This is my first attempt to decode a hymn on my own (of course under master’s hidden guidance) and that too of the most famous sukta – The Nasadiya Sukta. Most of my blogging friends, asked me to undertake this task in the past. I was not ready that time, but now I feel I am. I do not have any direct source from Master E K this time, but all the wisdom I gained from attuning to his way of approach, is what is helping me to embark on this great task.
I took some of the word-word meanings/translations from the book “A new approach to the Vedas – by A.K.Coomaraswamy” and from Sanskrit dictionary, and there upon, the meaning and the explanation of the hymn follows the rhythm of my inner thought, as I submit myself to the MASTER. You may judge the authenticity of this explanation. Well, I remind you of shakespeare’s words – “Gently to Hear, Kindly to Judge” and the proverb that “DO not judge a book by its cover“. Read fully, spend time in understanding what I have to say, compare with what you know or what you might get on internet and then take what seems to resonate with your consciousness. Let us dive now.
To understand a vedic hymn, we need to know few pre-elements as follows. Each of the element act as a guiding lamp for us to tread in right direction. Without these fundamental FOUR, our compass is lost and we will end up with many misunderstandings.
This hymn, famous by the name Nasadiya Sukta, is a part of Rig Veda. As mentioned in 23) The Vedas, Rik means a ray of light or a trill of vocal utterance. So, any hymn that occurs in Rig veda, in one way or the other, extols this RAY, an emanation of the Omniscient.
There must be a firsthand clarification to be made here. A seer of a hymn is NOT the “person” who invented/discovered the him. This is an utter blunder. Seer is called “Rishi” in Sanskrit and a “Rishi” is a cosmic intelligence that brings down the “RIK/Ray of LIGHT” into human comprehension. Thus, when a person, in highest state of resonance, utters a hymn, he/she gives credit to that “RISHI” or “Cosmic Intelligence” who enlightened their meditative states. Just like the deva of hunger acts in all of us, RISHIS act in appropriate personalities, who strive to transfer wisdom from invisible planes to the visible.
The seer of this hymn is “Paramesthi Prajapathi”. Unless we know who a Prajapathi is, we do not understand the purport of the hymn. Prajapathi are the first sons of creation. That means, before creation emerges, they first emerge into awakening. What is their state before that? They exist as seed principles in the EGG of cosmos (Brahmanda). These Prajapathis are also the 9 numbers that we have from 1-9, 0 being the totality of their UNIT existence. We can dedicate another article on this, but for now, the important thing to take is that, Prajapathi is the “creator-consciousness” who acts through the properties of Numbers. The seer of this hymn is called the loving darling Prajapathi of the LORD (Paramesthi Prajapathi) because, the hymn is about to expound the wisdom of creation and so obviously, the seer should be the creator consciousness. Else where (lalita sahasranama) it is said that the creation occurs due to DESIRE of Paramēśvara and hence the name.
A meter in the Veda suggests the rhythm of an aspect of creation. In 21) Gayatri & The Mantra and 28) The Six Keys (part-2) we have seen this explicitly. What is the meter of this hymn? It is called “Trishtup“. What do we know of this meter? It has 11 syllables in each of the four lines. What does 11 symbolize? The prajapathis (1 to 9 through 0) are the first sons of creation, while after them, the 11 is the second son. DO you know who this is? He is RUDRA, who manifests in 11 modes (that is why there are 11 rudras – Sankara, Manu, Kaala, etc.). RUDRA = Master of Rōdaśi or Master of etheric Vibrations. These vibrations can be understood as the fluctuations in apparently empty space (rōdaśi), whose different modes are the present state of matter and dark matter (it is interesting to connect the dots as to how M- theory suggests 11 dimensional existence). Thus, a meter having 11 syllables extols on these vibratory principles. Nasadiya Sukta, being a hymn of creation, should necessarily explain us through unfoldment of these 11 rudras. That is why, this hymn took the meter of TRISHTUP – 11 syllable meter.
Every hymn is presided over by a deity. That deity encompasses the whole characteristics of the hymn as ONE symbol. The deity of this hymn is called Bhāvavṛttaṃ = a globe of Meaning. Kalidasa praises that “Parvati and Parameswara are as inseparable as an utterance and in its meaning“. If RUDRAS are uttering the creation as their CRY (Rōdana in Rōdasi, hence RUDRA), through the first principles of Prajapathis, the purpose/essence of this creation (i.e., its meaning) is then, by necessity, presided over by this Bhavavrittam/The globe of meaning. “Vrittam/Globe“ because, creation is cyclical and globular in nature.
Majority of the concepts that would come in the hymn are seeded by these four elements. These are to be sown in the soil of our mind, right now, so as to reap the fruits of the following explorations of the hymn.
Interesting point: It is interesting to note that the hymn has 7 stanzas. Already the above four elements explained how the hymn extols on creation. Now, the number 7 is intimately connected to creation. I have explored this in 36) Mystic nature of Numbers, and I hope you read the beauties there. So, uttering 7 stanzas has the hidden secret that the septenary splendors of creation (7 rays, 7 musical notes, 7 maruts, 7 planetary deities, 7 planes of existence, etc.).
Now, let us proceed stanza by stanza, along with word-word meaning, translation and explanation. I am borrowing the transliteration scheme (Sanskrit to English) from wiki (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasadiya_Sukta).
Word to Word Meaning:
na+asad = Neither non existence; āsīn = preside; no = No; sad = Existence; āsīt = presided; Tat = (at) That; ānīṃ = Time; na+āsīd = Not presiding; rajō = Grains of rajas; nō=No; vyōma = Space; parō = Ultra; yat = this/that; kim = What; āvarīvah = Envelopes; kuha = Where; kasya = Whose; śarmann = Abode; aṃbhaḥ = Waters; kim = what; āsīd = exists; gahanaṃ = deep; gabhīraṃ = abyss.
Import:
At the moment when there was Naught nor was Aught, when neither rajō nor an abode presided the ultra space (which) enveloped the waters of the unfathomable deep abyss?
Explanation:
In the introduction we have seen in what direction we have to understand this hymn. Because the four elements suggest that the hymn is woven with the thread of ideas of creation, let us define and understand the hymn in that direction. Important terms to be defined in this first stanza:
Given that you have digested these important terms, let us understand the first stanza point wise. But before, we need another clarification to be made. A vēdic hymn is an utterance of a saint in highest state of resonance with THE ONE. So, the seeming questions of a hymn need to be understood as “rhetorical” rather than mere question. It is utterly foolish to think a Vēdic hymn “poses” a question or a seer is in doubt and that he does not know. If that were the case, then why “SING” the hymn in a tune and preserve a “doubt” for millennia? So, I am on the stand that every vēdic hymn that seems to be a question has an answer in it at plain sight – we just need to rub off the preconceived rubbish of our intuition. So, taking that the stanza has no questions, but only affirmative answers, let us dive into them:
Let us go in reverse direction (which I always tend to do in my blog articles and seems that the seer of this hymn too followed the same logic i.e to understand within to without, we go from without to within.
So, in the mask of questions, the first hymn affirmatively gives the above order of creation. If not so, why to mention those entities at all? If the seer wants to speak of unfathomable, why to bring exact rajas/abode/water etc to compare? Why not a comb or a sweet or a toy ?? It is because he intends to give us an order of creation via rhetorical question, these entities form part of the hymn as objects of questioning.
Does this hymn say there is nothing before creation or that seer does not know ?? Does it match with Big-bang theory (Universe came out of nothing)? NOOOOOOO. It is wrong to say that nāsadiya matches big-bang. That is a foolish attempt of greedy humans to satisfy their agony of mismatch between science and religion. Vēda never claims there was NOTHING before creation. Actually no one can ever claim. If they did, then there was “NOTHING” as something. Is there anything like “NOTHING” at all? Can you imagine? If you do, then there is something – how can you imagine nothing? – what is the object of imagination? So, it is this simple intuitive logic people forget before embarking on taking Vēda to interpret. Unless properly understood, vēda indeed is the most cryptic and toughest of all mysteries. So, NO, this hymn does not portray confusion, nor affirms big-bang nor does it say that NOTHING was before creation. The first statement “Nothing was and was nothing” itself is a mantra to meditate, not sit and debate!
This article gives a thorough introduction and a taste of the hymn, via the first stanza, of Nāsadīya, through my lens of intuition and devotion. Let me know your opinions in shaping future stanza’s explanations. This hymn has 7 in total.