Siddhachakra Explained

Siddhachakra is a popular yantra or mandala (mystical diagram) used for worship in Jainism.[1] [2] It is also known as Navapada in the Śvetāmbara tradition and Navadevta in the Digambara tradition. In the Śvetāmbara tradition it is associated with the Namokar Mantra.[3] [4] [5] [6] It is related to the legend of King Shripala and his wife Mayanasundari. It is depicted as a Kalasha with the core of a blossomed lotus representing Navapada in the centre surrounded by guarding deities on petals. It is used in some rituals.

Etymology

Siddha refers to a liberated soul, while chakra means wheel. It is believed that worshiping Siddhachakra results in freedom from the cycles of life within a universal 'wheel' known as nirvana.[2] It also means a 'circle of perfection'. Navapada means 'nine petals' in reference to the centre of the yantra, while Navadevta means 'nine deities'.[4] It is also described as a 'saint wheel'.[7]

History

The two major sects of Jainism, Śvetāmbara and Digambara, differ in their concept of Siddhachakra. The first five deities, known as the Panch Parmeshthi (five supreme beings) are the same in both traditions while the other four are different. They were traditionally known as Navapada in the Śvetāmbara tradition and Navadevta in the Digambara tradition.

Śvetāmbara

Siddhachakra most likely originally had only the Panch Parmesthi, Arihant in the center and the other four in petals in four different directions. It may have been inspired from Namaskara Valaya based on the Namokar Mantra as in some older Siddhachakra. The four last lines describing phalashruti (benefits) are depicted in addition to the petals at the four corners. They are described by Acharya Hemachandra in Yogashastra. He also noted that Vajraswami (BCE 57  - 57 CE) derived it from the lost Vidyanupravad parva text.[8]

It seems that the other four padas were added later. Acharya Dinkara (1411 CE) described Navapada in Nandyavrata Mandala. Nirvanakalika (c. 11th century) described it but replaced Tapa with Suchi-vidya.[8]

Ratnamandira Gani or Acharya Ratnashekhara wrote about the legend of Shripal in Siri-Sirivala-Kaha in Prakrit along with Siddhachakra Puja in 1372 or 1362 CE, the earliest known reference. A later popular version called Shripal Rajano Ras was written in 1682 CE by Vinayvijay and Yashovijay.[2] [8]

Legend

The legend takes place during the time of the twentieth Jain Tirthankara Munisuvrata, about 1.1 million years ago according to Jain traditions. There was a king named Singharth and a queen Kamalprabha of Champanagar. His brother Ajitsen captured Champanagar when he died. To save five-year-old Shripal from his uncle, Kamalprabha fled from the city and left him with a group of lepers while being chased by soldiers. Shripal was also infected by leprosy. He changed his name to Umar Rana and became the group's leader.[2] [9] [10] [11]

Eventually he reached Ujjain where King Prajapal was ruling. Out of anger from being disrespected by his daughter, Mayanasundari, he married her to the leprous Shripal. They met a Jain monk, Munichandra, who advised them to do a ritual named Ayambil Oli which is dedicated to the central Navpada in Siddhachakra. It cured Shripal's leprosy along with that of 700 other lepers. Later he conquered Ujjain and Champanagar.[3] [5] [11] [12] [13]

Digambara

Navdevata was depicted as Pratishtha-vidhi-mandala in Pratishtha-tilaka by Nemichandra (c. 15th century). It was also described in Pratishtha-Sirodhara by Ashadhar, Jin-samhita by Indranandi (c. 10th century), and Paratishtha-Kalpa-Tippanam by Kumudchanra.

Jinasamhita by Ekasamdhi (c. 1250 CE) described it in detail, depicting it as similar to Brihad Siddhachakra.

Types

There are two types of Siddhachakra. The small types have only a central part depicting Nav pada which only includes Arihant, Siddha (liberated souls), Acharya (leaders), Upadhyaya (teachers) and Sadhu (monks) along with the other four. Large types includes all of the structures described below called Brihad Siddhachakra or Siddhachakra Mahayantra. Small types are found frequently in Jain temples and in carvings while larger ones are found in brass plate form or made of different lentils during rituals on special occasions.[1] [2]

Structure

It is depicted as a Kalasha with an eye on both sides and a core made of a fully blossomed lotus. It has many circles of petals marking different concepts in Jainism.[5]

Kalasha

See also: Kalasha. A Kalasha is depicted as a pot with a large base and a mouth generally covered with a lid or topped with a coronet of mango leaves and a coconut. It is decorated with clothes and ornaments in images. Two eyes are depicted around the Kalasha, symbolising right faith and right knowledge.[2] [5]

At the neck of the Kalasha are nine small pots known as Nav Nidhi which describe nine kinds of wealth or treasures.Nine shrines dedicated to Navagraha are at the base of Kalasha which indicate nine 'cosmic influencers'.[2] [3] [5]

Lotus

At the core is a fully blossomed lotus with many circles of petals marking different concepts in Jainism. Navpada (Nine elements) is at the core surrounded by circles of petals called valaya. There is variation in the number of circles made by the petals in different images but generally there are ten circles.[3] [5] [14]

Navapada

Navapada is the core of the lotus.[15] Navapada includes five supreme beings having virtues, Guni or Panch Parmeshthi, and four right virtues, Gunas according to Śvetāmbara tradition. Their attributes are described in 108 scriptures.[1] [2] [3] [4] [14] They are also illustrated in silver or copper plates for worship.[16] In the Digambara tradition, it has the same Panch Parmeshthi but the other four elements are different.[8]

No. Place Description Colour Attributes
1 Arihant centre enlightened soul who teaches world the path of liberation 12
2 Siddha Upper centre bgcolor=#FF0000 8
3 Acharya Right the preceptor, leader of Sangha (community) bgcolor=#FFFF00 36
4 Upadhyaya Lower centre a person with knowledge who teaches to others bgcolor=#008000 25
5 Left Jain monks and nuns bgcolor=#000000 27
6 Darshan Chaitya Upper right Right Faith/Jain Image bgcolor=#FFFFFF 67
7 Gyan Chaityalaya Lower right bgcolor=#FFFFFF 51
8 Charitra Dharmachakra Upper left Right Conduct/Wheel of Dharma bgcolor=#FFFFFF 70
9 Tapa Shruta Lower left bgcolor=#FFFFFF 50

Valaya

Navapada is surrounded by circles of petals called valaya which describe various concepts and guarding deities as mantras.[5]

Circle No. Petal Described concept Notes Details
1 Nucleus Aryandrapad Part of Navpada Arihant of Navapada, many times as a mantra
2 Small circle Vowels Vowels and sounds
3 8 petals 8 padas Part of Navpada Other 8 members of Navapada
4 16 petals 49 basic sounds Vowels and sounds
5 8 sections 48 labdhi powers of higher souls in group of 6 in each section
6 8 sections 8 Guru footprints with mantra having names 2 petals, each at two poles have sacred mantra: Hrim and Klim
7 8 sections 8 Goddesses Jaya devi etc. Guarding deities
8 16 petals 16 Adhishthayak Dev Principal deities
9 16 petals 16 Vidya devi Goddesses
10 48 petals 48 Attendant deities
Some have additional petals describing four vira (guarding deities) and ten Digpala (protectors of ten directions).[3]

Surroundings

The sun and moon are depicted on the right and left side of the Kalasha, respectively. There are four shrines with guarding deities in the four corners: Kshetrapala, Vimaleshwar, Chakreshvari, and Aprasiddha Siddha Chakradhisthanak. Sometimes King Shripal and Queen Mayanasundari are depicted on the sides of the Kalasha as based on a legend.[1] [2] [5] [14]

Rituals

Navapada Aradhana and Ayambil Oli

Navapada Aradhana is associated with the Shripal-Mayanasundari legend.[13] Navapada Aradhana is performed by meditating on Navapada and doing an ayambil. In an ayambil, only one meal is eaten each day of plain food without any spices, sugar, salt, oil, butter, milk, vegetables or fruits. It is performed for nine days, twice a year. It is called Ayambil Oli. It falls in the months of Chaitra (March/April) and Ashwin (September/October) of the Jain calendar.[3] [9] [10] [11] [12] [17] A procession of Siddhachakra is carried out in towns known as Jalayatra.

Siddhachakra Puja

It is a complex ritual taking a half day in which a whole Siddhachakra is created on a floor using lentils. Mantras are recited along with performing puja starting in the centre of the Siddhachakra and moving towards the outside.[2] [3] [5] [9]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Siddhachakra Mahayantra (32) . herenow4u.net . July 6, 2010 . January 11, 2013.
  2. Web site: DETAILS OF SIDDHACHAKRA . Yorkshire Jain Foundation . The ImageSet Original . January 11, 2013 . Mardia, K.V..
  3. Web site: Siddhacakra . Jainpedia.org . Institute of JainologyInstitute of Jainology . January 11, 2013 . 1.
  4. Book: The A to Z of Jainism . Scarecrow Press . Wiley, Kristi L. . 2009 . 198 . 9780810868212 . 38.
  5. Book: Heroic Wives Rituals, Stories and the Virtues of Jain Wifehood . Oxford University Press . M. Whitney Kelting . Mary Whitney Kelting. 2009 . 33–107 . 9780195389647 .
  6. Book: Jaina Iconography . BRILL . Fischer, Eberhard . 1978 . 2–4 . 9789004052598 . 1 . Jain, Jyotindra.
  7. Book: Jaina Community . Popular Prakashan . Sangave, Vilas Adinath . 1980 . 235 . 9780317123463 .
  8. Book: Shah, Umakant P. Shah. Jaina-Rupa-Mandana. 1. Abhinav Publications. 9788170172086. 29 December 2012. 226. 1987.
  9. Web site: Mayṇāsundarī . Jainpedia . January 11, 2013 . Kelting, M. Whitney . Mary Whitney Kelting. 1–4.
  10. Web site: Āyambil Oḷī . Jainpedia . January 11, 2013 . Kelting, M. Whitney . Mary Whitney Kelting . 1–3.
  11. Web site: King Shripal and Mayana Sundari . Jain e-world. 27 June 2012 . January 11, 2013.
  12. Book: Dealing With Deities: The Ritual Vow in South Asia . SUNY Press . Harman, William P. . 2007 . 193–195 . 9780791467084 . Raj, Selva J..
  13. Book: Jains in the World: Religious Values and Ideology in India . Oxford University Press . Cort, John . 2001 . 162–163 . 9780195132342 .
  14. Web site: Shri Siddha Chakra (43) . herenow4u.net . July 16, 2010 . January 11, 2013.
  15. Web site: Jain Symbols . Jain University . January 11, 2013.
  16. Book: Jainism: An Indian Religion of Salvation . Motilal Banarsidass Publ . Glasenapp, Helmuth Von . 1999 . 427 . 9788120813762 . 14 .
  17. Web site: Shri Nav-Padjini Puja- Brief Explanation . jsdg.org . January 11, 2013.