The Great Madhva Acharya
(1238-1317 A.D.)![]()
Sri Madhvacarya, also known as Vasudeva, Ananda Tirtha and Purnaprajna, is one of India’s greatest theologians. He is the founder of dvaita philosophy, and along with Sankaracarya, is one of the most important commentators on the Upanisads, Bhagavad-gita and the Brahma-sutras. His doctrine asserts that this world is real and that there is an eternal and immutable difference between the individual soul and God.
What is known of Madhva’s personal life is largely taken from the Madhva-vijaya, a work by Narayana Bhatta, who was the son of a direct disciple of Madhva. Madhvacarya was born of Tulu speaking parents in the Karnataka region of South-west India near present day Udupi. The Madhva-vijaya mentions how the young Vasudeva, Madhva’s boyhood name, expressed a desire to become an ascetic as early as age 8.
Madhva’s parents naturally objected
and so it was not until he was about 16 years of age that Madhva was able
to leave home and become a sannyasi. From then on the young Vasudeva became
known as Ananda Tirtha, the name given to him by his sannyasa guru. Ananda
Tirtha later assumed the name Madhva by which he is most commonly known
today. In many of his writings Madhva openly identifies himself as the
third incarnation of mukhya-prana (Primal Breath) alluded to in the Rg
Veda. It is
said that mukhya-prana takes the
form of the wind-god (Vayudeva) and descends into this mortal world in
three successive incarnations: as Hanuman, the follower of Rama, as Bhimasena,
one of the Pandava, and finally as Madhva, who in Kali-yuga appears in
the guise of a sannyasi. Ananda Tirtha’s followers readily accept and worship
him as Madhva, the incarnation of Vayudeva. Sometimes Ananda Tirtha is
also
known as Purnaprajna due to his
display of vast learning.
Madhva’s childhood, like most great saints in this world, is filled with miracles and wondrous events. On one such occasion Madhva’s father safely carried him as an infant through a jungle infested with man-eating tigers in order to dedicate him at the temple of Anantesvara in Udupi. It is said that Madhva, as a child, often went missing from home only to by found worshipping God and discussing philosophy with the priests in the nearby temples. Madhva once saved his father from a debt collector by miraculously satisfying the man with a handful of seeds instead of coins. It is said that Madhva had no need to learn the alphabet. Instead he spent his time wrestling and swimming. When the examinations came the young Madhva easily passed, much to the consternations of his teachers.
As Aristotelian logic dominated education during the medieval days of Europe, so Sankaracarya’s advaita-vedanta dominated Vedic education during the days of Madhva. We are told how Sankara’s advaita-vedanta produced a profound dissatisfaction in the mind of the young Madhva, which often brought him into conflict with his teachers. In fact Madhva’s objection to advaita-vedanta became the most compelling force in this life and he spent much of his adult life arguing against this view of the world.
After studying in Udupi, Madhva
traveled east to Tamil Nadu where he continued to meet and debate with
advaita scholars. Throughout his life, wherever Madhva traveled, he vigorously
engaged in debate, not only with advaitins, but also Jains, Buddhists and
nyayayikas. This first tour was most important for
Madhva because it allowed him to
see firsthand that the followers of Ramanuja also objected to Sankara’s
advaita-vedanta. He witnessed how they had attacked Sankara, and he realized
that the monolithic walls of advaita were not impervious after all. As
a result Madhvacarya became determined to establish his own school of Vedic
thought, free of what he considered the lack of revelation of truth of
Sankara’s interpretation of the Vedas.
Madhva soon returned to Udupi, but after a short time he again found himself yearning for more travel. This time he desired to make a pilgrimage to North India. In particular, he wanted to visit Veda Vyasa at Badari in the northern Himalayas. In those days it was thought that Vyasa still resided on earth in a remote place in these mountains. Not much is known about the route Madhva took or what occurred along the way, but after arriving in Badari he mysteriously disappeared one night. We are told that he had ascended alone to the mythical abode of Vyasa at Mahabadari. Many months passed and Madhva’s followers thought that he had perished in the desolate mountains. When he finally appeared he was resplendent and joyful. He had received the blessings of Vyasa. Upon his return to Udupi, he immediately began to write his famous Brahma-sutra commentary.
With the zeal of Hanuman he began
his missionary work. As his youth Madhva was a superb athlete in
wrestling and water-sports. As
an adult he now used his physical stamina and sonorous voice to travel
and preach. Madhva was so effective in his teaching that he soon won the
conversion of his former teachers and many other learned men to his new
school of Vedic thought.
The Madhva-vijaya describes the
effect Madhva had on his audience: "People came in large numbers to see
that Madhvacarya, who shone like the moon with his gentle smile, lotus-eyes,
golden complexion and words of blessing. He had the gait of a young lion,
feet and hands like sprouts, nails like rubies; thighs like the trunk of
an elephant, a broad chest and long muscular arms. Indeed, those who made
sacred images
considered him the model for their
art."
Soon Madhva started his own temple
in Udupi by installing a beautiful image of Bala Krishna, the child form
of God. It is said that he obtained this image by rescuing a ship in distress
near the coast of Udupi. Madhvacarya signaled the ship to shore by waving
lamps and flags. Convinced that it was through the grace of Madhva that
the ship was saved, the ship’s captain offered him a gift. Madhva chose
the clay (gopi-candana) that was used for the ship’s ballast. Upon washing
the clay, Madhvacarya discovered a beautiful image of Sri Krishna, which
He personally carried to Udupi and began to worship. This image of
Krishna is still worshipped today
in the central temple of Udupi, The Krishna Mutt. Madhva’s Udupi temple
is one of the most important Krishna temples in all of India. It is said
that the lamp beside this image of Krishna was lit by Madhvacarya himself
and has never been extinguished.
During his lifetime, Madhvacarya
wrote many important commentaries on the Upanisads, Bhagavad-gita,
Brahma-sutra, Mahabharata and the
Bhagavata-purana. In addition, he wrote many original works that dealt
with important aspects of his new doctrine. In all, he wrote 37 works.
Not only did Madhvacarya’s powerful literary output help to establish his
teachings during his own lifetime, it has inspired a vast literary tradition
that continues to the present day.
The final years of Madhva were spent
in teaching and worship. In the end he instructed his followers not to
sit still, but to go forth and preach. His biographers tell how Madhvacarya
disappeared one evening while reciting his favorite text, the Aitareya
Upanisad. Gandharvas and other heavenly beings
gathered in the sky above him and
showered flowers. They describe how he suddenly disappeared from underneath
this mass of flowers and now he now resides, beyond ordinary vision, with
Veda Vyasa at the high mountain hermitage of Badari.
Besure to read the 100 refutations of the Mayavada conception composed by Sri Madhvacarya
End