Heaven & Hell LOKAS
Heaven & Hell LOKAS
Heaven & Hell LOKAS
HELL REALMS
Naraka is the Hindu equivalent of Hell, where sinners are
tormented after death. It is also the abode of Yama, the god of
Death. It is described as located in the south of the universe
and beneath the earth.
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Asuras
Devas
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Nature-spirits, usually good (benevolent), who are caretakers of the natural treasures
hidden in the earth and tree roots. On the one hand, a yakṣa may be an inoffensive nature-
fairy, associated with woods and mountains; but there is also a darker version of the yakṣa,
which is a kind of ghost.
Rakshasas are also called 'maneaters". Most often depicted as ugly, fierce-looking and
enormous creatures, with two fangs protruding from the top of the mouth and having sharp,
claw-like fingernails. They are shown as being mean, growling like beasts, and as insatiable
cannibals that could smell the scent of human flesh. Some of the more ferocious ones were
shown with flaming red eyes and hair, drinking blood with their palms or from a human skull
(similar to representations of vampires in later Western mythology). Generally they could fly,
vanish, and had Maya (magical powers of illusion), which enabled them to change size at will
and assume the form of any creature. They can tke human form.
Heaven & hell LOKAS
HEAVEN REALMS
There are many realms one can go to after death, these are
called Lokas.
The world as we (and most people) experience it is called ‘Maya’: The term
Maya refers to a "magic show, an illusion where things appear to be
present but are not what they seem" āyā is also a spiritual concept
connoting "that which exists, but is constantly changing and thus is
spiritually unreal", and the "power or the principle that conceals the true
character of spiritual reality".
“Just as when the dirt is removed, the real substance is made manifest;
just as when the darkness of the night is dispelled, the objects that were
shrouded by the darkness are clearly seen, when ignorance [Maya] is
dispelled, truth is realized.” — Vashistha, Yoga Vasiṣṭha
THE TRUE NATURE OF
THE UNIVERSE
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It suggests that the Big Bang is not the beginning of everything,
but is just the start of a present cycle preceded by an infinite
number of universes and to be followed by another infinite
number of universes.
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Hindus believe that brahman (the one ultimate reality) has three
functions and these are shown by the three gods, Shiva, Brahma and
Vishnu. These three are sometimes shown as three heads merging
into one and are known as the Trimurti.
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In the Chandogya Upanishad (a Hindu sacred text.) creation is
described as the breaking of an egg.
In the Vedas (knowledge) one of the accounts says that the
creator built the universe with timber, as a carpenter builds a
house.
“Then was neither non-existence nor existence: there was no realm of air,
no sky beyond it. Death was not then, nor was there anything immortal: no
sign was there, the Day’s and Night’s divider. Darkness there was: at first
concealed in darkness this All was indiscriminated chaos. All that existed
then was void and formless: by the great power of Warmth was born that
One.” – Rig Veda
THE CREATION OF
THE UNIVERSE
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In the Rig Veda (the first scripture of Hinduism,
containing spiritual and scientific knowledge) it says
that the universe was created out of the parts of the
body of a single cosmic man Purusha when his body was
sacrificed. There the four classes (varnas) of Indian
society come from his body: the priest (Brahmin) from
his mouth, the warrior (Kshatritya) from his arms, the
peasant (Vaishya) from his thighs, and the servant
(Shudra) from his legs.
THE MATERIAL WORLD
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Prakritim (or prakti) means "nature"It is a key concept in
Hinduism, formulated by its Samkhya school, and refers
to the primal matter with three different innate qualities
(Guṇas) whose equilibrium is the basis of all observed
visible (empirical) reality.
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What are human beings made of?