Swami Vishnu Tirtha

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Swami Vishnu Tirtha (?–1969), also known as Munilal Swami, was a sannyasin, writer, and guru with a prominent place in the Shaktipat tradition of Siddhayoga. He was born on an unknown date in Jhajjar, Haryana, India.[1] He stayed with an uncle while obtaining an undergraduate degree, then married and was employed as a teacher in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh while he obtained a postgraduate degree and a baccalaureate in law from Aligarh Muslim University. He then practised as a lawyer in the Ghaziabad District of Meerut.

Munilal and his wife raised a son and daughter. After the marriages of his children and the death of his spouse he decided to travel to Rishikesh in search of enlightenment. At the Swarg Ashram in Rishikesh he received Shaktipat initiation from Yogananda Maharaj in 1933. After travels to many holy places around Badrinath and Kedarnath, in 1939 Munilal expressed a desire for initiation as a renunciate (sannyasin). Yogananda directed him to Swami Shankar Purushottam Tirtha in Benaras, who initiated him at the Mohan Ashram, Haridwar near the bank of the Ganges. His name then became Swami Vishnu Tirtha. At the direction of Yogananda, he proceeded toward Indore and finally settled in Dewas where he laid the foundation for the Narayan Kuti Sanyas Ashram.

Vishnu Tirtha initiated many spiritual aspirants into the system of Shaktipat (descent of energy) and wrote a number of books. His most memorable work in English is Devatma Shakti, a study of the Divine Power (Kundalini Shakti) and the science of Shaktipat, based on traditions recorded in ancient scriptures supplemented by direct experiences. In the book, Devatma Shakti (Kundalini), Vishnu Tirtha observed: “We have pointed out repeatedly that no real progress in spirituality is possible unless an aspirant gets his kundalini power awakened, and it has also been pointed out that the easiest way of awakening that power is through initiation by shaktipat by a spiritual master.”[2]


Vishnu Tirtha had a profound love for the Ganges River and he spent around two months a year in Yog Shri Peeth Ashram in Rishikesh after his disciple Swami Shivom Tirtha and others carried out the construction of the centre in 1965. He left his body in 1969.

Vishnu Tirtha’s mountain like personality can be understood from Churning of the Heart (Parts I, II, III) written by his disciple Swami ShivOm Tirtha. Here a Guru is sculpting a disciple from a human being. One of his Guru Bandhus (disciple of same Guru) Devendraji Vigyani Maharaj described him as a person without any hint of sin.

Bibliography

  • Devatma Shakti (Kundalini) Divine Power - (in English) Dec. 1948, Yoga Shri Peeth Trust, Rishikesh, India.
  • Adhyatma Vikas
  • Atma Prabodh
  • Geetatatwamrit
  • Prana Tattva
  • Prityabhigyahridyam (commentary)
  • Sadhana Sanket
  • Saundya Lahiri (commentary)
  • Shaktipat
  • Shiva Sutra Prabodhini
  • Upanishadvani

See also

References

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  2. Swami Vishnu Tirtha, Devatma Shakti (Kundalini) Divine Power, Chapter “Secret of Upasana (Worship)” (Delhi, India, Swami Shivom Tirtha, 1993), p. 129.

External links