Pavamana Mantra
The Pavamana Mantra, also known as pavamāna abhyāroha
is an ancient Indian mantra found in the Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad, part of the Yajur Veda.
Text and translation
The text of the mantra reads:Swami Madhavananda offers the following translation:
Patrick Olivelle offers a slightly different translation:
The more common modern translation differs slightly in the translation of the first line:
These three statements are referred to as the three Pavamana Mantras. Some renderings – generally modern – add ॐ at the beginning and/or ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥ as a fourth line. This is a stylistic addition that concludes a recitation; as such it is often included with the verse. The Upanishad itself does not end the line that way.
Sanskrit word meaning
- – "from falsehood"; ablative case of "falsehood", from + "truth"; becomes due to sandhi; can be a synonym for "evil"
- – "me"; first person pronoun, singular number, accusative case
- [Sat (Sanskrit)|] – "to truth"; accusative case of "truth"; here accusative case shows the destination; becomes due to sandhi; can be a synonym for "good"
- – "lead"; causative, imperative mood, active voice, singular number, second person of root "to go".
- [Tamas (philosophy)|] – "from darkness"; ablative case of "darkness"; becomes due to sandhi
- [Divine light|] – "to light"; accusative case of "light"; becomes due to sandhi
- [Mrtyu|] – "from death"; ablative case of "death"; becomes due to sandhi
- [Amrita|] – "to immortality"; accusative case of "immortal", literally "not dead", from + "dead"; becomes due to vowel elision.
In the interpretation of Swami Krishnananda, "From the nonexistent, from the unreal, from the apparent, lead me to the other side of it, the Existent, the Real, the Noumenon." According to this interpretation and in keeping with the philosophy of Vedanta, the text rejects the material world as "unreal", "dark" and "dead" and invokes a concept of the transcendental reality.
Usage in culture
The quote has been used as an opening statement for the Economic Survey 2021 by Krishnamurthy Subramanian, who reports to the finance minister under the Narendra Modi Government.In 1997, it was musically arranged by Ravi Shankar and George Harrison, and included in the album Chants of India.
In 1976, the mantra was used for the lyrics for "Gita", a song by John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra, from their album Inner Worlds.
In 2003, the mantra was worked into two pieces of the score for The Matrix Revolutions, Neodämmerung by Don Davis and Navras by Juno Reactor and used in the final battle scene and end credits of the film, respectively.
The mantra features in 'To Kiss or Not to Kiss' in the soundtrack of Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series).
The text of the mantra is quoted in the beginning of the official music video for Light of Transcendence, the first track on the 2018 album Ømni by the Brazilian power metal band Angra.
In 2024, the mantra was used in the lyrics for "Shanti", a song by Zedd from the album Telos.