Siddhars and
this intense path of light is the mystical end of Hinduism. This
is a journey beyond enlightenment when beliefs are abandoned and
instead, experience and teachings and the sacred grace of the
ancient lineage of Gurus serve to guide the Siddhar adept.

Much less is known of the yogic traditions of South India as it
was guarded in secrecy and taught in the traditional manner of
guru to the spiritually mature disciple. In most cases the
enlightened beings went on to evolve into the final objective of
yoga and that was to merge into God in the physical form itself.
These sages were called Siddhars. Many of these Siddhars
maintained spiritual diaries and writings in the form of poetry
from the time they actualized into discovering the divine with
deeper meaning and the beginning of their journey into yoga
while attaining enlightenment, and to the final state of
transforming into light, merging with the Supreme.
There are different Siddhar schools with some believing in 18
masters and some as Siddhar Rajaswamy's- 210 masters.
According to the Siddhar teachings, these masters
constantly take birth again and again with their disciples in
different divine incarnations in different times and different
places around the world constantly to keep up with the changing
humanity needs and effecting change. For instance, Jesus Christ
is said to have been Siddhar Pullipani having reincarnated.
Swami Vivekananda was said to have been one of the
reincarnations of Siddhar Thirumulanathar. Lao Tzu was claimed
by Siddhar Bhogar to have been one of his incarnations.
'Siddhars' were evolved spiritual beings who went beyond
enlightenment to accomplish the final yoga of attaining the
ultimate perfection as becoming one with God. Perfection in this
sense means the state of the highly evolved as Christ after
resurrection. This is the ultimate objective of yoga in the
Siddha philosophy. Yoga of Siddha tradition in South India meant
the accomplishment of merging the body into the supreme light of
the absolute as attainments of eight different dimensions of
perfection. Each dimension of perfection is called a 'siddhi'
and 'siddhi' is the miraculous powers that were acquired while
practicing this path of yoga. Although spiritual traditions of
Hinduism throughout India shun acquiring 'siddhis' due to the
belief that acquiring siddhis would grow ego and therefore would
withhold the spiritual progress of the yogi, the Siddha path
insists on sheer restraint in using any siddhi while encouraging
Siddhars to live in solitude or live disguised within a society
as an ordinary householders. Siddhars consider attainment of
various siddhis as grace which naturally flow into them through
their yogic practices and it was held sacred as the mark of the
divine presence within themselves.
The realm of Siddhars is mystical, most times unbelievable and
has remained unchanged over thousands of years. To envision this
world, it is comparable to the life present in the extreme depth
of the ocean existing under intense high pressure and total
darkness, hardly ever disturbed by external forces. This would
be an example to illustrate the world of the Siddhars beneath
the known in Southern India which still vibrant and alive and
yet far away from the rest of human civilization. These ancient
spiritual places in South India, hidden from the rest of the
world resonate with the presence of the Siddhars even today.
Siddhar Patanjali:
Siddhar Patanjali,
the author of Yoga Sutra, who was one of the disciples of
Siddhar Bhogar, mentions of the this higher yoga which requires
the effort of the spiritual aspirant to understand the deep
insightfulness of this Siddha path through practice and patience
for the true teachings beneath the simplicity of his writings to
reveal. Historians have wondered whether there were three of
more saints under the name Patanjali from between 200 BC to 250
AD while being able unable to comprehend that it could also be
the same person.
Siddhar Bhoganathar- our ancient Father:

Siddhar Bhogar's extensive writings in Tamil covers Ayurveda and
yogic practices of Siddhars and much of which of his work has
not been translated to English as yet. Siddhar Bhogar is also
the guru to Maha-avatar Babaji (the eternal Siddhar mentioned by
Paramahamsa Yogananda in his book Autobiography pf a Yogi).
Siddhar Bhogar had in his spiritual diary made many claims with
some that defy our logic and are astounding to the point of
dismissing it offhand due to its implication in the modern day.
One of his claims in his writings is that he went to Mecca and
Medina and it was he who founded Islam. Could he have been the
light Prophet Mohammed understood to be as angel Gabriel?
Siddhar Bhogar did teach the Siddhar practice wherein one form
of siddhi was the ability to leave the body and appear as light
behind another person's intellect to guide or enter in as life
into another body.
Siddhar Thirumulanathar, Guru to Siddhar
Bhoganathar- Grandfather of Light:

Siddhar Thirumulanathar, Siddhar Bhogar's guru, writes in his
divine poetry that he meditated in his body to attain light for
a thousand years and then wrote a stanza of divine poetry each
year of higher tantra, the yoga of light. He wrote 3047
stanzas!Siddhar Thirumulanathar's writings, known as 'Thirumandiram'
has many meanings. Thirumandiram means sacred magic, divine
words, sacred mantras and /or sacred siddhi. These writings have
now been translated to English. Thirumandiram teaches the
science of attainment of light body, going beyond realization
into realms of the Siddha philosophy. All eight forms of siddhi
are explained and its way of attainments are taught too to
enable the metamorphosis into the 'perfect state' as the basic
objective of yoga. One of the forebears of Tibetian tantric yoga
was Siddhar Nagarjuna, who is claimed to have been teaching in
physical form for over 400 years, was a disciple under the
Siddhar Thirumular lineage.
Tantiram- the root of tantra:
This higher yogic path was called in ancient Tamil, 'Tantiram',
the root to tantric wisdom that is described as tantra. This
divine tantra as revealed by the Siddhars meant breaking through
ego arising though duality that separates us from the divine, by
worshipping the three dimensional context in every thought
arising as seeds of knowing from the mind.
There are so many forms of seed thoughts such as - as perceiver,
perceived and as perception; space, matter, energy; past,
present and future; creation, preservation and destruction; and
so on. Once the three dimensions of thought is understood and
held sacred with the unity behind duality achieved, the mind
would break into becoming single pointed. It would be natural
for Oneness to emerge as Source with the Self illumined in
knowing 'All Is' as "I am That' and 'I am'. Merging into the
Source was then the only grand reality as the destination of
this yogic journey towards Light.
With the soul recognized in its pure form as the 'Holy Ghost'
and a divine teacher as Guru to guide knowing All as the
Absolute nameless Father, the higher tantra manifests the primal
urge for the divine union in the 'trinity of knowing'. Applying
this wisdom as yogic techniques within a spiritual environment
to the single pointed mind and conditioned body, true yoga of
the Siddhars taught that the eternal is attained with the wisdom
of the mind along with intellect absorbed in divine grace,
powerful enough to manifest its Light body!
More About Siddhars: (Prof T.N. Ganapathy
version)
Within the context of Hindu myth the name Siddha originally
denoted one of the eighteen categories of celestial beings.
These beings of semi-divine status were said to be of great
purity and their dwelling was thought to be in the sky between
the earth and the sun. Later they became associated with a class
of more adept human being, often an accomplished yogi.
The term had been derived from the Sanskrit root sidh meaning
"fulfillment" or "achievement," so the noun came to refer to one
who had attained perfection. Because the Tamil language lacks
the aspirated consonants of Sanskrit the word has been written
and pronounced by the Tamils as cittar.
This has lead the Tamils to associate the word more with the
Sanskrit term chit, meaning "consciousness."
All of the writings of the Tamil Siddhars, whether defining
philosophical viewpoints, yogic practices, or presenting
alchemical recipes for herbal tinctures and base metal amalgams
were presented in poetic form, often employing the more
difficult meters that harkened back to the ancient Tamil Sangam
Age. These works are also riddled with tantric imagery,
references to Kundalini, and clues to control the dangerous
feminine power through breathing practices or the recitation of
the Goddess's secret names.
Because of the enigmatic nature of the Siddha imagery, and their
philosophy structured in direct defiance of human logic, few
scholars have ventured to address the Tamil Siddhars and then
often only as mere curiosities. Needless to say, the vast
majority of the Tamil Siddha works have never been translated,
as has been the case with some of the verses presented here.
One of the most basic characteristics of Tamil composition, and
one that is particularly relevant to Siddha poetry, is the
tendency to layer the work so that each word or image builds
upon the last. Because each component image is presented so as
to be viewed autonomously and in relationship both sequentially
and to the totality of the verse, the images of the poem may
seem slightly disjointed and contradictory. Though this may at
first seem to undermine the aesthetic quality and
over-complicate the simple act of enjoying poetry, the Tamil
Siddha compositions pattern the imagery to expound the subtle
complexity of their philosophical concepts or to map out the
terrain of the inner landscape which is dominated by the dormant
serpent energy |