Adi Sankara hardly needs an introduction, and whatever little I know about Sanatana Dharma and Advaita philosophy is thanks to his profound work on the topics. Many of his sholas, poetry and prose have explored the truth that we’re nothing but a manifestation of the union of Shakti and Siva – our consciousness and energy.

Karpura Gauram Karunavataram is one of those rare mantras that holds the entire philosophy of Sanatana Dharma in four short lines.

In this mantra Shankara is praising Shiva, yet he reminds us that Shiva without Shakti is just inert (jada), Creation needs movement. That is why the shloka concludes with “Bhavam Bhavāni-sahitam Namāmi”, I bow to Shiva who is eternally with Bhavani.

Let’s explore each line in detail.

Karpura Gauram — White as camphor
This isn’t about color, its about dissolution. Camphor leaves no residue when it burns. Like Shiva, who dissolves the ego and leaves nothing but pure awareness.

Karunā-avataram — The embodiment of compassion
The destroyer is, paradoxically, the most compassionate. What greater grace is there than clearing away what no longer serves us — ignorance, fear, attachment?

Samsāra-sāram — The essence of existence
Shiva is not outside our world, he’s the essence of it. Shankara is saying that Brahman is both the material and the cause of the universe.

Bhujagendra-hāram — He who wears the serpent king as a garland
The serpent is the Kala Bhairava aspect of Shiva that represents awakened awareness. Only one who is completely fearless and beyond duality, can wear time itself (the serpent) as an ornament.

Sadā-vasantam Hridaya-aravinde — Ever dwelling in the lotus of the heart
Here the mantra shifts from ritual to realization — the bridge Shankara built so elegantly. God is not somewhere out there, he’s the still center of our own self.

Bhavam Bhavāni-sahitam Namāmi — I bow to Shiva with Shakti
This is the heart of the mantra. There is no Shiva without Shakti, no consciousness without energy, no witness without creation. The sloka subtly teaches non-duality through devotion — the same way Shankara composed Soundarya Lahari, where the first verses declare that even Shiva cannot be away from Shakti and viceversa.

This mantra is one of my favorites and I am grateful that my Carnatic music teacher has started me off on my journey of music with this shloka that emphasis the inseparability of our being.

Traditionally chanted during aarti, it is believed to help burn away tamas, settle the mind and create a sense of inner expansion. It aligns with Shankara’s Advaita beautifully because it reminds us that the divine is not two. The divine is one, appearing as many.

I hope you will chant with me.

 

Karpura Gauram
Karunā-avataram
Samsāra-sāram
Bhujagendra-hāram
Sadā-vasantam Hridaya-aravinde
Bhavam Bhavāni-sahitam Namāmi

 

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About Sanatana Dharma

ब्रह्म सत्यं जगन्मिथ्या जीवो ब्रह्मैव नापरः।
अनेन वेद्यं सच्छास्त्रमिति वेदान्तडिण्डिमः॥

Brahman alone is real; the universe is mithya – neither fully real nor unreal, but an appearance. The individual self (jiva) is none other than Brahman itself, not separate or different. This is the true teaching of the scriptures, as revealed by Vedanta. ~ Verse 20 from Brahma Jnānavali Māla

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