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The Vedas (Samskrit : वेदाः) are a large body of ancient sacred texts which have originated in [[Bharatavarsha (भरतवर्षम्)|Bharatavarsha]] ( भारतवर्षः | the ancient Indian subcontinent). The Vedic Seers have received the Vedas through revelation. Vedas are considered to be [[Apaurusheya (अपौरुषेयम्)|Apaurusheya]] (अपौरुषेयः), or entirely superhuman, without any authorship.<ref name=":022">Swami Sivananda, All About HInduism</ref> Composed in Vedic samskrit (वैदिकसंस्कृतम्), these texts constitute the oldest layer of samskrit literature and the oldest scriptures of the world.
The Vedas (Samskrit: वेद véda, "knowledge") are a large body of sacred ancient texts which have originated in [[Bharatvarsha|भारतवर्ष || Bharatavarsha]] or the Indian subcontinent. Composed in Vedic samskrit, these texts constitute the oldest layer of samskrit literature and the oldest scriptures of the world. The great Vedic commentator, of the thirteenth century, [[Sayanacharya (सायनाचार्यः)|Sayana]] has given a definition of the Veda-<blockquote>इष्टप्राप्ति - अनिष्टपरिहर्योर - अलौकिकम् - उपयम् यो ग्रन्थो वेदयति स वेदः ||</blockquote><blockquote>ishtaprapti-anishtapariharyor-alaukikam-upayam yo grantho vedayati  sa vedah ||</blockquote>Meaning : The  scripture,  which  describes  the  divine  method  for obtaining what is desirable and for giving up what is undesirable, is called Veda.  
 
  
This definition presents the purpose of the Veda. According to another definition, as per the sage [[Apastamba|अपस्तम्ब || Apastamba]]  <blockquote>मन्त्र - ब्रह्मन्योर् - वेदनामधेयम् ||</blockquote><blockquote>mantra-brahmanyor-vedanamadheyam ||</blockquote>Meaning : 'The Veda is the name given to the Mantras and the Brahmanas’.This definition describes the form of the 'Veda' because it could be divided mainly into these two great divisions--the Mantras and the Brahmanas. Accordingly, मन्त्र || Mantra part is the main part of the Veda and whatever is not Mantra is ब्राह्मण || Brahmana. Here it is interesting to know that many  ancient  definitions  of  Veda,  showing  its  significance,  form  or contents are given in ancient Indian texts. Generally speaking the word वेद || Veda signifies highest, sacred, eternal  and  divine  knowledge  as  well  as  the  texts embodying  that knowledge.
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The [[The Four Vedas (चतुर्वेदाः)|Four Vedas]] which are regarded as authoritative texts by the followers of [[Sanatana Dharma (सनातनधर्मः)|Sanatana Dharma]] are Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), Samaveda (सामवेदः ) and [[Atharvaveda]] (अथर्ववेदः). The Yajurveda is again divided into two parts- The Shukla (शुक्लः) and the Krishna (कृष्णः). The Krishna or the Taittiriya (तैत्तिरीयः) is the older version and the Shukla or the वाजसनेयी ॥ Vajasaneyi is a later revelation to Maharshi Yajnavalkya (याज्ञवल्क्यः) from [[Surya (सूर्यः)|Surya (सूर्यः]]).<ref name=":022" /> The Rigveda is divided into twenty one sections, the Yajurveda into one hundred and nine sections, the Samaveda into one thousand sections and the Atharvaveda into fifty sections. In all, the [[Veda Vargeekarana (वेदवर्गीकरणम्)|Veda]] is thus divided into one thousand one hundred and eighty shakhas (शाखाः | recensions).<ref name=":022" />
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== परिचयः|| Introduction ==
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The great Vedic commentator, of the thirteenth century, सायणाचार्यः ॥ [[Sayanacharya (सायनाचार्यः)|Sayanacharya]] has given a definition of the वेदः ॥ Veda. <blockquote>इष्टप्राप्ति - अनिष्टपरिहर्योर् - अलौकिकम् - उपायम् यो ग्रन्थो वेदयति स वेदः || iṣṭaprāpti - aniṣṭapariharyora - alaukikam - upayam yo grantho vedayati sa vedaḥ ||<ref name=":62">Dvivedi, Kapil Dev. (2000) ''Vaidika Sahitya evam Samskrti (Vedic Literature and Culture).'' Varanasi: Vishvavidyalaya Prakashan. (Pages 1 and 2)</ref></blockquote>Meaning : The scripture, which describes the divine method for obtaining what is desirable and for giving up what is undesirable, is called वेदः ॥ Veda.  
  
== परिचय || Introduction ==
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This definition presents the purpose of the वेदः Veda. According to another definition, as per the Paribhasha sutras of अपस्तम्बः || Apastamba,<blockquote>मन्त्र - ब्रह्मन्योर् - वेदनामधेयम् || mantra - brahmanyor - vedanāmadheyam || (Apas. Pari. 33)<ref>Apastamba Paribhasha Sutras ([https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.273855/2015.273855.The-Apastamba#page/n17/mode/2up Kanda 1])</ref> </blockquote>Meaning : The वेदः ॥ Veda is the name given to the मन्त्राः ॥ Mantras and the ब्राह्मणानि ॥ Brahmanas.  
[[Sanatana Dharma|सनातन धर्म || Sanatana Dharma]], the lifestyle of Hindu people living in the Indian subcontinent, advocates that the Vedas are अपौरुषेय apauruṣeya ("not of a man" and "impersonal, authorless"). However, classical samskrit works which are different from the Vedic texts such as the महाकाव्य || mahakavyas and गद्य काव्य || gadya kavyas by different poets are available in great volumes. These texts are essentially different from the Vedas where the usage of Samskrit language is also different from the Vedic period. Vedic Samskrit is more ancient than classical Samskrit. Long before [[Panini]] systematized classical Samskrit grammar, निरुक्तम् || Niruktam was used to interpret Vedic Samskrit words.  
 
  
Vedas are also called श्रुति || Shrutis ("what is heard") distinguishing them from other religious
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This definition describes the form of the वेदः ॥ Veda because it could be divided mainly into these two great divisions--the मन्त्राः ॥ Mantras and the ब्राह्मणानि ॥ Brahmanas. Accordingly, Mantra part is the main part of the Veda and whatever is not Mantra is Brahmana. Here, it is interesting to know that many ancient definitions of Veda, showing its significance, form  or contents are given in ancient Indian texts. Generally speaking, the word Veda signifies highest, sacred, eternal and divine knowledge as well as the texts embodying that knowledge.<ref name=":1">Narayanacharya, K. S. (2011). ''Veda Sanskritiya Parichaya''. Hubli:​Sahitya Prakashana​.</ref>
texts, which are called स्मृति || Smṛti (what is remembered). The Vedas are revelations of ancient sages after intense meditation, passed on to thousands of future generations by शब्द ॥ shabd (sound) or transmitted verbally, thus carefully preserved since ancient times. Texts have been written and preserved in later ages.  
 
  
In the Mahabharata, the creation of Vedas is credited to
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The Vedas (shruti) are a class of texts completely different from other texts based on Vedas such as Shrauta Sutra (श्रौतसूत्रम्) and GrhyaSutra (गृह्यसूत्रम्), which are classified under smrti texts.<ref name=":03">Acharya Dharma Deva Vidya Martanda. (2002). ''[https://archive.org/details/RigvedaWww.aryamantavya.in The Rigveda, with Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati's commentary, English translation, Vol I]''. New Delhi:Sarvadeshik Arya Pratinidhi Sabha.</ref>
Brahma. The Vedic hymns themselves assert that they were skillfully created by ऋषि || Rishis (sages), after inspired creativity, just as a
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== वैदिकसाहित्यं लौकिकसाहित्यं च ॥ Vaidika and Laukika Sahitya ==
carpenter builds a chariot. The Vedas (sruti) are different from other Vedic era texts such as श्रौत सूत्र || Shrauta Sutras and ग्र्यह सूत्र || Gryha Sutras, which are smriti texts.
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Classical samskrit works (लौकिकसाहित्यम्  | laukika sahitya), such as the mahakavyas ( महाकाव्यानि | the five great classic works on poetic form) and gadya kavyas (गद्यकाव्यानि | prose works) by various poets, are significantly different from the Vedic texts and are available in great volumes. Vedic texts and their usage of Samskrit language are distinct from the classical samskrit texts. Vedic Samskrit is more ancient than classical Samskrit. Long before Panini (पाणिनिः) systematized classical Samskrit grammar, Nirukta (निरुक्तम् ) was used to interpret Vedic Samskrit words.  
  
Vedic samskrit language being ancient is difficult to understand without the knowledge of Vedangas, especially [[Nirukta (निरुक्तम्)|निरुक्तम् || Nirukta]] of Maharshi Yaska and the grammar of Panini and Patanjali. Maharshi [[Yaska']]<nowiki/>s Nirukta is special in that it is not only a dictionary of Vedic words but also an explanatory text for different Vedic terms.   
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Vedas are also called Shruti (श्रुतिः | what is heard) distinguishing them from other religious texts, which are called Smṛiti (स्मृतिः | what is remembered). The Vedas are revelations of ancient sages after intense meditation, passed on to thousands of future generations by shabda (शब्दः | sound) or transmitted verbally thus, carefully preserved since ancient times. Vedic texts have been written and preserved in much later ages.   
  
With the availability of modern technological advancements, vast data on various topics is created, in different parts of the world, dispersed all over the globe. Thus, people generated a large number of genuine as well as falsely interpreted data about the Vedas of Bharatavarsha.
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वैदिकसंस्कृतम् ॥ [[Vedic Language (वैदिकभाषा)|Vedic samskrit language]] being ancient is difficult to understand without the knowledge of [[Shad Vedangas (षड्वेदाङ्गानि)|Vedangas (वेदाङ्गानि)]], especially Nirukta of Maharshi Yaska (महर्षिः यास्कः) and the grammar of Panini and Patanjali (पतञ्जलिः). Maharshi Yaska's Nirukta is special in that, it is not only a dictionary of Vedic words but also an explanatory text for different Vedic terms.
  
== Ownership of the Vedas ==
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With the availability of modern technological advancements, vast data on various topics is created, in different parts of the world, dispersed all over the globe. Thus, people generated a large number of genuine as well as falsely interpreted data about the Vedas of Bharatavarsha (in the form of blogs, educational sites, wikipedia for example).
The ownership of our knowledge systems are mainly in the hands of foreigners (through Indology) or Indians trained by Westerners who write our इतिहास || Itihasa (history) from the colonial standpoint, which is to maintain Western hegemony in academia and promote “Western Universalism”. This strategy of conquest has been in operation since the Edinburgh enlightenment (1750, as cited by Dharampal 2000) which compelled the East India Company to change its barbaric methodologies of conquest used in Europe, the Africas & Americas (Todorov 1974) to a more subtle & devious method to conquer India. The result was a complete infiltration of western false interpretation of Vedas in our knowledge networks through gross error.
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== व्युत्पत्तिः॥Etymology  ==
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The samskrit word वेद (veda) "knowledge, wisdom" is derived from the root विद् (vid) - ज्ञाने (वेत्ति) || jñāne (vetti) in the meaning "to know" (Dhatupatha 1064). It is also derived from three other roots according to Swami Dayanand Saraswati.<ref name=":122" /> 
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* विद् सत्तायाम् || vid sattāyām (विद्यते || vidyate Dhatupatha 1171) in the meaning "existence"
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* विद् विचारणे || vid vicāraṇe (विन्ते || vinte Dhatupatha 1451) in the meaning "enquiry"
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* विद् लाभे || vid lābhe (विन्दति || vindati Dhatupatha 1433) in the meaning "gain or result"
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The four terms वेदः || Veda, आम्नायः || Amnaya, त्रयी || Trayi, श्रुतिः || Shruti are synonymous according to अमरकोशः ॥ Amarakosha.  
  
Vedic scholarship in India, in the true sense of the term, appears to have ceased with the great work of Maharishi Yaska, albeit with a few exceptions like Swami Dayanand, Shri Aurobindo and Shri Tulsi Ram. Swami Dayananda asserts that the commentaries of modern writers like Sayana, Skanda, Vejikaa, Mahidhara and Western Indologists are gross misinterpretations. Many great Indian scholars endeavor to bring back the great Vedic tradition by translations conducted with Bharatiya perspective. Many drawbacks can be pointed out as to the lack of visibility of Indian Scholars well versed in Vedas.
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Nine terms found in literature that are synonymous with the term Veda namely<ref>Venkateswara Rao. Potturi (2010) ''Paaramaathika Padakosam'' Hyderabad: Msko Books</ref><ref name=":62" />
# Many vedic scholars are aged seniors who chose to live in distant remote areas, silently practicing their knowledge.  Unable to imbibe different modern ways of life their existence has become obscure.
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# श्रुतिः || Shruti
# Mental and physical connect with the modern systems is lacking owing to simple lifestyle and lack of funds to these scholars.
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# अनुश्रवम् || Anushrava
# Indian Urban society discusses or views the modern so called "Indology", with the western indoctrination, refusing to accept the fundamental theories of the Vedic scholars.
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# त्रयी || Trayi
# English language given it's present day glory and spread, is grossly insufficient to explain the numerous nuances of the divine language samskrit.
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# आम्नायः || Amnaya
# Extensiveness of the Vedas and sufficiency of a lifetime to study and interpret them in modern sense requires expertise in both the subject and language which is difficult to achieve in a life time.
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# समाम्नायः || Samamnaya
# Invasion of Bharatavarsha by various foreigners have brought about adjustments and alterations in the धार्मिक || dharmic lifestyle as survival tactics against the foreign rulers, which brought about a loss of the fundamental principles advocated by the scriptures.
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# छन्दः || Chanda
# Modernization or replacement of ancient tools of work with modern instrumentation has led to loss of knowledge of such ancient systems which promote dharmic lifestyle inconveniencing the scholars and forcing many of them to adapt to such new lifestyles.
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# स्वाध्यायः || Svadhyaya
# Present day adaptation of western ways of life has replaced the ancient lifestyle leading to a cultural loss of vedic rituals and traditions, whereby the younger generations are unwilling to study or practice the older traditions. This led to formation of only a few scholars in the later generations.
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# आगमः || Agama
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# निगमः || Nigama
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The term Vedic texts is used in two distinct meanings:
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* Texts composed in Vedic Samskrit during the Vedic period
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* Texts considered as "connected to the Vedas" or a "ancillary of the Vedas".
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The samskrit term veda as a common noun means "knowledge", but can also be used to refer to fields of study unrelated to adhyatmik knowledge, e.g. in अगद-वेद || agada-veda (medical science), सस्य-वेद || sasya-veda (science of agriculture) or सर्प-वेद || sarpa-veda (science of snakes), already found in the early Upanishads.
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== वेदोत्पत्तिः || Vedotpatti ==
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Although the Vedas are said to be Sanatana (सनातनः । eternal), however their origin is credited to [[Brahma (ब्रह्मा)|Brahma (ब्रह्मा)]].  
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=== ब्रह्मा ॥ Brahma ===
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According to Shabdakalpadruma, <blockquote>ब्रह्ममुखनिर्गतधर्म्मज्ञापकशास्त्रम् इति पुराणम् |</blockquote><blockquote>brahmamukhanirgatadharmmajñāpakaśāstram iti purāṇam |</blockquote>Meaning : [[Puranas (पुराणानि)]] proclaim that vedas are shastras (शास्त्राणि) revealed from Brahma’s mouth that remind of one's Dharma (धर्मः).
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Regarding the origin of Vedas, Shabdakalpadruma further states that according to the Puranas and Markandeya rishi - once Brahma meditated on how to create and the Vedas then took birth out of Brahma's four faces with 21 shakas of Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), 100 shakhas of Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), 1000 shakhas of Samaveda (सामवेदः) and 9 shakhas of Atharvaveda (अथर्ववेदः) as given below.<blockquote>वेदस्य प्रादुर्भावो यथा कदाचित्कथं सृक्ष्यामीति ध्यायतो ब्रह्मणो मुखचतुष्टयेभ्यश्चत्वारो वेदाः प्रादुरासन् यथा </blockquote><blockquote>vedasya prādurbhāvo yathā kadācitkathaṃ sṛkṣyāmīti dhyāyato brahmaṇo mukhacatuṣṭayebhyaścatvāro vedāḥ prādurāsan yathā</blockquote><blockquote>एकविंशतिशाखात्मक - ऋक् १ शतशाखात्मक - यजुः २ सहस्रशाखामयसाम ३ नवशाखामयाथर्व्व ४ इति पुराणम् अपि च श्रीमार्कण्डेय उवाच । </blockquote><blockquote>ekaviṃśatiśākhātmaka - ṛk 1 śataśākhātmaka - yajuḥ 2 sahasraśākhāmayasāma 3 navaśākhāmayātharvva 4 iti purāṇam api ca śrīmārkaṇḍeya uvāca । </blockquote>In the Mahabharata also the creation of Vedas is credited to Brahma. The Vedic hymns themselves assert that they were skillfully created by Rishis (seers), after inspired creativity, just as a carpenter builds a chariot.
  
== Vedic Learning Methodology  ==
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=== ब्राह्मणाः ॥ Brahmanas ===
The Vedas followed the traditional oral tradition until Vyasadeva’s great contribution of putting it into a written format do so.  The titles for scholars who mastered the Vedas were:
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Brahmana mantras from different sources speak of the origin of  
# द्विवेदी || Dwivedi: two Vedas
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* Rigveda from [[Agni (अग्निः)]],
# त्रिवेदी || Trivedi: three Vedas
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* Yajurveda from [[Vayu (वायुः)]]
# चतुर्वेदी || Chaturvedi: four Vedas.
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* Samaveda from [[Surya (सूर्यः)]] also called रविः। Ravi and आदित्यः । Aditya.
These remain now as surnames of people in India. पण्डित || Pandits (priests) or laypeople who perform pujas or rituals either in the temple, home or workplace offer mantras, called मन्त्र पुष्प || mantra pushpa (a collection of all the four Vedas).This clearly reveals that the four Vedas co-existed and not as the diabolical Indologist claimed, one after the other. The very fact that same mantras are available in different vedas in different formats indicate the oneness of all vedas.
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<blockquote>तेभ्यस्तप्तेभ्यस्त्रयो वेदा अजायन्त । अग्नेर्ऋग्वेदो वायोर्यजुर्वेदः सूर्यात् सामवेदः । (Shat. Brah. 11.5) as given by Pt. Sri Jayadevaji Sharma<ref name=":2">Sharma, Pt Sri Jayadevaji (2008) ''Rigveda Samhita Bhashabhashya Volume 1'' Ajmer: Arya Sahitya Mandal Ltd</ref><ref>Singh, Ahilya. (2010) PhD Thesis Title: [http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/180070/3/03_chapter%201.pdf Pracheen bharat mein aarthik jeevan prarambh se vaidik kaal tak]. V. B. S. Purvanchal University.</ref></blockquote><blockquote>tebhyastaptebhyastrayo vedā ajāyanta । agnerṛgvedo vāyoryajurvedaḥ sūryāt sāmavedaḥ । (Shat. Brah. 11.5) as given by Pt. Sri Jayadevaji Sharma</blockquote><blockquote>तेभ्योऽभितप्तेभ्यस्त्रयो वेदा अजायन्त ऋग्वेद एवाग्नेरजायत यजुर्वेदो वायोः सामवेद आदित्यात् (Aite. Brah. 5.32)<ref>Aitareya Brahamana ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%90%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%B0%E0%A5%87%E0%A4%AF_%E0%A4%AC%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%B9%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%A3%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%8D/%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%9E%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9A%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%BE_%E0%A5%AB_(%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%9E%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9A%E0%A4%AE_%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%9E%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9A%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%BE) Panchaka 5])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>tebhyo'bhitaptebhyastrayo vedā ajāyanta ṛgveda evāgnerajāyata yajurvedo vāyoḥ sāmaveda ādityāt (Aite. Brah. 5.32)</blockquote>
  
A question may be, "all the मन्त्र || mantras, सूक्त || suktas, and अनुवाक || anuvakas that are being recited now did they exist then"?  To answer the non-believer and non-discerning  the example of the पुरुष सूक्त || Purusha suktas and other works can be used which makes it clear that the yagna related suktas were not in the same form as presently available but were available in another form. Also the fact that a यज्ञ || Yagna would not take place unless there was one Rik, one Yajasva and one Sama. The Rik must have expanded over time just as trees give us more flowers and fruits time goes yet belong to same species. Similarly, for posterity, the later Rishis invoked the new suktas or mantras based upon their particular इष्ट देव || Ishta Deva which then became a part of ऋक || Rik, यजस्व || Yajasva and साम || Sama Vedas. As they came more into usage they were integrated with the existing Suktas, so the foundational meaning remains as in the Vedas. Over different time periods the देव || Devas nor the क्रिया || kriyas (rituals) did not change their integral meaning. This is the nature of the the सम्प्रदाय || Sampradaya style of गुरु शिष्य || Guru sishya learning (disciplined succession).
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=== मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti ===
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<blockquote>अग्निवायुरविभ्यस्तु त्रयं ब्रह्म सनातनम् । दुदोह यज्ञसिद्ध्यर्थं ऋग्यजुःसामलक्षणम् । । १.२३ । ।(Manu. Smri. 1.23)<ref>Manusmriti ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%A8%E0%A5%81%E0%A4%B8%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%83%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%83/%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%A5%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%8B%E0%A4%A7%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%83 Adhyaya 1])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>agnivāyuravibhyastu trayaṃ brahma sanātanam । dudoha yajñasiddhyarthaṃ ṛgyajuḥsāmalakṣaṇam । । 1.23 । ।(Manu. Smri. 1.23)</blockquote>Manusmrti also
  
This phenomenal system helped disseminate and retain knowledge widely without much difficulty. In the Rikvedic time all were not Rishis. Notably, Vedas were not common knowledge. If we understand the connection of pure lineage or गोत्र || Gotras, the strict disciplinary life in [[Gurukula (गुरुकुल)|गुरुकुल || Gurukula]], the austerity of the Rishis’ lifestyle, the process of protecting secret meanings of Vedas and process of right way of reciting the mantras - it helps us understand that it was possible to protect one integral voice of Vedas. Therefore while many Veda suktas disappeared, it is important to note that they were replaced by new suktas with the same meaning and function. All Acharyas accept that studying the Vedas is mandatory for understanding the integral meaning of Vedas. If every one had accepted every Upanishad has different import, every आचार्य || acharya has different conclusions and according to diversity of teacher there are different understanding of Vedas then there would have been no clash among different schools hence this shows that  every one believes that there is only one essential understanding.
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===मुण्डक-उपनिषद् ॥ Mundaka Upanishad===
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The Upanishad texts base their adhyatmik philosophy on Vedas and describe the origin of vedas to be from the Parabrahma (परब्रह्मन् । Infinite Consciousness).<ref name=":032">Acharya Dharma Deva Vidya Martanda. (2002). ''[https://archive.org/details/RigvedaWww.aryamantavya.in The Rigveda, with Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati's commentary, English translation, Vol I]''. New Delhi:Sarvadeshik Arya Pratinidhi Sabha.</ref><ref>Swami Sharvananda (1920) ''Mundaka and Mandukya Upanishads'', Madras:Sri Ramakrishna Math</ref><blockquote>तस्मादृच: साम यजूंषि दीक्षा || tasmādṛca: sāma yajūṃṣi dīkṣā || (Mund. Upan. 2.1.6)<ref>The Works of Sri Sankaracharya (1910) [https://archive.org/stream/CompleteWorksOfSriSankaracharyaIn20Volumes1910Edition/WorksOfSriSankaracharya05-MundakaMandukyaAitareyaUpanishads1#page/n57/mode/2up ''The Upanishad Bhashya - Munda, Mandukya, & Aitereya. Vol 5''] Srirangam: Sri Vani Vilas Press</ref></blockquote>Meaning: From Him (the परब्रह्मन् ॥ Parabrahma) arise the the mantras of Rks, Yajus (यजुस्) and Sama (साम) vedas.<ref name=":032" />
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===बृहदारण्यक-उपनिषद् ॥ Brhdaranyaka Upanishad===
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Brhdaranyaka Upanishad ascribes the origin of Vedas from the breath of the Supreme Being <blockquote>....एतस्य वा महतो भूतस्य नि:श्वसितमेतद् यद् ऋग्वेदो यजुर्वेद: सामवेदोऽथर्वाङ्गिरस .... || (Brih. Upan. 4.5.11)<ref>Brhdaranyaka Upanishad ([https://archive.org/stream/Brihadaranyaka.Upanishad.Shankara.Bhashya.by.Swami.Madhavananda#page/n805/mode/2up Adhyaya 4])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>....etasya vā mahato bhūtasya ni:śvasitametad yad ṛgvedo yajurveda: sāmavedo'tharvāṅgirasa .... || (Brih. Upan. 4.5.11)</blockquote>Meaning:  From the breath (exhalation) of this Supreme Being have arisen the Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), Samaveda (सामवेदः) and Atharvaveda (अथर्ववेदः).<ref name=":033">Acharya Dharma Deva Vidya Martanda. (2002). ''[https://archive.org/details/RigvedaWww.aryamantavya.in The Rigveda, with Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati's commentary, English translation, Vol I]''. New Delhi:Sarvadeshik Arya Pratinidhi Sabha.</ref>
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== वेदलक्षणानि || Vedalakshanas ==
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Vedas have the following important attributes summarized here, apart from the many other characteristics, as discussed by scholars over ages.
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* आस्तिकत्वम् ॥ Astikatva (Belief in existence of a Supreme power)
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* अलौकिकत्वम् ॥ Alaukikatva (Brahmajnana-Knowledge of Supreme being)
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* अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ Apaurusheyatva (Authorless)
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* अनन्तत्वम् ॥ Anantatva (Endless)
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* सनातनत्वम् ॥ Sanatanatva (Eternal)
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* धर्मसाधकत्वम् ॥ Dharmasadhakatva (Means of Dharma)
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* सर्वज्ञानमूलकत्वम् ॥ Sarvajnanamulakatva (Source of all knowledge)
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In मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti, Manu extensively discusses various aspects of Vedas in the 12th अध्यायः ॥ Adhayaya.
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=== आस्तिकत्वम् ॥ Astikatva ===
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आस्तिकता ॥ Astikata is the belief in the existence of a Supreme power, superior to man, called variously as Brahman, Paramatma etc. This aspect has been described in different flavors by different rshis, scholars and acharyas but the essence of [[Sanatana Dharma (सनातनधर्मः)]] is that they are all Astika or holding a firm belief in the existence of a Supreme Being or force that is all pervading, all encompassing, higher than the man. The Vedas are full of mantras which tell us beyond doubt that this power (entity) is not only Supreme but also is One.<ref name=":0">Vidyamartand, Acharya Dharmadeva. (2008) ''Solutions to Modern Problems in Vedas'' Rajasthan:Sri Ghudmal Prahladkumar Arya Dharmarth Nyas</ref><blockquote>उप त्वाग्ने दिवेदिवे दोषावस्तर्धिया वयं | नमो भरन्त एमसि || १४ || (Sama. Veda. 1.1.1.2.14)<ref name=":0" /><ref>Samavedam Kauthumeeya shaka ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%B8%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%B5%E0%A5%87%E0%A4%A6%E0%A4%83/%E0%A4%95%E0%A5%8C%E0%A4%A5%E0%A5%81%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%80%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE/%E0%A4%B8%E0%A4%82%E0%A4%B9%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BE/%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%82%E0%A4%B0%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%B0%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9A%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%83/%E0%A4%9B%E0%A4%A8%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%A6_%E0%A4%86%E0%A4%B0%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9A%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%83/1.1.1_%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%A5%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A0%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%83/1.1.1.2_%E0%A4%A6%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%A4%E0%A5%80%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE_%E0%A4%A6%E0%A4%B6%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%83 Prapathaka 1])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>upa tvāgne divedive doṣāvastardhiyā vayaṃ | namo bharanta emasi || 14 || (Sama. Veda. 1.1.1.2.14)</blockquote>
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=== अलौकिकत्वम् ॥ Alaukikatva (Brahmavidya) ===
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The knower of Veda, wherever he stays in whatever ashrama he resides, becomes fit for the realization of Brahman<ref name=":122" /><blockquote>वेदशास्त्रार्थतत्त्वज्ञो यत्र तत्राश्रमे वसन् । इहैव लोके तिष्ठन्स ब्रह्मभूयाय कल्पते । । १२.१०२ ।  (Manu. Smri. 12.102)<ref name=":222" /></blockquote><blockquote>vedaśāstrārthatattvajño yatra tatrāśrame vasan । ihaiva loke tiṣṭhansa brahmabhūyāya kalpate । । 12.102 ।  (Manu. Smri. 12.102)</blockquote>
  
== The Dharmic (Indian) Worldview ==
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=== अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ Apaurusheyatva ===
A clash between the ideologies of modernity and the philosophy of civilization of cultures could have dangerous repercussions and this has been a frequently recurring thought in contemporary discourse. To understand the implications of these notions it becomes essential to emphasize that religion and dharma are not synonymous and hence cannot be talked of in the same breath.
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सनातनधर्मः || Sanatana Dharma based lifestyle of Hindu people living in the Indian subcontinent, advocates that the Vedas are अपौरुषेयः ॥ apauruṣheya ("not of a man" and "impersonal, authorless").
  
Dharma is regarded as the greatest and most valuable contribution to humanity by Bharatavarsha. Dharma is a samskrit expression of the widest import. There is no corresponding word for Dharma in any other language in this world as it is a unique and ancient concept promulgated by rushis since times immemorial. It would be futile to attempt to give any definition of the word. It can only be explained and has a wide variety of meanings. For instance, the word "Dharma" is used to mean न्याय || Nyaya (Justice), what is right in a given circumstance, moral values of life, pious obligations of individuals, righteous conduct in every sphere of activity, being helpful to the the needy, giving charity to individuals in need or for a public cause, natural qualities or properties of characteristics of a living being or things, duty and law as also constitutional law. Mahabharata which is acclaimed as the मानव कर्तव्य शास्त्र || Manava kartavya sastra, has a discussion of this topic in the form of conversation between Yudhistira and Bhishma thus,  <blockquote>तादृशोऽयमनुप्रश्नो यत्र धर्मः सुदुर्लभः  ।</blockquote><blockquote>दुष्करः प्रतिसंख्यातुं तत्केनात्र व्यवस्यति  ॥</blockquote><blockquote>प्रभावार्थाय भूतानां धर्मप्रवचनं कृतम्    ।</blockquote><blockquote>यः स्यात्प्रभवसंयुक्तः स धर्म इति निश्चयः ॥  (Maha. Shanti. 109-9-11)</blockquote><blockquote>tādṛśo'yamanupraśno yatra dharmaḥ sudurlabhaḥ |</blockquote><blockquote>duṣkaraḥ pratisaṃkhyātuṃ tatkenātra vyavasyati || </blockquote><blockquote>prabhāvārthāya bhūtānāṃ dharmapravacanaṃ kṛtam |</blockquote><blockquote>yaḥ syātprabhavasaṃyuktaḥ sa dharma iti niścayaḥ || (Maha. Shanti. 109-9-11)</blockquote>Meaning : It is most difficult to define Dharma. Dharma has been explained to be that which helps the upliftment of living beings. Therefore, that which helps ensures the welfare of living beings is surely Dharma. The learned rishis have declared that which sustains is Dharma.<blockquote>धारणाद् धर्म इत्याहुर्धर्मो धारयते प्रजाः |</blockquote><blockquote>यत् स्याद् धारणसंयुक्तं स धर्म इति निश्चयः || (Maha. Karna. 69-58)</blockquote><blockquote>dhāraṇād dharma ityāhurdharmo dhārayate prajāḥ |</blockquote><blockquote>yat syād dhāraṇasaṃyuktaṃ sa dharma iti niścayaḥ || (Maha. Karna. 69-58)</blockquote>Meaning : The above verse eulogizes Dharma as follows " Dharma sustains the society, Dharma maintains the social order, Dharma ensures the well being and progress of humanity, Dharma is surely that which fulfills these objectives"
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शब्दकल्पद्रुमः ॥ Shabdakalpadruma gives about the अपौरिषेयत्व ॥ Apaurusheyata of Vedas as <blockquote>धर्मब्रह्मप्रतिपादकमपौरुषेयवाक्यम् इति वेदान्तशास्त्रम् | </blockquote><blockquote>dharmabrahmapratipādakamapauruṣeyavākyam iti vedāntaśāstram |</blockquote>Meaning : वेदान्तशास्त्रम् ॥ Vedanta shastra says, वेदाः ॥ Vedas propound अपौरुषेयः ॥ Apaurusheya or author-less words about धर्मः ॥ Dharma and ब्रह्मन्॥ Brahman.
  
Therefore, Dharma embraces every type of righteous conduct covering every aspect of life essential for the sustenance and welfare of the individual and society and includes those rules which guide and enable those who believe in God and heaven to attain मोक्ष || moksha (eternal bliss).  The necessity of scrupulous practice of Dharma is forcefully expressed in Manusmriti thus:<blockquote>धर्म एव हतो हन्ति धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः |</blockquote><blockquote>तस्माध्दर्मो न हन्तव्यो मा नो धर्मो हतोऽवधीत्  || (Manu 6-11-15)</blockquote><blockquote>dharma eva hato hanti dharmo rakṣati rakṣitaḥ |</blockquote><blockquote>tasmādhdarmo na hantavyo mā no dharmo hato'vadhīt || (Manu 6-11-15)</blockquote>Meaning : Dharma protects those who protect it. Those who destroy Dharma get destroyed. Therefore, Dharma should not be destroyed so that we may not be destroyed as a consequence thereof.
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According to कुल्लुकभट्ट ॥ Kulluka Bhatta's commentary on मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti (Manusmriti with 9 Commentaries, Page 52)<ref name=":122" /><blockquote>सनातनं नितेयम् । वेदापौरुषेयत्वपक्ष एव मनोरभिमतः। पूर्वकल्पे ये वेदास्त एव परमात्ममूर्तेर्ब्रह्मणः सर्वज्ञस्य स्मृत्यारूढाः । तानेव कल्पादौ अग्निवायुरविभ्य आचकर्ष।<ref>Dave, Jayantakrishna Harikrishna. (1972) ''[https://archive.org/stream/ManusmritiWith9SktCommentariesDhaveJ.H.BharatiyaVidyaBhavanCompleteAllVolumes/Manusmriti%20with%20%209%20Skt%20Commentaries%20Dhave%20J.H.%20Bharatiya%20Vidya%20Bhavan%20%20%28Complete%20All%20Volumes%29#page/n73/mode/2up Manusmriti with 9 Sanskrit Commentaries, Volume 1]'' Bombay : Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan</ref></blockquote><blockquote>sanātanaṃ niteyam । vedāpauruṣeyatvapakṣa eva manorabhimataḥ। pūrvakalpe ye vedāsta eva paramātmamūrterbrahmaṇaḥ sarvajñasya smṛtyārūḍhāḥ । tāneva kalpādau agnivāyuravibhya ācakarṣa।</blockquote>Kulluka Bhatta's acceptance of the वेदानाम् अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ vedānām apauruṣeyatvam is clearly given as above. कुल्लुकः ॥ Kulluka has quoted from the Veda, <blockquote>यथा च श्रुतिः - अग्नेर्ऋग्वेदो वायोर्यजुर्वेद आदित्यात्सामवेद ॥ yathā ca śrutiḥ - agnerṛgvedo vāyoryajurveda ādityātsāmaveda <ref name=":122" /> directly.</blockquote>
  
Contemporary knowledge and academia is not able to help us ascertain the right direction in life,. To understand Bharatiyata as experienced by our ancient Rishis and lead a Dharmic life requires revisiting our civilisational heritage through the wisdom bank of the Vedas. Compiling relevant literature that is timely, supportive and relevant to the original वेदविद्या || VedaVidya may be seen as regressive by self-styled modernists and liberals, but this should not deter us as it is an indication of the power of the annihilating  forces. Predictions of the future being bleak and bringing destruction are made regularly, yet the same destructive systems are seen as wisdom?  Notably, "If the future is seen as destructive, how come revisiting time-tested successful systems is seen as unproductive?"
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=== अनन्तत्वम् ॥ Anantatva ===
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Vedas  are  unlimited  in extent. What is stated in the Vedas is that they are verily endless - "ananta vai Vedah". It cannot be said that the Vedas in their entirety got revealed to the Rishis. Only a portion — a small portion of the limitless  Vedas —  became  revealed  to  them. The  four  Vedas  and  a  thousand  and odd  Veda saakhaas (or branches) of the Vedas are only a portion of what was made known to them as evident from the life of Bharadvaja rshi.
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<blockquote>अनन्ता वै वेदाः । (Tait. Brah. 3.10.11)<ref>Taittriya Brahmana ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%A4%E0%A5%88%E0%A4%A4%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%B0%E0%A5%80%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%AC%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%B9%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%A3%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%8D_(%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%B8%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A0%E0%A4%83)/%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A3%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%A1%E0%A4%83_%E0%A5%A9/%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A0%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%83_%E0%A5%A7%E0%A5%A6 Kanda 3 Prapathaka 10])</ref></blockquote>
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{{Box-round|title=Anantatva of Vedas - Bharadvaja Rshi's Story|content=Taittriya Brahmana recounts the anecdote of Bharadvaja Rshi who spent successive lifetimes to master Vedas and performed tapas to extend longevity. He had an immense quest for knowledge. He pleased Indra with his tapas and asked for another lifetime for learning Vedas. Indra appeared before him and showed him 3 mountains. Seeing the vast Vedarashi Bharadvaja Rshi was overwhelmed. Indra says, these mountains are the Vedarashis. They are endless and cannot be known in one lifetime. So seek the knowledge of Brahmavidya, which is the purpose of the Vedas. Indra picked one handful from each of the three mountains and declares that the knowledge acquired by Bharadvaja was equivalent to those 3 handfuls in all lifetimes he had. He was taught Agni Savitra Vidya by Indra. Thus Bharadvaja was cured of the pride of learning.}}
  
The compilation of our Dharmic texts also becomes essential as the self-appointed ‘knowledge leaders’ will need  some definitive yardstick to judge both the progressive and the destructive. Without such a yardstick, knowledge creation remains the outcome of a whimsical mind, or propaganda for political/territorial gains or media-generated fodder for control of the world’s resources by a few rich corporations, leading to eventual destruction.
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=== सनातनत्वम् ॥ Sanatanatva ===
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In the opinion of मनुः ॥ Manu, Veda is the eternal eye सनातनचक्षुः ॥ Sanatana Chakshu of पितृ || Pitru, देवः || Deva, and मनुष्यः || Manushya. Veda is beyond the sphere of human power to create (अशक्यम् || Ashakya) and beyond the human comprehension too (अप्रमेयम् || Aprameya).<ref name=":122">Patel, Gautam. (1999). ''Traditional Vedic Interpretations.'' New Delhi : Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan</ref><blockquote>पितृदेवमनुष्याणां वेदश्चक्षुः सनातनम् । अशक्यं चाप्रमेयं च वेदशास्त्रं इति स्थितिः । । १२.९४ (Manu. Smri. 12.94)<ref name=":222">Manusmriti ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%A8%E0%A5%81%E0%A4%B8%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%83%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%83/%E0%A4%A6%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A6%E0%A4%B6%E0%A5%8B%E0%A4%A7%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%83 Adhyaya 12])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>pitṛdevamanuṣyāṇāṃ vedaścakṣuḥ sanātanam । aśakyaṃ cāprameyaṃ ca vedaśāstraṃ iti sthitiḥ । । 12.94 (Manu. Smri. 12.94)</blockquote>
  
The euphoria over the digital revolution and the perceived increase in ‘knowledge' is a chimera, as the increase in information has also seen a parallel decline in knowledge-gathering. Consequently, opinions and beliefs not backed by evidence from primary sources is seen as intellectual rigor. In this alarming situation, it becomes necessary to reclaim our values based on the eternal culture of sanatana dharma that stands as a guidepost for the people of Bharat. At the same time, this endeavor helps support the movement for reclaiming our position of विश्वगुरु || Vishwaguru that guides the world towards renewal and progress.
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=== धर्ममूलकत्वम् ॥ Source of Dharma ===
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मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti has attached great importance to the Vedas and advocates primarily that the source of धर्मः ॥ Dharma are the वेदाः ॥ Vedas. Secondly, its source is attributed to tradition and the virtuous conduct of those who follow the Veda, thirdly, to the customs of holy men and finally आत्मनस्तुष्टिः ॥ Atmasantushti (satisfaction of the inner self).<ref name=":122" /><blockquote>वेदोऽखिलो धर्ममूलं स्मृतिशीले च तद्विदाम् । आचारश्चैव साधूनां आत्मनस्तुष्टिरेव च । । २.६ । । (Manu. Smri. 2.6)<ref>Manusmriti ([https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%A8%E0%A5%81%E0%A4%B8%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%83%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%83/%E0%A4%A6%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B5%E0%A4%BF%E0%A4%A4%E0%A5%80%E0%A4%AF%E0%A5%8B%E0%A4%A7%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%83 Adhyaya 2])</ref></blockquote><blockquote>vedo'khilo dharmamūlaṃ smṛtiśīle ca tadvidām । ācāraścaiva sādhūnāṃ ātmanastuṣṭireva ca । । 2.6 । । (Manu. Smri. 2.6)</blockquote>Further मनुः ॥ Manu says - The eternal वेदशास्त्रम् ॥ Veda shastra upholds or protects all beings (by being their flawless guideline). Those endeavoring for the welfare of all beings (यज्जन्तः) regard Vedas as their supreme authoritative instrument in achieving it.<blockquote>बिभर्ति सर्वभूतानि वेदशास्त्रं सनातनम् । तस्मादेतत्परं मन्ये यज्जन्तोरस्य साधनम् । । १२.९९ । । (Manu. Smri. 12.99)<ref name=":222" /></blockquote><blockquote>bibharti sarvabhūtāni vedaśāstraṃ sanātanam । tasmādetatparaṃ manye yajjantorasya sādhanam । । 12.99 । । (Manu. Smri. 12.99)</blockquote>मनुः ॥ Manu declares that He alone knows the Dharma who explores the utterances of the ancient sages by the means of reasoning which is not against the Vedas.<ref name=":122" /><blockquote>आर्षं धर्मोपदेशं च वेदशास्त्राविरोधिना । यस्तर्केणानुसंधत्ते स धर्मं वेद नेतरः । । १२.१०६ । । (Manu. Smri. 12.106)<ref name=":222" /></blockquote><blockquote>ārṣaṃ dharmopadeśaṃ ca vedaśāstrāvirodhinā । yastarkeṇānusaṃdhatte sa dharmaṃ veda netaraḥ । । 12.106 । । (Manu. Smri. 12.106)</blockquote>
  
== Translation of Vedas  ==
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=== सर्वज्ञानमूलकत्वम् ॥ Source of all knowledge ===
Translation in the ancient अर्ष || Arsha tradition as done by authentic Vedic scholars is factual and done without prejudice and with no extraneous motive or for an academic agenda. Vedam is verily the भागवत वाणी || Bhagavat Vaani (Words of Brahma) revealed in scientific Vedic samskrit free from local color and historical acts, therefore Vedic language is to be interpreted and understood according to its own laws and structure, and the only key available for such interpretation is the निरुक्तम् || Nirukta of Maharshi Yaska and the grammar of Panini & [[Patanjali (पतञ्जलि)|Patanjali]].
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According to Brhadyogi-Yajnavalkya-Smriti (Page No. 11 of Ved aur Vedarth)<ref name=":13">Shastri, Jwalanth Kumar. (2009) ''Ved aur vedarth'' Rajasthan: Sri Ghudhmal Prahladkumar Arya Dharmarth Nyasa</ref><ref name=":03" /><blockquote>न वेदशास्त्रादन्यत्तु किंचिच्छास्त्रं हि विद्यते । निःसृतं सर्वशास्त्रं तु वेदशास्त्रात् सनातनम् ॥ (Brha. Smri . 12.1)</blockquote><blockquote>na vedaśāstrādanyattu kiṃcicchāstraṃ hi vidyate । niḥsṛtaṃ sarvaśāstraṃ tu vedaśāstrāt sanātanam ॥ (Brha. Smri . 12.1)</blockquote>Meaning: There is no other shastra greater than the veda shastra because all shastras emanate from the eternal vedashastra.<ref>Gharote. M. L. (1982) ''[https://archive.org/details/BrihadYogiYajnavalkyaSmritiEnglishTranslationBruhadGharoteM.L.BadekarV.A.KaivalyaDham Brhadyogi-yagnavalkya-smriti, English Translation]'' Lonavla : Kaivalyadhama S. M. Y. M. Samiti</ref>
  
A literal translation of the Vedas creates confusions and contradictions as the English language is insufficient to express the deep inner meaning embedded in Vedas. A good commentator, should be adept in languages, carefully choose words, and explain with derivatives to analyse the hidden nuances of meaning within their context but not always can it be understood by the reader.
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The महाभारतम् ॥ Mahabharata says - <blockquote>यानीहागमशास्त्राणि याश्च काश्चित्प्रवृत्तयः। तानि वेदं पुरस्कृत्य प्रवृत्तानि यथाक्रमम्॥ (Maha. Anushasana Parva 122-4)<ref>Shrimad Mahabharata ([http://www.rsvidyapeetha.ac.in/cgi-bin/maha/out-parva.cgi Anushasana Parva]) </ref></blockquote><blockquote>yānīhāgamaśāstrāṇi yāśca kāścitpravṛttayaḥ। tāni vedaṃ puraskṛtya pravṛttāni yathākramam॥ (Maha. Anushasana Parva 122-4)</blockquote>All the आगम-s || Agamas and शास्त्र-s || shastras whichever are created and are available now have been built using the Vedas as the foundation.<ref name=":13" />
  
For example, the literal meaning of the verse,<blockquote>सुमित्रिय न आप ओषधयः सन्तु || (Yaju. Veda. 36.23)</blockquote><blockquote>sumitriya na aapa oshadhayah santu || (Yaju. Veda. 36.23)</blockquote>Meaning : May the waters, vital forces of life, and herbs be friendly to us and may they be enemies to those who hate us and whom we hate.
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== अधिकारः ॥ Ownership of Vedas ==
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The ownership of our knowledge systems are mainly in the hands of foreigners (through Indology) or Indians trained by Westerners who write our इतिहासः || Itihasa (history) from the colonial standpoint, which is to maintain Western hegemony in academia and promote Western Universalism. This strategy of conquest has been in operation since the Edinburgh enlightenment (1750, as cited by Dharampal 2000) which compelled the East India Company to change its barbaric methodologies of conquest used in Europe, the Africas & Americas (Todorov 1974) to a more subtle & devious method to conquer India. The result was a complete infiltration of western false interpretation of Vedas in our knowledge networks through gross error.<ref name=":1" />
  
The literal meaning is incomprehensible and meaningless. The contextual meaning of this mantra is:
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Vedic scholarship in India, in the true sense of the term, appears to have ceased with the great work of महर्षिः यास्कः ॥ Maharishi Yaska, albeit with a few exceptions like Swami Dayanand, Shri Aurobindo and Shri Tulsi Ram. Swami Dayananda asserts that the commentaries of modern writers like सायणाचार्यः ॥ Sayana, स्कन्दः ॥ Skanda, Vejikaa, महीधरः ॥ Mahidhara and Western Indologists are gross misinterpretations.{{Citation needed}}
  
"May waters, tonics, pranic energies and medicinal herbs be good friends of our health system and immunity and let the same waters, tonics, pranic energies herbal medicines act against
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Many great Indian scholars endeavor to bring back the great Vedic tradition by translations conducted with Bharatiya perspective. Many drawbacks can be pointed out as to the lack of visibility of Indian Scholars well versed in Vedas.{{Citation needed}}
those ailments, diseases and negativities which injure us, which we hate to suffer and which we love to destroy, moreover let them have no side effects because side effects too help the negativities and injure us".
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# Many vedic scholars are aged seniors who chose to live in distant remote areas, silently practicing their knowledge. Unable to imbibe different modern ways of life their existence has become obscure. 
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# Mental and physical connect with the modern systems is lacking owing to simple lifestyle and lack of funds to these scholars.
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# Indian Urban society discusses or views the modern so called "Indology", with the western indoctrination, refusing to accept the fundamental theories of the Vedic scholars.
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# English language given its present day glory and spread, is grossly insufficient to explain the numerous nuances of the divine language samskrit.
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# Extensiveness of the Vedas and sufficiency of a lifetime to study and interpret them in modern sense requires expertise in both the subject and language which is difficult to achieve in a life time.
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# Invasion of भारतवर्षः ॥ Bharatavarsha by various foreigners have brought about adjustments and alterations in the dharmic lifestyle as survival tactics against the foreign rulers, which brought about a loss of the fundamental principles advocated by the scriptures.
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# Modernization or replacement of ancient tools of work with modern instrumentation has led to loss of knowledge of such ancient systems which promote dharmic lifestyle inconveniencing the scholars and forcing many of them to adapt to such new lifestyles.
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# Present day adaptation of western ways of life has replaced the ancient lifestyle leading to a cultural loss of vedic rituals and traditions, whereby the younger generations are unwilling to study or practice the older traditions. This led to formation of only a few scholars in the later generations.
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== धर्मस्य वैदिकदृष्टिः ॥ The Vedic View of Dharma ==
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A clash between the ideologies of modernity and the philosophy of civilization of cultures could have dangerous repercussions and this has been a frequently recurring thought in contemporary discourse. To understand the implications of these notions it becomes essential to emphasize that religion and dharma are not synonymous and hence cannot be talked of in the same breath.
  
It becomes a powerful prayer for the well-being of an advanced society, and very logically the next Mantra expounds a prayer for a full hundred years and more of life and health.<blockquote>तच्चक्षुर्देवहितम् पुरुस्तत् || (Yaju. Veda. 36.24)</blockquote><blockquote>t<nowiki/><nowiki/>acchakshurdevahitam purastat<nowiki/>''<nowiki/>''<nowiki/> || (Yaju. Veda. 36.24)</blockquote>Swami Dayananda wrote in the post-colonized context after independence whereupon he called upon his countrymen "to go back to the Vedas" for eradication of social evils as he opined that the cause of degradation and slavery of Indian nation was the ignorance of true Vedic teaching on which our culture was based and also thrived. It is true that we became independent in 1947, but then we got freedom and not independence. We continue to function as an Anglo-Saxon cultural satellite mainly as a market for its ideology through the English language and a nursery to train a new generation of sepoys and Coolies.
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The Vedas are the source of all Dharmas (in moral, social, religious, judicial, and adhyatmik sense) that have been in practice since times immemorial and hence is called सनातनधर्मः ॥ Sanatana Dharma (eternal dharma).
  
Many works have been compiled lately as an attempt to reconnect our Vedic heritage to our people from which we have been disconnected since the 800-year foreign
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धर्मः ॥ Dharma is a samskrit expression of the widest import. There is no corresponding word for Dharma in any other language in this world as it is a unique and ancient concept promulgated by rishis since times immemorial. It would be futile to attempt to give any definition of the word. It can only be explained and has a wide variety of meanings. For instance, the word "Dharma" is used to mean Nyaya (न्यायः Justice), what is right in a given circumstance, moral values of life, pious obligations of individuals, righteous conduct in every sphere of activity, being helpful to the the needy, giving charity to individuals in need or for a public cause, natural qualities or properties of characteristics of a living being or things, duty and law as also constitutional law. धर्मः ॥ Dharma is regarded as the greatest and most valuable contribution to humanity by भारतवर्षः ॥ Bharatavarsha.  
domination (first by the Arabs and then by the Anglo-Saxons) of our land. As many acharyas say unless our people give up the Asuric principles of Western
 
economists and return to the Vedic path, no progress is possible in social,
 
political, economic and spritual spheres.
 
  
We need to revitalize our civilization like the call of Swami Dayananda post-independence to counter the
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Contemporary knowledge and academia is not able to help us ascertain the right direction in life. To understand धार्मिकता ॥ Bharatiyata as experienced by our ancient Rishis and lead a Dharmic life requires revisiting our civilisational heritage through the wisdom bank of the Vedas. Compiling relevant literature that is timely, supportive and relevant to the original वेदविद्या || VedaVidya may be seen as regressive by self-styled modernists and liberals, but this should not deter us as it is an indication of the power of the annihilating forces.<ref name=":1" />
Indologist’s narrative of Caste system, idolatry, untouchability, all types of
 
superstitions and slaughtering of animals in the sacrifices, and even the नर-मेध || Nara-medha (human
 
sacrifices), results of wrong Vedic interpretations, many such things that
 
Hindus had to pay heavily for since the last 300 years.
 
  
The central importance of the new-age Vedic
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Predictions of the future being bleak and bringing destruction are made regularly, yet the same destructive systems are seen as wisdom? Notably, "If the future is seen as destructive, how come revisiting time-tested successful systems is seen as unproductive?" The compilation of our Dharmic texts also becomes essential as the self-appointed ‘knowledge leaders’ will need  some definitive yardstick to judge both the progressive and the destructive. Without such a yardstick, knowledge creation remains the outcome of a whimsical mind, or propaganda for political/territorial gains or media-generated fodder for control of the world’s resources by a few rich corporations, leading to eventual destruction.
translations is that it presents the Vedas from its primary sources, especially in a context where knowledge systems are directed by propaganda from Internet sources and social media and not evidence-based facts.  
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== संवादः ॥ Discussion ==
  
== सम्वाद || Discussion ==
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=== '''Western Indology''' ===
'''Western Indology'''
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The study of samskrit (संस्कृतम्) in the West began in the 17th century. In the early 19th century, Arthur Schopenhauer drew attention to Vedic texts, specifically the उपनिषद्-s || Upanishads. The importance of वैदिकसंस्कृतम् ॥ Vedic samskrit for Indo-European studies was also recognized in the early 19th century. English translations of the [[Samhita (संहिता)|Samhitas (संहिताः)]] were published in the later 19th century, in the Sacred Books of the East series edited by Müller between 1879 and 1910. Ralph T. H. Griffith also presented English translations of the four Samhitas, published 1889 to 1899.
  
The study of samskrit in the West began in the 17th century. In the early 19th century, Arthur Schopenhauer drew attention to Vedic texts, specifically the Upanishads. The importance of Vedic samskrit for Indo-European studies was also recognized in the early 19th century. English translations of the [[Samhita|Samhitas]] were published in the later 19th century, in the Sacred Books of the East series edited by Müller between 1879 and 1910. Ralph T. H. Griffith also presented English translations of the four Samhitas, published 1889 to 1899.
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Voltaire regarded Vedas to be exceptional, he remarked that:<blockquote>"''"The Veda was the most precious gift for which the West had ever been indebted to the East."''"</blockquote>Rigveda manuscripts were selected for inscription in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2007.
  
Voltaire regarded Vedas to be exceptional, he remarked that:<blockquote>''"The Veda was the most precious gift for which the West had ever been indebted to the East."''</blockquote>Rigveda manuscripts were selected for inscription in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2007.
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=== '''Indologists Hegemony''' ===
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The true Dharmic point of view that made us the richest civilization not only economically but culturally has remained unknown, a fact that can be attributed to the Indologist hegemony over global discourse. Until now the Vedas were read and understood in India and the West as interpreted by सायणाचार्यः ॥ Sayanacharya and his ‘collective authorship’ or Occidental linguists and missionaries of the East India Company (EIC). Notably, these great scholars' work was used not to defile the Indian narrative but through translations, create their knowledge systems (as in grammar, education systems, science, technology).
  
'''Indologists Hegemony'''
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Interestingly, Sayana’s and others' commentary of the Vedas and not of ancient authentic vedic scholars like महर्षिः यास्कः ॥ Maharishi Yaska or the more recent Swami Dayananda Saraswati, Sri Aurobindo or Shri Tulsi Ram’s works are used as  primary sources by the Indologist or their trained or sponsored Indian scholars. Their work has been commented upon by Shri Aurobindo (page 3, the Secret of the Veda, 1998), thus<blockquote>"''Indian scholar Sayana and we have in our own day the interpretation constructed after an immense labour of comparison and conjecture by modern European scholarship. Both of them present one characteristic in common, the extraordinary incoherence and poverty of sense which their results stamp upon the ancient hymns. When we come to read the hymns as a whole we seem to be in the presence of men who, unlike the early writers of other races, were incapable of coherent and natural expression or of connected thought. ''"</blockquote>The EIC through Indology, a medium used to serve the colonial agenda, translated our works not only to digest our knowledge systems but to create a narrative that show the colonized as ‘uncivilized’ and the white man’s on a mission to save the ‘pagan’. For example, Sayana was deemed a scholar and his works are very popular and freely available on the Internet. Significantly his commentary on the Rigveda was edited by Max Mueller, though under his name is done by ‘collective authorship’ , by Sayana, his brother, students and Max Mueller himself. Max Mueller, the self-styled Indologist, an employee of the colonial East India Company who bore the expenses for publishing the first volume (1849).
  
The true Dharmic point of view that made us the richest civilization not only economically but culturally has remained unknown, a fact that can be attributed to the Indologist hegemony over global discourse. Until now the Vedas were read and understood in India and the West as interpreted by [[Sayanacharya (सायनाचार्यः)|Sayana]] and his ‘collective authorship’ or Occidental linguists and missionaries of the East India Company (EIC). Notably, these great scholars' work was used not to defile the Indian narrative but through translations, create their knowledge systems (as in grammar, education systems, science, technology).
 
  
Interestingly, Sayana’s and others' commentary of the Vedas and not of ancient authentic vedic scholars like Maharishi [[Yaska]] or the more recent Swami Dayananda Saraswati, Sri Aurobindo or Shri Tulsi Ram’s works are used as primary sources by the Indologist or their trained or sponsored Indian scholars. Their work has been commented upon by Shri Aurobindo (page 3, the Secret of the Veda, 1998), thus<blockquote>''“Indian scholar Sayana and we have in our own day the interpretation constructed after an immense labour of comparison and conjecture by modern European scholarship. Both of them present one characteristic in common, the extraordinary incoherence and poverty of sense which their results stamp upon the ancient hymns. When we come to read the hymns as a whole we seem to be in the presence of men who, unlike the early writers of other races, were incapable of coherent and natural expression or of connected thought. ”''</blockquote>The EIC through Indology, a medium used to serve the colonial agenda, translated our works not only to digest our knowledge systems but to create a narrative that show the colonized as ‘uncivilized’ and the white man’s on a mission to save the ‘pagan’. For example, Sayana was deemed a scholar and his works are very popular and freely available on the Internet. Significantly his commentary on the Rigveda was edited by Max Mueller, though under his name is done by ‘collective authorship’ , by Sayana, his brother, students and Max Mueller himself. Max Mueller, the self-styled Indologist, an employee of the colonial East India Company who bore the expenses for published the first volume (1849).
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The euphoria over the digital revolution and the perceived increase in ‘knowledge' is a chimera, as the increase in information has also seen a parallel decline in knowledge-gathering. Consequently, opinions and beliefs not backed by evidence from primary sources is seen as intellectual rigor. In this alarming situation, it becomes necessary to reclaim our values based on the eternal culture of सनातनधर्मः ॥ sanatana dharma that stands as a guidepost for the people of भारतम् ॥ Bharat. At the same time, this endeavor helps support the movement for reclaiming our position of विश्वगुरुः || Vishvaguru that guides the world towards renewal and progress.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
# Acharya Dharma Deva Vidya Martanda. (2002). ''[https://archive.org/details/RigvedaWww.aryamantavya.in The Rigveda, with Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati's commentary, English translation, Vol I]''. New Delhi:Sarvadeshi Arya Pratinidhi Sabha.
+
<references />
# Narayanacharya, K. S. (2011). ''Veda Sanskritiya Parichaya''. Hubli:​Sahitya Prakashana​.
+
[[Category:Vedas]]
#Pandit Ramnarayandatt Shastri. (1955). ''[https://archive.org/details/Mahabharata04SanskritHindiPanditRamnarayanGitaPress Mahabharata].'' Gorakhpur:Gita Press.
 
#Kumar, S. (1996). ''The Vishuddha Manusmriti.'' Delhi:Arsh Sahitya Prachar Trust.
 

Latest revision as of 17:54, 19 August 2022

The Vedas (Samskrit : वेदाः) are a large body of ancient sacred texts which have originated in Bharatavarsha ( भारतवर्षः | the ancient Indian subcontinent). The Vedic Seers have received the Vedas through revelation. Vedas are considered to be Apaurusheya (अपौरुषेयः), or entirely superhuman, without any authorship.[1] Composed in Vedic samskrit (वैदिकसंस्कृतम्), these texts constitute the oldest layer of samskrit literature and the oldest scriptures of the world.

The Four Vedas which are regarded as authoritative texts by the followers of Sanatana Dharma are Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), Samaveda (सामवेदः ) and Atharvaveda (अथर्ववेदः). The Yajurveda is again divided into two parts- The Shukla (शुक्लः) and the Krishna (कृष्णः). The Krishna or the Taittiriya (तैत्तिरीयः) is the older version and the Shukla or the वाजसनेयी ॥ Vajasaneyi is a later revelation to Maharshi Yajnavalkya (याज्ञवल्क्यः) from Surya (सूर्यः).[1] The Rigveda is divided into twenty one sections, the Yajurveda into one hundred and nine sections, the Samaveda into one thousand sections and the Atharvaveda into fifty sections. In all, the Veda is thus divided into one thousand one hundred and eighty shakhas (शाखाः | recensions).[1]

What is Puja/Ritual and why it is done? - I

परिचयः|| Introduction

The great Vedic commentator, of the thirteenth century, सायणाचार्यः ॥ Sayanacharya has given a definition of the वेदः ॥ Veda.

इष्टप्राप्ति - अनिष्टपरिहर्योर् - अलौकिकम् - उपायम् यो ग्रन्थो वेदयति स वेदः || iṣṭaprāpti - aniṣṭapariharyora - alaukikam - upayam yo grantho vedayati sa vedaḥ ||[2]

Meaning : The scripture, which describes the divine method for obtaining what is desirable and for giving up what is undesirable, is called वेदः ॥ Veda. This definition presents the purpose of the वेदः ॥ Veda. According to another definition, as per the Paribhasha sutras of अपस्तम्बः || Apastamba,

मन्त्र - ब्रह्मन्योर् - वेदनामधेयम् || mantra - brahmanyor - vedanāmadheyam || (Apas. Pari. 33)[3]

Meaning : The वेदः ॥ Veda is the name given to the मन्त्राः ॥ Mantras and the ब्राह्मणानि ॥ Brahmanas.

This definition describes the form of the वेदः ॥ Veda because it could be divided mainly into these two great divisions--the मन्त्राः ॥ Mantras and the ब्राह्मणानि ॥ Brahmanas. Accordingly, Mantra part is the main part of the Veda and whatever is not Mantra is Brahmana. Here, it is interesting to know that many ancient definitions of Veda, showing its significance, form  or contents are given in ancient Indian texts. Generally speaking, the word Veda signifies highest, sacred, eternal and divine knowledge as well as the texts embodying that knowledge.[4]

The Vedas (shruti) are a class of texts completely different from other texts based on Vedas such as Shrauta Sutra (श्रौतसूत्रम्) and GrhyaSutra (गृह्यसूत्रम्), which are classified under smrti texts.[5]

वैदिकसाहित्यं लौकिकसाहित्यं च ॥ Vaidika and Laukika Sahitya

Classical samskrit works (लौकिकसाहित्यम् | laukika sahitya), such as the mahakavyas ( महाकाव्यानि | the five great classic works on poetic form) and gadya kavyas (गद्यकाव्यानि | prose works) by various poets, are significantly different from the Vedic texts and are available in great volumes. Vedic texts and their usage of Samskrit language are distinct from the classical samskrit texts. Vedic Samskrit is more ancient than classical Samskrit. Long before Panini (पाणिनिः) systematized classical Samskrit grammar, Nirukta (निरुक्तम् ) was used to interpret Vedic Samskrit words.

Vedas are also called Shruti (श्रुतिः | what is heard) distinguishing them from other religious texts, which are called Smṛiti (स्मृतिः | what is remembered). The Vedas are revelations of ancient sages after intense meditation, passed on to thousands of future generations by shabda (शब्दः | sound) or transmitted verbally thus, carefully preserved since ancient times. Vedic texts have been written and preserved in much later ages.

वैदिकसंस्कृतम् ॥ Vedic samskrit language being ancient is difficult to understand without the knowledge of Vedangas (वेदाङ्गानि), especially Nirukta of Maharshi Yaska (महर्षिः यास्कः) and the grammar of Panini and Patanjali (पतञ्जलिः). Maharshi Yaska's Nirukta is special in that, it is not only a dictionary of Vedic words but also an explanatory text for different Vedic terms.

With the availability of modern technological advancements, vast data on various topics is created, in different parts of the world, dispersed all over the globe. Thus, people generated a large number of genuine as well as falsely interpreted data about the Vedas of Bharatavarsha (in the form of blogs, educational sites, wikipedia for example).

 व्युत्पत्तिः॥Etymology

The samskrit word वेद (veda) "knowledge, wisdom" is derived from the root विद् (vid) - ज्ञाने (वेत्ति) || jñāne (vetti) in the meaning "to know" (Dhatupatha 1064). It is also derived from three other roots according to Swami Dayanand Saraswati.[6]

  • विद् सत्तायाम् || vid sattāyām (विद्यते || vidyate Dhatupatha 1171) in the meaning "existence"
  • विद् विचारणे || vid vicāraṇe (विन्ते || vinte Dhatupatha 1451) in the meaning "enquiry"
  • विद् लाभे || vid lābhe (विन्दति || vindati Dhatupatha 1433) in the meaning "gain or result"

The four terms वेदः || Veda, आम्नायः || Amnaya, त्रयी || Trayi, श्रुतिः || Shruti are synonymous according to अमरकोशः ॥ Amarakosha.

Nine terms found in literature that are synonymous with the term Veda namely[7][2]

  1. श्रुतिः || Shruti
  2. अनुश्रवम् || Anushrava
  3. त्रयी || Trayi
  4. आम्नायः || Amnaya
  5. समाम्नायः || Samamnaya
  6. छन्दः || Chanda
  7. स्वाध्यायः || Svadhyaya
  8. आगमः || Agama
  9. निगमः || Nigama

The term Vedic texts is used in two distinct meanings:

  • Texts composed in Vedic Samskrit during the Vedic period
  • Texts considered as "connected to the Vedas" or a "ancillary of the Vedas".

The samskrit term veda as a common noun means "knowledge", but can also be used to refer to fields of study unrelated to adhyatmik knowledge, e.g. in अगद-वेद || agada-veda (medical science), सस्य-वेद || sasya-veda (science of agriculture) or सर्प-वेद || sarpa-veda (science of snakes), already found in the early Upanishads.

वेदोत्पत्तिः || Vedotpatti

Although the Vedas are said to be Sanatana (सनातनः । eternal), however their origin is credited to Brahma (ब्रह्मा).

ब्रह्मा ॥ Brahma

According to Shabdakalpadruma,

ब्रह्ममुखनिर्गतधर्म्मज्ञापकशास्त्रम् इति पुराणम् |

brahmamukhanirgatadharmmajñāpakaśāstram iti purāṇam |

Meaning : Puranas (पुराणानि) proclaim that vedas are shastras (शास्त्राणि) revealed from Brahma’s mouth that remind of one's Dharma (धर्मः). Regarding the origin of Vedas, Shabdakalpadruma further states that according to the Puranas and Markandeya rishi - once Brahma meditated on how to create and the Vedas then took birth out of Brahma's four faces with 21 shakas of Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), 100 shakhas of Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), 1000 shakhas of Samaveda (सामवेदः) and 9 shakhas of Atharvaveda (अथर्ववेदः) as given below.

वेदस्य प्रादुर्भावो यथा कदाचित्कथं सृक्ष्यामीति ध्यायतो ब्रह्मणो मुखचतुष्टयेभ्यश्चत्वारो वेदाः प्रादुरासन् यथा

vedasya prādurbhāvo yathā kadācitkathaṃ sṛkṣyāmīti dhyāyato brahmaṇo mukhacatuṣṭayebhyaścatvāro vedāḥ prādurāsan yathā

एकविंशतिशाखात्मक - ऋक् १ शतशाखात्मक - यजुः २ सहस्रशाखामयसाम ३ नवशाखामयाथर्व्व ४ इति पुराणम् अपि च श्रीमार्कण्डेय उवाच ।

ekaviṃśatiśākhātmaka - ṛk 1 śataśākhātmaka - yajuḥ 2 sahasraśākhāmayasāma 3 navaśākhāmayātharvva 4 iti purāṇam api ca śrīmārkaṇḍeya uvāca ।

In the Mahabharata also the creation of Vedas is credited to Brahma. The Vedic hymns themselves assert that they were skillfully created by Rishis (seers), after inspired creativity, just as a carpenter builds a chariot.

ब्राह्मणाः ॥ Brahmanas

Brahmana mantras from different sources speak of the origin of

तेभ्यस्तप्तेभ्यस्त्रयो वेदा अजायन्त । अग्नेर्ऋग्वेदो वायोर्यजुर्वेदः सूर्यात् सामवेदः । (Shat. Brah. 11.5) as given by Pt. Sri Jayadevaji Sharma[8][9]

tebhyastaptebhyastrayo vedā ajāyanta । agnerṛgvedo vāyoryajurvedaḥ sūryāt sāmavedaḥ । (Shat. Brah. 11.5) as given by Pt. Sri Jayadevaji Sharma

तेभ्योऽभितप्तेभ्यस्त्रयो वेदा अजायन्त ऋग्वेद एवाग्नेरजायत यजुर्वेदो वायोः सामवेद आदित्यात् (Aite. Brah. 5.32)[10]

tebhyo'bhitaptebhyastrayo vedā ajāyanta ṛgveda evāgnerajāyata yajurvedo vāyoḥ sāmaveda ādityāt (Aite. Brah. 5.32)

मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti

अग्निवायुरविभ्यस्तु त्रयं ब्रह्म सनातनम् । दुदोह यज्ञसिद्ध्यर्थं ऋग्यजुःसामलक्षणम् । । १.२३ । ।(Manu. Smri. 1.23)[11]

agnivāyuravibhyastu trayaṃ brahma sanātanam । dudoha yajñasiddhyarthaṃ ṛgyajuḥsāmalakṣaṇam । । 1.23 । ।(Manu. Smri. 1.23)

Manusmrti also

मुण्डक-उपनिषद् ॥ Mundaka Upanishad

The Upanishad texts base their adhyatmik philosophy on Vedas and describe the origin of vedas to be from the Parabrahma (परब्रह्मन् । Infinite Consciousness).[12][13]

तस्मादृच: साम यजूंषि दीक्षा || tasmādṛca: sāma yajūṃṣi dīkṣā || (Mund. Upan. 2.1.6)[14]

Meaning: From Him (the परब्रह्मन् ॥ Parabrahma) arise the the mantras of Rks, Yajus (यजुस्) and Sama (साम) vedas.[12]

बृहदारण्यक-उपनिषद् ॥ Brhdaranyaka Upanishad

Brhdaranyaka Upanishad ascribes the origin of Vedas from the breath of the Supreme Being

....एतस्य वा महतो भूतस्य नि:श्वसितमेतद् यद् ऋग्वेदो यजुर्वेद: सामवेदोऽथर्वाङ्गिरस .... || (Brih. Upan. 4.5.11)[15]

....etasya vā mahato bhūtasya ni:śvasitametad yad ṛgvedo yajurveda: sāmavedo'tharvāṅgirasa .... || (Brih. Upan. 4.5.11)

Meaning: From the breath (exhalation) of this Supreme Being have arisen the Rigveda (ऋग्वेदः), Yajurveda (यजुर्वेदः), Samaveda (सामवेदः) and Atharvaveda (अथर्ववेदः).[16]

वेदलक्षणानि || Vedalakshanas

Vedas have the following important attributes summarized here, apart from the many other characteristics, as discussed by scholars over ages.

  • आस्तिकत्वम् ॥ Astikatva (Belief in existence of a Supreme power)
  • अलौकिकत्वम् ॥ Alaukikatva (Brahmajnana-Knowledge of Supreme being)
  • अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ Apaurusheyatva (Authorless)
  • अनन्तत्वम् ॥ Anantatva (Endless)
  • सनातनत्वम् ॥ Sanatanatva (Eternal)
  • धर्मसाधकत्वम् ॥ Dharmasadhakatva (Means of Dharma)
  • सर्वज्ञानमूलकत्वम् ॥ Sarvajnanamulakatva (Source of all knowledge)

In मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti, Manu extensively discusses various aspects of Vedas in the 12th अध्यायः ॥ Adhayaya.

आस्तिकत्वम् ॥ Astikatva

आस्तिकता ॥ Astikata is the belief in the existence of a Supreme power, superior to man, called variously as Brahman, Paramatma etc. This aspect has been described in different flavors by different rshis, scholars and acharyas but the essence of Sanatana Dharma (सनातनधर्मः) is that they are all Astika or holding a firm belief in the existence of a Supreme Being or force that is all pervading, all encompassing, higher than the man. The Vedas are full of mantras which tell us beyond doubt that this power (entity) is not only Supreme but also is One.[17]

उप त्वाग्ने दिवेदिवे दोषावस्तर्धिया वयं | नमो भरन्त एमसि || १४ || (Sama. Veda. 1.1.1.2.14)[17][18]

upa tvāgne divedive doṣāvastardhiyā vayaṃ | namo bharanta emasi || 14 || (Sama. Veda. 1.1.1.2.14)

अलौकिकत्वम् ॥ Alaukikatva (Brahmavidya)

The knower of Veda, wherever he stays in whatever ashrama he resides, becomes fit for the realization of Brahman[6]

वेदशास्त्रार्थतत्त्वज्ञो यत्र तत्राश्रमे वसन् । इहैव लोके तिष्ठन्स ब्रह्मभूयाय कल्पते । । १२.१०२ ।  (Manu. Smri. 12.102)[19]

vedaśāstrārthatattvajño yatra tatrāśrame vasan । ihaiva loke tiṣṭhansa brahmabhūyāya kalpate । । 12.102 ।  (Manu. Smri. 12.102)

अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ Apaurusheyatva

सनातनधर्मः || Sanatana Dharma based lifestyle of Hindu people living in the Indian subcontinent, advocates that the Vedas are अपौरुषेयः ॥ apauruṣheya ("not of a man" and "impersonal, authorless").

शब्दकल्पद्रुमः ॥ Shabdakalpadruma gives about the अपौरिषेयत्व ॥ Apaurusheyata of Vedas as

धर्मब्रह्मप्रतिपादकमपौरुषेयवाक्यम् इति वेदान्तशास्त्रम् | 

dharmabrahmapratipādakamapauruṣeyavākyam iti vedāntaśāstram |

Meaning : वेदान्तशास्त्रम् ॥ Vedanta shastra says, वेदाः ॥ Vedas propound अपौरुषेयः ॥ Apaurusheya or author-less words about धर्मः ॥ Dharma and ब्रह्मन्॥ Brahman. According to कुल्लुकभट्ट ॥ Kulluka Bhatta's commentary on मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti (Manusmriti with 9 Commentaries, Page 52)[6]

सनातनं नितेयम् । वेदापौरुषेयत्वपक्ष एव मनोरभिमतः। पूर्वकल्पे ये वेदास्त एव परमात्ममूर्तेर्ब्रह्मणः सर्वज्ञस्य स्मृत्यारूढाः । तानेव कल्पादौ अग्निवायुरविभ्य आचकर्ष।[20]

sanātanaṃ niteyam । vedāpauruṣeyatvapakṣa eva manorabhimataḥ। pūrvakalpe ye vedāsta eva paramātmamūrterbrahmaṇaḥ sarvajñasya smṛtyārūḍhāḥ । tāneva kalpādau agnivāyuravibhya ācakarṣa।

Kulluka Bhatta's acceptance of the वेदानाम् अपौरुषेयत्वम् ॥ vedānām apauruṣeyatvam is clearly given as above. कुल्लुकः ॥ Kulluka has quoted from the Veda,

यथा च श्रुतिः - अग्नेर्ऋग्वेदो वायोर्यजुर्वेद आदित्यात्सामवेद ॥ yathā ca śrutiḥ - agnerṛgvedo vāyoryajurveda ādityātsāmaveda [6] directly.

अनन्तत्वम् ॥ Anantatva

Vedas are unlimited in extent. What is stated in the Vedas is that they are verily endless - "ananta vai Vedah". It cannot be said that the Vedas in their entirety got revealed to the Rishis. Only a portion — a small portion of the limitless Vedas — became revealed to them. The four Vedas and a thousand and odd Veda saakhaas (or branches) of the Vedas are only a portion of what was made known to them as evident from the life of Bharadvaja rshi.

अनन्ता वै वेदाः । (Tait. Brah. 3.10.11)[21]

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Anantatva of Vedas - Bharadvaja Rshi's Story

Taittriya Brahmana recounts the anecdote of Bharadvaja Rshi who spent successive lifetimes to master Vedas and performed tapas to extend longevity. He had an immense quest for knowledge. He pleased Indra with his tapas and asked for another lifetime for learning Vedas. Indra appeared before him and showed him 3 mountains. Seeing the vast Vedarashi Bharadvaja Rshi was overwhelmed. Indra says, these mountains are the Vedarashis. They are endless and cannot be known in one lifetime. So seek the knowledge of Brahmavidya, which is the purpose of the Vedas. Indra picked one handful from each of the three mountains and declares that the knowledge acquired by Bharadvaja was equivalent to those 3 handfuls in all lifetimes he had. He was taught Agni Savitra Vidya by Indra. Thus Bharadvaja was cured of the pride of learning.


सनातनत्वम् ॥ Sanatanatva

In the opinion of मनुः ॥ Manu, Veda is the eternal eye सनातनचक्षुः ॥ Sanatana Chakshu of पितृ || Pitru, देवः || Deva, and मनुष्यः || Manushya. Veda is beyond the sphere of human power to create (अशक्यम् || Ashakya) and beyond the human comprehension too (अप्रमेयम् || Aprameya).[6]

पितृदेवमनुष्याणां वेदश्चक्षुः सनातनम् । अशक्यं चाप्रमेयं च वेदशास्त्रं इति स्थितिः । । १२.९४ (Manu. Smri. 12.94)[19]

pitṛdevamanuṣyāṇāṃ vedaścakṣuḥ sanātanam । aśakyaṃ cāprameyaṃ ca vedaśāstraṃ iti sthitiḥ । । 12.94 (Manu. Smri. 12.94)

धर्ममूलकत्वम् ॥ Source of Dharma

मनुस्मृतिः ॥ Manusmriti has attached great importance to the Vedas and advocates primarily that the source of धर्मः ॥ Dharma are the वेदाः ॥ Vedas. Secondly, its source is attributed to tradition and the virtuous conduct of those who follow the Veda, thirdly, to the customs of holy men and finally आत्मनस्तुष्टिः ॥ Atmasantushti (satisfaction of the inner self).[6]

वेदोऽखिलो धर्ममूलं स्मृतिशीले च तद्विदाम् । आचारश्चैव साधूनां आत्मनस्तुष्टिरेव च । । २.६ । । (Manu. Smri. 2.6)[22]

vedo'khilo dharmamūlaṃ smṛtiśīle ca tadvidām । ācāraścaiva sādhūnāṃ ātmanastuṣṭireva ca । । 2.6 । । (Manu. Smri. 2.6)

Further मनुः ॥ Manu says - The eternal वेदशास्त्रम् ॥ Veda shastra upholds or protects all beings (by being their flawless guideline). Those endeavoring for the welfare of all beings (यज्जन्तः) regard Vedas as their supreme authoritative instrument in achieving it.

बिभर्ति सर्वभूतानि वेदशास्त्रं सनातनम् । तस्मादेतत्परं मन्ये यज्जन्तोरस्य साधनम् । । १२.९९ । । (Manu. Smri. 12.99)[19]

bibharti sarvabhūtāni vedaśāstraṃ sanātanam । tasmādetatparaṃ manye yajjantorasya sādhanam । । 12.99 । । (Manu. Smri. 12.99)

मनुः ॥ Manu declares that He alone knows the Dharma who explores the utterances of the ancient sages by the means of reasoning which is not against the Vedas.[6]

आर्षं धर्मोपदेशं च वेदशास्त्राविरोधिना । यस्तर्केणानुसंधत्ते स धर्मं वेद नेतरः । । १२.१०६ । । (Manu. Smri. 12.106)[19]

ārṣaṃ dharmopadeśaṃ ca vedaśāstrāvirodhinā । yastarkeṇānusaṃdhatte sa dharmaṃ veda netaraḥ । । 12.106 । । (Manu. Smri. 12.106)

सर्वज्ञानमूलकत्वम् ॥ Source of all knowledge

According to Brhadyogi-Yajnavalkya-Smriti (Page No. 11 of Ved aur Vedarth)[23][5]

न वेदशास्त्रादन्यत्तु किंचिच्छास्त्रं हि विद्यते । निःसृतं सर्वशास्त्रं तु वेदशास्त्रात् सनातनम् ॥ (Brha. Smri . 12.1)

na vedaśāstrādanyattu kiṃcicchāstraṃ hi vidyate । niḥsṛtaṃ sarvaśāstraṃ tu vedaśāstrāt sanātanam ॥ (Brha. Smri . 12.1)

Meaning: There is no other shastra greater than the veda shastra because all shastras emanate from the eternal vedashastra.[24] The महाभारतम् ॥ Mahabharata says -

यानीहागमशास्त्राणि याश्च काश्चित्प्रवृत्तयः। तानि वेदं पुरस्कृत्य प्रवृत्तानि यथाक्रमम्॥ (Maha. Anushasana Parva 122-4)[25]

yānīhāgamaśāstrāṇi yāśca kāścitpravṛttayaḥ। tāni vedaṃ puraskṛtya pravṛttāni yathākramam॥ (Maha. Anushasana Parva 122-4)

All the आगम-s || Agamas and शास्त्र-s || shastras whichever are created and are available now have been built using the Vedas as the foundation.[23]

अधिकारः ॥ Ownership of Vedas

The ownership of our knowledge systems are mainly in the hands of foreigners (through Indology) or Indians trained by Westerners who write our इतिहासः || Itihasa (history) from the colonial standpoint, which is to maintain Western hegemony in academia and promote Western Universalism. This strategy of conquest has been in operation since the Edinburgh enlightenment (1750, as cited by Dharampal 2000) which compelled the East India Company to change its barbaric methodologies of conquest used in Europe, the Africas & Americas (Todorov 1974) to a more subtle & devious method to conquer India. The result was a complete infiltration of western false interpretation of Vedas in our knowledge networks through gross error.[4]

Vedic scholarship in India, in the true sense of the term, appears to have ceased with the great work of महर्षिः यास्कः ॥ Maharishi Yaska, albeit with a few exceptions like Swami Dayanand, Shri Aurobindo and Shri Tulsi Ram. Swami Dayananda asserts that the commentaries of modern writers like सायणाचार्यः ॥ Sayana, स्कन्दः ॥ Skanda, Vejikaa, महीधरः ॥ Mahidhara and Western Indologists are gross misinterpretations.[citation needed]

Many great Indian scholars endeavor to bring back the great Vedic tradition by translations conducted with Bharatiya perspective. Many drawbacks can be pointed out as to the lack of visibility of Indian Scholars well versed in Vedas.[citation needed]

  1. Many vedic scholars are aged seniors who chose to live in distant remote areas, silently practicing their knowledge. Unable to imbibe different modern ways of life their existence has become obscure.
  2. Mental and physical connect with the modern systems is lacking owing to simple lifestyle and lack of funds to these scholars.
  3. Indian Urban society discusses or views the modern so called "Indology", with the western indoctrination, refusing to accept the fundamental theories of the Vedic scholars.
  4. English language given its present day glory and spread, is grossly insufficient to explain the numerous nuances of the divine language samskrit.
  5. Extensiveness of the Vedas and sufficiency of a lifetime to study and interpret them in modern sense requires expertise in both the subject and language which is difficult to achieve in a life time.
  6. Invasion of भारतवर्षः ॥ Bharatavarsha by various foreigners have brought about adjustments and alterations in the dharmic lifestyle as survival tactics against the foreign rulers, which brought about a loss of the fundamental principles advocated by the scriptures.
  7. Modernization or replacement of ancient tools of work with modern instrumentation has led to loss of knowledge of such ancient systems which promote dharmic lifestyle inconveniencing the scholars and forcing many of them to adapt to such new lifestyles.
  8. Present day adaptation of western ways of life has replaced the ancient lifestyle leading to a cultural loss of vedic rituals and traditions, whereby the younger generations are unwilling to study or practice the older traditions. This led to formation of only a few scholars in the later generations.

धर्मस्य वैदिकदृष्टिः ॥ The Vedic View of Dharma

A clash between the ideologies of modernity and the philosophy of civilization of cultures could have dangerous repercussions and this has been a frequently recurring thought in contemporary discourse. To understand the implications of these notions it becomes essential to emphasize that religion and dharma are not synonymous and hence cannot be talked of in the same breath.

The Vedas are the source of all Dharmas (in moral, social, religious, judicial, and adhyatmik sense) that have been in practice since times immemorial and hence is called सनातनधर्मः ॥ Sanatana Dharma (eternal dharma).

धर्मः ॥ Dharma is a samskrit expression of the widest import. There is no corresponding word for Dharma in any other language in this world as it is a unique and ancient concept promulgated by rishis since times immemorial. It would be futile to attempt to give any definition of the word. It can only be explained and has a wide variety of meanings. For instance, the word "Dharma" is used to mean Nyaya (न्यायः Justice), what is right in a given circumstance, moral values of life, pious obligations of individuals, righteous conduct in every sphere of activity, being helpful to the the needy, giving charity to individuals in need or for a public cause, natural qualities or properties of characteristics of a living being or things, duty and law as also constitutional law. धर्मः ॥ Dharma is regarded as the greatest and most valuable contribution to humanity by भारतवर्षः ॥ Bharatavarsha.

Contemporary knowledge and academia is not able to help us ascertain the right direction in life. To understand धार्मिकता ॥ Bharatiyata as experienced by our ancient Rishis and lead a Dharmic life requires revisiting our civilisational heritage through the wisdom bank of the Vedas. Compiling relevant literature that is timely, supportive and relevant to the original वेदविद्या || VedaVidya may be seen as regressive by self-styled modernists and liberals, but this should not deter us as it is an indication of the power of the annihilating forces.[4]

Predictions of the future being bleak and bringing destruction are made regularly, yet the same destructive systems are seen as wisdom? Notably, "If the future is seen as destructive, how come revisiting time-tested successful systems is seen as unproductive?" The compilation of our Dharmic texts also becomes essential as the self-appointed ‘knowledge leaders’ will need some definitive yardstick to judge both the progressive and the destructive. Without such a yardstick, knowledge creation remains the outcome of a whimsical mind, or propaganda for political/territorial gains or media-generated fodder for control of the world’s resources by a few rich corporations, leading to eventual destruction.

संवादः ॥ Discussion

Western Indology

The study of samskrit (संस्कृतम्) in the West began in the 17th century. In the early 19th century, Arthur Schopenhauer drew attention to Vedic texts, specifically the उपनिषद्-s || Upanishads. The importance of वैदिकसंस्कृतम् ॥ Vedic samskrit for Indo-European studies was also recognized in the early 19th century. English translations of the Samhitas (संहिताः) were published in the later 19th century, in the Sacred Books of the East series edited by Müller between 1879 and 1910. Ralph T. H. Griffith also presented English translations of the four Samhitas, published 1889 to 1899.

Voltaire regarded Vedas to be exceptional, he remarked that:

""The Veda was the most precious gift for which the West had ever been indebted to the East.""

Rigveda manuscripts were selected for inscription in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2007.

Indologists Hegemony

The true Dharmic point of view that made us the richest civilization not only economically but culturally has remained unknown, a fact that can be attributed to the Indologist hegemony over global discourse. Until now the Vedas were read and understood in India and the West as interpreted by सायणाचार्यः ॥ Sayanacharya and his ‘collective authorship’ or Occidental linguists and missionaries of the East India Company (EIC). Notably, these great scholars' work was used not to defile the Indian narrative but through translations, create their knowledge systems (as in grammar, education systems, science, technology).

Interestingly, Sayana’s and others' commentary of the Vedas and not of ancient authentic vedic scholars like महर्षिः यास्कः ॥ Maharishi Yaska or the more recent Swami Dayananda Saraswati, Sri Aurobindo or Shri Tulsi Ram’s works are used as primary sources by the Indologist or their trained or sponsored Indian scholars. Their work has been commented upon by Shri Aurobindo (page 3, the Secret of the Veda, 1998), thus

"Indian scholar Sayana and we have in our own day the interpretation constructed after an immense labour of comparison and conjecture by modern European scholarship. Both of them present one characteristic in common, the extraordinary incoherence and poverty of sense which their results stamp upon the ancient hymns. When we come to read the hymns as a whole we seem to be in the presence of men who, unlike the early writers of other races, were incapable of coherent and natural expression or of connected thought. "

The EIC through Indology, a medium used to serve the colonial agenda, translated our works not only to digest our knowledge systems but to create a narrative that show the colonized as ‘uncivilized’ and the white man’s on a mission to save the ‘pagan’. For example, Sayana was deemed a scholar and his works are very popular and freely available on the Internet. Significantly his commentary on the Rigveda was edited by Max Mueller, though under his name is done by ‘collective authorship’ , by Sayana, his brother, students and Max Mueller himself. Max Mueller, the self-styled Indologist, an employee of the colonial East India Company who bore the expenses for publishing the first volume (1849).


The euphoria over the digital revolution and the perceived increase in ‘knowledge' is a chimera, as the increase in information has also seen a parallel decline in knowledge-gathering. Consequently, opinions and beliefs not backed by evidence from primary sources is seen as intellectual rigor. In this alarming situation, it becomes necessary to reclaim our values based on the eternal culture of सनातनधर्मः ॥ sanatana dharma that stands as a guidepost for the people of भारतम् ॥ Bharat. At the same time, this endeavor helps support the movement for reclaiming our position of विश्वगुरुः || Vishvaguru that guides the world towards renewal and progress.

References

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