Encyclopedia of Hinduism

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om
Om is the most important MANTRA in Hinduism.
CHANDOGYA UPANISHAD discusses the significance
of om. There it is given the highest value, equiva-
lent to the RIG VEDA and SAMA VEDA combined; it is
said to be speech and breath combined. Om is also
said to be the Sama Vedic chant encapsulated.
In TAITTIRIYA UPANISHAD 1.8 om is variously
said to be BRAHMAN or the entire world. The MAN-
DUKYA UPANISHAD outlines the esoteric aspects of
om. It is said to be all that is—past, present, and
future—and to transcend time. Om is said to be
the Self (ATMAN). Esoterically, it is said to encom-
pass the four STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS: the waking,
dreaming, deep-sleep, and transcendent states.
For this purpose, using SANSKRIT grammar, the let-
ter o in the word om is understood to constitute
an a and a u. A is the waking state, u the dreaming
state, m the deep-sleep state; the fourth state has
no external marker and is the non-dual reality.
Later texts understand om to encompass all
visible and invisible worlds, and these are enu-
merated. It is seen to be the three gods: BRAHMA,
VISHNU, and SHIVA; it is seen to be this world, the
sky world, and the world of heaven; its letters are
seen to be the manifest and unmanifest world;
and so on. One of the most common MANTRAS

using om is om tat sat: “om is that reality: all that
exists.”
For a YOGI, to focus on the mantra om is
to focus on the ultimate reality. If the yogi pro-
nounces om, it reaches the crown CHAKRA; if the

O


Om, the most revered syllable and mantra in San-
skrit, is believed to encompass all visible and invisible
worlds. (www.shutterstock.com/Junji Takemoto)
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