History of Nadi Shastri
Agatheeswarar
"Thumbs up
or Thumbs down. Future prediction by thumb print."
The origins
of the Naadi Shastra (energy-channel treatises) are shrouded in the
mists of time. This marvellous system of prediction has been used to
give reliable guidance for many centuries: knowledge about ourselves
(past and future), our relationships and our destinies. Research shows
that this system has been in use for at least 2000 years, since the
treatises were first written (on palm leaf scrolls) in Sanskrit, the
predominant language of ancient India. The original transmission was by
oral means, before the committal of the texts to writing.
The
shastras are believed to have been first composed long ago by the Sapta
Rishis (seven sages) - Agasthya, Kaushika, Vyasa, Bohar, Bhrigu,
Vasishtha and Valmiki.
The primary
centre for Naadi Shastra is in Vaitheeswarankoil, near Chidambaram in
Tamil Nadu, a state in South India. Here Lord Shiva is said to have
assumed the role of a vaidhya (a doctor), who alleviated the miseries of
his devotees. Until the 1930's, Naadi remained an ancient legacy, hardly
used or even comprehended by the majority of Hindu Astrologers.
The
preservation of the Naadi palm leaves and the translation from Sanskrit
into the Tamil language was undertaken on a large scale during the
regime of the Kings of Tanjore (9th-13th Century AD). When the leaves
started disintegrating with age, the Tanjore rulers appointed scholars
to rewrite them on fresh ola (palm leaves). Some of the Naadi Granthas
were also translated into another South Indian language, Telugu. The
Maratha king Sarabhoji and the Chola kings patronized these
translations.
When the
British left India they took with them some of the ancient manuscripts
and texts delving into Alchemy, Ayurveda, and Rasayan, while those
pertaining to occult sciences were left behind and auctioned. The
Valluvar community, who specialized in Astrology at the time, bought
these palm leaves and made Naadi reading their hereditary profession and
means of livelihood.
Each Naadi
is made up of a particular ola or palm leaf, written in vatta ezathu,
Tamil script, with a sharp, nail-like instrument called ezuthani. The
palm leaves are preserved by rubbing peacock oil on auspicious
occasions. These palm leaves are still preserved in the Saravasti Mahal
library of Tanjore, in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
The
Granthas are a set of highly organised manuscripts divided into
fourteen chapters or kandams.
These
Kandams serialize the various aspects of materialistic and spiritual
life of an individual such as family, marriage, profession, wealth ,
luck etc.
Contact Shree Koushika Nadi Astrology
Centre for more details.
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