Maharshi Vyasa
By
Sri Swami Sivananda
In ancient days, our forefathers, the Rishis of Aryavartha, went to the forest to do Tapasya during the four
months following Vyasa Purnimaa particular and important day in the Hindu calendar. On this memorable day, Vyasa, an incarnation
of the Lord Himself, began to write his Brahma Sutras. Our ancient Rishis did this Tapasya in caves and forests. But
times have changed and such facilities are not common nowadays although Grihasthas and Rajas are not wanting who are able
and willing to place at the disposal of the members of the fourth Ashrama such help and facilities as they can afford. The
forests and caves have given place to the rooms of Sadhus in their own Gurudwaras and Mutts. One has of necessity to suit
himself to time and place; and change of place and situation should not be allowed to make such a difference in our mental
attitudes. Chaturmas begins from the Vyasa Purnima Day when, according to our Shastras, we are expected to worship Vyasa and
the Brahmavidya Gurus and begin the study of the Brahma Sutras and other ancient books on wisdom.
Our mythology speaks of many Vyasas; and it is said that there had been twenty-eight Vyasas before the present
VyasaKrishna Dvaipayanatook his birth at the end of Dvapara Yuga. Krishna Dvaipayana was born of Parasara Rishi through the
MatsyakanyaSatyavathi Deviunder some peculiar and wonderful circumstances. Parasara was a great Jnani and one of the supreme
authorities on astrology and his book Parasara Hora is still a textbook on astrology. He has also written a Smriti
known as Parasara Smriti which is held in such high esteem that it is quoted by our present-day writers on sociology
and ethics. Parasara came to know that a child, conceived at a particular Ghatika or moment of time, would be born as the
greatest man of the age, nay, as an Amsa of Lord Vishnu Himself. On that day, Parasara was travelling in a boat and he spoke
to the boatman about the nearing of that auspicious time. The boatman had a daughter who was of age and awaiting marriage.
He was impressed with the sanctity and greatness of the Rishi and offered his daughter in marriage to Parasara. Our Vyasa
was born of this union and his birth is said to be due to the blessing of Lord Siva Himself who blessed the union of a sage
with a Jnani of the highest order, although of a low caste.
At a very tender age Vyasa gave out to his parents the secret of his life that he should go to the forest
and do Akhanda Tapas. His mother at first did not agree, but later gave permission on one important condition that he should
appear before her whenever she wished for his presence. This itself shows how far-sighted the parents and the son were. Puranas
say that Vyasa took initiation at the hands of his twenty-first Guru, sage Vasudeva. He studied the Shastras under sages Sanaka
and Sanandana and others. He arranged the Vedas for the good of mankind and wrote the Brahma Sutras for the quick and
easy understanding of the Srutis; he also wrote the Mahabharata to enable women, Sudras and other people of lesser intellect
to understand the highest knowledge in the easiest way. Vyasa wrote the eighteen Puranas and established the system of teaching
them through Upakhyanas or discourses. In this way, he established the three paths, viz., Karma, Upasana and Jnana. To him
is also attributed the fact that he continued the line of his mother and that Dhritarashtra, Pandu and Vidura were his progeny.
Vyasas last work was the Bhagavata which he undertook at the instigation of Devarshi Narada who once came to him and advised
him to write it as, without it, his goal in life would not be reached.
Vyasa is considered by all Hindus as a Chiranjivi, one who is still living and roaming throughout the world
for the well-being of his devotees. It is said that he appears to the true and the faithful and that Jagadguru Sankaracharya
had his Darshan in the house of sage Mandana Misra and that he appeared to many others as well. Thus, in short, Vyasa lives
for the welfare of the world. Let us pray for his blessings on us all and on the whole world.
Everybody knows that there are six important systems of thought developed by our ancients known as the Shad
Darshanas or the six orthodox schools of philosophy, viz., Sankhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaiseshika, Purva Mimamsa and Uttara Mimamsa
or Vedanta. Each system has a different shade of opinion. Later, these thoughts became unwieldy, and to regulate them, the
Sutras came into existence. Treatises were written in short aphorisms, called "Sutras" in Sanskrit, meaning
clues for memory or aids to long discussions on every topic. In the Padma Purana, the definition of a Sutra is given.
It says that a Sutra should be concise and unambiguous; but the brevity was carried to such an extent that the Sutra
has become unintelligible and particularly so in the Brahma Sutras. Today we find the same Sutra being interpreted
in a dozen ways. The Brahma Sutras written by Vyasa or Badarayanafor that was the name which he possessed in additionare
also known as Vedanta Sutras as they deal with Vedanta only. They are divided into four chapters, each chapter being
subdivided again into four sections. It is interesting to note that they begin and end with Sutras which read together
mean "the inquiry into the real nature of Brahman has no return", meaning that "going by that way one reaches Immortality
and no more returns to the world". About the authorship of these Sutras, tradition attributes it to Vyasa. Sankaracharya,
in his Bhashya, refers to Vyasa as the author of the Gita and the Mahabharata, and to Badarayana as the author of the Brahma
Sutras. His followersVachaspathi, Anandagiri and othersidentify the two as one and the same person, while Ramanuja and
others attribute the authorship of all three to Vyasa himself. The oldest commentary on the Brahma Sutras is by Sankaracharya;
he was later followed by Ramanuja, Vallabha, Nimbarka, Madhva and others who established their own schools of thought. All
the five Acharyas mostly agree on two points, viz., (i) that Brahman is the cause of this world and (ii) that knowledge of
Brahman leads to final emancipation. But they differ amongst themselves on the nature of this Brahman, the relation between
the individual soul and the Supreme Soul, and the condition of the soul in the state of release. According to some, Bhakti
and not Jnana, as interpreted by Sankara, is the chief means of attaining liberation.Vyasas life is a unique example of one
born for the dissemination of spiritual knowledge. His writings inspire us and the whole world even to this day. May we all
live in the spirit of his writings!