Urdhva Pundra for follower of Advaita Philosophy












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Can a follower of Advaita Philosophy wear the Urdhva Pundra of Gopi Chandana? If so, what is procedure to be followed to wear it?










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    Can a follower of Advaita Philosophy wear the Urdhva Pundra of Gopi Chandana? If so, what is procedure to be followed to wear it?










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      Can a follower of Advaita Philosophy wear the Urdhva Pundra of Gopi Chandana? If so, what is procedure to be followed to wear it?










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      Santosh Hegde is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      Can a follower of Advaita Philosophy wear the Urdhva Pundra of Gopi Chandana? If so, what is procedure to be followed to wear it?







      advaita






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      Santosh HegdeSantosh Hegde

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          Yes, you can wear urdhavpundram if you belong to advaita line. It has strong traditional evidence for it.



          If you can do a bit of light reading, look at this link. This is from the interview/discussion recorded between a Japanese professor and the late pontiff of Kanchi mutt, H.H Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.




          There were Vaishnavites who would not even enter a Siva temple –
          teevra vaishnavas – but who were yet followers of Advaita philosophy.
          They will not touch bhasma (sacred ashes) and will put on their
          forehead and body only the vertical marks, proclaiming their devotion
          to Vishnu.




          It goes without saying that that those were what we know as Smartha Vaishnavas. However, personally, I haven't seen any advaitin who refuses to enter other temples.



          What I describe next is personal experience. I am from a tamil speaking smartha family with roots in Kerala. And for as long as I have known, my family and my ancestors even in extended families all have donned only the urdhvapundram using gopi chandanam, in long "U", with a finger's gap, stretching from between the eyebrows to the hairline or beyond. Or a truncated "U", like a an elongated crescent.



          There are many clans which still follow that tradition of wearing urdhvapundram. However, the history and tradition has been so corrupted that I was accused of being a madhwa brahmin once by an ignorant kanchi mutt follower. The topic has lot more details, and associated controversies, all of which are out of scope for this question.






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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes








            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            2














            Yes, you can wear urdhavpundram if you belong to advaita line. It has strong traditional evidence for it.



            If you can do a bit of light reading, look at this link. This is from the interview/discussion recorded between a Japanese professor and the late pontiff of Kanchi mutt, H.H Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.




            There were Vaishnavites who would not even enter a Siva temple –
            teevra vaishnavas – but who were yet followers of Advaita philosophy.
            They will not touch bhasma (sacred ashes) and will put on their
            forehead and body only the vertical marks, proclaiming their devotion
            to Vishnu.




            It goes without saying that that those were what we know as Smartha Vaishnavas. However, personally, I haven't seen any advaitin who refuses to enter other temples.



            What I describe next is personal experience. I am from a tamil speaking smartha family with roots in Kerala. And for as long as I have known, my family and my ancestors even in extended families all have donned only the urdhvapundram using gopi chandanam, in long "U", with a finger's gap, stretching from between the eyebrows to the hairline or beyond. Or a truncated "U", like a an elongated crescent.



            There are many clans which still follow that tradition of wearing urdhvapundram. However, the history and tradition has been so corrupted that I was accused of being a madhwa brahmin once by an ignorant kanchi mutt follower. The topic has lot more details, and associated controversies, all of which are out of scope for this question.






            share|improve this answer






























              2














              Yes, you can wear urdhavpundram if you belong to advaita line. It has strong traditional evidence for it.



              If you can do a bit of light reading, look at this link. This is from the interview/discussion recorded between a Japanese professor and the late pontiff of Kanchi mutt, H.H Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.




              There were Vaishnavites who would not even enter a Siva temple –
              teevra vaishnavas – but who were yet followers of Advaita philosophy.
              They will not touch bhasma (sacred ashes) and will put on their
              forehead and body only the vertical marks, proclaiming their devotion
              to Vishnu.




              It goes without saying that that those were what we know as Smartha Vaishnavas. However, personally, I haven't seen any advaitin who refuses to enter other temples.



              What I describe next is personal experience. I am from a tamil speaking smartha family with roots in Kerala. And for as long as I have known, my family and my ancestors even in extended families all have donned only the urdhvapundram using gopi chandanam, in long "U", with a finger's gap, stretching from between the eyebrows to the hairline or beyond. Or a truncated "U", like a an elongated crescent.



              There are many clans which still follow that tradition of wearing urdhvapundram. However, the history and tradition has been so corrupted that I was accused of being a madhwa brahmin once by an ignorant kanchi mutt follower. The topic has lot more details, and associated controversies, all of which are out of scope for this question.






              share|improve this answer




























                2












                2








                2







                Yes, you can wear urdhavpundram if you belong to advaita line. It has strong traditional evidence for it.



                If you can do a bit of light reading, look at this link. This is from the interview/discussion recorded between a Japanese professor and the late pontiff of Kanchi mutt, H.H Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.




                There were Vaishnavites who would not even enter a Siva temple –
                teevra vaishnavas – but who were yet followers of Advaita philosophy.
                They will not touch bhasma (sacred ashes) and will put on their
                forehead and body only the vertical marks, proclaiming their devotion
                to Vishnu.




                It goes without saying that that those were what we know as Smartha Vaishnavas. However, personally, I haven't seen any advaitin who refuses to enter other temples.



                What I describe next is personal experience. I am from a tamil speaking smartha family with roots in Kerala. And for as long as I have known, my family and my ancestors even in extended families all have donned only the urdhvapundram using gopi chandanam, in long "U", with a finger's gap, stretching from between the eyebrows to the hairline or beyond. Or a truncated "U", like a an elongated crescent.



                There are many clans which still follow that tradition of wearing urdhvapundram. However, the history and tradition has been so corrupted that I was accused of being a madhwa brahmin once by an ignorant kanchi mutt follower. The topic has lot more details, and associated controversies, all of which are out of scope for this question.






                share|improve this answer















                Yes, you can wear urdhavpundram if you belong to advaita line. It has strong traditional evidence for it.



                If you can do a bit of light reading, look at this link. This is from the interview/discussion recorded between a Japanese professor and the late pontiff of Kanchi mutt, H.H Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati.




                There were Vaishnavites who would not even enter a Siva temple –
                teevra vaishnavas – but who were yet followers of Advaita philosophy.
                They will not touch bhasma (sacred ashes) and will put on their
                forehead and body only the vertical marks, proclaiming their devotion
                to Vishnu.




                It goes without saying that that those were what we know as Smartha Vaishnavas. However, personally, I haven't seen any advaitin who refuses to enter other temples.



                What I describe next is personal experience. I am from a tamil speaking smartha family with roots in Kerala. And for as long as I have known, my family and my ancestors even in extended families all have donned only the urdhvapundram using gopi chandanam, in long "U", with a finger's gap, stretching from between the eyebrows to the hairline or beyond. Or a truncated "U", like a an elongated crescent.



                There are many clans which still follow that tradition of wearing urdhvapundram. However, the history and tradition has been so corrupted that I was accused of being a madhwa brahmin once by an ignorant kanchi mutt follower. The topic has lot more details, and associated controversies, all of which are out of scope for this question.







                share|improve this answer














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                AmbiAmbi

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