📿 Shloka Collection

Katha Upanishad — Nachiketa and Death

Katha Upanishad 1.2.23 Upanishad
📖 Katha Upanishad (Krishna Yajurveda)
नायमात्मा प्रवचनेन लभ्यो न मेधया न बहुना श्रुतेन ।
यमेवैष वृणुते तेन लभ्यस्तस्यैष आत्मा विवृणुते तनूं स्वाम् ॥
Naayam aatma pravachanena labhyo na medhayaa na bahunaa shrutena |
Yamevai sha vrinute tena labhyas tasyai sha aatma vivrinute tanoom svaam ||
न प्रवचनेन
not by discourse or lectures
न मेधया
not by sharp intellect
न बहुना श्रुतेन
not by hearing much
यमेवैष वृणुते
the one whom this Atman itself chooses
तेन लभ्यः
is obtained by that person alone
विवृणुते तनूं स्वाम्
reveals its own true form

This is Yamraj (the god of death) speaking to the young boy Nachiketa. Nachiketa had asked for the ultimate gift: knowledge of what lies beyond death. Yamraj first tries to dissuade him with riches and pleasures — but Nachiketa persists. Then Yamraj reveals this deep truth.

The Atman — the innermost Self — cannot be grasped through argument, brilliance, or scriptural learning alone. It reveals itself only to the one who truly yearns for it, who turns all of one's being toward it.

This is not anti-intellectual — it is saying that the intellect is a tool, not the destination. The final step is a kind of surrender, a deep inner yearning that draws grace.

The Katha Upanishad belongs to the Krishna Yajurveda. Its central story — of the boy Nachiketa going to Yama's abode and asking for the secret of the Self — is one of the most beloved narratives in all of Vedanta.

A similar teaching appears in the Mundaka Upanishad (3.2.3): 'This Atman is not obtained by one who has no strength, nor through heedlessness, nor without austerity.'

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