The Concept of Sunya
From Buddhism to Kashmir Shaivism to Lalla Ded
By Prof. M.L.
Koul
All credible evidences from the annals of Kashmir history establish that
Kashmir was a pivotal centre of Buddhist thought
and learning. To counter the narrow
philosophical positions of Hinyana Buddhism it
was in Kashmir that the doctrinal positions and
theoretical mould of the Mahayana Buddhism were
formulated and shaped out. A galaxy of Buddhist
scholars of great eminence who were Kashmiri in
their origins or had settled in Kashmir from
other parts of India contributed their
speculative faculties to the enunciation of the
contours of Mahayana Buddhism and enriched its
thought-content by shaping out its structures.
All concerted efforts were made to disseminate
the thought to a number of countries beyond the
margins of the native country. The Mahayana
thought in its debate of Reality, Soul and Human
destiny had marked features of synonymity with
the mainstream thought of India.
Mahayana thought
over a period of time branched off into two
thought divisions of Madhyamik and Vijnanvad. In
the pages of Buddhist thought Madhyamik is also
designated as Sunyvad because of its core
philosophy about sunya. Nagarjun, a great
celebrity in the realms of Buddhist thought,
founded the Madhyamik school through his work
named as 'Madhyamik-Karika. In his seminal work
Nagarjun rejects the idea of an object existing
or not-existing permanently or temporarily. He
as a way out sought for a mean or middle-path.
Being an expert dialectician he searched for
causes for things that were existing. His
postulations were startling as the world for him
did not exist and was nothing but void, and
emptiness. Things that exist are inherently
lacking in substance. Anything that depends on a
cause to exist has no existence and reality of
its own.
In the words of
stcherbabsky, "A dependent existence has no
existence, just as borrowed money is no real
wealth."
The mainstream
Indian philosophical thought was wary to accept
the stipulations of Nagarjun and characterised
it as a philosophy of voidism or nihilism. All
affirmative schools of thought put the thesis of
Nagarjun to a scathing criticism and dismissed
it as destructive.
It was Dr. T.R.V.
Murti who in his highly acclaimed work,
Buddhism, gave a new orientation to the very
concept of Sunya as propounded by Nagarjun. He
forcefully argued against those scholars who had
interpreted sunya as voidism, emptiness or sheer
nihilism. As per Dr. Murti, Nagarjun never
thought of sunya as voidism, emptiness or
nihilism. He places Nagarjun's sunya atpar with
Brahman in Vedanta, or Vijnan in Vijnavad. Sunya,
to him, is a metaphysical reality or a
metaphysical concept. As Madhyamik is an
absolutism, Dr. Murti calls sunya its
metaphysical reality.
Dr. Murti
maintains that sunya is a being that lies behind
the world of relativity and conditioned
existence. As a metaphysical being it is neither
relative nor conditioned. He further states that
world is sunya because it is relative and has no
independent existence of its own.
'Sunyata' is
another concept that is popular with the
voidists. The critics of voidism understand it
in the sense of negation. But, it, in fact,
means negation of all views and even its own
view.
Despite the
wide-spread range of Buddhism in Kashmir, the
popularity of Shiva's worship and many broad
conceptualisations about popular religion never
ceased to be. Being the most tolerant religion
of the world religions, Buddhism was never in
conflict with other forms of religions and their
variegated methodologies of worship. Though a
popular creed in Kashmir, Buddhism with its
non-soul doctrine and sunya-like nihilistic
conceptions failed to appeal to the spiritual
impulse of Kashmir. The result was the churning
of an affirmative strand of thought that evolved
as a reaction to the formulations of the
Buddhist thinkers. With Shiva as its core
concept the new thought drew upon the
philosophies of Sankya, Vaishnavism and Buddhism
to weave its own harmonised pattern planked on
non-dual structures. As a monistic absolutism it
re-cycled old metaphysical and epistemological
issues and evolved new approach and premis to
yarn its world-view logically and coherently.
Sunya as a vital Buddhist concept was
appropriated, and was oriented in a manner that
appeared absolutely at variance with its
original Buddhist trappings and semantics.
The non-dual
thinkers wedded to Shaivism put the Buddhist
thesis of sunya to a thorough and incisive
debate in all its ramifications. What emerges
from the contours of their debate is that sunya
as a metaphysical concept can be acceptable and
accorded the same position that Brahman in
Vedanta has. They appear to have no serious
objections to place sunya even at par with
Vijnan in Vijnanvad. But, they have far-reaching
reservations to treat sunya at par with the
metaphysical Reality of Shiva who has the
pre-eminent attribute of 'Swatantrya', which is
perfect freedom to act and know. Because of the
attribute of 'Swantantrya', Shiva is 'Chaitanya'
and sunya is lacking in this essential
attribute. So, they evaluate sunya as a lower
level of reality which they are unable to accept
as the absolute Reality that Shiva encompasses.
The Shaiva
thinkers seriously object to the voidist
position of rejecting the world as emptiness or
void. The world, to them, is neither
insubstantial nor momentary. In their
thought-model Shiva pre-exists as a being and
Shakti is His becoming and their unicity is the
absolute reality. If Shiva is real, so is His
Shakti. As per logic, that what is real will
generate or emanate real. Real generating or
emanating unreal is logically preposterous. The
Shaiva thinkers are loud in their assertion that
world and objects in the world are real as they
are one with the light of consciousness. If they
were not to appear or illumine in the light of
consciousness, they would not exist at all.
The non-dual
shaivites are unanimous is rejecting the
Buddhist thesis of monetariness as it reduces
all manner of experiences, fleeting and abiding,
to mere nothingness. As emphasised by them, the
concept of momentariness dismisses all
possibilities of making judgments and
establishing contact through expression and
communication.
In the annals of
philosophy it is well-known that no new thought
is totally new. What appears as new has ideas,
concepts and stipulations from that what is
dismissed as old and jaded. The non-dual thesis
of Kashmir Shaivism as already mentioned has
strands from Shaiva Siddhant of South of India,
Sahajyani Buddhism, Sankhya and varied
philosophies of Vaihsnavism. Sunya as a concept
has been incorporated from Buddhism, especially
its variant called Madhyamik. The Shaivite
thinkers have modified sunya to reinforce and
strengthen their own philosophical positions and
fundamental thesis of monism. The Buddhist
meanings and trappings of sunya have been
totally discarded and given a new orientation in
sync with the core philosophy of non-dual
Shaivims. The very definition of sunya has been
altered as 'shunyam ashunaym iti ukhtam
which in translation means 'shunya is said to
be ashunya'. It is not an inexplicable riddle.
The definition makes it clear that sunya is not
void or emptiness. What we call sunya does
contain something lying in a state of total
mergence.
The Shaivites
translate sunya as 'abhava', which when broken
up becomes 'a + bhava' meaning Shiva and world
or objects lying in His consciousness. Sunya, to
them, is in no case or condition as what the
Buddhists call void or emptiness. Sunya is what
the Shaivites call 'sad-bhava' which marks the
presence of world or objects, but in a state of
total mergence.
The following
verse explains the Shaivite position on sunya:-
ashunaym
shunyam iti ukhtam, shunyat abhava uchyate,
abhava satu
vigyeyo yatra bhava layam gata
It conveys that
sunya is asunya, not the condition of sunya,
void or emptiness. Sunya means abhava (in
translation), which again means a state in which
objects (bhavas) lie in a condition of absolute
mergence (in Shiva's consciousness supreme, the
objects are there, but not in their name and
form, but in a state of absolute dilution
indistinguishable from Shiva's consciousness
supreme also called 'maha-vyom'.
Sunya in the
vakhs of Lalla Ded
Lalla Ded had a
strong theoretical knowledge of the tenets of
non-dual Shaiva philosophy of Kashmir. She was
fortunate enough to have a preceptor (guru) like
Sidda Srikanth, popularly known as Syada mol,
who happened to be in the line of the tradition
of Shaiva acharyas. Besides theoretical studies
Lalla Ded as demanded by the thought itself was
initiated in the Shaiva praxis by the same
preceptor. As her mystical experiences reveal
she was put on the path of higher ascension and
had to achieve Sivahood through the Shaiva-yoga
which her venerated preceptor had introduced to
her dose by dose, step by step.
As Lalla Ded was
a Shaiva practitioner she happened to experience
some such states where she felt that she neither
belonged to the world of objects nor had the
spiritual flashes that would have satiated her
yearnings of attaining identity with Shiva. Such
of her conditions are termed as sunya which
every initiate has to experience while working
out Shaiva praxis under the guidance of a
Shiva-guru, a realised soul.
After rummaging
all the available verions of Lala Ded's vaakhs I
was able to find out seven vaakhs in which Lalla
Ded has made an explicit mention of sunya, a
state she had to experience before achieving the
state of self-recognition. She was an ardent
follower of the Shaiva precept of 'Shivo Bhutwa
Shivam Yajet'.
Lalla Ded
ardently worked out the Shaiva Yoga, the
practices prescribed in it. A situation emerged
when the external world appeared to get absorbed
in her own self and the imbalance between
subject and object appeared to disappear and all
got merged into sunya (void). It is a stage in
her spiritual evolution and not the situation in
which she finally attained Sivahood. She even
ascended the state of sunya when she had felt
that the world of name and form had risen to
absorption. What was left was the state of
anamaya which in Shaiva parlence means the
condition of supremacy of the luminosity of
consciousness supreme carrying the stir (spand)
to create and absorb. The experience intensely
felt by Lalla Ded has been grippingly conveyed
in the vaakh:
‘abhyas
savikas layi wothu
gaganas saghun
myul samistrata!
Sunya gol ta
anamaya motu
yuhuy wopadesh
chuy bata !!
Being aware of
the entire upanishadic ouvre of literature Lalla
Ded has woven a superb allegory to explain the
three functions of Param Shiva who creates,
maintains and assimilates the universe. For the
purpose she mentions Shiva who is the horse,
Keshav who is the saddle and Brahma who is the
sitrrups. The horse in the allegory is the 'trigunatmac
horse' and Param Shiva alone having the
attributes of 'anahat, kha swaroop, shunyalai’
is capable of riding it.
Anahat,
Kha-Swaroop, Shunyalai, aham-vimarsa and nada-binda
have philosophical meanings and need be studied
in the light of the thought Lalla Ded was
thoroughly cultivated by her preceptor.
As per the Shaiva
texts Bindu is the undifferentiated, luminous
and eternal consciousness supreme. Nada is the
Shakti, the potency to manifest what lies in the
Bindu. Bindu expands from Chitta-kala to
anand-shakti, Iccha Shakti, Jnan Shakti and
Kriya Shakti.
Many unrelated
meanings have been attributed to anahat. What
Lalla Ded means by anahat is related to Bindu
and Nada. Anahat is 'pranav', Om, an unhindered
and eternal sound, which is Bindu when in a
state of unity with Param Shiva and Nada when in
outward expansion.
Kha-swaroop and
shunyalai are the attributes of Param Shiva who
is beyond time and space and is the abode of
sunya which means that in the consciousness of
Shiva the world of objects lies in a state of
total mergence.
Lalla Ded
conveyes:
Anahat
Kha-Swaroop, Sunyalai
Aham-Vimarsa Nada Byand Yas Von
As a Shaiva
practitioner Lalla Ded merged her two breaths,
pran and apan, into the Sushmana-nadi, also
known as madhyanadi, which is considered as
having a sunya like condition. She realised that
the outward world had ceased to be for her and
the state of duality was not a reality. In this
psychic condition of having broken with the
outward world she experienced a new state of
having lost her not-self, which till then was
under the delusion of taking it as her real
self. With his experience as her sheet anchor
she felt that the lotus of self-luminosity was
about to enfold and bloom.
The following
vaakh conveys the same felt-experience:-
Sunyuk madan
kodum panas
mea Lalli
roozam na bodh na hosh
Vazay sapnis
panai panas
ada kami hili
phol Lalli pamposh !!
Kashmir thought
of Shaiva non-dual is a philosophy of positive
affirmation and has in no uncertain terms
rejected all forms of asceticism. Lalla as
evidenced by her vaakhs has lived a life of high
moral values in which avaricious greed, lust and
insatiable eating have no place. Greed, lust and
indiscriminate indulgence in pleasures of eating
signify attachment of an individual to the
things that he takes for his real self. That is
why Lalla says that vain imaginings are to be
abandoned and petty desires are to be slain. It
never means that she is preaching for any form
of asceticism. Her emphasis is to abandon any
form of attachment that encases the real self of
an aspirant. Lalla exhorts to concentrate on
Shiva, which will pave his way to the attainment
of a state where he will get merged in Sunya, a
name for transcendental Shiva in which the world
and its objects lie in a condition of absolute
dilution. The following verse is meaningful in
this context:-
Loob marun
sahaz vetsarun
drogu zanun
kalpan trav !
Nishe chuy
ta duru mo garun
sunes
sunyah milith gauv !!
Before Lalla Ded
achieved her spiritual state of serlf-recognition
she had followed many a course to act out their
efficacy and usefulness in achieving her
destination. She had studied Tantras, especially
Bhairav Tantras and the practices prescribed in
them. She utilised all her learning from them
and took to mantras, worked them out and marched
ahead. She felt that what she had achieved
through Tantras and Mantras was that she had
purified her chitta, limited form of chitti,
consciousness supreme. After purification of her
chitta, which was there but was free from the
disturbance brought about by subject-object
relationship, Lalla Ded attained the state of an
aspirant, who has attained a loftiness of
spiritual hue and is in ecstasy where nothing
remains, but her own self stripped of all malas
of attachment and duality. She in this lofty
state merged into sunya, transcendental Shiva in
whom the world of objects remains submerged in
an undifferentiated form.
Lalla Ded
sings:
Tanthar gali
tai manthar motse
manthar gol
tai motseyi chyath !
Tseth gol tai
kenh ti na kune
sunes sunyah
milith gauv !!
Sunya to Lalla Ded has come from non-dual
thought of Kashmir, Shaivism which in turn had
appropriated it from Buddhist thought. As a
superb poet she sang it in vaakhs couching her
intensely-felt experiences. Being a
philosophical concept, Lalla Ded communicates
the states of sunya that she had experienced
during the course of her spiritual evolution.
She is a great poet because she makes her felt
experiences the stuff of her verse-sayings. Her
poetry is great because she is philosophical in
what she conveys and pours out.
Source: Kashmir
Sentinel
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