Volume Two, Number 1

Nath introduction

The Nath (Adi-Nath) are an Indian sect of tantrik sadhus (renunciate holy men).  Like most sects they claim a divine lineage, holding Lord Shiva to have been the first Natha.  Historically, the lineage stems from an accomplished yogi Matsyendra Nath who most scholars believe lived around the 11th century C.E.

Hindu scholar, Gopinath Kaviraj provides the following description of the Natha cosmology:

“This shows that the metaphysical position of the Nathas was not monistic, nor was it dualistic either. It was transcendental in the truest sense of the term. They speak of the  Natha, the Absolute, as beyond the opposition involved in  the concepts of Saguna and Nirguna or of Sakara and Nirakara. And so to them the Supreme End of Life is to realize oneself as Natha and to remain eternally fixed above the world of relations. The way to this realization is stated to be Yoga, on which they lay great emphasis. It is held that Perfection can not be attained by any means unless it is supplemented by the disciplinary practices of Yoga.”

Various traditions trace the origins of Hatha yoga to the Natha—either as inventors or resuscitators of an ancient system in decline.  The Natha taught a yoga combining Pranyama (breath control), Asana (body control), Mudra (posture) and Nadanusandhana.  The practice results in a state of intense Joy, known as Sahajavastha. 

Kaviraj elaborates on the Natha strain of yoga:

 

“The general principle on which they proceeded appears to be the recognition of the graded character of Matter, ranging from the densest form revealed in our waking sense-experience up to the most rarefied and tenuous form to which the end of Samprajnata Samadhi - the so-called Sasmita Samadhi - eventually leads. I am speaking here in terms of Sankhya nomenclature. The consciousness of the individual self as enmeshed in grosser matter is really identical with the Universal Consciousness of the World-soul, nay, with Absolute Consciousness itself. Only that limitations have to be carefully removed.”

 

And in summary:

 

“The Nathas insist that if the Absolute is to be reached, the central Track, which leads directly into it as a river loses itself in the ocean, must be found out and resorted to.”

 

H.H. Shri Paramahamsha Mahendranath, known as Dadaji, was the 23rd lineage guru of the Adi-Nathas.  He was born in London, England in 1911.  He met infamous British magician Aleister Crowley who advised the young seeker to go to India.  He was not able to act on the instruction until 1949, but after arriving in India he remained there until his death in 1991.  He was initiated into the Natha tradition on Gurupurnima (Guru Day, first full moon in June) 1953 from Shri Lokanatha the  Digambar-Avadhoot of Uttarkashi (U.P.). From then on he lived as a wondering saddhu.  He also received Kaula tantrik initiation Uttarakaula Order from Shri Pagala Baba.  Additionly Dadaji received initiations in the Karguyt Pas sect, soto Zen, Taoism, Ch’an,  Ramanaya Nikaya (Theravadan Buddhism).

Dadaji’s extent writings represent a fascinating and innovative combination of traditional Natha tantrik teachings and New Aeonic hermeticism.  Two modern organizations claim direct descent from Dadaji, AMOOKOS (the Arcane and Magical Order of the Knights of Shamballa) and the International Nath Order (and Magikos).

His writings are available online at The Scrolls of Mahendranath (also the home page for the International Nath Order): http://www.mahendranath.org

 

AMOOKOS’s homepage is: http://www.cix.co.uk/~mandrake/naths.htm

 

Another great site with a wealth of Hindu and Tantrik translations is maintained by translator Michael Magee: http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/gthursby/tantra/

Kaviraj, Gopinath. Published in the Princess of Wales Sarasvati Bhavan Series, Vol VI, (1927).

H.H. Shri Paramahamsha Mahendranath, manuscript sent to Michael Magee, http://www.shivashakti.com/dadaji.htm.