Brahmavadini
Brahmavadini
Brahmavadini
This has been mentioned in the texts like Madhava Samhite on Parashara Smriti, in Harita
Dharma Sutra, etc. Some claim that Brahmavadini is just a wife of a daughter of a male rishi. But
that is not what the texts define them as, nor does the very word Brahmavadini imply anything of
that sort. Instead the word actually implies a knowledge of the vedas.
which means
She who studies vedas after upanayana and then gets married is brahmavadini, she who gets
married immediately after upanayana and then studies vedas is sadyovadhu
This goes on to show that women were eligible to both the sacred threading ceremony as well as
the vedic studies in ancient times. This also means that women are also eligible to Gayatri
Upadesha and to learn the Gayatri Mantra. Because any person who has undergone the
Yajnopavitam ceremony is eligible for Gayatri Upadesha.
So, denying the women rights to study vedic knowledge, to Yajnopavitam Samskara and Gayatri
Upadesha is un-vedic. In the vedas there is not a single reference which denies the women
these rights.
Shri Madhvacharya in his Mahabharatha Tatparya Nirnaya, describes the scholarly nature of
Draupadi, the wife of Pandavas as
Great women should study the Vedas like Krishnaa (Draupadi)
Now obviously, it would be naive to say that women cannot study the vedas, while there are
hymns in the Vedas which were revealed to women sages!
Katyaayana in his Rigveda Sarvanukramani lists the 27 Rishikas as follows, saying these are the
brahmavadinis or female vedic scholars.