SRI APPAYYA DIKSHITA
C.
R. PATTABHI RAMAN
We
discern a triple stream flowing to make a confluence “Triveni” of Hindu
religious life and thought from time immemorial. The first is represented by
great Grihasthas–householders–from the Sapta Rishis downwards. Sita Devi in the Sundara Kanda of the
Ramayana refers to connubial perfection of the Sage Vashishta
and his Patni Arundhati. Fulfilling his various
duties to the family and the community, the householder forms the backbone of
our civilization. He supports the Brahmachari and Sanyasi alike. In the Upanishads we find Sage Yagnavalkya preaching and practising
Tyaga–living in the world without being worldly. He
and his illustrious disciple, King Janka demonstrated
that there was no permanence or lasting happiness in mere worldly possessions
and achievements.
The
second stream is represented by philosophers and saints gradually retiring from
the householder’s Ashram and finally becoming Sanyasins.
To this category belonged many Rishis and emperors,
so well described by immortal Kalidasa in his Raghuvamsa.
In
the third stream we find sages who renounced the world even as Brahmacharis. From Suka Brahman
downward to the great Sankaracharya, Sadasiva Brahmendra and Sri Ramana Maharshi of recent times, we have illustrious
example of such saints and sages. Today in our midst are living the respected Jagad Gurus Sankaracharyas of Sri
Sringeri Sarada and Kanchi
Kamakoti Peethams.
Sri
Appayya Dikshita belongs to
the first category. In his case also we find renunciation of worldly
possessions. He used the gold and other items of property given to him by his
patrons for religious and educational objects. He had around him more than 500
scholars and disciples. He maintained them and distributed his wealth to the
needy and the poor while providing also for his children and family. The author
has done well to compare and contrast the lives of Adi
Sankara and Sri Appayya Dikshita.
Sri
Appayya Dikshita was born
in the second decade of the sixteenth century in Adayapalam,
a hamlet in present day North Arcot District, near Chetpat. His father Brahmasri Rangaraja Dikshitar, was a great scholar well-known in
We
find in some treatises doubts expressed with regard to the exact date of birth
of Sri Appayya Dikshita.
Excepting the reference to his authorship in Dikshita’s poetical and philosophical works, one does not
get much biographical data about him. This is a common feature in
It
is not surprising that until recently there have been very few Western style
biographies of our great leaders, saints and sages. One never reads the name of
the sculptor or the artist concerned in any of the ancient temples of
The century to which Sri Appayya
Dikshita belonged was a peak one for human
achievements. Shakespeare, his contemporary, was writing his plays in
Sri
Appayya and his brother Achan
were brilliant even as boys, Sri Appayya’s learning
was prodigious. He was not only learned in the Vedas but became a master of
Vedanta and the Sastras at an
young age. If one has to classify him in the galaxy of philosophers and writers
of Bharatavarsha, he may perhaps be called a great Advaitin. His treatises like “Sivarka
mani dipika” in this
field are masterpieces. He was, however, truly catholic in his outlook and
studies. It is remarkable that his writings on Vishishtadvaita
and Dvaita philosophies are great works which have
been prescribed as classical texts by the followers of those creeds. He,
however, proclaims more than once that Eswara, Mahavishnu and Devi are all one.
While facing the deities at Chidambaram, he sings “on the one side is Paramatma as Lakshmi and her husband and on the other as Uma and Eswara.”
However,
like Sri Madhusudana Saraswati who saw the Brahmam in Sri Krishna the boy, with the flute, he owns up
to an inborn bias in favour of the blue-throated Eswara with his crescent moon on his head and Uma by his side, in spite of his being aware that all the
manifestations of Paramatma are one. In his “Nyaya Rakshamani” which is a
commentary mainly on the Brahma Sutras, we find him striking a path of his own.
The Appayya Dikshitar Granthavali has brought out this rare work with the
blessings of His Holiness Sri Sankaracharya Swami of
Kanchi Kamakoti Pitham. Even a mere catalogue of 104
of his works is bewildering for the immensity of the canvas employed by him for
expressing his thoughts and his philosophy.
Sri
Appayya Dikshita
anticipated the present psychic mental and sub-conscious experiments, 400 years
ago. He drank the juice of a powerful herbal drug–datura–and
asked his disciple to write down whatever came from him when he was in the deep
state of intoxication and out of his normal mind. What they have written down
is astounding reading. It is a lucid Stotra “Atmarpana Stuti” praise of Eswara, his Ishta Devata.
He
was a Siddha and a great Yogi. One of his yogic
experiments was as unique as it was thrilling. In the later years of his life,
he was subject to attacks of colic pain. He was convinced that it was due to
his Prarabdha–his past Karma. Whenever he wanted to
meditate deeply or while worshipping the Almighty, he made a bundle of his
towel and put it in front of him. By his yogic power he transferred the malady
to the towel and sat in meditation. His disciples watched the towel jumping
about the place. To them he explained later on that he transferred his ailment
which was in the form of an evil spirit to the cloth and that took it back soon
after his meditation was over.
It
is the belief of great sages and saints of
My
father, Dr. C. P. Ramaswami Aiyar, who always spoke with reverence and some
little pride as a descendant of Sri Dikshita, has
described him as a “Polymath” in the early chapters of “History of My Times.”
The author has quoted him in extenso.
Sri
Appayya Dikshita was born
in the Sama Sakha and belonged to Bharadwaja
Gotra. He refers to the great Rishi who played the
host to Sri Rama in his travel to and from Ayodhya. Sri Dikshita,
however, expressed a tinge of regret for not being born as a Yajurvedi. He liked the chanting of “Rudram
and Chamakam” very much. He actually prayed that in
his next birth he must be born a Yajurvedi and in
Andhra Pradesh. He was deeply impressed with the devotion and learning that
existed in Andhra Pradesh during his time.
In
spite of fierce debates on the respective superiority of Saivism
and Vaishnavism, we find mutual regard exhibited by
the protagonists of those schools. The caste barriers had not become very
rigid. One of Sri Dikshita’s ancestors married a Vaishnavite lady. Sri Appayya Dikshita himself had, It is
believed, as his second wife, the daughter of Sri Tatachariar,
the great Vaishnavite leader. Her
parents found it difficult to get her marriage fixed in time,
and she was about to commit suicide. In an amusing incident referred to by him,
we learn that on his an approaching Kanchipuram laden
with many honours and riding in a palanquin with
armed escorts and elephants supplied by the ruler of Vellore, an old Aiyengar lady
came out of the house to see what the Tamasha
was about. She sees Appayya Dikshita
sitting in the palanquin at the head of the procession and exclaims that it is
after all “Achalu’s husband.” Sri Appayya
Dikshita in one of his compositions exclaims, “in this hamlet of Kanchipuram, it
is only my wife Achalu who was famous and not I.”
In
a famous Sloka he sings “a few wild flowers, bilwa
leaves and drops of water offered to Eswara is all
that is needed to live happily and to save one’s soul. Not even doing this,
many are condemning themselves to misery and want, and are also committing Atmadroha.” Having praised the Lord, particularly Sri Margabandhu of Virinchipuram, in
many works, he, like Sri Sankara, says that “he was
committing sins by conferring a form to the Formless, by praising One who is beyond all thought and speech and by showing
lighted camphor to One who was the cause of light and fire.”
-From
the Foreword to the book “Sri Appayya Dikshita”
by Dr
N. Ramesan
According to Sri Anantanandaruda Saraswati Swamigal (Kanchi Kamakoti Mutt) and Sri Adayapalam Ramakrishna Dikshitar, there is no reliable authority to show that Sri Appayya Dikshita married the Vaishnavite lady referred to.
*
“Dr C. P. and I are
descendants of the great saint and savant, Sri Appayya
Dikshitar, who was born with a special mission: to
demonstrate that self-realisation is possible in and through the life of a
house-bolder...The electric lights in
“This
light of the East has illumined the path of many American seekers after Truth.
When Dr. C. P. lectured on “Indian philosophy” at the American Institute of
Asiatic Studies, Stanford, and other centres in the
–SWAMI SIVANANDA