accomplished Yogis in Vedic times cannot be doubted yogin Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary 2008 revision Cologne Digital Sanskrit Lexicon Germany a b c David N Lorenzen and Adrian Munoz 2012 Yogi Heroes and Poets Histories and Legends of the Naths SUNY Press ISBN 978 1438438900 pp x xi David Lorenzen 2004 Religious Movements in South Asia 600 1800 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195664485 pp 310 311 David N Lorenzen and Adrian Munoz 2012 Yogi Heroes and Poets Histories and Legends of the Naths SUNY Press ISBN 978 1438438900 pp 24 25 Rosen 2012 p 72 Feuerstein 2000 p 343 SH Aranya 1983 Yoga Philosophy of Patanjali SUNY Press ISBN 978 0873957281 pp 334 337 a b Arti Dhand 2002 The dharma of ethics the ethics of dharma Quizzing the ideals of Hinduism Journal of Religious Ethics 30 3 pp 347 372 Yajnavalkya tells Gargi in verse 1 55 of Yoga Yajnavalkya that one who copulates म थ न only with and always with one s sexual partner is a Brahmachari see य गय ज ञवल क य १ ५५ Sanskrit text of Yoga Yajnavalkya SanskritDocuments Archives 2009 a b Stuart Sovatsky 1987 The pleasures of celibacy Yoga Journal March April Issue pp 41 47 White 2012 pp 1 6 Machelle Seibel and Hari Kaur Khalsa 2002 A Woman s Book of Yoga Penguin ISBN 978 1583331378 pp 108 109 Wendy Doniger O Flaherty 1981 Siva The Erotic Ascetic Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195202502 pp 262 263 K N Aiyar 1914 Thirty Minor Upanishads Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1164026419 chapter 22 pp 173 176 Lorenzen David 1972 The Kapalikas and Kalamukhas University of California Press pp 186 190 ISBN 978 0520018426 य गय ज ञवल क य प रथम ऽध य य Sanskrit text of Yoga Yajnavalkya SanskritDocuments Archives 2009 Agase K S 1904 Patanjalayogasutraṇi Puṇe India Anandasrama p 102 Svatmarama Sinh Pancham 1997 The Hatha Yoga Pradipika 5th ed p 14 ISBN 9781605066370 अथ यम न यम अह स सत यमस त य बरह यछर यम कश हम ध त दय र जव म त ह र श छम छ व यम दश १७ a b c James Lochtefeld Yama 2 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Vol 2 N Z Rosen Publishing ISBN 9780823931798 p 777 a b Stuart Sovatsky 1998 Words from the Soul Time East West Spirituality and Psychotherapeutic Narrative State University of New York ISBN 978 0791439494 p 21 J Sinha Indian Psychology p 142 at Google Books Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidas OCLC 1211693 p 142 W O Kaelber 1976 Tapas Birth and Spiritual Rebirth in the Veda History of Religions 15 4 pp 343 386 S A Bhagwat 2008 Yoga and Sustainability Journal of Yoga Fall Winter 2008 7 1 1 14 N Tummers 2009 Teaching Yoga for Life ISBN 978 0736070164 p 16 17 William Owen Cole 1991 Moral Issues in Six Religions Heinemann ISBN 978 0435302993 pp 104 105 Akshaya Kumar Banerjea 1983 Philosophy of Gorakhnath with Goraksha Vacana Sangraha Motilal Banarsidass pp xxi ISBN 978 81 208 0534 7 a b White 2012 p 2 a b White 2012 p 94 a b White 2012 p 7 Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses New York University Press pp 40 41 ISBN 978 0 8147 3619 7 White 2012 p 9 Shail Mayaram 2003 Against History Against State Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231127301 pp 40 41 39 David Lorenzen 2006 Who Invented Hinduism Yoda Press ISBN 978 8190227261 pp 51 63 a b c David Gordon White 2011 Sinister Yogis University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226895147 pp 198 207 a b William Pinch 2012 Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107406377 pp 4 9 28 34 61 65 150 151 189 191 194 207 White 2012 pp 94 101 SourcesFeuerstein Georg 2000 The Shambhala Encyclopedia of Yoga Shambhala Publications Rosen Richard 2012 Original Yoga Rediscovering Traditional Practices of Hatha Yoga Shambhala Publications ISBN 9780834827400 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226149349External links Yoga Yoga Tales at Wikibooks Media related to Yogi at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yogi amp oldid 1098293114, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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