Thursday, March 19, 2026

The Role of Agni in Vedic Ritual and Symbolism

 Why the sacred flame has never gone out in Indian civilisation

Abstract: When a Hindu couple gets married, a fire is lit. When a child is born, a fire is lit. When a person dies, a fire consumes the body. When the morning puja begins in a home, a flame is kindled. When a new building is consecrated, a havan is performed. Across the entire arc of Hindu life, from birth to death and every sacred threshold in between, fire is present. This is not coincidence, and it is not mere tradition inherited without understanding. It flows directly from one of the most ancient and profound of all Vedic insights: that Agni, the deity of fire, is not simply a force of nature but the living bridge between the human world and the divine.

This article explores who Agni is in the Vedic understanding, what role fire plays in Vedic ritual, and what the deeper symbolism of Agni reveals about the ancient Indian vision of the cosmos, the self, and the relationship between them. The language is kept deliberately simple, because the truth that Agni points toward belongs not to scholars alone but to every person who has ever felt something stir inside them when they looked into a flame.

Keywords: Agni, Vedic Fire, Rigveda, Yagna, Havan, Vedic Deity, Sacred Fire, Symbolism, Purification, Divine Messenger, Jataveda, Vaishvanara, Agnihotra, Vedic Cosmology, Transformation, Samskaras, Sanatan Dharma

Introduction: The God Who Lives in Your Kitchen

Open the Rigveda, the oldest of the Vedas and one of the oldest surviving texts of any civilisation on earth, and you will find something remarkable on the very first page. The very first word of the very first hymn of the entire Rigveda is not a description of the cosmos, not a prayer to a sky god, not an invocation of some distant and powerful deity. The very first word is simply: Agni.

Agni I praise, the household priest, the divine minister of the sacrifice, the invoker, greatest bestower of treasure. The sages began their greatest collection of hymns with fire. Not the sun, not the sky, not the great god Indra who commands hundreds of hymns. Fire. The flame burning in the home. The fire that cooks food, that warms the family, that drives away the darkness of night. The sages saw in that ordinary, domestic, everyday flame something so sacred and so significant that they placed it first among all things worth singing about. Understanding why is the entire purpose of this article.

Agni in the Rigveda: Who Is This Deity?

The Many Faces of One Fire

Agni is one of the most frequently invoked deities in the entire Rigveda, with more than two hundred hymns addressed directly to him. But what strikes a careful reader of these hymns is not just how often Agni is praised but how many different things he is simultaneously said to be. In one hymn he is the household priest. In another he is the messenger of the gods. In a third he is the immortal who lives among mortals. In a fourth he is the one who knows all things, present at every birth and every death. In a fifth he is described as hidden in wood, sleeping inside plants and trees, waiting to be awakened by the friction of two sticks.

This multiplicity is not inconsistency. It reflects the Vedic understanding that fire appears in multiple forms across the natural world, and that the deity Agni is the single divine principle that animates all of those forms. There is the fire in the home, the sacrificial fire on the altar, the fire of lightning in the storm cloud, the fire of the sun in the sky, the fire hidden in wood waiting to be released, and the fire of digestion within the human body itself. The Rigveda sees all of these as manifestations of one Agni, the way we might understand electricity as one phenomenon that can power a lamp, a motor, or a thunderbolt. One principle, many appearances.

One of Agni's most important names is Jataveda, which means the one who knows all beings. The sages believed that because Agni is present at every sacred moment of every life, from the first birth-fire to the funeral pyre, he carries within himself the complete knowledge of every soul that has ever passed through his light. Another great name is Vaishvanara, meaning the one who belongs to all human beings, or the universal self. This name points toward the deepest of all Agni's symbolic meanings, which the Upanishads later develop with extraordinary subtlety.

Agni as the Divine Messenger: The Bridge Between Worlds

The most practically important role of Agni in Vedic ritual is that of the divine messenger, the one who carries offerings from the human world to the world of the gods. When you place an offering of ghee, grain, or herbs into a consecrated fire, the fire transforms the physical substance into something that transcends the physical. The smoke rises. The essence of the offering travels upward. Agni, as the carrier of that offering, is the living connection between the seen world and the unseen.

The Vedic term for this role is Duta, meaning messenger or ambassador. Agni is the cosmic ambassador, appointed by the gods themselves to reside among human beings and to maintain the channel of communication between the two realms. The Rigveda asks him repeatedly to summon the other gods to the sacrifice, to seat them on the ritual grass, and to ensure that the offerings reach their intended recipients. Without Agni, the sacrifice cannot work, because without Agni there is no way for the human offering to cross from the material to the divine plane.

This is not primitive magic. It is a sophisticated philosophical statement about the nature of transformation. Fire does not merely heat things. It transforms them. Wood becomes heat and light and ash. Ghee becomes fragrance and warmth. The physical becomes energetic. The visible becomes invisible. The Vedic sages saw in this fundamental process of transformation by fire an image of deep spiritual truth: that what appears material is, at a deeper level, pure energy and consciousness, and that the passage from one level of reality to the other is always through some form of fire.

Agni in Vedic Ritual: The Sacred Fire in Practice

The Yagna: A Universe in Miniature

The central Vedic ritual is the yagna, sometimes written as yajna, which is often translated as sacrifice but is better understood as a sacred offering, a deliberate act of giving to the divine through the medium of fire. The yagna is one of the oldest continuously practised ritual forms in human history, performed in India without significant interruption for at least three thousand years.

The physical structure of the Vedic yagna is itself deeply symbolic. The sacred fire is kindled in a specially constructed pit or altar called the kunda, whose shape varies depending on the purpose of the ritual but is always geometrically precise. The most common shapes are the square, associated with Agni himself and with earthly purposes; the circle, associated with Vishnu and cosmic harmony; and the half-moon, associated with Soma and with healing. These are not arbitrary choices. Every dimension of the yagna, from the shape of the fire pit to the specific wood used to kindle the flame, carries deliberate meaning.

The offerings placed into the fire are equally precise. Ghee, clarified butter, is the primary offering in almost all rituals, its pure fat feeding the flame with remarkable intensity. Specific herbs, grains, woods, and resins are added according to the purpose of the ritual. The priest chants specific Vedic mantras as each offering is made, the sound of the mantra itself understood as an offering, because in the Vedic understanding, sound at its most refined is as real and as powerful as any physical substance. The yagna is thus a total engagement of all the senses and all the faculties in the act of offering to the divine.

The yagna is understood in the Vedas not only as a human gift to the gods but as a participation in the cosmic order. The Rigveda describes the entire universe as a kind of eternal yagna, in which everything gives of itself to sustain everything else. The sun gives its light. The rain gives its water. The earth gives its nourishment. The human being, by performing the yagna consciously and with full understanding, is aligning themselves with this cosmic generosity, declaring in the language of ritual that they understand their place in the great web of mutual giving that sustains all existence.

The Agnihotra and the Samskaras: Fire in Daily Life and at Life's Thresholds

Not every Vedic fire ritual requires an elaborate kunda and days of preparation. The most fundamental of all Vedic fire practices is the Agnihotra, a simple offering of ghee and rice into a small sacred fire performed twice daily, at sunrise and sunset. The Agnihotra is described in the Yajurveda and the Atharvaveda as the foundation of all other rituals, the daily maintenance of the sacred connection between the household and the divine order.

The timing of the Agnihotra is deliberate. Sunrise and sunset are the two great threshold moments of the day, when the boundary between the visible and invisible worlds is most palpably felt. By performing the fire ritual precisely at these moments, the practitioner aligns their own daily cycle of waking and resting with the cosmic rhythm of light and darkness. Modern researchers who have studied the practice have found that the specific combination of substances burned during Agnihotra creates smoke with measurable air-purifying properties, suggesting that the ancient sages embedded practical wisdom inside ritual form, ensuring it remained alive even when the intellectual reasons for it had been temporarily forgotten.

Beyond daily practice, Agni is present at every significant threshold of individual life through the samskaras, the sacred rites of passage. At the Vivah, the marriage ceremony, the couple circles the sacred fire seven times, each round accompanied by specific vows called the Saptapadi. The fire is the witness to their union, the divine presence before whom their promises are made. A Hindu marriage is not considered complete without this circling of Agni, because it is Agni who bears witness for all three worlds.

At the Antyesti, the final rite of death, fire takes its place as the central transformative agent. The body, composed of five elements, is returned to those elements through Agni's purifying agency. The Rigveda has specific hymns for this moment, asking Agni to carry the departed soul gently to the realm of the ancestors, to restore the body to the cosmos from which it came, and to free the essential self for its continuing journey. The Vedic understanding of cremation is not the destruction of a person but the liberation of one, with Agni as the compassionate and knowing agent of that liberation.

The Deeper Symbolism: Agni as the Self Within

Vaishvanara and the Fire of Consciousness

The Chandogya Upanishad, in one of its most celebrated passages, identifies Agni Vaishvanara not with the external fire on the altar but with the fire within the human body itself. The universal Agni is described as having the sky as his head, the sun as his eye, the air as his vital breath, the middle space as his body, and the earth as his feet. In other words, the cosmic Agni is not separate from the cosmos. He is the cosmos itself understood as a living, burning, transforming intelligence. And the same fire that burns in the cosmic altar burns within the human body as the fire of metabolism, perception, and conscious awareness.

This identification between the external sacred fire and the internal fire of consciousness is one of the most elegant expressions of the Vedic principle of correspondence between the macrocosm and the microcosm. The universe is a great yagna, an eternal act of offering and transformation. The human body is a small yagna, in which food is offered to the internal Agni, which transforms it into energy, thought, and awareness. Every meal is, in the Vedic understanding, a sacred act performed at the altar of the inner fire. This is why traditional Hindus offer food to God before eating, and why eating is sometimes accompanied by a brief prayer. The food is an offering to Agni Vaishvanara, the divine fire dwelling within every living being.

Agni as Purification: What Remains After the Fire

In both ritual and symbol, Agni carries a profound association with purification. In the Vedic understanding, fire purifies because it is the supreme agent of transformation. It takes what is gross and makes it subtle. It takes what is dense and releases its essential energy. The smoke of the sacred fire carries impurities upward and disperses them. The ash that remains after a fire is considered sacred precisely because it represents what survives after fire has done its complete work. The vibhuti, or sacred ash, applied to the forehead in Hindu worship, is a reminder that what fire cannot destroy is what is truly real.

The Mundaka Upanishad uses this image in its teaching about knowledge and liberation. Just as fire reduces all fuel to ashes, the fire of true knowledge, called Jnana, reduces all karma and all ignorance to ashes. The purification that Agni performs on the physical plane, transforming gross matter into light and energy, is an image of the purification that spiritual knowledge performs on the plane of consciousness, transforming ignorance and ego into wisdom and freedom. Agni is therefore a symbol not only of ritual purification but of the deepest possible inner transformation.

Conclusion: The Flame That Has Never Gone Out

There is something extraordinary about the fact that the very first word of the Rigveda is the same presence at the last ritual of a Hindu life. Agni opens the great hymn-book of the Vedas, and Agni carries the soul home at death. This reflects a profound philosophical truth that the Vedic sages embedded at the very structure of their most sacred text: fire is the beginning and the end, the medium through which life enters the world and through which it departs, and the sustaining presence at every sacred moment in between.

For the ordinary person today, the presence of Agni in daily Hindu life need not be seen as mere inherited custom. The diya lit at evening puja, the camphor flame circled before the deity in the temple, the small havan at a house-warming or a wedding, the flame of the incense stick burning on the family altar, all of these are living connections to one of the oldest and deepest insights of human civilisation: that fire is the visible form of an invisible truth, that transformation is the nature of all existence, and that the divine is not somewhere far away but is as close as the flame on your kitchen altar.

The sages looked at fire and saw everything. They saw the messenger between worlds. They saw the purifier of all that is impure. They saw the transformer of the gross into the subtle. They saw the cosmic appetite that sustains all life. And in the fire burning within every living being, in the warmth of awareness and the light of consciousness that make experience possible, they recognised Agni Vaishvanara, the universal self, the one flame that burns in every form and is, if you look closely enough, the very same flame that burns in you.

Agnim ile purohitam yajnasya devam ritvijam

Hotaram ratnadhatamam

I praise Agni, the household priest, divine minister of the sacrifice,

the invoker, greatest bestower of treasure (Rigveda 1.1.1)

 

The Long Road Home: The Kashmiri Pandit Exodus of 1990, Its Root Causes, and a Policy Framework for Dignified, Permanent Return

Abstract: The forced displacement of Kashmiri Pandits from the Kashmir Valley in early 1990 represents one of the most significant cases of internal displacement in post-independence India and one of the least internationally recognized. In the span of a few weeks in January and February of 1990, an estimated 100,000 to 300,000 members of this indigenous Hindu community fled their millennia-old homeland under threat from Islamist insurgents, amid a collapse of administrative governance and the targeted assassination of community leaders. More than three decades later, approximately 62,000 registered Pandit families remain in exile, primarily in refugee settlements in Jammu and New Delhi. This article examines the structural, political, and ideological causes of the exodus; evaluates the successive government rehabilitation packages that have largely failed; and presents a comprehensive, multi-dimensional policy roadmap grounded in comparative international experience, human rights law, and ground realities of the Kashmir Valley. The article argues that meaningful, permanent, and dignified return is achievable, but requires far more than financial incentives. It demands security guarantees, legal property restitution, political representation, social reconciliation with the Muslim majority community, and a fundamental shift in state commitment from rhetoric to implementation.

Keywords: Kashmiri Pandits, internal displacement, forced migration, ethnic cleansing, minority rights, rehabilitation policy, Kashmir conflict, reconciliation, India

Introduction: A Civilizational Wound That Has Not Healed

There is a particular kind of grief that comes from losing a home not to flood or fire, but to fear. The Kashmiri Pandits know this grief with an intimacy that has stretched now across more than three decades. In the bitter cold of January 1990, across the Kashmir Valley's ancient towns and villages, mosques began broadcasting threats through loudspeakers late into the night. The slogans were chilling in their clarity: "Raliv, Galive, Chaliv" - convert to Islam, die, flee from Kashmir. Thousands of families packed what little they could carry and fled in darkness. They had no idea they would never come back.

The displacement of the Kashmiri Pandit community is a humanitarian tragedy that deserves both the academic rigor it seldom receives and the moral clarity it is too often denied. This is not a contested story in its essential facts, even if the precise numbers and the relative weights of causation remain subjects of scholarly debate. What is not in debate is the outcome: an indigenous Hindu minority that had called the Kashmir Valley home for over 5,000 years was stripped of that home in a matter of weeks, and has not been able to return in any meaningful numbers in the 35 years since.

This article proceeds in four parts. First, it situates the exodus historically and details the specific causes that produced it. Second, it assesses the conditions on the ground that have kept the Pandits from returning. Third, it critically evaluates the government rehabilitation efforts made so far. And fourth, it offers a detailed, concrete policy roadmap that, if implemented with genuine political will, could create the conditions for permanent, dignified, and voluntary return. The goal is not a demographic engineering exercise. It is justice.

Historical Background: A Community and Its Kashmir

The Kashmiri Pandits are Kashmiri Brahmins whose continuous recorded presence in the Kashmir Valley predates most modern civilizations. They were the custodians of the Shaivite Hindu tradition in one of its most philosophically sophisticated expressions, contributors to Sanskrit literature, administrators of considerable influence under successive rulers, and, crucially, people who defined themselves as Kashmiri first. Their identity was inseparable from the geography of the valley, its rivers, its temples, its particular fusion of Hindu and Sufi spiritual practice that gave birth to the cultural concept of Kashmiriyat.

By the 1941 census, the Pandit population stood at approximately 78,800, representing around 6 percent of the valley's population. Their numbers declined gradually over subsequent decades due to land redistribution policies following the accession to India, the political marginalization of their community after the gerrymandering of electoral constituencies in the 1960s, and economic migration to mainland India. By 1981, they numbered approximately 124,000 in the Kashmir Division. By 1990, estimates range from 140,000 to 170,000.

These numbers matter because they contextualize the scale of what happened. Within three months in early 1990, the great majority of this community vanished from a land their ancestors had inhabited for millennia. By 2011, only around 3,000 families remained in the valley. The CIA World Factbook at one point estimated the displaced at 300,000. Whatever the precise number, the community's near-total erasure from its homeland is a documented fact.

The Causes of the Exodus: A Multi-Layered Analysis

Political Collapse and Administrative Failure

The exodus did not emerge from nowhere. Its seeds were planted through a decades of institutional dysfunction. When the Farooq Abdullah government was dismissed and Governor's Rule was imposed, the administrative machinery was already compromised. On 19 January 1990, as mosques broadcast threats and mobs gathered in the streets of Srinagar, not a single police officer appeared. The CM had reportedly fled to London. Law and order had ceased to exist.

The newly appointed Governor Jagmohan's role remains fiercely contested. The Kashmiri Muslim perspective holds that he encouraged the Pandits to leave, using their departure to impose a harsh security crackdown without worrying about civilian casualties. The Kashmiri Pandit perspective holds that he offered some of them transport and safe passage when no protection was forthcoming from any quarter. The truth, as Special Commissioner Wajahat Habibullah noted, is that no community could reasonably be expected to stay when their neighbors were being murdered and mosques were broadcasting calls for them to leave or die.

Islamist Insurgency and Targeted Violence

The militancy that engulfed Kashmir in 1989 and 1990, grew increasingly powerful Islamist factions, most notably Hizbul Mujahideen, that were both ideologically hostile to non-Muslims and materially supported by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence. The ISI established training camps across the border in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, financed, armed, and ideologically radicalised fighters, and channeled them back into the valley with a specifically communal agenda.

The EFSAS has documented that Hizbul Mujahideen explicitly presented Kashmiri Pandits with three choices: convert, be killed, or leave, a formula that echoed the historical treatment of religious minorities in contexts of Islamist coercion. What followed was a systematic campaign of targeted killing of Pandit community leaders, judges, lawyers, academics, and government officials. Among those murdered was Justice Neelkanth Ganjoo, a retired sessions judge who had sentenced JKLF founder Maqbool Bhat to death. His killing on a Srinagar street in November 1989 sent a message that no Pandit, regardless of stature or profession, was safe.

The Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti, after conducting surveys in 2008 and 2009, estimated that 399 Kashmiri Hindus were killed by insurgents from 1990 to 2011, with 75 percent of those deaths occurring in the first year of the insurgency. The Indian Home Ministry's own data records 1,406 Hindu civilian fatalities between 1991 and 2005. The cases of individual victims, Girija Tickoo who was gang-raped and murdered; Sarwanand Koul Premi, a poet and scholar who translated the Bhagavad Gita into Kashmiri, shot dead in the jungle with his son, represent not just individual tragedies but a community under coordinated assault.

The Role of Local Complicity and Silence

This is perhaps the most politically sensitive dimension of the exodus, and the one most critical for any honest analysis. The broader Muslim civil society of Kashmir remained largely silent in the face of what was happening. Mosques that could have been used to call for protection of the minority were instead being used to broadcast threats. Local police, predominantly Muslim, had largely withdrawn or disappeared. The silence of the majority was itself a form of complicity, even when its members were not direct perpetrators.

This is not an accusation designed to condemn an entire community. It is an observation that is essential to understanding what the Pandits experienced and why they left. The feeling of abandonment by neighbors, by the state, by the institutions of civil society was as devastating as the physical threat itself. Any policy for return that does not honestly address this dimension is built on a foundation that cannot hold.

The Role of Pakistan and Cross-Border Jihad

The external dimension of the exodus is well-documented. Pakistan's military establishment and its intelligence service, the ISI, provided strategic direction, training, weapons, and ideology to the Kashmir insurgency from its inception. Lashkar-e-Taiba, responsible for the 2003 Nadimarg massacre in which 24 Pandits including infants and elderly women were lined up and shot, operated with ISI support. The UK Parliament's Early Day Motions on the Kashmir conflict have specifically acknowledged the role of "cross-border Islamic terrorists" in the events of 1990. The weaponization of religion as a political instrument, directed from across the border and amplified by local ideologues, transformed what might have been a political insurgency into a communal cleansing.

The State of Exile: 35 Years in Limbo

The Pandits who fled in 1990 did not imagine they were leaving forever. They took a change of clothes and assumed they would return in weeks. Instead, most of their children have grown up in tent camps and transit accommodations in Jammu, in cramped apartments in New Delhi's migrant colonies, in an enforced diaspora across India and abroad. As of the most recent data, approximately 62,000 Kashmiri migrant families remain registered with the Relief and Rehabilitation Commissioner, 40,000 in Jammu, 20,000 in Delhi, and 2,000 scattered elsewhere. Unofficial estimates of the displaced population, including those not registered, run significantly higher.

The conditions in camps like Jagti on the outskirts of Jammu, home to over 4,200 registered families have been the subject of criticism from humanitarian organizations. Many families lived for years in tents and prefabricated shelters in extreme heat and cold, without adequate sanitation, clean water, or healthcare. The psychological toll of displacement has been massive and largely unaddressed. Elderly Pandits have died in exile, having never returned to see their homes. A second and third generation has grown up with Kashmir as mythology rather than memory, knowing their homeland only through stories, photographs, and a grief that has been passed down like an inheritance.

The Indian government has not granted the displaced Pandits the status of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) under international law, reportedly fearing that IDP status would attract international oversight of what it regards as a purely internal matter. Instead, they are classified as "migrants," a euphemism that obscures the coercive nature of their departure and strips them of entitlements they would otherwise hold under established international frameworks.

Government Rehabilitation Efforts: A Record of Promises Unmet

India's central government has launched two major rehabilitation packages for Kashmiri Pandits, in 2008 and 2015. The 2008 comprehensive package, valued at approximately Rs. 1,618 crore, included financial assistance for house repair or construction, transit accommodations in the valley, continuation of cash relief, scholarships, and employment provisions. The 2015 Prime Minister's Development Package committed additional funds including Rs. 500 crore earmarked for rehabilitation and 6,000 transit homes to be constructed in the valley.

The results have been deeply disappointing. By 2022, only around 1,000 of the promised 6,000 transit housing units had been completed. Of the 6,000 government jobs announced, approximately 5,500 Pandits are currently employed under PM packages in the valley. A total of roughly 3,800 migrants had been rehabilitated through employment provisions by the time of the most recent data, with around 520 returning post the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019.

Those who did return to take up government jobs in the valley have faced a new set of hardships. Many were posted far from their home districts, in remote areas, with meager salaries. Some settled alone, leaving their families in Jammu. Several were denied promotions. And the security environment around them remained volatile. The murder of Rahul Bhat, a Kashmiri Pandit government employee shot dead inside his government office in Budgam in May 2022, triggered a wave of protests and a mass exodus of the 5,500 employed Pandits from their transit accommodations, demanding safer relocation. After five months of protest, they were effectively forced back to their posts with no meaningful security upgrade.

The political dimension of the failure is worth naming plainly. The BJP, which won majority of the votes cast by Kashmiri Pandit migrants in the 2014 elections on the back of explicit promises of return with dignity, honor, and assured livelihood, has delivered markedly less than it promised across a decade in power. The Congress-led UPA governments before it were no different. The community has been, in the words of many of its own leaders, used as a political football. Their grief has been instrumentalized for electoral gain while the practical conditions for their return have been left largely unaddressed.

Why Return Has Not Happened: An Honest Assessment of Barriers

Before prescribing solutions, intellectual honesty requires a clear-eyed look at why, despite 35 years of expressed desire to return, the Pandits have largely not done so. The barriers are multiple, interacting, and in some cases, self-reinforcing.

Security remains the paramount concern. The targeted killing of Pandits has not stopped. Hybrid terrorism operatives embedded in civilian populations, often young men radicalized online has continued to claim Pandit lives even in the period since the abrogation of Article 370 was expected to improve conditions. The perception of danger is not irrational; it is grounded in recent, documented experience.

Property is the second major barrier. An estimated 50,000 Pandit agricultural families lost ancestral lands. Over 20,000 businesses were destroyed, looted, or illegally occupied. Homes were taken over by militants, by neighbors, by squatters. Some have been demolished or converted. The J&K Migrant Immovable Property Act of 1997 was meant to prevent distress sales, but its enforcement has been weak and the process of property restoration has been slow, opaque, and frustrating. As of the most recent data, only 610 families had their properties returned. This is a fraction of what was taken.

Social estrangement is a third, and perhaps the most complex, barrier. Three and a half decades have passed. The Pandit community and the Kashmiri Muslim community have grown apart in ways that go beyond political grievance. Many younger Pandits have built lives, careers, and identities in Jammu, Delhi, Pune, and abroad. Many younger Kashmiri Muslims have no living memory of Pandits as neighbors, colleagues, and friends. The social fabric of Kashmiriyat, the centuries-old syncretic culture that bound the two communities has frayed. Rebuilding it requires more than infrastructure. It requires genuine will on both sides, sustained over time.

Political representation is a fourth barrier. Kashmiri Pandits have been effectively disenfranchised within the Kashmir political system since the gerrymandering of constituencies in the 1960s. Without a meaningful political voice in the governance of the territory they are being asked to return to, they have no structural ability to shape the conditions of their own security, property rights, or cultural preservation.

A Policy Framework for Dignified, Permanent Return

What follows is a comprehensive, sequenced policy framework. It is organized around five pillars, each of which is necessary but not individually sufficient. The interdependence of these pillars is deliberate: piecemeal approaches have been tried and failed. Only a holistic strategy, implemented with consistent political will, has a chance of succeeding.

Pillar I: Security - The Non-Negotiable Foundation

No community will return to a place where they reasonably fear for their lives. Security guarantees for returning Pandits must be concrete, not rhetorical.

The government must establish dedicated, professionally trained community protection units stationed in areas of Pandit return. These cannot be makeshift arrangements. They should be modeled on the specialized police protection units that have been successfully deployed in post-conflict settings in Northern Ireland and in parts of the Balkans. Intelligence sharing between central and state agencies on threats specific to Pandit communities must be formalized. The 2022 killing of Rahul Bhat inside his government office demonstrates that current protocols are inadequate.

Zero tolerance prosecution of violence against returned Pandits must be mandated. Every case of threat, intimidation, or attack must be investigated by agencies with clear accountability timelines, and the results must be made publicly available. Impunity has been the norm; visibility and accountability must replace it. A special fast-track judicial mechanism, with dedicated prosecutors and investigators, should handle cases involving violence against minorities in the valley.

The question of settlements versus dispersed return must be resolved through community consultation, not government imposition. Many Pandit organizations have proposed the development of self-sufficient satellite townships within the valley planned communities with integrated security, infrastructure, housing, schools, hospitals, and economic zones, within which Pandits can establish themselves before integration into the wider valley society. This is not the same as the Israeli settler model; it is a transitional arrangement designed to allow a community displaced for 35 years to re-establish safety and belonging before full social integration. The township proposal deserves serious policy consideration.

Pillar II: Property Restitution and Economic Rehabilitation

The return of property is both a practical necessity and a moral imperative. A displaced community cannot be asked to start over from scratch in its own homeland. The mechanisms for property restitution need radical strengthening.

A Special Property Commission, staffed by judges and technical experts, should be given a fixed mandate, three years to adjudicate and resolve all outstanding Pandit property claims. The Commission should have authority to compel the eviction of unauthorized occupants, order compensation from the state where eviction is not practical, and ensure that agricultural lands are restored or fairly compensated. Compensation must reflect current market value, not the depreciated values of three decades ago.

Financial support for returnees must be restructured. The current package of Rs. 7.5 lakh for house repair is insufficient in the context of present construction costs in the valley. Grants should be re-indexed to current costs. Low-interest, long-tenure loans for business establishment should be made available through dedicated banking channels with simplified application processes. Tax holidays for businesses established by returnees within a defined initial period would incentivize economic activity and send a signal of state commitment.

Agricultural land restoration deserves particular attention. Many Pandit families whose ancestral identity was tied to specific plots of land in specific villages should be given priority assistance in actually working those lands again, including crop insurance, access to irrigation infrastructure, and marketing support. This is not merely economic; it is deeply cultural.

Pillar III: Political Representation and Legal Protections

The Kashmiri Pandit community cannot return to a political order in which they have no voice. Political representation is not a luxury for minorities; it is the mechanism through which all other protections are made sustainable.

Reserved seats for Kashmiri Pandits in the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly should be legislated as a transitional measure for a defined period, say two or three electoral cycles to ensure that the community's interests are represented in the governance structure they are returning to. This has precedent in Indian constitutional arrangements for other scheduled communities. The analogy of the Sangha constituency for Buddhist monks in J&K itself shows that creative political accommodation of minority communities is possible within the Indian constitutional framework.

A Minorities Rights Act specific to Jammu and Kashmir, with real enforcement teeth, should be enacted. This Act should include protections against hate speech directed at the Pandit community, provisions for the preservation and restoration of Hindu temples and shrines, and explicit provisions protecting the right to practice Hindu religion publicly in the valley. A dedicated state-level Minorities Commission with investigation authority and statutory power to make binding recommendations to the government should oversee its implementation.

Formal recognition of Kashmiri Pandits as Internally Displaced Persons under Indian law, aligned with the United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, would give the community both legal standing and entitlement to the full range of rehabilitative obligations that IDP status carries. The government's reluctance to grant this status for political reasons is understandable but ultimately counterproductive. International human rights frameworks provide a well-developed roadmap for displacement recovery that India has largely chosen to ignore.

Pillar IV: Social Reconciliation and Community Dialogue

This is the pillar that government policy cannot build alone. The physical infrastructure of return, houses, jobs, police protection means little if the social environment is hostile, indifferent, or cold. The experience of returned communities in post-conflict settings around the world, from Rwanda to Bosnia to Northern Ireland, demonstrates consistently that coexistence requires deliberate, sustained investment in relationship-building between communities that have been estranged by violence.

A Truth and Reconciliation Commission for Kashmir, modeled loosely on the South African experience but adapted to the specific character of the Kashmir conflict, would serve multiple functions. It would create a public, official record of what happened to the Pandits in 1990 and after, one that neither sanitizes the violence nor is weaponized for communal politics. It would give victims a formal space to be heard. It would give perpetrators an opportunity to acknowledge wrongdoing. And it would, over time, produce a shared historical account that both communities can stand on, even if they disagree on some details.

Community dialogue programs, jointly designed by Pandit and Kashmiri Muslim civil society organizations, should be institutionalized at the school and neighborhood level. Cultural exchange programs that reintroduce Kashmiri Pandit heritage, the Shaivite tradition, the classical music, the language, the festivals to a younger Kashmiri Muslim generation that grew up knowing nothing of it would help rebuild the shared cultural identity of Kashmiriyat that the exodus destroyed. Young people from both communities who did not live the events of 1990 are, paradoxically, better placed than their parents to build the relationships that return will require.

The Kashmiri Muslim civil society must be the primary driver of this pillar, not because the government or the Pandit community should be passive, but because the return of Pandits is, in the end, a test of whether Kashmiri Muslim society wants to live in a pluralist Kashmir or not. The encouraging signs are there. Farooq Abdullah's public call for Pandits to "come back home" in late 2024, however rhetorical, reflects a shift in tone from mainstream Kashmiri Muslim political leadership. That shift must be converted into practical, sustained action at the grassroots level.

Pillar V: Temple and Cultural Heritage Restoration

The temples, shrines, cremation grounds, and sacred sites of the Kashmiri Pandit community are among the oldest surviving religious structures in South Asia. Many were desecrated, damaged, or destroyed during and after the insurgency. Hundreds remain in states of severe disrepair, occupied by unauthorized persons, or simply vandalized and abandoned. Their restoration is both a religious right and a cultural necessity.

A dedicated Heritage Restoration Authority, jointly funded by the central government and the J&K administration, should be established with a mandate to identify, document, restore, and protect all Hindu religious sites in the Kashmir Valley. The Temple and Shrines Protection Bill, which Pandit organizations have been demanding for years, should be enacted without further delay. The authority should work with the Archaeological Survey of India, local craftsmen, and Pandit community representatives to ensure that restoration is done with cultural authenticity.

Cultural heritage is not merely sentimental. It is the physical manifestation of a community's claim to belonging in a place. When Pandits can walk into a restored temple in Srinagar or Anantnag and see that their sacred space has been preserved and respected, that experience communicates something no government notification can: that they are welcome back as themselves, not merely as demographic statistics.

The Role of the International Community

The displacement of the Kashmiri Pandits has received far less international attention than comparable cases of minority displacement in other parts of the world. This is partly a function of geopolitics, Kashmir's complexity makes governments cautious about appearing to take sides and partly a function of the Indian government's deliberate policy of framing the issue as an internal matter. Both of these factors have, in effect, allowed a major humanitarian tragedy to persist with minimal external pressure for resolution.

The United Nations Human Rights Council, international human rights organizations including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, and the governments of Western democracies that claim to champion minority rights globally, should formally recognize the Kashmiri Pandit displacement as a case deserving of international attention and advocacy. This need not involve any position on Kashmir's political status or territorial dispute. Minority rights and the right to return to one's homeland are human rights that exist independent of geopolitical positioning.

Diaspora communities of Kashmiri Pandits, particularly in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, have financial resources, political networks, and advocacy capacity that have been underutilized in pressing for the international community's engagement. A coordinated diaspora advocacy strategy, linked to human rights organizations and engaging directly with legislators and foreign ministries, could shift the calculus of international attention in ways that would create useful pressure on the Indian government to accelerate rehabilitation.

Conclusion: Dignity Before Demography

The return of the Kashmiri Pandits to their homeland is not primarily a security problem, a financial problem, or a political problem. It is a moral problem that has been allowed to fester for 35 years because successive governments found it more useful as a political symbol than as a human challenge requiring practical resolution.

The framework outlined in this article, grounded in security guarantees, property restitution, political representation, social reconciliation, and cultural heritage restoration is not a utopian wish list. Every element of it has a precedent in international practice. Post-apartheid South Africa managed truth and reconciliation under far more extreme conditions. Bosnia has rebuilt multiethnic communities after ethnic cleansing. Northern Ireland has institutionalized power-sharing between communities that spent decades killing each other. None of these processes were easy, fast, or perfect. All of them required political courage and community will that is rarely available but can be built.

The Kashmiri Pandits asking to return home are not asking for revenge. They are asking for what every human being is entitled to: the right to live in the place their ancestors have always lived, to pray in their temples, to speak their language, to know their neighbors, and to raise their children without fear. That the Indian state and Kashmiri society together have failed to provide this for 35 years is a disgrace that the region's history will record unflinchingly.

The long road home for the Kashmiri Pandits runs through political courage, genuine security, honest reckoning with history, and the patient, sustained work of building a valley that has room for all its people. It is not too late to begin. But it will be, soon.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Eternal Traveller

 Atman and Its Journey According to the Upanishads

The story of your soul, told by the ancient sages of India

Abstract: Every human being, at some point in their life, asks the same three questions. Where did I come from? What am I, really? And where will I go when this body dies? These are not small questions. They are the most important questions a person can ask. And the ancient sages of India who composed the Upanishads spent their entire lives sitting with these questions, meditating on them, debating them, and eventually arriving at answers of extraordinary depth and beauty.

At the centre of the Upanishadic answers to all three questions is one concept: the Atman. The Atman is the Sanskrit word for the true self, the soul, the inner witness that lies at the heart of every living being. This article tells the story of the Atman as the Upanishads tell it: what the Atman is, how it travels through existence across many lifetimes, what drives that journey, what the journey is ultimately moving toward, and what it feels like when the journey finally ends in liberation. It is told in plain, everyday language, using the stories and analogies that the sages themselves used, so that any curious person can follow and find something personally meaningful in it.

Keywords: Atman, Upanishads, Soul, Reincarnation, Karma, Moksha, Liberation, Jiva, Samsara, Brahman, Katha Upanishad, Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, Chandogya Upanishad, Hindu Philosophy, Self-realisation, Five Sheaths, Kosha, Vedanta

Introduction: You Are Older Than You Think

Close your eyes for a moment and ask yourself a simple question. Not who you are in terms of your name, your job, your family, your nationality. Just ask: what is aware right now? What is it that is reading these words, knowing that it is reading them, noticing the sound of the room, feeling the weight of the chair? Something is doing all of that. Something is present. Something is aware.

Now ask: when did that something begin? Your body began at a specific moment, when a particular sperm and egg joined. Your personality began to form in childhood, shaped by your parents, your school, your experiences. Your memories begin at around age three or four. But this witnessing awareness, this basic sense of being present and conscious, this innermost 'I am' that is reading these words right now, does it feel like something that began? Does it feel like something that will end?

The sages of the Upanishads sat with exactly this question, and their answer was clear and consistent across hundreds of texts composed over many centuries: this witnessing awareness, this innermost self, did not begin when your body began. It will not end when your body ends. It is ancient beyond imagining, and it is on a journey that spans not one lifetime but many, moving toward a destination that the sages called Moksha, or liberation. That innermost self is the Atman. And its journey is the subject of this article.

Part One: What Is the Atman?

The Traveller Inside the Vehicle

The Katha Upanishad, which is one of the most poetic and philosophically rich of all the Upanishads, uses a beautiful analogy to explain the Atman. It says that the body is like a chariot. The senses are the horses that pull the chariot. The mind is the reins that (ideally) control the horses. The intellect is the charioteer who holds the reins. And the Atman, the true self, is the master sitting in the chariot, the one for whose sake the whole journey is being undertaken.

Most of us, in our daily lives, make the mistake of thinking that we are the chariot, or the horses, or even the charioteer. We identify completely with the body and the mind. We think: I am this body that gets hungry and tired and sick. I am these thoughts that rush through my head all day. I am these emotions that pull me in different directions. But the Upanishads say this is a fundamental case of mistaken identity. You are the master in the chariot, not the chariot itself. You are the Atman, the pure witnessing consciousness, and all the rest, the body, the senses, the mind, the emotions, are instruments that you use, not what you are.

This might sound abstract, so let us approach it from another direction. Have you ever noticed that throughout your life, everything about you has changed? Your body at age five was completely different from your body now. Your thoughts at fifteen were completely different from your thoughts today. Your emotions, your beliefs, your opinions, your physical appearance, your relationships, everything has changed, often many times over. And yet there is something that has not changed, something that was present in the five-year-old child and is present right now, something continuous, something that has been the silent witness to all of those changes without itself changing. That something is the Atman.

The Five Sheaths: Peeling the Onion to Find the Self

The Taittiriya Upanishad offers another way of understanding the Atman, through the teaching of the Pancha Koshas, or five sheaths. Imagine the Atman as a lamp that is covered by five layers of cloth, each layer dimming the light a little more. As long as the cloth is there, you cannot see the lamp clearly. But the lamp is always burning. The sheaths are what obscure it, not what it is.

The outermost sheath is the Annamaya Kosha, the food-body or physical body, so called because it is built from food and sustained by food and eventually returns to the earth as food for other beings. This is the layer most people identify with completely, thinking the body is all they are.

Just inside the physical body is the Pranamaya Kosha, the energy body, the life-force that animates the physical form. This is the vitality that you feel when you are healthy and energetic, and whose absence you feel when you are ill or exhausted. It is what leaves the body at death, and its departure is what the difference between a living body and a corpse consists of.

Deeper still is the Manomaya Kosha, the mental body, the layer of thought, emotion, memory, and desire. This is the busy, noisy layer that most of us live in almost all of the time, the constant stream of thoughts about the past and worries about the future, the emotional reactions to everything around us.

Deeper than the mental body is the Vijnanamaya Kosha, the wisdom body or the intellect. This is the layer of discrimination, judgment, understanding, and insight. It is the part of you that can step back from the rush of thoughts and emotions and evaluate them. When you catch yourself mid-argument and think, 'I am being unreasonable,' that is the Vijnanamaya Kosha at work.

And the innermost sheath is the Anandamaya Kosha, the bliss body, the layer of deep joy and peace that you touch in dreamless sleep and in moments of genuine contentment. It is the closest of the sheaths to the Atman, but it is still not the Atman. It is still a sheath, a layer of covering.

The Atman itself is beyond all five sheaths. It is the pure awareness that knows each of these layers, that is present through all of them, but is not itself any one of them. It is the lamp inside all the coverings. The Taittiriya Upanishad points to it by saying, after describing each sheath in turn: and beyond even that, there is Atman.

Part Two: The Journey Begins, Karma and the Cycle of Rebirth

Why Does the Atman Travel at All?

If the Atman is already pure, already free, already perfect in its nature, then why is it on a journey at all? Why does it not simply rest in its own perfect nature from the very beginning?

The answer the Upanishads give is both profound and remarkably practical. The Atman begins its journey not because it is imperfect but because it is, so to speak, not yet aware of its own perfection. It is like a king who suffers from amnesia and wanders the streets believing he is a beggar. He is still a king. His royal nature has not changed. But he does not know it, and so he lives like a beggar, and his experience is the experience of a beggar, not a king. The journey is the process of recovering his memory, of coming back into the recognition of what he truly is.

The vehicle of this journey is what the Upanishads call the Jiva, the individual soul, which is the Atman associated with a particular mind and body. The Jiva is the Atman as it appears in a specific form, with specific desires, specific memories, and specific karma accumulated over many lifetimes. The Jiva is the Atman wearing the costume of a particular person. And it is the Jiva that travels from life to life, carrying its accumulated karma the way a traveller carries luggage.

Karma: The Law That Drives the Journey

No discussion of the Atman's journey can proceed without understanding karma. The word karma simply means action, but in the Upanishadic context it refers to something more specific: it refers to the total accumulated weight of all the actions, thoughts, and intentions from all of a being's previous lives, and to the principle that this accumulated weight determines the conditions of future lives.

Think of it this way. Every significant action you perform, and particularly every action motivated by desire, leaves a kind of impression on the mind, a groove in the fabric of the Jiva's consciousness. The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad says it directly: a person becomes exactly what they desire. If a person's desires are narrow and selfish, focused entirely on personal pleasure and gain, their consciousness takes on a corresponding quality, and the circumstances of their future life reflect that quality. If a person's desires are generous, noble, and oriented toward the welfare of others, their consciousness takes on that quality, and their future circumstances reflect it.

This is not a system of reward and punishment administered by an external God sitting in judgment. It is more like a natural law, like the law of gravity. Drop a stone and it falls. Plant a seed and it grows. Perform an action with a particular intention and consciousness and the consequences of that action shape your future experience. The universe, in the Upanishadic understanding, is extraordinarily just, not because someone is keeping score, but because cause and effect operate at every level of existence, including the level of consciousness.

The Chandogya Upanishad describes the process with striking clarity. When a person dies, those whose conduct in life has been good will quickly attain a good birth: the birth of a Brahmin, or a Kshatriya, or a Vaishya. But those whose conduct has been bad will attain a correspondingly lower birth. This is the basic mechanics of karma. But the deeper teaching is that the specific form of the next life is determined not just by the gross actions but by the deepest desires and attachments of the dying person, because it is the desires that have accumulated over a lifetime that determine the direction the Jiva moves when it leaves the body.

The Mechanics of Dying and Being Born Again

The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad gives a detailed and fascinating account of what happens to the Atman when the physical body dies. This account is not meant to be taken as a literal description of geography but as a philosophical map of the process of consciousness transitioning from one form of existence to another.

When a person dies, the Upanishad says, the senses are withdrawn one by one into the mind, and the mind is withdrawn into the life-force, and the life-force, along with the subtle impressions of the lifetime just lived, begins its journey. Those who have lived with genuine wisdom and selfless virtue travel the path of the gods, the Devayana, which ultimately leads to liberation and no return to the cycle of birth and death. Those who have lived good but desire-driven lives, full of religious merit but not yet free of personal longing, travel the path of the ancestors, the Pitriyana, which leads to a period of rest and enjoyment in a subtler realm of existence before the karmic forces draw them back into a new birth on earth.

The image the Upanishad uses for this return journey is memorably beautiful. It says that the Jiva descends from the subtle realms like rain, falling first into the clouds, then into the earth, then into a plant, then being eaten by an animal or a human being, and in that way entering a new womb and a new life. The accumulated karma is the force that drives this descent, and the specific conditions of the new birth, the family, the body, the temperament, the situation, are determined by the quality and content of that karma.

This cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth is called Samsara, which literally means 'wandering' or 'flowing together.' The image is of a river that never reaches the sea, that just keeps flowing through different landscapes, changing in appearance but always moving, always driven by the same underlying force of accumulated desire and karma. Samsara is not a punishment. It is simply the natural movement of a consciousness that has not yet recognised its own true nature and therefore continues to seek fulfilment in external forms and experiences.

Part Three: What the Atman Carries and What It Learns

Memory, Personality, and the Subtle Body

A natural question arises here. If the Atman passes from body to body across many lifetimes, why do we not remember our past lives? Why does the process of death and rebirth involve such a complete forgetting?

The Upanishads address this through the concept of the Sukshma Sharira, or subtle body. When the physical body dies and dissolves back into the elements, what continues is not the physical body but a subtler vehicle, a kind of energetic blueprint that carries the essential impressions, tendencies, and karmic patterns of the Jiva. This subtle body does not carry specific episodic memories the way your physical brain carries the memory of what you had for breakfast yesterday. What it carries is deeper than memory: it carries character, the fundamental dispositions and tendencies that make you who you are.

This is why children are born with personalities already formed. A baby comes into the world not as a blank slate but with temperament, with inclinations, with inexplicable fears and inexplicable gifts. The child who picks up a musical instrument for the first time and plays it as though remembering something long known is, in the Upanishadic understanding, literally remembering, not the specific memories of a previous life as a musician, but the deep grooves of musical capacity that were laid down in that life and carried in the subtle body into this one.

What is being perfected and refined across lifetimes is not just individual character but consciousness itself. Each life is an opportunity to work through certain karmic patterns, to develop certain qualities, to learn certain lessons. A person who is consumed by greed in one life may be born into conditions of poverty in the next, not as punishment but as the most effective classroom for learning what greed actually costs. A person who treats others with cruelty may find themselves in circumstances where they experience that cruelty from the inside. The curriculum of Samsara is perfectly designed, not by an external teacher but by the internal logic of karma itself.

The Purpose Hidden in the Suffering

One of the most important and most comforting teachings of the Upanishads about the Atman's journey is that suffering is not meaningless. This does not mean that suffering is good or that it should be inflicted or that it should not be relieved where possible. It means that suffering has a direction, a purpose in the economy of consciousness, which is to loosen the grip of attachment and desire and thus to create the conditions in which the Atman can recognise its own true nature.

The Katha Upanishad tells the story of a young boy named Nachiketa who is sent, somewhat accidentally, to Yama, the god of death. Yama, impressed by Nachiketa's sincerity, offers him three boons. For his third and greatest boon, Nachiketa asks the question that concerns us in this article: what happens to a person after death? Yama initially tries to deflect the question, offering Nachiketa wealth and pleasure and power instead. But Nachiketa refuses. He says: all of these things are impermanent. They last only as long as the body lasts. Tell me about the eternal. Tell me about the Atman.

Yama's response is the heart of the Katha Upanishad. He says: the Atman is not born, nor does it die. It was not produced from anything, nor did anything come from it. It is unborn, eternal, ancient, and undying. It is not killed when the body is killed. It is subtler than the subtle and greater than the great. It lives in the cave of the heart of every being. The one who is free from sorrow sees the glory of the Atman by the grace of the creator.

The suffering of Samsara, in this understanding, is the experience of a being who does not yet know that it is the Atman: eternal, unborn, deathless, perfect. Every loss, every disappointment, every experience of impermanence, is the universe gently and sometimes not so gently pointing toward the same truth: nothing in the world of forms can satisfy you forever, because you are not a form. You are the formless awareness that forms arise within. You will keep searching in the world of objects until you understand that what you are looking for is your own self.

Part Four: The End of the Journey, Moksha and Liberation

When the Traveller Recognises Itself

The journey of the Atman through Samsara does not go on forever. It has a destination. And that destination is not a place but a recognition. It is the moment when the Jiva finally sees through the amnesia, the moment when the king who believed himself to be a beggar suddenly, unmistakeably remembers who he is. This recognition is what the Upanishads call Moksha, liberation, or sometimes Mukti.

Moksha does not mean that the Atman goes somewhere it has never been. It means that the Atman recognises what it has always been. The ocean finally knows itself as ocean rather than as wave. The gold that has been fashioned into a ring recognises that it is gold and has always been gold, not ring. The space inside a clay pot, which seemed to be pot-shaped and pot-bounded, recognises that it is the same limitless space that is everywhere when the pot dissolves.

The Mundaka Upanishad describes this recognition with one of the most beautiful images in all of Vedantic literature. It says that two birds sit on the same tree. One bird eats the fruits of the tree, experiencing the sweetness of some and the bitterness of others, delighting and suffering in turn. The other bird simply watches, serene and uninvolved, never eating, never suffering, never delighting, simply present. The first bird is the Jiva, the individual self caught in the play of experience and karma. The second bird is the Atman, the pure witnessing consciousness that is always already free. And the liberating insight is the recognition that these two birds are not truly two separate birds. They are one and the same. The bird that has been eating and suffering is the same bird as the one that has been watching in peace all along. The moment this is seen directly, not as a theory but as a living reality, the eating bird stops eating. The suffering ends. The journey is complete.

What Liberation Actually Feels Like

The Upanishads do not describe Moksha as the extinction of the self, the way a candle is snuffed out. They describe it more like the dissolving of a wave back into the ocean. The wave does not cease to exist. It ceases to exist as a separate, bounded, limited thing, and returns to what it always was, which is ocean. The sense of personal separation, the feeling of being a small, isolated, mortal creature in a vast and indifferent universe, dissolves. What remains is not nothing. What remains is everything, experienced from the inside, as one's own self.

The Chandogya Upanishad uses a phrase to describe the liberated state that has become one of the most famous in all of Sanskrit literature: Sarvam Khalvidam Brahma. All of this is indeed Brahman. The liberated one sees Brahman everywhere, in everything, as everything, including and especially as their own innermost self. The neighbour, the stranger, the animal, the tree, the stone, all are seen as manifestations of the same one consciousness that the liberated person recognises as their own deepest nature. Compassion becomes effortless in such a state, not as a moral achievement but as a natural consequence of seeing that what suffers in another is, at the deepest level, oneself.

For such a person, the Upanishads say, there is no more death. This does not mean that their body will not die. It means that they have recognised that they are not the body, and therefore the death of the body is no longer experienced as their death. It is experienced the way you experience the end of a dream: a dissolving of a form you temporarily took on, with no loss to the awareness that was dreaming.

Liberation in This Very Life

One of the most practically important teachings of the Upanishads about Moksha is that it does not have to wait for the end of some distant future lifetime. It is possible to achieve liberation in this very life, in the body you currently inhabit, in the circumstances you currently find yourself in. The term for such a person is Jivanmukta, one who is liberated while still alive.

The Jivanmukta continues to live in the world. They continue to eat and sleep and interact with people. Their body continues to move through time and eventually dies. But inside, something has permanently shifted. They no longer identify with the body-mind complex. They see themselves as the Atman, as Brahman, as the infinite consciousness that pervades all things. They act in the world but are not bound by the results of their actions. They experience joy and sorrow, but these are like waves on the surface of a deep ocean: the surface moves, but the depths are undisturbed.

This is the state that the Bhagavad Gita, which is itself a summary of Upanishadic wisdom, calls Sthitaprajna, one of steady wisdom. It is the state that every great saint in India's history has embodied: the unshakeable inner peace of someone who knows, not as a belief but as direct experience, that their true self is eternal, free, and perfect.

Conclusion: Your Journey Is Already Underway

The story of the Atman as told by the Upanishads is not a fairy tale. It is not a comforting fantasy invented to make death less frightening. It is the result of thousands of years of the most rigorous and honest investigation into the nature of consciousness ever undertaken by human beings. And whether or not one accepts every detail of the Upanishadic account, the central insight at its heart is one that a remarkable number of people across every culture and every century have confirmed from their own direct experience: there is something in you that does not belong to time. There is something in you that watches all of your experiences without itself being changed by them. There is something in you that is, in some way that is very difficult to put into ordinary words, not limited by the body it inhabits or the life it is currently living.

The Upanishads say that this something is the Atman. They say it has journeyed through countless forms before arriving in this particular body in this particular life. They say it will journey through many more forms before it finally, inevitably, recognises itself as the Brahman, the infinite ocean of consciousness in which the entire universe arises and subsides like a dream. And they say that this recognition, this homecoming, is not something that happens to you from outside. It is something that emerges from within, from the depths of your own being, when you finally turn your attention away from the noise of the world and look quietly and honestly at the one who is looking.

That is the journey. And the most astonishing thing the Upanishads tell us is this: the destination of the journey is not somewhere else. It is right here, right now, in the awareness that is reading these words. The Atman is not searching for Brahman the way you search for your keys. The Atman is Brahman, always has been, always will be. The journey is simply the long, beautiful, sometimes difficult process of coming to know what was never, for even a single moment, not already the case.

Aham Brahmasmi

I am Brahman

Ayam Atma Brahma

This Atman is Brahman