The Garbha Upanishad (), or Garbhopanishad (), is one of the minor , listed number 17 in the modern anthology of 108 Hindu Upanishadic texts. Written in Sanskrit, it is associated with the Krishna Yajurveda by some, and as a Vedantic Upanishad associated with the Atharvaveda by other scholars.Paul Deussen, Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 2, Motilal Banarsidass, , page 567 It is considered one of the 35 Samanya (general) Upanishads. The last verse of the Upanishad attributes the text to sage Pippalada, but the chronology and author of the text is unclear, and the surviving manuscripts are damaged, inconsistent with each other and incomplete.Paul Deussen, Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 2, Motilal Banarsidass, , pages 639-640, 644
The Garbha Upanishad is a text that almost exclusively comments on medical and physiology-related themes, dealing with the theory of the formation and development of the human embryo and human body after birth. Paul Deussen et al. consider this Upanishad on the garbha or human embryo to be more like "a manual on physiology or medicine" than a spiritual text, with the exception of a passage which includes a number of statements about the foetus awareness, including the assertion that the foetus has knowledge of its past lives as well as intuitive sense of good and bad, which it forgets during the process of birth.
The text is notable for its style, where it states a proposition, asks questions challenging the proposition, thereafter develops and presents answers to those questions.Paul Deussen, Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 2, Motilal Banarsidass, , pages 640-644KN Aiyar, Thirty Minor Upanishads, University of Toronto Archives, , pages vii, 116-123 It is also notable for its attempt to enumerate and offer relative measure of human anatomy from foetus to adult stage of human life.
The five objects of sense are related to ear, skin, eye, tongue, nose. The related support system consists of the mouth to speak, hands to lift, feet to walk, tongue for tasting, nose for smelling, Apana for excretion, and the genitals for sexual enjoyment. The body discriminates and knows by Buddhi (intellect), fancies and thinks through Manas (mind) and speaks with speech. There are five tastes, representing food it needs for development, and these are sweet, saline, bitter, pungent and astringent.
The body goes through six stages from existence in its life, and these are creation as foetus, birth, growth, maturity, decay and death. It develops six "chakras (wheels)", which denote "the dhamani (nerves), Muladhara, Svadhishthana, Manipura, Anahata, Vishuddha, and Ajna." Then six gunas and seven notes of sounds, which are combined to form sounds, some acceptable and some non-acceptable.
The Upanishad asserts its theory for the gender of the child, birth defects and the birth of twins. It states that dominance of male semen results in a male child while a female child is born when there is surfeit of female or mother's semen. When semen of both male and female are equally strong birth of a hermaphrodite occurs. Birth defects are asserted to result when either parent is suffering from anxiety and trauma at the time of conception. Twins of same gender develop when the shukra and shonita burst into two; however, when only shukra bursts into two or when the parents copulate often, then twins of mixed gender may be formed. Development and birth of a single embryo is most common among humans, states the text. However, up to Quintuplets are observed among humans, asserts the ancient text.
The text states that in the last weeks of its development, the fetus remembers the good and bad karma and being born anew through many births, resolves to remember Maheshwara (Shiva) and Narayana (Vishnu), resolves to study and practice Samkhya-Yoga after birth because all these bestow the reward of liberation. The fetus resolves, states the Upanishad, to meditate on Brahman after birth. However, when the fetus is in the process of birth, states the text, the squeezing out of the womb causes it to forget its resolutions.
The purpose of Garbh Sanskar is to educate the child in the womb. It is believed that the education of moral, traditional and spiritual values begins right from the moment the foetus is conceived in the womb in Indian culture and, especially in Hinduism. Science has shown that babies in the womb will benefit from Garbhsanskar in early stages. The mother's relationship with the baby starts right from the moment of conception.
In Ramayana, it was found that before the birth of Lord Rama during 'putra kameshti yagna,' the Agni devata gave King Dashratha 'payas' which can only be considered a kind of 'Garbh Sanskar'. There is also a well-known mythological narrative in Mahabharat about how Arjuna taught Abhimanyu to enter 'chakravyuha' when he was in the womb of his mother, Subhadra. This history, too, proves the fact that people also believed the idea of Garbh Sanskar during the mythological period. According to Charakacharya the mind of the foetus is completely assimilated with its parents, whatever stories, songs and garbh sanskar music a pregnant woman listens also affect the mind of her baby in the womb.
The Garbha Upanishad posits the question, "Why is it called Sharira (the body)?", and in response states that because in it Shriyante (exists) three fires – the fire for knowledge, the fire for seeing and the gastric fire.Paul Deussen, Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 2, Motilal Banarsidass, , page 644 The text uses similes of yajna (fire) ritual to describe how cosmic processes are repeated in the temple of body, with food as offering, mind the Brahman and seeking of the soul (Atman) as the goal of the ritual of life.
The text then abruptly jumps to enumerating anatomy of a developed human body, likely from lost chapters of the manuscript. It asserts, states Paul Deussen, that in a human adult, "the head has four skull bones, and in them there are on each side sixteen sockets; in the body there are 107 joints, 180 sutures, 900 sinews, 700 veins, 500 muscles, 360 bones and 45 million hairs".Paul Deussen (1966), The Philosophy of the Upanishads, Dover, , pages 285-286 Further, enumerates the Upanishad, the heart of an adult human male weighs 364 grams, tongue weighs 546 grams, bile in the body 728 grams, semen produced is 182 grams, fat 1,456 grams, and excrement generated is uncertain in amount because it depends on what and how much the body eats and drinks.
Etymology
Structure and manuscripts
Contents
Section 1: What is the human body?
Section 2: How is human embryo formed?
Section 3: How does the embryo develop?
Section 4: What does the embryo know?
Section 5 : How does embryo learns through Garbh Sanskar?
Developments after birth
Bibliography
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