Showing posts with label tarpana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tarpana. Show all posts

Hinduism - What Is Tarpana?

 


(“satisfying”) Tarpana is a ceremony of remembrance in which one delivers libations of water to one's ancestors in order to satisfy their thirst.

Tarpana fulfills one of the Five Great Sacrifices, "sacrifice to the ancestors." These five sacrifices are obligatory daily religious observances (nitya karma) for a "twice-born" house holder, that is, a householder who was born into one of India's three "twice born" groups—brahmin, kshatriya, or vaishya—and received the adolescent religious initiation known as the second birth.

Tarpana may also be a one-time religious deed (naimittika karma) that should be done while bathing (snana) at pilgrimage sites (tirthas).

The ritual itself is pretty straightforward.

The performer first bathes in order to become ritually pure, then scoops water into his joined hands and tips his fingers forward to drain the water.

According to some texts, the water should also be mixed with sesame seeds, a component linked with funeral gifts.

Tarpana was regarded a companion ritual to the memorial service known as shraddha, albeit tarpana was done considerably more often as a required daily deed.

One symbolically feeds one's ancestors to satisfy their hunger in the shraddha ceremony, while one gives them water to relieve their thirst in the tarpana rite.

~Kiran Atma


You may also want to read more about Hinduism here.

Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.

Hinduism - What Is Vishnu's Very First Avatar Or Incarnation On Earth?


The first of Vishnu's 10 complete avatars or "incarnations" on Earth is the Fish Avatar. 

Each avatar emerges when the cosmos is in peril, generally as a result of a demon (asura) whose might has become abnormally great, causing the universe to lose its natural equilibrium. 

Vishnu assumes bodily form when the world is out of balance, according to the avatars' theory, in order to remove the root of evil and restore cosmic balance. 

The story of the fish avatar starts in the distant past, when virtuous ruler Manu finds a little fish in the water he holds in his cupped hands while performing the tarpana or water-offering ceremony for his ancestors. 

The monarch, who is kind, places the little fish in a pot of water, but the fish quickly outgrows it. 

Manu transports the fish to bigger and larger boats as it grows, eventually releasing it into the Ganges. 

Manu understands that the fish is Vishnu himself when it becomes too huge for the Ganges and must be released into the ocean. 

He starts to chant Vishnu's praises. 

The fish then warns Manu that the world is about to be destroyed—first by scorching fire, which will sear all life, and then by floods, which will transform the whole globe into a single cosmic sea. 

Vishnu tells Manu that the gods have made a boat out of the Vedas and instructs him to gather all of the earth's animals and place them on the boat for safekeeping. 

He assures Manu that all of the animals on board will escape the impending catastrophe, and that when the world returns to normal with the arrival of the Krta Age, Manu will be the monarch of the universe. 

Manu follows orders, and as the world is about to be destroyed, Vishnu arrives in the guise of a massive horned fish. 

Manu attaches the boat to the fish's horn, and all of the creatures on board survive to repopulate the planet thanks to Vishnu's omnipotence. 




You may also want to read more about Hinduism here.

Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.