Upashruti — Goddess of Sacred Night and Celestial Revelation
Hindu Dharma is vast and luminous, containing within it
countless divine beings, each representing a unique facet of cosmic reality.
Among the lesser-known yet deeply significant goddesses is Upashruti — a deity
of the night, an oracular voice, and a celestial guide. Though she does not
occupy the grand altars of popular worship, her presence in the ancient texts
reveals a profound spiritual intelligence woven into the fabric of the
universe. She is a reminder that divinity is not always loud and visible — sometimes
it whispers in the dark.
Who Is Upashruti?
The name Upashruti is derived from the Sanskrit roots upa
(near, towards) and shruti (that which is heard). Together, the name carries
the meaning of “that which is heard from close by” or “the
sacred heard voice.” This etymology itself is deeply instructive. In Hindu
thought, shruti refers to revealed knowledge — the Vedas themselves are shruti,
meaning divine sound that was heard by the ancient rishis in deep meditative
states. Upashruti, therefore, is not merely a night goddess — she is an
embodiment of divine revelation through sound and silence.
She is described in the Mahabharata as a goddess of the
night, and in a separate but equally important context, as a supernatural
oracular voice. This voice was believed to be uttered by sacred idols following
specific mystic invocations, answering sincere questions about future events.
In ancient temple traditions, the concept of a living, responsive divine
presence was not considered unusual. The idol was not seen as mere stone but as
a vessel of consciousness, and Upashruti was the voice through which that
consciousness spoke.
Upashruti in the Mahabharata
The Mahabharata, that great ocean of dharmic knowledge and
narrative, provides us with two important references to Upashruti. The first
appears in the Adi Parva, Chapter 166, where Upashruti’s divine assistance
enables Indrani — the consort of Indra — to locate and perceive Indra through
the holes of a lotus stalk. This was no ordinary act of navigation. It was a
mystical vision granted through divine grace, made possible by Upashruti’s
intervention.
The second and perhaps more touching reference comes from
the Udyoga Parva, Chapter 14, Stanzas 12 and 13. Here, it is narrated that
through the grace of Upashruti, Shachi Devi and Indra were reunited. Shachi,
one of the most devoted and steadfast consorts in all of Hindu sacred history,
was separated from Indra during a period of great cosmic disturbance. Her
determined search for her husband, guided by the light of night and the voice
of Upashruti, is a testament to devotion and the divine support that accompanies
it.
These two episodes reveal Upashruti as a facilitator of
divine union — a goddess who helps separated souls find one another, who makes
the invisible visible, and who guides seekers through darkness toward reunion.
Patron Goddess of Uttarayana
Upashruti is also identified as the patron goddess of
Uttarayana — the sacred period marking the sun’s northward journey across the
sky during the first half of the year. Uttarayana, beginning with Makar
Sankranti, has tremendous importance in Hindu thought. The Bhagavad Gita itself
mentions the significance of this period:
“Agni, jyoti, ahah, shuklah, shan-masa uttarayanam —
Tatra prayata gacchanti brahma brahma-vido janah.” (Bhagavad Gita, Chapter
8, Verse 24)
This verse speaks of the northward path of the sun as the
luminous path through which the knowers of Brahman depart to reach the Supreme.
That Upashruti presides over this auspicious passage connects her to
liberation, ascent, and spiritual elevation. She is not merely a goddess of
physical night — she governs the transition from darkness to increasing light,
from ignorance toward wisdom.
Symbolism of Night and Sound
In Hindu thought, the night is not merely the absence of
day. Night, or ratri, is sacred in itself. The Ratri Sukta of the Rigveda
praises the goddess of night as the one who brings rest, restoration, and the
deep silence in which the soul may commune with the infinite. Upashruti, as a
night goddess, inhabits this same sacred dimension.
Sound, too, holds a supreme position in Hindu philosophy.
The universe itself is said to have originated from sound — Nada Brahman, the
primordial sound. The Vedas teach that Om is the first and most fundamental
vibration of existence. An oracular goddess who speaks through sacred silence,
whose very name means “the heard,” is deeply aligned with this
principle of divine sound as cosmic truth.
Upashruti thus represents two pillars of spiritual life —
stillness and sound. She is the voice one hears only when the outer world grows
quiet. She speaks to those who have stilled the noise of the mind through
sincere invocation and devotion.
Teachings and Life Lessons
Upashruti’s quiet presence in the sacred texts carries
powerful teachings for the spiritual seeker.
Seek in silence. Her oracular nature teaches that divine
guidance does not always come through dramatic signs or external spectacle. It
comes in the stillness of night, in the quiet of sincere prayer, to those who
listen with an open and prepared heart.
Devotion finds its way. The story of Shachi Devi finding
Indra through Upashruti’s grace is a luminous teaching on the power of devoted
love. When the heart is pure and the intent is sincere, the divine steps in to
guide even through the deepest darkness.
Transitions are sacred. As the goddess of Uttarayana,
Upashruti teaches that every transition — every movement from one phase of life
to another — is sacred and presided over by divine intelligence. The soul’s
journey is never without celestial accompaniment.
Modern Day Relevance
In a world that is perpetually noisy, Upashruti’s essence is
more relevant than ever. She invites us to pause, to sit in silence, to listen
within. Whether through meditation, prayer, or the simple act of sitting
quietly under the night sky, her teaching is timeless — the divine voice
speaks, but only those who are still enough can hear it.
Her patronage of Uttarayana also reminds us to honour the
rhythms of nature and the cosmic calendar that Hindu Dharma has always
recognized. The movement of the sun, the turning of seasons, the shift from
darkness to light — all are sacred events, governed by divine presences such as
Upashruti.
Upashruti may not be the most widely worshipped of
goddesses, but she is among the most deeply meaningful. She is the divine
whisper in the night, the grace that unites separated hearts, the sacred voice
behind oracular wisdom, and the celestial guide of the sun’s luminous northward
journey. In her quiet way, she teaches us that divinity pervades every corner
of existence — including the darkness, the silence, and the unseen spaces where
the soul listens and the divine speaks.