📿 Shloka Collection

Durga Sukta — Opening Verse

Taittiriya Aranyaka 10.1 (Durga Sukta) Vedic Mantra
📖 Durga Sukta (Taittiriya Aranyaka, Krishna Yajurveda)
जातवेदसे सुनवाम सोमम् अरातीयतो निदहाति वेदः ।
स नः पर्षदति दुर्गाणि विश्वा नावेव सिन्धुं दुरितात्यग्निः ॥
Jaata vedase sunavaa ma somam araatee yato nidahaati vedah |
Sa nah parshaad ati durgaani vishvaa naaveva sindhum duritaaty agnih ||
जातवेदसे
to Agni — the knower of all beings
सुनवाम सोमम्
we offer soma (the sacred offering)
अरातीयतः
those who wish us ill / enemies
निदहाति
burns up / destroys
वेदः
knowledge / the Veda — the knowing one (Agni)
स नः पर्षत्
may he carry us across
अति दुर्गाणि विश्वा
across all difficult passages (durgani — the inaccessible ones)
नावेव सिन्धुम्
like a boat across a river
दुरितात्
from evil / misfortune

The Durga Sukta is one of the oldest Vedic texts associated with the concept of Durga. The word 'durga' here means 'difficult to cross' or 'inaccessible' — referring to the hard passages and obstacles of life. The prayer is: may Agni carry us across all such durgani, like a boat across a river.

This is striking: in this Vedic context, Durga is not yet the ten-armed goddess of the Puranas. She is the principle of crossing over — being ferried safely through life's most treacherous passages. Fire (Agni) is the divine ferryman.

Over centuries, this concept of 'the one who takes us across the inaccessible' (durgati nashini — destroyer of difficulty) became personified as the Goddess Durga. The Puranic Durga — fierce, armed, the slayer of demons — is the evolved form of this same ancient prayer for safe passage.

The Durga Sukta is found in the Taittiriya Aranyaka (10.1) of the Krishna Yajurveda. It is recited during Durga puja and Navaratri as part of the Vedic liturgy, alongside the Puranic Devi Mahatmyam.

The name Durga appears in the Rigveda (8.47.11) as an adjective meaning 'hard to traverse.' The transformation of this abstract concept into the personal goddess Durga — as seen in the Devi Mahatmyam — is one of the most fascinating developments in the history of Hindu religion.

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