Miracles
and moksha are Chidambaram's speciality. Overcome by the temple's
power, worshippers are drawn into the depths of their own soul. The
result is inner awakening, miraculous experiences, and at times complete
liberation from rebirth.
The Metaphysical Greatness of Chidambaram
All temples convey mystical truths through their architecture, images, stories, rituals and pageantry. But somehow Chidambaram, because of its age, association with great yogis and the unbroken devotion of its priesthood, has unparalleled power in awakening the devotee. Here is the home of the fifth of the elemental Lingams of air, earth, fire, water, ether. This Akasha Lingam, representing Siva as beyond form, is simply the empty space in a room beside Siva Nataraja in the Chitsabha, known as Chidambaram Rahasyam or "secret." All that one finds here are a yantra and golden arch decorated with bilva leaves. Another profound object of worship here is the Moksha Linga, a clear crystal again representing Parasiva, worshiped six times a day. It is said this Lingam was given to the Dikshitars by Lord Nataraja Himself, who hardened the rays coming out of the crescent moon on His head.
But the most
ancient and foremost attribute of Chidambaram is that at this very place
Supreme God Siva as Nataraja performed and continues to perform the
Dance of Bliss for the release of all souls from bondage. Begun in
formless stillness, His movement creates form, and subsequent movements
destroy the previous forms. At the end of the dance, when He stops,
there is again stillness, with no form created or destroyed. How to
witness such a dance? The various saints spoke at length about this
mysterious process, a combination of devotion and yoga. Chidambaram,
they said, is not an outside place, but within the highest chakras of
man himself. Such is the mystery of the dance, and the mystery of God
Realization. So we go to Chidambaram to seek this personal experience of
Supreme God Siva.
The Yajur Veda's Svetasvatara Upanishad
explains Lord Siva's nature, "All this universe is in the glory of God,
of Siva, the God of love. The heads and faces of men are His own, and He
is in the hearts of all. He is the never-created creator of all: He
knows all. He is pure consciousness, the creator of time, all-powerful,
all-knowing. He is the Lord of the soul and of nature and of the three
conditions of nature. From Him comes the transmigration of life and
liberation, bondage in time and freedom in eternity."
The
classical interpretation of Chidambaram's famous four-armed Siva
Nataraja form is given in the Chidambaram Mummani Kovai, a scripture
specifically on this temple. "O my Lord! Your hand holding the sacred
drum has made and ordered the heavens and earth and other worlds and
innumerable souls. Your lifted hand protects the multifarious animate
and inanimate extended universe. Your sacred foot, planted on the
ground, gives an abode to the tired soul, struggling in the toils of
karma. It is Your lifted foot that grants eternal bliss to those that
approach You." The Sivasutras of Vasugupta, from the Kashmir school of
Saivism, say, "The dancer is the Supreme Self."
Saint Tirumular
2,200 years ago revealed what has remained the most profound exposition
of Siva's dance. In the 8th chapter of the 8th tantra of Tirumantiram,
he says: "Siva is omnipresent with His grace remaining omnibenevolent.
Everywhere is the Holy Form, Siva-Sakti, Chidambaram and the Divine
Dance. Five are the dances of Siva: the Dance of Bliss, Dance of Beauty,
Dance in the Golden Hall and the Wondrous Dance. When He danced that
Dance of Bliss, the Vedas, the Agamas, the seven melodies, the seven
universes, the five elements and all the entirety of worlds danced. When
the Lord danced, the devas, asuras, humans, siddhas, vidyadharas, the
three primal Gods, the three and thirty other Gods, the seven rishis,
the several faiths and all, all creation, moveable and immovable, joined
Him in the dance.
"Siva's Dance of Bliss defies description,
as a red ruby, He dances the pure golden dance in flourishing Tillai, in
the jewelled Golden Hall, in the remote divine light and in Sivananda
bliss. The vision of Siva's Dance in the Golden Hall creates an intense
effect. He blesses the yogi and controls him. The yogi is steeped in
transcendental bliss. The goodly Dancer of Jnana [wisdom] Dance makes
him sit still and impassive, and then He resides within him. Having
witnessed the holy dance, you no longer hanker after worldly pleasures
and desires. The confusing thoughts and sorrows that worry you are
dispelled.
"To the beat of the rhythmic measure that arises
there, Sankara dances within the central sushumna nadi. Then He enters
and abides within you forever. He danced His nine dances for jivas
[souls] to revel and saktis to delight. He danced in forests, in the
thoughts of His devotees, in the junction of sushumna and in endless
jnana. Thus did He dance and dance in progression from jiva within to
jnana in the endless Void. Siva's spheres of dance within are the
central spinal column (Meru), the two nadis-ida (left) and pingala
(right), jiva's delta-shaped junction at ajna chakra and the sushumna
cavity at the top that is like the forest of Tillai. Ida and pingala are
the land of Mount Meru and the land of South that is further beyond.
Sushumna cavity is the Holy Hall, where the Lord of the Crescent Moon
performs His divine Dance of Bliss. Thus do the frontiers of the vast
universe lie-all encompassed by His Dance.
"In the ajna center
astral space between the eyebrows abides the luminous mantra `Aum.'
Verily, that is the holy temple of Chidambaram. The vast universe, the
cluster of tattvas, the Sadasiva, the central sushumna, the sathavi
sakti, the sambhavi sakti, the kundalini sakti-these serve as the seven
pedestals for the Transcendental Being to perform His Holy Dance. Your
birth cycle is snapped when you seek the varied dances, the songs sung
and the forms the great Gurupara assumes. They who full know that the
Guru within, that dances in the holy temple of Chidambaram, is
Form-Formless, will surely receive His divine grace the jnana way."
Saint Appar too extolled the preciousness of this vision. "If you could
see the arch of His brow, the budding smile on lips red as the kovvai
fruit, cool matted hair, the milk-white ash on coral skin, and the sweet
golden foot raised up in dance, then even human birth on this wide
earth would become a thing worth having. Brahma and Vishnu worship Him
every day with flowers and incense and sandal paste, for even they could
not behold His form. I, who have seen with these eyes the cloth of silk
on the ash-smeared God in Tillai's Golden Hall, have nothing left to
see."
The Magical Miracles of Chidambaram
Many famous
miracles have occurred at Chidambaram, both of inner transformation and
of outer magic. The first of the miracles would be that of Sage
Vyaghrapada himself. He was sent by his father, Rishi Madhyantinar, from
the Himalayas to the "earthly abode of Lord Siva where more blessings
could be attained from Lord Nataraja than through a great many yogic
feats." Once settled in the forest of Tillai trees which became
Chidambaram, the sage encountered difficulty in acquiring fresh flowers
for his daily worship of the Srimulanadar Siva Lingam. Hence he prayed
to Lord Siva for the tiger's hands and feet to climb and the tiger's
eyes to see in the dark. The wish granted, he would scale the highest of
trees to pick the choicest flowers in the pre-dawn darkness. He and his
fellow hermit, Sage Patanjali, are said to still reside in the inner
worlds at Chidambaram.
Chidambaram temple has the latest puja
of any temple in India, ending near midnight. All other temples close
earlier, it is said, so the Gods can come to witness Siva's dance. One
devotee, not believing this, hid near the temple entrance before the
last puja. And to his amazement, he did indeed see all the Gods
arriving!
The 9th-century saint, Manikkavasagar, composed many
songs about Chidambaram. While living there, he was challenged by a
Buddhist king to defend his Saivite beliefs in debate with an eloquent
Buddhist monk. Even though Manikkavasagar refuted all his points, the
monk refused to concede defeat, upon which Manikkavasagar prayed to Siva
for the Goddess of Speech to depart the monk, rendering him dumb. The
astounded king then challenged Manikkavasagar to restore speech to his
daughter, who had not spoken since birth. The saint subjected the girl
to a series of questions. Her reply became the famous song Tiruchazhal.
As a result of this miracle, the Buddhist king, the monk, his followers
and the king's people all converted to Saivism.
It is said
Manikkavasagar attained merger with Siva in the Chitsabha. So, too, did
many other Saiva saints, such as Tirunilakantar, Kochengan Cholan,
Ganampullar, Kurruvar, Maraijnana Sambandar, Hiranyavarman,
Vyaghrapadar, Patanjali, Upanmani, Vyasa, Nandan and Sukar.
Nambi Andar Nambi lived in the 10th century. When he was a boy, it
became his duty one day to perform puja at a shrine to Lord Ganesha.
Being young, he expected the God to actually eat the food offerings that
were made. When He did not, Nambi started crying and imploring Ganesha
to eat. Finally Ganesha came and ate the food. Nambi's father did not
believe this and came to see for himself. Once again Ganesha came at
Nambi's behest and ate the offerings. So when the Chola king, Rajaraja
I, desired to recover the many missing songs of the Saiva saints, he
sought Nambi's assistance. Nambi prayed to Lord Ganesha, who revealed
that the manuscripts were locked in a secret room at Chidambaram. Their
miraculous rediscovery was a tremendous event in the modern history of
Saivism. The many Devaram songs about Chidambaram and Lord Siva's dance
have served as enduring testimony attracting generations of pilgrims and
establishing Chidambaram as the foremost center of South Indian
Saivism.
During festivals, the great temple car is taken out
and pulled through the streets by thousands of devotees. One year it had
rained so heavily, the car became stuck in the mud. Suddenly everyone
heard a booming voice commanding the devotee Sendanar to sing. As soon
as he did, the car began to move and continued on without anyone's
pulling the ropes. This song became part of the Tirumurai, the collected
hymns of the Saiva saints.
In early days the Dikshitars used
to leave a copper plate at the shrine of Swarnakala Bhairavar each
night. In the morning it would be changed to gold. Unfortunately, this
miracle no longer happens.
Miracles at Chidambaram are not only
for saints or ancient times. Just last year* a women in the nearby
village of Attippattu was suffering a severe disease requiring major
surgery. There was a strong possibility she would not survive. The
Dikshitars advised her husband to light ghee lamps every Sunday near
Nataraja. When the day came for the surgery, new x-rays were taken, and
to the marvel of one and all there was a complete absence of disease. No
surgery was required.
In 1983 a team of geophysicists mapping
the Earth's gravity field told devotees that the town had the highest
reading they had so far encountered anywhere on the earth. Objects here
are heavier than anywhere else.
Just to be in Chidambaram is a
miracle, and one not limited to Hindu devotees. A local Muslim man
recently said, "No matter where I go I do not experience the
extraordinary feeling which I get only in Chidambaram." The area is
noted for its complete communal harmony, not broken even when trouble
broke out elsewhere in Bharat. "The peace here is unique," said a Hindu
man, "You live here for 10 days then you would know what I mean."
Perhaps this is why the Tamils say, "To attain salvation, one should be
born in Tiruvarur, die in Benares, think of Annamalai and live in
Chidambaram."
* 1995 post.
Courtesy: Hinduism Today
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