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Hinduism
Our desire to live in this world
drives our life. And we all seek heaven on earth. But what happens
after we
die? Where do we go? Many of us today don't believe in the concept of
heaven and hell. So did the early Hindus! To them heaven was not a
preferred destination after death.
Back to Nature
The early Hindus never believed in heaven, and never prayed to attain a
permanent place there. The earliest concept of afterlife, say Vedic
scholars, was that the dead reunite with Mother Nature and live in some
other form on this earth — just as Wordsworth wrote, "with rocks and
stones and trees." Going back to the early Vedic hymns, we find an
eloquent invocation to the fire god, where the prayer is to assimilate
the dead with the natural world:
"Burn him not, scorch him not, O Agni,
Consume him not entirely; afflict him not…
May your eye go to the Sun,
To the wind your soul…
Or go to the waters if it suits thee there,
Or abide with thy members in the plants..."
~
The Rig Veda
The concept of heaven and hell evolved at a later stage
when we find such amendments in the Veda as "Go thou to the heaven or
to the earth, according to thy merit…"
Idea of Immortality
Vedic folks were satisfied with living their
life to the fullest; they never aspired to attain immortality. It was a
common belief that human beings are allocated a span of hundred years
for earthly existence, and people just
prayed for a healthy life: "…Interpose not, O gods, in the midst of our
passing existence, by inflicting infirmity in our bodies." (Rig Veda)
However, as time passed by, the idea of eternity for mortals evolved.
Thus later in the same Veda we come to read: "…Grant us food, and may
I obtain immortality through my posterity."
If we take the Vedas as our reference point to study the
evolution of the Hindu concept of heaven and hell, we find that
although the first book of the Rig Veda refers to 'heaven', it
is only in the last book that the term gets some import. While Book I
of the Rig Veda in a hymn mentions: "...pious sacrificers
enjoy residence
in the heaven of Indra…", Book VI in a special invocation to the fire
God appeals to "lead men to heaven". Even the last book does not refer
to 'heaven' as an auspicious afterlife destination. The idea of
reincarnation
and the concept of attaining heaven became popular in the Hindu canon
with the passage of time.
Where is Heaven?
Vedic people were not quite sure about the site or setting of this
heaven or who ruled the region. But by common consensus it was situated
somewhere up there, and it was Indra who reigned in heaven and Yama who
ruled the hell.
How's Heaven Like?
In the mythical tale of Mudgala and Rishi Durvasa, we have a detailed
description of the heavens (Sanskrit "swarga"), the nature of its
inhabitants, and its advantages and disadvantages. While the two were
in a conversation about virtues and heaven, a celestial messenger
appears in his heavenly vehicle to take Mudgala to his heavenly abode.
In reply to his inquiry, the messenger gives an explicit account of
heaven. Here's an excerpt from this scriptural description as
paraphrased by Swami Shivananada of Rishikesh:
"…The heaven is well provided with excellent paths…The
Siddhas,
the Vaiswas, the Gandharvas, the Apsaras, the Yamas and the Dhamas
dwell
there. There are many celestial gardens. Here sport persons of
meritorious acts. Neither hunger nor thirst, nor heat, nor cold,
neither grief nor fatigue, neither labour nor repentance, nor fear, nor
anything that is disgusting and inauspicious; none of these is to be
found in heaven. There is no old age either…Delightful fragrance is
found everywhere. The breeze is gentle and pleasant. The inhabitants
have resplendent bodies. Delightful sounds captivate both the ear and
the mind. These worlds are obtained
by meritorious acts and not by birth nor by the merits of fathers and
mothers…There is neither sweat nor stench, nor excretion nor urine. The
dust does not soil one's clothes. There is no uncleanliness of any
kind.
Garlands (made from flowers) do not fade. Excellent garments full of
celestial
fragrance never fade. There are countless celestial cars that move in
the air. The dwellers are free from envy, grief, ignorance and malice.
They live very happily…"
Disadvantages of Heaven
After the bliss of heaven, the
celestial messenger tells us about its disadvantages: "In the celestial
region, a person, while enjoying the fruits of acts he had already
performed, cannot perform any other new act. He must enjoy the fruits
of the former life till they are completely exhausted. Further, he is
liable to fail after he has completely exhausted his merit. These are
the disadvantages of heaven. The consciousness of those about to fall
is stupefied. It is also agitated by emotions. As the garlands of those
about to fall fade away, fear possesses their hearts…"
Description of
Hell
In The Mahabharata, Vrihaspati's account of "the frightful
regions of Yama" has a good description of hell. He tells king
Yudhishthira: "In those regions, O king, there are places that are
fraught with every merit and that are worthy on that account of being
the abodes of the
very deities. There are, again, places in those regions that are worse
than those which are inhabited by animals and birds…"
"By no one among men is his own life
understood;
Carry us beyond all sins" (Vedic Prayer)
There are clear stipulations in the Bhagavad Gita
about the kind of acts that can lead one to heaven or hell: "…those who
worship the gods go to the gods; …those who worship the Bhutas
go to the Bhutas; and those who worship me come to me."
Two-Way To Heaven
Ever since Vedic times, there exist two known roads to heaven: Piety
and righteousness, and prayers and rituals. People who chose the first
path had to lead a sin-free life full of good deeds, and those who took
the easier lane deviced ceremonies and wrote hymns and prayers to
please the gods.
Righteousness: Thy Only Friend!
When in the Mahabharata, Yudhishthira asks Vrihaspati about
what is the true friend of mortal creatures, and who follows him to the
afterworld, Vrihaspati says: "One is born alone, O king, and one dies
alone; one crosses alone the difficulties one meets with, and one alone
encounters whatever misery falls to one's lot. One has really no
companion in these acts. …Only righteousness follows the body that is
thus abandoned by
them all…One endued with righteousness would attain that high end which
is constituted by heaven. If endued with unrighteousness, he goes to
hell."
Sins & Offences: Highway to Hell
Vedic men was ever careful against committing any sin, because sins
could be inherited from forefathers, and passed on from generation to
generation. Thus we have such prayers in the Rig Veda: "…May
the purpose of my mind be sincere; may I not fall into any kind of
sin…" However, it was believed, women's sins were cleansed "by their
menstrual course like a metallic plate that is scoured with ashes". For
men, there was always a conscious effort to pass off sinful deeds as
accidental deviations. The seventh book of the Rig Veda makes
this clear: "It is not our own choice, Varuna, but our condition that
is the cause of our sinning; it is that which causes intoxication,
wrath, gambling, ignorance; there is
a senior in the proximity to the junior; even a dream is provocative of
sin".
How We Die
The Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad tells
us about what happens
to us immediately after death: "The upper end of the heart now lights
up. By the help of that light, this self departs, either through the
eye, or through the head, or through other parts of the body. When it
goes out, the vital force accompanies it; when the vital force goes
out,
all the organs accompany it. Then the self is endowed with particular
consciousness, and afterwards it passes on to the body that is brought
to light by that consciousness. Meditation, work and previous
impressions follow it. … As it does and as it acts, so it becomes: The
doer of good becomes good, and the doer of evil becomes evil…"
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