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Showing posts with label dariya sahib of bihar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dariya sahib of bihar. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

The Sant Dariya Sahib of Bihar Dharamdasi Kabir Panth Connection, by James Bean

 

The Sant Dariya Sahib of Bihar Dharamdasi Kabir Panth Connection, by James Bean



If one is acquainted with the writings of Sant Dariya Sahib one will soon notice that they are completely Dharamdasi oriented and permeated with the Anurag Sagar/Kabir/Dharam Das tradition. For instance, the Beas publication, Dariya Sahib - Saint of Bihar, is essentially a sequel to the Anurag Sagar. From what they taught, it's obvious that for Dariya Sahib and his guru, named in his writings as Sat Saheb, were heavily influenced by the Dharam Das Kabir Panth. They also believed "Sant Dharam Das was the true successor of Kabir", a uniquely Dharamdasi view of succession not shared by followers of other Kabir Panth sects. Scholars such as Daniel Gold have mentioned that the Dariya Sahib sect in Bihar resembles the Dharamdasi Kabir Panth in how it's organized. The Dariya Panth sees itself as the continuation of the Dharam Das Kabir Panth, even teaching that Dariya Sahib was the reincarnation of Kabir come again to reset Sant Mat during this Kali Yuga age, portraying the latter Dharamdasi line of gurus as having gone off course getting caught up in rituals and Hinduization or corruption with few people getting initiated into the path of the Sound Current having inner experiences. A familiar story about a sangat only lasting for a few generations and then dying out or morphing into something else like a new world religion or Hindu panth, in any case, becoming a shell or husk of its former self.


"...Dariya panthis, who, seeing Dariya as an incarnation of Kabir, can take their lineage as the real Kabir Panth." (The Sants - Studies in a Devotional Tradition of India,  page 326)


"Dariya Sahab is considered the second incarnation of Kabir Sahab." (Dariya Sagar):  

https://archive.org/details/DaryaSagarBiharWaleKeChuneHueShabda1931BelvederePressAllahabad/page/n3/mode/2up?q=%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%AC%E0%A5%80%E0%A4%B0 


Sant Dariya Sahib website: 

https://theholysound.com/sant-dariya-saheb-bihar/teachings.html 


"Dr. Dharmendra Brahmachari Shastri who published a research paper on the Sant for his Doctor of Philosophy thesis called, Sant Dariya KABIR of Bihar. In one of the books Dariya claimed himself to be Saint Kabir in his previous birth. The list of books and the number of verses and total number of lines in each book are given below":

https://theholysound.com/sant-dariya-saheb-bihar/books.html 


"... During the later stages of Sant tradition, figures have arisen who have spoken out against the established panths as providing little access to the true Sant teaching, which is perceived as leading to inner experience. Soamiji was one. Tulsi Sahib, his predecessor, argues sharply with panthi characters in his Ghat Ramayana. 45 Earlier, in Bihar, Dariya Sahib was taken as an incarnation of Kabir, come again to spread the true teaching on seeing the degeneration of his panth."  46


Footnote 46: "46. P. Chaturvedi, Uttari Bharat ki sant parampara (Allahabad: Leader Press, 1972), p. 660 gives an account of the way in which Dariya took himself as 'non separate from Kabir.' Dariya-panthi publications speak of him simply as 'Kabir's other avatar'". See introductory page to Dariya vachanamst, a periodical published from the Dariya Ashram, Kashi."   (The Sants, page 325)





"Those souls who remain in obedience

to these successors,

Shall cross the Ocean of the world.

How long will this line of succession continue?

Kindly relate it to us in your own words, asks Fakkar Das.

Listen mindfully, O Fakkar Das,

I explain this to you, says Dariya:

As long as the discipline of the Sound Current

is preserved unadulterated,

The line of succession will truly continue.

But when it is mixed with outer rituals

and display of external garbs,

My Sound Current will part company.

My Divine essence will depart,

And the souls will go into the mouth of Kal.

I shall then come to this world,

And shall proclaim the teaching

of the Sound Current again."

(excerpted from a hymn of Dariya, page 183, Dariya Sahib - Saint of Bihar: https://scienceofthesoul.org/books-EN-023-0.html )





One won't find much Kabir Sound Current mysticism with the Kabir Chaura Panth but you sure will if you explore the writings of the Dharam Das Panth and writings of Dariya of Bihar.  As of late I've started exploring the Kabir Sagar volumes using AI interfaces such as Gemini and Grok. Volume One of the Kabir Sagar is the Anurag Sagar (Ocean of Love)!

https://archive.org/details/giTY_kabir-sagar-complete-11-volumes-khemraj/page/n127/mode/2up


"This connection between Dharamdasis and Radhasoamis, to which the Anurag Sagar has led us, is confirmed by another set of writings venerated by Radhasoami leaders but little known outside of Radhasoami and Dharamdasi circles: the poetry of Dariya Sahib. Dariya Sahib was an eighteenth-century poet who lived in a Dharamdasi region of Bihar and referred to both Kabir and Dharam Das as his predecessors. Like the author of the Anurag Sagar, he viewed Kabir as a divine and mystical force and enumerated aspects of the ascending realms of consciousness in a manner remarkably similar to what one sees in Swami Shiv Dayal’s Sar Bachan." (Mark Juergensmeyer, Radhasoami Reality, first edition, 1991, pages 26-29)  


Antecedents of Radhasoami and Tulsi Sahib of Hathras


Below are some references from various sources to the Sant tradition most directly related to Radhasoami, modern-day Sant Mat. As Mark Juergensmeyer has said, "This esoteric teaching of Tulsi Sahib had its antecedents."


In decades gone by there have been some rather valuable discussions about the origins of Sant Mat, the most likely guru lineage of the path based upon the clues we can observe in the teachings of Swami Ji Maharaj, Tulsi Sahib of Hathras, and earlier Sant literature. As previous presentations have suggested, the evidence points to Sant Dariya Sahib of Bihar as being the most likely guru of Tulsi Sahib. Dariya Sahib of Bihar is the one contemporary guru actually named by Tulsi Sahib in his writings and hymns.


"Among the saints whom Tulsi Sahib himself singles out in Ghat Ramayan as Satgurus (true masters) are Bu-Ali Qalandar, Jalaluddin Rumi, Kabir Sahib, Dadu Dayal, Rai Das Ji, Dariya Sahib (who may have been Tulsi Sahib's own Guru), Guru Nanak, Surdas Ji, Nabha Das Ji, Mansur, Mirabai, Sarmad and Shams-e Tabrizi." (Tulsi Sahib - Saint of Hathras, 2017 edition, Puri, Sethi, Dr. T.R. Shangari, page xiii)


Tulsi was born in 1763 and passed on in 1843. He would have been in his teens when Dariya Sahib of Bihar was still alive — old enough to have perhaps received initiation from Dariya Sahib of Bihar or one of his representatives, in other words. Dariya was a towering figure occupying some of that space in history between the time of Kabir and that of Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras. Dariya passed on when Tulsi was around seventeen years of age. Dariya Sahib appointed several Saints to be his spiritual successors: Fakkar Das, Basti Das, Sant Tika Das, and, Sant Guna Das, also contemporaries with Tulsi Sahib, who likely spent some time in Bihar. Bihar was, and remains, home-base of the Satsang of Sant Dariya Sahib.


“He [Tulsi Sahib] has freely used words of Braj, Avadhi, Rajasthani (Marwari), Gujrati, Punjabi and Maithili, which leads one to conclude that, like many other Saints, he must have traveled widely in V.P., Rajasthan, Gujrat, Punjab and Bihar.” (J.R. Puri, and V.K. Sethi, Tulsi Sahib, Saint of Hathras, 1981, page 19)


If Tulsi hadn’t received initiation directly from Dariya by the age of seventeen, the references to Dariya Sahib in Tulsi’s writings still make sense if he received initiation from one of Dariya’s immediate successors, which is another possibility. Anyone initiated by those successors would likely have much reverence for Dariya Sahib as being the “great master” of Sant Mat during those days.


Tulsi's own references to Dariya are the foundation for the Dariya Sahib connection, but there are other observations one can make. For instance the sangats that used the Five Names (Panch Naam) prior to Tulsi Sahib of Hathras are associated  with the Dariya/Dharam Das/Kabir line of gurus.


Below are excerpts from Daniel Gold and Mark Juergensmeyer. And at the bottom I conclude with a hymn of Dariya Sahib embedded in the Kabir/Phool Das chapter of Tulsi Sahib's book, the Ghat Ramayan.


"Far to the west of Ayodhya, at Hathras, near Agra, a sant named Tulsi Sahib recognized himself as the reincarnation of Tulsi Das, who sang the praises of Ram in the great Hindi version of the epic Ramayana. Though Tulsi Sahib’s commonly known Ramayana is highly conducive to the ceremonial worship of Lord Ram, Tulsi Sahib in his present incarnation took the heritage of the Hindi sants as an alternative to Hindu ritual worship. In a book called the Inner Ramayana he elaborates at length on the idea of sant tradition. Arguing one by one with the proponents of established Indian religions, Tulsi Sahib demonstrates the superiority of sant mat, “the teaching of the sants.” Through followers of the Radhasoami movement, who inherit a direct spiritual legacy from Tulsi Sahib, the idea of sant mat has become familiar to circles of devotees in the West today.


"It was Tulsi Sahib, living into the nineteenth century, who finally produced a learned exposition of sant mat; yet sants had long before seen themselves as constituting some sort of spiritual brotherhood. Just how far the early sants saw themselves within a distinct tradition and in what ways their perceptions,of commonality in fact reflected shared practice are by no means settled questions. Some sants appear as notoriously idiosyncratic individuals, and movements bearing sants’ names have developed in highly diverse ways. But the ideal of the sant is lauded in verse, later Hindi sants refer to earlier ones, and Kabir, the first great figure in the Hindi tradition, mentions earlier Marathi predecessors. By the seventeenth century, great sectarian compilations—which include verses in sant style from figures beyond the immediate lineage—testify to ideas of a larger tradition of sants, if imprecisely understood and realized from diverse perspectives. By the end of the nineteenth century Radhasoami groups were formulating ideas of sant tradition that fit nicely into their own theologies." (Daniel Gold, Comprehending the Guru, 1988, pages 15-16)




"The idea of sant mat, propagated by Tulsi Sahib at the end of the eighteenth century, was taken up by the nineteenth-century progenitor of Radhasoami lineage, known as Soamiji. At both Agra and Beas, sant mat is understood to represent a practical formulation of an older sant tradition." (Daniel Gold, Comprehending the Guru, page 78)


"This esoteric teaching of Tulsi Sahib had its antecedents. His best known work, Ghat Ramayana (which purports to be the essence, or ghat, of the great Hindu epic, the Ramayana), is a dialogue between Tulsi Sahib and Phul Das, a follower of Dharam Das, who was in turn one of the best known disciples of Kabir. In it references are made to an even earlier dialogue, one between Kabir and Dharam Das. This dialogue is contained in a document entitled Anurag Sagar (The Sea of Love), which the Ghat Ramayana resembles in style and content and which may be regarded as its precursor. Several Radhasoami masters have acknowledged its relevance for their teachings and have urged their followers to read it.40


Footnote 40: "Sawan Singh, for instance, refers to the Anurag Sagar in Philosophy of the Masters (Beas: Radhasoami Satsang, Beas, 1977), vol. 4, p. 67; and one of Sawan Singh’s disciples says that the master advocated that the book be studied diligently" (Rai Saheb Munshi Ram, With the Three Masters [Beas: Radhasoami Satsang, Beas, 1967], vol. 2, p. 187).


"The main ideas of the Anurag Sagar are those we have described as esoteric santism, but particular attention is paid to the remarkable power of a salvific sound that can be transmitted only to appropriate persons, and only through initiation. Behind the Anurag Sagar lies an elaborate mythology about a cosmic conflict between the forces of darkness and the forces of good. As in Tulsi Sahib’s writing, the former is Kal, and Kabir himself embodies the latter. A particularly dramatic scene has Kabir meeting Kal in combat at the top of the causal plane. According to the Anurag Sagar, the public, historical Kabir was only a momentary revelation, a brief glimpse of a much more important reality: a cosmic Kabir-force that originated before creation, entered into human history briefly as Kabir, and is still accessible in the form of a pure sound that resonates through the cosmos and provides liberation from the evil grip of time and mortality.


"Although few of these mythological details survive as such within Radhasoami teachings, the grand role that Kabir plays within Radhasoami thought and its view of history is indisputable; one of the Radhasoami masters, for instance, claimed to have recognized Benares on seeing it for the first time because he had been there as Kabir in a previous birth. The general framework of the myth is to be found in Radhasoami notions of the evilness of time (Kal), the creation of religion by Kal as part of a sinister plot, and the saving power of a cosmic guru—incarnate in a living spiritual master—that penetrates Kal’s kingdom by a force of light and sound, rescues souls, and guides them toward ascending vistas of reality.


"The Anurag Sagar would seem to point to Kabir as the source of esoteric santism. The problem with this conclusion, however, is that although the Anurag Sagar is said to have been written by Kabir, its style and content suggest an authorship sometime in the eighteenth or even nineteenth century—several centuries after Kabir’s death. Moreover, the ideas of esoteric santism contained in the Anurag Sagar are rejected by many of the people who today consider themselves the direct followers of Kabir, the Kabirpanthis.


"There is one present-day branch of Kabirpanthis, however, for which these ideas are not at all extreme: the Dharamdasis. The Anurag Sagar is indeed one of their principal texts..."


"Dharamdasi teachings about the cosmic realms are quite similar to Radhasoami’s; like the Beas branch it gives the panch nam (five names) as one of its mantras at the time of initiation..."


"This connection between Dharamdasis and Radhasoamis, to which the Anurag Sagar has led us, is confirmed by another set of writings venerated by Radhasoami leaders but little known outside of Radhasoami and Dharamdasi circles: the poetry of Dariya Sahib. Dariya Sahib was an eighteenth-century poet who lived in a Dharamdasi region of Bihar and referred to both Kabir and Dharam Das as his predecessors. Like the author of the Anurag Sagar, he viewed Kabir as a divine and mystical force and enumerated aspects of the ascending realms of consciousness in a manner remarkably similar to what one sees in Swami Shiv Dayal’s Sar Bachan." (Mark Juergensmeyer, Radhasoami Reality, first edition, 1991, pages 26-29)


Shabd of Dariya Saheb quoted in the Ghat Ramayan by Sant Tulsi Sahib, in the section devoted to the Anurag Sagar and his Dialogue with Phool Das of the Kabir sect:


Gateway to the August Darbar of the Lord has opened to me.


Lightning flashes and darts forth like a fast current, illuminating like a shooting star.

The veil of clouds over the moon is removed and the dense darkness vanishes.


When love and yearning are engendered in Surat, it beholds the moon-lit courtyard.

Surat moves about happily in the firmament and opens the gate to Bank-nal.


Like a spider moving along the thread drawn out of itself,

Surat, ascending on the bow, rises up like a current.

On meeting the Beloved, Surat merges in Him the way a stream merges in river.


I have seen the Form which, indeed, is formless and beyond all description.

It is boundless, having neither beginning nor end.

Dariya Shaeb says that when his mind became humble and meek,

he was able to cross the ocean of existence. 

(Param Sant Tulsi Sahib, S.D. Maheshwari, page 125)





Also see: The Case for Sant Tulsi Sahib’s Guru Being Sant Dariya Sahib of Bihar — Sant Mat History Revisited, By James Bean: 

https://medium.com/sant-mat-meditation-and-spirituality/the-case-for-sant-tulsi-sahibs-guru-being-sant-dariya-sahib-of-bihar-sant-mat-history-revisited-08fc892e737e

And: Sant Tulsi Sahib’s Spiritual Master Was Sant Dariya Sahib of Bihar, by James Bean:  

https://santmatradhasoami.blogspot.com/2024/05/sant-tulsi-sahibs-spiritual-master-was.html





Friday, January 31, 2025

Observations About Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras, India, by James Bean (Sant Mat History Explored)

 


Observations About Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras, India, by James Bean (Sant Mat History Explored)




Sant Das Maheshwari mentioned in the book, Param Sant Tulsi Sahib: "Tulsi Saheb, too, has not written anything by way of himself introducing himself and his family. It is said that he was born in the Peshwa family in the city of Poona."


One may wonder just where exactly "IT IS SAID". The whole basis for that story came not from Tulsi himself but what others eventually said about him or came to believe after his death, in other words, the lore and legend that developed around Tulsi many years later. Where IS IT SAID? This business of associating Tulsi Sahib with Peshwas of Poona goes back to an introduction to Tulsi Sahib to be found in the edition of the Ghat Ramayan first published by Belvedere Press in 1911. I do hope those who contributed to that book did good research.


Everyone has been repeating this Peshwas of Poona back-story regarding Tulsi ever since as if it's true, but I don't know that it necessarily is true. I notice Mark Juergensmeyer in, Radhasoami Reality, used rather careful language regarding this back-story.


"The common account of Tulsi Sahib’s life is that he was born into a family of Maharashtrian royalty and renounced his status to wander in search of truth." (page 25) "The common account".   


It occurs to me that the whole archetypal Prince Siddhartha-like story of Tulsi Sahib belonging to the royal lineage of the Peshwas, and then his running away from the royal court might simply be viewed as an apocryphal story composed by others after-the-fact without necessarily there being any actual historically verifiable basis for it. To do a Tulsi Sahibism here, in Tulsi Sahib parlance, only when I see with my own eyes some references by Tulsi himself will I believe Tulsi Sahib had some connection to the royal Peshwas of Poona.


The only real evidence we have for Tulsi Sahib's past associations and possible guru connections is provided internally in the books Tulsi authored: Shabdavali; Ratan Sagar, Ghat Ramayan and Padma Sagar. Examining the internal evidence in spiritual classics is the approach which is used, for instance, by Nag Hammadi scholars to analyse the textual, theological and spiritual influences upon the authors of those Gnostic gospels. This same critical analysis should also be applied to the writings of Tulsi Sahib. In other words, we can learn much about Tulsi's influences and affiliations by closely examining what he said about himself, what clues he left that we can notice, what writings he quoted from, what gurus he mentioned most frequently, what groups he was most critical of, the mystical terminology present in his writings and hymns, and what guru and Sant Mat lineage best matches or most closely resembles Tulsi's own Sant Mat path.


Shabdavali is a collection of the hymns of Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras. "Shabdavali ('shabds or poems') is a compilation of miscellaneous hymns and poems composed in different ragas, and it expresses different aspects of Sant Mat."  (page 27, Tulsi Sahib - Saint of Hathras, 2017 edition)


Padma Sagar: "Padma Sagar means 'Ocean of Flowers'. It is a complete composition by Tulsi Sahib, in which he provides answers to spiritual questions posed by his disciple Hriday. In addition, he also explains the technique of uniting with the Shabd within." (page 28)


Ghat Ramayan: "Ghat Ramayan... is the story of the Lord within the body -- the inner spiritual journey." (page 20) The book is organized into two parts. The first section explores the treasure of spirituality within each human being, the mysteries of creation and the inner regions. The format of the second part of Ghat Ramayan consists of questions and answers, many discussions in the form of numerous dialogues between Tulsi and followers of various spiritual paths.


Ratan Sagar: "Like Ghat Ramayan, Tulsi Sahib's Ratan Sagar ('Ocean of Jewels') is a fathomless ocean of spiritual knowledge. In this composition he describes the state of existence before the universe was created, how this universe was created, the relationship of every soul with the Lord, how the soul became a part of this creation, the reasons why the soul continually wanders through the four khanis (modes of birth) and the cycle of transmigration, and the means of the souls emancipation." (pages 23 and 24)


Ratan Sagar and Anurag Sagar: "From a spiritual perspective, there is a significant similarity between Tulsi Sahib's Ratan Sagar and Kabir Sahib's Anurag Sagar ('Ocean of Love'). This similarity is most apparent in the various sections on spirituality and the manner in which they are presented. In Anurag Sagar, Kabir Sahib's disciple Dharamdas asks questions, and Kabir Sahib answers them. Similarly, in Ratan Sagar Tulsi Sahib's disciple Hriday asks the questions, and Tulsi Sahib answers. Both books are entirely based on a question-and-answer style." (page 25)


Tulsi Sahib's Q & A dialogues format, though rare in most Sant Mat publications, is the standard approach in much of the Sant Dharamdas Kabir panth literature known as the Kabir Sagar ('Ocean of Kabir'), a collection of around forty books attributed to, or written in the name of, "Guru Kabir". The Anurag Sagar that Tulsi Sahib comments on in his Ghat Ramayan is one of the volumes of this Kabir Sagar. Tulsi Sahib's understanding that Sant Dharamdas was the true "spiritual successor of Kabir", Tulsi's usage of the Five Names (Panch Naam) Guru Mantra (originating earlier in the Dharamamdasi branch of Sant Mat, in other words, in use prior to the time of Tulsi Sahib), his reverence for the Anurag Sagar, along with scores of references to a contemporary Satguru of his day from the Dharamdasi region of Bihar by the name of Sant Dariya Sahib are all suggestive of the primary spiritual influences upon Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras.


Here in the west, Mark Juergensmeyer was actually the first one to observe this connection between Tulsi Sahib and Dariya Sahib of Bihar to the Dharamdasis, the Kabir line of gurus going back to Sant Dharam Das (the People of the Anurag Sagar, the People of the Five Names) in his 1991 book, Radhasoami Reality.


"Although not considered normative sant teachings by those outside Radhasoami, the Radhasoami complex of sant-related concepts bears a coherent and distinctive stamp. Those within the Radhasoami community have not given it a specific name, but it might be called 'esoteric santism.' It is santism because the concepts are roughly comparable to those taught by the medieval sants, yet it is esoteric, since it makes each of the sant concepts part of a special system of interior spirituality. When and where did this esoteric santism arise?" (Mark Juergensmeyer, Radhasoami Reality — The Logic of a Modern Faith, Princeton University Press, 1991, page 24)


"This connection between Dharamdasis, to which the Anurag Sagar has lead us, is confirmed by another set of writings venerated by Radhasoami leaders but little known outside of Radhasoami and Dharamdasi circles: the poetry of Dariya Sahib. Dariya Sahib was an eighteenth-century poet who lived in a Dharamdasi region of Bihar and referred to both Kabir and Dharam Das as his predecessors." (page 29)




Tuesday, January 20, 2015

A History of Simran Practice in the Sant Tradition (Path of the Masters): The Many Names of the Nameless God (Anami)


A History of Simran Practice in the Sant Tradition (Path of the Masters): The Many Names of the Nameless God (Anami),
 By James Bean http://about.me/SantMat




The Nameless God has been given many names over the centuries. There are countless Divine names used as mantras or sacred words of Remembrance in various schools of spirituality. In Dadu Panth, that sacred name of God at the highest level is Satya-Raam. The name Raam was very frequently mentioned in the hymns of Guru Kabir, Sant Namdev, and other classic Sants of India. Some receive a single Name, others a longer Guru Mantra phrase. Some are given "The Five Names" (panch naam) consisting of five holy names of God. These are revealed at the time of Initiation into Sant Mat or Surat Shabd Yoga meditation practice. These same five names have been used for centuries in certain branches of Sant Mat connected with Kabir and Sant Dharam Das, Sant Dariya Sahib, Sant Tulsi Sahib, and Sant Radhasoami Sahib. Others have been given five Sufi names of God at the time of Initiation into Surat Shabd Yoga meditation. These five Sufi or Islamic names have the same essential meaning as the five Indian names used in some forms of Sant Mat, and, as with the Indian names, also correspond to five basic inner regions. (In one of the Jewish Gnostic paths of antiquity, a group known as the Sethians, there was also a five-named or panch naam mantra approach, only with five Hebrew names that have been found in Coptic texts of Egypt. Those were associated with certain heavenly regions: Harmoz-el, Oroia-el, Daveithai, El-eleth, and another word meaning, the "Self-Begotten One".) Others are given the name of the Most High God RADHASOAMI (Rad-Da-Swam-e, "Soul-Lord" or "Lord of the Soul"), associated with the Eighth Plane, to use in simran practice along one's journey though all of the various states and stages within during meditation. Other Sant Mat lineages use a two-syllabled sacred word revealed at the time of Initiation, and it represents a name for the Soundless One.

In the classic bhajans and banis of the Sants of India appear numerous names of God. One can read verses exhorting devotees to repeat many names of the Nameless, Soundless, Formless One: 

"Repeat the Name of Raam".
"Repeat the Name of Radhaswami".
"Repeat the Name of Hari".
"Repeat the Name of Govinda".
"Repeat the Name of Vitthala".
"Repeat the Name of Allah".
"Repeat the Name of HOO (HU)".

Many names have used by various Sants: Param-Atma, Hari, Alakh, Allah, Raam or Rama, Rahim, Agam, Purushotama, Khuda, Gobind, Panduranga, Pandhari, Vitthala, Narayana, Vitthoba, Sat Purusha, etc... Some of these names are used by Hindu paths too, and have different meanings. As Sant Dariya Sahib once said: 

"Consider the four meanings of Ram, 
The first Ram (1) is our inner self. 
Parashu-ram (2) is said to be the second one. 
The third one lived in Dasharath's (3) home.
The fourth Ram is the Primeval Sat Purush (4)
Call Him (Sat Purush) Ram or call Him Naam, 
Ram and Naam are one. 
Both are mutually indistinguishable; 
Satguru's Sound Current reveals this wisdom."

NOTES:

(1) The Life Principle that pervades everywhere, permeating, witin all.

(2) Parashu-ram, the son of Sage Jamadagni, is regarded as the sixth incarnation of Lord Vishnu.

(3) Ancient king of Ayodhya, the father of Ram. Rama: the seventh incarnation of Vishnu and the hero of the great epic Ramayana (Adventures of Rama).

(4) The Nirguna or Formless Raam, All-Spirit. ("Dariya Sahib, Saint of Bihar", K.N. Upadhyaya, Mystics of the East Series)
     
For the Sants of the East, all names of the One God represent the Nameless, Formless (Nirguna) God of Love and Compassion Who is Timeless (Akal), Spirit, and Eternal (Sat).

The True Spirit of Simran Practice is Bhakti 

"Simran" is a term which means "Remembrance", the spiritual practice of remembering or being mindful of God by repeating his Name. Devotees sing or chant various names for God. Higher spiritually, and more "within" is the practice of "manas jap", the mental repetition of God's name or names "with the tongue of thought" -- in other words, chanting names of God within one's mind. The Sants have always placed much greater emphasis upon mental Simran over vocal chant.

There is however, more to Simran than the repeating of sacred names. Simran must be approached with the right attitude, the right spirit, for one's intent determines how successful the practice will be, and what effect it will have upon one's consciousness. Simran has never been intended to be a dry or lifeless mantra practice. The path of the Sants is a Bhakti path, a path of love and devotion for the Supreme Being. Thus, the true Masters have always instructed their students to repeat God's Name with love and devotion, as a lover calling out to one's Beloved, the Lord of Love.

Guru Kabir 

"Keep your mind ever engrossed in the Name of the Lord 
As the lover's mind is ever engrossed in his Beloved. 
He never forgets her for a single moment --  
Through day and night he remembers her. 

"Happiness rests in ever-repeated simran, 
Sorrow and suffering is removed by simran. 
Kabir declares with utmost force and clarity: 
Practise this simran and be one with the Lord." 
(Kabir -- The Great Mystic, by Isaac A. Ezekiel)

What, then, is the practice of the Name? It is a form of interior prayer by which a person learns to keep his or her attention always in the Lord, in every circumstance and situation, at all moments, through day and night. It is a form of inner remembrance that leads to a heightened awareness beyond the limitations of the physical world and the portals of death.

Through meditation on the Name, or Naam Bhakti, one learns to draw one's attention away from the outer world.

Sant Namdev 

"Always be in rapport with the Lord
And enjoy true contentment -- 
This is the state of ineffable serenity.
There is no peace except in the Name of the Lord --
Meditate on it with one-pointed attention. 

"Experience the state of superconsciousness 
Where the Lord's love surges 
And you will see your own form 
In each particle of the creation. 

"0 Nama, the Lord will make 
The pupil of your eye his home,
And your eye will expand 
To contain the entire universe." 
(Saint Namdev, Mystics of the East Series)

The Simran of God's Name Will Lead One to the True Name: The Sound of God

The repetition of the holy Names is the truest spiritual technique. An uninterrupted inner repetition of the holy Names given by the living Master has to be practiced daily with love, devotion, and one-pointed attention. One thereby transcends one's body and is transported to the realms of Light.

The repetition develops into an ever-going spontaneous process, and one catches the unceasing inner Music which takes one to its Source, and reveals God face to face. One is, therefore, exhorted to search daily for the Source of this Unstruck Music. Whatever one does and wherever one happens to be, one is asked to be a sacrifice unto His Name and to have ardent longing to behold Him and hear His voice.

Sant Dadu Dayal 

"From within, the indwelling Lord Himself 
     tells me. 
'The repetition of My Name alone 
     is true; all else is delusion.' 

"The Name, the essential Truth of the 
     three worlds, alone is efficacious. 
     0 Dadu. 
With discrimination, repeat it exclusively 
     day and night, 0 mind. 

"At every breath be devoted to it, and 
     thy Beloved will meet thee one day. 
Repetition is the path leading to bliss; 
thus hath the Master explained. 

"Be dedicated to God moment by moment, 
     even if thou art to lose thy life. 
No other way is there to support 
     the self. 

"Who is that ill-fated one preaching some 
     other means? 
Without the Name, tell me, where can 
     one find a foothold? asketh Dadu. 

"Let not the Name be separated for 
     a moment from within thy heart, 
     0 Dadu. 
Millions have been purified by 
     repeating God's Name alone. 

"Be dedicated to God while the body 
     is in good condition, 
Else later on, when the body and mind 
     are worn out, thou shalt repent, 
     sayeth Dadu. 

"The whole world is full of poison; rarely 
     someone is free from it, 0 Dadu. 
He alone will be free from poison 
     who is steeped in the Name 
     of the Supreme Lord.

"Repeat the Name with the pang of 
     separation, and sing its glory with 
     love and devotion. 
Fix thy mind in repetition with joy and 
     dedication, 0 Dadu. 

"While speaking or listening, giving 
     or taking, eating or drinking, 
Repeat the Name of God at all times, 
     0 Dadu, thus shalt the self rest 
     in the inner lotus."
(Encyclopedia of Saints of India, Volume 25: Sant Dadu Dayal)


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