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Om

Om (or Aum) (listen; Sanskrit: ॐ, ओम्, romanizedOṃ, ISO 15919: Ōṁ) is a symbol representing a sacred sound, syllable, mantra, and an invocation in Hinduism.[1][2] Its written representation is one of the most important symbols of Hinduism.[3] It is variously said to be the essence of the supreme Absolute,[2] consciousness,[4][5][6] Ātman, Brahman, or the cosmic world.[7][8][9] In Indic traditions, Om serves as a sonic representation of the divine, a standard of Vedic authority and a central aspect of soteriological doctrines and practices.[10] The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas, the Upanishads, and other Hindu texts.[9]

Om ligature in Devanagari script
Om () in Tamil script with a trishula at Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple, Singapore; Om appears frequently as an icon in temples (mandirs) and spiritual retreats
A rangoli featuring Om surrounded by stylised peacocks; Om often features prominently in the religious art and iconography of Indic religions
A rakhi in the shape of Om

Om emerged in the Vedic corpus and is said to be an encapsulated form of Samavedic chants or songs.[10][1] It is a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts, during puja and private prayers, in ceremonies of rites of passage (samskara) such as weddings, and during meditative and spiritual activities such as Pranava yoga.[11][12] It is part of the iconography found in ancient and medieval era manuscripts, temples, monasteries, and spiritual retreats in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism.[13][14] As a syllable, it is often chanted either independently or before a spiritual recitation and during meditation in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.[15][16]

The syllable Om is also referred to as Onkara (Omkara) and Pranava among many other names.[17][18]

Common names and synonyms edit

The syllable Om is referred to by many names, including:

  • Praṇava (प्रणव); literally, "fore-sound", referring to Om as the primeval sound.[19][20]
  • Oṅkāra (ओङ्कार) or oṃkāra (ओंकार); literally, "Om-maker", denoting the first source of the sound Om and connoting the act of creation.[21][22][23][24]
  • Udgītha (उद्गीथ); meaning "song, chant", a word found in Samaveda and bhasya (commentaries) based on it. It is also used as a name of the syllable Om in Chandogya Upanishad.[25]
  • Akṣara (अक्षर); literally, "imperishable, immutable", and also "letter of the alphabet" or "syllable".
    • Ekākṣara; literally, "one letter of the alphabet", referring to its representation as a single ligature. (see below)

Origin and spiritual significance edit

The etymological origins of ōm (aum) have long been discussed and disputed, with even the Upanishads having proposed multiple Sanskrit etymologies for aum, including: from "ām" (आम्; "yes"), from "ávam" (आवम्; "that, thus, yes"), and from the Sanskrit roots "āv-" (अव्; "to urge") or "āp-" (आप्; "to attain").[26][A] In 1889, Maurice Blumfield proposed an origin from a Proto-Indo-European introductory particle "*au" with a function similar to the Sanskrit particle "atha" (अथ).[26] However, contemporary Indologist Asko Parpola proposes a borrowing from Dravidian "*ām" meaning "'it is so', 'let it be so', 'yes'", a contraction of "*ākum", cognate with modern Tamil "ām" (ஆம்) meaning "yes".[26][27] In the Jaffna Tamil dialect spoken in Sri Lanka, aum' is the word for yes.[citation needed]

Regardless of its original meaning, the syllable Om evolves to mean many abstract ideas even in the earliest Upanishads. Max Müller and other scholars state that these philosophical texts recommend Om as a "tool for meditation" and explain the various meanings that the syllable may hold in the mind of one meditating, ranging from "artificial and senseless" to the "highest concepts such as the cause of the Universe, essence of life, Brahman, Atman, and Self-knowledge".[28][29]

The syllable Om is first mentioned in the Upanishads. It has been associated with various concepts, such as "cosmic sound", "mystical syllable", "affirmation to something divine", or as symbolism for abstract spiritual concepts in the Upanishads.[9] In the Aranyaka and the Brahmana layers of Vedic texts, the syllable is so widespread and linked to knowledge, that it stands for the "whole of Veda".[9] The symbolic foundations of Om are repeatedly discussed in the oldest layers of the early Upanishads.[30][31] The Aitareya Brahmana of Rig Veda, in section 5.32, suggests that the three phonetic components of Om (a + u + m) correspond to the three stages of cosmic creation, and when it is read or said, it celebrates the creative powers of the universe.[9][32] However, in the eight anuvaka of the Taittiriya Upanishad, which consensus research indicates was formulated around the same time or preceding Aitareya Brahmana, the sound Aum is attributed to reflecting the inner part of the word Brahman. Put another way, it is the Brahman, in the form of a word.[33] The Brahmana layer of Vedic texts equate Om with bhur-bhuvah-svah, the latter symbolising "the whole Veda". They offer various shades of meaning to Om, such as it being "the universe beyond the sun", or that which is "mysterious and inexhaustible", or "the infinite language, the infinite knowledge", or "essence of breath, life, everything that exists", or that "with which one is liberated".[9] The Samaveda, the poetical Veda, orthographically maps Om to the audible, the musical truths in its numerous variations (Oum, Aum, Ovā Ovā Ovā Um, etc.) and then attempts to extract musical meters from it.[9]

Pronunciation edit

When occurring within spoken Classical Sanskrit, the syllable is subject to the normal rules of sandhi in Sanskrit grammar, with the additional peculiarity that the initial o of "Om" is the guṇa vowel grade of u, not the vṛddhi grade, and is therefore pronounced as a monophthong with a long vowel ([oː]), ie. ōm not aum.[B][34] Furthermore, the final m is often assimilated into the preceding vowel as nasalisation (raṅga). As a result, Om is regularly pronounced [õː] in the context of Sanskrit.

However, this o reflects the older Vedic Sanskrit diphthong au, which at that stage in the language's history had not yet monophthongised to o. This being so, the syllable Om is often archaically considered as consisting of three phonemes: "a-u-m".[35][36][37][38] Accordingly, some denominations maintain the archaic diphthong au viewing it to be more authentic and closer to the language of the Vedas.

In the context of the Vedas, particularly the Vedic Brahmanas, the vowel is often pluta ("three times as long"), indicating a length of three morae (trimātra), that is, the time it takes to say three light syllables. Additionally, a diphthong becomes pluta with the prolongation of its first vowel.[34] When e and o undergo pluti they typically revert to the original diphthongs with the initial a prolonged,[39] realised as an overlong open back unrounded vowel (ā̄um or a3um [ɑːːum]). This extended duration is emphasised by denominations who regard it as more authentically Vedic, such as Arya Samaj.

However, Om is also attested in the Upanishads without pluta,[C] and many languages related to or influenced by Classical Sanskrit, such as Hindustani, share its pronunciation of Om ([õː] or [oːm]).

Written representations edit

South Asia edit

 
Statue depicting Shiva as the Nataraja dancing in a posture resembling the Devangari ligature for Om; Joseph Campbell argued that the Nataraja statue represents Om as a symbol of the entirety of "consciousness, universe" and "the message that God is within a person and without"[40]

Nagari or Devanagari representations are found epigraphically on sculpture dating from Medieval India and on ancient coins in regional scripts throughout South Asia. Om is represented in Devanagari as ओम्, composed of four elements: the vowel letter  (a), the vowel diacritic  (o), the consonant letter  (m), and the virama stroke which indicates the absence of an implied final vowel. Historically, the combination represented a diphthong, often transcribed as au, but it now represents a long vowel, ō. (See above.) The syllable is sometimes written ओ३म्, where (i.e., the digit "3") explicitly indicates pluta ('three times as long') which is otherwise only implied. For this same reason Om may also be written ओऽम् in languages such as Hindi, with the avagraha () being used to indicate prolonging the vowel sound. (However, this differs from the usage of the avagraha in Sanskrit, where it would instead indicate the prodelision of the initial vowel.) Om may also be written ओं, with an anusvāra reflecting the pronunciation of [õː] in languages such as Hindi. In languages such as Urdu and Sindhi Om may be written اوم in Arabic script, although speakers of these languages may also use Devanagari representations.

The commonly seen representation of the syllable Om, , is a cursive ligature in Devanagari, combining  (a) with  (u) and the chandrabindu (, ). In Unicode, the symbol is encoded at U+0950 DEVANAGARI OM and at U+1F549 🕉 OM SYMBOL as a "generic symbol independent of Devanagari font".

In some South Asian writing systems, the Om symbol has been simplified further. In Bengali and Assamese Om is written simply as ওঁ without an additional curl. In languages such as Bengali differences in pronunciation compared to Sanskrit have made the addition of a curl for u redundant. Although the spelling is simpler, the pronunciation remains [õː]. Similarly, in Odia Om is written as ଓଁ without an additional diacritic.

In Tamil, Om is written as , a ligature of (ō) and ம் (m), while in Kannada, Telugu, and Malayalam, Om is written simply as the letter for ō followed by anusvāra (ಓಂ, ఓం, and ഓം, respectively).

There have been proposals that the Om syllable may already have had written representations in Brahmi script, dating to before the Common Era. A proposal by Deb (1921) held that the swastika is a monogrammatic representation of the syllable Om, wherein two Brahmi /o/ characters (U+11011 𑀑 BRAHMI LETTER O) were superposed crosswise and the 'm' was represented by dot.[41] A commentary in Nature (1922) considers this theory questionable and unproven.[42] A. B. Walawalkar (1951) proposed that Om was represented using the Brahmi symbols for "A", "U", and "M" (𑀅𑀉𑀫), and that this may have influenced the unusual epigraphical features of the symbol for Om.[43][44] Parker (1909) wrote that an "Aum monogram", distinct from the swastika, is found among Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions in Sri Lanka,[45] including Anuradhapura era coins, dated from the 1st to 4th centuries CE, which are embossed with Om along with other symbols.[46]

East and Southeast Asia edit

The Om symbol, with epigraphical variations, is also found in many Southeast Asian countries.

In Southeast Asia, the Om symbol is widely conflated with that of the unalome; originally a representation of the Buddha's urna curl and later a symbol of the path to nirvana, it is a popular yantra in Southeast Asia, particularly in Cambodia and Thailand. It frequently appears in sak yant religious tattoos, and has been a part of various flags and official emblems such as in the Thong Chom Klao of King Rama IV (r. 1851–1868)[47] and the present-day royal arms of Cambodia.[48]

The Khmer adopted the symbol since the 1st century during the Kingdom of Funan, where it is also seen on artefacts from Angkor Borei, once the capital of Funan. The symbol is seen on numerous Khmer statues from Chenla to Khmer Empire periods and still in used until the present day.[49][50][better source needed]

In Chinese characters, Om is typically transliterated as either 唵 (pinyin: ǎn) or 嗡 (pinyin: wēng).

Representation in various scripts edit

Northern Brahmic edit

Southern Brahmic edit

East Asian edit

Other edit

Hinduism edit

 
Om appears frequently in Hindu texts and scriptures, notably appearing in the first verse of the Rigveda[D]

In Hinduism, Om is one of the most important spiritual sounds.[3] The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas, the Upanishads, and other Hindu texts,[9] and is often chanted either independently or before a mantra, as a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts, during puja and private prayers, in ceremonies of rites of passages (sanskara) such as weddings, and during meditative and spiritual activities such as yoga.[11][12]

It is the most sacred syllable symbol and mantra of Brahman,[51] which is the ultimate reality, consciousness or Atman (Self within).[7][8][4][5][52]

It is called the Shabda Brahman (Brahman as sound) and believed to be the primordial sound (pranava) of the universe.[53]

Vedas edit

Om came to be used as a standard utterance at the beginning of mantras, chants or citations taken from the Vedas. For example, the Gayatri mantra, which consists of a verse from the Rigveda Samhita (RV 3.62.10), is prefixed not just by Om but by Om followed by the formula bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ.[54] Such recitations continue to be in use in Hinduism, with many major incantations and ceremonial functions beginning and ending with Om.[16]

Brahmanas edit

Aitareya Brahmana edit

The Aitareya Brahmana (7.18.13) explains Om as "an acknowledgment, melodic confirmation, something that gives momentum and energy to a hymn".[3]

Om is the agreement (pratigara) with a hymn. Likewise is tathā = 'so be it' [the agreement] with a [worldly] song (gāthā) [= the applause]. But Om is something divine, and tathā is something human.

— Aitareya Brahmana, 7.18.13[3]

Upanishads edit

 
Ōṃ is given many meanings and layers of symbolism in the Upanishads, including "the sacred sound, the Yes!, the Vedas, the udgitha (song of the universe), the infinite, the all encompassing, the whole world, the truth, the Ultimate Reality, the finest essence, the cause of the universe, the essence of life, the Brahman, the ātman, the vehicle of deepest knowledge, and self-knowledge (ātma jñāna)".[29]
Chandogya Upanishad edit

The Chandogya Upanishad is one of the oldest Upanishads of Hinduism. It opens with the recommendation that "let a man meditate on Om".[55] It calls the syllable Om as udgitha (उद्गीथ; song, chant), and asserts that the significance of the syllable is thus: the essence of all beings is earth, the essence of earth is water, the essence of water are the plants, the essence of plants is man, the essence of man is speech, the essence of speech is the Rigveda, the essence of the Rigveda is the Samaveda, and the essence of Samaveda is the udgitha (song, Om).[56]

Ṛc (ऋच्) is speech, states the text, and sāman (सामन्) is breath; they are pairs, and because they have love for each other, speech and breath find themselves together and mate to produce a song.[55][56] The highest song is Om, asserts section 1.1 of Chandogya Upanishad. It is the symbol of awe, of reverence, of threefold knowledge because Adhvaryu invokes it, the Hotr recites it, and Udgatr sings it.[56][57]

The second volume of the first chapter continues its discussion of syllable Om, explaining its use as a struggle between Devas (gods) and Asuras (demons).[58] Max Muller states that this struggle between gods and demons is considered allegorical by ancient Indian scholars, as good and evil inclinations within man, respectively.[59] The legend in section 1.2 of Chandogya Upanishad states that gods took the Udgitha (song of Om) unto themselves, thinking, "with this song we shall overcome the demons".[60] The syllable Om is thus implied as that which inspires the good inclinations within each person.[59][60]

Chandogya Upanishad's exposition of syllable Om in its opening chapter combines etymological speculations, symbolism, metric structure and philosophical themes.[57][61] In the second chapter of the Chandogya Upanishad, the meaning and significance of Om evolves into a philosophical discourse, such as in section 2.10 where Om is linked to the Highest Self,[62] and section 2.23 where the text asserts Om is the essence of three forms of knowledge, Om is Brahman and "Om is all this [observed world]".[63]

Katha Upanishad edit

The Katha Upanishad is the legendary story of a little boy, Nachiketa, the son of sage Vājaśravasa, who meets Yama, the Vedic deity of death. Their conversation evolves to a discussion of the nature of man, knowledge, Atman (Self) and moksha (liberation).[64] In section 1.2, Katha Upanishad characterises knowledge (vidyā) as the pursuit of the good, and ignorance (avidyā) as the pursuit of the pleasant.[65] It teaches that the essence of the Veda is to make man liberated and free, look past what has happened and what has not happened, free from the past and the future, beyond good and evil, and one word for this essence is the word Om.[66]

The word which all the Vedas proclaim,
That which is expressed in every Tapas (penance, austerity, meditation),
That for which they live the life of a Brahmacharin,
Understand that word in its essence: Om! that is the word.
Yes, this syllable is Brahman,
This syllable is the highest.
He who knows that syllable,
Whatever he desires, is his.

— Katha Upanishad 1.2.15-1.2.16[66]
Maitri Upanishad edit
 
A Pahari painting of Om (ओं), c. 1780-1800, decorated with deities: Shiva and Shakti (could be Vaishnavi or Siddhidatri); Vishnu and Lakshmi seated upon Shesha; Harihara (Vishnu-Shiva fusion deity); Brahma; and Dattatreya as a representation of the Trimurti (top-to-bottom, left-to-right)

The Maitrayaniya Upanishad in sixth Prapathakas (lesson) discusses the meaning and significance of Om. The text asserts that Om represents Brahman-Atman. The three roots of the syllable, states the Maitri Upanishad, are A + U + M.[67]

The sound is the body of Self, and it repeatedly manifests in three:

  • as gender-endowed body – feminine, masculine, neuter;
  • as light-endowed body – Agni, Vayu, and Aditya;
  • as deity-endowed body – Brahma, Rudra,[E] and Vishnu;
  • as mouth-endowed body – garhapatya, dakshinagni, and ahavaniya;[F]
  • as knowledge-endowed body – Rig, Saman, and Yajur;[G]
  • as world-endowed body – bhūr, bhuvaḥ, and svaḥ;[H]
  • as time-endowed body – past, present, and future;
  • as heat-endowed body – breath, fire, and Sun;
  • as growth-endowed body – food, water, and Moon;
  • as thought-endowed body – intellect, mind, and psyche.[67][68]

Brahman exists in two forms – the material form, and the immaterial formless.[69] The material form is changing, unreal. The immaterial formless is not changing, real. The immortal formless is truth, the truth is the Brahman, the Brahman is the light, the light is the Sun which is the syllable Om as the Self.[70][71][I]

The world is Om, its light is Sun, and the Sun is also the light of the syllable Om, asserts the Upanishad. Meditating on Om, is acknowledging and meditating on the Brahman-Atman (Self).[67]

Mundaka Upanishad edit
 
Shri Yantra with Om () at its center, Sri Mariamman Temple, Singapore; yantras are frequently used as aids in Hindu meditation

The Mundaka Upanishad in the second Mundakam (part), suggests the means to knowing the Atman and the Brahman are meditation, self-reflection, and introspection and that they can be aided by the symbol Om. It uses a bow and arrow analogy, where the bow symbolizes the focused mind, the arrow symbolizes the self (Atman), and the target represents the ultimate reality (Brahman).[73][74]

That which is flaming, which is subtler than the subtle,
on which the worlds are set, and their inhabitants –
That is the indestructible Brahman.[J]
It is life, it is speech, it is mind. That is the real. It is immortal.
It is a mark to be penetrated. Penetrate It, my friend.

Taking as a bow the great weapon of the Upanishad,
one should put upon it an arrow sharpened by meditation,
Stretching it with a thought directed to the essence of That,
Penetrate[K] that Imperishable as the mark, my friend.

Om is the bow, the arrow is the Self, Brahman the mark,
By the undistracted man is It to be penetrated,
One should come to be in It,
as the arrow becomes one with the mark.

— Mundaka Upanishad 2.2.2 – 2.2.4[75][76]

Adi Shankara, in his review of the Mundaka Upanishad, states Om as a symbolism for Atman (Self).[77]

Mandukya Upanishad edit

The Mandukya Upanishad opens by declaring, "Om!, this syllable is this whole world".[78] Thereafter, it presents various explanations and theories on what it means and signifies.[79] This discussion is built on a structure of "four fourths" or "fourfold", derived from A + U + M + "silence" (or without an element).[78][79]

  • Om as all states of Time.
    In verse 1, the Upanishad states that time is threefold: the past, the present and the future, that these three are Om. The four fourth of time is that which transcends time, that too is Om expressed.[79]
  • Om as all states of Ātman .
    In verse 2, states the Upanishad, everything is Brahman, but Brahman is Atman (the Self), and that the Atman is fourfold.[78] Johnston summarizes these four states of Self, respectively, as seeking the physical, seeking inner thought, seeking the causes and spiritual consciousness, and the fourth state is realizing oneness with the Self, the Eternal.[80]
  • Om as all states of Consciousness.
    In verses 3 to 6, the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates four states of consciousness: wakeful, dream, deep sleep, and the state of ekatma (being one with Self, the oneness of Self).[79] These four are A + U + M + "without an element" respectively.[79]
  • Om as all of Knowledge.
    In verses 9 to 12, the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates fourfold etymological roots of the syllable Om. It states that the first element of Om is A, which is from Apti (obtaining, reaching) or from Adimatva (being first).[78] The second element is U, which is from Utkarsa (exaltation) or from Ubhayatva (intermediateness).[79] The third element is M, from Miti (erecting, constructing) or from Mi Minati, or apīti (annihilation).[78] The fourth is without an element, without development, beyond the expanse of universe. In this way, states the Upanishad, the syllable Om is indeed the Atman (the self).[78][79]
Shvetashvatara Upanishad edit

The Shvetashvatara Upanishad, in verses 1.14 to 1.16, suggests meditating with the help of syllable Om, where one's perishable body is like one fuel-stick and the syllable Om is the second fuel-stick, which with discipline and diligent rubbing of the sticks unleashes the concealed fire of thought and awareness within. Such knowledge, asserts the Upanishad, is the goal of Upanishads.[81][82] The text asserts that Om is a tool of meditation empowering one to know the God within oneself, to realize one's Atman (Self).[83]

 
The Hindu deity Ganesha is sometimes referred to as "oṃkārasvarūpa" (Omkara is his form) and used as the symbol for Upanishadic concept of Brahman.[84][85]
Ganapati Upanishad edit

The Ganapati Upanishad asserts that Ganesha is same as Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, all deities, the universe, and Om.[86]

(O Lord Ganapati!) You are (the Trimurti) Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahesa. You are Indra. You are fire [Agni] and air [Vāyu]. You are the sun [Sūrya] and the moon [Chandrama]. You are Brahman. You are (the three worlds) Bhuloka [earth], Antariksha-loka [space], and Swargaloka [heaven]. You are Om. (That is to say, You are all this).

— Gaṇapatya Atharvaśīrṣa 6[87]

Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana edit

The Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana, a Samavedic text, outlines a story where those who chant Om can achieve the same rewards as deities. However, the gods are concerned about humans ascending to their realm. To address this concern, a compromise is reached between the gods and Death. Humans can attain immortality, but it involves relinquishing their physical bodies to Death. This immortality entails an extended celestial existence after a long earthly life, where the practitioner aspires to acquire a divine self (atman) in a non-physical form, allowing them to reside eternally in the heavenly realm.[88]

Ramayana edit

In Valmiki's Ramayana, Rama is identified with Om, with Brahma saying to Rama:

"You are the sacrificial performance. You are the sacred syllable Vashat (on hearing which the Adhvaryu priest casts the oblation to a deity into the sacrificial fire). You are the mystic syllable OM. You are higher than the highest. People neither know your end nor your origin nor who you are in reality. You appear in all created beings in the cattle and in brahmanas. You exist in all quarters, in the sky, in mountains and in rivers."

Bhagavad Gita edit

 
An illustration of Om from a Mahabharata manuscript, 1795, decorated with murtis of Surya, Brahma, and Vishnu to the left, Shakti (could be Maheshwari) on the chandrabindu point, and Shiva (holding a trishula) to the right

The Bhagavad Gita, in the Epic Mahabharata, mentions the meaning and significance of Om in several verses. According to Jeaneane Fowler, verse 9.17 of the Bhagavad Gita synthesizes the competing dualistic and monist streams of thought in Hinduism, by using "Om which is the symbol for the indescribable, impersonal Brahman".[90]

"Of this universe, I am the Father; I am also the Mother, the Sustainer, and the Grandsire. I am the purifier, the goal of knowledge, the sacred syllable Om. I am the Ṛig Veda, Sāma Veda, and the Yajur Veda."

— Krishna to Arjuna, Bhagavad Gita 9.17[91][90]

The significance of the sacred syllable in the Hindu traditions, is similarly highlighted in other verses of the Gita, such as verse 17.24 where the importance of Om during prayers, charity and meditative practices is explained as follows:[92]

"Therefore, uttering Om, the acts of yagna (fire ritual), dāna (charity) and tapas (austerity) as enjoined in the scriptures, are always begun by those who study the Brahman."

— Bhagavad Gita 17.24[92][93]

Puranas edit

The medieval era texts of Hinduism, such as the Puranas adopt and expand the concept of Om in their own ways, and to their own theistic sects.

Vaishnava traditions edit

The Vaishnava Garuda Purana equates the recitation of Om with obeisance to Vishnu.[94] According to the Vayu Purana,[citation needed] Om is the representation of the Hindu Trimurti, and represents the union of the three gods, viz. A for Brahma, U for Vishnu and M for Shiva.[95] The Bhagavata Purana (9.14.46-48) identifies the Pranava as the root of all Vedic mantras, and describes the combined letters of a-u-m as an invocation of seminal birth, initiation, and the performance of sacrifice (yajña).[96]

Shaiva traditions edit

 
Om symbol with a trishula at Kanaka Durga Temple, Vijayawada

In Shaiva traditions, the Shiva Purana highlights the relation between deity Shiva and the Pranava or Om. Shiva is declared to be Om, and that Om is Shiva.[97] After this, an epithet of Shiva is Omkareshwar, the Lord, Ishvara, of oṃkāra.

Shakta traditions edit

In the thealogy of Shakta traditions, Om connotes the female divine energy, Adi Parashakti, represented in the Tridevi: A for the creative energy (the Shakti of Brahma), Mahasaraswati, U for the preservative energy (the Shakti of Vishnu), Mahalakshmi, and M for the destructive energy (the Shakti of Shiva), Mahakali. The 12th book of the Devi-Bhagavata Purana describes the Goddess as the mother of the Vedas, the Adya Shakti (primal energy, primordial power), and the essence of the Gayatri mantra.[98][99][100]

Other texts edit

 
Radha and Krishna intertwined with an Om (ওঁ) and surrounded by scenes from their life

Yoga Sutra edit

The aphoristic verse 1.27 of Pantanjali's Yogasutra links Om to Yoga practice, as follows:

तस्य वाचकः प्रणवः ॥२७॥
His word is Om.

— Yogasutra 1.27[101]

Johnston states this verse highlights the importance of Om in the meditative practice of yoga, where it symbolises the three worlds in the Self; the three times – past, present, and future eternity; the three divine powers – creation, preservation, and transformation in one Being; and three essences in one Spirit – immortality, omniscience, and joy. It is, asserts Johnston, a symbol for the perfected Spiritual Man.[101]

Chaitanya Charitamrita edit

In Krishnava traditions, Krishna is revered as Svayam Bhagavan, the Supreme Lord himself, and Om is interpreted in light of this. According to the Chaitanya Charitamrita, Om is the sound representation of the Supreme Lord. A is said to represent Bhagavan Krishna (Vishnu), U represents Srimati Radharani (Mahalakshmi), and M represents jiva, the Self of the devotee.[102][103]

Jainism edit

 
Painting illustrating the Jain Om symbol, from Jaipur, c. 1840

In Jainism, Om is considered a condensed form of reference to the Pañca-Parameṣṭhi by their initials A+A+A+U+M (o3m).

The Dravyasamgraha quotes a Prakrit line:[104]

ओम एकाक्षर पञ्चपरमेष्ठिनामादिपम् तत्कथमिति चेत अरिहंता असरीरा आयरिया तह उवज्झाया मुणियां
Oma ekākṣara pañca-parameṣṭhi-nāmā-dipam tatkathamiti cheta "arihatā asarīrā āyariyā taha uvajjhāyā muṇiyā".
AAAUM [or just "Om"] is the one syllable short form of the initials of the five supreme beings [pañca-parameṣṭhi]: "Arihant, Ashariri, Acharya, Upajjhaya, Muni".[105]

By extension, the Om symbol is also used in Jainism to represent the first five lines of the Namokar mantra,[106] the most important part of the daily prayer in the Jain religion, which honours the Pañca-Parameṣṭhi. These five lines are (in English): "(1.) veneration to the Arhats, (2.) veneration to the perfect ones, (3.) veneration to the masters, (4.) veneration to the teachers, (5.) veneration to all the monks in the world".[104]

Buddhism edit

Om is often used in some later schools of Buddhism, for example Tibetan Buddhism, which was influenced by Hinduism and Tantra.[107][108]

In East Asian Buddhism, Om is often transliterated as the Chinese character (pinyin ǎn) or (pinyin wēng).

Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana edit

 
The mantra om mani padme hum written in Tibetan script on the petals of a sacred lotus around the syllable hrih at the center; Om is written on the top petal in white

In Tibetan Buddhism, Om is often placed at the beginning of mantras and dharanis. Probably the most well known mantra is "Om mani padme hum", the six syllable mantra of the Bodhisattva of compassion, Avalokiteśvara. This mantra is particularly associated with the four-armed Ṣaḍākṣarī form of Avalokiteśvara. Moreover, as a seed syllable (Bīja mantra), Om is considered sacred and holy in Esoteric Buddhism.[109]

Some scholars interpret the first word of the mantra oṃ maṇi padme hūṃ to be auṃ, with a meaning similar to Hinduism – the totality of sound, existence, and consciousness.[110][111]

Oṃ has been described by the 14th Dalai Lama as "composed of three pure letters, A, U, and M. These symbolize the impure body, speech, and mind of everyday unenlightened life of a practitioner; they also symbolize the pure exalted body, speech and mind of an enlightened Buddha".[112][113] According to Simpkins, Om is a part of many mantras in Tibetan Buddhism and is a symbolism for wholeness, perfection, and the infinite.[114]

Japanese Buddhism edit

 
Nio statues in Kyoto prefecture of Japan, are interpreted as saying the start (open mouth) and the end (closed mouth) of syllable "AUM"[115][116]

A-un edit

The term A-un (阿吽) is the transliteration in Japanese of the two syllables "a" and "hūṃ", written in Devanagari as अहूँ. In Japanese, it is often conflated with the syllable Om. The original Sanskrit term is composed of two letters, the first () and the last () letters of the Devanagari abugida, with diacritics (including anusvara) on the latter indicating the "-ūṃ" of "hūṃ". Together, they symbolically represent the beginning and the end of all things.[117] In Japanese Mikkyō Buddhism, the letters represent the beginning and the end of the universe.[118] This is comparable to Alpha and Omega, the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet, similarly adopted by Christianity to symbolise Christ as the beginning and end of all.

The term a-un is used figuratively in some Japanese expressions as "a-un breathing" (阿吽の呼吸, a-un no kokyū) or "a-un relationship" (阿吽の仲, a-un no naka), indicating an inherently harmonious relationship or nonverbal communication.

Niō guardian kings and komainu lion-dogs edit

The term is also used in Buddhist architecture and Shinto to describe the paired statues common in Japanese religious settings, most notably the Niō (仁王) and the komainu (狛犬).[117] One (usually on the right) has an open mouth regarded by Buddhists as symbolically speaking the "A" syllable; the other (usually on the left) has a closed mouth, symbolically speaking the "Un" syllable. The two together are regarded as saying "A-un". The general name for statues with an open mouth is agyō (阿形, lit. "a" shape), that for those with a closed mouth ungyō (吽形, lit. "'un' shape").[117]

Niō statues in Japan, and their equivalent in East Asia, appear in pairs in front of Buddhist temple gates and stupas, in the form of two fierce looking guardian kings (Vajrapani).[115][116]

Komainu, also called lion-dogs, found in Japan, Korea and China, also occur in pairs before Buddhist temples and public spaces, and again, one has an open mouth (Agyō), the other closed (Ungyō).[119][120][121]

Sikhism edit

 
Ik Onkar of Sikhism

Ik Onkar (Punjabi: ਇੱਕ ਓਅੰਕਾਰ; iconically represented as ) are the first words of the Mul Mantar, which is the opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh scripture.[122] Combining the numeral one ("Ik") and "Onkar", Ik Onkar literally means "one Om ";[123] [L] these words are a statement that there is "one God",[124] understood to refer to the "absolute monotheistic unity of God"[122] and implying "singularity in spite of the seeming multiplicity of existence".[125][M]

According to Pashaura Singh, Onkar is used frequently as invocation in Sikh scripture; it is the foundational word (shabad), the seed of Sikh scripture, and the basis of the "whole creation of time and space".[126]

Ik Onkar is a significant name of God in the Guru Granth Sahib and Gurbani, states Kohli, and occurs as "Aum" in the Upanishads and where it is understood as the abstract representation of three worlds (Trailokya) of creation.[127][N] According to Wazir Singh, Onkar is a "variation of Om (Aum) of the ancient Indian scriptures (with a change in its orthography), implying the unifying seed-force that evolves as the universe".[128] Guru Nanak wrote a poem entitled Onkar in which, states Doniger, he "attributed the origin and sense of speech to the Divinity, who is thus the Om-maker".[122]

Onkar ('the Primal Sound') created Brahma, Onkar fashioned the consciousness,
From Onkar came mountains and ages, Onkar produced the Vedas,
By the grace of Onkar, people were saved through the divine word,
By the grace of Onkar, they were liberated through the teachings of the Guru.

— Ramakali Dakkhani, Adi Granth 929-930, Translated by Pashaura Singh[126]

"Onkar" is the primordial sound/word. It is the soundless word (anahat naad or anahad naad). It is both the source as well as manifestation of the source. "Onkar" pervades the entire creation. The soundless sound is present everywhere and inside everything including us. In Sikhism, the Guru Granth Sahib is manifested form of this "Onkar". Hence, the Guru Granth Sahib is called "Shabad Guru". Shabad (word) is Guru and Guru itself is the Primordial Sound "Onkar" (God).[citation needed]

Thelema edit

For both symbolic and numerological reasons, Aleister Crowley adapted aum into a Thelemic magical formula, AUMGN, adding a silent 'g' (as in the word 'gnosis') and a nasal 'n' to the m to form the compound letter 'MGN'; the 'g' makes explicit the silence previously only implied by the terminal 'm' while the 'n' indicates nasal vocalisation connoting the breath of life and together they connote knowledge and generation. Together these letters, MGN, have a numerological value of 93, a number with polysemic significance in Thelema. Om appears in this extended form throughout Crowley's magical and philosophical writings, notably appearing in the Gnostic Mass. Crowley discusses its symbolism briefly in section F of Liber Samekh and in detail in chapter 7 of Magick (Book 4).[129][130][131][132]

Modern reception edit

The Brahmic script Om-ligature has become widely recognized in Western counterculture since the 1960s, mostly in its standard Devanagari form (), but the Tibetan Om () has also gained limited currency in popular culture.[133]

In meditation edit

Meditating and chanting of Om can be done by first concentrating on a picture of Om and then effortlessly mentally chanting the mantra. Meditating and mental chanting have been said[by whom?] to improve the physiological state of the person by increasing alertness and sensory sensitivity.[134][unreliable source?]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ (U+0950)
  2. ^ (U+0AD0)
  3. ^ ओम् (U+0913 & U+092E & U+094D)
  4. ^ ওঁ (U+0993 & U+0981)
  5. ^ (U+0A74)
  6. ^ ꣽ (U+A8FD)
  7. ^ ᰣᰨᰵ‎ (U+1C23 & U+1C28 & U+1C35)
  8. ^ ᤀᤥᤱ (U+1900 & U+1925 & U+1931)
  9. ^ (U+AAF2)
  10. ^ 𑘌𑘽‎ (U+1160C & U+1163D)
  11. ^ ଓଁ (U+0B13 & U+0B01)
  12. ^ ଓ‍ଁ (U+0B13 & U+200D & U+0B01)
  13. ^ 𑑉‎ (U+11449)
  14. ^ 𑇄 (U+111C4)
  15. ^ 𑖌𑖼 (U+1158C & U+115BC)
  16. ^ 𑩐𑩖𑪖‎ (U+11A50 & U+11A55 & U+11A96)
  17. ^ 𑚈𑚫 (U+11688 & U+116AB)
  18. ^ (U+0F00)
  19. ^ 𑓇‎ (U+114C7)
  20. ^ ᬒᬁ (U+1B12 & U+1B01)
  21. ^ ဥုံ (U+1025 & U+102F & U+1036)
  22. ^ 𑄃𑄮𑄀 (U+11103 & U+1112E & U+11100)
  23. ^ ꨯꩌ (U+AA05 & U+AA4C)
  24. ^ ꨀꨯꨱꩌ (U+AA00 & U+AA2F & U+AA31 & U+AA4C)
  25. ^ 𑍐 (U+11350)
  26. ^ ꦎꦴꦀ (U+A98E & U+A980 & U+A9B4)
  27. ^ ಓಂ (U+0C93 & U+0C82)
  28. ^ ឱំ (U+17B1 & U+17C6)
  29. ^ (U+17DA)
  30. ^ ໂອໍ (U+0EAD & U+0EC2 & U+0ECD)
  31. ^ ഓം (U+0D13 & U+0D02)
  32. ^ ඕං (U+0D95 & U+0D82)
  33. ^ (U+0BD0)
  34. ^ ఓం (U+0C13 & U+0C02)
  35. ^ โอํ (U+0E2D & U+0E42 & U+0E4D)
  36. ^ (U+0E5B)
  37. ^ (U+5535)
  38. ^ (U+C634)
  39. ^ オーム (U+30AA & U+30FC & U+30E0)
  40. ^ ᢀᠣᠸᠠ (U+1826 & U+1838 & U+1820 & U+1880)
  41. ^ އޮމ (U+0787 & U+07AE & U+0789)
  42. ^ 𑣿‎ (U+118FF)
  1. ^ Praṇava Upaniṣad in Gopatha Brāhmaṇa 1.1.26 and Uṇādisūtra 1.141/1.142
  2. ^ see Pāṇini, Aṣṭādhyāyī 6.1.95
  3. ^ see Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad 8-12, composed in Classical Sanskrit, which describes Om as having three mātras corresponding to the three letters a-u-m
  4. ^ in the early 19th-century manuscript above Om is written अउ३म् with "अउ" as ligature as in ॐ without chandrabindu
  5. ^ later called Shiva
  6. ^ this is a reference to the three major Vedic fire rituals
  7. ^ this is a reference to the three major Vedas
  8. ^ this is a reference to the three worlds of the Vedas
  9. ^ Sanskrit original, quote: द्वे वाव ब्रह्मणो रूपे मूर्तं चामूर्तं च । अथ यन्मूर्तं तदसत्यम् यदमूर्तं तत्सत्यम् तद्ब्रह्म तज्ज्योतिः यज्ज्योतिः स आदित्यः स वा एष ओमित्येतदात्माभवत्[72]
  10. ^ Hume translates this as "imperishable Aksara", Max Muller translates it as "indestructible Brahman"; see: Max Muller, The Upanishads, Part 2, Mundaka Upanishad, Oxford University Press, page 36 and Robert Hume, "Thirteen Principal Upanishads" [1], page 367
  11. ^ The Sanskrit word used is Vyadh, which means both "penetrate" and "know"; Robert Hume uses penetrate, but mentions the second meaning; see: Robert Hume, Mundaka Upanishad, Thirteen Principal Upanishads, Oxford University Press, page 372 with footnote 1
  12. ^ Quote: "While Ek literally means One, Onkar is the equivalent of the Hindu "Om" (Aum), the one syllable sound representing the holy trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva - the God in His entirety."[123]
  13. ^ Quote: "the 'a,' 'u,' and 'm' of aum have also been explained as signifying the three principles of creation, sustenance and annihilation. ... aumkār in relation to existence implies plurality, ... but its substitute Ik Onkar definitely implies singularity in spite of the seeming multiplicity of existence. ..."[125]
  14. ^ Quote: "Ik Aumkara is a significant name in Guru Granth Sahib and appears in the very beginning of Mul Mantra. It occurs as Aum in the Upanishads and in Gurbani, the Onam Akshara (the letter Aum) has been considered as the abstract of three worlds (p. 930). According to Brihadaranyaka Upanishad "Aum" connotes both the transcendent and immanent Brahman."[127]

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Bibliography edit

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this, article, about, sacred, sound, spiritual, symbol, dharmic, religions, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, listen, sanskrit, ओम, romanized, oṃ, 15919, Ōṁ, symbol, representing, sacred, sound, syllable, mantra, invocation, hinduism, written, repre. This article is about the sacred sound and spiritual symbol in dharmic religions For other uses see Om disambiguation and Aum disambiguation Om or Aum listen Sanskrit ॐ ओम romanized Oṃ ISO 15919 Ōṁ is a symbol representing a sacred sound syllable mantra and an invocation in Hinduism 1 2 Its written representation is one of the most important symbols of Hinduism 3 It is variously said to be the essence of the supreme Absolute 2 consciousness 4 5 6 Atman Brahman or the cosmic world 7 8 9 In Indic traditions Om serves as a sonic representation of the divine a standard of Vedic authority and a central aspect of soteriological doctrines and practices 10 The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas the Upanishads and other Hindu texts 9 Om ligature in Devanagari scriptOm ௐ in Tamil script with a trishula at Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple Singapore Om appears frequently as an icon in temples mandirs and spiritual retreatsA rangoli featuring Om surrounded by stylised peacocks Om often features prominently in the religious art and iconography of Indic religionsA rakhi in the shape of OmThis article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Om emerged in the Vedic corpus and is said to be an encapsulated form of Samavedic chants or songs 10 1 It is a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts during puja and private prayers in ceremonies of rites of passage samskara such as weddings and during meditative and spiritual activities such as Pranava yoga 11 12 It is part of the iconography found in ancient and medieval era manuscripts temples monasteries and spiritual retreats in Hinduism Buddhism Jainism and Sikhism 13 14 As a syllable it is often chanted either independently or before a spiritual recitation and during meditation in Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism 15 16 The syllable Om is also referred to as Onkara Omkara and Pranava among many other names 17 18 Contents 1 Common names and synonyms 2 Origin and spiritual significance 3 Pronunciation 4 Written representations 4 1 South Asia 4 2 East and Southeast Asia 4 3 Representation in various scripts 4 3 1 Northern Brahmic 4 3 2 Southern Brahmic 4 3 3 East Asian 4 3 4 Other 5 Hinduism 5 1 Vedas 5 1 1 Brahmanas 5 1 1 1 Aitareya Brahmana 5 1 2 Upanishads 5 1 2 1 Chandogya Upanishad 5 1 2 2 Katha Upanishad 5 1 2 3 Maitri Upanishad 5 1 2 4 Mundaka Upanishad 5 1 2 5 Mandukya Upanishad 5 1 2 6 Shvetashvatara Upanishad 5 1 2 7 Ganapati Upanishad 5 1 3 Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana 5 2 Ramayana 5 3 Bhagavad Gita 5 4 Puranas 5 4 1 Vaishnava traditions 5 4 2 Shaiva traditions 5 4 3 Shakta traditions 5 5 Other texts 5 5 1 Yoga Sutra 5 5 2 Chaitanya Charitamrita 6 Jainism 7 Buddhism 7 1 Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana 7 2 Japanese Buddhism 7 2 1 A un 7 2 2 Niō guardian kings and komainu lion dogs 8 Sikhism 9 Thelema 10 Modern reception 11 In meditation 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 BibliographyCommon names and synonyms editThe syllable Om is referred to by many names including Praṇava प रणव literally fore sound referring to Om as the primeval sound 19 20 Oṅkara ओङ क र or oṃkara ओ क र literally Om maker denoting the first source of the sound Om and connoting the act of creation 21 22 23 24 Ik Oṅkar ੴ or ਇ ਕ ਓਅ ਕ ਰ literally one Om maker and an epithet of God in Sikhism see below Udgitha उद ग थ meaning song chant a word found in Samaveda and bhasya commentaries based on it It is also used as a name of the syllable Om in Chandogya Upanishad 25 Akṣara अक षर literally imperishable immutable and also letter of the alphabet or syllable Ekakṣara literally one letter of the alphabet referring to its representation as a single ligature see below Origin and spiritual significance editThe etymological origins of ōm aum have long been discussed and disputed with even the Upanishads having proposed multiple Sanskrit etymologies for aum including from am आम yes from avam आवम that thus yes and from the Sanskrit roots av अव to urge or ap आप to attain 26 A In 1889 Maurice Blumfield proposed an origin from a Proto Indo European introductory particle au with a function similar to the Sanskrit particle atha अथ 26 However contemporary Indologist Asko Parpola proposes a borrowing from Dravidian am meaning it is so let it be so yes a contraction of akum cognate with modern Tamil am ஆம meaning yes 26 27 In the Jaffna Tamil dialect spoken in Sri Lanka aum is the word for yes citation needed Regardless of its original meaning the syllable Om evolves to mean many abstract ideas even in the earliest Upanishads Max Muller and other scholars state that these philosophical texts recommend Om as a tool for meditation and explain the various meanings that the syllable may hold in the mind of one meditating ranging from artificial and senseless to the highest concepts such as the cause of the Universe essence of life Brahman Atman and Self knowledge 28 29 The syllable Om is first mentioned in the Upanishads It has been associated with various concepts such as cosmic sound mystical syllable affirmation to something divine or as symbolism for abstract spiritual concepts in the Upanishads 9 In the Aranyaka and the Brahmana layers of Vedic texts the syllable is so widespread and linked to knowledge that it stands for the whole of Veda 9 The symbolic foundations of Om are repeatedly discussed in the oldest layers of the early Upanishads 30 31 The Aitareya Brahmana of Rig Veda in section 5 32 suggests that the three phonetic components of Om a u m correspond to the three stages of cosmic creation and when it is read or said it celebrates the creative powers of the universe 9 32 However in the eight anuvaka of the Taittiriya Upanishad which consensus research indicates was formulated around the same time or preceding Aitareya Brahmana the sound Aum is attributed to reflecting the inner part of the word Brahman Put another way it is the Brahman in the form of a word 33 The Brahmana layer of Vedic texts equate Om with bhur bhuvah svah the latter symbolising the whole Veda They offer various shades of meaning to Om such as it being the universe beyond the sun or that which is mysterious and inexhaustible or the infinite language the infinite knowledge or essence of breath life everything that exists or that with which one is liberated 9 The Samaveda the poetical Veda orthographically maps Om to the audible the musical truths in its numerous variations Oum Aum Ova Ova Ova Um etc and then attempts to extract musical meters from it 9 Pronunciation editWhen occurring within spoken Classical Sanskrit the syllable is subject to the normal rules of sandhi in Sanskrit grammar with the additional peculiarity that the initial o of Om is the guṇa vowel grade of u not the vṛddhi grade and is therefore pronounced as a monophthong with a long vowel oː ie ōm not aum B 34 Furthermore the final m is often assimilated into the preceding vowel as nasalisation raṅga As a result Om is regularly pronounced oː in the context of Sanskrit However this o reflects the older Vedic Sanskrit diphthong au which at that stage in the language s history had not yet monophthongised to o This being so the syllable Om is often archaically considered as consisting of three phonemes a u m 35 36 37 38 Accordingly some denominations maintain the archaic diphthong au viewing it to be more authentic and closer to the language of the Vedas In the context of the Vedas particularly the Vedic Brahmanas the vowel is often pluta three times as long indicating a length of three morae trimatra that is the time it takes to say three light syllables Additionally a diphthong becomes pluta with the prolongation of its first vowel 34 When e and o undergo pluti they typically revert to the original diphthongs with the initial a prolonged 39 realised as an overlong open back unrounded vowel a um or a3um ɑːːum This extended duration is emphasised by denominations who regard it as more authentically Vedic such as Arya Samaj However Om is also attested in the Upanishads without pluta C and many languages related to or influenced by Classical Sanskrit such as Hindustani share its pronunciation of Om oː or oːm Written representations editSouth Asia edit nbsp Statue depicting Shiva as the Nataraja dancing in a posture resembling the Devangari ligature for Om Joseph Campbell argued that the Nataraja statue represents Om as a symbol of the entirety of consciousness universe and the message that God is within a person and without 40 Nagari or Devanagari representations are found epigraphically on sculpture dating from Medieval India and on ancient coins in regional scripts throughout South Asia Om is represented in Devanagari as ओम composed of four elements the vowel letter अ a the vowel diacritic o the consonant letter म m and the virama stroke which indicates the absence of an implied final vowel Historically the combination ओ represented a diphthong often transcribed as au but it now represents a long vowel ō See above The syllable is sometimes written ओ३म where ३ i e the digit 3 explicitly indicates pluta three times as long which is otherwise only implied For this same reason Om may also be written ओऽम in languages such as Hindi with the avagraha ऽ being used to indicate prolonging the vowel sound However this differs from the usage of the avagraha in Sanskrit where it would instead indicate the prodelision of the initial vowel Om may also be written ओ with an anusvara reflecting the pronunciation of oː in languages such as Hindi In languages such as Urdu and Sindhi Om may be written اوم in Arabic script although speakers of these languages may also use Devanagari representations The commonly seen representation of the syllable Om ॐ is a cursive ligature in Devanagari combining अ a with उ u and the chandrabindu ṃ In Unicode the symbol is encoded at U 0950 ॐ DEVANAGARI OM and at U 1F549 OM SYMBOL as a generic symbol independent of Devanagari font In some South Asian writing systems the Om symbol has been simplified further In Bengali and Assamese Om is written simply as ও without an additional curl In languages such as Bengali differences in pronunciation compared to Sanskrit have made the addition of a curl for u redundant Although the spelling is simpler the pronunciation remains oː Similarly in Odia Om is written as ଓ without an additional diacritic In Tamil Om is written as ௐ a ligature of ஓ ō and ம m while in Kannada Telugu and Malayalam Om is written simply as the letter for ō followed by anusvara ಓ ఓ and ഓ respectively There have been proposals that the Om syllable may already have had written representations in Brahmi script dating to before the Common Era A proposal by Deb 1921 held that the swastika is a monogrammatic representation of the syllable Om wherein two Brahmi o characters U 11011 𑀑 BRAHMI LETTER O were superposed crosswise and the m was represented by dot 41 A commentary in Nature 1922 considers this theory questionable and unproven 42 A B Walawalkar 1951 proposed that Om was represented using the Brahmi symbols for A U and M 𑀅𑀉𑀫 and that this may have influenced the unusual epigraphical features of the symbol ॐ for Om 43 44 Parker 1909 wrote that an Aum monogram distinct from the swastika is found among Tamil Brahmi inscriptions in Sri Lanka 45 including Anuradhapura era coins dated from the 1st to 4th centuries CE which are embossed with Om along with other symbols 46 East and Southeast Asia edit The Om symbol with epigraphical variations is also found in many Southeast Asian countries In Southeast Asia the Om symbol is widely conflated with that of the unalome originally a representation of the Buddha s urna curl and later a symbol of the path to nirvana it is a popular yantra in Southeast Asia particularly in Cambodia and Thailand It frequently appears in sak yant religious tattoos and has been a part of various flags and official emblems such as in the Thong Chom Klao of King Rama IV r 1851 1868 47 and the present day royal arms of Cambodia 48 The Khmer adopted the symbol since the 1st century during the Kingdom of Funan where it is also seen on artefacts from Angkor Borei once the capital of Funan The symbol is seen on numerous Khmer statues from Chenla to Khmer Empire periods and still in used until the present day 49 50 better source needed In Chinese characters Om is typically transliterated as either 唵 pinyin ǎn or 嗡 pinyin weng Representation in various scripts edit Northern Brahmic edit Om in Northern Brahmic scripts nbsp Devanagari ligature a Gujarati b nbsp Devanagari c see above for variants nbsp Bengali Assamese d nbsp Gurmukhi e Ik Onkar nbsp Gurmukhi cursive variant Ik Onkar nbsp Jain symbol f nbsp Lepcha g nbsp Limbu h nbsp Meitei Mayek Anji symbol i nbsp Modi j nbsp Odia k nbsp Odia cursive variant l nbsp Prachalit m nbsp Ranjana nbsp Sharada n nbsp Siddham o nbsp Soyombo p nbsp Takri q nbsp Tibetan r nbsp Tirhuta Mithilakshar s Southern Brahmic edit Om in Southern Brahmic scripts nbsp Balinese t nbsp Burmese u nbsp Chakma v nbsp Cham w nbsp Cham homkar symbol x nbsp Grantha y nbsp Javanese z nbsp Kannada aa nbsp Khmer ab nbsp Khmer Aom Unalaom or Komutr symbol ac nbsp Lao ad nbsp Malayalam ae nbsp Sinhala af nbsp Tamil ag nbsp Telugu ah nbsp Thai ai nbsp Thai Om Unalome or Khomut symbol aj East Asian edit Om in East Asian scripts nbsp Chinese ak nbsp Hangul al nbsp Katakana am nbsp Mongolian an Other edit Om in other scripts nbsp Thaana ao nbsp Warang Citi ap Hinduism edit nbsp Om appears frequently in Hindu texts and scriptures notably appearing in the first verse of the Rigveda D In Hinduism Om is one of the most important spiritual sounds 3 The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas the Upanishads and other Hindu texts 9 and is often chanted either independently or before a mantra as a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts during puja and private prayers in ceremonies of rites of passages sanskara such as weddings and during meditative and spiritual activities such as yoga 11 12 It is the most sacred syllable symbol and mantra of Brahman 51 which is the ultimate reality consciousness or Atman Self within 7 8 4 5 52 It is called the Shabda Brahman Brahman as sound and believed to be the primordial sound pranava of the universe 53 Vedas edit Om came to be used as a standard utterance at the beginning of mantras chants or citations taken from the Vedas For example the Gayatri mantra which consists of a verse from the Rigveda Samhita RV 3 62 10 is prefixed not just by Om but by Om followed by the formula bhur bhuvaḥ svaḥ 54 Such recitations continue to be in use in Hinduism with many major incantations and ceremonial functions beginning and ending with Om 16 Brahmanas edit Aitareya Brahmana edit The Aitareya Brahmana 7 18 13 explains Om as an acknowledgment melodic confirmation something that gives momentum and energy to a hymn 3 Om is the agreement pratigara with a hymn Likewise is tatha so be it the agreement with a worldly song gatha the applause But Om is something divine and tatha is something human Aitareya Brahmana 7 18 13 3 Upanishads edit nbsp Ōṃ is given many meanings and layers of symbolism in the Upanishads including the sacred sound the Yes the Vedas the udgitha song of the universe the infinite the all encompassing the whole world the truth the Ultimate Reality the finest essence the cause of the universe the essence of life the Brahman the atman the vehicle of deepest knowledge and self knowledge atma jnana 29 Chandogya Upanishad edit The Chandogya Upanishad is one of the oldest Upanishads of Hinduism It opens with the recommendation that let a man meditate on Om 55 It calls the syllable Om as udgitha उद ग थ song chant and asserts that the significance of the syllable is thus the essence of all beings is earth the essence of earth is water the essence of water are the plants the essence of plants is man the essence of man is speech the essence of speech is the Rigveda the essence of the Rigveda is the Samaveda and the essence of Samaveda is the udgitha song Om 56 Ṛc ऋच is speech states the text and saman स मन is breath they are pairs and because they have love for each other speech and breath find themselves together and mate to produce a song 55 56 The highest song is Om asserts section 1 1 of Chandogya Upanishad It is the symbol of awe of reverence of threefold knowledge because Adhvaryu invokes it the Hotr recites it and Udgatr sings it 56 57 The second volume of the first chapter continues its discussion of syllable Om explaining its use as a struggle between Devas gods and Asuras demons 58 Max Muller states that this struggle between gods and demons is considered allegorical by ancient Indian scholars as good and evil inclinations within man respectively 59 The legend in section 1 2 of Chandogya Upanishad states that gods took the Udgitha song of Om unto themselves thinking with this song we shall overcome the demons 60 The syllable Om is thus implied as that which inspires the good inclinations within each person 59 60 Chandogya Upanishad s exposition of syllable Om in its opening chapter combines etymological speculations symbolism metric structure and philosophical themes 57 61 In the second chapter of the Chandogya Upanishad the meaning and significance of Om evolves into a philosophical discourse such as in section 2 10 where Om is linked to the Highest Self 62 and section 2 23 where the text asserts Om is the essence of three forms of knowledge Om is Brahman and Om is all this observed world 63 Katha Upanishad edit The Katha Upanishad is the legendary story of a little boy Nachiketa the son of sage Vajasravasa who meets Yama the Vedic deity of death Their conversation evolves to a discussion of the nature of man knowledge Atman Self and moksha liberation 64 In section 1 2 Katha Upanishad characterises knowledge vidya as the pursuit of the good and ignorance avidya as the pursuit of the pleasant 65 It teaches that the essence of the Veda is to make man liberated and free look past what has happened and what has not happened free from the past and the future beyond good and evil and one word for this essence is the word Om 66 The word which all the Vedas proclaim That which is expressed in every Tapas penance austerity meditation That for which they live the life of a Brahmacharin Understand that word in its essence Om that is the word Yes this syllable is Brahman This syllable is the highest He who knows that syllable Whatever he desires is his Katha Upanishad 1 2 15 1 2 16 66 Maitri Upanishad edit nbsp A Pahari painting of Om ओ c 1780 1800 decorated with deities Shiva and Shakti could be Vaishnavi or Siddhidatri Vishnu and Lakshmi seated upon Shesha Harihara Vishnu Shiva fusion deity Brahma and Dattatreya as a representation of the Trimurti top to bottom left to right The Maitrayaniya Upanishad in sixth Prapathakas lesson discusses the meaning and significance of Om The text asserts that Om represents Brahman Atman The three roots of the syllable states the Maitri Upanishad are A U M 67 The sound is the body of Self and it repeatedly manifests in three as gender endowed body feminine masculine neuter as light endowed body Agni Vayu and Aditya as deity endowed body Brahma Rudra E and Vishnu as mouth endowed body garhapatya dakshinagni and ahavaniya F as knowledge endowed body Rig Saman and Yajur G as world endowed body bhur bhuvaḥ and svaḥ H as time endowed body past present and future as heat endowed body breath fire and Sun as growth endowed body food water and Moon as thought endowed body intellect mind and psyche 67 68 Brahman exists in two forms the material form and the immaterial formless 69 The material form is changing unreal The immaterial formless is not changing real The immortal formless is truth the truth is the Brahman the Brahman is the light the light is the Sun which is the syllable Om as the Self 70 71 I The world is Om its light is Sun and the Sun is also the light of the syllable Om asserts the Upanishad Meditating on Om is acknowledging and meditating on the Brahman Atman Self 67 Mundaka Upanishad edit nbsp Shri Yantra with Om ௐ at its center Sri Mariamman Temple Singapore yantras are frequently used as aids in Hindu meditationThe Mundaka Upanishad in the second Mundakam part suggests the means to knowing the Atman and the Brahman are meditation self reflection and introspection and that they can be aided by the symbol Om It uses a bow and arrow analogy where the bow symbolizes the focused mind the arrow symbolizes the self Atman and the target represents the ultimate reality Brahman 73 74 That which is flaming which is subtler than the subtle on which the worlds are set and their inhabitants That is the indestructible Brahman J It is life it is speech it is mind That is the real It is immortal It is a mark to be penetrated Penetrate It my friend Taking as a bow the great weapon of the Upanishad one should put upon it an arrow sharpened by meditation Stretching it with a thought directed to the essence of That Penetrate K that Imperishable as the mark my friend Om is the bow the arrow is the Self Brahman the mark By the undistracted man is It to be penetrated One should come to be in It as the arrow becomes one with the mark Mundaka Upanishad 2 2 2 2 2 4 75 76 Adi Shankara in his review of the Mundaka Upanishad states Om as a symbolism for Atman Self 77 Mandukya Upanishad edit The Mandukya Upanishad opens by declaring Om this syllable is this whole world 78 Thereafter it presents various explanations and theories on what it means and signifies 79 This discussion is built on a structure of four fourths or fourfold derived from A U M silence or without an element 78 79 Om as all states of Time In verse 1 the Upanishad states that time is threefold the past the present and the future that these three are Om The four fourth of time is that which transcends time that too is Om expressed 79 Om as all states of Atman In verse 2 states the Upanishad everything is Brahman but Brahman is Atman the Self and that the Atman is fourfold 78 Johnston summarizes these four states of Self respectively as seeking the physical seeking inner thought seeking the causes and spiritual consciousness and the fourth state is realizing oneness with the Self the Eternal 80 Om as all states of Consciousness In verses 3 to 6 the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates four states of consciousness wakeful dream deep sleep and the state of ekatma being one with Self the oneness of Self 79 These four are A U M without an element respectively 79 Om as all of Knowledge In verses 9 to 12 the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates fourfold etymological roots of the syllable Om It states that the first element of Om is A which is from Apti obtaining reaching or from Adimatva being first 78 The second element is U which is from Utkarsa exaltation or from Ubhayatva intermediateness 79 The third element is M from Miti erecting constructing or from Mi Minati or apiti annihilation 78 The fourth is without an element without development beyond the expanse of universe In this way states the Upanishad the syllable Om is indeed the Atman the self 78 79 Shvetashvatara Upanishad edit The Shvetashvatara Upanishad in verses 1 14 to 1 16 suggests meditating with the help of syllable Om where one s perishable body is like one fuel stick and the syllable Om is the second fuel stick which with discipline and diligent rubbing of the sticks unleashes the concealed fire of thought and awareness within Such knowledge asserts the Upanishad is the goal of Upanishads 81 82 The text asserts that Om is a tool of meditation empowering one to know the God within oneself to realize one s Atman Self 83 nbsp The Hindu deity Ganesha is sometimes referred to as oṃkarasvarupa Omkara is his form and used as the symbol for Upanishadic concept of Brahman 84 85 Ganapati Upanishad edit See also Ganesha Om and Ganapatya The Ganapati Upanishad asserts that Ganesha is same as Brahma Vishnu Shiva all deities the universe and Om 86 O Lord Ganapati You are the Trimurti Brahma Vishnu and Mahesa You are Indra You are fire Agni and air Vayu You are the sun Surya and the moon Chandrama You are Brahman You are the three worlds Bhuloka earth Antariksha loka space and Swargaloka heaven You are Om That is to say You are all this Gaṇapatya Atharvasirṣa 6 87 Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana edit The Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana a Samavedic text outlines a story where those who chant Om can achieve the same rewards as deities However the gods are concerned about humans ascending to their realm To address this concern a compromise is reached between the gods and Death Humans can attain immortality but it involves relinquishing their physical bodies to Death This immortality entails an extended celestial existence after a long earthly life where the practitioner aspires to acquire a divine self atman in a non physical form allowing them to reside eternally in the heavenly realm 88 Ramayana edit In Valmiki s Ramayana Rama is identified with Om with Brahma saying to Rama You are the sacrificial performance You are the sacred syllable Vashat on hearing which the Adhvaryu priest casts the oblation to a deity into the sacrificial fire You are the mystic syllable OM You are higher than the highest People neither know your end nor your origin nor who you are in reality You appear in all created beings in the cattle and in brahmana s You exist in all quarters in the sky in mountains and in rivers Ramayana Yuddha Kanda Sarga 117 89 Bhagavad Gita edit nbsp An illustration of Om from a Mahabharata manuscript 1795 decorated with murtis of Surya Brahma and Vishnu to the left Shakti could be Maheshwari on the chandrabindu point and Shiva holding a trishula to the rightThe Bhagavad Gita in the Epic Mahabharata mentions the meaning and significance of Om in several verses According to Jeaneane Fowler verse 9 17 of the Bhagavad Gita synthesizes the competing dualistic and monist streams of thought in Hinduism by using Om which is the symbol for the indescribable impersonal Brahman 90 Of this universe I am the Father I am also the Mother the Sustainer and the Grandsire I am the purifier the goal of knowledge the sacred syllable Om I am the Ṛig Veda Sama Veda and the Yajur Veda Krishna to Arjuna Bhagavad Gita 9 17 91 90 The significance of the sacred syllable in the Hindu traditions is similarly highlighted in other verses of the Gita such as verse 17 24 where the importance of Om during prayers charity and meditative practices is explained as follows 92 Therefore uttering Om the acts of yagna fire ritual dana charity and tapas austerity as enjoined in the scriptures are always begun by those who study the Brahman Bhagavad Gita 17 24 92 93 Puranas edit The medieval era texts of Hinduism such as the Puranas adopt and expand the concept of Om in their own ways and to their own theistic sects Vaishnava traditions edit The Vaishnava Garuda Purana equates the recitation of Om with obeisance to Vishnu 94 According to the Vayu Purana citation needed Om is the representation of the Hindu Trimurti and represents the union of the three gods viz A for Brahma U for Vishnu and M for Shiva 95 The Bhagavata Purana 9 14 46 48 identifies the Pranava as the root of all Vedic mantras and describes the combined letters of a u m as an invocation of seminal birth initiation and the performance of sacrifice yajna 96 Shaiva traditions edit nbsp Om symbol with a trishula at Kanaka Durga Temple VijayawadaIn Shaiva traditions the Shiva Purana highlights the relation between deity Shiva and the Pranava or Om Shiva is declared to be Om and that Om is Shiva 97 After this an epithet of Shiva is Omkareshwar the Lord Ishvara of oṃkara Shakta traditions edit In the thealogy of Shakta traditions Om connotes the female divine energy Adi Parashakti represented in the Tridevi A for the creative energy the Shakti of Brahma Mahasaraswati U for the preservative energy the Shakti of Vishnu Mahalakshmi and M for the destructive energy the Shakti of Shiva Mahakali The 12th book of the Devi Bhagavata Purana describes the Goddess as the mother of the Vedas the Adya Shakti primal energy primordial power and the essence of the Gayatri mantra 98 99 100 Other texts edit nbsp Radha and Krishna intertwined with an Om ও and surrounded by scenes from their lifeYoga Sutra edit The aphoristic verse 1 27 of Pantanjali s Yogasutra links Om to Yoga practice as follows तस य व चक प रणव २७ His word is Om Yogasutra 1 27 101 Johnston states this verse highlights the importance of Om in the meditative practice of yoga where it symbolises the three worlds in the Self the three times past present and future eternity the three divine powers creation preservation and transformation in one Being and three essences in one Spirit immortality omniscience and joy It is asserts Johnston a symbol for the perfected Spiritual Man 101 Chaitanya Charitamrita edit In Krishnava traditions Krishna is revered as Svayam Bhagavan the Supreme Lord himself and Om is interpreted in light of this According to the Chaitanya Charitamrita Om is the sound representation of the Supreme Lord A is said to represent Bhagavan Krishna Vishnu U represents Srimati Radharani Mahalakshmi and M represents jiva the Self of the devotee 102 103 Jainism edit nbsp Painting illustrating the Jain Om symbol from Jaipur c 1840See also Jainism and non creationism and Jain symbols Om In Jainism Om is considered a condensed form of reference to the Panca Parameṣṭhi by their initials A A A U M o3 m The Dravyasamgraha quotes a Prakrit line 104 ओम एक क षर पञ चपरम ष ठ न म द पम तत कथम त च त अर ह त असर र आयर य तह उवज झ य म ण य Oma ekakṣara panca parameṣṭhi nama dipam tatkathamiti cheta arihata asarira ayariya taha uvajjhaya muṇiya AAAUM or just Om is the one syllable short form of the initials of the five supreme beings panca parameṣṭhi Arihant Ashariri Acharya Upajjhaya Muni 105 By extension the Om symbol is also used in Jainism to represent the first five lines of the Namokar mantra 106 the most important part of the daily prayer in the Jain religion which honours the Panca Parameṣṭhi These five lines are in English 1 veneration to the Arhats 2 veneration to the perfect ones 3 veneration to the masters 4 veneration to the teachers 5 veneration to all the monks in the world 104 Buddhism editOm is often used in some later schools of Buddhism for example Tibetan Buddhism which was influenced by Hinduism and Tantra 107 108 In East Asian Buddhism Om is often transliterated as the Chinese character 唵 pinyin ǎn or 嗡 pinyin weng Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana edit nbsp The mantra om mani padme hum written in Tibetan script on the petals of a sacred lotus around the syllable hrih at the center Om is written on the top petal in whiteIn Tibetan Buddhism Om is often placed at the beginning of mantras and dharanis Probably the most well known mantra is Om mani padme hum the six syllable mantra of the Bodhisattva of compassion Avalokitesvara This mantra is particularly associated with the four armed Ṣaḍakṣari form of Avalokitesvara Moreover as a seed syllable Bija mantra Om is considered sacred and holy in Esoteric Buddhism 109 Some scholars interpret the first word of the mantra oṃ maṇi padme huṃ to be auṃ with a meaning similar to Hinduism the totality of sound existence and consciousness 110 111 Oṃ has been described by the 14th Dalai Lama as composed of three pure letters A U and M These symbolize the impure body speech and mind of everyday unenlightened life of a practitioner they also symbolize the pure exalted body speech and mind of an enlightened Buddha 112 113 According to Simpkins Om is a part of many mantras in Tibetan Buddhism and is a symbolism for wholeness perfection and the infinite 114 Japanese Buddhism edit nbsp Nio statues in Kyoto prefecture of Japan are interpreted as saying the start open mouth and the end closed mouth of syllable AUM 115 116 A un edit See also Om mani padme hum The term A un 阿吽 is the transliteration in Japanese of the two syllables a and huṃ written in Devanagari as अह In Japanese it is often conflated with the syllable Om The original Sanskrit term is composed of two letters the first अ and the last ह letters of the Devanagari abugida with diacritics including anusvara on the latter indicating the uṃ of huṃ Together they symbolically represent the beginning and the end of all things 117 In Japanese Mikkyō Buddhism the letters represent the beginning and the end of the universe 118 This is comparable to Alpha and Omega the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet similarly adopted by Christianity to symbolise Christ as the beginning and end of all The term a un is used figuratively in some Japanese expressions as a un breathing 阿吽の呼吸 a un no kokyu or a un relationship 阿吽の仲 a un no naka indicating an inherently harmonious relationship or nonverbal communication Niō guardian kings and komainu lion dogs edit Main articles Niō and Komainu The term is also used in Buddhist architecture and Shinto to describe the paired statues common in Japanese religious settings most notably the Niō 仁王 and the komainu 狛犬 117 One usually on the right has an open mouth regarded by Buddhists as symbolically speaking the A syllable the other usually on the left has a closed mouth symbolically speaking the Un syllable The two together are regarded as saying A un The general name for statues with an open mouth is agyō 阿形 lit a shape that for those with a closed mouth ungyō 吽形 lit un shape 117 Niō statues in Japan and their equivalent in East Asia appear in pairs in front of Buddhist temple gates and stupas in the form of two fierce looking guardian kings Vajrapani 115 116 Komainu also called lion dogs found in Japan Korea and China also occur in pairs before Buddhist temples and public spaces and again one has an open mouth Agyō the other closed Ungyō 119 120 121 Some a un pairs nbsp An ungyō komainu nbsp An agyō komainu nbsp Ungyō Niō at the Central Gate of Hōryu ji nbsp Agyō Niō at the Central Gate of Hōryu jiSikhism editMain article Ik Onkar nbsp Ik Onkar of SikhismIk Onkar Punjabi ਇ ਕ ਓਅ ਕ ਰ iconically represented as ੴ are the first words of the Mul Mantar which is the opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib the Sikh scripture 122 Combining the numeral one Ik and Onkar Ik Onkar literally means one Om 123 L these words are a statement that there is one God 124 understood to refer to the absolute monotheistic unity of God 122 and implying singularity in spite of the seeming multiplicity of existence 125 M According to Pashaura Singh Onkar is used frequently as invocation in Sikh scripture it is the foundational word shabad the seed of Sikh scripture and the basis of the whole creation of time and space 126 Ik Onkar is a significant name of God in the Guru Granth Sahib and Gurbani states Kohli and occurs as Aum in the Upanishads and where it is understood as the abstract representation of three worlds Trailokya of creation 127 N According to Wazir Singh Onkar is a variation of Om Aum of the ancient Indian scriptures with a change in its orthography implying the unifying seed force that evolves as the universe 128 Guru Nanak wrote a poem entitled Onkar in which states Doniger he attributed the origin and sense of speech to the Divinity who is thus the Om maker 122 Onkar the Primal Sound created Brahma Onkar fashioned the consciousness From Onkar came mountains and ages Onkar produced the Vedas By the grace of Onkar people were saved through the divine word By the grace of Onkar they were liberated through the teachings of the Guru Ramakali Dakkhani Adi Granth 929 930 Translated by Pashaura Singh 126 Onkar is the primordial sound word It is the soundless word anahat naad or anahad naad It is both the source as well as manifestation of the source Onkar pervades the entire creation The soundless sound is present everywhere and inside everything including us In Sikhism the Guru Granth Sahib is manifested form of this Onkar Hence the Guru Granth Sahib is called Shabad Guru Shabad word is Guru and Guru itself is the Primordial Sound Onkar God citation needed Thelema editFor both symbolic and numerological reasons Aleister Crowley adapted aum into a Thelemic magical formula AUMGN adding a silent g as in the word gnosis and a nasal n to the m to form the compound letter MGN the g makes explicit the silence previously only implied by the terminal m while the n indicates nasal vocalisation connoting the breath of life and together they connote knowledge and generation Together these letters MGN have a numerological value of 93 a number with polysemic significance in Thelema Om appears in this extended form throughout Crowley s magical and philosophical writings notably appearing in the Gnostic Mass Crowley discusses its symbolism briefly in section F of Liber Samekh and in detail in chapter 7 of Magick Book 4 129 130 131 132 Modern reception editThe Brahmic script Om ligature has become widely recognized in Western counterculture since the 1960s mostly in its standard Devanagari form ॐ but the Tibetan Om ༀ has also gained limited currency in popular culture 133 In meditation editFurther information Pranava yoga Meditating and chanting of Om can be done by first concentrating on a picture of Om and then effortlessly mentally chanting the mantra Meditating and mental chanting have been said by whom to improve the physiological state of the person by increasing alertness and sensory sensitivity 134 unreliable source See also editA in Buddhism Beej Mantra Religious symbolNotes edit ॐ U 0950 ૐ U 0AD0 ओम U 0913 amp U 092E amp U 094D ও U 0993 amp U 0981 ੴ U 0A74 ꣽ U A8FD ᰣ U 1C23 amp U 1C28 amp U 1C35 ᤀ U 1900 amp U 1925 amp U 1931 ꫲ U AAF2 𑘌 U 1160C amp U 1163D ଓ U 0B13 amp U 0B01 ଓ U 0B13 amp U 200D amp U 0B01 𑑉 U 11449 𑇄 U 111C4 𑖌 U 1158C amp U 115BC 𑩐 U 11A50 amp U 11A55 amp U 11A96 𑚈 U 11688 amp U 116AB ༀ U 0F00 𑓇 U 114C7 ᬒ U 1B12 amp U 1B01 ဥ U 1025 amp U 102F amp U 1036 𑄃 U 11103 amp U 1112E amp U 11100 U AA05 amp U AA4C ꨀ U AA00 amp U AA2F amp U AA31 amp U AA4C 𑍐 U 11350 ꦎ U A98E amp U A980 amp U A9B4 ಓ U 0C93 amp U 0C82 ឱ U 17B1 amp U 17C6 U 17DA ໂອ U 0EAD amp U 0EC2 amp U 0ECD ഓ U 0D13 amp U 0D02 ඕ U 0D95 amp U 0D82 ௐ U 0BD0 ఓ U 0C13 amp U 0C02 ox U 0E2D amp U 0E42 amp U 0E4D U 0E5B 唵 U 5535 옴 U C634 オーム U 30AA amp U 30FC amp U 30E0 ᢀᠣᠸᠠ U 1826 amp U 1838 amp U 1820 amp U 1880 އ މ U 0787 amp U 07AE amp U 0789 𑣿 U 118FF Praṇava Upaniṣad in Gopatha Brahmaṇa 1 1 26 and Uṇadisutra 1 141 1 142 see Paṇini Aṣṭadhyayi 6 1 95 see Maṇḍukya Upaniṣad 8 12 composed in Classical Sanskrit which describes Om as having three matra s corresponding to the three letters a u m in the early 19th century manuscript above Om is written अउ३म with अउ as ligature as in ॐ without chandrabindu later called Shiva this is a reference to the three major Vedic fire rituals this is a reference to the three major Vedas this is a reference to the three worlds of the Vedas Sanskrit original quote द व व व ब रह मण र प म र त च म र त च अथ यन म र त तदसत यम यदम र त तत सत यम तद ब रह म तज ज य त यज ज य त स आद त य स व एष ओम त य तद त म भवत 72 Hume translates this as imperishable Aksara Max Muller translates it as indestructible Brahman see Max Muller The Upanishads Part 2 Mundaka Upanishad Oxford University Press page 36 and Robert Hume Thirteen Principal Upanishads 1 page 367 The Sanskrit word used is Vyadh which means both penetrate and know Robert Hume uses penetrate but mentions the second meaning see Robert Hume Mundaka Upanishad Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press page 372 with footnote 1 Quote While Ek literally means One Onkar is the equivalent of the Hindu Om Aum the one syllable sound representing the holy trinity of Brahma Vishnu and Shiva the God in His entirety 123 Quote the a u and m of aum have also been explained as signifying the three principles of creation sustenance and annihilation aumkar in relation to existence implies plurality but its substitute Ik Onkar definitely implies singularity in spite of the seeming multiplicity of existence 125 Quote Ik Aumkara is a significant name in Guru Granth Sahib and appears in the very beginning of Mul Mantra It occurs as Aum in the Upanishads and in Gurbani the Onam Akshara the letter Aum has been considered as the abstract of three worlds p 930 According to Brihadaranyaka Upanishad Aum connotes both the transcendent and immanent Brahman 127 References edit a b Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing pp 319 20 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 a b Beck Guy L 2012 Sonic liturgy ritual and music in Hindu tradition Columbia University of South Carolina Press p 25 ISBN 978 1 61117 108 2 OCLC 824698506 a b c d Wilke Annette Moebus Oliver 2011 Sound and Communication An Aesthetic Cultural History of Sanskrit Hinduism Berlin De Gruyter p 435 ISBN 978 3110181593 a b James Lochtefeld 2002 Om The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Vol 2 N Z Rosen Publishing ISBN 978 0823931804 page 482 a b Holdrege Barbara A 1996 Veda and Torah Transcending the Textuality of Scripture SUNY Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 7914 1640 2 Om Merriam Webster 2013 Pronounced ˈōm a b David Leeming 2005 The Oxford Companion to World Mythology Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195156690 page 54 a b Hajime Nakamura A History of Early Vedanta Philosophy Part 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120819634 page 318 a b c d e f g h Annette Wilke and Oliver Moebus 2011 Sound and Communication An Aesthetic Cultural History of Sanskrit Hinduism De Gruyter ISBN 978 3110181593 pages 435 456 a b Gerety Moore McKean Finnian 20 May 2015 This Whole World Is OM Song Soteriology and the Emergence of the Sacred Syllable Thesis Harvard University Graduate School of Arts amp Sciences p 33 ISSN 1746 7527 a b David White 2011 Yoga in Practice Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691140865 pp 104 111 a b Alexander Studholme 2012 The Origins of Om Manipadme Hum A Study of the Karandavyuha Sutra State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791453902 pages 1 4 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120808775 p 248 Sehdev Kumar 2001 A Thousand Petalled Lotus Jain Temples of Rajasthan ISBN 978 8170173489 p 5 Jan Gonda 1963 The Indian Mantra Oriens Vol 16 pp 244 297 a b Julius Lipner 2010 Hindus Their Religious Beliefs and Practices Routledge ISBN 978 0415456760 pp 66 67 Misra Nityanand 25 July 2018 The Om Mala Meanings of the Mystic Sound Bloomsbury Publishing pp 104 ISBN 978 93 87471 85 6 OM Sanskrit English Dictionary University of Koln Germany James Lochtefeld 2002 Pranava The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Vol 2 N Z Rosen Publishing ISBN 978 0823931804 page 522 Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 74 75 347 364 667 Diana Eck 2013 India A Sacred Geography Random House ISBN 978 0385531924 page 245 R Mehta 2007 The Call of the Upanishads Motilal Barnarsidass ISBN 978 8120807495 page 67 Omkara Sanskrit English Dictionary University of Koeln Germany CK Chapple W Sargeant 2009 The Bhagavad Gita Twenty fifth Anniversary Edition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 1438428420 page 435 Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press page 12 with footnote 1 a b c Parpola Asko 1981 On the Primary Meaning and Etymology of the Sacred Syllable ōm Studia Orientalia Electronica 50 195 214 ISSN 2323 5209 Parpola Asko 2015 The Roots of Hinduism the Early Aryans and the Indus Civilization New York ISBN 9780190226909 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad Oxford University Press pages 1 21 a b Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 67 85 227 284 308 318 361 366 468 600 601 667 772 Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 page 207 John Grimes 1995 Ganapati The Song of Self State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791424391 pages 78 80 and 201 footnote 34 Aitareya Brahmana 5 32 Rig Veda pages 139 140 Sanskrit for English translation See Arthur Berriedale Keith 1920 The Aitareya and Kauṣitaki Brahmaṇas of the Rigveda Harvard University Press p 256 Aitareya amp Taittiriya Upanishads with Shankara Bhashya English a b Whitney William Dwight 1950 Sanskrit Grammar Including both the Classical Language and the older Dialects of Veda and Brahmana Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 12 27 28 Osho 2012 The Book of Secrets unpaginated Osho International Foundation ISBN 9780880507707 Mehta Kiran K 2008 Milk Honey and Grapes p 14 Puja Publications Atlanta ISBN 9781438209159 Misra Nityanand 2018 The Om Mala unpaginated Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9789387471856 Valmiki trans Mitra Viharilala 1891 The Yoga vasishtha maharamayana of Valmiki Volume 1 p 61 Bonnerjee and Company ISBN unspecified Kobayashi Masato 2006 Paṇini s Phonological Rules and Vedic Aṣṭadhyayi 8 2 PDF Journal of Indological Studies 18 16 Joseph Campbell 1949 The Hero with a Thousand Faces 108f Deb Harit Krishna 1921 The Svastika and the Oṁkara Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal 17 3 231 247 Research Items The Swastika Gammadion Fylfot Nature 110 2758 365 September 1922 doi 10 1038 110365a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4114094 The Swastika p PA365 at Google Books Roy Ankita 2011 Rediscovering the Brahmi Script PDF Bombay Industrial Design Center IDC IIT Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2015 See the section Ancient Symbols Kak SC 1990 Indus and Brahmi Further Connections Cryptologia 14 2 169 183 doi 10 1080 0161 119091864878 Parker Henry 1909 Ancient Ceylon p 428 Parker Henry 1909 Ancient Ceylon p 490 Deborah Wong 2001 Sounding the Center History and Aesthetics in Thai Buddhist Performance University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226905853 page 292 James Minahan 2009 The Complete Guide to National Symbols and Emblems ISBN 978 0313344961 pages 28 29 ឱម ប រភពន រ បសញ ញ ឱម Retrieved 17 August 2020 ឱម អ ណ ចឱមន ក ន ងស សន Retrieved 17 August 2020 Om 10 November 2020 Ellwood Robert S Alles Gregory D 2007 The Encyclopedia of World Religions Infobase Publishing pp 327 328 ISBN 9781438110387 Beck Guy L 1995 Sonic Theology Hinduism and Sacred Sound Motilal Banarsidass pp 42 48 ISBN 9788120812611 Monier Monier Williams 1893 Indian Wisdom Luzac amp Co London page 17 a b Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press pages 1 3 with footnotes a b c Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 68 70 a b Patrick Olivelle 2014 The Early Upanishads Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195124354 page 171 185 Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 70 71 with footnotes a b Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press pages 4 6 with footnotes a b Robert Hume Chandogya Upanishad The Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press pages 178 180 Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press pages 4 19 with footnotes Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press page 28 with footnote 1 Max Muller Chandogya Upanishad The Upanishads Part I Oxford University Press page 35 Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 269 273 Max Muller 1962 Katha Upanishad in The Upanishads Part II Dover Publications ISBN 978 0486209937 page 8 a b Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 284 286 a b c Muller Max ed The Upanishads Maitrayana Brahmana Upanishad Vol 2 Oxford University Press pp 307 308 Maitri Upanishad Sanskrit Text with English Translation permanent dead link EB Cowell Translator Cambridge University Bibliotheca Indica page 258 260 Max Muller The Upanishads Part 2 Maitrayana Brahmana Upanishad Oxford University Press pages 306 307 verse 6 3 Deussen Paul ed 1980 Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass p 347 ISBN 978 8120814684 Cowell E B ed Maitri Upanishad Sanskrit Text with English Translation Bibliotheca Indica Translated by Cowell E B Cambridge University Press p 258 Maitri Upanishad in Sanskrit via Wikisource Paul Deussen Translator Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Vol 2 Motilal Banarsidass 2010 Reprint ISBN 978 8120814691 pages 580 581 Eduard Roer Mundaka Upanishad Bibliotheca Indica Vol XV No 41 and 50 Asiatic Society of Bengal page 144 Robert Hume Mundaka Upanishad Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press pages 372 373 Charles Johnston The Mukhya Upanishads Books of Hidden Wisdom 1920 1931 The Mukhya Upanishads Kshetra Books ISBN 978 1495946530 Reprinted in 2014 Archive of Mundaka Upanishad pages 310 311 from Theosophical Quarterly journal Mundaka Upanishad in Upanishads and Sri Sankara s commentary Volume 1 The Isa Kena and Mundaka SS Sastri Translator University of Toronto Archives page 144 with section in 138 152 a b c d e f Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814691 pages 605 637 a b c d e f g Hume Robert Ernest 1921 The Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press pp 391 393 Charles Johnston The Measures of the Eternal Mandukya Upanishad Theosophical Quarterly October 1923 pages 158 162 Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 308 Max Muller Shvetashvatara Upanishad The Upanishads Part II Oxford University Press page 237 Hume Robert 1921 Shvetashvatara Upanishad 1 14 1 16 The Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press pp 396 397 with footnotes Grimes John A 1995 Ganapati Song of the Self State University of New York Press pp 77 78 ISBN 978 0 7914 2439 1 Alter Stephen 2004 Elephas Maximus a portrait of the Indian Elephant New Delhi Penguin Books p 95 ISBN 978 0143031741 Grimes 1995 pp 23 24 Saraswati 1987 p 127 In Chinmayananda s numbering system this is upamantra 8 Gerety Finnian M M 1 February 2021 Between Sound and Silence in Early Yoga Meditation on Om at Death History of Religions 60 3 217 218 doi 10 1086 711944 ISSN 0018 2710 S2CID 233429885 Valmiki Ramayana Yuddha Kanda Sarga 117 valmikiramayan pcriot com a b Fowler Jeaneane D 2012 The Bhagavad Gita A Text and Commentary for Students Sussex Academic Press p 164 ISBN 978 1845193461 Mukundananda 2014 Bhagavad Gita The Song of God Commentary by Swami Mukundananda Jagadguru Kripaluji Yog a b Fowler Jeaneane D 2012 The Bhagavad Gita A Text and Commentary for Students Sussex Academic Press p 271 ISBN 978 1845193461 Muller Max ed 26 October 2001 The Bhagavadgita with the Sanatsujatiya and the Anugita Translated by Telang K T Routledge p 120 ISBN 978 0700715473 The Vishnu Dharma Vidya Chapter CCXXI 16 April 2015 Esnoul A M 2005 Oṃ Encyclopedia of Religion 2nd ed USA Macmillan Reference pp 6820 6821 ISBN 9780028659978 14 King Pururava Enchanted by Urvasi Bhagavata Puraṇa Canto 9 Bhaktivedanta Book Trust International Inc Beck Guy 1995 Sonic Theology Hinduism and Sacred Sound Motilal Banarsidass p 154 ISBN 978 8120812611 Rocher Ludo 1986 The Puraṇas Wiesbaden O Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3447025225 Adi Parashakti The Divine Mother TemplePurohit Your Spiritual Destination Bhakti Shraddha Aur Ashirwad 1 August 2018 Retrieved 26 May 2021 Swami Narayanananda 1960 The Primal Power in Man The Kundalini Shakti Health Research Books ISBN 9780787306311 a b Patanjali 1912 The Yogasutras of Patanjali Translated by Johnston Charles New York C Johnston p 15 Indian Century OM www indiancentury com Kaviraja Krishnadasa 1967 20 the Goal of Vedanta Study Teachings of Lord Caitanya Translated by A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Bhaktivedanta Book Trust International Inc a b Von Glasenapp 1999 pp 410 411 Malaiya Yashwant K Om significance in Jainism Languages and Scripts of India Colorado State University Namokar Mantra Digambarjainonline com Retrieved 4 June 2014 Samuel Geoffrey 2005 Tantric Revisionings New Understandings of Tibetan Buddhism and Indian Religion Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120827523 Vajrayana Buddhism Origins Vajrayana Buddhism History Vajrayana Buddhism Beliefs www patheos com Retrieved 4 August 2017 Om the Symbol of the Absolute Retrieved 13 October 2015 Olsen Carl 2014 The Different Paths of Buddhism A Narrative Historical Introduction Rutgers University Press p 215 ISBN 978 0 8135 3778 8 Getty Alice 1988 The Gods of Northern Buddhism Their History and Iconography Dover Publications pp 29 191 192 ISBN 978 0 486 25575 0 Gyatso Tenzin On the meaning of OM MANI PADME HUM The jewel is in the lotus or praise to the jewel in the lotus Internet Sacred Text Archive Retrieved 17 April 2017 C Alexander Simpkins Annellen M Simpkins 2009 Meditation for Therapists and Their Clients W W Norton pp 159 160 ISBN 978 0 393 70565 2 C Alexander Simpkins Annellen M Simpkins 2009 Meditation for Therapists and Their Clients W W Norton p 158 ISBN 978 0 393 70565 2 a b Snodgrass Adrian 2007 The Symbolism of the Stupa Motilal Banarsidass Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 303 ISBN 978 8120807815 a b Baroni Helen J 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Zen Buddhism Rosen Publishing p 240 ISBN 978 0 8239 2240 6 a b c A un 阿吽 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System 2001 Retrieved 14 April 2011 Daijirin Japanese dictionary 2008 Monokakido Co Ltd Komainu and Nio PDF Dentsdelion Antiques Tokyo Newsletter 11 3 2011 Ball Katherine 2004 Animal Motifs in Asian Art Dover Publishers pp 59 60 ISBN 978 0 486 43338 7 Arthur Chris 2009 Irish Elegies Palgrave Macmillan p 21 ISBN 978 0 230 61534 2 a b c Doniger Wendy 1999 Merriam Webster s encyclopedia of world religions Merriam Webster p 500 ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 Retrieved 23 September 2015 a b Gulati Mahinder 2008 Comparative Religious And Philosophies Anthropomorphlsm And Divinity Atlantic pp 284 285 ISBN 978 8126909025 Singh Khushwant 2002 The Sikhs In Kitagawa Joseph Mitsuo ed The religious traditions of Asia religion history and culture London RoutledgeCurzon p 114 ISBN 0 7007 1762 5 a b Singh Wazir 1969 Aspects of Guru Nanak s philosophy Lahore Book Shop p 20 Retrieved 17 September 2015 a b Singh Pashaura 2014 Gurmat The Teachings of the Gurus In Singh Pashaura Fenech Louis E eds The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies Oxford University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0199699308 a b Kohli S S 1993 The Sikh and Sikhism Atlantic p 35 ISBN 81 71563368 Singh Wazir 1969 Guru Nanak s philosophy Journal of Religious Studies 1 1 56 Crowley Aleister Liber Samekh Internet Sacred Text Archive Retrieved 27 May 2021 Crowley Aleister Magick in Theory and Practice Chapter 7 Internet Sacred Text Archive Retrieved 27 May 2021 Crowley Aleister 1997 Magick Liber ABA book four parts I IV Second revised ed San Francisco CA ISBN 9780877289197 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Crowley Aleister 2016 Liber XV Ecclesiae Gnosticae Catholicae Canon Missae Gothenburg ISBN 9788393928453 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Messerle Ulrich Graphics of the Sacred Symbol OM Archived from the original on 31 December 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2019 Kumar S Nagendra H R Manjunath N K Naveen K V Telles S 2010 Meditation on OM Relevance from ancient texts and contemporary science International Journal of Yoga 3 1 2 5 doi 10 4103 0973 6131 66771 PMC 2952121 PMID 20948894 S2CID 2631383 Bibliography editFrancke A H 1915 The Meaning of the Om mani padme hum Formula The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 47 3 397 404 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00048425 JSTOR 25189337 S2CID 170755544 Gurjar A A Ladhake S A Thakare A P 2009 Analysis of Acoustic of OM Chant to Study It s sic Effect on Nervous System International Journal of Computer Science and Network Security 9 1 363 367 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 186 8652 Kumar S Nagendra H Manjunath N Naveen K Telles S 2010 Meditation on OM Relevance from ancient texts and contemporary science International Journal of Yoga 3 1 2 5 doi 10 4103 0973 6131 66771 PMC 2952121 PMID 20948894 Kumar Uttam Guleria Anupam Khetrapal Chunni Lal 2015 Neuro cognitive aspects of OM sound syllable perception A functional neuroimaging study Cognition and Emotion 29 3 432 441 doi 10 1080 02699931 2014 917609 PMID 24845107 S2CID 20292351 Saraswati Chinmayananda 1987 Glory of Ganesha Bombay Central Chinmaya Mission Trust ISBN 978 8175973589 Stein Joel 4 August 2003 Just say Om PDF Time Magazine Telles S Nagarathna R Nagendra H R 1995 Autonomic changes during OM meditation PDF Indian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 39 4 418 420 ISSN 0019 5499 PMID 8582759 Vivekanda The Mantra Om Word and Wisdom via Wikisource Von Glasenapp Helmuth 1999 Der Jainismus Eine Indische Erlosungsreligion Jainism An Indian Religion of Salvation in German Shridhar B Shrotri trans Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 1376 6 Om at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Om amp oldid 1211451034, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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