Kshira Sagara


In Hindu cosmology, the Ocean of Milk is the fifth from the center of the seven oceans. It surrounds the continent known as Krauncha. According to Hindu scriptures, the devas and asuras worked together for a millennium to churn the ocean and release Amrita the nectar of immortal life. It is spoken of in the Samudra manthana chapter of the Puranas, a body of ancient Hindu legends. It is called as Thirupaarkadal in Tamil and is the place where Vishnu reclines over Shesha Naga along with his consort Lakshmi.

Etymology

"Ocean of Milk" is the English translation of the Sanskrit terms ', ' or ', from ' "milk" and ', ' "water, ocean" or "ocean."
The term varies across Indic languages, including khir sagar in Bengali, pārkaḍal in Tamil, and Pāla Kadali in Telugu.

The Churning of the Ocean

Hindu history also contains a story about the churning of the Cosmic Ocean in order to obtain Amrita – the nectar of immortal life. At the suggestion of Vishnu the and churn the primeval ocean in order to obtain Amrita which will guarantee them immortality. To churn the ocean they used the Serpent, Vasuki, for their churning-string. For a churning pole they used Mount Mandara placed on the back of a Great Tortoise – the Kurma Avatar of Vishnu. As the gods and demons churned the sea, the terrible poison Halahala issued from its depths and began to envelop the universe with its choking fumes. Gasping for breath, the devas and asuras sought the help of Shiva, who valiantly took the poison into his throat and swallowed it. Shocked by his heroic act, the Goddess Parvati grasped him by the throat, trapping the poison there and preventing it from spreading; but, such was the strength of the poison, that it turned his neck blue, thereby earning him the name of Neelakanta. When the Amrita finally emerged along with several other treasures the devas and asuras fought over it. However Vishnu in the form of the enchantress Mohini managed to lure the asuras into handing over to "her" the Amrita, which she then distributes to the devas. Svarbhanu, an asura, disguises himself as a deva and tries to drink some Amrita himself. Surya and Chandra alert Vishnu to this deception. Vishnu then decapitates Svarbhanu just as he is about to swallow the nectar, leaving his head and decapitated body immortal.Later the head part is known as Rahu and the beheaded part is known as Ketu.
According to the Bhagavata, the products of the churning of Kshirasagara are the substances Halahala and Amrita ; the divinities Dhanvantari, Lakshmi, Jyestha and Chandra ; the animals Airavata, the white elephant and the horse Uchchaisrava and, last but not least, the magical wish-granting tree Kalpavriksha.
The Churning of the Cosmic Ocean is told in several ancient texts, notably in the Valmiki's Ramayana Canto 45 and in the Mahabharata.

Depiction at Angkor Wat

A bas-relief at the temple of Angkor Wat in Cambodia includes a depiction of devas and asuras working together to stir up the Ocean of Milk in an attempt to free the precious objects lost within, including the elixir of immortality called amrita. The scheme, masterminded by Vishnu, was to wrap the serpent Vasuki around Mount Mandara and then to rotate the mountain and to churn the surrounding sea in the manner of a gigantic food processor, by alternately pulling on the serpent's head and then on his tail.

Svetadvipa

Cosmologically the Dvipas and Sagaras depict the entire Cosmos, though in Cartiography, all the Dvipas and Sagaras are shown to lie in the Southern Hemisphere. In some of the satvata-tantras there is a description of the nine varshas and the predominating Deity worshiped in each:
  1. Vasudeva
  2. Sankarshana
  3. Pradyumna
  4. Aniruddha
  5. Narayana
  6. Narsimha
  7. Hayagriva
  8. Mahavaraha
  9. Parashurama
Paramatma, the Supersoul in the heart of everyone through whom all Avatars come to material universe, is lying on that Milk Ocean. So Paramatma is Ksirodakasayi Vishnu – who is in every atom and heart of all 8 400 000 kinds of material bodies, as the soul in each heart called atma which in essence is same as the Paramatma).