Soma in Vedas
Shrinivas Gadkari
sgadkari2001 at YAHOO.COM
Fri Sep 13 15:29:44 CDT 2002
>One has to be careful with words, how they are derived and what they mean.
>soma = moon, with a short "a" at the end of soma. It is not derived as sa +
>uma. Indeed, umA has a long "a" vowel sound.
>
>Siva is also called somAskanda, i.e. sa + umA + skanda, when depicted
>together with Parvati and Karttikeya. This derivation is different from the
>name somashekhara.
>
>Vidyasankar
Namaste Vidyasankar,
At many places I have read that soma refers to bliss of the Self.
And this meaning for soma makes sense in all the occurrences
that I know of. That is what set me thinking and associate soma with
om.
Do you feel soma = s + om + a, is not the correct way to look at it ?
Your insights will be helpful.
The sound s is associated with the in-breath and is used to denote
something that one takes in.
a denotes existence, so one can add a to som to denote that entity
which we take in with som.
I may not be entirely accurate, but this line of thinking is not
completely off the track.
Best regards,
Shrinivas
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