'Parampara' (
Sanskrit: परमà¥à¤ªà¤°à¤¾, ''paramparÄ'') denotes a succession of teachers and disciples in traditional
Indian culture. It is also known as ''guru-shishya paramparÄ'', succession from
guru to disciple. In the paramparÄ system, knowledge (in any field) is passed down (undiluted) through successive generations. The
Sanskrit word literally means ''an uninterrupted series or succession''.
[1] In the traditional residential form of education, the shishya remains with his guru as a family member and gets the education as a true learner.
In some traditions there is never more than one active master at the same time in the same ''guruparamaparya'' (lineage).
[2]
The fields of knowledge taught may include, for example,
spiritual, artistic (
music or
dance) or
educational.
Titles of Gurus in Parampara
In paramapara, not only is the immediate guru revered, the three preceding gurus are also worshipped or revered. These are known variously as the ''kala-guru'' or as the "four gurus" and are designated as follows:
[3]
★ 'Guru' - the immediate guru
★ 'Parama-guru' - the Guru's guru
★ 'Parapara-guru' - the Parama-guru's guru
★ 'Parameshti-guru' - the Parapara-guru's guru
See also
★
Guru-shishya tradition
★
Gurukula
Notes
1. ''A Sanskrit-English Dictionary'' by Sir Monier Monier-Williams (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1899), ISBN 0-19-864308-X. Page 587, column a.
2. Padoux, André. "The Tantric Guru" in White, David Gordon (ed. 2000). ''Tantra in Practice'', p. 44. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
3. Mahanirvana Tantra