Chapter 2 · Verse 19

Transcendental Knowledge

य एनं वेत्ति हन्तारं यश्चैनं मन्यते हतम्। उभौ तौ न विजानीतो नायं हन्ति न हन्यते
ya enaṁ vetti hantāraṁ yaśh chainaṁ manyate hatam ubhau tau na vijānīto nāyaṁ hanti na hanyate

Word Meanings

yaḥ — one who; enam — this; vetti — knows; hantāram — the slayer; yaḥ — one who; cha — and; enam — this; manyate — thinks; hatam — slain; ubhau — both; tau — they; na — not; vijānītaḥ — in knowledge; na — neither; ayam — this; hanti — slays; na — nor; hanyate — is killed

Translation

One who thinks the Self is the slayer, and one who thinks it is slain—both are ignorant. The Self neither slays nor is slain.

Commentary

यः he who? एनम् this (Self)? वेत्ति knows? हन्तारम् slayer? यः he who? च and? एनम् this? मन्यते thinks? हतम् slain? उभौ both? तौ those? न not? विजानीतः know? न not? अयम् this? हन्ति slays? न not? हन्यते is slain.Commentary -- The Self is nondoer (Akarta) and as It is immutable? It is neither the agent nor the object of the act of slaying. He who thinks I slay or I am slain with the body or the Ahamkara (ego)? he does not really comprehend the true nature of the Self. The Self is indestructible. It exists in the three periods of time. It is Sat (Existence). When the body is destroyed? the Self is not destroyed. The body has to undergo change in any case. It is inevitable. But the Self is not at all affected by it. Verses 19? 20? 21? 23 and 24 speak of the immortality of the Self or Atman. (Cf.XVIII.17)