Sarva Sara Upanishad
Sarva Sara Upanishad
Translated by Swami Madhavananda
Published by Advaita Ashram, Kolkatta
Om! May He protect us both together; may He nourish us both together;
May we work conjointly with great energy,
May our study be vigorous and effective;
May we not mutually dispute (or may we not hate any).
Om! Let there be Peace in me!
Let there be Peace in my environment!
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me!
1. Om. What is Bandha (bondage of the Soul)? What is Moksha (liberation)? What
is Avidya (nescience)? What is Vidya (knowledge)? What are the states of Jagrat
(waking), Svapna (dreaming) , Sushupti (Dreamless sleep), and the fourth, Turiya
(Absolute)? What are the Annamaya, Pranamaya, Manomaya, Vijnanamaya and
Anandamaya Koshas (vestures or sheaths of the soul)? What is the Karta (agent),
what the Jiva (individual self), the Kshetrajna (knower of the body), the Sakshi
(Witness), the Kutastha, the Antaryamin (Internal Ruler)? What is the
Pratyagatman (Inner Self), what the Paramatman (Supreme Self), the Atman, and
also Maya? -- the master of Self looks upon the body and such like things other
than the Self as Itself: this egoism is the bondage of the soul. The cessation
of that (egoism) is Moksha, liberation. That which causes that egoism is Avidya,
nescience. That by which this egoism is completely turned back is Vidya,
knowledge. When the self, by means of its four and ten organs of sense beginning
with the mind and benignly influenced by the sun and the rest which appear
outside, perceives gross objects such as sound etc., then it is the Atman's
Jagrat (wakeful) state. When, even in the absence of sound etc., (the self) not
divested of desire for them, experiences, by means of the four organs, sound and
the rest in the form of desires - then it is the Atman's state of Svapna
(dream). When the four and ten organs cease from activity, and there is the
absence of differentiated knowledge, then is the Atman's state of Sushupti
(dreamless sleep).
2. When the essence of consciousness which manifests itself as the three states,
is a witness of the states, (but is) itself devoid of states, positive or
negative, and remains in the state of non-separation and oneness, then it is
spoken of as the Turiya, the fourth. The aggregate of the six sheaths, which are
the products of food, is called the Annamaya-kosha, alimentary sheath. When the
fourteen kinds of Vayus beginning with the Prana, are in the alimentary sheath,
then it is spoken of as the Pranamaya-kosha, vesture of the vital airs. When the
Atman united with these two sheaths performs, by means of the four organs
beginning with the mind, the functions of desire, etc., which have for their
objects sound and the rest, then it (this state) is called the Manomaya-kosha,
mental sheath. When the soul shines being united with these three sheaths, and
cognisant of the differences and non-differences thereof then it is called the
Vijnanamaya-kosha, sheath of intelligence. When these four sheaths remain in
their own cause which is Knowledge (Brahman), in the same way as the latent
Banyan tree remains in the Banyan seed, then it is spoken of as the
Anandamaya-kosha, causal frame of the Soul. When it dwells in the body, as the
seat of the idea of pleasure and pain, then it is the Karta, agent. The idea of
pleasure is that which pertains to wished-for objects, and the idea of pain is
that which pertains to undesirable objects. Sound, touch, sight, taste, and
smell are the causes of pleasure and pain. When the soul, conforming itself to
good and bad actions, has made a link of the present body (with its past body),
and is seen to be effecting a union, a connection as it were, with the body not
yet received, then it is called the Jiva, individual soul, on account of its
being limited by Upadhis. The five groups are those beginning with the mind,
those beginning with the Prana, those beginning with the Sattva, those beginning
with the will, and those beginning with merit. The ego possessing the attributes
of these five groups, does not die out without the knowledge of the
ever-attained Self. That which, owing to its proximity to the Self, appears as
imperishable and is attributed to Atman, is called the Linga-sharira (subtle
body), and the "heart's knot". The Consciousness which manifests itself therein
is called the Kshetrajna, Knower of the Kshetra (body).
3. He who is the cogniser of the manifestation and disappearance of the knower,
knowledge, and the knowable, but is himself devoid of such manifestation and
disappearance, and is self-luminous, is called the Sakshi, Witness. When being
perceived in an undifferentiated manner in the intelligence of all beings, from
Brahma (the Creator) down to an ant, it resides in the intelligence of all
beings, then it is called the Kutastha. When, standing as the means of realising
the real nature of the Kutastha and others, which are differentiations by virtue
of possessing limiting adjuncts, the Atman manifests itself as inter-woven in
all bodies, like the thread through a string of jewels, then it is called the
Antaryamin, Internal Ruler. When the Atman shines forth - absolutely free from
all limiting adjuncts, brilliant, as a homogeneous mass of consciousness in its
nature of pure Intelligence, independent - then, it is spoken of as the Entity
of "Thou" (Tvam), and as the Pratyagatman, Inner-Self. (That which is) Satya
(the Reality), Jnana (Knowledge), Ananta (the Infinite), Ananda (Bliss), is
Brahman. The Reality is the indestructible; That which, when name, space, time,
substance, and causation are destroyed, dies not, is the indestructible; and
that is called Satya, the Reality. And Jnana - that essence of Intelligence
which has no beginning and no end, spoken of as Jnana.
4. And Ananta, the Infinite, (remaining in the same manner) as (does) clay in
modifications of clay, as gold in modifications of gold, as thread in fabrics of
thread, the antecedent, all-pervading Consciousness, that is in all phenomena of
creation beginning with the Un-manifested, is called the Infinite. And Ananda,
Bliss - the essence of the consciousness of happiness, the ocean of measureless
bliss, and the state of undifferentiated happiness is called Bliss. That, of
which the above fourfold nature is an indication, and which is permanent in all
space, time, substance, and causation, is called the Entity of "That" (Tat)
Paramatman, Supreme Self, and Para-Brahman, or the Highest Brahman.
Distinguished from the Entity of "Thou" (when it appears to be) possessed of
attributes, as well as from the Entity of "That" (when it appears to be)
possessed of attributes, that which is all-pervading like the sky, subtle, whole
by itself, pure Existence, the Entity of "Art" (Asi). Self-luminous, is spoken
of as the Atman; the Entity of "not-That", also is spoken of as Atman. That
which is beginningless, fruitful, open to both proof and disproof, neither real
nor unreal, nor real-unreal - non-existent, when, because of the immutability of
its own substratum, the cause of change is ascertained; -- existent when it is
not so ascertained - (thus that) which is un-definable, is called Maya.
5. I am neither the body nor the ten senses, Buddhi, Mind, Ego. Without Prana
and mind, pure, I am always the witness, pure consciousness, surely. I am
neither the doer nor the enjoyer, only a witness to Prakriti. By my presence
body etc., function as alive, still, eternal, ever joy, pure. I am Brahman to be
known from all Vedanta, yet unknowable like sky and air. I am neither form nor
action, only Brahman.
6. I am not body; birth, death do not come to me. I am not Prana - have no
hunger and thirst; I am not mind - have no grief or delusion. I am not the doer
- have no bondage or release.
Om! May He protect us both together; may He nourish us both together;
May we work conjointly with great energy,
May our study be vigorous and effective;
May we not mutually dispute (or may we not hate any).
Om! Let there be Peace in me!
Let there be Peace in my environment!
Let there be Peace in the forces that act on me!
Here ends the Sarva-Sara Upanishad, as contained in the Krishna-Yajur-Veda.