Dasbodh
Shreemat Dāsbodh (Devanagari: दासबोध), loosely meaning advice to the disciple, is a classical 17th century Hindu Advaita Vedanta spiritual text. It was orally narrated by saint Samarth Ramdas, to his disciple Kalyan Swami. The narration is believed to have taken place in a cave called Shivatharghal in the Raigad district of Maharashtra in India. The Dāsbodh provides readers with spiritual guidance on matters such as devotion and acquiring knowledge. Dāsbodh [1] is the only sSpiritual text that contains not only spiritual guidance but also guides Spiritual practitioners many details such as how to write, how to manage life, what the qualities of a leader are, what the symptoms of fools are, etc.
Background
Dāsbodh is a classic spiritual text that until recently has been largely unavailable in the West. The text was written in the 1654 by the great Saint, Shri Samartha Ramdas in the Marathi language, the native language of Maharashtra State in India. The book was originally written in a poetic style and is presented in the format of a conversation between a Guru and disciple. Many questions are answered and many doubts are cleared. In Dāsbodh, Samartha Ramdas presents the essence of many Vedic texts. Dāsbodh is truly a manual for life in the highest sense. Dāsbodh has been popular for many years in India and has only recently begun to receive recognition in the West. Dāsbodh is somewhat unusual among spiritual literature in that it not only expounds the classic themes of discrimination between the true and the untrue, and detachment commonly found in Vedic literature, but also provided is detailed instruction on how to function and excel in society from a place of deep spiritual understanding
Dāsbodh is a large volume which has 20 main chapters, each consisting of 10 sub-chapters. Each of these sub-chapters varies in the number of stanzas, but averages around 30-40 stanzas (ovi) per sub-chapter with some being considerably longer. Contained within the chapters of Dāsbodh, Ramdas clearly outlines and makes easy the path of liberation through Devotion and Knowledge. Through knowledge, Ramdas clears away all doubts and gives the understanding of one's "True Self". Ramdas also reveals the true meaning and significance of "Discrimination" and "Detachment". It draws upon ancient Vedic texts including, but not limited to the Vedas, the Shashtras, the Upanishads, the Avadhut Gita, the Bhagavad Gita, the Rama Gita, the Yogavasishtha, the Guru Gita and the Brahma Sutras. Mainly what is presented in Dāsbodh is the voice of direct experience itself.
Dāsbodh is one of the principle Advaita Vedanta texts that was commonly referenced by the masters of the Inchgiri Sampradaya. Notable modern day masters of this Sampradaya include Shri Siddharameshwar Maharaj, Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj and Shri Ranjit Maharaj.[2]
Rāmdās (1608-1681), a religious Hindu poet from Mahārāstra, India, wrote Dāsbodh (दासबोध) in Marāthi. It is a comprehensive volume in verse form providing instructions as to how one ought live one's life.
Dāsbodh prescribes the path of devotion to God or "Bhakti mārg" (भक्तिमार्ग in Sanskrit) —as well as the path of Knowledge or "Jnana Marg" for "liberation" according to Hindu philosophy. It deals with diverse aspects of human life such as politics, conducting business dealings and taking care of one's body and family life.
Dāsbodh is written in the verse form known as owi (ओव्या) in Marathi. The volume comprises 7,751 owi (ओव्या) and is divided into 20 dashak (दशक) chapters, each chapter consisting of ten samās (समास) sub-chapters.
This granth (book) is a manual for living a life exalted. One of the key messages given by Saint Ramdas is to not be lazy, as he always encouraged aspirants to earn the livelihood in a virtuous manner. "Aalse kam nasste, he to pratyas yete kashta kade chukawite hin jan" owi 4 from chapter 18 gives idea about what happens when person is lazy. The person who is ready to work will always be fortunate. Common man normally does not want to work and expects everything from God without an effort. This granth is a dialogue between Guru and Shishya which is often referred to as "GranthaRaj" or "King of Spiritual Texts".
Dāsbodh has been translated into many Indian and foreign languages like German, English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Gujrathi and Sindhi.[3]
Translations
- Sanskrit
- English (four different authors)
- Hindi (three different authors (Chitrashala press Poona copy, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Mumbai, copy and Hindi Sahitya Kutir, Banaras copy)
- Telugu (Sundaraiyya vidnyan kendram copy and Vedavyas Mudraksharshala chittur copy)
- Kannada
- Tamil
- Sindhi
Footnotes
http://www.dasbodh.com/
http://www.inner-quest.org/Ranjit_Interview.htm
References
- ↑ http://www.Dāsbodh.com
- ↑ http://www.inner-quest.org/Ranjit_Interview.htm
- ↑ Dāsbodh.com : Online library containing Dāsbodh in various languages
- An English translation of the Dāsbodh (PDF) http://www.sadgurubhagwanshreedharswamimaharaj.com/Dāsbodh.pdf
- Online library containing Dāsbodh in various languages and other literature by Samarth Ramdas Swami
- Shri Dasbodh of Shri Samartha Ramdas (Original Marathi) - Free Download at archive.org