पृष्ठम्:सिद्धसिद्धान्तपद्धतिः अन्ये च.djvu/२९

एतत् पृष्ठम् अपरिष्कृतम् अस्ति

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These legends and traditions help us to give the Natha gurus some definite place in history. The stories of Gorakhnath. Matsyendranath and Gopichand had been current in Bengal and many other parts of India, before the time of conquest of Bengal by the muslims in the thirteenth century. Later on the songs of Minanath ( Matsyendra ) and Gorakhnath became popular among the muslims of East Bengal. In the Vaisnava love lyrics of Bengal occasional references are found of Gorakh. Yogi. In Nepal, it is believed that Avalokitesvara came to Nepal at the command of Buddha from somewhere outside Nepal. He came in the guise of a Saivite priest and is identified with Matsyendra. These Yogis are still found in Nepal , Bihar, Bengal, U. P., Gujrat, Maharastra and Northern Deccan.

The Origin of the Sect

The Natha Yogis who were Saivites ( worshippers of Lord Siva ), originated in Northern India as an expression of revival of Hinduism, during the second millennium A. D. After the decline of Buddhism, Saktaism and Vaisnavism, in which the personal element was predominant, the Natha Cult flourished side by side with Islam Union with Siva was preached by Sankaracharya at an earlier period (788-850 A. D. dates of Sankara ), but this impersonal ideal of Advaitavada had died out. The Natha Yogis helped in reviving this ideal. To them Siva was the permanent principle; while the pheno menal world was attributed to Shakti, the ever active principle.

On the above principle, the Natha gurus preached their doctrines; but as to the origin of the Natha Sect we are still uncertain. A mass of legends have grown round the hoary name of Gorakhnath, who is undoubtedly the greatest of the Natha Yogis, but his birthplace and family history are still shrouded in mystery. Indian Yogis never reveal their past, this is the age old customExcept in case of kings who have forsaken their thrones to become Yogis, we can never be certain of their ancestry. Gorakhnath is known as Isvara-Santana meaning the son of God. In the Goraksa-Siddhanta-Sangraha, published by the Sarasvati Bhavana Texts of Benaras and edited by Dr. Gopinath Kaviraj, we find on page 40, the names of the nine Nathas,