Ganapati R Mal

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Om Sri MahaaGanapathaye Namah Om Sri Gurubhyo Namah Om Rishibhyo Namah

Sri Maha Ganapathi Homam


Laghu Paddhati (Short Procedure)
By P.V.R. Narasimha Rao (www.VedicAstrologer.org)
Date of current version: 2009 April 19

A Word from the author

My spiritual master Dr Manish Pandit hails from Pune, India and lives in Manchester, UK. The
idea of spreading Mahaganapathi homam in the world was revealed to him in a dream a few
years ago. He saw eight elevated beings in a dream. They transported him across blue skies to
Chennai, India, where he was shown the big fire that was to be lighted in future. They told him to
start the work. They assured him that homam as a spiritual sadhana was very appropriate in Kali
yuga. As spiritually inclined people have fewer and fewer hours to spend on spiritual sadhana
everyday with the progressing Kali yuga, sadhanas that work fast are more relevant. Homam
works much faster than japam and other spiritual sadhanas. They told him that the practice of
homam would transform into a movement that would reach across caste, class and race barriers.

Later, when we were performing a Shata Chandi Homam in the first week of March 2006 at the
Kalikambal temple in Chennai, he had a darshan of Divine Mother on a Friday and was
reassured by Her about the right course of events regarding spreading homam.

Starting from that Shata Chandi homam, a chain of events led to the preparation of this
document. It is hoped that spiritual seekers interested in homam will find this resource useful.

What is Homam

Homam is a fire ritual. It is also known as homa or havan or yajna (yagya) or yajana. In homam,
divine presence is invoked into fire using specific procedures. Then materials are offered into
fire, along with sacred chants (mantras). The offerings are supposed to reach gods. It is
interesting to note that fire ritual is an ancient practice and several religions taught worshipping
gods in fire.

Why Homam

Hinduism teaches that gods come into fire and receive the prayers of spiritual aspirants. Even
when one meditates without an external fire, gods being meditated on come into the internal fire
of the aspirant and receive the mantras via that fire. However, the internal fire is quite weaker
than an external fire for most people and hence it is beneficial to perform worship using an
external fire. That practice eventually strengthens the internal fire also.

We all see and feel our sthoola sareera (gross body), which is made up of gross matter. But, we
also have a sookshma sareera (subtle body) made up of subtle matter. It cannot be perceived by

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the senses attached to the gross body (eyes, ears, nose etc). It contains thousands of naadis,
which are essentially subtle channels of energy flow. A fire called bhootaagni (existential fire)
burns in this subtle body. It is the subtle basis of one’s entire existence. It manifests in the gross
body in the form of various fires. Examples are the “fire” in the stomach that helps one digest the
food eaten and the “fire” in the brain that helps one digest and understand various sense
experiences.

This bhootaagni is vital to one’s existence. In most people, it is quite weak. Due to impurities
and obstructions in the naadis of the subtle body, this fire cannot burn strongly to energize the
entire existence. When it burns low, the divine presence that can enter it is quite limited in
magnitude.

If one overcomes the internal weaknesses such as desire, anger, greed, false prestige, wantonness
and jealousy, develops compassion, one-pointed devotion, detachment, and sheds one layer of
ego and delusion after another, eventually the impurities in the naadis will be cleared and
bhootaagni will burn strong. However, this is a very difficult and time-consuming process.

One can take advantage of an external fire in that regard. As the deity of homam enters the
external fire on a regular basis, the nearby divine presence burns the impurities in the naadis, by
burning various karmas (actions from the past, which will get corresponding reactions in the
future) in the kaarana sareera (causal body). This eventually leads to the strengthening of
bhootaagni.

After one performs homam for a long enough time, one’s naadis are cleared of the obstructions
and one’s bhootaagni burns brightly. At that juncture, all sadhanas performed by one, including
regular meditation, become much more effective. If bhootaagni can accommodate divine
presence to a larger degree, the meditation becomes more effective.

The goal of all spiritual sadhana, whether one thinks in those terms or not, is actually to cleanse
oneself of all the internal impurities. Various karmas from previous lives hang on to the kaarana
sareera (causal body), making it heavy. These in turn manifest in the sookshma sareera (subtle
body) as various impurities in various nadis (subtle energy channels) that block the free flow of
energy. These in turn manifest in the sthoola sareera (gross body) as various problems of the
body and mind. These also cause dense conditioning of one’s mind to sink one’s consciousness
in an ocean of delusion. This conditioning of the consciousness due to previous karmas is also
known as maayaa. When one is sunk in maayaa, one is beaten down by the six enemies – kaama
(desire), krodha (anger), lobha (greed), moha (delusion), mada (wantonness) and maatsarya
(jealosy). As one makes spiritual progress, one’s karmas drop off the kaarana sareera, the
impurities in the nadis are cleansed, one’s mental conditioning becomes weaker and one can
resist the internal enemies. All these are inter-related and happen simultaneously. When one
burns all of one’s major karmas, one becomes karmically very light. Nadis in the sookshma
sareera are all clear and energy can freely flow anywhere. One is untouched by the internal
enemies then. When one sees all as god, nothing can make one angry or jealous or deluded.
When mental conditioning drops, nothing excites one and nothing saddens one. One stays in a
state of bliss always. Despite the changing nature of the external work and appearance, one is in
the same state internally.

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The goal of all spiritual sadhana is to reach that state. Whether through jnaana (knowledge and
wisdom) or through bhakti (devotion and surrender) or both, one has to burn the karmas and
impurities blocking one from reaching that state. The goal of all sadhana is to let ego (the sense
of “I-ness”) go completely and merge (have yoga) with divinity. If a vacuum can be created
within oneself, then divine presence can fill the vacuum. As long as one has egotism and various
kinds of conditioning (vasanas) of mind, such a vacuum cannot be created. When all those cease
and the mental conditioning is weakened, the mind become extremely calm and a vacuum is
created within. Then divine presence fills one and the result is indescribable bliss.

Homam facilitates this process quickly by burning various karmas that are creating various
layers of conditioning and obstructing spiritual progress.

A lot of Hindu rituals involve invoking divine presence in an idol or a water pot (kalasha) and
offering worship to the idol/pot. Unfortunately, we are living in Kali yuga in which the elements
of earth, water and air are not pure. If the idol has any impurities on account of the time when it
was made, how it was made, the thoughts of the person who made it etc, the impurities heavily
restrict how much divine presence the idol can accommodate.

The only elements that cannot be polluted are space/ether (aakaasa) and fire (agni). It is very
difficult to do spiritual sadhana via the medium of space. So the best medium for sadhana is fire.
One of the Sanskrit words for “fire” is “paavaka”, which means “the one that purifies”. Fire is by
definition pure and purifies everything that it comes in touch with. The wood or coconut used to
sustain fire may have impurities, but fire itself is very pure and accommodates a divine presence
of the highest degree. For a ritual using the earth or water elements as the medium to be
successful, the sadhaka must be quite pure and the sadhaka’s bhootagni must be reasonably
strong. On the other hand, a ritual using the fire element as the medium can be successful
irrespective of the stature and purity of the sadhaka. For this reason, homam is the most apt
sadhana for most spiritual aspitants in this yuga, especially as the Kali deepens. Unfortunately,
many people have unfounded fears of making mistakes and being punished for them and hence
do not take advantage of the fantastic practice of homam.

Apart from the personal benefits, there are universal benefits of homam. The offerings in the fire
finally reach Sun, who feeds the entire earth. The gross material body of the burnt offerings
reaches the gross material body of Sun. The subtle body of the burnt offerings reaches the subtle
body of Sun. It is the subtle body of Sun that feeds the subtle bodies of all beings on earth. Thus,
feeding it is very important for the smooth running of life on earth. As we enter the Ghora Kali
(terrible age of strife and disorderliness) phase, adharma (un-righteous activities) will be on the
rise in the world and as such the subtle body of Sun will become weaker. If more and more
people perform homam and strengthen the subtle body of Sun, it will balance the adharma and
keep the world away from a total collapse.

Common Mis-conceptions

(1) Misconception: Homam is very difficult to perform. It is for experts only.

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Comment: Not really. Several people who did not know anything about how to do any kind of
worship conducted homam by themselves by reading this document. It is a simple practice.

(2) Misconception: One must either do a “perfect” homam or not do any homam at all. A perfect
homam takes a very long time.

Comment: Though one may eat a sumptuous meal on an important festival day, one does not
necessarily get a lot of energy from it. One gets most of one’s energy from the regular dal
(lentils) and rice that one eats everyday.

Though there are complicated versions of homam, it is better to do a simple homam on a regular
basis than to do a complicated version very rarely. A small half-hour or one-hour homam done
on a daily basis is far better for spiritual sadhana than a big annual or half-yearly homam.

(3) Misconception: If mistakes happen in a homam, the consequences will be bad.

Comment: If a homam is performed with a saattwik spirit for saattwik purposes, there are no
risks.

If you act nice with your parents because you want their money, you have to understand their
thinking well, take the advice of people who know them well and act very carefully to get money
from them. Mistakes can be costly and spoil your goal.

But, if you act nice with your parents simply because you love them and want to show your love,
you do not need to be careful. You just show your love in whatever way you know. There is no
need to follow anybody’s advice strictly and there are no risks.

Similarly, you have to be careful if you perform a homam for certain material goals (such as
getting money, attracting someone, destroying someone etc). If you perform a homam just to
show your love to god, cleanse yourself spiritually and make yourself worthy of divine
communion, then there are no risks. The procedure taught in this document is based on the
teachings of rishis and it is safe for anybody to use. Small mistakes will not result in any
punishment.

In fact, it is expected that everybody who uses this document is interested in only the second
kind of goal, i.e. spiritual cleansing and upliftment.

(4) Misconception: One not initiated by a guru (master) cannot perform homam or recite certain
mantras.

Comment: If one receives a mantra or a procedure from the mouth of a master, it is analogous to
a millionaire opening a bank account in his son’s name with a high starting balance. The son is
lucky, as he is starting off with a big balance. Similarly, some of the siddhi (attainment) the
master has in the mantra or procedure is transferred to the disciple even as (s)he starts out.

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If one does not receive a mantra or a procedure from the mouth of a master, it is analogous to
starting off with a zero bank balance. While it is useful to start off with a positive balance, it is
neither necessary nor sufficient. There are sons of millionaires who used up the millions earned
by parents and reduced them to zero, while there are some self-made men who made millions
purely with self-effort. Similarly, one taught by the greatest guru can fall while one not taught by
a guru can reach the ultimate. While it is desirable to have a guru, it is by no means compulsory.

If one is the kind who needs to have a guru figure behind every mantra or procedure, one can
think of the author and/or his spiritual master, Dr Manish Pandit from Pune, India (currently
residing in Manchester, UK) as the guru for this homam procedure.

(5) Misconception: Those who are not learned in Veda cannot recite Veda mantras and perform
homam based on Veda mantras.

Comment: Jnaneshwar was a 12th century master. He was a great Krishna devotee. When he was
asked to not recite Veda by a council of erudite scholars, as he was not formally qualified, he
replied that every being had a right to recite Veda. When he started reciting, they tried to shut his
mouth. Then, a buffalo standing next to him recited Veda! The scholars begged his pardon and
corrected their narrow-minded attitude.

Many great souls like him taught that Veda could be recited by anyone. One engaged in tantric
practices that serve specific purposes and give specific siddhis (attainments) need to be afraid of
side effects and punishments for mistakes, but mantras from Veda were taught by great rishis for
the highest purpose of self-realization. One reciting them need not be afraid of any side effects.
Veda mantras are saattwik, self-correcting and ultimately leading to self-realization.

Those who have an affinity to tantric practices should not be discouraged from learning and
using them, but those who appreciate the teachings of rishis must be encouraged to recite Veda
mantras and perform homam based on Veda mantras. The key is to have an attitude of
submission and a desire for nothing other than self-realization and to do homam without any
expectations whatsoever. Then there are no risks.

The procedure taught in this document contains just a few Veda mantras, which are not very
difficult to pronounce.

(6) Misconception: Those who are not born in a Brahmin family cannot perform homam.

Comment: One’s varna (caste) is not to be determined solely from the family one is born in.
There are examples of men born to parents belonging to various castes performing tapascharya
and becoming rishis. Maharshi Viswamitra, who taught the Savitru Gayatri mantra, was a
kshatriya by birth. Maharshi Valmiki, who taught Brahma Jnana to Maharshi Bharadwaja, was a
shoodra by birth.

One who has affinity to knowledge is a Brahmin (scholar). One who has affinity to power and
authority is a kshatriya (warrior). One who has affinity to money is a vaisya (trader). One who
has affinity to carnal pleasures is a shoodra (worker). If a person born in a Brahmin family is

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after money, he becomes a vaisya and not a Brahmin. On the other hand, if a person born in a
vaisya family desires nothing but knowledge and self-realization, he automatically becomes a
Brahmin and very fit to perform homam.

Irrespective of the caste of birth, one who is interested in knowledge (especially knowledge of
self) and one whose interest in power, money and pleasures is decaying is fit to perform homam.

(7) Misconception: Women cannot perform homam.

Comment: There is a big difference between men and women when it comes to the gross body.
But, at the level of subtle body or causal body, there is no difference based on gender. All
spiritual practices operate mainly at the subtle and causal level. So, it makes no sense to have a
total ban on women performing homam.

However, there are some practical reasons behind the biases of tradition. Though there are no
differences based on gender in the subtle body, the differences at the gross body level can come
into play in the initial stages. Women interested in performing homam may carefully consider
the following factors and make their decision.

Any spiritual practice performed well over a period of time eventually results in a Kundalini
awakening and rise. Kundalini is nothing but one’s self-identification. It is a microcosmic
representation of the Divine Mother within oneself. It defines how one identifies oneself. Though
everything in the universe is just Brahman, each being forms a separate self-identity and that
self-identity is reinforced quite strongly with time. When one identifies completely with the body
without any kind of questioning, Kundalini is asleep. As kundalini wakes up and rises, one starts
to wonder “who am I” and one’s awareness of self becomes more and more refined. As kundalini
reaches higher chakras, one realizes one’s true nature. When Kundalini reaches Sahasrara
chakra, one realizes one’s truest nature, i.e. one realizes that one is the formless Brahman.

If Kundalini gets stuck at swadhishthana chakra, one’s sexual drive increases and one is tested in
that matter. In this matter, women and men are very different. This phase can be very difficult for
women. This is not to say that this phase is easy for men.

More importantly, some spiritual experiences in a pregnant lady can even kill a fetus, if the soul
in it is not spiritually elevated. On the positive side, if an elevated soul is in the fetus at the time
of such experiences, a siddha may be born.

There is a negative for every positive and it is a matter of balancing the factors and making an
individual decision. Women interested in homam should consider the above factors and decide
whether they want to perform homam or not. If any women are interested, they should be
encouraged to perform homam.

(8) Misconception: Homam is just like meditation. It is not any better. It does not really make
any difference.

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Comment: The proof of the pudding is in eating it. If one tries performing a homam to the best of
one’s ability on a daily basis for a few months, one will know what homam can do! After doing
homam for several months, one will find that all other sadhanas one does become more effective
as a result of homam.

(9) Misconception: One should get a priest to do homam and not do it oneself.

Comment: Let us revisit a previous analogy. If one wants to be nice to one’s parents to get their
money, one may engage someone who will act on one’s behalf to get the money of parents. But,
if one’s sole purpose is to just love one’s parents and show that love, it is better to do it directly
than to engage other people.

(10) Misconception: Before doing homam with any mantra, one must do japam of that mantra by
a count that is ten times the homam count. For example, one must do japam by a count of 10,000
before one does homam by a count of 1,000.

Comment: This convention is not without reason. The true meaning of this convention is that
homam is ten times more powerful than japam. If one does a mantra 1,000 in a homam, it is
equivalent to doing the mantra 10,000 in japam. If one wants, one can offer the mantra entirely in
external fire and there is no need to do any japam before doing homam.

All thumb rules and conventions have exceptions. If a rishi with a very strong bhootaagni does
japam, it is equivalent to a homam and the “ten times” rule does not apply. However, for most
normal people, homam is ten times more powerful than japam. The bottomline is that the
strength and the purity of the medium that accommodates the presence of the deity who receives
the mantra will decide the effectiveness of the mantra.

(11) Misconception: The moola mantra of Mahaganapathi is given below.

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The phrase “sarva janam me vashamaanaya” literally means “bring all people under my control”.
Thus, this is a selfish mantra for controlling people. It is raajasik/taamasik and inappropriate for
someone who wants to remain saattwik and desires only self-knowledge and nothing else.

Comment: Let us look at this mantra closely. Om is the pranava – the source of all. It represents
Brahman. Shreem is Lakshmi beeja and stands for prosperity and well-being of all kinds (not just
wealth). Hreem is Mahalakshmi beeja and also known as maayaa beeja. It represents the entire
manifested creation and running of it. Kleem is the Mahasaraswati beeja and also known as
kaama (desire) beeja. The consonant ‘g’ belongs to Ganapathi. The beeja ‘gloum’ comes from it
by adding ‘l’ and ‘oum’. Adding ‘r’ and ‘l’ to consonants, we make them work mainly through
Pingala and Ida nadis (respectively), i.e. knowledge and surrender (respectively). The vowel
added at the end ‘oum’ belongs to Maheswara and shows removing darkness. Overall, the

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syllable ‘gloum’ makes one surrender to the power of Ganesha and remove the darkness through
that surrender. The next beeja ‘gam’ in the mantra stands for realizing the nature of Ganesha.
Ganapataye means “to Ganapati”. Varavarada means “the best giver of the best things”.
Sarvajanam means “all beings”. Vashamaanaya means “bring under control”. We are not asking
for one or two people to come under our control here. We are asking for all beings to be under
control. It should be remembered that each of us is a microcosm of the entire universe and
various beings of this universe represent various aspects of ourselves. So we are actually asking
for perfect control over all of our thoughts, all of our intentions, all of our actions etc. Control
over all beings within us basically means perfect self-control.

We are essentially saying that Mahaganapathi represents Brahman as well as the well-being and
running of this entire manifested universe that springs from Brahman. We are desiring a perfect
surrender to Mahaganapathi, which completely removes darkness, makes us understand the
tattwa (nature) of Mahaganapathi fully and hence gives us perfect self-control.

This mantra is a highly saattwik mantra. It destroys the tamas and rajas in us, gives devotion
towards Mahaganapathi and makes us understand His true nature, which means understanding
unmanifested Brahman as well as the manifested universe.

Why Mahaganapathi Homam

Mahaganapathi homam is apt for everyone. Ganesha sits in the mooladhara chakra. Chakras exist
in the subtle body and they represent different realms in which one’s consciousness can dwell.
Mooladhara chakra represents the physical/material realm, while higher chakras represent higher
realms of consciousness. Being in Mooladhara chakra, Ganesha takes care of material prosperity
and well being.

Ganesha is also in charge of the opening of the sushumna nadi, which is located in Mooladhara
chakra. Nadis are channels of energy flow in the subtle body. Sushumna nadi contains various
lokas (worlds) and all the beings that dwell in them, in a microcosmic form. The self-
consciousness of a person is normally limited to the mooladhara chakra, i.e. the material realm.
When the self-consciousness ascends through sushumna nadi through various chakras, one
becomes aware of other realms of consciousness and the beings that dwell in them, including
various lokas and various gods. For one to experience various gods, one’s self-consciousness has
to ascend through sushumna nadi and reach higher realms of existence. Ganesha, being the
gatekeeper of the sushumna nadi, controls one’s spiritual experience of various gods and lokas.
No wonder shastras recommend praying to Ganesha before praying to any deity!

As Ganesha controls the material realm as well as the gate to the higher spiritual realms of being,
his homam is very useful to any spiritual seeker. It facilitates spiritual progress while protecting
the material aspects of one’s life. Thus, Mahaganapthi homam is recommended to all.

About This Document

This document describes a short procedure for performing Sri Maha Ganapathi homam, which
takes 40-45 minutes. This document is for those who are interested in performing Maha

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Ganapathi homam by themselves every day or week or month. The procedure taught here is
simple enough to do daily and yet retains all the important steps in a full-fledged homam. Those
who want an even simpler procedure with fewer mantras may refer to Appendix B for a super-
short procedure with bare minimum mantras.

One should consult one’s elders and gurus and decide whether one is allowed to perform a
homam or not. If one thinks one is allowed to do homam and is interested in doing homam on a
regular basis but does not know how to do it, then one can use this document to learn one way to
do it. If one’s gurus have taught one a different procedure, one may use the procedure taught by
one’s gurus. This document is for the benefit of those who do not know any procedure and want
to learn some procedure to do homam. Those who learnt a slightly different procedure from the
previous versions of this document need not worry and either follow what they have already
learnt or switch to the procedure in this document.

Excessive Movement of Body and Mind

Some people move a lot when they meditate. As it was mentioned earlier, the goal of all sadhana
is to calm the mind down and create a vacuum within oneself, so that the deity of the sadhana
can come and occupy the space. One should lose awareness of the body. When meditating, it is a
good idea to keep the back straight without making it too tense. It is a good idea to not move. If
it is not possible to stay still for extended periods, one should at least try to stay still over short
periods of time. It is also a good idea to close the eyes. One can focus one’s mind on either a
deity or on the sound of the mantra.

Similarly, when performing homam also, it is a good idea to keep the back straight and minimize
the movement, especially of the back. It is ideal if one keeps the back and head erect and
manages with a minimal movement of just one arm.

If body is stationary, there is some chance that mind too will become stationary for a while in the
middle. That is the goal after all.

Correct Attitude

While it is good to follow the procedure faithfully, it is even more important to surrender oneself
to god, leave ego and identify one’s self with the deity in the fire when performing the homam. If
that is there, all other minor errors will have no negative effect. If that is not there, even an
impeccably performed homam will not have any tangible effect. Like mentioned earlier, the goal
is to melt ego (I-ness or sense of self) and create a vacuum within oneself, so that the deity can
fill it. Complete devotion, single-minded focus on deity/mantra/procedure and minimization of
the activity of body and mind can help one achieve that eventually.

If one has an over-active mind, doing pranayama before homam can be useful. The time around
sunrise in the morning is a particularly conducive to a pleasant Mahaganapathi homam.

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Materials Needed

Must have

• One homa kundam (a copper container with preferably a square shaped base). If a homa
kundam is not available, one can dig a square shaped pit in the ground (with 1-2 foot sides
and half to one foot deep) and arrange a few layers of bricks around the pit. It is symbolic of
the mooladhara chakra.
• Dry coconut halves (available in Indian stores) or wood (for burning)
• Ghee (clarified butter) from cow’s milk. It is available in Indian stores. If unable to find, just
get some butter and melt it in low heat. After it melts, some black stuff will separate from the
melted liquid. Filter out the black deposit and use the liquid. It will solidify after a time.
Before the homam, melt it again and use it.
• A wooden spoon/ladle to put ghee into the fire
• Some akshatas. Those can be made by mixing raw (uncooked) white (or brown) rice grains
with a drop of sesame oil (or some other oil) and a pinch of turmeric powder. Instead of
turmeric powder, one can also use vermilion (kumkum) powder used for the dot on the
forehead.
• A small lamp, consisting of a wick that can be lit in sesame oil/ghee. A candle can also be
used as an alternative, though it is better to burn ghee or sesame oil than wax.
• A match box to light fire
• One tumbler or cup to store water. It should preferably be made of silver or copper or clay. If
unavailable, you may use steel or glass.
• One spoon (preferably silver or copper)
• Some water

Optional

• A small idol of Ganesha. If you have none, use a metallic coin or any metallic object.
Actually, you can do without any idol and just invoke Mahaganapathi in fire.
• A mixture of various auspicious materials known as the havan samagri (available in India
stores), if possible.
• Some sandalwood powder, turmeric powder and kumkum (vermilion) powder
• Some flowers or flower petals
• Some sesame seeds, some mamra/murmura (puffed white rice), some nuts, some mildly
popped corn and other materials that can be offered in fire. Small fruits are also fine. Honey
can also be used. All these are optional. The absolute minimum needed is coconut pieces and
ghee.
• Some darbhas (dried blades of sacred grass). Check with a local temple priest to find out how
to procure them. If darbhas are unavailable, you may think of creative alternatives. For
example, find some other dry grass or dry leaves or just thin twigs and pray to your ishta
devata (favorite deity) before the homam to make them acceptable.
• An incense stick (agarbatti) if available and a holder to stick it to (a banana can be used
instead)
• Camphor and a container or plate for lighting camphor and offering haarati

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• Some food that you can offer to god. Eggs, meat and seafood should not be used in that food.
In fact, do not eat eggs, meat and seafood on the day of homam. Onion, garlic, strong spices
and too much of chillies should also be avoided in the food cooked for God. Fruits are also
fine. Just sugar or brown sugar or rock candy sugar or jaggery can be offered to god too.
When using sugar, please note that the normal white refined sugar used these days has bone
ash in it. Brown sugar, vegetarian sugar or jaggery are to be prefered.
• Some milk, if available.

Preparation Before Homam

(1) Instead of arranging homa kundam directly on the floor, place a wood plank or something
on the floor, wrapped with aluminum foil (or some such thing), and put 4 bricks of the
same height on it and place the homa kundam on the bricks. Thus, there is some air and a
wooden plank under the homa kundam and the floor does not get heated up.
(2) If you want easy cleaning, place some aluminum foils on the floor all around the plank
containing homa kundam. If ghee or something is spilled in that area, it is easy to clean.
(3) If you want, you can also cover the interior of homa kundam with some aluminum foils, so
that it is easy to clean.
(4) Make some food items to offer to god. You can just use rock sugar candy or raisins or dates
or fruits or jaggery also. Please see the notes in the previous section on this.
(5) Cook a little plain white rice. I put a few grains of rice and a little water in a small
container and put it in microwave oven before my homam and cooked rice is ready at the
end when I need it. If this is not possible, take a banana or apple or some other fruit and
make it into 6 slices.
(6) Fill water in the tumbler/cup and place the spoon in it.
(7) Make a seat for yourself in front of the homa kundam. Ideally you should be facing east,
i.e. homa kundam should be on the east from you. On the east of the homa kundam, place a
small plate or a wooden plank, make a pile of some rice grains on it and place the idol (or a
metal/clay object such as a coin) on it. You can decorate based on your ability and taste. An
idol is optional. You can worship Mahaganapathi directly in fire.
(8) From the middle of the western edge of the homam kundam, draw two parallel red lines
with kumkum (vermilion) powder towards your seat. They should go east-west and connect
homa kundam to your seat. Melt the ghee and place the bowl containing it on those lines.
(9) Cut dry coconuts into small pieces. Pieces of 1 inch x 1 inch size are useful.
(10) Important: Do not consume any food within 3-4 hours before the homam (atleast one hour).
Evacuate the bowels before homam and take bath. Stomach should be empty during a
homam for the best experience.

11
Homam Procedure
Anujnaa (Permission)

Before starting the homam, think in your mind of Mother Earth who is bearing you, Lord
Ganesha who removes obstacles, your ishta devata (favorite deity), your parents, the rishis of
your gothra (if you know them), all the rishis and all your gurus. Then say the following, while
mentally requesting all the gods to co-operate with your homam.

HxI …EÆõx†sô …t¤¤põk§d†i¥sx…es†bõ| …iyöZI …¥bpI †iy…öZ¥cj†I ¥dx Asë¡|


…A…d¢…kxcxd§ …tpy†rx …pk§c†jIZJ| …qZI Rz†¥pi …qkb…J s†pzkxJ|

If you have a “pavitram” (a ring made of darbha or a special ring made of metal), wear it now. If
you don’t have a pavitram, take any ring that you have, pray to your ishta devata and wear it. It
should be worn on the right hand ring finger. If you don’t have a ring, don’t worry and move on.

Aachamanam (sipping water to purify)

Take a little water from the tumbler into your right hand with a spoon. Drink the water after
saying the first item below. Take more water with the spoon into your hand, say the second item
below and drink it. Take more water, say the third item below and drink it. Imagine that Vishnu
who is within you is getting that water.

HxI ¥Kqpxj sûxtx| HxI dxkxjYxj sûxtx| HxI ixcpxj sûxtx|

Vighneswara Pooja (worshipping the remover of obstacles)

In order to not have any obstacles in the pooja, we have to pray to Ganesha in the beginning. Just
read the following verses:

q¡KøxIgkckI pyrê¡I qqypk§YI PZ¡k§h¡RI| öesËpbdI cõx¥jZ§ skû


py¥NïxeqxIZ¥j||
AMRxdd eb§ixk§KI MRxdditk§dyqI| A¥dKbI ZI h°xdxI GKbIZI
Dexsô¥t||
pöKZ¡IW itxKxj ¥KxUys¢kõsiöeh| dykûyNïI K¡k¡ ¥i ¥bp skûKx¥kõr¡
skûbx||

12
Pray within your mind to Ganesha to remove obstacles from your homam. If you have time,
energy and inclination (or when you are doing a longer version), you can even make a small
Ganesha idol with turmeric and water and do shodasopachaara pooja to the idol. But just reading
the above verses and praying to Ganesha in mind should suffice for a short homam that is
performed on a regular basis.

Praanaayaamam (restraining the life force)

Take some akshatas (see “Materials Needed” for a description of how to make them) in the the
left palm, place the left palm on the left lap, hold the nostrils with the right hand and do
praanaayaamam. Place the little finger and ring finger on the left nostril and thumb on the right
nostril. Close the left nostril, open the right nostril by releasing the thumb and say the Gayatri
mantra mentally while gently breathing in through the right nostril (without making any
breathing sound). If you don’t know the Gayatri mantra, use one of the following mantras:

HxI d¥ix hMp¥Z pxs¡¥bpxj| HxI diqüypxj| HxI MI MYeZ¥j diJ|

After saying the mantra once, close the right nostril with the thumb and say the mantra once
more while retaining the air previously breathed in. Then open the left nostril by relaxing the
little and ring fingers and say the mantra for the third time while breathing out through the left
nostril. When done, say the mantra once more, while breathing in through the left nostril. Then
close the left nostril with little and ring fingers and say the mantra for the fifth time while
retaining the air previously breathed in. Then release the thumb and say the mantra for the sixth
time while breathing out through the right nostril. While reading the mantra all the six times,
contemplate the formless supreme Brahman (supreme soul of the entire universe) that fills each
being of this universe and also the air being breathed in and out. If you want, you can imagine a
specific form (such as your ishta devata) also and imagine that your ishta devata fills the entire
universe. If you want, you can repeat the above sequence as many times as you comfortably can.

Sankalpam (taking the vow)

Now, declare your intention of doing a homam to please Maha Ganapathi. Transfer the akshatas
to the right hand, place the open left palm (empty) on right lap, place the closed right palm
containing akshatas on the left palm. Then say the following, while mentally thinking that you
are going to do a homa to the best of your ability, to please Maha Ganapathi.

HxI i¥ixexÀ sisë b¡kyZ±jbûxkx öqz ek¥iqûk öezZõk§aI öqz


itxMYeZy öesxb syÆõk§aI Abõ q¡hby¥d q¡hi¡t¢k§¥Z öqz
itxMYeZy ¥txiKk§i jaxq°y Kky¥rõ|

Then leave the akshatas from your hand in front of the homa kundam or the idol and sprinkle a
little bit of water on the palms. Now light the ghee/oil lamp.

13
Kalasa Suddhi (water purification)

When you are doing a long version of the homam, you can establish a kalasam in the
northeastern side of the homa kundam and invoke Varuna in it and do shodasopachaara pooja to
Varuna and read Punyaaha Vaachanam (Pavamana Sooktam). For a short homam, you can just
do the following.

Place a few akshatas and a flower (if available) in the tumbler containing water. If you can, put
dhenu mudra (else, don’t worry). Say the following syllable 11 times to purify the water.

pI

Now read the following and think that auspicious essence of various rivers of the world is
entering the water in the tumbler.

MI¥M P ji¡¥d ¤¤Pp ¥Mxbxpky sksûZy |


dk§i¥b syIc¡ Kx¥pky R¥m„sôyd§ sËycyI K¡k¡ ||
Ai£ZI hpZ¡

Then take a little water from the tumbler with a flower or flower petal or spoon and sprinkle it on
yourself, on homa kundam, on the idol you are going to use and other materials to be used in
homam (like fruits, flowers and food).

Take a darbha (see “Materials Needed” for a description) and draw 6 lines with the darbha on the
base of the homakundam, in the same order as shown in Figure 1. The direction in which each
line is drawn is indicated by the direction of the arrow in the figure. Say the following six
mantras while drawing the six lines (respectively).

HxI ögÖ¥Y diJ|


HxI jixj diJ|
HxI ¥sxixj diJ|
HxI k¡öbxj diJ|
HxI pyrê¥p diJ|
HxI CIöbxj diJ|

14
Figure 1

Agni Pratishthaapana (fire installation)

Take a darbha. Place it inside the homa kundam (on the base), with the tip of the darbha facing
east and the other end facing west. Take another darbha. Place it inside, with the tip of the darbha
facing north and the other end facing south.

Take a piece of camphor, light it from the lamp and place it in the middle of the homa kundam,
while saying:

HxI h¢k§h¡psþ¡p¥kxi§|

Place one or more dry coconut pieces (or a log/twig/piece of wood) above the burning camphor
and make sure that it catches fire. Next pray to the fire god using the following mantra from
RigVeda. It requests the fire god to keep an inauspicious form of fire called “kravyaada” and
carry the offerings to gods through the auspicious form of fire called “jaatavedas”.

…öKpõx†b…i²yI öe†ty¥Yxiy …b¢kI …ji‡kx¥¹x MPâZ¡ kyöe…pxtJ |


…C¤¤tpxjiy†Z¥kx …RxZ‡¥pbx …¥b¥p‡¥hõx …tpõI †ptZ¡ öe…Rxdd§ |

Now we have to do samskara (refinement) to the fire. Pour 8 drops of ghee in the fire while
saying the following mantra 8 times.

HxI h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx†tx|

Take 2 or more darbhas (or twigs). Place them outside the homa kundam, along the eastern
boundary. The tips should be facing north and the other end facing south. Then take another 2 or
more darbhas and place them on the southern boundary, with tips facing east and the other end
facing west. Then take 2 or more darbhas and place them on the western boundary, with tips
facing north. Then take 2 or more darbhas and place them on the northern boundary, with tips

15
facing east. If you do homam on a regular basis, you can leave these darbhas/twigs around the
homa kundam there is no need to do this step every time.
Take some water with the spoon and sprinkle it outside the homa kundam, on its four boundaries
while reading the following 4 mantras. The order and direction of sprinkling is shown in Figure
2. For example, first sprinkle water from the southwestern corner to the southeastern corner, as
shown by the arrow marked “1”. Then follow other arrows marked as 2, 3 and 4.

A…by¥Z„†d¡idõsû| A†d¡…i¥Z„†d¡idõsû| s†k…sû¥Z„†d¡idõsû| ¥bp s…pyZJ


öe†s¡p|

Figure 2

Now pray to Agni (fire god) with the following mantra:

…PZûx…ky q£I…Mxös놥jx A…sõ ex…bx¥bû …qzk§¥r …seët†sëx¥sx …Asõ |


öZy†cx …g¥Æx †p£…r¥hx ¥kx†kpzZy …i¥tx …¥b¥px ik§…ZõxM§I Bpy¥pq |
…Gr ty …¥bpJ …öeby¥qx …d¡ s…kûxJ e¢†¥kûx ty …RxZJ s …D Mk§†¥h …AIZJ |
s …pyRx†jixdJ s R…dyrõ†ixYJ öe…ZõO§i¡‡LxsëyrçZy …pyqû†¥Zxi¡LJ |
öexO§i¡¥Lx ¥bp| ¥t A¥²| iixhyi¡¥Lx hp|

Now think within your mind of Lord Ganesha, your ishta devata (favorite deity), rishis of your
gotra (if you know them), all rishis, your gurus, various gods and other beings of this universe.

16
Dikpaalaka Pooja (worshipping the rulers of directions)

Now, take some akshatas and also some flowers (if available) and offer them to the rulers of
directions. Starting with the eastern edge of the homa kundam, go clockwise (i.e. east, southeast,
south, southwest etc) and offer akshatas and flowers in the eight directions. You can place them
on the edges of the homa kundam. After the eight directions, offerings are made to Brahma (ruler
of the upward direction) in the middle of northeast and east and to Sesha (ruler of the downward
direction) in the middle of southwest and west.

Then offer akshatas and flowers to Agni in the middle of the homa kundam. Finally, touch your
heart and offer respect to the self (soul). For the 8+2+1+1=12 offerings, say the following 12
mantras:

HxI CIöbxj diJ | HxI A²¥j diJ| HxI jixj diJ| HxI dyk£Z¥j diJ| HxI
pk¡Yxj diJ| HxI pxj¥p diJ| HxI ¥sxixj diJ| HxI C¦qxdxj diJ| HxI
ögÖ¥Y diJ| HxI ¥qrxj diJ| HxI A²¥j diJ| HxI BÃ¥d diJ|

Poorvaangam (preliminary offerings)

Now hold the wooden spoon/ladle pointing from northwest towards southeast and offer a ghee
drop in the fire for Prajapati (progenitor of all beings), with the following mantra.

HxI öeRxeZ¥j sûx‡tx| öeRxeZj CbI d ii|

Now hold the wooden spoon/ladle pointing from southwest towards northeast and offer a ghee
drop in the fire for Indra (ruler of gods), with the following mantra.

HxI CIöbxj sûx‡tx| CIöbx¥jbI d ii|

Offer a little ghee to Agni (fire god) in the middle of the fire with the following mantra:

HxI A²¥j sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d ii|

Then offer a little ghee to Soma (god of nourishment and well-being) in the upper half of the
northern side of the homa kundam with the following mantra:

HxI ¥sxixj sûx‡tx| ¥sxix¥jbI d ii|

Now, we have to offer a “forgiveness offering” to Prajapati again to request his forgiveness for
all the mistakes that happened in the homa upto this point, with the following mantra:

17
BkIhöeh£Zy GZZ§±Y ekõIZI i¥cõ sIhxpyZ sisë ¥bxr
öexjÒyÀxk§aI skû öexjÒyÀI ¥txrõxiy| HxI h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx‡tx|
öeRxeZj CbI d ii|

After making an offering to the basic gods as shown above, one can invoke Ganesha in the fire.
After the above preliminary offerings and before invoking Ganesha, one can also make offerings
to rishis. One can, for example, make offerings to the rishis of one’s lineage. It is optional.

Praana Pratishthaapanaa (invocation of god)

Now we have to invoke the deity in the idol and the fire. If you know how to do anganyaasam
and karanyaasam, do it while saying the following. Otherwise, just read the following.

Asõ öqz itxMYeZy öexYöeZyrçxed iIöZsõ MYK EryJ


dyP£b§MxjöZz ¶IbJ öqz itx MYeZyk§¥bpZx| MøxI gzRI| MøzI q°yJ| Mø¦I
KzmKI| MxI AIM¡rçxhõxI diJ| MzI Zk§RdzhõxI diJ| M¢I icõixhõxI diJ|
¤¤MI AdxiyKxhõxI diJ| M¦I KdyrçyKxhõxI diJ| MJ KkZm Kke£rçxhõxI
diJ| MxI t£bjxj diJ| MzI qyk¥s sûxtx| M¢I qyLx¤¤j prU§| ¤¤MI
KpPxj t¡I| M¦I ¥döZöZjxj p¦rU§| MJ Aösëxj fU§|
h¢k§h¡psþ¡p¥kxiyZy byM§gIcJ|

Now invoke the deity in the fire and the idol with the following mantra. While saying it, imagine
that Mahaganapathi who is in your own heart is entering the fire and the idol.

HxI BI ötzI ¥öKxI jI kI mI pI qI rI sI tI nI ±I| HxI tIsJ


¥sx„tI ¥sx„tI tIsJ| öqz itxMYe¥ZJ öexY Ct öexYJ| Rzp Ct
ÓyZJ| s¥kûIöbyjxYy pxO§idÒ±¡J ¥öqxöZ RytûxöNxY
öexYxexdpõx¥dxbxdsixdxJ C¤¤tpxMZõ s¡LI PykI ZyrçIZ¡ sûxtx|
sxËycõI K¡kûIZ¡ sûxtx| A†s¡dz…¥Z e¡†d…ksôx…s¡ P±¡…J e¡†dJ
…öexY…iyt †¥dx ¥b…ty ¥hxM†I| ¥RõxK§†e¥qõ…i s¢†kõ…i¡¶†kI…Zi†d¡i¥Z …i£n†jx dJ
…sûsëy| BI ötzI ¥öKxI ¥öKxI ötzI BI | BI ötzI ¥öKxI ¥öKxI ötzI BI|

18
BI ötzI ¥öKxI ¥öKxI ötzI BI| BI ötzI ¥öKxI ¥öKxI ötzI BI| HxI öqz
itxMYeZy öexYq¤¤°õ diJ|

Now read the following and make the aavaahani, samsthaapani, sannidhaapani, sannirodhini and
avakunthana mudras with your hands if you know them. If not, don’t worry and just read.

AöZ BMPâ | Bpxty¥Zx hp| Óxey¥Zx hp| sËyty¥Zx hp|


sËyk¡¥Æx hp| ApK¡IVy¥Zx hp| ¥bp öeszb öeszb| ¥bp skû RMËxa
jxp¥ÆxixpsxdKI| ZxpÀûI öezZyhx¥pd i¢k§Z¦ A²¦ P sËycyI
K¡k¡|

While saying this, pray to Ganapathi in your mind and ask him to stay in the fire and the idol till
the end of the homam.

Panchopachara Pooja (worship of god)

Now, we have to offer worship with several servies to Mahaganapathi in the fire and idol. There
are several options. One can do a panchopachara pooja with 5 services or a shodasopachara
pooja with 16 services or a chatusshashtyupachara pooja with 64 services. For simplicity, a
panchopachara pooja is recommended in a homam. Those who have a lot of time and want to
perform a shodasopachara pooja may refer to Appendix C and use that procedure instead of what
is given in this section.

Say the following and offer sandalwood powder/paste to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol.
You can also offer turmeric powder and kumkum.

mI e£aypõxÃ¥d diJ| MIcI sik§ejxiy|

Say the following and offer a flower (or a flower petal) to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol.

tI BKxqxÃ¥d diJ| e¡rðI sik§ejxiy|

Say the following and offer dhoopam (incense) to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol. Light
the tip of the incense stick, let the fire burn brightly and then extinguish the fire. There should be
no fire on the stick but smoke coming from the burning tip. Show the smoke to the fire in the
homa kundam.

jI pxjûxÃ¥d diJ| c¢eI BöNxejxiy|

19
Say the following and show the deepam (light/lamp) to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol.

kI A²õxÃ¥d diJ| bzeI bk§qjxiy|

Say the following and offer some food to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol. You can use
cooked food or a fruit or jaggery or sugar. Show it to the fire and idol and offer a little bit into
the fire.

If you made only one food item, it is a good idea to offer it at the end of the homam. There will
be a naivedyam (food offering) again. Offer something else for now. The offering at the end is
the main one.

pI Ai£ZxÃ¥d diJ| ¤¤d¥pbõI sik§ejxiy|

Say the following and offer some akshatas to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol. This mantra
means that we are offering “all services” to Him.

sI skûxÃ¥d diJ| s¥kûxePxkxd§ sik§ejxiy|

Dasadha Vibhakta Moola Mantra (root mantra divided into 10 parts)

Now, we have to make ten offerings of ghee (ghee drops) for the ten parts of the moola mantra.
Say the following ten sentences. Offer a drop of ghee into the fire after each sentence.

HxI sûxtx| HxI öqzI sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI
sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI
sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI MYeZ¥j sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI
KøzI Mø¦I MI MYeZ¥j pkpkb sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI
MYeZ¥j pkpkb skûRdI sûxtx| HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI
MYeZ¥j pkpkb skûRdI ¥i pqixdj sûxtx sûxtx|

Mahaganapathi Mantras

Now, you can offer as many mantras of Mahaganapathi as you want. Suggested counts for each
mantra are 4 or 8 or 12 or 21 or 28 or 108 or 1008. At the end of the mantra, you have to add the
following (if it is not already present in the mantra) and then make an offering in the fire.

20
sûx‡tx

When making the last offering with a mantra (i.e. you are going to stop that mantra after this
offering and switch to a different mantra), you add the following instead of the above:

p¦rU§

The offering can be a drop of ghee or sesame seeds or murmura/mamra (puffed white rice) or
havan samagri or small dry coconut pieces or small pieces of darbha. If you are doing homam on
a big scale with a big fire, you can even put banana slices, full coconuts, various fruits
(especially jack fruit, grapefruit, pomegranate and kapittha fruit), nuts (cashews, almonds etc),
modakas (a specific Indian cuisine item), sugar cane pieces, several sweets and snacks etc. But,
if you are doing on a small scale with a small fire, stick to sesame seeds, dry coconut pieces,
puffed white rice and ghee drops.

Three mantras are particularly important. The first one is the moola mantra with beejas. The
second one is a Vedic mantra. The two are given below (with “swaha” added already). After
them, you can read “Ganapathi Atharva Seersham” (also known as “Ganapathi Upanishat”). If
one reads the moola mantra 12 times, the Vedic mantra 8 times and Ganapathi Atharva Seersham
3 times, it will take about 40-45 minutes. You can decide your own counts. If you are doing
leisurely, you can add many more mantras from various books. It is a good idea to add the
mantra(s) of your ishta devata. If you do sadhana of a specific mantra like Gayatri mantra
everyday, it is a good idea to make some offerings with that mantra too. The two main mantras
(moola mantra and Vedic mantra) are given below.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI MYeZ¥j pkpkb skûRdI ¥i pqixdj


sûxtx|

HxI …MYxdx‡I Zûx …MY†eZyM§I tpxi¥t …KpyI †K…pzdx†i¡…ei†öqpsëiI|


…¥Rõ…rçkxR…I ög†ÖYxI ögÖYsð…Z Bd†J …q£Yû…Ë¢Zy†hysþz…b sx†bdI||
sûx‡tx|

Ganapathi Atharva Seersham is given in an Appendix A at the end of this document. It is a very
powerful prayer of Mahaganapathi. In fact, it is the highest prayer of Mahaganapathi. It lauds
Mahaganapathi as the source of creation, as the Supreme Being from whom all gods such as
Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra are derived. When read with correct swaram (intonation), it brings
inner peace and bliss. You can repeat it as many times as you want in your homam.

21
Punah Pooja (worship again)

After all the offerings with mantras, we offer a quick worship again to Mahaganapathi in the fire.

Say the following and offer some food to Mahaganapathi in the fire and the idol.

HxI MI MYeZ¥j diJ| ¤¤d¥pbõI sik§ejxiy |

Light a small camphor piece in a plate and show it to the fire while saying the following. At the
end, you can throw the camphor piece into fire.

HxI MI MYeZ¥j diJ| dzkxRdI sik§ejxiy |

If one has time, a panchopachara pooja can also be done as the punah pooja. But the above two
things will suffice.

Now get up and do pradakshinas to the homa kundam. If someone stands on the roof (or in the
sky) and looks down at you, it should look like you are going around the homa kundam in the
clockwise direction. Do one or three rounds and then sit down again in front of fire.

Uttaraangam (vote of thanks)1

Now, offer one drop of ghee to Prajapati, then the controllers of the three worlds (bhuh – fire
god, bhuvah – wind god, who controls space too, suvah – sun god for all the non-material
spiritual realms), to Agni who processes the food for gods and makes it consumable and finally
Prajapati again. Read the following and offer a drop of ghee at each “swaahaa”.

HxI öe†Rxe…¥Z d Zû…¥bZx…dõ¥dõx py†qûx …RxZx…dy e…ky Zx †gh¢p|


jZ§†Kxix¥së R¡…t¡is놥Ëx Asë¡ †pjM§I †sõx…i e†Z¥jx k…jzYxi§| sûx‡tx|
öeRxeZj CbI d ii||
HxI h¢J sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d ii||
HxI h¡…pJ sûx‡tx| pxjp CbI d ii||
HxI s¡…pJ sûx‡tx| s¢kõxj CbI d ii||
j†b…sõ Kk§…i¥Yx„Zõ†kzky…PI j…bûx†dõ¢d…iytx†Kki§| A²y…ræZ§ †sûy…ræK£bûybûxd§
skûI †sûy…ræI s¡†t¡ZI K¥kx…Z¡ sûx†tx| A²¥j sûyræK£Z CbI d ii||

1
Skip this and go to the next section to find a shorter procedure for uttaraangam.

22
HxI h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx†tx| öeRxeZj CbI d ii||

Now do pranaayaamam again. The procedure of pranaayaamam is explained earlier.

Now, make three offerings to the fire god, asking for forgiveness for any mistakes committed
knowingly or unknowingly, while using fire as the medium. Read the following and offer a drop
of the ghee in the fire at each “swaahaa”.

A‡dx¹xZI jbx†¹xZI …j¹sõ …öKyj…¥Z iy†a¡| A‡¥² Z†bsõ …K…mð…j


ZûM§I ty ¥p†Á …j…axZaI| sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d ii||
e¡†k¡rsIiy¥Zx …j¥¹x …j¹J e¡†k¡rsIiyZJ| A‡¥² Z†bsõ …K…mð…j ZûM§I
ty ¥p†Á j…axZaI| sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d ii||
jZ§†ex…KöZx idsx …bzd†b…±x d| …j¹†sõ …idû†¥Z ik§†ZxsJ| A…²yræ¥Æx‡Zx
…öK…Z¡py†bûy…Rxdd§| j†Ry¥rçx …¥bpxd§ …E…Z¡¥qx †jRx…Zy| sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d
ii||

Next, three offerings are made to the fire god, wind god and sun god, the controllers of the three
worlds. Read the following and offer a drop of the ghee in the fire at each “swaahaa”.

HxI h¢J sûx†tx| A²j CbI d ii||


HxI h¡…pJ sûx‡tx| pxjp CbI d ii||
HxI s¡…pJ sûx‡tx| s¢kõx¥jbI d ii||

One final offering to Prajapati is made to beg for forgiveness for various mistakes made in the
homam, with respect to pronunciation, actions, procedure, devotion, materials used etc. Read the
following and offer of drop of ghee.

Asôyd§ ¥txiKk§iYy i¥cõ sIhxpyZ sisë iIöZ¥mxe ZIöZ¥mxe


öKyjx¥mxe h°y¥mxe öqÆx¥mxe dyji¥mxe dyrçx¥mxe öbpõ¥mxexby
sisë ¥bxr öexjÒyÀxk§aI skû öexjÒyÀxt¡ZyI ¤txrõxiy| HxI
h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx‡tx| öeRxeZj CbI d ii||

An offering to Vishnu and an offering to Rudra must be made. Read the following two lines and
offer a drop of ghee for each line. Think of Vishnu and Shiva.

23
HxI öqz py†rê…¥p sûx‡tx| pyrê¥p ekixÃd CbI d ii||
HxI d¥ix …k¡öbx†j e…q¡e†Z…¥j sûx‡tx| k¡öbxj eq¡eZj CbI d ii||

After making an offering to Rudra, wash the hand once. You can simply sprinkle a little bit of
water on the right palm for that purpose.

Uttaraangam – shorter version (vote of thanks)

When you are in a hurry, you can perform uttaraangam in a brief form by saying the following
and making an offering of ghee with each line.

HxI h¢J sûx‡tx| A²j CbI d ii||


HxI h¡…pJ sûx‡tx| pxjp CbI d ii||
HxI s¡…pJ sûx‡tx| s¢kõxj CbI d ii||
HxI h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx†tx| öeRxeZj CbI d ii||
HxI öqz py†rê…¥p sûx‡tx| pyrê¥p ekixÃd CbI d ii||
HxI d¥ix …k¡öbx†j e…q¡e†Z…¥j sûx‡tx| k¡öbxj eq¡eZj CbI d ii||

Tarpanam (satisfying with liquid)

Then, get a little milk in a cup or a tumbler. If you don’t have milk, use water. Keep your right
palm horizontal, with the palm facing up. Make an upward vertical circle with thumb and index
finger. Pour a little milk in the palm. Then angle the palm slightly and make the milk drop from
the palm through the tips of middle and ring fingers into a corner of the homa kundam. While
doing that, say the following:

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI Mø¦I MI MYeZ¥j pkpkb skûRdI ¥i pqixdj


sûxtx| HxI öqz itxMYeZyI Zk§ejxiy|

Do this once or 4 times or 8 times or 12 times. At the end, throw away the milk remaining in the
cup/tumbler and don’t use it.

24
Figure 3

Suddhaanna Bali (sacrifice of pure rice)

Now, we have to offer bali (sacrifice to other beings – associates of Mahaganapathi). Get the
cooked white rice (or banana slices or some other fruit slices). Just place a small token amount as
bali. You need to place bali in six different places outside the homa kundam. First, place it on the
east of the homa kundam. Then on the west, then on the north, then on the south and finally two
more on the east (a little north to the previous bali(s) placed in the east). The order and positions
can be found in Figure 3. While offering balis in six places, the following sentence can be said:

HxI öqz itxMYeZy exk§r¥b¥hõx diJ| gmyI sik§ejxiy|

The rice remaining after offering balis should be thrown away and not consumed. If cooked rice
is not available, small banana slices or some other fruit slices can be used. Again, any fruit pieces
left over after bali should be thrown away and not consumed.

Vasordhaaraa (stream of excellence)

Take a little ghee into the ladle and pour it slowly on the burning dry coconut pieces in the homa
kundam while reading the third verse from “Rudra Chamakam”. It is given below.

Don’t pour too much ghee if you don’t want much smoke. Just take one teaspoonful of ghee in
the wooden ladle and manage with it slowly. This ghee should be just enough to make the pieces
burn well so that poornaahuti (about to be offered) burns well.

HxI qI †P …¥i i†jÒ ¥i …öeyjI †P ¥i„d¡…Kxi†Ò …¥i Kx†iÒ ¥i s¦i…ds†Ò ¥i


…höbI †P …¥i ¥öq†jÒ …¥i p†sõÒ …¥i j†qÒ …¥i h†MÒ …¥i öb†pyYI P ¥i …jIZx
†P ¥i …ck§Zx †P …¥i ¥±i†Ò …¥i c£†ZyÒ …¥i pyqû†I P …¥i i†tÒ ¥i s…Ipy†¶ …¥i

25
¹xöZ†I P …¥i s¢†Ò ¥i …öes¢†Ò …¥i szk†I P ¥i …mj†Ò i…EZI †P …¥i„i£Z†I P
¥i„…j±§iI …P ¥i„†dxij¶ ¥i …Rzpx†Z¡Ò ¥i bzk§Nx…j¡ZûI †P ¥i„d…iyöZI …P
¥i„†hjI P ¥i …s¡MI †P …¥i q†jdI P ¥i …s¢rx †P ¥i …s¡byd†I P ¥i||

Poornaahuti

Now, we have to prepare a package for poornaahuti (“complete offering”). The normal
procedure is to place a full dry coconut, some metal coins, some turmeric, some sandalwood,
some kumkum, some akshatas, samples of some of the materials used in homam as offerings in a
cloth and tie the cloth.

For a simple homam with a small fire, you may take a dry coconut half and place a few akshatas,
one coin, little sandalwood powder, turmeric powder, kumkum powder and samples of materials
offered earlier in it. If you do a small homam everyday in a western country and need to
minimize the smoke, you may put just a small coconut piece as poornaahuti. If you are doing
homam in a big firepit that is dug in ground, you may want to experiment with a regular full
coconut that has little water. It is a more accurate representation of the ego of a normal person.

Place the poornaahuti on the wooden ladle, say the mantra below and then place the poornaahuti
in fire carefully with hand (if you drop it on a small fire from the wooden ladle, it can extinguish
the fire and also loose materials can spill everywhere in the homa kundam).

HxI …e¢k§Yx…t¡Zy†i¡…ÀixI †R¡¥txZy| s…kûI ¤¤p ‡e¢k§Yx…t¡ZyJ|


s†kû…¥ipx†¥eïxZy| A†¥ax …CjI ¤¤p ‡e¢k§Yx…t¡ZyJ| …Asõx…¥ip öe†ZyZyrçZy|
HxI e¢k§…Yib…J e¢k§…Yiyb…I e¢k§…YxZ§e¢k§…Yi¡…bPõ¥Z| e¢k§…Ysõ e¢k§…Yix…bxj
e¢k§…Y¥ipxp…qyrõ¥Z||
HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j e¢k§Yxt¡ZyI sik§ejxiy|

While (or after) placing the poornaahuti in the fire, say the following mantra.

HxI ögÖxk§eYI ögÖtpyk§ ögÖx²¦ ögÖYx t¡ZI| ög¤¤Öp ¥Zd


MIZpõI ögÖ Kk§i sixcydx||

Imagine that you are completely surrendering yourself to Mahaganapathi. Poornaahuti basically
means “complete surrender”. The full (or half) coconut used in the poornaahuti is a symbol of
one’s head, i.e. ego (“I-ness”), which is to be sacrificed (surrendered) to Mahaganapathi. Without
that inner sense of surrender, an elaborate poornaahuti ritual with pristine materials has no
meaning. Most Vedic rituals are symbolic of certain inner changes that you bring about within

26
yourself, to remove obstacles within your sookshma sareera that are blocking self-knowledge.
The purpose of Veda is the knowledge of self (Aatman) and all rituals are ultimately for that
purpose. Doing rituals blindly is a good starting point, but at some stage, one has to wonder
about the inner meaning.

Winding Up and Meditation

The fire god (Agni) has carried all our offerings to various gods. So the final offering is to him.
Read the following and offer a drop of ghee in the fire.

s…eë †¥Z A¥² …siyc†J …seë…RytûxJ seë E†rj…sþeëJ cx†i …öeyjx†Yy| …seë
¥tx‡öZx s…eë cx†Zûx …j…R…Çy…seë¥jx…dzkx†e£Ysûx …N£…¥Z…d sûx‡tx|
A²¥j seëpZ CbI d ii||

Take some water in a spoon and sprinkle it around the homa kumdam as shown in Figure 2. This
is similar to what we did at the beginning, but the mantras to say are slightly different. Instead of
the four mantras used earlier, use the following four mantras when sprinkling water along the
four arrows marked as 1,2,3 and 4 in Figure 2

A…by¥Z„†dûiIÓxJ| A†d¡…i¥Z„†dûiIÓxJ| s†k…sû¥Z„†dûiIÓxJ| ¥b†p spyZ…J


öex†sxpzJ|

The ritual of homam cleanses one internally. The powerful divine presence in the fire has a great
ability to cleanse one. Especially, a sincerely offered poornaahuti creates a lot of positive energy
as it burns. One can take advantage of it by meditating in front of the fire as the poornaahuti
burns. The time when the poornaahuti burns is the best time to meditate.

Sit still with a straight back in front of the fire and meditate. Make sure that the back is erect and
yet not too tight. Make sure that the neck and head are also erect. Close the eyes, imagine your
favorite deity in a form you like and meditate on that form with your favorite mantra. It does not
have to be a mantra of Ganapathi. You may, for example, meditate with the Gayatri mantra. Try
to forget about the your body and what you are doing and get into the mantra fully. Think that
the deity of the mantra is the only one that exists. Think that all beings and all objects of this
world are expressions of the same deity. Think that that deity is the true Doer of all actions by all
beings of this world. Your chances of losing consciousness of your body and immersing in the
mantra fully are the maximum at this point of time than any other! Take advantage and meditate
for atleast 5-10 minutes with maximum focus now. Consider this an essential part of the homam.

Rakshaa

Now, take the darbhas placed at the beginning outside the homa kundam on the western side (or
new darbhas, if you did not place any darbhas along the boundaries due to lack of darbhas),

27
apply a little ghee to them and place the tips in fire. When they catch fire, remove them from the
fire, place them in a container and let the whole darbhas burn. The black ash you get is called
“rakshaa” (protection). At the end of the homam, you can apply a little rakshaa to the forehead of
the idol and then a little to your own forehead and the foreheads of others. This is believed to
protect from evil forces. You can store the rakshaa for future use on important occasions.

If your fire is too small and does not last till this point, you may consider taking rakshaa before
meditation.

It is not necessary to take raksha. One can skip this step. Alternately, one can skip now and later
mix the ashes of the materials burnt in the homa kundam with ghee and use that as rakshaa.

Udvaasana (good bye)

Take a couple of darbhas in your right hand and a couple more darbhas with your left hand. Take
some flowers or akshatas also if available. Hold the darbhas with the tips facing away from you
and the bases in your hands. Now touch the two sides of the homakundam with the darbhas in
the two hands. Then touch the idol with those darbhas and leave the akshatas and flowers on the
god. Imagine that the energy from the homakundam has been transferred into the idol. To
simplify this, you can also place your fists containing a few akshatas on top of the northern and
southern sides of homa kundam and then deposit the akshatas in those fists at the feet of the idol.

Say the following and show your heart with your hands. Imagine that Sri Mahaganapathi has
exited the fire and the idol and came back into your heart.

AsôxÍ¢k§¥ZÒ A¥²Ò öqzitxMYeZyI jaxÓxdI öeZyrçxejxiy|

Now, we have to say goodbye to the fire god too. Say the following and bow to the fire god.

A…¥² d†j s¡e†ax …kx¥j …Asôxd§ pyqûx†dy ¥bp …pj¡†dxdy …pybûxd§|


…j¡¥jx†cõsô†¸¡t¡…kxY¥i…¥dx h¢jy†rçxI …¥Z d†i D°yI py¥ci| A²¥j diJ||

Conclusion

Say the following three verses. Think of Krishna and imagine that you are not the doer and
Krishna is the doer who is acting through you. While you do it, place a few akshatas on the tips
of the ring and middle fingers of the right hand, place the palm on the small deposit bowl and
wash it such that the water and akshatas are deposited in the deposit bowl.

iIöZtzdI öKyjxtzdI h°ytzdI t¡Zxqd| jÆ¡ZIZ¡ ijx ¥bp


ekye¢k§YI Zbsë¡¥Z||

28
öexjÒyÀxdõ¥qrxYy ZeJ Kk§ixÃKxdy ¤¤p| jxdy ¥Zrxi¥qrxYxI
öqz K£rêsôkYI ekI|| öqz K£rê K£rê K£rê|
Kx¥jd pxPx id¥sIöby¤¤jkûx g¡ÆõxÃdx px öeK£¥ZJ sûhxpxZ§|
K¥kxiy jbõZ§ sKmI ek¤¤sô dxkxjYx¥jZy sik§ejxiy||

Say the following finally. Imagine that Sri Mahaganapathi became pleased with your homam.
Surrender the doership of the homam to Krishna and pray for peace.

A¥dd bypõ iIMn ¥tx¥id hMpxd§ skûxÃKJ öqzitxMYeZyJ öezjZxi§|


HxI ZÄZ§| skûI öqz K£rêxk§eYisë¡| HxI qxIZyJ qxIZyJ qxIZyJ|

After this, you should not think of yourself as the doer of the homam just finished, for you have
surrendered the doership to Krishna!

The naivedyam (food) you offered to Mahaganapathi can be eaten now and served to others. The
rakshaa (holy ash) can be mixed with a drop of ghee and applied on the forehead as a dot or a
line.

If you used a kalasam (water pot) in addition to an idol to invoke the god, you can take a bath
with the water in the kalasam. Pour the water on yourself after you finish your bath, while saying
a mantra of Ganesha. After pouring that water on yourself, don’t pour any more regular water.
The water from kalasam should be the last water you pour on yourself in the bath.

It is possible to put a kalasam and use it everyday without changing water. One may change the
water every weekend or on every Chaturthi day and take bath with the old water.

:: Sarvam Sri Krishnarapanamastu :: :: Om Shaantih Shaantih Shaantih ::

Appendix A

Ganapathi Atharva Seersham (Ganeshopanishat)


The text of “Ganapathi Atharva Seersham” (also known as “Ganeshopanishat”) is given below. It
can be recited once or a few times while making offerings into the fire during the homam.
Offering can be made at the end of each stanza, when “swaahaa” comes.

This Vedic hymn is the highest prayer of Maha Ganapathi. It extols the highest nirguna form of
Maha Ganapathi. All gods, including Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva, are different manifestations of
this form. All the worlds are created, sustained and destroyed in this form of Maha Ganapathi.
When reading this, imagine Maha Ganapathi as Parama Purusha (Supreme Cosmic Being).

29
HxI d†i¥së …MY†eZ¥j| Zû…¥ip …öeZõ±…I Z†Àûisy| Zû…¥ip …¥Kpm…I
Kk§†Zxsy| Zû…¥ip …¥Kpm…I ck§†Zxsy| Zû…¥ip …¥Kpm…I tk§†Zxsy| Zû¥ip skûI
Lmûyb†I ög…Öxsy| ZûI sx±xbx†Ãxsy …dyZõi§|| sûx‡tx|

†EZI …pP§iy| †sZõI …pP§iy|| sûx‡tx|

…Ap Zû…I ixI| A†p …p°x‡kI| A†p …¥öqxZx‡kI| A†p …bxZx‡kI| A†p …cxZx‡kI|
Apxd¢Pxd†ip…qyrõI| A†p …eÒx‡ÀxZ§| A†p …e¡k‡sëxZ§| A¥px…Àkx‡ÀxZ§|
A†p b…±yYx‡ÀxZ§| A†p …¥Pxk§cûx‡ÀxZ§| Apx…ckx‡ÀxZ§| skû¥Zx ixI
exty ex†ty s…iIZxZ§|| sûx‡tx|

ZûI pxO§i†jsëûI Py…ÍjJ| ZûixdIbi†jsëûI ög…ÖijJ| ZûI


s¶ybxdIbx†bûyZz…¥jx„sy| ZûI …öeZõ±…I ög†Öxsy| ZûI ¹xdi¥jx
py¹x†di…¥jx„sy|| sûx‡tx|

skûI RMbybI †Zû¥Àx …Rxj¥Z| skûI RMbybI †ZûÀ…sëyrçZy| skûI RMbybI


Zûjy m†j¥i…rõZy| skûI RMbybI Zû†jy öe…¥ZõZy| ZûI
h¢iykx¥ex„d¥mx„†dy¥mx…dhJ| ZûI PZûxky ‡pxK§e…bxdy|| sûx‡tx|

ZûI …M¡Y†öZjx…ZzZJ| ZûI ApÓx†öZjx…ZzZJ| ZûI …¥bt†öZjx…ZzZJ| ZûI


…Kxm†öZjx…ZzZJ| ZûI i¢mxcxkÓy†¥Zx„sy …dyZõI| ZûI q°y†öZjx…ÃKJ| ZûxI
¥jxMy¥dx cõx†jIZy …dyZõI| ZûI ögÖx ZûI pyrê¡sëûI
k¡öbsëûiyIöbsëûi²ysëûI pxj¡sëûI s¢kõsëûI PIöbixsëûI ög…Ö
h¢k§h¡…psþ¡p¥kxI|| sûx‡tx|

30
…MYx‡byI e¢†kûi¡…¶x…kõ …pk§Yx‡bzIsëb…dIZkI| Ad¡sûxkJ †ek…ZkJ|
Ak§‡¥cIb¡…msyZI| Zx†¥kY …EÆI| GZÀp i†d¡sû…k¢eI| MKxkJ ‡e¢kû…k¢eI|
AKx¥kx i†cõi …k¢eI| Ad¡sûxk‡ÒxÇõ…k¢eI| gyIb¡k¡†Àk…k¢eI| dx†bJ
sI…cxdI| sM§I†tyZx …sIcyJ| ¤¤srx M†¥Yq…pybõx| M†YK …EryJ|
dyP£b§Mx†jöZz …QIbJ| MYe†Zyk§¥b…pZx| HxI MI …MY†eZ¥j diJ| HxI MI
…MY†eZ¥j diJ| HxI MI …MY†eZ¥j diJ||sûx‡tx|

GK…bIZx†j …pyb§i†¥t| pöK…Z¡IWx†j czity| Z†¥Ëx bIZyJ öe…¥Pxb‡jxZ§||


sûx‡tx|

GK…bIZI †PZ¡k§…t…sëI …exqi†IK¡…qcx†kyYI| k†bI …P p†kbI …t…¤¤sëk§…gyöhx†YI


i¢…rK†cûRI| k°†I …mI¥gx†bkI …q¢k§…e…Kk§Y†KI k…°px†ssI|
k†°…MIcx†d¡myeëx…I…MI …k°†e¡¤¤rðJ …s¡e¢†RyZI| h†°x…d¡†KIeydI …¥b…pI
…RMZ§†Kxk…Yi†Põ¡ZI| B†pyk§…h¢ZI †P …s£…ræõx…b¦ …öeK£‡¥ZJ e¡…k¡rxZ§†ekI|
G†pI …cõxj†Zy ¥jx …dy…ZõI …s ¥jx†Mz ¥jx…MydxI †pkJ|| sûx‡tx|

d¥ix öpxZeZ¥j| d¥ix MYeZ¥j| diJ öeiaeZ¥j| di¥së„së¡


mI¥gxbkx¤¤jKbIZxj pyNïdxqy¥d qyps¡Zxj pkbi¢k§Z…¥j diJ||
sûx‡tx||

Appendix B: Super-short Homam (minimum mantras)


For those who are uncomfortable with Sanskrita and yet want to perform homam, the procedure
given in this document may still be difficult. For such people, I can recommend a much shorter
procedure. It is hoped that those who start with this super-short homam will eventually make an
effort to switch to the main procedure given in this document, after they get some practice and
become comfortable with mantras in Sanskrita.

Mantras offered to a deity in fire are powerful irrespective of the procedure used. Instead of not
doing homam at all, it is better to do this super-short homam.

31
This appendix will describe a super-short procedure very briefly. If some details are unclear,
please contextualize them by reading the rest of the document. The Sanskrita mantras are
minimized in this super-short procedure.

Preliminary Procedure

Think in your mind of Mother Earth, Lord Ganesha, your favorite deity, your parents, rishis of
your lineage (if you know them), all rishis and all gods. You can use a language that you are
comfortable with (e.g. English) and say something in an intuitive way to remember all of them.

Take a tumbler or glass of water. Take three spoonfuls of water from the tumbler and drink them
while saying: “This is for Keshava (¥Kqp)”, “This is for Naaraayana (dxkxjY)” and “This is
for Maadhava (¶ixcp)”.

With akshatas in hand, pray to Ganesha: “O Ganesha (M¥Yq)! Please remove obstacles from
my homam”. Do praanaayaama (see the section on it in the main document), possibly with the
Om sound or a mantra given earlier.

Now take a vow: “I shall now perform a homam to the best of my ability, for the pleasure of
Lord Ganesha (M¥Yq).”

Leave the akshatas in front of the idol or homa kundam.

Early Offerings

Light a lamp. Put some akshatas in the water tumbler and say “vam (¶pI)” 11 times. Take the
water with the spoon and sprinkle it on yourself, on the homa kundam, on the idol and on the
food, fruits and flowers.

Homa kundam should be on your east and you should be facing east. Draw two red parallel east-
west lines with kumkum (vermilion) connecting the middle of the western edge of homa kundam
with your seat and place the container with melted ghee on those lines.

Take a small camphor piece, light it in the lamp and place the burning camphor piece in homa
kundam while saying the following.

HxI h¢k§h¡psþ¡p¥kxI

Place dry coconut pieces or wood above it and make sure that they catch fire. Now offer five
drops of ghee while saying the following:

HxI öeRxeZ¥j sûx‡tx|

32
HxI CIöbxj sûx‡tx|
HxI A²¥j sûx‡tx|
HxI ¥sxixj sûx‡tx|

This is for forgiveness of my mistakes so far.

HxI h¢k§h¡…psþ¡…pJ sûx‡tx|

Main Homam

Say “O Ganesha (M¥Yq), please come into this fire”. Say the following while showing the fire
with folded palms (as though you are telling someone “come here”):

Bpxty¥Zx hp| Óxey¥Zx hp|

Put some akshatas in the fire and say “O Ganesha (M¥Yq), please be pleased with these
services from me”.

Now repeat the mantras of Ganesha that you know 4 or 8 or 12 or 21 or 28 or 108 or 1008 times.
Some mantras are suggested in the main document. At a minimum, do the following simple
mantra as many times as you can:

HxI MI MYeZ¥j diJ| sûxtx|

Each time you say this, offer ghee or akshatas or sesame seeds or some other materials described
earlier in this document in the fire. If you do the above mantra many times and not do any other
mantras, it is acceptable. The above mantra is part of Ganapathi Atharva Seersham and is a
powerful (and yet simple) mantra.

At the end of the offerings, take some food you cooked (or fruit), show it to the fire and say “O
Ganesha (M¥Yq), please accept this” and throw a small bit into fire. Then stand up and go
around the homa kundam once or 3 times. If someone looks at you from the roof or from the sky,
it should look like you are going around the homa kundam in clockwise direction. At the end,
you can bow in front of the fire. Finally sit down in front of the fire in your original place.

33
Final Offerings

Say the following lines and offer a drop of ghee in the fire after each line:

HxI h¢J sûxtx|


HxI h¡pJ sûxtx|
HxI s¡pJ sûxtx|
HxI h¢k§h¡psþ¡pJ sûxtx|
HxI pyrê¥p sûxtx|
HxI k¡öbxj sûxtx|

At the end, sprinkle a little water on your right hand.

If it is possible, now offer six chunks of cooked white rice or fruit slices in the six places shown
in Figure 3, while saying “these are for the associates of Ganesha (M¥Yq)”. Otherwise, you
may skip this step.

Poornaahuti

While saying “Om”, pour a stream of ghee from the spoon into the fire. When the fire becomes
big, you can offer poornaahuti.

Please read the section on poornaahuti in the main document for the description of materials
needed, meaning of poornaahuti and the spirit to be followed. Instead of the mantras in the main
document, just say the following:

HxI MI MYeZ¥j e¢k§Yxt¡ZyI sik§ejxiy|

Then drop the full coconut or half coconut or coconut piece in fire. Offer one more drop of ghee
while saying:

HxI A²¥j seëp¥Z sûxtx|

Now, meditate with any mantra you like for 5-10 minutes as the poornaahuti burns. For some
useful tips, please refer to the main document.

At the end of the meditation, show your heart with your hands and say “O Ganesha (M¥Yq),
please come back into my heart”. Also, thank the fire god mentally for his co-operation in the
ritual. Then say:

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skûI öqz K£rêxk§eYisë¡| HxI qxIZyJ qxIZyJ qxIZyJ|

If you minimize the entire procedure and spend maximum time chanting a mantra of Ganesha
with offerings into fire and then meditating as the poornaahuti burns, you will get the most out of
your homam and not lose much! After some practice, you can compare this super-short
procedure with the procedure given in the main document and keep adding mantras from the
main procedure and eventually switch to the main procedure. But even this super-short
procedure, when performed sincerely, can give good results.

Appendix C: Shodasopachara Pooja


[If you want to perform a shodasopachara pooja (a worship consisting of 16 services) to
Mahaganapathi who is in fire and the idol, instead of the panchopachara pooja mentioned in this
document, please use the procedure in this appendix instead. This will take more time.]

Say the line below and think in the mind that you are offering a nice seat to Mahaganapathi to sit
on. While imagining that, just offer a few akshatas to the idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j diJ| BsdI sik§ejxiy|

Now, say the line below imagine that you are washing his feet. While imagining that, show a
little water with the spoon to the fire and leave the water in a small empty bowl (we will call it
“the deposit bowl” from now onwards).

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j exb¥jxJ exbõI sik§ejxiy|

Say the line below, imagine that you are washing the hands of Mahaganapathi, show a little
water in the spoon to the fire and leave it in the deposit bowl.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j tsë¥jxJ Ak§NõI sik§ejxiy|

Say the line below, imagine that you are offering drinking water to Mahaganapathi’s mouth,
show a little water in the spoon to the fire and leave it in the deposit bowl.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j i¡¥L q¡ÆxPidzjI sik§ejxiy|

Say the first sentence below, imagine that you are giving a bath to Mahaganapathi, show a little
water in the spoon to the fire and leave it in the deposit bowl. Say the second sentence below,
imagine that you are giving drinking water to Mahaganapathi’s mouth after bath, show a little
water in the spoon to the fire and leave it in the deposit bowl.

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HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZyI sïejxiy| sïxdxdIZkI BPidzjI
sik§ejxiy|

Say the line below, imagine that you are offering a pair of nice clothes (one in the top and one in
the bottom, i.e. like a shirt and a pant) and offer a few akshatas to the idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j pösëxYy cxkjxiy|

Say the line below, imagine that you are offering a yajnopaveetam (sacred thread) and offer a
few akshatas to the idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j j¥¹xepzZI sik§ejxiy|

Say the line below, imagine that you are offering nice jewelry and offer a few akshatas to the
idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j BhkYxdy sik§ejxiy|

Say the line below and offer a little bit of sandalwood paste, turmeric powder, kumkum powder
and akshatas to the idol and the fire. If you don’t have all these, just sprinkle a few akshatas on
the idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j MIcxd§ cxkjxiy| tkyöbx K¡IK¡iI


sik§ejxiy| A±Zxd§ sik§ejxiy|

Keep sprinkling a few flowers or flower petals or akshatas on the idol and the fire while reading
the following 16 names of Mahaganapathi. Make sure you put very little amount of materials in
the fire, so that you don’t extinguish it accidentally. Offer most things to the idol instead. Just
offer a token amount in the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j e¡¤¤rðJ e¢Rjxiy| HxI s¡i¡Lxj diJ|
HxI GKbIZxj diJ| HxI Keymxj diJ| HxI MRKk§YKxj diJ| HxI
mI¥gxbkxj diJ| HxI pyKUxj diJ| HxI pyNïkxRxj diJ| HxI c¢i¥KZ¥p
diJ| HxI MYxcõ±xj diJ| HxI fxmPIöbxj diJ| HxI MRxddxj diJ| HxI
pöKZ¡IWxj diJ| HxI q¢k§eKk§Yxj diJ| HxI ¥tkIgxj diJ| HxI

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sÜIbe¢kûRxj diJ| HxI syÆypydxjKxj diJ| HxI öqz itxMYxcyeZ¥j
diJ|

Say the following line and show the incense stick lighted before to the fire and the idol.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j c¢eI BöNxejxiy|

Say the following line and show the lamp lighted before to the fire and the idol. Then show a
little water in the spoon to the fire and idol and leave it in the deposit bowl.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j bzeI bk§qjxiy| BPidzjI sik§ejxiy|

Say the first sentence below, show one of the two food items you prepared (or fruits) to god and
imagine that he tasted it. If you know the standard procedure of offering naivedyam with the
Gayatri mantra, you can do it. Else, don’t worry and just say the line below. When saying the
second line, imagine that you are offering a nice taamboolam (paan) to Mahaganapathi and offer
some akshatas in their place to the idol and the fire.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j ¤¤d¥pbõI sik§ejxiy| ZxIg¢mI


sik§ejxiy|

Place a little camphor on a camphor container or a plate, light it and make a clockwise vertical
circle in the air with the plate in front of the fire. Say the line below while you do it.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j Kk§e¢kdzkxRdI sik§ejxiy|

Take a small flower (or some akshatas) in your right hand, say the following and offer the flower
to the idol (and perhaps a couple of petals into the fire). If you know “Narayana Sooktam” and/or
Mantrapushpam (and if you have time), read them first and then say the line below. Otherwise,
just this line will do. Imagine that you are offering a flower that captures the essence of all
mantras.

HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j iIöZe¡rðI sik§ejxiy|

Say the following and bow before Mahaganapathi mentally. Of course, you can also get up, go
around the homa kundam once or thrice and bow down (or kneel down or lie down) in front of
the fire, if you are not in a hurry. If someone looks at you from the roof or sky, it should look
like you are going around the fire in clockwise directions.

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HxI öqzI ötzI KøzI itxMYeZ¥j öeb±yY disÜxkxd§ sik§ejxiy|

While you do all this, make sure that the fire gets going. Keep placing more dry coconut pieces if
necessary to keep the fire going. It may be tricky the first few times, but you will get used to it.
When necessary, you can sprinkle a little camphor powder in the fire to make it bigger.

Appendix D: Practical Tips and Hints


Here are some hints related to practical aspects of homam:

(1) In the beginning, there may be problems with maintaining the fire. New dry coconut pieces
(or wood pieces) have to be put in the fire while old pieces are still burning, in order to keep the
fire going. One’s ability to estimate how long a dry coconut piece can sustain fire will improve
with time.

(2) If the fire completely goes away, sprinkling some camphor powder on the hot pieces can
bring the fire back. That fire can be sustained by placing new pieces.

(3) If only a small amount of akshatas are offered during pooja (one or two akshatas each time)
and placed on a coconut piece, they will eventually burn.

(4) When offering a flower, if only a petal is placed on a coconut piece and the rest of the flower
is placed near the idol, it has a better chance of burning fully in the fire without creating
problems to the fire. Of course, in a homam performed with a big fire, full flowers burn easily.

(5) If small amounts are offered, it works better (when the fire is also small).

(6) If merely a drop of ghee is offered each time, less smoke is generated.

(7) Wood generates smoke. But dry coconut generates very little smoke. It generates smokes
mainly at the end when the fire goes away. If the homa kundam is close to a window and the
window is opened at the end, that may be sufficient to drive the little smoke out.

(8) Apart from mantras of Ganapathi, mantras of other deities can be offered in the fire while
imagining them to be different manifestations of Maha Ganapathi.

(9) Vedic hymns have an indescribable power. Even one chanting them without knowing the
meaning will find a lot of peace, happiness and bliss through them after repeated chanting. One
should try Ganapathi Atharva Seersham.

(10) It is a very good idea to keep the body as still as possible, with minimal movement of only
those body parts that must move (e.g. arm and mouth). It will maximize the positive spiritual
benefit from homam.

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(11) It is a good idea to keep atleast two coconut pieces burning all the time. Even if the fire in
one becomes weak, the other piece can help re-ignite it.

(12) If one puts a lot of oil or ghee in a pan and heats it, it generates smoke as the ghee burns. If
one puts too little oil in a pan and tries to fry vegetables, they burn and generate smoke. If one
puts the right balance of oil and vegetables, they get cooked properly and there is no smoke.
Similarly, if one puts the right balance of ghee and solid materials, they burn without smoke.
There will be some smoke only at the end, when the fire goes off. Wood, on the other hand, is
different from dry coconut and generates more smoke.

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