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Yama
*** Shopping-Tip: Yama
{{mergefrom|Yanluo}}
Image:102 0812.jpg 300px|right|thumb|[[Tibetan
Dharmapala at the
Field Museum in
Chicago, Illinois]]
'''Yama''' (
Sanskrit: यम) is the
Hindu lord of
death, whose first recorded appearance is in the
Vedas. He is one of the most ancient beings in the world and parallel forms of one sort or another have been found all over
Eurasia. He is known as
Yima by
Zoroastrianism Zoroastrians, and is considered to be
cognate with
Ymir of
Norse mythology Norse legend and has become known as '''Enma''', or '''Emma-o''' (閻魔大王), in
Japanese mythology Japanese legend. Some even claim that he also shares the same mythological roots as
Abel.
The spirits of the dead, on being judged by Yama, are supposed to either pass through a term of enjoyment in a region midway between the earth and the heaven of the gods, or to undergo their measure of
punishment in
Naraka (or
Jigoku), the nether world, situated somewhere in the southern region. After this time they return to
Earth to animate new bodies.
In Vedic tradition Yama was considered to have been the first mortal who died and espied the way to the celestial abodes, and in virtue of precedence he became the ruler of the departed. In some passages, however, he is already regarded as the god of death.
Characteristics of Yama
Image:Kagamibuta netsuke front.jpg thumb|left|200px|19th century ''kagamibuta [[netsuke'' depicting Emma]]
He is a
Lokapala and an
Aditya. In
art, he is depicted with
green or
red skin, red clothes, and riding a
Syncerus buffalo. He holds a loop of
rope in his left hand with which he pulls the soul from the corpse. He is the son of
Surya (Sun) and twin brother of
Yami, or
Yamuna, traditionally the first
human pair in the Vedas. He was also
worshiped as a son of
Vivasvat and
Saranya. He is one of the
Ashta-Dikpalas and represents the south. He reports to Lord
Shiva the Destroyer, an aspect of
Trimurti (Hinduism's triune Godhead). Three hymns (10, 14, and 35) in the
Rig Veda Book 10 are addressed to him.
Yama is also the lord of
justice and is sometimes referred to as
Dharma, in reference to his unswerving dedication to maintaining order and adherence to harmony. In this capacity, he is normally depicted wearing a Chinese judge's cap in Japanese art. It is said that he is also one of the wisest of the
devas. In the
Katha Upanishad, among the most famous
Upanishads, Yama is portrayed as a teacher. He is the father of
Yudhisthira, the oldest brother of the 5
Pandavas (Karna was born prior to Kunti's wedlock, so technically Karna is Yudhthira's older brother) and is said to have incarnated as
Vidura by some accounts in the
Mahabharata period.
Garuda Purana mentions Yama often. His description is in 2.5.147-149: "There very soon among Death, Time, etc. he sees Yama with red eyes, looking fierce and dark like a heap of collyrium, with fierce jaws and frowning fiercely, chosen as their lord by many ugly, fierce-faced hundreds of diseases, possessing an iron rod in his hand and also a noose. The creature goes either to good or to bad state as directed by him." In 2.8.28-29, "...the seven names of Yama, viz Yama, Dharma-raja, Mrtyu, Antaka, Vaivasvata, Kala, Sarva-pranahara...". His wife is Syamala (3.17.4-5, 3.29.16, 24-25).
In
Buddhism, the
Wheel of Life mandala is often depicted between the jaws of Yama. Yama was revered in
Tibet as a guardian of spiritual practice.
Subordination to Shiva and Vishnu
Yama, although a controller, is still subordinate to the ultimate controllers
Shiva and
Vishnu.
A story of Yama's subordinance to
Shiva is well-illustrated in the story of
Markandeya.
[http://www.chennaionline.com/toursntravel/placesofworship/tirukkadavur01.asp]
Yama is called
Kala ("time"), while Shiva is called
Mahakala ("greater time").
[http://www.advaita-vedanta.org/series/11_names_of_shiva/11_names_of_shiva_top.htm]
Another story, found in the
Bhagavata Purana, shows Yama's subordinance to
Vishnu. The man
Ajamila had committed many evil acts during his life such as
stealing, abandoning his
wife and
children, and marrying a
prostitute. At the moment of his death he involuntarily chanted the name of
Narayana (the
Sanskrit name for Vishnu) and achieved
moksha, becoming saved from the messengers of Yama. Although Ajamila had actually been thinking the name of his youngest son, Narayana's name has powerful effects, and thus Ajamila was released from his great sins.
[http://www.chennaionline.com/festivalsnreligion/religion/religion33.asp]
Yamas as codes of conduct
In a related usage, a yama is a "restraint" or rule for living
virtuously. Ten yamas are codified in numerous
scriptures, including the
Shandilya Upanishad Shandilya and
Varaha Upanishads, the ''
Hatha Yoga Pradipika'' by
Gorakshanatha, and the ''
Tirumantiram'' of
Tirumular.
Patanjali lists five yamas in the ''
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali''.
The ten traditional yamas are:
#
Ahimsa: abstinence from injury, harmlessness, the not causing of pain to any living creature in thought, word, or deed at any time. This is the "main" Yama. The other nine are there in support of its accomplishment.
#
Satya: truthfulness, word and thought in conformity with the facts.
#
Asteya: non-stealing, non-coveting, non-entering into debt.
#
Brahmacharya: divine conduct, continence, celibate when single, faithful when married.
#
Kshama: patience, releasing time, functioning in the now.
#
Dhriti: steadfastness, overcoming non-perseverance, fear, and indecision; seeing each task through to completion.
#
Daya: compassion; conquering callous, cruel and insensitive feelings toward all beings.
#
Arjava: honesty, straightforwardness, renouncing deception and wrongdoing.
#
Mitahara: moderate appetite, neither eating too much nor to little; nor consuming meat, fish, shellfish, fowl or eggs.
#
Shaucha: purity, avoidance of impurity in body, mind and speech.
In the ''
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali'', the Yamas are the first limb of the eight limbs of
Raja Yoga. They are found in the Sadhana Pada Verse 30 as:
# Ahimsa
# Satya
# Asteya
# Brahmacharya
# Aparigraha: absence of avariciousness, non-appropriation of things not one's own.
Yama in popular culture
* In the
anime and
manga ''
Dragon Ball'', '''Enma''' (The Japanese name for Yama) is portrayed as a harried bureaucrat with a short temper, attended to by an army of office-worker
Oni (Japanese folklore) oni. Though the ruler of the afterlife, he is surpassed in power by both the four ''Kaiō'' and the one remaining ''Kaiōshin'' (higher gods in whose hands rest the stewardship of the entire universe).
* He is depicted in a similar fashion in ''
YuYu Hakusho'', as the pen-pushing ruler of the spirit world and a shadowy figure known for his temper; however, he is also the father of Koenma (literally, "Child-Enma"), who often runs the underworld in his father's stead. He is known as "'''Yemma'''" (based on an older Japanese pronunciation) in the
English language English-dubbed ''
Dragon Ball Z'' anime, and '''Yama''' in the English version of ''
YuYu Hakusho''.
* '''Yama''' is a major character in the
science fiction novel
Lord of Light by
Roger Zelazny. In this novel certain colonists from Earth gain control of high technology on a faraway planet and rule it as Hindu gods. Yama is the genius behind most of the technology.
* In the
Spriggan (manga) Spriggan manga, Yama was a virus programmed from ancient text that overran an ARCAM compound in the United States, brainwashing its occupants to kill intruder by flashing the words "KILL THEM ALL!"
See also
*
Hindu mythology
*
Hindu deities
*
List of Hindu deities
*
List of Hinduism-related articles
*
History of India
*
Hindu scriptures
External links
-
Dying, Yamaraja and Yamadutas
-
Painting of Yama
-
Yama's subordinance to Vishnu
-
Thangka Painting of Yama
-
Foundations of Yoga - Discussion of Yama and Niyama, by Swami Nirmalananda Giri
{{HinduMythology}}
{{Buddhism2}}
{{Yoga}}
Category:Adityas
Category:Lokapala
Category:Buddhism in Japan
Category:Buddhist mythology
Category:Death gods
Category:Hindu gods
Category:Japanese gods
Category:Yoga
Category:YuYu Hakusho
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