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Monday 30 December 2013

Kanchi Mahaswami's Maha Samadhi

His Holiness, Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswathi, the 68th Sankaracharya of Sri Kanchi Kamakoti Peetam in South India, passed away in Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, on Saturday, January 8th, 1994, just four months before he was due to complete his centenary. The end of the 68th pontiff of the Kanchi Mutt came suddenly at 2:58pm as he was relaxing in his room within the mutt. All of India rushed to pay respect-Hindus, Muslims, Christians, rich, poor, low caste and high caste alike.

The pontiff, slightly indisposed due to a phlegm formation, had stopped giving darshan to the public since the first of this year. But he recovered fully and was talking to devotees. He listened that final morning to a continuous recitation of the 1,000 names of Vishnu by 100 devotees. The two junior pontiffs, His Holiness Jayendra Saraswathi and his disciple Sri Vijayendra Saraswathi, met the pontiff around 2:30pm before leaving for Tambaram, a suburb of Madras. Informed in transit that the pontiff’s condition was serious, they rushed back to Kanchi mutt at 4:30pm, but he had already attained mahasamadhi. When informed of the end of his guru on his arrival at the mutt, Sri Jayendra was too shaken for some time to leave the van. After he collected himself, he ran in followed by Vijayendra. Three doctors-Bhaskaran, Ranganathan and Sambamoorthy-attended on the sage till he breathed his last.

The saint’s body was brought out of his room for public homage at 7:05 pm. A never-ending stream of people filed past the same dais where they had been having his darshan all these years. Roads were jammed as thousands descended on Kanchi, 45 miles west of Madras. The saint’s transcendence of caste, creed and religion was eloquently attested by numerous Muslims in traditional headgear and several Christian nuns being part of the 3-mile long queue. Brahmin ladies distinguished by their 18-yard saris stood cheek by jowl with persons of other castes.

The pontiff, one of the most venerated Hindu leaders of this century, was head of Kanchi Peetham and responsible for the many temples and Vedic schools under its stewardship. He was an exemplary sannyasin, a renunciate monk, who owed nothing and for the past few decades ate but one meal each day of simple grain with fruit juice or milk. By tradition, he traveled on foot to bring the power of Sankara’s teachings deep into India’s countryside. He would walk 10 or 20 miles a day, followed by crowds chanting “Jaya, jaya Sankara. Hara, hara Sankara” and a caravan of a dozen or more jeeps. Each day he would camp at a village to perform the mandatory puja which the pontiff alone can do. Villagers would come, prostrate, listen to his upadesha and make simple offerings (placed on a small table in front of him, for he cannot touch others or things they may give him, especially money). The next morning he would continue, marching another 20 miles in the hot sun, worshipped by passers-by or wives from their roadside homes. Months thus passed until finally he returned to the monastery, there not to rest but to guide the many souls under his loving care. None who met him could possibly miss the purity, the clear-eyed presence, the spiritual awakening he obviously abided in day and night.

Athishtana Pravesam


The Paramacharya is the first pontiff of the Kanchi Peetam to be interred in the mutt premises. The decision, according to the news agency United News of India, “was taken as per the wish of Sri Jayendra Saraswathi.” An elaborate abhishekam lasting more than an hour preceded the interment. Five elephants carried sacred prasadam from five famous temples to the Sankara mutt and placed them besides the pontiff. At 12:15pm on Sunday, January 9, the mahabishekam began. A vast assembly of devotees witnessed the mortal remains of a spiritual colossus being successively bathed with honey and milk, curd and sugarcane juice, crushed fruits and coconut juice, panchagavyam and sandalwood paste to the continuous chanting of Vedic mantrams. Unlike ordinary Hindus who are cremated, great saints are buried in salt and other substances, their bodies continuing to radiate spiritual power. Hundreds of odhuvars, specially trained temple singers who had come there for a function to honor them slated for the same day, poured forth the hymns which the saint is known to rejoice in. This was followed by offerings of both real and solid-gold flowers. After worship with various ghee lamps as done before deities in temples, the final offering of burning camphor was performed around 1:20pm. The final interment was delayed an hour to await Prime Minister Rao’s arrival.

A sudden hush gripped the mutt as the body of the Paramacharya, dressed in deep saffron, was hoisted and carried to the recently begun Birla Hall, originally intended as a place for public gatherings. It has been decided to pull down the construction so far achieved and instead build a shrine. The saint was lowered with the chair in which his body was kept into a specially woven bamboo basket and ensconced in a ten-foot pit filled with salt, sandal powder, flowers and medicinal herbs. The exalted danda [staff], which the sage so gloriously held aloft for the best part of a century, was snapped into three pieces; one was placed on the head and two alongside the sacred frame. The spot where the body of the 68th Sankaracharya of the Kanchi mutt was buried was thrown open for public worship on January 11th. The saint’s few possessions-a cot, woolen blanket, flashlight, spectacles, an alarm time piece and wall clock are kept in a glass case by the samadhi for public viewing.



Compiled from: Hinduism Today dated March 1994 and other online magazines

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