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Haridra Ganapati

Haridra Ganapati is an aspect of the Hindu god Ganesha associated with turmeric. He is depicted as yellow in color and wearing yellow garments. Iconographic texts describe Haridra Ganapati as having three eyes and four arms holding a noose, elephant goad, sweet, and his broken tusk. He is worshipped for wealth, well-being, and protection. The Haridra Ganapatya sect considers him the supreme being and worshipping him is believed to grant liberation from rebirth.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
372 views2 pages

Haridra Ganapati

Haridra Ganapati is an aspect of the Hindu god Ganesha associated with turmeric. He is depicted as yellow in color and wearing yellow garments. Iconographic texts describe Haridra Ganapati as having three eyes and four arms holding a noose, elephant goad, sweet, and his broken tusk. He is worshipped for wealth, well-being, and protection. The Haridra Ganapatya sect considers him the supreme being and worshipping him is believed to grant liberation from rebirth.

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sharathVEM
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Haridra Ganapati (Sanskrit: -, Haridr-gaapati, literally "turmeric Ganesha") is an

aspect of the Hindu god Ganesha (Ganapati). Haridra Ganapati is also known as Ratri
Ganapati.[1] Haridra Ganapati is depicted as yellow like turmeric and wears yellow garments. He
is one of the most popular thirty-two forms of Ganesha.

Contents

1 Iconography
2 Worship

3 Notes

4 References

Iconography
The iconographical treatises Niyotsava and the Mantra-maharnava have similar descriptions of
Haridra Ganapati. He is described as having three eyes. He sits on a golden throne. He is yellowcomplexioned like turmeric and also wears yellow clothes. He has four arms and carries a pasha
(noose), an ankusha (elephant goad), a modaka (sweet) and the danta (his own broken tusk) in
his four hands.[2] He draws his devotees closer by the noose, while goads them in the right
direction by the ankusha.[3]
The Dakshinamnaya mentions that Haridra Ganapati has six arms and sits on a jewelled throne,
in addition to his yellow colour and yellow vestments. His three right hands hold the ankusha
and display the krodha-mudra (the gesture of anger) and abhayamudra (the gesture of
protection). His left hands carry the pasha, a parashu (battle-axe) and displays the varadamudra
(gesture of boon-giving).[4]
Other references to the deity describe his face to be ointed with turmeric; him wearing a yellow
yagnopavita ("sacred thread") besides his turmeric complexion and clothes. He is described
holding a pasha, an ankusha and a staff.[5]
In the Ajitgama, Haridra Ganapati is described as turmeric-colored and flanked by two
unnamed wives.[6]

Worship
Haridra Ganapati is worshipped for wealth and well-being.[7] He is also described to protect his
devotees.[4]
Haridra Ganapati is the patron of the Haridra Ganapatya sect, one of the six major schools of the
Ganapatya sect, which regards Ganesha as the Supreme Being. The Haridra Ganapati followers
consider him as leader of all deities including Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva and Indra; the guru of the
sage Bhrigu, the guru of gods Brihaspati, the serpent Shesha etc.; the one which the greatest

knowledge and the one is worshipped by the deities who create the universe. Worshipping
Haridra Ganapati is believed to grant moksha (emancipation). These sectarians used to brand by
iron the head of Ganesha and his tusk on their palms.[5]
Haridra Ganapati is a Tantric form of Ganesha. Special mantras and yantras are used in his
worship. Rituals involving his worship generally are performed to fulfill material objectives,
especially gaining boons related to sexuality. He is also associated with six rituals of abhichara
(uses of spells for malevolent purposes) by which the adept can cause the target to suffer
delusions, be overcome with irresistible attraction or envy, or to be enslaved, paralysed or killed

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