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Book Review: "Thirumandiram:
A Classic of Yoga and Tantra"
by Georg Feuerstein, Ph D
(Reprinted from the March-April 1996 issue of
"The Yoga Journal"
"Thirumandiram" by
Siddhar Thirumoolar, translated with notes by B. Natarajan, edited
by M. Govindan. Published by Kriya Yoga Publications, 196 Mountain
Road, Eastman, Quebec, Canada J0E 1P0
" All serious yoga students
are familiar with the Bhagavad Gita ("Lord's Song")
and the Yoga Sutras ("Aphorisms of Yoga"), which are
yoga classics written in Sanskrit, the sacred language of the
brahmins. Few Western students, however, are aware that there
are a number of extraordinary traditionalworks on yoga that are
composed in languages other than Sanskrit. Oneof these scriptures
is Thirumoolar's Thirumandiram ("Sacred Word"). Composed
in the Tamil language,it was authored in the sixth or seventh
century C.E., though some authorities place it earlier.
The Thirumandiram, which consists
of 3,047 melodious verses, captures the essential teachings of
siddha yoga, or the yoga of the perfected adepts. This is the
yogic path of the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition flourishing in south
India. As the name indicates, the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition revolves
around the worship of the Divine in the form of Shiva. The name
Shiva means "He who is Benevolent", and the adjective
shaiva means "relating to Shiva". the Sanskrit word
siddhantha means "philosophical doctrine" or "accomplished
teaching." Who was Thirumoolar, the saintly author of the
Thirumandiram? Tradition recalls that he was a lowly cowherd who
tended his cattle inthe hills of south India and who filled his
lonely days with a burning love for the Divine. His spiritual
passion to merge with Shiva in mystical union in due course turned
him into a venerated sage. thirumoolar was, in fact, one of the
earliest Shiva-worshipping adepts of the south. He achieved no
particular fame during his lifetime, but, as is often the case
with the saintly, his greatness was increasingly recognized after
his death. Several centurieslater, his masterful work was incorporated
into the Shaiva canon, and today he is remembered as one of south
India's greatest yoga adepts.
His Thirumandiram sparkles with
original wisdom and shows a rare knowledge of the secrets of siddha
yoga. He writes about the Divine (in the form of the god Shiva),
the power of love and devotion, the efficacy of mantras, the connection
between breath and mind, higher visions, ultimate God-realization,
and not least the serpent power (kundalani-shakti) and the esoteric
structures of the subtle body. While much of the information given
can be found scattered in the Sanskrit scriptures as well, in
the Thirumandiram it is imparted with a lively immediacy that
is absent from more abstract works like the Sanskrit tantras or
the philosophical writings ofnorthern Shaivism. For example:
All the world may well attain the bliss
I have received,
If the name of the Lord chanted by
the great ones is repeated,
Within the heart will arise a thrilling
unstruck sound
Which, when practised, will lead to
realization.(85)
Time was when Idespised the body;
But then I saw the God within
An the body, I realised, is the Lord's temple
And so I began preserving it
With care infinite'. (725)
Dr. Natarajan embarked on his
English rendering in the late 1970's, but only a portion of it
was published in India. the present "international"
edition, published posthumously by Marshall Govindan, for the
first time offers Dr. Natarajan's complete translation.
In the present edition, each
of the more than 3,000 verses is numbered and givena caption that
conveniently allows the reader to quickly take in their purport.
The English rendering tries to capture not only the deep meaning
of the original but also something of its poetic spirit, though
on this score the translator is not as successful. Most, if not
all, of Thirumoolar's ideas can be found in other Tamil and Sanskrit
scriptures. But he communicates them in a kind of inspired vividness
and beauty that spring from direct personal experience, and he
seeks to instill the same experience in others. Thus the Thirumandiram
is as important a yoga scripture as the Bhagavad Gita, the Yoga
Sutras or the voluminous and inspiring Vasishtha. This outstanding
text is now available in a fine three-volume edition thanks to
the Marshall Govindan's labor of love."
Georg Feuerstein, Ph.D, is a
contributing editor of Yoga Journal and author of The Yoga Sutras
of Patanjali, Sacred Paths, and over 20 other books. His most
recent (coauthored) book is "In Search of the Cradle of Civilization",
published by Quest Books. His organization, the Yoga Research
and Education Center, Santa Rosa, California, co-sponsors the
Tamil Siddha Yoga Research Project along with Babaji's Kriya Yoga
Order of Acharyas.
Copyright: Georg Feuerstein. 1996.
All rights reserved.
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