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Tantric Cult In Eastern India
Dr. Upendra Thakur
Professor and Head of the Department of Ancient Indian and Asian Studies, Magadh University, Bodh-Gaya.
BIHAR
The Tantras may rightly be termed as "so many encyclopaedias of the knowledge of their time" as they deal with all matters of "common belief and interest from the doctrine of the origin of the world to the laws which govern kings and the societies... medicine and science generally. The Tantra is...the repo. sitory of esoteric belief and practices, particularly those relating to yoga and mantra-tattva". In them we find the description of the Supreme Being, the creation and destruction of the Universe, ihe classification of creatures, the origin and worship of the gods, the heavenly bodies different worlds and hells, man and hells, man and woman, cakra (centre of the human body), dharma, asramas and the sacraments, mantra, yantra (magic diagram on which to worship), various forms of spiritual training, Japa, Vrata, worship (internal and external), medicine, science and many other things.
It has been argued that the Tantras are a recent Sastra and are largely the creation of the people of Eastern India which is supposed to be its stronghold. The antiquity of the Tantra has, however, been proved beyond doubt to be as ancient as the Śruti itself. In fact, not only in Eastern India, But throughout the whole of India the upper classes of Hindu community are governed by the Tantric religion as far as initiation (dika) is concerned. There are Saktas, Vaisnavas and Saivas all over the country. The Saktas are initiated by the Sakti-mantra, the Vaisnavas by the Vinnu-mantra and the Saivas by the Siva-mantra. All these mantras are the exclusive properties of the Tantra. Like Mithila, Madras, Bengal, Bombay, Kast (Banaras), Kashmir, Assam and other fuch notable places of India have Šaktas, Vaisnavas and Saivas in a large number following the Tantric system. It is, therefore, absurd to argue that this system is the exclusive creation of the people of
1. Bhattacharya, Matykabheda Tantram, Intro. 3, Avalon, Principles of Tantras (Tantra-tattva) pref. Iff, 49-50
2. Bhattacharya, Intro. 7ff, Avalon, Jntro. 58ff, D. N. Bose, Tantras: Their Philosophy and Occult Secrets, pp. 2ff, Upendra Thakur, Studies in Jainism and Buddhism in Mithila, chap. II, pp. 29-38.
इतिहास और पुरातत्त्व ८३
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