Mundaka upanishad krishnananda
Mundakam 3-1-1. 3-1-2. 3-2-3. some others
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda
FOREWORD
Among the Upanishads, the Mundaka Upanishad is regarded as one the most
important. It throws a flood of light on the Jnana Marga (the path of Knowledge) and
leads the aspirant to the highest rung in the ladder of Jnana-Brahmavid Brahmaiva
Bhavati.
That this Upanishad was meant for the Sannyasin (and hence the significant name
Mundaka Upanishad) is itself the highest tribute that can be paid to its sacredness. The
truth that this Supreme Knowledge which the Upanishad imparts is to be had through
inspirational initiation direct from a Guru who is well versed in the Brahma Vidya and
who has at the same time had the Brahma Anubhava, is brought out very clearly in this
Upanishad.
At the very commencement, the Upanishad throws out a challenge to all finite (and
therefore imperfect) sciences. Real Knowledge does not consist in the mastery of
cartloads of mere verbiage, but in the immediate experience of the Self. Without this
Self-Knowledge, it is futile to try to know anything else! Mans knowledge of an object is
clouded by the ignorance that shrouds his own Self; and minus this unifying force of
Self-Knowledge, all knowledge is reduced to mere conjecture and, therefore, it is
arbitrary. Knowledge of the Self instantly means true knowledge of everything.
How is this Knowledge to be attained?
While yet engaged in the performance of daily duties the aspirant should carefully and minutely analyse the nature of the world, and grasp the transience of all objects.
If everything is transient, what, then, is Eternal and therefore, worth aspiring for?
This question cannot be answered by the aspirants
intellect, for the intellect itself is a finite and frail instrument and one amongst the
transient objects in this evanescent world. But the emergence in the aspirants mind of
such a Query is itself the signal that the heart-strands that bound him to Samsara have
got loosened, and that
with the sword of Jnana he can easily cut them asunder.
This sword is in the Gurus sheath and has to be acquired by direct personal initiation.
In the
Gurus holy presence, the disciples intellect ceases to function. Like the gushing waters
of a mountain torrent, when the obstructing dam is broken, Divine Wisdom floods the
heart of the aspirant: he knows. He realises that in essence he is that Knowledge Itself!
That is the Supreme Knowledge in which the distinction between knowledge, the
knower and the known vanishes. And, that is the reason why the Upanishad alludes to It
with a series of negations.
The Upanishad gives graphic descriptions of the effects of desire-prompted actions and
shows how the wrong performance of these actions brings on evil consequences and
even the correct performance, while conferring temporary affluence and happiness,
terminates in the reincarnation of the Jiva in even lower births. Desire is condemned in
unequivocal terms.
Practice of truth is one of the foremost Sadhanas for the purpose of Self-realisation. And the powerfully reassuring
Mantra Satyameva jayate na anritam occurs in this Upanishad.
Practice of Truth, penance, Brahm- acharya and the acquirement of correct
knowledge are the practices that bestow strength on the aspirant-physical, mental,
moral, intellectual and spiritual strength; and an aspirant endowed with this strength
alone can reach the Goal-not a weakling, says the Upanishad.
These are all preparatory practices. These are excellent aids for self-purification. But
these actions cannot by themselves achieve That which is not the product of any
action-the Supreme Brahman. Utter annihilation of the ego is called for; and the
Upanishad again and again stresses the Truth that the Atman is all-pervading and is the
Self of all. Failure to perceive this Truth alone results in egocentric personality. The
Upanishad forbids one from talking of anything other than this all-pervading Self. The
austerity of speech (and of the inner Bhava that prompts speech itself) is hidden in this!
Just reflect for a moment. If you really and sincerely recognise the presence of the
Atman in every being, no contemptuous expression would escape from your lips, no
falsehood will be uttered by you; your speech would be sweet, truthful and loving.
Universal love will reside in your heart; and cosmic love is synonymous with supreme
self-sacrifice, or egolessness. That cosmic love is the threshold to the limitless domain of
Brahmic Bliss.
The Upanishad has given very apt and illuminating illustrations to make clear the subtle
Truth propounded in it.
AUTHORS PREFACE
The translations and explanatory notes of the Mantras given here are meant not so
much to provide a word-to-word translation and a commentary of every word thereof,
but to give the essential purport of the Mantras and the central meaning they convey to
the spiritual aspirant. The notes given here are mainly intended for the Sadhaka who is
not very particular about a theological, ritualistic or formal traditional explanation of
the Upanishads, but is interested in knowing their philosophical implications directly
bearing upon the practice of the Yoga of Knowledge.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
FIRSTMUNDAKA
THE GLORY OF KNOWLEDGE
Knowledge is attained not so much by the effort of the individual as through the Sages
who hand down this Knowledge. The characteristics of the ancient disciples were very
marked. The aspiration, the sincere perseverance and the devotion they had to the ideal
of Knowledge was exceptional. They attained the Knowledge with much difficulty,
undergoing many hardships in the forms of austerity, service of the preceptor and
practice of meditation. Knowledge is the ripe fruit of the fine flower of virtue.
Righteousness practised without exceptions, to the very law, gives rise to the state of
introversion and contemplation of consciousness. It is absolutely necessary that the
aspirant or the disciple should be a contemplative so that he may be receptive to the
Knowledge imparted to him. Knowledge is received by the internal nature and, hence, it
is not properly received by extroverts.
In this Upanishad it is said that Knowledge was originally imparted by the Creator
Himself to the representatives of Knowledge, the Sages and the Divine Beings.
Though everyone has the right for Knowledge, it is Knowledge that is connected with
renunciation that becomes the means to liberation. Renunciation is the necessary
implication of the attempt at an expansion into universality of nature. Knowledge
cannot be expected to be co-existent with worldly activity. Love for the world is not
consistent with love for the Absolute. Therefore, true spiritual Knowledge is found only
in those who find no value in anything that is objective.
FIRST KHANDA 1/6
Mantra No. 1: Brahma was the first among the divine beings.
This Lord of all, the protector of all,imparted to his eldest son Atharva this Brahma-Vidya which is the basis of all sciences.
Brahma-Vidya is the fundamental science because it is the explanation and the very
substance of all knowledge, the different aspects and branches of which are all lower
forms of knowledge.
Mantra No. 2: What Atharva was told by Brahma, Atharva told to Angi. Angi transmitted
Brahma-Vidya to Satyavaha, the son of Bharadvaja, who gave this great science to Angiras.
Mantra No. 3: Saunaka, the great sacrificer, approached Angiras duly and with respect and
asked: What is that, O Bhagavan, through the knowledge of which everything becomes
known?
The knowledge of everything through the knowledge of one thing means that everything
is made up of that same thing. Ordinarily the knowledge of one thing does not imply the
knowledge of another thing. But Brahma-Vidya is not a knowledge which excludes other
kinds of knowledge, but that which transmutes into itself all kinds of knowledge.
Spiritual knowledge means the direct experience arrived at through the fusion of the
essence of the object of knowledge into the essence of the subject of knowledge. Hence
spiritual knowledge is indivisible experience, not divisible like intellectual knowledge. It
is intuition which does not function on the basis of duality, but is essentially a self
identical, integral experience. Spiritual Knowledge means the essence of the knowledge
of everything that exists in generality as well as in particularity. It is the Knowledge of
the highest cause, the knowledge of which means the knowledge of all its effects also.
Mantra No. 4: To him he said: Two kinds of knowledge have to be acquired: thus the Knowers
of Brahman have declared. These are (i) the lower and (ii) the higher.
Mantra No. 5: Of these the lower one consists of the Rig Veda, the Yajur Veda, the Sama Veda,
the Atharva Veda, phonetics, rituals, grammar, etymology, prosody and astronomy. But the
higher one is that through which the Imperishable is attained.
Angiras tries to explain the lower Vidya in the beginning, though the question of
Saunaka is regarding the higher Vidya. There may be a general doubt in the mind of the
aspirant as to whether the lower Vidya has got any value or not. Angiras anticipates such
doubts likely to be experienced by the disciple and says that the lower one is an
insufficient means to the realisation of Brahman. The lower Vidya pertains to the
divinities, their worship and the different methods of attaining excellent regions through
the performance of meritorious deeds, like prayer, sacrifice, etc., offered to the divinities
concerned. The prima facie view is rejected and the final judgment, viz., that the
Imperishable Being is reached through another kind of knowledge, is established.
The great difference between the lower and the higher Vidyas is that in the former case
knowledge gives rise to the performance of actions, whereas, in the latter case, all action
ceases before the attainment of Knowledge.
In the lower Vidya, when the knowledge of a
divinity is gained, efforts should be put forth afterwards in order to attain that divinity.
But in the higher Vidya, Knowledge does not mean the knowledge of any particular
divinity and it is not knowledge in the ordinary sense at all. Higher Knowledge means
not the connection between the knower and the known, but the knowledge of the
Knower himself without any relation or medium between the knower and the known in
the form of cognition or awareness. Further, the attainment of a divinity means the
taking of a special form by an individual, befitting the nature of that particular divinity.
But higher Knowledge means the renunciation of all forms of experience and existing as
an absolutely attributeless being which is not in relation to any thing external.
The higher Vidya is the Knowledge propounded in the Upanishads. Upanishat means
the Knowledge that destroys ignorance or that which leads to perfection or the means of
attuning oneself with the true Existence. Brahma-Vidya is the technique or the science
enabling one to reach Absolute Experience. This Knowledge is attained through great
effort in the forms of Viveka, Vichara, Vairagya and Abhyasa.xxxxxx
Dharma and Jnana are different in their natures. Virtuous actions no doubt conform to
Dharma. But, the nature of Dharma is to goad one to action. When there is a knowledge
of Dharma which is the same as lower Vidya, a person is incited to perform actions in
terms of Dharma. Knowledge of merely Dharma does not mean perfection, because it is
the sense of imperfection involved in it that prompts a person to do further action. But
the higher Knowledge is self-sufficient and does not require one to perform anything
after the attainment of It.
Mantra No. 6: That which is imperceptible, ungraspable, without lineage, colourless, eyeless
and earless, handless and footless, eternal and all-pervading, existing in the heart of all, very
subtle, imperishable and the source of all beings, is beheld by men of wisdom.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 8
This indestructible being does not come within the purview of the powers and the
functions of the body, the vital energy, the senses of knowledge and action, the mind,
the subconscious, the intellect, and the ego, whatever be the form into which their
functions are modified. The relative values and the ideas of connections or relations that
are seen in the world of experience hold good only when there is cognition and
perception of the external. Attributes do not inhere in this Ultimate Substance, and they
are neither identical with It nor different from It. If they are different, they have no
connection with It; if they are identical, they do not exist at all. Hence, all attributes are
denied in the transcendental Being. The negation of the functions of hearing and seeing
imply the non-existence of name and form which are connected with these two
functions. Name and form do not mean the ordinary name and form which are
understood by the mind. Name means the potentiality of form and form is the
materialisation of name. Name is the subtle power which is the factor working as the
principle or constitution of individuality which expresses itself as a form situated in
space. Thus name stands for that individualistic principle which does not change until
the attainment of the highest knowledge. But the form changes itself at the time of death
and at the beginning of birth. Hence, Nama and Rupa are not valid in the Absolute.
Further, the senses and the other organs are necessary only when there is the need for
the knowledge of anything or for doing anything. Absoluteness does not stand in the
need of either knowing anything or doing anything, because of its secondlessness. It is
able to know more and do more without any functional organ, as these organs are not
helps but real obstructions to the consciousness of the perfection of spirit. This Spirit
does not suffer diminution either in the form of decay of organs or loss of possessions or
change of attributes, because it has neither organs, nor properties, nor qualities which
are subject to change; nor is it affected by increase as in it everything is included. The
Spirit is experienced as existent everywhere, without distinctions, by those who have
risen to the level of spiritual consciousness. This is the object of higher knowledge, or
Para Vidya.
Mantra No. 7: As a spider projects forth and absorbs back (the threads), as plants grow on
earth, as hairs grow on the body, the universe emerges from the Imperishable Being.
The first example shows that even the material cause of the universe is the Divine Being
Itself, i.e., the Universe is non-different in nature from its cause. The second illustration
shows that what is manifested is only an appearance of the form of the original cause.
The third example shows that even apparently inanimate beings also find their origin in
the conscious cause. In short, whatever is, similar or dissimilar-everything is
essentially the highest causeless Cause, viz., the Divine Principle.
Mantra No. 8: Brahman distends through austerity; then the primordial matter is produced; from
that the Prana, the mind, truth, the regions and the effects of actions.
The austerity of Brahman consists in Knowledge. It is not a means to purification as in
the case of the individual, but it is the metaphorical explanation of the nature of the
Primal Wish which is considered to exist as the background of the appearance of the
universe. The cause of the world is described here as the general potentiality which
dilates in order to give rise to appearances. This cause accounts for the existence of the
original essence of matter which is in the state fit for manifestation. This matter is called
here as Anna or food, because it is the object of experience by the spirit internally as well
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 9
as externally. The co-existence of matter and spirit makes possible the appearance of the
cosmic life, or Hiranyagarbha. Prana, objectively and enlivened by consciousness, is the
same as the Creator, Hiranyagarbha, but, subjectively, the energy that vibrates the body
and influences the mind. This Hiranyagarbha is the peculiar combination of allknowledge
and all-power. He is all-knowledge because he is based on the Absolute and
he is all-power because he is the cause of the world. The mind, which is of the nature of
the thought and doubt together with the intellect with a capacity to discriminate and
determine, is produced as an effect from this primordial matter itself. From this the
mind comes out. Satyam, or truth, is the continuity or existence of the different forms of
experience. Truth means the truth of experience. The experiences of the mind are
considered as true, because the mind gives rise to the expression of its own forms. These
forms, though they are not continuous or truly existent, appear to be continuous and
true because the mind reflects through itself the consciousness which is continuous and
true. The creation of the mind implies also the projection of the external fields or
regions which provide the necessary atmosphere for the experiences of the mind. The
moment the mind is ejected, the impulse to action, which is the nature of the mind, is
also produced. The impulse to action results in the performance of action. As every
action has got its own reaction or result, the fruits of action always exist as inseparable
from their causes. The fruit of action is called here as Amrita, or indestructible, because
these fruits of actions can never be destroyed until the attainment of Self-Knowledge.
Mantra No. 9: Who is Omniscient and all-Knowing, whose penance consists in knowledge, from
Him do proceed Hiranyagarbha, name, form and matter.
Omniscience stands for the knowledge of the general essence of everything. Allknowingness
is the knowledge of everything in particular also. His power consists in
knowledge. Wherever there is knowledge, there is power also. Power is the form taken
by knowledge. True power cannot be had as long as ones knowledge is imperfect. The
greater the knowledge, the greater is the power. Hence, Omniscience is Omnipotence
also. Power is not actually the idea of superiority and control over another, but the result
of becoming the Self of another. One cannot have power over another as long as one is
different from another, because the relation between two things is always artificial.
Genuine relationship is identity of nature, which is the same as true power. Real power
is not the effect of effort or toil, but a spontaneous experience of Self-perfection which
does not depend upon anything external. This Supreme Perfection, whose power is
knowledge, manifests as the Cosmic Creator, who becomes the cause of the names and
the forms of the universe and also the matter of names and forms.
SECONDKHANDA
The object of the lower Vidya is connected with the doer, the instrument of doing, the
action, and the result thereof. The path of the lower Vidya is one of Samsara, whose
beginning and end cannot be known. It is of the form of pain and, therefore, it has to be
rejected by all intelligent beings. The experience of Samsara is continuous like the flow
of waters in a river. The cessation of this flow is called emancipation which is the object
of the higher Knowledge, which is beginningless and endless, decayless, deathless,
immortal, fearless, pure and calm, of the nature of establishment in the Self, non-dual
and Supreme Bliss. The experience of Samsara is not a constant or steady experience
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 10
but a constant movement or a free flow of mental experiences. It is not existence, but
change. Change is another name for Samsara. This change is the involuntary urge
caused by the sense of imperfection and desire for perfection. It is this great discontent
present in life that never allows anything to be what it is for more than a moment.
Everything has to transform itself, for nothing is perfect. Whatever is in space or in time
comes under the law of causation and, therefore, is bound to be imperfect. This section
of the Upanishad deals with the nature of lower Vidya and its criticism is intended to
make one conscious of the imperfect state and then go beyond it. Vairagya is the result
of the perception of defects and the consciousness of perfection. It is necessary that
there should be a consciousness of suffering so that one can know what he actually is
through the sense of limitation and the aspiration given rise to by this consciousness.
Mantra No. 1: The effects of Karmas which were glorified in the Mantras of the Vedas and which
were known by the sages were diversely explained and put into practice in the Treta Yuga.
(Treta may also mean the threefold Veda consisting of the Rik, the Yajus and the Saman.) O
men! Observe these always, having the desire for the fruits of actions based on truth or
righteousness. This is your path of good action in this world.
Mantra No. 2: When in the flaming-fire the flames begin to shake, then oblations of ghee should
be offered in the middle of the two previous oblations of Darsa and Paurnamasa.
Mantra No. 3: Whose performance of Agnihotra is without the Darsa and the Paurnamasa,
without the sacrifice of Chaturmasya, without the offering of the autumnal season, without
feeding and worshipping the guest, without proper performance, without the Vaishva-Deva
offering and which is not done according to rules-that Agnihotra shall destroy the seven worlds
of the performer.
Mantra No. 4: The seven flames of fire are Kaali, Karali, Manojava, Sulohita, Sudhumravarna,
Sphulingini and Vishvaruchi.
Mantra No. 5: Who performs the sacrifice when these flames are brilliant, offering oblations at
the right time, him the rays of the sun guide and take to where the ruler of the gods reigns
supreme.
Mantra No. 6: The oblations offered appear in conscious forms and invite the sacrificer, saying
Come, Come. They speak to him in sweet words and worship him and through the passage of
the rays of the sun lead him up to the celestial region and say, This is your auspicious heavenly
world, the effect of meritorious deeds.
Actions performed without knowledge bind the performer to the particular results of
those actions. These actions are infected by ignorance, desire and the impulse to act and,
therefore, they are essenceless and the source of sorrow. Hence, such actions are
criticised in the following Mantras.
Mantra No. 7: All the sacrifices performed by the eighteen people connected with them are
transient and unsafe boats in crossing this Samsara. These actions are inferior. Those ignorant
ones who glorify and consider as good these actions go to birth and death again and again.
Plava is boat or a floating bubble. These actions are called bubbles, because their effects
break like bubbles together with the potencies of actions. No action leads a person to
something which is not conditioned by space or time, because all actions are in space
and time.
Mantra No. 8: Drowned in the midst of ignorance, but thinking themselves great and learned,
the deluded ones, attacked from all sides by decay, disease and death and several other
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 11
miseries, turn round and round in the wheel of Samsara like blind men guided by blind men.
Mantra No. 9: Controlled by the diverse forms of ignorance, children without intelligence
arrogantly feel: We have achieved our purpose. Because of the desires present within their
minds, these performers of selfish actions fall down miserably to the field of action and sorrow
from the region of enjoyment on the exhaustion of the effects of their meritorious deeds.
Actions, good or bad, give rise to limited results and, therefore, there is an end of the
experience of the fruits of all actions. Though a person is really ignorant, he is made to
feel that he is wise because of the semblance of consciousness that is reflected through
his intellect. The fruits of actions are not powerful enough to give the performer of the
actions lasting happiness. There is a threefold defect in the experience of the fruits of
actions. An action is generally performed with the expectation that it will bring the
desired end. But inasmuch as desires do not have connections with anything
permanently and because they shift their centres quickly, at the time of experience of the
fruit of the previous action it is no more the desired end. Not only this, it becomes a
source of sorrow. This is one defect. Secondly, the experience of happiness through the
fruits of actions is not real happiness, but only an excitement of the mind temporarily
caused by the desired contact with the object which appeared to give the promise of true
happiness. Hence, it is more a deluded state of the mind than an experience of real
happiness. Thirdly, because it may not be possible always to fulfil all desires and reap
the fruits of all actions in one birth, the individual may have to take several more births
for the sake of experiencing them. Thus, all desires and actions lead to bondage. It is
sheer ignorance and delusion that make one believe that one can become perfect and
happy through his intellect, mind and the senses, as all these instruments of knowledge
and action function in the relative plane alone.
For the sake of acting according to his own interests, man takes the advice of only such
other people as are conducive to the fulfilment of those personal interests. This is
illustrated by the saying of blind men being led by the blind. People full of desires
cannot appreciate the advice given by men of wisdom, as wisdom is contrary to desire.
Rejecting the precepts of wisdom, people take to their own methods of action and
through self-conceit and vanity think that they have achieved their ends. Their
experiences, however, shall result in intense grief and they will be made to repent for
their actions. Because of heedlessness and pride they constantly fall back into the
experiences of phenomenal suffering and never really attain to what they actually longed
for, inasmuch as what is really desired is unrestricted happiness and as this cannot be
had through desires and actions.
Mantra No. 10: Thinking that external sacrifices and charities are all, i.e., the best, these
deluded ones do not know of anything better. Enjoying in heaven the fruits of meritorious deeds,
at the end of it, they fall down to this world or even to a lower world.
Because of the lack of proper knowledge, ordinary people do not have the consciousness
of the fact that there is a higher state of emancipation. Their lot is suffering alone
because wherever there is lack of knowledge, there pain is the experience. A meritorious
deed temporarily raises an individual to a region of enjoyment, because the effect of a
deed is temporary. At the end of the momentum of the meritorious deed, the individual
reverts to his native condition of imperfection and desire for action, i.e., he once again
becomes what he was previously. No deed can permanently raise an individual to a high
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 12
and glorious state, as every deed is only a phenomenon. And, further, due to the
presence of passion and greed, the individual may even fall down to lower regions.
Mantra No. 11: Those people who have faith and practise austerity, who live in forests with
calmness of mind and full with knowledge, living on alms, being freed from all desires, pass
through the passage of the sun to where is that immortal and imperishable Purusha.
The Mantra refers to Krama-Mukti, or gradual liberation, attained by the Upasakas of
Saguna Brahman. These Upasakas are the Vanaprasthas living in forests a life of
austerity and devotion.
Mantra No. 12: Examining the nature of the regions attained through action and finding out their
worthlessness, a wise person should get totally disgusted with them, because that which is not
made cannot be attained through what is made or done. For the sake of the knowledge of that
(which is not made), one should approach, with Samit in his hand, a preceptor who is wellversed
in scriptures and also established in Brahman.
The efforts of an individual are generally stained by ignorance, selfish desires and
actions connected with those desires. Karmas are enjoined only on such people as
cannot extricate themselves from the clutches of these fetters. The different regions and
experiences which are accessible to these people, are also of the same nature as their
causes. They give rise to such unpleasant experiences as rise and fall in different states.
They are also dependent on and affected by the defects consequent upon the nonperformance
of what is enjoined and the performance of what is prohibited. People who
revel in mere phenomenal selfish actions alone, get such births as those of beasts,
demons, etc. These experiences should be properly analysed with the help of such proofs
of knowledge as perception, inference, verbal testimony and comparison. The true
nature of these experiences in the different worlds should be known in its essential
form. These experiences are the different roads to Samsara. They extend from the
unmanifest potentiality of beings to the lowest inanimate matter. They are either
manifested or unmanifested, physical, astral or mental, objective or subjective. They are
interdependent like the seed and the tree. They are the sources of extreme misery and
are absolutely essenceless. They are illusory like a jugglers trick or water in the mirage
or a city in the clouds or like objects in dream or like a breaking bubble. They are now
seen and now not seen. Such experiences should be known to be the results of desires
and actions belonging to the mind and senses. An aspirant should turn his back to all
these and should come to the conclusion that the whole universe is produced by
nescience and its undesirable consequences. The network of this universe is kept intact
in the forms of pleasure and pain, virtue and vice, good and evil, etc.
A wise aspirant, therefore, should get disgusted with all these experiences beginning
from Brahman down to a blade of grass. That which is not produced or created, is not
attained through that which is produced or created. There can be relationship only
between similar things, and not between two dissimilar things. A product has got noneternal
characteristics and, therefore, it will not be able to know the eternal as long as it
is bound to such lower characteristics. Moreover, all effects or produced things can
relate themselves to another thing only through a change or modification or an action. It
is obvious that self-transformation is not the way of attaining true knowledge of any
object. Since a transformation is transitory in nature, the knowledge that is effected by it
would also be transitory. In this universe of manifestation, there is nothing that is not
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 13
produced. Brahman is not something that is produced. Hence, the attainment of the
knowledge of Brahman is not possible through a transitory process, which is the
characteristic of produced things alone. Everything that is done leads only to what is
done or produced. That which is eternal and not produced, is attained only through pure
Knowledge which is not non-eternal or produced. Brahman is not subject to either
producing or creating or obtaining or purifying or modifying in any way.
The highest Bliss which an aspirant seeks is found only in the immutable eternal Being.
In the aspirant there is a consciousness of the difference between all non-eternal
appearances and the eternal Being. This consciousness is called Viveka, which gives rise
to Vairagya or the abandonment of the non-eternal. The aspirant begins to perceive the
worthless nature of things and the possibility of the existence of a higher glorious being.
For the sake of the knowledge of the Supreme Being, he approaches a spiritual preceptor
who is rooted in the consciousness of Brahman. This Mantra points out that one will not
be able to have intuitive knowledge without the help of an experienced teacher, even
though one may be a very learned person.
Mantra No. 13: To him who has duly approached (the Preceptor), who is of tranquil mind, whose
mind is completely controlled, the wise Preceptor duly imparts the knowledge of Truth, the
Brahma-Vidya, through which one is enabled to know the Imperishable Being.
The disciple should approach the teacher in a manner suited to the reception of the
Knowledge of Brahman. The most important of all qualifications required of the disciple
is thorough desirelessness. The forms of desires, whatever their nature or condition be,
cover the purity of the mind and prevent the reception of the knowledge which is the
opposite of any kind of desire. Even desire for life in the body should be got rid of when
one approaches a preceptor for the sake of Knowledge. The disciple should have
intelligently combined in himself the qualities of the head and the heart. He should have
purity of feeling within coupled with subtle intelligence. The nature of Knowledge is first
understood through the purified intellect and then felt within the purified heart. Viveka
and Vairagya are respectively the qualities of the head and the heart, i.e., of the intellect
and feeling. The preparations which an aspirant should make before receiving spiritual
knowledge consist in the practice of the canons laid down in the Sadhana-Chatushtaya.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 14
SECONDMUNDAKA
The objects and the natures of lower Vidya have been explained. They end in the
experience of Samsara. In this Section of the Upanishad, all experiences are traced back
to their ultimate cause from which they proceed, in which they subsist and into which
they return. The knowledge of this ultimate Cause means the knowledge of everything
that exists. This ultimate Cause is the object of higher Knowledge, Para Vidya or Brahma
Vidya, which is the subject matter of the following Mantras.
FIRSTKHANDA
Mantra No. 1: This is the truth: Even as from a blazing fire countless sparks of various kinds but
similar form are shot forth, similarly, from the Imperishable Being, various kinds of beings
emerge forth, and return to it later on.
The individuals that emerge out of the Supreme partake of the nature of the Supreme in
addition to their own special individualities. In every individual, there is a special nature
of existence and permanency which are eternal values, and there are also such relative
values as experiences of qualities. That which is real in every individual is of the same
nature in all, but that which is special to the individual is peculiar to itself alone. The
illustration of sparks shooting forth from fire is not meant to show that individuals exist
independent of their cause, as sparks are separate from their cause which is fire, but to
prove that effects have got a nature which is identical with that of the cause. All are one
in their essential Selfhood, but all are different in their modes of thinking. Even as the
roots of all trees are in the earth and the trees are fed by the earth alone and all trees live
upon the same essence of food extracted from the earth, but the branches do not touch
the earth, and the trees differ from one another in their forms or external growth, the
different individuals are rooted in the common essence of the universal Self, but their
superficial natures are peculiar to their individualities which are the effects of their
different ways of thinking. The freedom of the individual, therefore, consists in the
absorption of the consciousness of the nature peculiar to itself into the consciousness of
the general essence underlying all individualities. It is only the breaking of the barrier of
limited consciousness that constitutes the movement towards perfection. Even as the air
that is in different vessels may give different smells, different minds have different
natures; but, even as the space within different vessels is not affected by the odour
which is in the air within the vessel, the Absolute Self in all individuals is unaffected by
the modes of thinking in different individuals. The factors which create distinction are
the vessel and the odour. Without these two, there is no distinction at all. Similarly, it is
the body and the mind that create differences in existence and without them there is no
experience of difference. Moksha, therefore, is the removal of the mind and the
consequent transcending of the body-consciousness. All individuals proceed from,
subsist in, and return to the one Cause of all causes, viz., the one Self in all. Life is made
possible because of the dependence of individuals on this Self. It is this Self that gives
the very existence which is the main value necessary for every individual; without it
individuals have no existence, even as without space there is no universe at all. As all
created objects ultimately vanish into space, all individuals finally return to their source,
viz., the Self. All are distinctionless in that Source of all beings. All special characteristics
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 15
of the individuals are cast off and everyone is reduced to a uniform state, even as in deep
sleep everyone experiences the same condition. Nama and Rupa, or name and form,
constitute the universe of appearance, whereas Satchidananda constitutes Reality.
Names and forms appear to be real because of the reflection of Satchidananda in them.
The whole value of things is, therefore, Satchidananda, and without it they are nothing.
Mantra No. 2: The Purusha is Divine, formless, existing inside and outside, unborn, free from
Prana and mind, pure, and greater than the great unmanifest.
Purusha is one who fills all space or who resides in the cavity of the heart. The Purusha
is immaterial and, therefore, divine in nature. For the same reason, it is inside and
outside. It is unborn because it is causeless. It does not undergo any process such as of
life and its experiences.
The Universal Self knows without the ordinary Pramanas, or proofs of knowledge. Its
knowledge does not consist in perception, inference, verbal testimony or any kind of
commonly known proof. Worldly knowledge is relative and mediate. There is no
necessity for the cognitive or perceptive organs in the highest Self, because in it
knowledge consists in Self-realisation, or realisation of Itself. Even the distinction which
is ordinarily made between the sheaths of a person cannot be made in the true Self.
Virat, Hiranyagarbha and Isvara are of the nature of Pure Consciousness. The apparent
distinction which is seen to exist among these three aspects of the Divine Being is more
the result of a convention or habit of the mind to find objectively what it experiences in
itself. Logically this distinction cannot be proved, though it is simply believed in. Hence,
the Upanishad says that the Divine Being is without Prana or mind. The Pranas and the
mind are limiting factors and, therefore, they have no basis in the unlimited Divine
Being. The Mantras of the Vedas and the declarations of the Upanishads which describe
the Divine Being as having heads, eyes, feet, etc., are only figurative, meant to convey its
universal nature. There is neither the vibration of Iccha Sakti nor of Kriya Sakti in the
Divine Being; therefore, there are no sense-organs also. In short, there is nothing in It
which belongs to the special characteristic of the individual.
This Purusha is superior to the unmanifested being which is the source of the possibility
of all causes and effects which constitute the very pith of phenomena. In this Divinity of
the Purusha, the mind, the Pranas, etc., are said to come to a complete cessation as they
are simply modes of relative existence, i.e., the manner in which the relations between
the subject and the object are kept up. These functions of the mind, etc., are not selfexistent,
because they are the special forms manifested by the consciousness for a
definite purpose. Their value is, therefore, only in relation to the passing modes of
consciousness. As there is no mode in the Divine Being, there are no functional organs
in It.
Mantra No. 3: From this Being proceed the vital energy, the mind, the senses, ether, air, fire,
water and the all-supporting earth.
All the appearances are based on the different phases of consciousness, or Vishaya-
Chaitanya. Appearances are possible only on the reality of consciousness. That which is
real in all forms of experience, is common to both the experiences and the experiencer.
Matter is not a substance but a condition of experience differing in the various stages of
evolution. Hence, all forms of matter, gross or subtle, external or internal, are certain
states which are peculiar to the respective modes of the experiencing consciousness.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 16
Therefore, the universe, including all subjects and all objects, is only a condition
supported by the Absolute, on the basis of which appearances are experienced by the
cognising individual and without which the universe has no reality. In fact, what is real
in the universe is nothing more and nothing less than Existence-Consciousness-Bliss.
The names and the forms are not existent substances.
Mantra No. 4: THE NATURE OF THE VIRAT-PURUSHA AND THE UNIVERSE:
The Virat is the Chaitanya, or the Consciousness, which animates the universe of gross
experience. The following Mantra describes the universal character of the Virat, which is
the name given to the materialised state of the subtle, universal, creative power called
Hiranyagarbha. Even this Virat has one character belonging to the Absolute, which
makes the Virat the centre of all-knowledge and all-power. This character is universality
of nature. No distinction can be made between Hiranyagarbha and Virat except in the
sense that the latter is the way in which the former exists as the universe of objective
experience. In other words, Virat is Chaitanyamaya. The ascription of certain characters
and forms to the Virat is only to facilitate the clear understanding of the universal
nature which an individual will not be able to understand with his limited knowledge
and his impotent sense-organs.
This is the universal Self, the Virat; his head is the shining region of the heavens; his eyes are
the sun and the moon; his ears are the quarters of space, his speech is the Veda full of
knowledge; his vital energy is the universal air; the whole universe is his heart; his feet are the
lowest earth.
The description of the form of Virat as extending from the highest region to the lowest,
to the right and to the left and to every quarter of space, is a metaphorical illustration of
the all-inclusive nature of this universal being. In this Mantra, all objects and states of
experience are unified with the subject of all experience, whereby duality is denied. The
whole mass of experience is understood by an individual only in terms of the manner in
which it is presented to it. The same universal vibration, which has no special character
at all, is experienced as sound by the ear, as touch by the skin, as form by the eye, as
taste by the tongue and as smell by the nose. The very same universal vibration is
subjectively experienced by the Pranas as heat and cold, hunger and thirst. The
psychological organs experience this universal nature as the respective counterparts of
their own individual conditions. Thus, the whole universe is ideal in its nature.
This ideal nature is conceived of and experienced in relation to the subject. Subjectively,
all experiences are explained as manifestations or expressions of the forms of the mind
within. The necessity for the explanation of the objective reality of experiences is
demanded by the fact that the individual seems to have no control over the objective
nature. Thus, experience is explained as being the result of the interaction of the subject
and the object. But, this explanation gives rise to the question as to how consciousness
of experience, if it is only the result of an interaction, is produced at all when it is only a
factor different from both the subject and the object. Consciousness cannot simply hang
in the air without belonging either to the subject or the object. If it belongs to the
subject, it means that a conscious subject is capable of knowing an unconscious object.
If, on the other hand, consciousness belongs to the object, the subject would be
controlled by the object. No complete knowledge of anything would be possible if the
subject is entirely dependent on the object. If complete knowledge is a possibility at all,
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 17
the object of knowledge should be ingrained in the essential constitution of the subject
itself. The experience of Self-realisation, where infinitude becomes the centre of reality,
denies all possibilities of any value of any object distinct from the subject. Thus also the
ideal nature of the universe is established.
Moreover, the Absolute, which includes all subjects and all objects, cannot be said to
give rise to either itself or something other than itself. Both hypotheses would frustrate
the very meaning of Absoluteness. Hence, experience is essentially limitless. The
distinctions in experiences are only the different stages in and the different ways of the
knowledge of the Absolute by Itself in the forms of individual natures.
This, in essence, is the meaning of the explanation of the appearance of the Virat as the
universe of experience. This Virat-Consciousness is the real seer, hearer, thinker and
understander in all beings. All functions are made possible by this general
consciousness in all beings.
Mantras No. 5 to 9: From Him, the heavenly region which is illuminated by the sun, the moon,
the showers of rain, all vegetation on earth, do proceed. Earth is the essence of food. Food
produces energy, and from energy all beings are produced. From Him come forth the Rig Veda,
the Sama Veda, the Yajurveda, the austerities connected with sacrifices, the sacrifices
themselves with and without offering of animals, the gifts to the priests, the proper time of the
sacrifice, the sacrificer, and the worlds presided over by the moon and the sun, to be reached
by the sacrificers. All these are determined by the law of the Virat. From Him again proceed the
forms of and the rules connected with the celestial beings who are of diverse nature, the semigods,
the human beings, animals, birds, inhalation and exhalation, corns and grains, penance,
faith, truth, continence and restraint. By Him are determined the functions of the different senses
with their different forms of knowledge connected with their respective objects giving rise to
various kinds of experiences, the different seeds of the functionl organs actuated by the Pranas
within, in accordance with the constitution of the different individuals. In Him are found the
oceans and the mountains; all rivers flow in Him in their various forms. Plants and the various
tastes connected with food-all form the different parts of this Cosmic Body in which resides the
Universal Self or the Virat-Purusha.
Mantra No. 10: The whole universe is the Purusha alone. Actions and penances also are this
Immortal Supreme alone. One who knows this which is seated within the secret cave, breaks
open the knot of ignorance.
Because all is the Purusha alone, it follows that differences are unreal. Hence,
modification is described as merely a play of speech consisting only in name and,
therefore, false. What is true is the Purusha alone. Other than this Purusha, there is
nothing. This is the reply given by the preceptor to the disciples question regarding that
the knowledge of which means the knowledge of everything. When the Purusha is
known, all is known. In fact there is no such thing as all, except this one Purusha. The
Knowledge of the Purusha, therefore, means the absence of duality which is the same as
the destruction of ignorance and attainment of Immortality and Absoluteness.
SECONDKHANDA
Mantra No. 1: This Supreme Being is revealed as seated within, very near to oneself (really, it is
not near but the very Self itself). It moves in the cave and is the great support on which
everything rests. (On it is based) whatever moves, whatever lives and whatever winks. Know
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 18
this which is existence as well as non-existence, which is adorable, the best of all beings,
superior to the intellects of people.
The Self is not really experienced by any individual as it really is. Only its effects are
experienced. The existence of the Self is inferred from the fact that the effects which are
experienced, manifest the natures of existence, consciousness, bliss and indivisibility.
The external experiences of the sense of being, intelligence, happiness, love and power
show that there must be an ever-enduring Being in which are found all these
characteristics in their perfected state. The functions of the sense-organs as well as those
of the psychological instruments constantly reflect the nature of an eternally perfect
Being. This Self should be known as the only reality and as identical with the central
core of everything. It is described as existence, non-existence, and that which is beyond
both. It is, therefore, called transcendental Existence or Super-Being, beyond the
ordinary conception of existence or being.
Mantra No. 2: On that which is self-luminous, subtler than the subtle, all the worlds and their
inhabitants are supported. That is the imperishable Absolute. That manifests itself as life,
speech and mind; that is truth; that is immortal; that should be meditated upon. O disciple!
meditate on it.
Mantra No. 3: Taking hold of the great weapon of the bow consisting of the theme of the
Upanishads, fixing the arrow which is rendered sharp through constant contemplation, drawing
back the bow-string with the power of the conscious affirmation of that, O disciple, hit that mark,
the Imperishable.
Mantra No. 4: Om is the bow; the individual self is the arrow; Brahman is the target to be hit. It
should be hit with great vigilance. Then, one shall merge in Brahman, even as the arrow enters
into the target.
Constant meditation on Om allows the individual consciousness to take the form of Om
itself which is unlimited in its nature. The meditator becomes ultimately the object of
meditation itself. Om is the symbol of Brahman and, therefore, meditation on Om leads
to the realisation of Brahman. When one meditates on Om, the mind gets purified. It is
freed from its distractive nature and, consequently, it rests in the tranquil condition of
the Absolute Om.
The individual self is compared to the arrow which hits the target, because the
individual which is a limited reflection gets dissolved in the original through intense
concentration and meditation, even as the arrow that is shot by pulling the bow-string
gets unified with its target. But, in the case of the individual, the arrow does not move
towards an external object but is turned within. The individual, therefore, does not
move towards Brahman and then get identified with it. It is inwardly extinguished
through the transcendence of its own personal existence. It is more a process of Selfcentredness
than objective meditation. Brahman is compared to a target, not because it
is away from the arrow which can hit it, but it is the ultimate experience which is gained
when the personality of the self is lost. Even objective meditation finally leads to selfdissolution,
because intense concentration on an object continuously and for a long time
makes the mind take the form of that object. As the mind perceives only the form which
it has taken, it begins to perceive the same form everywhere. Since, however, it is not
possible for the mind to exist contemplating on one thing alone and at the same time
maintain its individuality, it itself ceases to exist the moment there is perception of the
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 19
same form everywhere. Therefore, continuous meditation on any form leads to the same
result of ultimate self-extinction and Self-recovery in the Absolute.
Meditation should be practised not with heedlessness and non-discrimination, but with
the power consequent upon complete renunciation of all objects and states, giving rise
to absolute passionlessness through concentration of mind. One thing can become
identical with another thing only when that one thing partakes of the nature of the other
thing. Desires of all kinds, potential or manifested, are detrimental to the consciousness
of oneness and, hence, the realisation of Oneness, or Brahman, follows the practice of
absolute desirelessness. All the factors that go to make up ones individual existence
have to be cast off through meditation on the universal Being, which transcends all
planes of phenomenal existence.
Mantra No. 5: On which the heaven, the earth, the sky and the mind, together with all the
Pranas, are based-know that one Atman alone. Leave off all other speech; this is the bridge to
Immortality.
This Atman should be known not as any kind of object of knowledge, but as the
substance of ones own Self as well as the Self of everybody else. As a subject can never
become an object at any time, the Self cannot be known through any means related to
objective knowledge. But it is known in the form of Self-awareness freed from the
objective faculties pertaining to the five material sheaths. This is achieved through a
total abstraction of oneself, i.e, refusal to abide by the laws of relative thinking and
understanding. This, again, is possible only after sense-abstraction, which is signified by
discipline and control of speech. Speech is a means of relating oneself to external objects
by means of spending energy. This energy is spent out, really, through thinking alone.
Every thought sends out energy to the object that is thought. In this process, the mind
gets transformed. As this transformation is a change of the mind itself, there is absence
of equilibrium in the mind. This disturbed state of the mind transmits its
transformation to the senses, which connect themselves accordingly with the forms of
objects determined by this previous transformation. The cessation of speech means the
stoppage of connections with persons external to oneself, though subtle connections are
kept up by the mind, independent of the senses. Therefore, the gross and subtle
relationships are stopped respectively through cessation of sense-functions and of
mental modifications. This practice is reinforced by continuous meditation on the
nature of the Atman. The Atman is figuratively described as the bridge to Immortality,
meaning, thereby, that its experience is Immortal. The Sruti has said that the knowledge
of That alone leads one to Immortality and that there is no other way of attaining it.
Mantra No. 6: Like spokes centred in the hub of a wheel, all nerve-centres are centred in
consciousness. This one consciousness of the Atman seems to appear in various forms.
Meditate on this Atman as OM. May there be blessedness to you all on your way across
darkness.
When a person appears to have a certain quality, it must be understood that this quality
is of the mind and not of the Atman. When it is said that a person is happy or sorry,
pleased or displeased, it means that the mind of the person has taken certain forms. As
all forms are changes felt within, they cannot belong to the nature of the Atman. Every
experience is a fluctuation of the mind, good, bad or otherwise, in relation to the
individual. Because of the intimate relationship that is between the Atman and the
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 20
mind, it appears as though the whole person changes when the mind changes itself. This
is the reason why a person says, I am happy, I am sorry, etc., though in essencet
these conditions do not belong to the person at all. This Atman, which is distinct from
the functions of the mind, should be meditated upon through the symbol of Om. The
meditators, as it was already described, are those who have withdrawn themselves from
the impulse for desire and action through an intense yearning for the attainment of
Absolute Knowledge. So that obstacles may not impede the free progress of the disciple,
the preceptor blesses them with auspiciousness for the sake of reaching the other shore
of darkness, i.e., the attainment of the light of the Self.
Mantra No. 7: He who is Omniscient and all-knowing, whose glory extends even to the earth, is
established in the ether of the heart, or the divine city of Brahman. The guider of the mind and
the Pranas and the mover of the body is seated in the core of every individual. Through the
knowledge of that Supreme Principle, the great heroes behold that which shines as Bliss and
Immortality.
The glory of this Atman extends to the earth, because even the individuals inhabiting the
earth reflect certain characteristics belonging to the Atman. The main characteristics of
the Atman are indivisibility, absoluteness, eternity, immortality and pure existence. The
special natures which characterise the aforesaid essential, self-identical qualities of the
Atman are consciousness and the freedom of perfection. All these natures are reflected
in the individual in one way or the other.
The indivisible nature of the Atman is reflected in the individual in the form of the urge
for perfection, preceded by a sense of imperfection. The inner essence of the individual
always points to the possibility of and necessity for an undivided state of existence. The
universe manifests itself as an organic whole and has got the characteristics of harmony
and synthesis among its contents. The character of indivisibility implies that of
infinitude or Absoluteness, as that which is divisible is conditioned by space, time and
motion. Perfection cannot be spatiality. The non-spatial nature of perfection means its
non-temporal nature also. It is not divided by past, present and future because of nonobjectiveness.
Absoluteness can have neither origin nor phenomenal continuance nor
cessation. Hence it is eternal, which explains everything, but which itself is not
explained by anything. Non-temporality is the same as immortality, which again is the
nature of perfection or existence without change. The inability of the individual to rest
continuously in any form of phenomenal life, and the constant urge from within to
transcend oneself ever felt by the individual, are the harbingers of the knowledge of the
fact that the individual is in essence a non-individual or impersonal unlimited being.
The diversities of life can be explained only by absoluteness of nature.
Such is the glory of Brahman as reflected on earth and in the individuals. This relentless
Law of the Absolute is the supreme controller of the systematic functions of everything
in this universe. Even as one cannot go behind ones own self, one cannot in any way
transgress the law of the Absolute, as the Absolute is the very basis of every individual.
The glory of Brahman is reflected through the individual functions, psychological as well
as physical. The characteristics of existence, consciousness, freedom, etc., which belong
to the Absolute, are manifested in different degrees in the different stages of evolution in
conformity with the knowing capacity of the individual in a particular state of
experience. Everyone in this world wants freedom and perfection, which sense is not
limited by any conception, possibility or existence. Everyone hankers after unlimited
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 21
freedom. Freedom would not be possible for anyone if it lay as something remote from
the one who seeks it. That freedom is necessary proves that it is possible to have it, and
this possibility again shows that it cannot be remote but should be an element in ones
own consciousness. Therefore, perfection is the essential nature of all beings, the lack of
the experience of which ends in the various struggles of life.
In thinking individuals, Brahman manifests as existence and consciousness, but in
inanimate beings only the aspect of existence is revealed. Bliss, however, is experienced
in addition to the experience of existence and consciousness only in the higher class of
beings in whom the quality of Sattva is predominant. In Tamas, Rajas and Sattva
respectively, existence, consciousness and bliss are experienced in succession, the
succeeding one including the preceding natures of reality. Therefore, all individuals
belonging to all degrees of manifestation reflect in different degrees the reality of the
Self.
This all-pervading Self is said to be situated in the centre of the individual. This,
however, does not mean that the Atman is situated anywhere in space, but it means that
it is felt as existence by the individual through the mind which defines ones personality.
Because it is the mind that reflects the Atman, the presence of the Atman is felt only
where the mind manifests itself. There is neither going nor coming nor establishment in
space with reference to the Atman. Wherever a positive value is experienced, it must be
understood that the Atman is manifest there. It is realised as existent in an indivisible
nature, i.e., as the Absolute, by Sages full of Wisdom, in the form of the experience of
positive bliss and immortality.
Mantra No. 8: The knot of the heart is broken, all doubts are cleared and all actions perish when
the Greatest Supreme Being is beheld.
The knots of the heart are Avidya, Kama and Karma, or ignorance, desire and action.
Avidya is the cause, Kama is the medium and Karma is the effect. These three binding
factors confine experience to an individual personality. Because ignorance is the cause
of all troubles, Knowledge, which is the opposite of ignorance, is able to break open the
fort of ignorance, desire and action. When the cause is removed, all the effects also are
removed. Since an effect cannot remove its cause, no mental act or physical act can
remove the cause of these two, viz., the absence of knowledge. A condition is
contradicted only by an opposite condition and not by an object or state which is
subservient to the condition to be contradicted. Hence, knowledge which is the sole
power which is directly opposite to the cause of all troubles, is able to put an end to the
entirety of phenomenal experience.
Doubts which trouble the minds of the individuals are ultimately solved because of the
knowledge of Existence itself. Doubt is a function of the mind, which is an effect of
nescience. When its cause is removed, it is itself removed. When the mind, the cause of
actions, is removed by the removal of ignorance, all actions perish. Actions are threefold
in nature: Sanchita, Agami and Prarabdha. Sanchita Karma is the store of the effects or
the impressions of all the actions performed by an individual in his countless previous
births. All these effects of actions have to be experienced by the individual in different
bodies. An action or a group of actions out of the Sanchita Karma, which can be
experienced only under some particular conditions, is allotted to a particular body for
the sake of experience in those conditions demanded by this special effect or group of
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 22
effects of an action or actions. This allotted portion is called Prarabdha. The Agami
Karma consists of actions performed by the individual through a particular body or the
mind which will bear fruit in future.
It is sometimes held that the Prarabdha Karma of a Jnani is not destroyed. Sometimes it
is suggested that even the Prarabdha is destroyed when Knowledge rises. The portion of
the effects of actions to be worked out through a particular body is separated from the
Sanchita Karma and allotted for experience even before the birth of the body. Hence, the
momentum with which the Prarabdha starts actuating the body is exhausted only on the
death of the body and not before. Knowledge is not concerned with this active
momentum at all. Even when the individual is resolved into the Absolute Consciousness,
the body, as long as the Prarabdha is not exhausted, will continue to move as directed by
the Prarabdha, though this movement of the body does not become the object of the
Knowledge of the Self-realised person. In this sense, the Prarabdha is not destroyed
even when Knowledge dawns.
But, it must be remembered that the Prarabdha is seen to be working in the Jnani only
by other individuals who have not got Self-knowledge. The value of a thing is completely
negated and is also reduced to non-existence when there is no consciousness of that
thing or when the thing is resolved into the subject itself. The state of the
consciousness of the Absolute is not something which is separated from the movement
of the Prarabdha. In it all movements are realised as an infinite unity. The Jnani has no
special connection with his particular body. All other bodies also are equally his. He is
the centre of the Consciousness of all individuals and, therefore, there is no meaning in
holding that Prarabdha works in him. He is the witness of universal activity, or rather,
the very Self of the Universe itself. Appearances are meaningful only to separated
individuals and not to the unified consciousness. The movement of the body of the Jnani
is compared to the movement of a leaf in the wind; such a movement is not a conscious
activity at all.
For these reasons, it should be known that Prarabdha is not a substantial something
which is co-existent with consciousness, but it is only a negative force which operates
only in the individual but not in the Absolute. All relative values are transcended the
moment Absolute Knowledge is realised. The Knowledge of the Supreme Being, which is
Omniscient and free from the attributes of Samsara, in the form of the identity of
oneself with it, removes the fetters caused by ignorance, desire and action. Having
uprooted these causes of Samsara, the individual merges into the Absolute.
Mantra No. 9: The pure, partless Brahman is encased, as it were, in the great golden sheath (of
the intellect). This Pure Being is the Light of lights. It is known by those who have realised the
Self.
The intellect is the seed of the highest empirical knowledge and, therefore, it is nearest
to the consciousness of Brahman. It is the sheath which manifests Brahma-Chaitanya in
the greatest degree. It is characterised by Sattva-Guna and, therefore, its colour is said
to be golden. Because of this Sattva present in it, the human being has consciousness in
him, even in his individualised condition. But, the intellect is characterised by Rajas also
and, hence, its consciousness is always objective. Objectivity belongs to the Rajas in the
intellect, and the consciousness in it belongs to Brahman which is behind the intellect.
However, the intellect is the pointer to the existence of Brahman. Meditation is
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 23
practised through the aid of the function of the intellect. Meditation is made possible
because of the consciousness or Sattva that is in it, and meditation is made necessary
because of the Rajas that is in it which dissipates energy and impedes real knowledge.
The Atman is realised through the intellect by transcending the intellect. Hence,
Brahman is said to be manifest in the intellect.
This Atman is known by those who follow the course of the natural essential
consciousness within through the withdrawal of the senses and the mind. But, those
who follow the course of the mind and the senses, enter into the world of sorrow. The
mind and the senses constitute the world of darkness which is illuminated by the light of
the Atman. The whole universe appears to have consciousness and light because the
universe which is truly the region of darkness reflects the consciousness and the light of
Brahman. Even the greatest light of the universe and the greatest consciousness
manifest in it are only a borrowed reflection of Brahman. Brahman is not known by
them who are busy with the universe of darkness in which roam the mind and the
senses.
Mantra No. 10: There the sun does not shine, nor the moon and the stars; nor even these
lightnings; what to speak of this fire; everything shines after Him who shines. By His light this
whole universe is illuminated.
Mantra No. 11: This immortal Brahman alone is before. Brahman is behind. Brahman is to the
right and to the left. Brahman alone is spread above and below. This whole universe is the
supreme Brahman alone.
This Mantra shows that what is real is indivisible and that all divided manifestations are
false appearances. This is the conclusion of the subject-matter of the Srutis. It appears
to be spread in all directions, or existent everywhere, only from the point of view of the
individual perceiving or conceiving It in terms of space and time. The experience of
Itself in Itself is free from the idea or notion of extension or magnitude. Its true nature is
summed up in the word Absolute, which is neither a subject nor an object of
Knowledge. All conceptions and perceptions are based on the idea of cause and effect,
which has no meaning for Brahman. In truth, that which appears as various names and
forms is only Brahman, which is without names and forms. All are in It but It is not in
them in its completeness, as It is not fully manifest in any name or form. True
Knowledge is therefore divisionless, without reference to the knower or the known or
the relation between the two. The Upanishads conclude that Brahman alone is the
Absolute Reality.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 24
THIRDMUNDAKA
FIRSTKHANDA
Mantra No. 1: Two birds living together, each the friend of the other, perch upon the same tree.
Of these two, one eats the sweet fruit of the tree, but the other simply looks on without eating.
The two birds are the Jiva and Isvara, both existing in an individual compared to a tree.
They exist together as the reflection and the original. They both manifest themselves in
different ways in every individual. From the characteristics of the Jiva it is possible to
infer the nature of Isvara, and from the nature of Isvara it is possible to determine the
potentialities of the Jiva. Both the Jiva and Isvara have a common substratum which is
Brahman and which is the reality of both. The body is compared to a tree because it can
be cut down like a tree. This tree is also called the Kshetra or the field of manifestation
and action of the Kshetrajna or the knower of the field. The body is the field of action
and experience and it is the fruit of actions done already.
That which distinguishes the Jiva from Isvara is the mind only. In fact, the mind itself
constitutes the Jiva. It is the Jiva that is affected by Avidya, Kama and Karma. Because
of the conjunction of consciousness with these limiting factors, it has to experience the
results of its actions; but Isvara, who is not limited to any adjunct, has no actions
whatsoever to perform, and so, no experience of the results of actions. The fruits
enjoyed by the Jiva are of the nature of pleasure and pain, i.e., they are all relative
experiences born of non-discrimination. The experience of Isvara is eternal and is of the
nature of purity, knowledge and freedom. Relative experience is the effect of the
presence of Rajas, but the character of Isvara is Sattva and, hence, there is no
phenomenal experience for Him. He is in fact the director of both the agent of actions
and the results of actions. Isvaras activity consists in His mere existence. The value of
His existence is greater than that of the activity of the whole universe. It is His existence
that actuates the whole universe of manifestation.
Mantra No. 2: In the self-same tree the individual (bird) is drowned in grief because of delusion
and impotency. When it beholds the other (bird), viz., the adorable Lord, it realises its own glory
and gets freed from sorrow.
The grief of the Jiva is the result of its inability to live in conformity with the forms of
the effects of unwise actions done in the past. Such thoughtless actions, no doubt, lead
to their corresponding results and as they are not in tune with the law of Truth, they
torment the individual in the form of unpleasant experiences. Without a relative
experience the individual cannot live, and with every relative experience produced by
unwisdom, fresh misery is added to the pre-existing lot. Thus, from the highest
standpoint, the entirety of the experience of the individual consists of grief alone.
Because of its confinement to the forms of its desires and actions, the Jiva feels itself to
be impotent, confused and helpless. It is even made to feel that a particular experience
to which it is connected is alone real and that there is no reality beyond it. Due to this, it
is now and then connected with and separated from the objects of its desire. It is born
and it dies, passing through several kinds of wombs in accordance with the kinds of its
actions.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 25
The freedom of the individual consists in the vision of the Lord Supreme Who is coexistent
with it, in fact inseparable from it as its very Self. The realisation of Isvara is the
same as the raising of the individual consciousness to the consciousness of Isvara. The
Jiva ceases to exist the moment it realises Isvara. The glory of the real essence of the
individual is known only when the veil covering it is removed. This is achieved in the
realisation of God. The ultimate realisation is in the form of the identity of the Self with
the Supreme Being. Here, the whole universe is realised to be the same as the essence of
the spiritual infinite. This realisation puts an end to all kinds of imperfections and
sorrows.
Mantra No. 3: When the knowing individual has the vision of the intelligent creator, the Lord, the
Purusha, the Brahman which is the source of all, then it shakes off both merit and demerit, and
having become taintless, attains to supreme equality with the Lord.
In this Mantra, the Lord is designated as having a golden hue, which means that His
nature of Knowledge is eternally inherent in Him even as the colour of gold is something
inherent in it. It points to the self-luminous nature of God, whose characteristics are
imperishable, which fact is hinted at by the unaffected colour of gold. It is also said that
the individual should have the fit perception, i.e., it should have the ability to perceive
the universal Being. To the individual is attributed the quality of knowingness which is
the knowledge of the Supreme Being achieved after the acquisition of the power of
correct discrimination.
Divine knowledge is free from the conception of good and bad, because this knowledge
is non-relative. It is an all-consuming wisdom in which relative natures or conceptions
can have no value. Distinctions like virtue, vice, good, bad, high, low, etc., are made only
as long as the all-comprehensive knowledge, which underlies all these distinctions, is
not realised. The effects of merit and demerit are burnt up by the fire of knowledge,
because these effects are only conceptual and not spiritual. They exist only as long as the
mind exists. When the mind is transcended, they too are transcended. The whole
universe stands transfigured in the Absolute. The Jiva becomes free from blemishes,
attachments and sorrows, and gets unified with the Supreme Being. Equality with the
Infinite is the same as identity with the Infinite, which is of the nature of non-duality,
limitless and unsurpassable. Equality of objects which have different characteristics is
only a mental imagination and not a fact. But the equality of identical natures
encompassing the whole existence is the experience of an indivisible unified whole.
Mantra No 4: In all beings this one supreme life manifests itself. Knowing this, the wise one
does not speak of anything else. Having his sport in the Self, bliss in the Self, and action in the
Self, he is the best among the knowers of Brahman.
One who realises this Supreme Being as ones own Self, ceases from his natural sensefunctions
and puts an end to all speech unconnected with the Self. Rather, he does not
speak at all. Speech is a manner of connecting one thing with another thing. In Selfrealisation,
the relationship of the subject with the object is transcended and all things
become the Self Itself. Whenever there is a perception of duality, speech has got a value,
but in non-duality all such relationships lose their value. Instead of the experiences of
the external relationships, the knower has the experience of Self-identity. This
experience of the Self is described in the form of finding everything that is found
externally, in ones own Self Itself. The statements regarding sporting in the Self or
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 26
finding all bliss in the Self make it clear that the highest form of happiness is realised
without any contact with any object or any condition. Real bliss is not the effect of either
mental or physical contact, but is the result of the absence of all contacts. In short, bliss
consists in the resolution of the very sense of objectivity into the conscious subject. The
action of the knower consists in the knowledge of the Self. Self-delight itself is action for
him. It is a simple mass of bliss that he experiences, unhampered by any function alien
to the nature of the Self. Sankara points out that the action of the knower is of the nature
of renunciation, meditation and wisdom.
The Mantra does not imply that the knower performs any function. It only glorifies the
state of the realisation of the Self by resorting to figurative descriptions of his greatness.
The possibility of the combination of action with knowledge is denied by the fact of his
being the highest among the knowers of Brahman. The Brahma Varishtha is the one
who is in the seventh state of knowledge where his ego is totally merged in the Absolute.
It is quite evident that external bodily action with personal consciousness cannot be in
conformity with Absolute Knowledge. It is not possible for a person to sport in the Self
or have delight in the Self and at the same time concern himself with relative action.
Self-Knowledge is possible only after withdrawing oneself from all external functions,
physical as well as mental. The consciousness of externality and internality cannot be
simultaneous, even as darkness and light do not exist in the same place.
Therefore, the contention that it is possible to combine action with Absolute Knowledge
is only the prattle of the ignorant. The Upanishads have constantly declared that true
Knowledge is obtained through renunciation of all external functions and through
meditation on the Absolute. The Brahma Varishtha, therefore, is one who has realised
Brahman and whose action consists in Self-Knowledge preceded by renunciation of
external consciousness.
Mantra No. 5: The Atman is attained through truth, penance, correct knowledge and
Brahmacharya (self-control), observed continuously without break. The Atman is beheld within
in the form of light and purity by the austere ones who are freed from all kinds of sins.
Truth is adherence to fact, whether absolute or relative. It is proceeding along the way of
the unity of existence. Relatively, it takes the form of acting in conformity with facts that
are experienced through the process of individual knowledge. Absolutely, it is living in
the light of the fact that Existence is absolute and indivisible. Falsehood is the opposite
of truth, and is the result of clinging to the falsehood of individuality. Truth is the way of
disintegrating the individual personality through presentation of the good and not the
pleasant. Truth is that which is universally good, but falsehood, when it is deliberately
resorted to for the fulfilment of a definite purpose, appears pleasant only to an
individual or certain individuals. Falsehood, therefore, fattens the individuality, whereas
truth breaks open the individuality and enables one to realise the Atman.
Tapas, or penance, in its true sense, consists in the withdrawal of senses and
concentration of the mind. Austerity, or penance, is only a means to the end and not the
end itself. It is a means inasmuch as it disciplines the individual functions and directs
them to meditation, which leads to wisdom and realisation. By Tapas what is meant is
not merely bodily mortification, because bondage does not consist in the body but the
mind that animates the body. The cause of bondage is the mind alone and, therefore, the
discipline of the mind is Tapas.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 27
Proper knowledge is equal vision, or perception of the one Atman in all. This is a
function deeper than that of speaking truth or practising Tapas. It is a function of the
spirit which realises itself in every form of existence.
Brahmacharya is the method of the abstraction of sense-energy from the externals and
the conservation of the same for the sake of steadying the mind and giving it the energy
necessary for the practice of concentration and meditation, though the popular meaning
of Brahmacharya is continence. It really means leading a life befitting the nature of
Brahman. It is, in other words, Charya or moving or acting or conducting oneself in
accordance with the law of Brahman, which is the unity of existence. Such control is not
merely the abandonment of objects but is the absence of the taste for objects. Bondage is
not caused by the existence of objects but by the connection of the mind with those
objects. In short, self-control is absence of sense-experience, giving rise to mental
equilibrium, light, consciousness and joy.
These observances should be practised continuously without exceptions to the rules, and
not for sometime alone and with certain exceptions. These should be practised until the
realisation of the Self, because the stoppage of such practices may lead to the assertion
of individuality and impede the process of Self-realisation. The Upanishad has said that
the Atman is attained by those in whom there is no crookedness, no falsehood and no
play of tricks.
This Atman is realised within oneself and not outside oneself. Though the process of
realisation is an inward one, the goal that is attained includes the outward also. Sadhana
starts with an introversion of the mind in the beginning, but in the end the result
achieved is not simply internal but is infinite. From the point of view of the individual, it
is said that this Atman is realised in ones own heart, in the form of a splendid
effulgence, perfectly pure and limitless in its nature, which is realised only by those who
are free from attachments and sins, desires and all kinds of greed. This realisation is
effected through the practice of virtues like truth, enumerated above. Sankara is of the
opinion that only a Sannyasin, i.e., a person of complete renunciation, will be able to
achieve this Supreme End which requires of the aspirant a total transcendence of the
universe.
Mantra No. 6: Truth alone triumphs; not falsehood. Through truth the divine path is spread out
by which the sages whose desires have been completely fulfilled, reach to where is that
supreme treasure of Truth.
Truth is more than truth-speaking. Truth is the symbol of perfection, a representation of
the Divine Being. Adherence to truth means embracing the universal nature of the
Reality. Therefore, truth wins victory everywhere. Truth is the essence of the Universal
movement consisting of evolution and involution. Untruth is negative, whereas truth is
positive. Through Truth the consciousness blossoms into more expanded experience,
but untruth attempts to stifle consciousness altogether and disallows the expansion of
consciousness causing, at the same time, the hardening of individuality.
It is Truth through which the divine way or the life of spiritual striving is spread before
the aspiring individuals. The universe as a spiritual organism to be striven for, is
brought into the consciousness of the individual through the practice of Truth. Truth is
in fact the eye of the individual aspiring for the realisation of its Absolute nature. The
sages got a vision of this Truth because they were absolutely free from such defects as
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 28
deceit, delusion, fraud, pride, vanity and falsehood. They found the consummation of
their desires and aspirations in this Absolute Truth. They became first desireless and
then sought the Truth. Desire breeds falsehood, and desirelessness gives rise to Truth.
Truth enables one to attain the Supreme Treasure which is the Absolute Truth.
Mantra No. 7: That which is supremely expansive, divine, of unthinkable form, subtler than the
subtle, much farther than that which is far, and at the same time very near, shines and is seated
in the Central Being of those who have the consciousness of That.
Mantra No. 8: It is not grasped by the eye, not even by speech, nor by the other senses. It is not
possible to know it through mortifications or deeds. He who meditates upon it with absolute
purity (Sattva) of mind, as the partless Being, beholds it through the serenity attained in
knowledge.
The serenity of knowledge is that state where nothing is experienced other than simple
awareness. In ordinary human beings, this knowledge is not manifest, since it is not
connected with the tranquillity of mind and also since it is polluted by the defects of love
and hatred for external things. As a mirror covered over by dust is not able to reflect an
object, knowledge, though it is present within, is not experienced, as the mind is
disturbed by objectivity. When the dirt of the mind consisting of love, etc., in connection
with the sense-objects, is removed and the mind is rendered calm, pure and peaceful,
then one is said to have attained the serenity of knowledge in which condition alone one
becomes fit for the experience of Brahman. Further, meditation should be practised on
Brahman as the partless indivisible being and not as a partial or limited aspect of the
whole. The quality of meditation is dependent upon the character of the object of
meditation. When the mind contemplates upon the divisionless Being, it itself becomes
divisionless and vanishes into the Absolute. But, for all this, in the beginning, practice of
virtues like truth is absolutely necessary, to be followed by the withdrawal of the senses
and concentration of mind, leading to Tadatmyata, or absorption in the object of
meditation.
Mantra No. 9: This subtle Atman should be known with the purified mind into which the Prana
with its fivefold aspect has entered. The mind is pervaded completely by the functions of the
Pranas together with the powers of the senses. In this purified mind this Atman is revealed.
Mantra No. 10: Whichever region is thought of by the mind and whatever desires the man of
purified mind desires, that region and those desires he obtains. Therefore, one who wishes to
have prosperity should worship the knower of the Self.
The realisation of the Self is a simultaneous fulfilment of the deepest aspirations
together with all the desires, internal or external, unmanifested or manifested, subtle or
gross, of the individual. The state of Sattva, or absolute purity of mind, is not an
individualistic experience but a universal one. Sattva is free from Rajas and, therefore,
the experiences of the individualities are denied in it. Complete fulfilment of all ones
wishes is not possible except in the state of universal Being, which is the same as
Suddha-Sattva-Anubhava.
Because of the omniscience and omnipotence of the knower of Self, whoever worships
him becomes prosperous. The Sankalpa of the Knower is rooted in Satya or Truth, and
his influence upon those who adore and worship him, is great. Wherever this Knower of
the Self moves, there he exercises his influence automatically. Whoever comes in contact
with him gets completely transformed.
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 29
SECONDKHANDA
Mantra No. 1: Him who knows this Supreme Abode of Brahman in which the whole universe is
situated and which is brilliantly shining, those heroes who adore and worship, without any desire
in their minds, transcend this seed of birth.
Mantra No. 2: He who contemplates on objects of desire, having a desire for them, is born here
and there due to those desires; but for him whose desires are all fulfilled, whose Self is perfectly
contented due to the sense of perfection, all desires dissolve themselves here itself.
An individual is born in that condition of mental experience in which it will be possible
for it to fulfil the desires cherished previously. Desires goad an individual towards virtue
and vice, the result of performance of actions which leads to birth and death. Birth and
death cannot be negated until all desires are fulfilled or destroyed. In fact, there is no
such thing as complete fulfilment of phenomenal desires as long as one exists as a
phenomenal being having desires for objects of phenomena.
Desires are never fulfilled through acquisition of objects, but they find their fulfilment,
which is the same as their destruction, in the source of Consciousness itself, in the
knowledge of which they vanish altogether. All the different individuals have their
cloaks made up of their own varying desires through which alone they have objective
experience which is called birth, life and death. Such experiences cease when these
cloaks are cast off and the Absolute Self is realised. The moment the Self is realised, all
the desires get dissolved in the menstruum of knowledge. This is the condition in which
love merges into experience and the distinction of the subject and the object is
abolished. Here it is that the true meaning of all desires and aspirations is found and the
complete fulfilment of all these is achieved in its real sense. When the cause of desires is
uprooted through knowledge, all its effects too get invalidated at once. The knower
transcends the sense of virtue and vice and all such pairs of opposites, whose law binds
only the individual living in space and time. Destruction of desires is Moksha.
Mantra No. 3: This Atman is not to be attained through discourses, through intellect, or through
much of hearing. That which one seeks, by that alone it is attained. To such a one this Atman
reveals its true nature.
The Self is realised not through an external process of speaking, thinking or hearing but
through self-identical knowledge.Whom one wishes to attain, i.e., the Self or the Atman,
by him alone is It attained through non-relational experience. The realisation of the Self
is actually attained not by the mind, but by consciousness which belongs to the Self and
which in fact is the Self Itself. The Mantra indicates that that which is sought is not
something different from the seeker but the essential nature of the seeker himself. The
condition of realisation is intense aspiration. There is no other way to realise It. The
seeker is required to surrender his individual personality so that that which obstructs
the experience of himself as the infinite Being may be removed, and not to suggest that
surrender means a giving up of oneself to another being. This surrender is actually the
abandonment of the false self for the sake of the infinite Self which is non-different from
ones own Self. The Absolute Atman is ever accomplished and is of the nature of Selfexperience
and, therefore, It cannot be reached through an external process even as one
cannot reach ones own body through any kind of action. To such an aspiring seeker, the
true nature of the Self is revealed within himself alone in the form of eternally
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 30
accomplished knowledge. In short, realisation of the Self is the negation of non-self
which consists in the process of thinking.
Mantra No. 4: This Atman cannot be attained by one who is devoid of strength, not through
heedlessness, not even through penance which is devoid of its proper insignia. That wise one
who strives hard with these methods, his self enters into the state of Brahman (or the
Absolute).
The Mantra sets forth certain pre-requisites of meditation on the Atman. Strength here
stands for mental and moral power, or inner toughness, without which concentration is
impossible. It may also mean physical stability, inasmuch as physical health is
conducive to mental peace. Sankara takes strength in the sense of the power that is
generated through devotion to and meditation on the Atman, which paves the way for
the higher achievements later on. One should not expect to know the Self through such
heedless practices as attachments to worldly objects like son, cattle, etc., nor through
works done for the sake of personal gain. Even austerity practised improperly as a sort
of mortification without its insignia, viz., Sannyasa or inner renunciation, will not help
in the realisation of the Self. Sankara here suggests that Tapas may be taken to mean
knowledge which is possessed even by householders, in which case it is useless because
of the lack of renunciation. The knowledge of a householder cannot really be Selfknowledge,
because of his being bound to his duties connected with his stage of life.
True knowledge is the awareness of the non-dual Reality, which a householder cannot
be expected to have as long as he has to perform his duties in this world. Therefore,
knowledge connected with renunciation alone is true knowledge. Knowledge is
necessarily preceded by renunciation, without which it cannot be called real knowledge.
With these methods, viz., strength, carefulness and knowledge connected with
renunciation, one who aspires to attain the Supreme Being becomes a Vidvan, or a
Knower of the Self, and his Self enters into the essence of the Absolute.
Mantra No. 5: Having attained this, the heroic Rishis, being satisfied with Knowledge, perfect,
desireless and calm, uniting their selves with the Divine Being and attaining everything from
every side, enter into Everything Itself, i.e., they become omnipresent through the attainment of
the Omnipresent Being.
Knowledge itself is the highest end of life and not simply a means to an end. Knowledge
is identical with the highest perfection. The sages who have this knowledge are satisfied
with It alone and not with some external means of satisfaction which will simply fatten
the body and the ego. Ones highest duty consists in the struggle for the attainment of
this knowledge by which one gets unified with the all-pervading Absolute Being. This is
the same as Moksha, where the individuality ceases to be and where one exists in all
places and at all times, i.e., becomes infinite and eternal.
Mantra No. 6: Those Yatis who have ascertained the true meaning of the knowledge of
Vedanta, who have purified their natures through Sannyasa and Yoga, having attained
immortality, get liberated from all sides in the region of Brahma at the end of time.
Sannyasa-Yoga means establishment in the consciousness of Brahman consequent upon
the renunciation of desires and actions. The individuals get liberated at the end of time,
which means that they are freed from bondage when their experiences of Samsara come
to an end. It is not ordinary death that is meant here, because in ordinary physical death
time does not come to an end and Samsara also does not cease. What is meant is the
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 31
Atyantika Marana, or ultimate death, where the subtle body of the individual dies
together with its cause, viz., ignorance. The end of time may also mean the time when
those who have attained Brahma Loka attain Krama Mukti at the time of the dissolution
of cosmos together with Brahma Himself. In that state, all the liberated ones find their
individualities vanish into Brahman, even as a lamp which is not fed by oil is
extinguished into space. These liberated souls are said to enter into everything, because
they become the Soul of the universe through instantaneous experience of the Infinite.
Their experience is, therefore, absolutely unconditioned and it is not the result of
proceeding towards any plane of consciousness, which is always conditioned because of
its being only a degree of Truth. Moksha is not a movement towards any state, but an
immutable experience here and now. Knowledge is said to be the means to Moksha
because the means should always befit the nature of the end, and knowledge is
unconditioned like Moksha. Moksha is not produced as an effect of anything but
consists in the mere cessation of the hindrances to such an experience.
Mantra No. 7: The different parts of individuality get dissolved and all the senses merge in their
presiding divinities. Actions, the self consisting of intelligence-all these become unified in the
Supreme Imperishable.
The effects of all actions are not experienced because of the rise of knowledge. The
intellectual self, viz., the individual self, transcends itself and is unified with its source,
viz., Pure Consciousness, which is called here the Supreme Imperishable, which is vast
like the ether, which is the same as Brahman, which is unlimited, undecaying, unborn,
changeless, immortal, fearless, without a cause and without an effect, without
internality and externality, non-dual, blessed and peaceful, existing everywhere, at all
times in the same condition. The individual becomes non-different from It, having got
rid of all the obstructions in the forms of ignorance, desire and action.
Mantra No. 8: As rivers flowing into the ocean lose themselves in the ocean, casting off name
and form, so the knower, freed from name and form, attains the Divine Purusha who is higher
than the high.
Mantra No. 9: He who knows the Supreme Brahman becomes Brahman Itself. In his family
none devoid of the Knowledge of Brahman is born. He crosses over sorrow, he crosses over
sin. Freed from the knots of the heart he becomes Immortal.
It may be thought that the knower of Brahman may be obstructed by Devas, etc., from
attaining perfection. But, this is not possible in the case of a knower of Brahman or even
an aspirant after the knowledge of Brahman. Obstacles are possible only in the case of
those whose effort is put forth for the attainment of something which is particularised.
Whenever one struggles to obtain something which is not universal but particular, there
is a reaction from the other particulars, or rather the other aspects of reality, which
resist the onward march of the mind towards its own limited end. The Knower of the
Self, on the other hand, becomes the Self of the Devas and, therefore, he cannot have
opposition from any side. Knowledge simply consists in the removal of ignorance. The
moment ignorance is dispelled or duality is cancelled, Moksha is experienced without
any opposition whatsoever. Oppositions are the reactions to selfish desires and not to
the aspiration for Brahman as there cannot be reaction to an impersonal being or
impersonal thought or aspiration. The Impersonal Being is eternal and is always
identical with ones own Self. In fact, an aspirant after Brahman is helped by the
The Mundaka Upanishad by Swami Krishnananda 32
universe in the pursuit of the same, because what he aspires for is the common reality of
all. No opposition can be of any avail in his case. He transcends all obstacles, conquers
sorrow and sin through the power of Knowledge, frees himself from the pairs of
opposites like virtue and vice, purifies his family with his knowledge, breaks the knots of
his heart, is liberated ultimately from relative experience and becomes Immortal.
Mantra No. 10: Those who have performed their duties well, who are learned in scriptures, who
intensely aspire for Brahman, who faithfully worship the sacred fire called Ekarshi, who have
undergone the vow of the head, to them alone this Brahma-Vidya should be told.
Those who have performed the works prescribed in the previous stages of life, purify
themselves through such works and become fit for higher aspirations. Erudition in the
sacred lore makes them undeluded and clear-minded. Further, they should have already
performed the Upasana of Saguna Brahman, through which alone their minds can rest
in the Nirguna Brahman. Ekarshi is a fire worshipped by Atharva Vedins. The meaning
is that one should perform the works and the worships enjoined in the section of the
Veda of which he forms a member. The vow of the head is either a particular kind of
sacrifice in which fire is carried on the head or Sannyasa which is connected with the
vow of the head, viz., shaving. The drift of the Mantra is that one should have already
performed what he considers as his duty in life and renounced everything later on, so
that he may have true aspiration for Brahman. When Brahma Vidya is imparted to such
people, it becomes fruitful.
Mantra No. 11: This highest truth was declared in ancient days by the Rishi Angiras. This Vidya
should not be studied by one who has not followed the prescribed rules. Prostration to the great
Rishis. Prostration to the great Rishis.
Om Santih, Santih, Santih.
SANTIMANTRA
Om. O gods, may we, with our ears, hear what is auspicious; O ye fit to be worshipped,
may we, with our eyes, see what is auspicious. May we enjoy the life allotted to us by the
gods, offering our praise with our bodies strong of limb. May Indra, the powerful, the
ancient of fame, vouchsafe us prosperity. May He, the nourisher and the possessor of all
wealth, give us what is well for us. May the Lord of swift motion be propitious to us and
may the Protector of the great ones protect us too.
Om Peace, Peace, Peace.

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