PRECEPTORS OF ADVAITA PART 17 10 24 CONTD KR IRS

 *HOMAGE TO HIS HOLINESS SRI SANKARACHARYA OF KANCHI KAMAKOTI PITHA*

*by*

Dr Fernand Brunner


*Professor, Neuchatel University, Bern University,* (*Switzerland*)

The most impressive moment of my last stay in India from September to
December 1966, was undoubtedly my visit to Śrī Śaṅkarāchārya of Kāñchī
Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha. On a sunny October day, Professor T. M. P. Mahadevan’s car
was driving us, Dr Veezhinathan, my wife and myself, towards Tirupati. Past
the endless outskirts of Madras, the road climbs through a striking
landscape of bare hills and dislocated rocks, then stretches down to a
tableland equally overwhelmed with heat and light overlooked by a hill
ascended by a huge flight of steps and crowned by temples. At the foot of
this hill, not far from the busy Tirupati, the Śaṅkarāchārya’s camp was
located. No more imposing setting was ever offered by Nature to the
admiration of men, and consecrated by the faithful ones to the Divinity.
Let not however the unprepared European expect in the Śaṅkarāchārya’s camp
the ostentation of some Mahārāja’s palace. And yet, the one who is here is
the *Jagadguru,* the guru of the world: a regal title too. But his kingship
is spiritual, and he lives in the most complete simplicity. The brahmans,
the cows, the elephants which surround him are symbols of his function; but
no other ornament signals his court: he sits under a tree, clothed like a
mendicant monk;, to meet him, one treads the grass of a field that his
cattle grazes all around him. But people present him with offerings fit for
the gods, and prostrate before him. He gives them leave to get up with a
boundless modesty. One understands that all his life has been directed
towards the attainment of this perfect self-detachment. He takes interest
in his visitors, their origin, their problems, with the spontaneity and
sincerity typical of absolute unselfishness. There shines in his look the
light of a knowledge which transcends everything finite. This is the type
of a spiritual master. Everlasting India can always present him to the
world. The greatness of India lies in her acknowledging the true greatness
which takes the form of such 8 pure simplicity.

THE SAGE OF KANCHI

*by*

T. M. P. Mahadevan
M.A., PH.D.

 *1. Introduction*

Any one who has read the works of Śrī Śaṅkara would certainly want to know
what sort of a person the great Master was. In all his extensive writings
he nowhere makes any reference to himself. The only isolated passage where
one could see an oblique reference relates, not to any detail in personal
biography, but to the inwardly felt experience of the Impersonal Absolute.
In this passage which occurs towards the end of the *Brahma-sūtra-bhāṣya* ,
he observes:

“How is it possible for another to deny the realization of *Brahman*
-knowledge,
experienced in one’s heart, while bearing a body?”[1]
<https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/preceptors-of-advaita/d/doc62924.html#note-e-32986>

The reference here is to the plenary experience of *Brahman,* even while
living in a body *(jīvan-mukti);* and it is evident that the testimony
offered here is from Śaṅkara’s own experience. The outlines of the story of
Śaṅkara’s life could be gathered only from the *Śaṅkara-vijayas* and other
narratives. Inspite of varying accounts in regard to some of the details,
the image of the Master that one forms from these sources, taking into
account also the grand teachings that are to be found in his own works, is
that of a great spiritual leader, who renounced all wordly attachments even
as a boy, who was a prodigy in scriptural lore and wisdom, who spent every
moment of his life in the service of the masses of mankind by placing
before them, through precept and practice, the ideal of the life divine,
and who was a teacher of teachers, the universal guru. Even as such a
magnificent image is being formed, the doubt may arise in the minds of many
*:* Is it possible that such a great one walked this earth? Is it possible
that in a single ascetic frame was compressed several millennia of the
highest spiritual human history? This doubt is sure to be dispelled in the
case of those who have had the good fortune of meeting His Holiness
Jagadguru Śrī Chandra-śekharendra Sarasvatī, the Sixty-eighth in the
hallowed line of succession of Śaṅkarāchāryas to adorn the Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha
of Kāñchī, Anyone who comes into the august presence of His Holiness cannot
but recall to his mind the image of Ādi Śaṅkara, the immaculate sage who
was divine and yet human, whose saving grace was universal in its sweep,
and whose concern was for ail— even for the lowliest and the last. For
sixty years Śrī Chandraśekharendra Śarasvatī has been fulfilling the noble
spiritual mission entrusted by Ādi Śaṅkara to his successors bearing his
holy name. Numerous are the ways in which he has given the lead for human
upliftment through inner awakening. When one considers his life of
ceaseless and untiring dedication to the task of stabilizing and promoting
the renascent spirit of India so that humanity may be benefited thereby,
one cannot but conclude that it is the unbounded Grace of Śaṅkara that has
assumed this new form in order to move the world one step higher on the
ladder to universal perfection.

 *2. Early Life*

‘Chandraśekharendra Sarasvatī’ is the *sannyāsa* name given to Svāmināthan
when he was barely thirteen. It was on the 20th of May, 1894, that
Svāmināthan was born in Viluppuram (South Arcot District). His father,
Subrahmaṇya Śāstrī, belonged to the Hoysala Karnāṭaka Smārṭa Brahmaṇa
family which had migrated years earlier to the Tamil country and had
settled in Choḷa-deśa. After passing the Matriculation Examination from the
Government School, Kumbhakoṇam, taking the first place, Subrahmaṇya Śāstri
served as a teacher for some time, and then entered the Educational
Service. At the time of Svāmināthan’s birth, he was at Viḷuppuram.
Svāmināthan’s mother, Mahālakṣmī, hailed from a family belonging to
Icchaṅguḍi, a village near Tiruvaiyāru. An illustrious and saintly person
connected with the family, Raja Govinda Dīkṣita of the sixteenth century,
was minister to the first Nāyak King of Tañjāvūr; Dīkṣita popularly known
as Ayyan, was responsible for many development projects in Choḷa-territory;
his name is still associated with a tank, a canal, etc. (Ayyan Canal, Ayyan
Kulam).

Svāmināthan was the second child of his parents. He was named Svāmināthan
after the Deity of the family, the Lord Svāminātha of Svāmimalai, Two
incidents relating to this early childhood period are recorded by the
Āchārya himself in an article contributed to a symposium on *What Life Has
Taught Me.*[2]
<https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/preceptors-of-advaita/d/doc62924.html#note-e-32987>
This
is how he has described these incidents:

“A *‘mara nāi’* as they call it in Tamil or teddy cat (an animal which
generally climbs on trees and destroys *t* he fruits during nights) somehow
got into a room in the house and thrust' its head into a small copper pot
with a neck, which was kept in a sling and contained jaggery. The animal
was not able to pull out its head and was running here and there in the
room all through the night. People in the house and neighbours were aroused
by the noise and thought that some thief was at his job. But, the incessant
noise continued even till morning hours, and some bravados armed with
sticks opened the door of the room and found the greedy animal. It was
roped and tied to a pillar. Some experienced men were brought and after
being engaged in a tug-of-war, they ultimately succeeded in removing the
vessel from the head of the animal. The animal was struggling for life. It
was at last removed to some spot to roam freely, I presume. The first
experience of my life was this dreadful ocular demonstration born of greed
causing all our neighbours to spend an anxious and sleepless night.

The next experience was a man in the street who entered into the house
seeing me alone with tiny golden bangles upon which he began to lay his
hands. I asked him to tighten the hooks of the bangles which had become
loose and gave a peremptory and authoritative direction to him to bring
them back repaired without delay. The man took my orders most obediently
and took leave of me with the golden booty. In glee of having arranged for
repairs to my ornament, I speeded to inform my people inside of the
arrangement made by me with the man in the street who gave his name as
Ponnusvāmi. The people inside hurried to the street to find out the culprit
But the booty had become his property true to his assumed name, Ponnusami
(master of gold)”

Reflecting on these experiences, the Āchārya observes with characteristic
humility:

“I am prone to come to the conclusion that there lives none without
predominantly selfish motives. But with years rolling on, an impression,
that too a superficial one true to my nature, is dawning upon me that there
breathe on this globe some souls firmly rooted in morals and ethics who
live exclusively for others voluntarily forsaking not only their material
gains and comforts but also their own *sādhana* towards their spiritual
improvements”.

 A significant incident occurred in the year 1899. Svāmināthan’s father was
then serving as a teacher at a school in Porto-novo. He took the boy to
Chidambaram for the Kumbhābhiṣekam of Ilaimaiyākkinār temple.
Ilaimaiyākkinār it was that, according to a legend, gave salvation to
Tirunīlakaṇthanāyanār, one of the sixty-three Śaiva saints whose
biographies constitute the theme of Śekkilār’s *Periyapurānam.* The father
and son reached Chidambaram one evening and stayed at the house of Śrī
Venkatapati Aiyar, an Inspector of Schools. Svāmināthan was asked by his
father to go to sleep after being assured that he would be woken up at
night, and taken to the temple to see the procession and have the *darśan* of
the Deity. Svāmināthan woke up only next morning, and felt that his father
had disappointed him very much by not waking him up at night and taking him
to the temple. He gave expression to his feeling of disappointment to his
father. The latter consoled him saying that he himself had not gone to the
temple, and added that it was very fortunate that none in the house had
gone there. There was a fire accident that night at the temple and many of
those who were inside the temple perished in that great fire. On the same
night, Svāmināthan’s mother at Porto-novo had dreamt of the fire accident
at the Chidambaram temple, and in the early hours of the next day she was
very much perturbed imagining that danger might have befallen her husband
and child. In a fit of frenzy she came out of the house only to be fold by
her servant-maid that there had been a gruesome fire accident at the
Chidambaram temple. She proceeded towards the railway station to enquire
from the people who were returning from Chidambaram about her husband and
her son. Her joy knew no bounds when she saw both of them coming out of the
railway station. The agony she had experienced in her dream the previous
night, and the providential manner in which the father and son were saved
from the tragedy should have had some mysterious connection.

In the year 1900, Svāmināthan was in the first' standard in school at
Chidambaram, Śrī M. Singaravelu Mudaliyār, the Assistant Inspector of
Schools, visited the school on an inspection and discovered in *t* he boy
the makings of a genius. He asked him to read the Longman’s English Reader
prescribed for a higher standard; and Svāmināthan read it remarkably well.
At his instance Svāmināthan was promoted to the third standard.

The *upanayanam* of the boy was performed in 1905 at Tinḍivanam to which
place Subrahmanya Śāstri had been transferred. It is significant that the
Sixty-sixth Śaṅkarāchārya of Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha, Śrī Chandraśekharendra
Sarasvatī, who was at the time touring in South Arcot District, sent his
blessings: and it was he that later on literally captivated the boy, and
chose him as successor to the holy seat: and it is also significant that
Svāmināthan came to bear the *sannyāsa* name of the Sixty-sixth Āchārya.

When Svāmināthan was ten years of age, he was admitted in the Second Form
in the Arcot American Mission School, Tiṇḍi-vanam. The prodigy that the boy
was, he gave an excellent record of himself at school. He used to carry
away many prizes, including the one for proficiency in the Bible studies.
The teachers of the school naturally took a great liking for Svāmināthan:
they were proud of him and cited him to the other boys as a model student.

In 1906, when Svāmināthan was studying in the Fourth Form, the school was
arranging for a dialogue from Shakespeare’s *King John,* The teachers who
were responsible for fixing the participants in the dialogue could not'
find a suitable candidate from the age-group fixed for taking on the role
of Prince Arthur, the central character in the play. The Head-Master who
knew Svāmināthan’s extraordinary talents sent for the boy who was only
twelve then and assigned the role to him. After obtaining permission from
his parents, Svāmināthan rehearsed his part for only two days, and
acquitted himself remarkably well as Prince Arthur in the dialogue winning
the appreciation of the entire audience: the acting was so perfect and the
enunciation of Shakespeare’s classical English so accurate. One of
Svāmināthan’s friends had lent’ him the attire of a prince and Svāmināthan
really looked a prince. Many of the teachers went to Subrahmaṇya Śāstri’s
house next day and expressed how greatly they were pleased with
Svāmināthan’s superb performance.



*3. Ascension to Sri Kamakoti Pitha*

We have already referred to the Sixty-sixth Āchārya of Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha, Śrī
Chandraśekharendra Sarasvatī. In 1900 he was camping in the village
Perumukkal near Tiṇḍivanam and was observing the *chāturmāsya-vrata* there.
Subrahmaṇya Śāstri went to that village along with his family to have the
Āchārya’s *darśana* and receive his blessings. Svāmināthan saw His Holiness
from a distance in a temple during the *viśvarūpa-yātrā.*

His Holiness the Sixty-sixth Āchārya had the Navarātrī Celebrations
performed at Marakkanam village. After the Navarātrī he was camping at
Sāram village situated on the Tiṇḍivanam-Madurantakam rail route.
Svāmināthan went there with a friend without informing his parents. He
offered his homage at the lotus-feet of His Holiness and requested his
permission to leave. His Holiness insisted that Svāmināthan should stay
there itself. Two pandits attached to the Maṭha also asked Svāmināthan to
stay there. But Svāmināthan said that he had to attend school and that he
had not informed his parents about his coming over to the Maṭha. Thereupon
His Holiness gave him permission to leave. Svāmināthan left for Tiṇḍivanam
in a cart belonging to the Maṭha. After Svāmināthan had left, His Holiness
informed the two pandits of the Maṭha his keen desire to install
Svāmināthan as his successor to *t* he glorious pontifical seat of Kāñchī.

His Holiness the Sixty-sixth Āchārya attained *siddhi* at Kalavai and
Svāmirāthan’s maternal cousin was installed as the Sixty-seventh Āchārya.
He was the only child of Svāmināthan’s mother’s sister. And, he had lost
his father when he was quite young. He studied the Vedas at Chidambaram,
staying in Svāmināthan’s family in the years 1900-1901. After that he was
staying along with his mother in the Maṭha itself. When Svāmināthan’s
parent’s received the news about his installation to the Pīṭha,
Svāmināthan’s mother desired to see and console her sister whose only child
had become an ascetic. The whole family planned to leave for Kalavai in a
cart. But at the last minute, Svāmināthan’s father received a telegram from
Tiruchi asking him to attend an Education Conference at Tiruchi. And so,
before leaving for Tiruchi, he desired the members of his family not to go
to Kalavai in the cart because it was not quite safe to travel

HIS HOLINESS SRI CHANDRASEKHARENDRA SARASVATI [when thirteen years old.]

nearly fifty miles in a cart without proper escort; he asked them to go to
Kāñchī by train and from there to Kalavai in a cart.

The epic journey to Kāñchī and Kalavai and the providential manner in which
Svāmināthan came to be installed as the Head of the Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha at a
very tender age is recounted by the Āchārya himself in the article *What
Life Has Taught Me* already referred to, in the following words:

“In the beginning of the year 1907, when I was studying in a Christian
Mission School at Tiṇḍivanam, a town in the South Arcot District, I heard
one day that the Śaṅkarāchārya of Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha who was amidst us in our
town in the previous year, attained *siddhi* at Kalavai, a village about
ten miles from Arcot and twenty-five miles from Kāñchīpuram. Information
was received that a maternal cousin of mine who, after some study in the *Ṛg
Veda* had joined the camp of the Āchārya offering his services to him, was
installed on the Pīṭha.

He was the only son of the widowed and destitute sister of my mother and
there was not a soul in the camp to console her. At this juncture, my
father who was a supervisor of schools in the Tiṇḍivanam taluk, planned to
proceed with his family to Kalavai, some sixty miles from Tiṇḍivanam in his
own touring bullock cart. But on account of an educational conference at
Trichinopoly he cancelled the programme.

My mother with myself and other children started for Kalavai to console her
sister on her son assuming the sannyāsa āśrama. We travelled by rail to
Kāñchīpuram and halted at the Śaṅkarāchārya Maṭha there. I had my ablution
at the Kumara-koṣṭa-tīrtha. A carriage of the Maṭha had come there from
Kalavai with persons to buy articles for the Mahā Pūjā on the 10th day
after the passing away of the late Āchārya Paramaguru. But one of them, a
hereditary *maistry* of the Maṭha asked me to accompany him. A separate
cart was engaged for the rest of the family to follow me.

During our journey, the *maistry* hinted to me that I might not return home
and that the rest of my life might have to be spent in the Maṭha itself! At
first I thought that my elder cousin having become the Head of the Maṭha,
it might have been his wish that I was to live with him. I was then only
thirteen years of age and so I wondered as to what use I might be to him in
the institution.

But the *maistry* gradually began to clarify as miles rolled on that the
Āchārya my cousin in the pūrvāsrama, had fever which developed into
delirium and that was why I was being separated from the family to be
quickly taken to Kalavai. He told me that he was commissioned to go to
Tiṇḍivanam itself and fetch me but he was able to meet me at Kāñchīpuram
itself. I was stunned with this unexpected turn of events. I lay in a
kneeling posture in the cart itself, shocked as I was, repeating RĀMA RĀMA,
the only spiritual prayer I knew, during the rest of my journey.

My mother and the other children came some time later only to find that
instead of her mission of consoling her sister, she herself was placed in
the state of having to be consoled by someone else!”

Permission for installing Svāmināthan in the great pontifical seat of
Kāñchī was obtained from his father through telegram and every arrangement
was made as quickly as possible tor his installation. Svāmināthan ascended
the Śrī Kāñchī Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha on the 13th of February, 1907, as the
Sixty-eighth Āchārya, assuming the *sannyāsa* name ‘Chandraśekharendra
Sarasvatī.’ His Holiness went in a procession to the *siddhisthala* and
performed the mahā-pūjā of the Sixty-sixth Āchārya.

>From Kalavai the new Āchārya proceeded to Kumbhakoṇam where the
headquarters of the Maṭha were located. The transfer of the headquarters
from Kāñchī to Kumbhakoṇam had been necessitated by the unsettled political
conditions in Tonḍaimaṇḍalam in the eighteenth century during the time of
the Sixty-second Āchārya. With the passage of time the responsibilities and
the functions of the Maṭha increased. It is not a simple monastic
institution. The Maṭha has to administer properties endowed for various
religious and philanthropic purposes. The headship of such an organization,
it is obvious, should be extremely difficult. The administration requires
on the part of the Āchārya great spiritual power coupled with worldly
wisdom, the ability to fill the status of the *Jagadguru* , as well as
minute knowledge of men and matters. It is pertinent to mention here that
the paternal grand-father of Svāmināthan, Gaṇapati Śāstrī, was closely
connected with the Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha as its manager *(sarvādhikārī)* for over
fifty years from 1835 onwards. It was under his stewardship that permanent
arrangements were made for adequate sources of income to meet the expenses
of the Maṭha. The duties of the Maṭha had enormously increased since then.
And, the new Āchārya lost no time in getting himself equipped for the tasks
awaiting him. For this, he had first to go to the headquarters at
Kumbhakoṇam.

Leaving Kalavai in the same year, i.e. 1907, the Āchārya went to
Kumbhakoṇam after making a brief halt at Tiṇḍivanam. One could well imagine
what a proud day it should have been for the people of Tiṇḍivanam when they
received their own Svāmināthan as the new Āchārya of Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha. The
town wore a festive appearance. The teachers of the American Mission School
and the former school-fellows vied with one another in meeting the Āchārya
and conversing with him. The Āchārya had a good word for every one, and
spoke tenderly to each one of the teachers. After three days’ stay at
Tiṇḍivanam, the Āchārya resumed the journey and reached Kumbhakoṇam in the
month of Chitra in the year Plavaṅga.

The head of an Āchārya-Pīṭha is looked upon by the disciples as the
spiritual ruler, and is invested with all the regalia associated with a
king. The disciples of the Maṭha desired to celebrate the installation of
the new Āchārya as the head of the Kāmakoṭi Pīṭha with due ceremony. The
installation was performed on a grand scale on Thursday the 9th of May 1907
at the Kumbhakoṇam Maṭha. Her Highness Jeejambabhai Saheb and Her Highness
Ramakumarambha-bhai Saheb, queens of Shivaji of the ruling family of
Tanjore sent all the regal paraphernalia for the coronation. The ceremonial
*abhiṣeka* was performed with jasmine flowers. First, the representatives
of the Bangāru Kāmākṣī, Kāmākṣī and Akhilāṇḍeśvarī temples performed the
*abhiṣeka.* This was followed by the representatives of the princely family
of Tanjore, of the various Zamindars, and of the several aristocratic
families. Prominent scholars took an active part in the coronation. Seated
on the throne of the Maṭha, the Āchārya blessed all the people assembled
there. That night seated in the golden *ambāri* on the regal elephant, sent
by the Tanjore ruling family, His Holiness went in a grand procession
through the main streets of Kumbhakoṇam. Thus commenced the Āchārya’s
spiritual rulership as the *Jagadguru.*

K RAJARAM IRS 171024

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