The
festival of Navaratri is celebrated with prayers and gaiety in the beginning of
autumn and spring This period is a time for self-referral and getting back to
the source. During this time of transformation, Nature sheds the old and gets
rejuvenated. Vedanta says, matter reverts to its original form to recreate
itself again and again. The creation is cyclical, not linear; everything is
recycled by nature in a continuous process of rejuvenation. The human mind,
however, lags behind in this routine cycle of creation.
Navaratri is a festival to enable us to take the mind back to its source. The seeker finds the true source through fasting, prayer, silence and meditation. Night is called ratri because it brings rejuvenation. It gives relief at the three levels of our existence physical, subtle and causal. While fasting detoxifies the body, silence purifies speech and brings rest to the chattering mind, and meditation takes you deep into your own being. The inward journey nullifies our negative karmas. Navaratri is a celebration of the spirit or prana which alone can destroy Mahishasura, inertia; Shumbha-Nishumbha, pride and shame and Madhu-Kaitabh, extreme forms of craving and aversion.
They
are opposites, yet complementary. Inertia, deeply ingrained negativities and
obsessions, Raktabeejasura; unreasonable logic, Chanda-Munda and blurred
vision, Dhoomralochan can be overcome only by raising the level of prana and
shakti, the life-force energy. The nine days of Navaratri are also an
opportunity to rejoice in the three primordial qualities that make up the
universe. Though our life is governed by the three gunas, we seldom recognise
and reflect on them. The first three days of Navaratri are tamo guna, the
second three of rajo guna and the last three of sattva guna.
Our
consciousness sails through the tamo and rajo gunas and blossoms in the sattva
guna in the last three days. Whenever sattva dominates life, victory follows.
The essence of this knowledge is honoured by celebrating the tenth day as
Vijaya Dashami. The three primordial gunas are considered as the feminine force
of the universe. By worshipping the Mother Divine during Navaratri, we
harmonise the three gunas and elevate sattva in the atmosphere. Navaratri is
celebrated as the victory of good over evil.
From
the Vedantic point of view, the victory is of absolute reality over apparent
duality In the words of Ashtavakra, it is the poor wave which tries to keep its
identity separate from the ocean, but to no avail. Though the microcosm is well
within the macrocosm, its perceived separateness is the cause of conflict. For
a gyani or a wise person, entire creation comes alive and he recognises life in
everything in the same way children see life in everything. The Mother Divine
or pure consciousness pervades all forms and has all names.
Recognising
the one divinity in every form and every name is the celebration of Navaratri.
Hence, special pujas honouring all aspects of life and nature are performed
during the last three days. Kali is the most horrific manifestation of Nature.
Nature symbolises beauty, yet it has a horrific form too. Acknowledging the
duality brings a total acceptance in the mind and puts the mind at ease. The
Mother Divine is recognised not just as the brilliance of intellect Buddhi, but
also the confusion, Bhranti; she is not just abundance, Lakshmi, she is also
hunger, shudha and thirst, Trishna.
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