Sant Eknath
Sant Eknath (1533–1599) was a prominent Marathi Saint, scholar and religious poet. In the development of Marathi literature, Sant Eknath is seen as a bridge between the towering predecessors Dnyaneshwar and Naamdev and the equally noble successors Tukaram and Ramdas.
Early Life
Eknath was born sometime around 1530 AD in an illustrious
Brahmin family of Pratisthan (Paithan today). They were said to be the
Kulkarnis of the village, their real name is Eknath Suryajipant Kulkarni. Sant
Bhanudas, who brought back the sacred image of Lord Pandurang, from Vijaynagar
to Pandharpur, was Eknath’s great grandfather.
Eknath was born under the star sign of ‘Mula’ in the sagittarius constellation, traditionally considered a bad omen for the parents of the child. The omen was borne out for Eknath’s father Suryanarayan and mother Rukmini died shortly after his birth and Eknath was brought up by his grandparents, Chakrapani and Saraswatibai. As an orphan, Eknath had to the suffer taunts of other children. He began avoiding their company and found refuge as a child in prayer and other devotional practices.
Tutelage by Janardanswami
When about twelve years old, Eknath heard about
Janardanswamy. This great scholar lived in Devgiri renamed as Daulatabad by the
Muslim rulers of the time. Eager to become his disciple, Eknath trudged all the
way to Devgiri. Janardaswamy was amazed by this extraordinarily gifted boy and
readily accepted him as his disciple. He taught Eknath Vedanta, Nyaya,
Meemansa, Yoga etc. and most importantly, Sant Dnyaneshwar’s works.
Janardanswamy was a devotee of Lord Dattatreya, and this meant that Eknath's
social and religious outlook consisted of tolerance and kindness toward all fellow
beings.
The Guru asked Eknath to go on a pilgrimage. He himself
accompanied Eknath up to Nasik-Tryambakeshwar. There, Eknath wrote his famous
treatise on the Chatushloki Bhagavat. In this Marathi commentary, he explained
the significance of four sacred shlokas of the Bhagavat in 1036 specially
metered verses known as ovee.
After completing his pilgrimage, consisting of various holy places of west and north India, Eknath returned to Paithan. His grandparents were extremely delighted to see him again and implored him to marry. Eknath and his wife Girija were truly made for each other and established an ideal examples of ethical living. In time, the couple was blessed with two daughters, Godavari and Ganga and a son Hari.
Revival of the Dnyaneshwari
During the intervening period between Dnyaneshwar and
Eknath, Maharashtra, like the rest of the country, had been ravaged by Muslim
invasions. Defeat after defeat had left the people demoralized. The people did
not have their epics, their ballads, their poems to turn to, these had all been
forgotten in a generation or two. Eknath saw that the need of the hour was a
revival of Marathi literature, of the great epics, an education in the old
values and if the once popular Marathi-worded Dnyaneshwari could be brought
again to the people, they could be uplifted, morally and spiritually.
Eknath devoted himself to bringing about the epic poem's revival. His first task was to locate the "samadhi" of Dnyaneshwar to show to the people that Dnyaneshwar was not a mythological being, but a real man, one of their own. He then devoted a few, hard years in compiling an undistorted version of the Dnyaneshwari.
His Writings
Almost all of Eknath's writings were in verse form in
Marathi. Eknath wrote a scholarly and lucid commentary, Eknathi Bhagawat, on the
Eleventh Canto of the Sanscrit sacred text, the Bhagavata Purana. The
commentary involved 18,800 owees. He wrote the first 25,000 owees of his
another major work, the Bhawartha-Ramayana. A disciple called Gavba added
15,000 owees to complete this work. Eknath wrote Rukmini Swayamwar comprising
1,711 owees; it was based on 144 verses from the Bhagawat Purana. His work,
Hastamalak, comprised 764 owees, and it was based on a 14-shlok Sanskrit hymn
with the same name by Shankaracharya.
His other works were the Shukashtak (447 owees), the
Swatma-Sukha (510 owees), the Ananda-Lahari (154 owees), the Chiranjeewa-Pad
(42 owees), the Geeta-Sar, and the Prahlad-Wijaya. He introduced a new form of
Marathi the religious song called Bharood, writing 300 of them. He also wrote
300 religious songs in the Abhang form. He was also a preacher, and gave many
public discourses.
Eknath initiated in Maharashtra a movement called Wasudewa
Sanstha. It involved house-to-house visitations by individuals known as
Wasudewa, who, standing in front of peoples' houses, spread religious messages
through bhajans (ballads).
His Teachings
Eknath was one of the earliest reformers of untouchability
in Maharashtra, working as he was in the late Middle Ages. In times when
Brahmins even avoided the shadow and the voice of an untouchable, he publicly
showed courtesy toward untouchables and frequented them. Once he saved the life
of a Mahar child, rescuing it from the scorching heat ,the child was wandering
in the hot sand of the Godavari. The Brahmins of the village got angry at
Eknath imparting his touch to the body of a backward. In an act meant to
mollify them, he famously took a bath in the same river to wash away the
impurity, hoping they would see the inhumanity of their taboos. His poems
appeal their readers to treat each fellow being with kindness and humanity, as
a brother, as a sister. This appeal also included birds and animals and plants.
One of his most loved poems says, every soul you meet is your God.
Eknath’s teachings may be summarized as "Vichar, Uchchar and Achar" i.e., purity in thought, speech and action. His works, verses and preachings kindled hope among the people at a time when they needed it most.
Samadhi
Certain religious poets had dealt with the question of their own death by resorting to a "Samadhi". Here the poet took his own life by immersing himself in a body of water, such as a lake or a river. Following the example of his idol, Dnyaneshwar, Eknath embraced "jalsamadhi" (water samadhi) in the sacred Godavari on Krishna Shasthi day of Phalguna in the year 1599AD.
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