Saturday, August 21, 2010

The Next Great Saint of Madhvacharya - Sri Sripadaraja



Sripadaraya or Sripadaraja or Lakshminarayana Tiirtha (1420 to 1486 Pontificate)

Introduction

SrIpAdarAjaru is revered by all mAdhvAs. It is believed that he is the incarnation of dhruva. His contributions to dvaita, haridAsa sAhitya, and the then existing social and political circumstances were considerable. He was also the vidyAguru of Sri vyAsarAya.

Shripadaraya or Shripadaraja is considered to be the originator of dAsakUta. That is why his name stands first in the following stotra which is sung at the beginning of any traditional Harikatha discourse

"namah sripAdarAjAya namastE vyAsa yOgine namah purandarAryAya vijayAryAya te namaha"

That is why he is also called as 'dAsa pitAmaha' (Grand Father of Dasas). He spread the message of BhAgawatha through his songs.

Lakshminarayana becomes a sanyasi

SripAdarAja was born in Shivaganga on the banks of the river Kaveri. His parents named him Lakshminarayana.

svarNavarNa tiirtha was the 8th pontiff descended from PadmanABha tiirtha (a direct disciple of Madhvacharya). He was once travelling towards abbUru when he came across LakshmInArAyaNa playing with this friends. When asked how far abbUru was, the little boy gave a very clever reply. He said, "Look at the setting sun, and look at us playing here. Now you guess how far abbUru is! " (the intended meaning was "we are playing here even though the sun is setting because we are confident of reaching home before it gets really dark; in other words, abbUru is close by ! "). The swamiji was taken back by the boy's keen intellect and decided to make him disciple. Later, after obtaining his parent's consent, the boy was granted sanyAshrama and named LakshmInArAyaNa yOgi.

Speciality in teaching :

During his life time Sripadaraja taught sarvamoola granthas for forty times together with teeka. He used to take lessons himself paying full personal attention to students in dwaitha vidyapeeta at Mulubagilu so that the students absorb Madhwa's tatvajnana completely, Sripadaraja guru's style of teaching is explained through the following story.

One paricharak of the mutt used to attend classes. It was surprising to see him present daily and in all batches of students. Once all the old students gathered to celebrate annual day of Vidyapeeta. "Mangala" of the "paata" taught for the 40th time was arranged on that occassion. That paricharak was present then also as usual. All the old students making fun of him commented "poojya this shishya is there now also. He is junior to those who pass out and senior to those who come in. In future also he would be sitting like this only. For what use a person like this would be?" Guruvarya smilingly picked up one teeka vrutha and told "scholars, interpret this line". All of them more or less replied in the same way giving only one meaning. Sripadaraja has given one new special meaning to that vakhya every paryaya-pravachana time, in addition to the ordinary meaning. All that the shishya has stored in the mind Guruvarya asked him" can you interpret this vakhya?" That paricharak shishya prostrated infront of his guru and explained in all humility those forty types of rare meaning. The scholar students nodded their heads in appreciation. Some hung their heads down in shame. Sripadaraja muni endearingly blessed that shishya and advised the rest that one should never look down upon any one. One should have hearty respect to one and all.

As per the direction of Sripadaraja, Vyasaraja studied tathparyanirnaya grantha in full and in depth. After a lot of critical contemplation on Tatparynirnaya,Vyasaraja offered the gist-essence at the feet of Sripadaraja. Sripadaraja enjoying that, remarked that " The theertha offered by Vyasaraja has uncommon taste due to the study of tatparyanirnaya, persons who have tasted the sweetness of Sarvajnacharya's shasthras can only know what others can not know. All the granthas of Acharya have unique significance. How much ever small it may be it is full of sweetness and unfailing power. "Nirnayam sarva shastranam Bharathaartha nirnaya" Mahabharatha Tathparyanirnaya has this fame. Srimad Anandatheertha has made shri Haripada theertha tastier still" with these words Sripadaraja blessedVyasaraja.

Sripadaraja was both a brilliant scholar as well as a great author. He was guru made for Vyasraja in the field of authoring granthas. He had captured the far limit of vedantha and composed a lovely, all encompassing work called Vagvajra. Vagvajra grantha does full justice to its name. The style is classic, it resembled quite a lot with "Sanyayarathnavali". Mastery over words, variety in meaning, soulful narration vibrantly manifested. In this work many prakriyas of Sriman Nyayasudha have been collected and put forward in both prosaic and poetic way. Yukthis are not repeated, instead "anumanas" are used. Before putting up doctrine, comprehensive and extensive churning have taken place. Sripadraja taught the heart of Teeka-grantha in an attractive manner, has laid a new royal path for the future heirs of Madhwa siddhanta samrajya. A part of Vagvajra runs like this. "Sri manyaya sudha granthath......tharka sangraham" and Sripadaraja shataka says yadvagvajroktha yukthi...... Sreya senaha. The eminent scholars says. "The name of this grantha is "vagvajra" or "Nyaya Sudhopanyasa Vagvajra" containing 3500 shlokas. Clarity is the hall mark of this soul capturing vyakhyana grantha. It is complete in propagation of postulates".


Saturday, June 26, 2010

The Next Great Saint of Madhva Follower



Sri Jaythirtha was a great scholar of dvaitha philosophy he wrote commetries to Madhvacharya and hence was also called as Tikacharya.

His Brundavana is in Malakedha in Gulbarga District.


Monday, May 31, 2010

Hanuma-Bhima-Madhva



Hanuman ==> Worships Sri Rama
Bhima ==> Worships Sri Krishna
Madhva ==> Worships Sri Vedavyasa

Trivikrama Pandithacharya watches the Pooja of Sri Madhvacharya and composes
Sri Hari Vayusthuthi.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Sri Madhananada Thirtha (Anandathirtha)

Sri Madhananada Thirtha (Madhvacharya followers are mentioned below)

Sri Padmanabha Thirtha

Sri Narahari Thirtha

Sri Madhava Thirtha

Sri Akshobya Thirtha

Veda vyasa & Anandathirtha (Madhvacharya)

HARI SARVOTHAMA VAYU JEEVOTHAMA!

His philosophy

His philosophy is dvaita. Brahman is Hari or Vishnu definable to an extent by the Vedas. He has a transcendental form, Vyuhas, Incarnations are His parts and Lakshmi is distinct. The qualities of Brahman are it is fully independent, the cause of all causes , supreme bliss, devoid of false attributes but possesses all qualities. The soul is atomic, it pervades the body by intelligence, infinite in number, Karta and Bhokta. Creation is the actuation of what is in the womb of matter and soul by the action of Brahman. The cause of bondage is the divine will of the Supreme and ignorace of the soul (svarupa). The process of release is through whole hearted devotion, study of the Vedas and detached karma. The goal is to gain release from samsara and restoration of one's own individual form.

Birth and childhood

Birth and childhood

Madhva was born on Vijayadashami day of 1238 CE at Pajaka, a tiny hamlet near Udupi. Narayana Panditacharya who later wrote Madhva's biography has recorded the names of Acharya's parents as Madhyageha Bhatta (Naduilaya in Tulu) as name of the father and Vedavati as Acharya's mother. They named him Vasudeva at birth. Later he became famous by the names Purnaprajna, Anandatirtha and Madhvacharya.
Even as a child, Vasudeva exhibited precocious talent for grasping all things spiritual. He was drawn to the path of renunciation and even as a young boy of eleven years, he chose initiation into the monastic order from Achyuta-Pragna, a reputed ascetic of the time, near Udupi, in the year Saumya (1249 CE). The preceptor Achyuta-Pragna gave the boy Vasudeva the name of 'Purnaprajna' at the time of his initiation into sanyasa.
A little over a month later, little Purnaprajna is said to have defeated a group of expert scholars of Tarka(logic) headed by Vasudeva-pandita. Overjoyed at his precocious talent, Achyuta Preksha consecrated him as the head of the empire of Vedanta and conferred upon him the title of Ananda Tirtha.
Thus Purna-prajna is the Acharya's name given to him at the time of Sanyasa (renunciation). The name conferred on him at the time of consecration as the Master of Vedanta is 'Ananda-tirtha'. Madhva, a name traceable to the vedas (Balittha Suktham), was the nom-de-plume assumed by the Acharya to author all his works. Madhva showed that Vedas talk about him as "Madhva" and utilized that name for himself. However, he used Ananda Tirtha or Suka Tirtha also to author his works. Madhva was the name by which he was to later be revered as the founders of Tattva-vada or Dvaita-mata.