Sri Madvacharya, the founder
of Dvaita school of philosophy, was born in the village of Pejarka, near Udupi
in Karnataka state in 1238 AD. He was born
to Narayana Nadillaya and Vedavati, a pious couple devoted to Lord Vishnu. They named the child Vasudeva and he also grew
up as a very pious child. He also showed extraordinary mental abilities and
physical powers from his childhood. When his father repeated previous day’s
lesson he usually complained why he was teaching the same thing as previous
day. Once his teacher found him not
paying attention to his teaching. When the
teacher scolded him for not paying attention, he replied that he was not
interested in learning Vedic hymns part by part. The teacher dared him to
recite the whole hymn and he recited the hymn in full with flawless intonation
and won the appreciation of his teacher. He was a good sportsman skilled in
swimming, wrestling and weight lifting.
Even from his early
childhood he was devoted to Lord Vishnu.
At the age of eight he sought his father’s consent to become a sanyasi.
When his father hesitated because he was the only son, he assured his father
that he will wait until another son was born to his parents. Shortly thereafter
a second son was born and father reluctantly gave his consent. Then his mother said “No”, but latter had to
say “Yes” when faced with the alternative of his running away from home. Then he took sanyasa from Sri Achyuthapreksha,
who gave him a new name Purnaprajna.
Sri Achyuthapreksha
belonged to an Advaitic order and had his math in Ananteswar shrine and he had
a hard time teaching young Purnaprajna, Upanishads and Bhagavad Gita on
monistic lines. Purnaprajna argued hard and impressed his guru with his
dualistic interpretation of the scriptures. He was a skilful debater and his
guru got converted to his views. After changing to Dvaita, Achyuthapreksha
changed his name also to Purushottama Tirtha. He also appointed Purnaprajna as his successor
with the name Ananda Tirtha. Ananda
Tirtha thereupon began to preach his Dvaita philosophy according to which the world is real, the individual souls are
different from Brahman, and Vishnu is the Highest Entity in the universe. Many pundits
and scholars of other schools who challenged him to a debate got defeated by
his keen and irrefutable logic. Ananda
Tirtha, in order to propagate his faith undertook a pilgrimage to various
shrines in South India where he debated and won over opponents of other schools
in the different places. Upon his return to
Udupi, he wrote the commentary on Bhagavad Gita, Gita Bhashya, his
first work. His guru now called him by a new name Madhva, meaning “honey
bringer”, by which name he became famous.
Soon after, Sri Madhvacharya
made a pilgrimage to the North and went to Allahabad, Dwaraka, Benares, Delhi
and other places and reached the famous Badrikshetra. He composed the Madhavabhashya,
commentary on Brahmasutras at this place and went further north all alone to
the depths of Himalayas, where Sri Vedavyasa is said to have his abode. On his
return journey Sri Madhvacharya came to the banks of Godavari and had debates
with two eminent scholarly pundits Shobana Bhatta and Samasastry belonging to
Advaitic school. The Pundits were defeated in the debate and they became his
disciples taking up Sanyasa. Shobana
Bhatta became the famous Padmanabha Tirtha, followed his master and was greatly
devoted to him and later succeeded Sri Madvacharya. Samasastry became Narahari Tirtha and joined
him later as per his orders.
After his return to Udipi, Sri
Madhvacharya began writing various works establishing the new system of
philosophy which has come to be called Dvaita Vedanta. He wrote commentaries on the ten principal
Upanishads, ten special treatises called Prakaranas, the Gita
Tatparya and other works during this period. It is during this period he
noticed from the shores of Malpe, a coastal village near Udupi a ship in
distress, in the Arabian Sea. He used his saffron cloth to guide the ship
safely to shore. The thankful captain of
the ship offered Sri Madvacharya anything he wanted from the ship. He only took
a small mound of Gopi Chandan from the ship. When he broke it there was
a statue of Sri Krishna.
With this idol of Sri
Krishna he established the Krishna temple in Udupi. He also established eight mathas, called
Ashta Matha in Udupi, the heads of which preside over the worship of Sri
Krishna in the temple by rotation. The maths are Palimaru matha, Adamaru matha, Krishnapura matha, Puttige
matha, Shirur matha, Sodhe matha, Kaniyooru matha, and Pejavara matha. The system of rotation
continues even today at Udupi. Change takes place once in two years and change-over
is celebrated as Paryaya festival.
Sri Madhvacharya undertook a
second tour of North India. He met many Muslim rulers like Ghyasuddin Balban
and conversed with them in Urdu. Ghyasuddin Balban was so impressed that he offered
a part of his Kingdom as jaghir if Sri Madhvacharya would stay in his
kingdom. Sri Madvacharya politely
declined his offer and proceeded with his tour.
After returning from North India he spent the rest of his life in Udupi,
occasionally visiting a place called Vishnumangala near Udupi. During one of his visits he entered into a
debate with a reputed champion of the Advaita school by name Trivikramapanditacharya.
The debate between them seems to have extended to fifteen days and in the end
Trivikramapanditacharya admitted defeat and became his disciple embracing Dvaita
philosophy.
Trivikramapanditacharya
became devoted to Sri Madvacharya and wrote the commentary known as
Tatvapradipa on the Brahmasutra Bhashya of
Sri Madhvacharya. At his request Sri Madhvacharya wrote a metrical
commentary on the Brahmasutras which is famous as Anuvyakhyana. The end for Sri
Madvacharya is said to have come in his eightieth year suddenly. While he was teaching the Aitareya Upanishad
Bhashya to his disciples, he seems to have suddenly disappeared from the sight of disciples
in a shower of flowers.
Sri Madhvacharya
is considered to be the third avatar of Mukya Prana, Vayu, the
earlier two being Hanumanji and Bhima, the Pandava prince. Like Bhima, he could
eat and digest enormous quantity of food without being affected, while at the
same time he could fast for days without showing any sign of tiredness. One
incident attributed to him in this respect runs as follows. Once when Sri Madvacharya was
travelling through the Goa region, a Brahmin by name Sankara wanted to test
him. So he invited him to his place and offered 4000 banana fruits which Sri Madvacharya
ate completely besides drinking 30 vessels of milk, reminiscent of Bhima’s
exploits. Seeing his special superhuman powers the local king wanted Sri Madvacharya
to stay in his place. When he refused,
the king tried to detain him by locking him in the local temple. Sri Madvacharya became invisible to the king
and left the place with his disciples.
Another famous miracle
attributed to him is “walking on water”. While returning from Badrinath, he and his
disciples had to cross River Ganges. There were no boats to cross the river. He
left his disciples and walked into water and reached the other bank. The Muslim king at the other bank was surprised to
see him crossing the full river without boat and without getting the clothes
wet. The king recognized the greatness of Sri Madvacharya and he immediately
arranged for boats to get the disciples across the river.
Sri Madhvacharya has written
in all thirty seven works, and they are collectively called Sarvamula.
Four of his works are on Brahmasutras, two on Bhagavad Gita, ten are the
commentaries on ten Upanishads, one on the Mahabharata and one on the Bhagavata
and ten are the Prakaranas. The Rigbhashya is a commentary on the
Rig-Veda (for a few typical Riks). Seven of his works are of the Stotra
type. The direct disciples of Sri Madhvacharya, viz. Padmanabha Tirtha,
Narahari Tirtha, Trivikramapanditacharya among others have written commentaries
on his works.
The philosophy he
espoused was dualism, Dvaitam, He was critical of Sankara’s Advaita, which he
attacked fiercely and of Ramanuja’s Visishtadvaita. The salient points of his
philosophy can be summed up as:
1. Brahman is Lord Vishnu.
He only is independently Real
2. Jeevas (Athmas) and Jada (insentient objects) are also Real but their Reality is dependant Reality, dependant on Brahman.
3. Panchabeda, five differences i.e. between Brahman and jeevas, jeeva and jada, jada and jada, jada and Brahman, jeeva and jeeva, is an eternal fact.
4. Liberation (Moksha) means attaining the lotus feet of Lord Vishnu; in other words, entering an eternal relationship of service to the Supreme Lord
5. Pure devotional service to Lord Vishnu is the only way to attain this liberation
6. Jeevas are of three classes; mukthi-yogas, eligible for Moksha, nitya-samsarins, subject to eternal Samsara, tamo-yogyas, condemned to eternal hell.
7. The truth can be known only through; pratyaksha (direct perception), anumana (inference or logic), and sabda (Vedic authority)
8. The worship of Vishnu consists of - (i) Ankana, marking the body with His symbols, (ii) Namakarana, giving the names of the Lord to children and (iii) Bhajana, singing His glories
9. Renunciation, devotion and direct cognition of the Lord through meditation lead to the attainment of liberation.
2. Jeevas (Athmas) and Jada (insentient objects) are also Real but their Reality is dependant Reality, dependant on Brahman.
3. Panchabeda, five differences i.e. between Brahman and jeevas, jeeva and jada, jada and jada, jada and Brahman, jeeva and jeeva, is an eternal fact.
4. Liberation (Moksha) means attaining the lotus feet of Lord Vishnu; in other words, entering an eternal relationship of service to the Supreme Lord
5. Pure devotional service to Lord Vishnu is the only way to attain this liberation
6. Jeevas are of three classes; mukthi-yogas, eligible for Moksha, nitya-samsarins, subject to eternal Samsara, tamo-yogyas, condemned to eternal hell.
7. The truth can be known only through; pratyaksha (direct perception), anumana (inference or logic), and sabda (Vedic authority)
8. The worship of Vishnu consists of - (i) Ankana, marking the body with His symbols, (ii) Namakarana, giving the names of the Lord to children and (iii) Bhajana, singing His glories
9. Renunciation, devotion and direct cognition of the Lord through meditation lead to the attainment of liberation.
Sri Madvacharya's Dvaita philosophy
had been further developed by Jayatirtha (1356-1388) and Vyasaraya (1478-1589)
and has its main centre at Udupi (Karnataka).
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Great insight into one of the three reverential Acharyas. Thanks.
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