What is Veda
Indian tradition, however, has held the Vedas all along in the highest reverence, it has invested them with the authority of a revealed scripture, Books of Wisdom. Notwithstanding all the centuries-old efforts at such debunkings, the Vedas stand firm as a rock towering like the snow-capped peaks of Kailas overtopping and overlooking the vast panoramic expanse below, drawing its nourishment every moment from the ceaseless streams that flow from above-the huge and hoary expanse of Indian life and culture. What is the secret that has enabled the Vedas to hold the pre-eminent position they have occupied from the beginnings of time in this country? Is there anything in them which is valuable for man as to exact respect and reverence to the extent they have done? And if the Vedas are really so valuable and so sacred, why is it that they have become the targets of so much criticism? Why is it that the Vedas are today so much enveloped in misunderstanding and condemnation that they are in danger of being completely lost to sight?
And what, in the first place, is the Veda?
The
Vedās are the only extant records of the lives and expressions
of our forefathers of an age upon the time-limits of which
scholars and historians have been unable to agree with any
degree of finality. Indian scholars like Tilak and
Europeans like Jacobi are inclined to date the period
from Four to Six millenniums before the Christian era
while other Western scholars have a strong tendency to
advance the date to as near the Christian era as
possible. Be that as it may, it is the songs and chants of
these fathers of the race—purve pitarah—, it is their hymns
that form the starting point and the kernel for the
vast literature that has flowed from and developed round
them and goes by the name VEDA. At some period of their
history, very likely at the close of the epoch during
which the hymns were first sung and celebrated, it was
found necessary to collect and compile all the available
hymns current at that time. The necessity for the
compilation may have arisen in order to prevent their loss
inevitable with the passage of time and also to preserve them in
the form in which they were chanted. Tradition has it that
they were compiled under the direction of that Master
compiler of the Great Age—Vyasa. Certainly what have been
compiled do not exhaust all the hymns that must have
been current; the compilations represent the remnants
that had survived the ravages of time and were still
extant at the time of the compilation. These hymnal
texts had been handed down from mouth to mouth and it was
inevitable that they must have suffered diminution in quantity
with each generation.
The hymns were collected and arranged in four different compilations, Samhitās,
each collection being governed by different
considerations about the nature of the hymns, the purpose
for which they were compiled, etc. Thus hymns which were
largely in the nature of prayers and dedications to Gods were
collected—says the tradition—by Paila under the guidance of
Vyasa, and went to form the Rik mantra Samhita. Hymns
which were particularly chanted during religious and
social functions of the community were compiled by
Vaishampayana under the title Yajus mantra Samhita.
Jaimini is said to have collected hymns that were set to
music and melody—Saman. There is also the fourth collection
of hymns and chants ascribed to Sumantu, known as Atharva
Samhita. We need not dwell upon the subject of the
Atharva mantra Samhita and the controversy around it but
recognize the Vedic tradition as has come down to us
which includes all the four Samhitās in its fold.
Each
of these Samhitās was followed gradually by explanations and
dissertations in prose and in verse for elucidating the
meanings, allusions, legends, etc. of the hymns and
their application. These portions are known as
Brāhmaņās. The concluding portions of these or the
portions attached to them are discussions and speculations
of a philosophical and spiritual import based certainly on the
ideas and texts found in the Hymns. They are called the
Āraņyakās and Upanishads. Each Veda thus comprises the
Mantra Samhita, the Brāhmaņās, the Āraņyakās and the
Upanishads.
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