What is Guru Purnima?
The full moon day in the Hindu month of Ashad (July-August) is observed
as the auspicious day of Guru Purnima, a day sacred to the memory of
the great sage Vyasa. All Hindus are indebted to this ancient saint who
edited the four Vedas, wrote the 18 Puranas, the Mahabharata and the
Srimad Bhagavata. Vyasa even taught Dattatreya, who is regarded as the
Guru of Gurus.
Significance of Guru Purnima
On this day, all spiritual aspirants and devotees worship Vyasa in
honor of his divine personage and all disciples perform a 'puja' of
their respective spiritual preceptor or 'Gurudevs'.
This day is
of deep significance to the farmers, for it heralds the setting in of
the much-needed rains, as the advent of cool showers usher in fresh life
in the fields. It is a good time to begin your spiritual lessons.
Traditionally, spiritual seekers commence to intensify their spiritual
'sadhana' from this day.
The period 'Chaturmas' ("four months")
begins from this day. In the past, wandering spiritual masters and
their disciples used to settle down at a place to study and discourse on
the Brahma Sutras composed by Vyasa, and engage themselves in Vedantic
discussions.
The Role of the Guru
Swami Sivananda asks: "Do
you realize now the sacred significance and the supreme importance of
the Guru's role in the evolution of man? It was not without reason that
the India of the past carefully tended and kept alive the lamp of
Guru-Tattva. It is therefore not without reason that India, year after
year, age after age, commemorates anew this ancient concept of the Guru,
adores it and pays homage to it again and again, and thereby re-affirms
its belief and allegiance to it. For, the true Indian knows that the
Guru is the only guarantee for the individual to transcend the bondage
of sorrow and death, and experience the Consciousness of the Reality."
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