Brāhmanahatya

Brāhmanahatya (also known as Brahma Hatya) is Sanskrit for "the act of killing a Brahmin". Brahmin is the person who knew and experienced final truth that is those who attained brahma state. Brahmin is the state of higher being; it is not a caste which is acquired by brahmin community. Every living being is Brahma because god resides into living being in the form of soul hence any act of killing of living being is Brahmahatya. Everybody is Brahma Swarupa hence any killing act is Brahmahatya.

Legend

In a story involving Indra and Vritra, Brāhmahatya is portrayed as a hideous crime. The killer and his/her descendants thereafter bear a curse. It is not limited to the killing of a Brahmin. It extends to the killing of all those creatures that are equivalent to a Brahmin.

Japa, tapa, homa, yagya, tarpan and shradh kriya can defeat the curse. Brahma dosha nivarana pooja is also mandatory. In such cases triambaka pooja at triyambakeshwara and pinda daan at gaya is suggested. Ancient scripts state that the curse can be defeated by the darshana of round ek mukhi rudraksha, but it is very difficult to get the original one.

In Tiruvidaimaruthur Shiva temple, near Kumbakonam, an idol for Brahmahatya is present. The complete legend of this temple is associated with this curse.[1]

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2016-02-04.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.