Om
Om is a polysemous symbol representing a sacred sound, seed syllable, mantra, and invocation in Hinduism as well as in other Indian religions. Its written form is the most important symbol in the Hindu religion. It is the essence of the supreme Absolute, consciousness, Ātman, ''Brahman, or the cosmic world. In Indian religions, Om serves as a sonic representation of the divine, a standard of Vedic authority and a central aspect of soteriological doctrines and practices. It is the basic tool for meditation in the yogic path to liberation. The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas, the Upanishads, and other Hindu texts. It is described as the goal of all the Vedas.
Om emerged in the Vedic corpus and is said to be an encapsulated form of Samavedic chants or songs. It is a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts, during puja and private prayers, in ceremonies of rites of passage such as weddings, and during meditative and spiritual activities such as Pranava yoga. It is part of the iconography found in ancient and medieval era manuscripts, temples, monasteries, and spiritual retreats in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. As a syllable, it is often chanted either independently or before a spiritual recitation and during meditation in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.
The syllable Om'' is also referred to as Onkara and Pranava among many other names.
Common names and synonyms
The syllable Om is referred to by many names, including:' ; literally, "fore-sound", referring to Om as the primeval sound.- '
Origin and spiritual significance
The etymological origins of ōm ' have long been discussed and disputed, with even the Upanishads having proposed multiple Sanskrit etymologies for aum, including: from "ām", from "ávam", and from the Sanskrit roots "āv-" or "āp-". In 1889, Maurice Bloomfield proposed an origin from a Proto-Indo-European introductory particle "*au" with a function similar to the Sanskrit particle "atha". However, contemporary Indologist Asko Parpola proposes a borrowing from Dravidian "*ām" meaning "'it is so', 'let it be so', 'yes'", a contraction of "*ākum", cognate with modern Tamil "ām" meaning "yes". In the Jaffna Tamil dialect spoken in Sri Lanka, aum is the word for yes.Om emerged in the Vedic corpus and is said to be an encapsulated form of Samavedic chants or songs. The Samaveda, the poetical Veda, orthographically maps Om to the audible, the musical truths in its numerous variations and then attempts to extract musical meters from it. The Aitareya Brahmana of Rig Veda, in section 5.32, suggests that the three phonetic components of Om correspond to the three stages of cosmic creation, and when it is read or said, it celebrates the creative powers of the universe. However, regardless of its original meaning, the syllable Om evolves to mean many abstract ideas even in the earliest Upanishads. Max Müller and other scholars state that these philosophical texts recommend Om as a basic tool for meditation and explain the various meanings that the syllable may hold in the mind of one meditating, ranging from "artificial and senseless" to the "highest concepts such as the cause of the Universe, essence of life, Brahman, Atman, and Self-knowledge".
In the Aranyaka and the Brahmana layers of Vedic texts, the syllable is so widespread and linked to knowledge, that it stands for the "whole of Veda". The Brahmana layer of Vedic texts equates Om with bhur-bhuvah-svah, which symbolizes "the whole Veda". They offer various shades of meaning to Om, such as it being "the universe beyond the sun", or that which is "mysterious and inexhaustible", or "the infinite language, the infinite knowledge", or "essence of breath, life, everything that exists", or that "with which one is liberated". The symbolic foundations of Om'' are repeatedly discussed in the oldest layers of the early Upanishads. In the Upanishads, it has been associated with various concepts, such as "cosmic sound", "mystical syllable", "affirmation to something divine", or as symbolism for abstract spiritual concepts. However, in the eight anuvaka of the Taittiriya Upanishad, which consensus research indicates was formulated around the same time or preceding Aitareya Brahmana, the sound Aum is attributed to reflecting the inner part of the word Brahman. Put another way, it is the Brahman, in the form of a word.
Pronunciation
When occurring within spoken Classical Sanskrit, the syllable is subject to the normal rules of sandhi in Sanskrit grammar, with the additional peculiarity that the initial o of "Om" is the guṇa vowel grade of u, not the vṛddhi grade, and is therefore pronounced as a monophthong with a long vowel, i.e. ōm not aum. Furthermore, the final m is often assimilated into the preceding vowel as nasalisation. As a result, Om is regularly pronounced in the context of Sanskrit.However, this o reflects the older Vedic Sanskrit diphthong au, which at that stage in the language's history had not yet monophthongised to o. This being so, the syllable Om is often archaically considered as consisting of three phonemes: "a-u-m". Accordingly, some denominations maintain the archaic diphthong au viewing it to be more authentic and closer to the language of the Vedas.
In the context of the Vedas, particularly the Vedic Brahmanas, the vowel is often pluta, indicating a length of three morae, that is, the time it takes to say three light syllables. Additionally, a diphthong becomes with the prolongation of its first vowel. When e and o undergo they typically revert to the original diphthongs with the initial a prolonged, realised as an overlong open back unrounded vowel. This extended duration is emphasised by denominations who regard it as more authentically Vedic, such as Arya Samaj.
However, Om is also attested in the Upanishads without pluta, and many languages related to or influenced by Classical Sanskrit, such as Hindustani, share its pronunciation of Om.
Written representations
South Asia
Nagari or Devanagari representations are found epigraphically on sculpture dating from Medieval India and on ancient coins in regional scripts throughout South Asia. Om is represented in Devanagari as ओम्, composed of four elements: the vowel letter, the vowel diacritic, the consonant letter, and the virama stroke which indicates the absence of an implied final vowel. Historically, the combination represented a diphthong, often transcribed as, but it now represents a long vowel,. The syllable is sometimes written ओ३म्, where explicitly indicates pluta which is otherwise only implied. For this same reason Om may also be written ओऽम् in languages such as Hindi, with the being used to indicate prolonging the vowel sound. Om may also be written ओं, with an reflecting the pronunciation of in languages such as Hindi. In languages such as Urdu and Sindhi Om may be written ' in Arabic script, although speakers of these languages may also use Devanagari representations.The commonly seen representation of the syllable Om, ', is a cursive ligature in Devanagari, combining with and the chandrabindu. In Unicode, the symbol is encoded at and at as a "generic symbol independent of Devanagari font".
In some South Asian writing systems, the Om symbol has been simplified further. In Bengali and Assamese Om is written simply as ' without an additional curl. In languages such as Bengali differences in pronunciation compared to Sanskrit have made the addition of a curl for redundant. Although the spelling is simpler, the pronunciation remains. Similarly, in Odia Om is written as ' without an additional diacritic.
In Tamil, Om is written as, a ligature of ஓ and ம், while in Kannada, Telugu, and Malayalam, Om is written simply as the letter for ō followed by .
There have been proposals that the Om syllable may already have had written representations in Brahmi script, dating to before the Common Era. A proposal by Deb held that the swastika is a monogrammatic representation of the syllable Om, wherein two Brahmi /o/ characters were superposed crosswise and the 'm' was represented by dot. A commentary in Nature considers this theory questionable and unproven. A. B. Walawalkar proposed that Om was represented using the Brahmi symbols for "A", "U", and "M", and that this may have influenced the unusual epigraphical features of the symbol for Om. Parker wrote that an "Aum monogram", distinct from the swastika, is found among Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions in Sri Lanka, including Anuradhapura era coins, dated from the 1st to 4th centuries CE, which are embossed with Om along with other symbols.
East and Southeast Asia
The Om symbol, with epigraphical variations, is also found in many Southeast Asian countries.In Southeast Asia, the Om symbol is widely conflated with that of the unalome; originally a representation of the Buddha's urna curl and later a symbol of the path to nirvana, it is a popular yantra in Southeast Asia, particularly in Cambodia and Thailand. It frequently appears in sak yant religious tattoos, and has been a part of various flags and official emblems such as in the Thong Chom Klao of King Rama IV and the present-day royal arms of Cambodia.
The Khmer adopted the symbol since the 1st century during the Kingdom of Funan, where it is also seen on artefacts from Angkor Borei, once the capital of Funan. The symbol is seen on numerous Khmer statues from Chenla to Khmer Empire periods and still in used until the present day.
In Chinese characters, Om is typically transliterated as either 唵 or 嗡.
Hinduism
In Hinduism, Om is one of the most important spiritual sounds. The syllable is often found at the beginning and the end of chapters in the Vedas, the Upanishads, and other Hindu texts, and is often chanted either independently or before a mantra, as a sacred spiritual incantation made before and during the recitation of spiritual texts, during puja and private prayers, in ceremonies of rites of passages such as weddings, and during meditative and spiritual activities such as yoga.It is the most sacred syllable symbol and mantra of Brahman, which is the ultimate reality, consciousness or Atman.
It is called the Shabda Brahman and believed to be the primordial sound of the universe.
Vedas
Om came to be used as a standard utterance at the beginning of mantras, chants or citations taken from the Vedas. For example, the Gayatri mantra, which consists of a verse from the Rigveda Samhita, is prefixed not just by Om but by Om followed by the formula bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ. Such recitations continue to be in use in Hinduism, with many major incantations and ceremonial functions beginning and ending with Om.Brahmanas
Aitareya Brahmana
The Aitareya Brahmana explains Om as "an acknowledgment, melodic confirmation, something that gives momentum and energy to a hymn".Upanishads
Chandogya Upanishad
The Chandogya Upanishad is one of the oldest Upanishads of Hinduism. It opens with the recommendation that "let a man meditate on Om". It calls the syllable Om as udgitha, and asserts that the significance of the syllable is thus: the essence of all beings is earth, the essence of earth is water, the essence of water are the plants, the essence of plants is man, the essence of man is speech, the essence of speech is the Rigveda, the essence of the Rigveda is the Samaveda, and the essence of Samaveda is the udgitha.is speech, states the text, and is breath; they are pairs, and because they have love for each other, speech and breath find themselves together and mate to produce a song. The highest song is Om, asserts section 1.1 of Chandogya Upanishad. It is the symbol of awe, of reverence, of threefold knowledge because Adhvaryu invokes it, the Hotr recites it, and Udgatr sings it.
The second volume of the first chapter continues its discussion of syllable Om, explaining its use as a struggle between Devas and Asuras. Max Muller states that this struggle between gods and demons is considered allegorical by ancient Indian scholars, as good and evil inclinations within man, respectively. The legend in section 1.2 of Chandogya Upanishad states that gods took the Udgitha unto themselves, thinking, "with this song we shall overcome the demons". The syllable Om is thus implied as that which inspires the good inclinations within each person.
Chandogya Upanishad's exposition of syllable Om in its opening chapter combines etymological speculations, symbolism, metric structure and philosophical themes. In the second chapter of the Chandogya Upanishad, the meaning and significance of Om evolves into a philosophical discourse, such as in section 2.10 where Om is linked to the Highest Self, and section 2.23 where the text asserts Om is the essence of three forms of knowledge, Om is Brahman and "Om is all this ".
Katha Upanishad
The Katha Upanishad is the legendary story of a little boy, Nachiketa, the son of sage, who meets Yama, the Vedic deity of death. Their conversation evolves to a discussion of the nature of man, knowledge, Atman and moksha. In section 1.2, Katha Upanishad characterises knowledge as the pursuit of the good, and ignorance as the pursuit of the pleasant. It teaches that the essence of the Veda is to make man liberated and free, look past what has happened and what has not happened, free from the past and the future, beyond good and evil, and one word for this essence is the word Om.Maitri Upanishad
The Maitrayaniya Upanishad in sixth Prapathakas discusses the meaning and significance of Om. The text asserts that Om represents Brahman-Atman. The three roots of the syllable, states the Maitri Upanishad, are A + U + M.The sound is the body of Self, and it repeatedly manifests in three:
- as gender-endowed body – feminine, masculine, neuter;
- as light-endowed body – Agni, Vayu, and Aditya;
- as deity-endowed body – Brahma, Rudra, and Vishnu;
- as mouth-endowed body – garhapatya, dakshinagni, and ahavaniya;
- as knowledge-endowed body – Rig, Saman, and Yajur;
- as world-endowed body –,, and ;
- as time-endowed body – past, present, and future;
- as heat-endowed body – breath, fire, and Sun;
- as growth-endowed body – food, water, and Moon;
- as thought-endowed body – intellect, mind, and psyche.
The world is Om, its light is Sun, and the Sun is also the light of the syllable Om, asserts the Upanishad. Meditating on Om, is acknowledging and meditating on the Brahman-Atman.
Mundaka Upanishad
The Mundaka Upanishad in the second Mundakam, suggests the means to knowing the Atman and the Brahman are meditation, self-reflection, and introspection and that they can be aided by the symbol Om. It uses a bow and arrow analogy, where the bow symbolizes the focused mind, the arrow symbolizes the self, and the target represents the ultimate reality.Adi Shankara, in his review of the Mundaka Upanishad, states Om as a symbolism for Atman.
Mandukya Upanishad
The Mandukya Upanishad opens by declaring, "Om!, this syllable is this whole world". Thereafter, it presents various explanations and theories on what it means and signifies. This discussion is built on a structure of "four fourths" or "fourfold", derived from A + U + M + "silence".Om as all states of Time.- : In verse 1, the Upanishad states that time is threefold: the past, the present and the future, that these three are Om. The four fourth of time is that which transcends time, that too is Om expressed.Om as all states of Ātman.
- : In verse 2, states the Upanishad, everything is Brahman, but Brahman is Atman, and that the Atman is fourfold. Johnston summarizes these four states of Self, respectively, as seeking the physical, seeking inner thought, seeking the causes and spiritual consciousness, and the fourth state is realizing oneness with the Self, the Eternal.Om as all states of Consciousness.
- : In verses 3 to 6, the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates four states of consciousness: wakeful, dream, deep sleep, and the state of ekatma. These four are A + U + M + "without an element" respectively.Om as all of Knowledge.
- : In verses 9 to 12, the Mandukya Upanishad enumerates fourfold etymological roots of the syllable Om. It states that the first element of Om is A, which is from Apti or from Adimatva. The second element is U, which is from Utkarsa or from Ubhayatva. The third element is M, from Miti or from Mi Minati, or apīti. The fourth is without an element, without development, beyond the expanse of universe. In this way, states the Upanishad, the syllable Om is indeed the Atman.
Shvetashvatara Upanishad
Ganapati Upanishad
The Ganapati Upanishad asserts that Ganesha is same as Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, all deities, the universe, and Om.Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana
The Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana, a Samavedic text, outlines a story where those who chant Om can achieve the same rewards as deities. However, the gods are concerned about humans ascending to their realm. To address this concern, a compromise is reached between the gods and Death. Humans can attain immortality, but it involves relinquishing their physical bodies to Death. This immortality entails an extended celestial existence after a long earthly life, where the practitioner aspires to acquire a divine self in a non-physical form, allowing them to reside eternally in the heavenly realm.Ramayana
In Valmiki's Ramayana, Rama is identified with Om, with Brahma saying to Rama:''Bhagavad Gita''
The Bhagavad Gita, in the Mahabharata, mentions the meaning and significance of Om in several verses. According to Jeaneane Fowler, verse 9.17 of the Bhagavad Gita synthesizes the competing dualistic and monist streams of thought in Hinduism, by using "Om which is the symbol for the indescribable, impersonal Brahman".The significance of the sacred syllable in the Hindu traditions, is similarly highlighted in other verses of the Gita, such as verse 17.24 where the importance of Om during prayers, charity and meditative practices is explained as follows:
Puranas
The medieval era texts of Hinduism, such as the Puranas adopt and expand the concept of Om in their own ways, and to their own theistic sects.Vaishnava traditions
The Vaishnava Garuda Purana equates the recitation of Om with obeisance to Vishnu. According to the Vayu Purana, Om is the representation of the Hindu Trimurti, and represents the union of the three gods, viz. A for Brahma, U for Vishnu and M for Shiva. The Bhagavata Purana identifies the Pranava as the root of all Vedic mantras, and describes the combined letters of a-u-m as an invocation of seminal birth, initiation, and the performance of sacrifice.In Śrī Vaiṣṇava tradition, sub-traditions differ on who has eligibility to say Oṁ, but it is generally a "nonissue" as it is not necessary for salvation. The Teṉkalai division, represented by Piḷḷailokācārya in his Parantapaṭi, allow everyone to recite the praṇava, arguing the syllable arises spontaneously from all. The Vaṭakalai division, represented by Vedāntadeśika in his Rahasyatrayasāra, disallows women and śūdras from reciting the praṇava, citing older scriptural injunctions to support the stance.
Shaiva traditions
In Shaiva traditions, the Shiva Purana highlights the relation between deity Shiva and the Pranava or Om. Shiva is declared to be Om, and that Om is Shiva.After this, an epithet of Shiva is Omkareshwar, the Lord, Ishvara, of oṃkāra.
Shakta traditions
In the thealogy of Shakta traditions, Om connotes the female divine energy, Adi Parashakti, represented in the Tridevi: A for the creative energy, Mahasaraswati, U for the preservative energy, Mahalakshmi, and M for the destructive energy, Mahakali. The 12th book of the Devi-Bhagavata Purana describes the Goddess as the mother of the Vedas, the Adya Shakti, and the essence of the Gayatri mantra.Other texts
Yoga Sutra
The aphoristic verse 1.27 of Pantanjali's Yogasutra links Om to Yoga practice, as follows:This verse highlights the importance of Om in the meditative practice of yoga, where it symbolizes the three worlds in the Self; the three times – past, present, and future eternity; the three divine powers – creation, preservation, and transformation in one Being; and three essences in one Spirit – immortality, omniscience, and joy. It is a symbol for the perfected Spiritual Man.
Chaitanya Charitamrita
In Krishnava traditions, Krishna is revered as Svayam Bhagavan, the Supreme Lord himself, and Om is interpreted in light of this. According to the Chaitanya Charitamrita, Om is the sound representation of the Supreme Lord. A is said to represent Bhagavan Krishna, U represents Srimati Radharani, and M represents jiva, the Self of the devotee.Tantrasāra
According to the Tantrasāra of Kr̥ṣṇānanda Āgamavāgīśa, a śūdra may not be initiated with a mantra beginning with Oṁ aka praṇava.Jainism
In Jainism, Om is considered a condensed form of reference to the Pañca-Parameṣṭhi by their initials A+A+A+U+M.The Dravyasamgraha quotes a Prakrit line:
By extension, the Om symbol is also used in Jainism to represent the first five lines of the Namokar mantra, the most important part of the daily prayer in the Jain religion, which honours the. These five lines are : " veneration to the Arihants, veneration to the perfect ones, veneration to the masters, veneration to the teachers, veneration to all the monks in the world".
Buddhism
Om is often used as part of mantras and dharanis in Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions of Buddhism, such as East Asian Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism. In East Asian Buddhist traditions like Chinese Buddhism, Om is often transliterated as the Chinese character or .Tibetan Buddhism and Vajrayana
In Tibetan Buddhism, Om is often placed at the beginning of mantras and dharanis. Probably the most well known mantra is "Om mani padme hum", the six syllable mantra of the Bodhisattva of compassion, Avalokiteśvara. This mantra is particularly associated with the four-armed form of Avalokiteśvara. Moreover, as a seed syllable, Om is considered sacred and holy in Esoteric Buddhism.Some scholars interpret the first word of the mantra to be, with a meaning similar to Hinduism – the totality of sound, existence, and consciousness.
has been described by the 14th Dalai Lama as "composed of three pure letters, A, U, and M. These symbolize the impure body, speech, and mind of everyday unenlightened life of a practitioner; they also symbolize the pure exalted body, speech and mind of an enlightened Buddha". Om is a part of many mantras in Tibetan Buddhism and is a symbolism for wholeness, perfection, and the infinite.
Japanese Buddhism
''A-un''
The term A-un is the transliteration in Japanese of the two syllables "a" and "", written in Devanagari as. In Japanese, it is often conflated with the syllable Om. The original Sanskrit term is composed of two letters, the first and the last letters of the Devanagari abugida, with diacritics on the latter indicating the "-" of "". Together, they symbolically represent the beginning and the end of all things. In Japanese Mikkyō Buddhism, the letters represent the beginning and the end of the universe.The term a-un is used figuratively in some Japanese expressions as "a-un breathing" or "a-un relationship", indicating an inherently harmonious relationship or nonverbal communication.
''Niō'' guardian kings and ''komainu'' lion-dogs
The term is also used in Buddhist architecture and Shinto to describe the paired statues common in Japanese religious settings, most notably the Niō and the komainu. One has an open mouth regarded by Buddhists as symbolically speaking the "A" syllable; the other has a closed mouth, symbolically speaking the "Un" syllable. The two together are regarded as saying "A-un". The general name for statues with an open mouth is agyō, that for those with a closed mouth ungyō.Niō statues in Japan, and their equivalent in East Asia, appear in pairs in front of Buddhist temple gates and stupas, in the form of two fierce looking guardian kings.
Komainu, also called lion-dogs, found in Japan, Korea and China, also occur in pairs before Buddhist temples and public spaces, and again, one has an open mouth, the other closed.
Sikhism
Ik Onkar are the first words of the Mul Mantar, which is the opening verse of the Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh scripture. Combining the numeral one and "Onkar", Ik Onkar literally means "one Om "; these words are a statement that there is "one God", understood to refer to the "absolute monotheistic unity of God" and implying "singularity in spite of the seeming multiplicity of existence".According to Pashaura Singh, Onkar is used frequently as invocation in Sikh scripture; it is the foundational word, the seed of Sikh scripture, and the basis of the "whole creation of time and space".
Ik Onkar is a significant name of God in the Guru Granth Sahib and Gurbani, states Kohli, and occurs as "Aum" in the Upanishads and where it is understood as the abstract representation of three worlds of creation. According to Wazir Singh, Onkar is a "variation of Om of the ancient Indian scriptures, implying the unifying seed-force that evolves as the universe". Guru Nanak wrote a poem entitled Onkar in which, states Doniger, he "attributed the origin and sense of speech to the Divinity, who is thus the Om-maker".
"Onkar" is the primordial sound/word. It is the soundless word. It is both the source as well as manifestation of the source. "Onkar" pervades the entire creation. The soundless sound is present everywhere and inside everything including us. In Sikhism, the Guru Granth Sahib is manifested form of this "Onkar". Hence, the Guru Granth Sahib is called "Shabad Guru". Shabad is Guru and Guru itself is the Primordial Sound "Onkar".