The story of Nachikethas, who was initiated in a spiritual
discipline by Yama Himself, is found in this Upanishad. The same
story is also mentioned in the Thaithiriya Brahmana and in the
Mahabharatha too, in the 106th Chapter of the Anusaasanaparva.
This Upanishad has become famous on account of its clarity and
depth of imagination. Many of the thoughts expressed in it can be
found in the Bhagavadgitha. Since it belongs to the Katha Saakha
of the Krishna Yajurveda School, it is called Kathopanishad.
A very strict ritualist, Vaajasravas, also known as Gouthama,
performed a Yaga. As part of the sacrifice he gave away cows that
were no longer able to eat grass or drink water, much less yield
milk! They were too old for any useful purpose. Seeing this, his
virtuous and intelligent son, Nachikethas by name, realised that
his father was in for a great deal of sorrow, consequent on the
sinful gifts. The boy wanted to save his father from his fate as
far as it lay in his power; he asked his father, to whom he
intended to offer him as a gift! He importuned that he too
should be given away to some one. At this the father got so
incensed that he shouted in disgust, "I am giving you to the God
of Death". Whereupon, Nachikethas resolved that his father's words
must not be falsified though they were uttered in the Jiva-loka,
infected with birth and death. So he persuaded his father to offer
him, in strict ritualistic style, as a gift to Yama. Nachikethas
promptly proceeded to the abode of the God of Death. He had to
wait three nights before he could see Yama. The Lord of Death felt
sorry for the delay in receiving a Brahmin guest and promised
Nachikethas (by way of atonement) three boons, one for each night
he spent outside his doors.
Nachikethas wanted first, that when he returned to his native
place and home at His behest, his father must welcome him gladly,
free from all anger over his former impertinence, and full of
mental equanimity. His second desire was to know the secret of the
absence in heaven of hunger or thirst or the fear of death. Yama
gladly gave him these boons. In addition Yama initiated him into a
special ritual, and its mystery. Nachikethas listened
reverentially and grasped the details of that ritual quickly and
clearly. Yama was so delighted with his new disciple that He gave
the Yaga a new name Nachiketha Agni! This was an extra boon for
the young visitor. Nachikethas said; "Master! Man is mortal; but,
some say that death is not the end, that there is an entity called
Atma which survives the body and the senses; others argue that
there is no such entity. Now that I have the chance, I wish to
know about the Atma from you."
Yama desired to test the credentials of his questioner's
steadfastness and eagerness to know the Highest Wisdom. If he was
undeserving, Yama did not want to communicate the knowledge to
him. So, He offered to give him instead, various other boons,
related to worldly prosperity and happiness. He told him that the
Atma is something very subtle and elusive, that it is beyond the
reach of ordinary understanding and He placed before him other
attractive boons that could be enjoyed 'quicker' and 'better'.
Nachikethas replied: "Revered Master! Your description of the
difficulty of understanding it makes me feel that I should not let
go this chance for, I can get no teacher more qualified than You
to explain it to me. I ask this as my third boon and no other. The
alternative boons You hold before me cannot assure me the
everlasting benefit that Atmajnana alone can bestow."
Seeing this Sraddha and this steadiness Yama was pleased and He
concluded that Nachikethas was fit to receive the highest wisdom.
He said, "Well, My dear Boy! There are two distinct types of
experiences and urges, called Sreyas and Preyas, both affect the
individual. The first releases; the second leashes. One leads to
salvation and the other to incarceration! If you pursue the Preya
path, you leave the realisation of the highest goal of man, far
behind. The Sreya path can be discerned only by the refined
intellect, by Viveka; the Preya path is trodden by the ignorant
and the perverted. Vidya reveals the Sreyas and Avidya makes you
slide into the Preyas. Naturally, those who seek the Sreya road
are very rare."
Yama continued: "The Atma is agitationless, unruffled; it is
Consciousness, infinite and full. He who has known the Atma will
not be moved by the dual ideas of 'is' and 'is-not', 'Do-er'
'Not-doer' etc. The Atma is not even an object to be known! It is
neither knower, known nor knowledge. Discovering this is the
supremest Vision; informing one of this is the supremest
instruction. The Instructor is Brahmam, and the Instructed is also
Brahmam. Realisation of this ever-present Truth saves one from all
attachment and agitation and so, It liberates one from birth and
death. This great Mystery cannot be grasped by logic; it has to be
won by Faith in the Smrithis and experienced."
"The Atma is capable of being known only after vast
perseverance. One has to divert the mind from its natural habitat
- the objective world - and keep it in unwavering equanimity. Only
a hero can succeed in this solitary internal adventure and
overcome the monsters of egoism and illusion! That victory alone
can remove grief."
The teaching of the Vedantha is that the Highest Truth is
capable of being realised by all. All the texts proclaim so with
one voice; they also say that the Pranava or the syllable Om is
the symbol of the Para and the Apara Brahmam; they declare that
the Upasana of the Pranava brings within your reach even the
Hiranyagarbha stage and helps you to attain two stages of Brahmam,
too. The Hiranyagarbha is enveloped by the thinnest veil of Maya
and through Om, it can be rent asunder, and both Para and Apara
Brahmam realised.
The Kathopanishad also elaborates on the Atma in various ways.
It says that the Atma is not measurable, that it can never be
contained by limitations, though it appears so. The image of the
Sun in a lake quivers and shakes due to the quivering and shaking
of the water; the Sun is but a distant witness. It is unaffected
by the media which produce the images. The Atma likewise is the
witness of all this change in space and time.
The Jiva, the Individualised Ignorance, is the participant of
the fruits of action, of right and wrong, of good and evil; the
Jivi forges bondage through Egoism and loosens the bonds through
Buddhi, the counter-force of ignorance. Realise that all is won
the moment the indriyas (external and internal) are put out of
action. Discard them as false and misleading; merge them all in
the Manas. Throw the Manas back into the Buddhi and the Buddhi or
individualised Intelligence into the Cosmic Intelligence of
Hiranyagarbha. And, having reached that stage of Sadhana, merge
the Cosmic intelligence in the Atma-thathwa of which it is but a
manifestation. Then you attain the stage of Nirvikalpasamadhi, the
perfect unruffled equanimity of Absolute One-ness which is your
true Nature. That is the secret propounded by this Upanishad; that
and the fact that all creation is a proliferation of Nama and
Rupa.
Misled by the mirage, you are unable to see the desert waste;
frightened by the snake (superimposed by you on the rope) you are
unable to discern the basic reality. The beginningless delusion
that haunts the Jivi has to be broken through. The 14th Manthra of
this Upanishad wakes up the Jivi from the sleep of ages and leads
him on towards the goal.
The Atma is beyond Sabda, Sparsa, Rupa, Rasa and Gandha; it
knows no end. The senses are object-bound, outward-bound. The Atma
is the prime instrument for all activity and knowledge, the inner
motive-force behind everything. This delusion of manifold-ness,
variety, multiplicity, many-ness, has to die. It is born of
Ajnana. The "many" is a mirage caused by "circumstances"; the
feeling that you are separate from the One is the root of all this
seeming Birth and Death, which the individual appears to go
through. Yama then declared the Nature of Brahman to Nachikethas,
to remove his doubts on that point.
Like a light hidden by smoke, the Thumb-sized Purusha (the
Angushtamaathra) is eternally shining. As the torrent of rain
falling on a peak is shattered downwards in a thousand streams,
the Jivi, who feels many-ness and difference, falls down through
many-ness and goes to waste. This Upanishad announces that there
is nothing higher than the Atma or even equal to it. The roots of
a tree are invisible; they are hidden underground; but their
effect is evident in the flowers that are visible, is it not? This
is true of this Samsaravriksha, the Tree of Life. From that
experience, you have to infer that the root, Brahmam, is there as
sustenance and as support, said Yama.
The Tree of Samsara is like the magician's mango tree; it is
just an illusion. He who has purified his Buddhi can see in it, as
in a fine mirror, the Atma, in this very life. Brahmam is the
Jneyam, the thing known to the seeker of knowledge; it is the
Upaasyam, the thing attained by the seeker of attainment. The
Jnani is liberated by his visualisation of Brahmam, but the
Upasaka reaches Brahmaloka after death. There, he merges in
Hiranyagarbha and at the end of the kalpa, he is liberated along
with the Hiranyagarbha Itself.
Nachikethas understood without a flaw this Brahmavidya that
Yama taught him; he was released by Death and attained Brahmam. So
far as this Brahmavidya is concerned even he who attempts to know
what it is, becomes thereby a better personality, free from the
taint of sin.
This Upanishad has taught in many ways the fundamental
subjects: Pranavaswarupa, Sreyas and Brahmavidya. My resolve is to
tell you now the essence of these teachings. Of course, one Mantra
is enough to save those who have sharpened intelligence and who
are full of the yearning to escape. For the dull-witted,
sense-prompted individual immersed in secular pleasure-seeking,
advice however plentiful is a waste.
The Atma is like the ocean; to instruct a person about it, you
need not ask him to drink the entire ocean. A single drop placed
on the tongue will give him the needed knowledge. So too, if you
desire to know the Upanishad, you need not follow every Manthra.
Learn and experience the implication of one Manthra; you can
realise the Goal without fail. Learn and practice. Learn to
practice: That is the secret of the Teaching.