Sunday, September 14, 2025

The supreme dark lord

 












Ganesha is one of the most well-known Hindu gods, certainly outside Hinduism. For a long time, I thought of him as an adorable little critter. Something like the Swedish comic character Pellefant, perhaps? Or Dumbo? You know, cute talking elephants from children´s comic books. IN REALITY, THERE IS NOTHING FUNNY ABOUT GANESHA. He fights with other gods, wears the head of a slayed demon, is a bigamist, and appears in the cremation ground garlanded with skulls and sitting on a corpse?! No surprise there, since he´s really the son of Shiva (well, kind of). For the shocking truth, see the clips above and read the stuff below.

And no, I´m not *entirely* serious. But almost... 

Is there a character called Gajasura in Hindu mythology?

Yes, Gajasura is a real and significant character in Hindu mythology. He is a powerful demon (asura) who had the form of an elephant, and he is a central figure in a famous story involving Lord Shiva.


The Myth of Gajasura and Lord Shiva

According to the myth, Gajasura was a demon who, through intense meditation and penance, pleased Lord Shiva and was granted a powerful boon. The boon was that nothing could kill him and that he would be impervious to all attacks. However, Gajasura's strength and arrogance grew, and he began to terrorize the heavens and the Earth. He became a great source of suffering for both gods and mortals.

In his immense pride, he even challenged Lord Shiva himself, attacking him while Shiva was in a deep state of meditation. The gods, seeing Shiva being disturbed, grew anxious. In response to the demon's insolence, Lord Shiva emerged from his meditation and engaged in a fierce battle with Gajasura.

Ultimately, Shiva defeated and killed the elephant demon. As a symbolic act of victory and to remind his devotees of his immense power, Shiva wore the skin of Gajasura as a garment. This act gave Shiva the name Gajantaka, which means "The Ender of the Elephant." The skin of the elephant demon is often depicted draped across Shiva's back in many artistic and sculptural representations.

This story serves as a powerful reminder of Lord Shiva's role as the destroyer of evil and the protector of the cosmos.

Is there also a myth about Ganesha fighting and defeating Gajasura, who was granted a boon from Brahma?

Your question points to a different, but connected, version of the myth. While the most prominent myth states that Gajasura was defeated by Lord Shiva, there are indeed variations that link Gajasura directly to Lord Ganesha.

However, it is important to clarify that in most Puranic accounts, Ganesha does not fight or defeat Gajasura. The two characters are connected through the story of how Ganesha received his elephant head.

The Myth in Detail

In this version of the story, Gajasura is a demon who performs great penance and receives a boon. While some texts state this boon was from Shiva, others, like the Shiva Purana, specify that he received it from Lord Brahma. This boon made him invincible to the gods and other beings. Drunk with power, he began to harass the three worlds.

The story then follows the well-known narrative:

  • Shiva Defeats Gajasura: The gods appeal to Lord Shiva to stop the demon. Shiva fights and kills Gajasura, but the demon, in his final moments of devotion, asks a boon from Shiva: to be remembered forever and to be worn by Shiva.

  • Gajasura's Head and Ganesha: At a later time, when Lord Shiva beheads the boy created by Parvati, the grieving goddess asks Shiva to bring him back to life. To appease her, Shiva sends his attendants to find the head of the first creature they see. They return with the head of the elephant demon Gajasura, who had been granted a boon to be remembered.

  • Ganesha's New Form: Shiva places Gajasura's head on the boy's body, thus creating the form of Ganesha that we know today.

In this way, Gajasura is not defeated by Ganesha, but his story is inextricably linked to Ganesha's origin. The defeat of Gajasura is a feat of Lord Shiva, while the head of the defeated demon becomes the iconic head of Ganesha, fulfilling the demon's final wish.

Is there a form of Ganesha called Aghora Ganapati or Aghora Ganesha?

Yes — there is indeed a form of Gaṇeśa called Aghora Gaṇapati (or Aghora Gaṇeśa), though it belongs to the more tantric and esoteric traditions of Gaṇeśa worship, not the mainstream pūjā forms most people are familiar with.


1. Context: The 32 Forms of Gaṇeśa

In South Indian iconography (esp. Tamil Nadu, Karnataka), Gaṇeśa is worshipped in 32 forms (mūrti-s) described in the Mudgala Purāṇa and temple traditions. These include Bala Gaṇapati, Heramba Gaṇapati, Mahā Gaṇapati, etc.
👉 In this list, you do not find “Aghora Gaṇapati.”

So where does he appear?


2. Aghora Gaṇapati in Tantric Tradition

  • In Śaiva Tantra, “Aghora” is one of the five faces (pañcānana) of Śiva:

    • Sadyojāta, Vāmadeva, Aghora, Tatpuruṣa, Īśāna.

    • The Aghora aspect is fierce, transformative, connected with dissolution of impurities and with cremation-ground symbolism.

  • Gaṇapati in Aghora aspect:

    • Some tantric texts and local traditions invoke Gaṇeśa in the Aghora mode — wild, wrathful, protective against bhūtas, preta-s, and obstacles of the subtle/spiritual path.

    • In these mantras, he is often described with a terrifying appearance, surrounded by spirits, sometimes smeared with ash, and invoked in cremation-ground sādhana.

  • There are also mantra traditions that call on “Aghora Gaṇeśa” for protection in śmaśāna (cremation ground) rituals, parallel to Aghora Śiva.


3. Modern Mentions

  • In some Kaula and left-hand tantric circles (esp. Bengal and Nepal), Aghora Gaṇapati is recognized as a form used in fierce mantras.

  • In Odisha and Bengal, one also hears of Ugra Gaṇapati and Aghora Gaṇapati, both invoked for subduing hostile forces.


4. Important Distinction

  • In mainstream pūjā → Gaṇeśa is gentle, auspicious, remover of obstacles.

  • In tantric contexts → he can manifest in ugra / aghora aspects, as the destroyer of demonic or inner obstacles, even in fierce cremation-ground forms.


Summary:
Yes — Aghora Gaṇapati is a real form, but not part of the standard 32 Gaṇeśa forms. Instead, he belongs to tantric traditions, where Gaṇeśa is invoked in a fierce “Aghora” mode, parallel to Śiva’s Aghora face, to remove deep spiritual obstacles, subdue spirits, and protect sādhakas in cremation-ground rituals.


Would you like me to track down an actual mantra or dhyāna description of Aghora Gaṇapati from tantric sources (so you can see how he is visualized)?

Yes, please.

Great — let’s go into the esoteric material. Unlike the well-codified 32 Gaṇapati forms, the Aghora Gaṇapati tradition is more scattered, found in tantric paddhati-s and mantra-saṅgraha-s.

Here’s what we know from the texts and oral traditions:


1. Mantra Tradition

One Aghora Gaṇeśa mantra (from Bengal/Nepalese tantric sources) is:

“oṁ hrīṁ śrīṁ glaṁ glaṁ gaṇapataye aghora hastāya huṁ phaṭ svāhā”

  • “Aghora-hasta” = he of the fierce hand/gesture, dispelling terrible forces.

  • Used for śmaśāna-sādhana (cremation ground practice) and protection against bhūta-preta-piśāca influences.

Another simpler bija-based mantra used in aghora contexts:

“oṁ ghaṁ aghora-gaṇapataye namaḥ”

This is said to invoke him in a fierce form, but is much less common.


2. Dhyāna (Visualization)

A traditional dhyāna-śloka (meditation verse), found in some Kaula manuals, describes him as:

  • Dark (kṛṣṇa varṇa) or smoky in color.

  • Three-eyed, with a fierce elephant face.

  • Garlanded with skulls, smeared in ash.

  • Holding kapāla (skull cup), khaṭvāṅga (staff), paraśu (axe), and muṣṭi (fist/gesture of wrath).

  • Surrounded by preta-gaṇas (spirit hordes).

  • Seated on a corpse or in the cremation ground, radiating terrible power but also supreme protection.

👉 This parallels the Ugra Gaṇapati dhyānas in texts like the Śrī Tattva Nidhi (Mysore), but with more explicit Aghora-Śiva symbolism.


3. Purpose

  • Unlike the gentle remover of everyday obstacles (Vighneśvara), Aghora Gaṇapati removes deep karmic and spiritual blockages.

  • Invoked in dangerous sādhana: spirit-subjugation, cremation-ground rituals, and advanced tantric initiations.

  • Seen as the wrathful protector of the sādhaka, consuming subtle impurities.


Summary:
Yes — there are mantras and dhyāna descriptions of Aghora Gaṇapati, mainly in tantric paddhatis. He is envisioned as dark, fierce, ash-smeared, with skulls and weapons, and invoked with mantras like

  • “oṁ hrīṁ śrīṁ glaṁ glaṁ gaṇapataye aghora hastāya huṁ phaṭ svāhā”

This is not a mainstream pūjā form, but a specialized tantric invocation parallel to Śiva’s Aghora aspect.


Would you like me to also contrast Aghora Gaṇapati with the more widely recognized Ugra Gaṇapati (who is in the 32 forms list)? That comparison would help show how close — but not identical — they are.

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