Om Saravanabhava Mantra (Subrahmanya Shadakshara) — Benefits & How to Chant
ॐ शरवणभव मंत्र (सुब्रह्मण्य षडक्षर)
Complete guide to chanting correctly for maximum benefit
Benefits of Chanting Om Saravanabhava Mantra (Subrahmanya Shadakshara)
The principal seed (bija) mantra of Lord Murugan/Subrahmanya for direct connection
Grants protection from fear, enemies and negative forces
Bestows courage, will-power and victory in difficult situations
Considered highly purifying, burning away obstacles like the Lord's fiery birth
Easy to chant and ideal for continuous japa and meditation
Foundation mantra recited within the Kanda Shasti Kavacham and Subrahmanya pujas
How to Chant Om Saravanabhava Mantra (Subrahmanya Shadakshara)
Instructions
Chant 'Om Saravanabhava' 108 times with a clean mind, ideally facing east before an image of Murugan with the Vel. Each repetition can be meditated upon as invoking one of the six faces. The mantra is often repeated continuously (ajapa) and forms the core invocation of the Kanda Shasti Kavacham. Begin under guidance for formal upasana; for simple devotion, sincere repetition suffices.
Spiritual Significance
Devotees recount that fervent repetition of 'Saravanabhava' during the six days of Skanda Shashthi, culminating in the Soora Samharam, has dispelled illness, fear and obstacles — mirroring the Lord's slaying of the demon Surapadma on the sixth day.
Origin & History
Source: Skanda upasana tradition (Puranic and Agamic Subrahmanya worship)
Author: Unknown (traditional)
The mantra is rooted in the Skanda Purana account of Kartikeya's birth: Shiva's third-eye fire, too potent to be borne by anyone, was carried to the Sharavana reed-grove where it became the six-faced child. Hence the Lord's intimate name 'Saravanabhava'. The syllables became the celebrated Shadakshara mula-mantra, central to Subrahmanya worship in South India and the heart of texts like the Kanda Shasti Kavacham.