Shree Varahi
Devi
One text of
the Prapanchasara Tantra says that the Parabindu divides into two parts, of
which the right is Bindu, the male, Purusha or Ham, and the left Visarga the
female, Prakriti or Sah, making the combined Hamsah. Hamsah is the union of
Prakriti and Purusha and the universe is Hamsah
Varahi is a bali (animal
sacrifice) devata, one of Lalita's receivers of offerings. Her four alchemical
elements (dhatus) are known as the four fires. Kurukulla's alchemical elements
are known as the five Shaktis. The combination of these five Shaktis (downward
pointing triangles) and four fires (upward pointing triangles), forms the
complex figure in the centre of the Shri Cakra. Varahi's four are the twelve
(three x four) sun kalas, twelve sidereal constellations. Kurukulla's five
triangles are the fifteen (five x three) Kalas of the moon, fifteen lunar days.
The complete individual grows within nine months to be born as a Shri Yantra or
plant. The flowering of this plant is shown by the 24 petals of the yantra.
Both Varahi and Kurukulla are
connected with, but separate from the
sixteen Nityas
(fifteen days of the bright fortnight plus Lalita herself).
The following chapter of the
Tantrarajatantra, translated into English for the first time, is devoted to
the practice of the Varahi mantra and contains a number of prayogas. As with all
other prayogas, a sadhaka is only qualified (adhikari) to perform these rites if
(a) she or he is initiated, and (b) does the daily puja of Tripurasundari.
Further, the commentary (not translated here) shows that there is a number of
elements which have to be taken account of when performing prayogas. These
include visualisation skills and also a knowledge of astrology (Hindu, sidereal
version), before the rites will be successful.
The Tantrarajatantra says
that Varahi is the "father form", while Kurukulla is the "mother form" of the
devata.
Tantrarajatantra Chapter XXIII
Now in the
Sixteen Nitya (Tantra) the rules, the worship and the limbs relating to the
Angabhuta known as Panchami are spoken of. I speak of puja of the siddha mantra,
worship through ritual and meditation, and sacrifice and yantras, giving all the
siddhi that is desired.
After doing limb nyasa using
seven, two sets of six, ten, seven and seven parts of the mantras, a person
should worship according to rule in a chakra consisting of triangle, circle,
hexagon, invoking her with Hrim.
One should worship using the 110
letters of the Varahi vidya in the centre (of the yantra), and should then
worship the attendants in the left, right and centre triangles who are Krodhini,
Stambhini and Chanda-Ucchanda, placing Hrim in front of their respective names
and Namah behind.
In the six angles starting from
the east and going anticlockwise one should worship Brahmi and so forth. Then in
the circles one should worship Mahalakshmi Panchami. After giving animal
sacrifice using the sixteenth syllable, and after one has worshipped all with
ritual accessories, one should recite the vidya 1000 or 100 times. Daily, one
should do sacrifice using pure and good sesamum, rice or ghee, then the vidya
becomes successful.
A sage of controlled senses,
able to perform sacrifice, should do puja at the twilights. He should recite the
vidya 100,000 times -- giving oblation of one tenth part of that. After doing
the worship and invocation, the mantra becomes successful -- if one is
compassionate, devoted to Guru, contented, patient and of peaceful mind.
If one should perform a rite for
a specific application devotedly, it gives whatever is desired immediately,
giving the favour and grace of Devi to the tireless practitioner.
One should meditate on Devi as
having the body of a girl from the throat down, resembling the colour of molten
gold, her large, fiery and tawny haired head being that of a sow.
She has three eyes and seven
arms which hold a discus, a conch, a hook, a lotus, a noose, and a club. She
shows the (mudras) dispelling fear and granting boons. One should think of her
as being comfortably seated on the shoulders of Garuda. In daily worship one
should meditate on her and her Shaktis in this way.
In particular applications, one
should recall Devi and her Shaktis as being seated on lions, tigers, elephants,
horses or Garudas. According to that which one wishes to achieve in specific
meditations, one should think of her as having a dark green, red, yellow, black
or purple body.
In rituals for subjugation, one
should think of Panchami, and recite (her mantra) as red, surrounded by hosts of
beautiful red Shaktis. In worship for paralysing, one should meditate on her as
yellow, wearing yellow garments, garlanded with yellow flowers, wearing yellow
jewels, and smeared with yellow unguent, surrounded by yellow Shaktis.
In a difficult pass one should
think of her as being seated on a great bodied lion which is of a dark green
colour, surrounded by Shaktis similar to herself, offering recitation of the
Vidya to the central Shakti. If the mantrin should meditate on these as his own
self, he attains an exalted and wealthy status.
If one should remember Devi,
with her Shaktis, on lions, Garudas, elephants, Sharabhas, horned creatures,
dogs, boars, buffaloes and serpents with terrific teeth and cruel and crooked
claws, whether assailed by thieves, unexpected attacks, by anxieties about being
injured, by pisachas, by bhutas, by pretas, away from one's family, or in a
defile in the wilderness, or on lonely roads, or in a forest, or on a mountain
peak, then in this way one becomes free from anxiety and happy.
Whether in wars, in fearful
situations, in falls (from status), or attacked by chariots and swords, or in
difficult passes, having remembered her one becomes supremely victorious.
If one should meditate, in
states of terrible war, on Devi as blue, with a terrible appearance, seated on
an elephant, holding a nail, a knife, a sword, an arrow, a club, a sickle, and a
discus in her right hands: and with her left making the threatening gesture, and
holding shield, skin, bow, damaru, plough, noose and conch: surrounded by
Shaktis like her; the Shaktis seated on elephants, assaulting all the missiles
of the enemy, and attacking them with maces, all moving about, like red banners,
then (the enemy) flees, pursued by swarms of blue Shaktis howling terribly,
berserk.
One should meditate on Devi in
the form previously described during great wars, as being in the centre of the
sun's orb, her body marked with red tridents. If one should then recite the
vidya with concentrated mind, after invoking her into water via breath during
rituals for a period of seven days, one's enemy will die from fever.
If one should think of Devi,
surrounded by her attendants, and recite her vidya, for three days, in water, as
breaking in pieces the body of one's enemy, which is then consumed by fierce
jackals and corpse eaters and flesh eating dogs, then, after remembering her,
one gains deliverance.
If one should think of Devi as
of an effulgent purple colour, and do recitation (visualising her) cleaving the
target's tongue, heart and feet, one slays enemies.
If, after remembering Devi as of
a yellow colour, one should worship according to the rule, the enemy experiences
harm, anxiety in speech, becomes disputatious, and is conquered in battle.
After thinking of this Devi as
seated on Garuda, and surrounded by numbers of Shaktis seated on Garudas, and
the skies being thick with an array of hosts of unseated Garudas, then one
becomes victorious over an army of enemies at a distance, instantly putting them
to flight. With her eight arms holding axes, and being surrounded by a circle of
Shaktis, one may destroy the army of enemies in a battle immediately.
If a person should meditate on
Varahi as having dishevelled hair, as being seated on a throne in a jewelled
pavilion, each of her hairs swarms of Shaktis holding clusters of red arrows,
and each of which sits on hyenas, lions, tigers and monkeys and bears and
Garudas and horses, each holding tridents as previously declared, the hostile
host is destroyed by one's own ruler.
Parameshvari, if a sadhaka
should worship the yellow effulgent one, the paralyser, with yellow flowers,
using the previously declared tongue method, for a number of days, the array of
the enemies in battle and whatever else one desires are paralysed instantly.
If one should worship the red
Devi at midnight, using red flowers, one may enslave or kill all enemies, this is
certain.
If one should do puja for the
number of days previously spoken of, using black flowers according to rule, at
the time of one's enemy's death, in a visha nadi, a tortured yoga, or in a death
or destruction yoga, then Yama lords it over the enemies.
If one should worship using dark
green flowers, and various sorts of scents, it is said one becomes very wealthy,
free of disease, true minded, a lord. One lives happily on earth for 100 years,
it is said.
One should do sacrifice at night
in a rectangular fire pit, using turmeric mixed with food, sesame, beans, rice,
yellow flowers, yellow fruit, palmyra leaves, together with the letters of the
target's name, using ghee. Then one may paralyse, as previously stated.
At midnight, the enemy may be
felled if one sacrifices in fire in a yoni shaped pit, offering meat in a
devoted way, and sacrificing for the number of days previously stated. One may
kill the enemy by disease, sword, dart, serpent, water, flame, elephant,
madness, enemies, whirlwind, the fall of a tree or wall, consumed by enemies.
The enemies are unable to withstand this prayoga.
Meditating on her as being
purple, and seated on a bird, having the nail and the rest of the weapons,
during (the rising of) Virgo or Scorpio, offering goat flesh and much ghee, the
rays of light from the sacrifice slay the person, who is consumed by hot raging
fever.
If one should meditate on her as
being effulgent as the dawn sun, offering (in sacrifice) various red substances,
ghee, blossoms of the Kimshuka, Bandhuka, Japa, Pala, Karavira, Kahlara, lotus,
Patala, Ashoka and various other red blossoms, then one becomes equal to a king,
very wealthy, having great power, wafted by fly whisks and shielded by parasols,
of this there is no doubt.
If, at night, one should
meditate on her as red, with her nail and other weapons, and sacrifice in the
various cardinal points starting with the east for the number of days previously
stated, then one may subjugate man, woman or the whole world. One becomes
famous, and lives on earth for a long period like Laksmi.
One should draw a bhupura,
inside of this placing the name of the target. On the outside one should write
the earth letters. Making an eight petal lotus, one should write the six
syllables of the mantra outside of the two circles.
Outside the hexagon one should
write the earth letters, placing mantras inside the angles. As previously
stated, one should write (letters) on the rim of the two circles, placing
outside of the bhupura, in an anticlockwise direction, the letters of the
matrika.
After doing this, one should
then write in reverse the letters of the root vidya. If one should worship in
this, one may paralyse the enemy and the world.
One should write the letters of
the mantra six by six in a nine angled design surrounded by two circles, outside
of this there being an octangle design surrounded by two circles, all surrounded
by a bhupura. Within the octangles, and outside of the circles, and in the
bhupura, one should write the matrikas both clockwise and anticlockwise. One
should write the name (of the target) in all the directions, and should worship
the eight armed form, Auspicious One. Parameshvari, employing the method
previously stated, the target becomes paralysed.
One should draw three circles,
outside them putting a hexagon surrounded by two circles. This is to be enclosed
in an octangular design, surrounded by a circle. In order one should place the
letters of Earth, one in each of the (six) angles, outside this writing them in
three groups of three. In the centre one should also write the name (of the
target). After reciting, the sadhaka should give animal sacrifice to obtain
whatever is desired.
One should draw a triangle
enclosed in a circle, outside of this drawing a hexagon, another hexagon, an
octangular figure, and another hexagon. From the edges to the middle one should
write the naksatra, tithi and day (of the target's birth), also writing all the
matrika letters. In the centre of each of the seven mandalas, one should write
the matrikas in clockwise order. One should place Hrim in the centre. If one
should worship this one obtains all siddhi. One may command bhutas, pretas,
pishachas and so forth, causing disease, attacks by elephants and other wild
beasts, or pacifying them.
One should draw an octangular
design, placing in each of the corners, sides and centre a trident shape.
Outside this, write the letters of the mantra together with the matrikas,
placing in the middle compartment the named one wishes to paralyse. One should
draw it on birch bark, on cloth, on copper or on stone. One should always
worship it using flowers, beautiful perfumes, then doing recitation of the
mantra. Doing the ritual at the twilights, one may always obtain whatever is
desired.
Draw a square, inside of this
making sixteen lines, extending from the cardinal and intermediate points, which
together makes a figure of 225 compartments. One should make a symmetrical
figure of 28 compartments by rubbing out other of the angles made. In the
central three compartments one should write the target and the name of the act
the sadhaka wishes to accomplish. Starting from the east, one should write the
letters of the mantra.
This great yantra is called the
vajra, giving the totality of whatever is wished for by sadhakas. Wherever this
is placed, whether written on copper, stone and so forth, there can never dwell
thieves, bhutas, diseases, ailments, serpents, bad planets, pretas, pisacas and
so forth. In whichever house this yantra is placed on the junction points of the
homestead design (vastu), there can never exist black magic, ailments or
disease.
From the north west, south east,
south west and north east, draw 12 lines, making a vajra figure of 21
compartments. In the centre of these one should draw the name of whatever is to
be accomplished, outside of this, in a clockwise direction, writing the letters
of the alphabet. After worshipping this and drawing it, whether it be on copper,
stone or whatever, disease, bhutas, planets, madness, pisacas and the kleshas of
the mind can never enter or afflict one.
If one should draw the
previously described vajra in a golden colour within the centre of a pot,
filling it with milk, and if one should invoke Devi in this liquid, and worship
her therein, oblating and offering flowers and reciting the vidya 3000 times,
subsequently bathing oneself with the liquid, and drinking some of it, then one
becomes free of bodily kleshas, and lives happily on earth.
After making a circle measuring
four finger breadths, one should put outside of it, two measures by two
measures, eleven compartments. From each of these two by two measures one should
draw lines. After putting tridents in the compartments, one should surround the
whole with the letters of the alphabet, and placing the named in the centre.
After indrawing the Devi via breath into this yantra, and worshipping from the
east clockwise, then reciting the vidya, one may achieve whatever is desired.
Notes
Varahi, also
known as Panchami, or the Fivefold One, bears the relation of "father" to
Lalita, although pictured as a Devi. The mother form is Kurukulla Tara. Varahi
gives four fires and Kurukulla five Shaktis -- this forming the complex shape in
the centre of Shri Yantra.
Varahi is fivefold as water,
fire, earth, air and aether. These elements are related to lion, tiger,
elephant, horse and Garuda -- the bird-human vehicle of Vishnu. Their colours
are dark green, red, yellow, black and purple.
Her mantra vidya of 110 letters
is: Aim glaum aim namo bhagavati vartali vartali varahi varahi varahamukhi
varahamukhi andhe andhini nama rundhe rundhini namah jambhe jambhini namah mohe
mohini nama stambhe stambhini namah sarvadushta pradadushtanam earvesham
sarvabak chitta chakshurmukhagatijihvastambham kuru kuru shighram rashyam kuru
kuru aim glaum thah thah thah thah hum phat svaha.
Her yantra is a triangle
enclosed within a circle, a hexagram surrounding this, and the hexagram itself
being surrounded by two circles.
by -
www.clas.ufl.edu/users/gthursby/tantra/varahi.htm
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