Gajendra Moksha Stotram
गजेन्द्रमोक्ष स्तोत्रम् in English · English
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✦ Meaning
The Gajendra Moksha Stotram is the celebrated prayer of Gajendra, the king of elephants, from the Eighth Canto of the Srimad Bhagavata Purana. Seized by a powerful crocodile and exhausted after a thousand-year struggle, Gajendra abandons all reliance on his own strength and surrenders wholly to the Supreme Lord, praising Him as the formless, all-pervading source of creation. The moment his prayer becomes free of all selfish desire, Lord Vishnu appears on Garuda and frees him. It is cherished as the supreme hymn of surrender (sharanagati) and of the Lord's certain protection for those who call upon Him.
Origin & Story
Srimad Bhagavata Purana, Eighth Canto (chapters 2-4) · Veda Vyasa (as narrated by Shuka to King Parikshit) · Puranic
The Gajendra Moksha is narrated by Shukadeva Goswami to King Parikshit in the Eighth Canto of the Srimad Bhagavata Purana. Gajendra, king of the elephants, had been the pious king Indradyumna in a former life, cursed by sage Agastya to take an elephant's body. Seized by a crocodile (a Gandharva named Huhu, fallen by the curse of sage Devala) while drinking at a lake, Gajendra fought for a thousand years until utterly spent. Surrendering every other hope, he recited this prayer — the supreme jaapya he had learned in his previous birth — addressing the Lord not by any sectarian name but as the formless, all-pervading source of all. Pleased by such pure, desireless surrender, Lord Hari appeared upon Garuda, severed the crocodile's jaws with His Sudarshana Chakra, and lifted Gajendra from the water, granting both him and the crocodile liberation.
✦ As told in scripture
The Bhagavata declares that the very instant Gajendra's prayer became free of all selfish motive and he sought the Lord alone, Sri Hari, who dwells in the hearts of all, abandoned His own abode and rushed on Garuda to the lake — delivering the elephant before any other god could respond. Devotees hold that the Lord still comes with the same swiftness to any soul who, having exhausted every other resource, cries out to Him in complete surrender.
Complete Text with Meaning
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śrī-śuka uvāca - evaṃ vyavasito buddhyā samādhāya mano hṛdi | jajāpa paramaṃ jāpyaṃ prāg-janmany-anuśikṣitam ||
Meaning:Sri Shuka said: Thus resolved in his mind and fixing his consciousness within his heart, Gajendra began to recite the supreme prayer he had learned in a previous birth.
śrī-gajendra uvāca - oṃ namo bhagavate tasmai yata etac-cid-ātmakam | puruṣāyādi-bījāya pareśāyābhidhīmahi ||
Meaning:Gajendra said: Om. I offer my obeisances to that Supreme Lord from whom this whole conscious creation has sprung. We meditate upon Him, the Supreme Person, the original seed of everything, the Lord of all.
yasminn-idaṃ yataś-cedaṃ yenedaṃ ya idaṃ svayam | yo'smāt-parasmāc-ca paras-taṃ prapadye svayambhuvam ||
Meaning:In whom this universe rests, from whom it arises, by whom it exists, and who is Himself this universe — to Him, the self-existent one who is beyond the highest, I surrender.
yaḥ svātmanīdaṃ nija-māyayārpitaṃ kvacid-vibhātaṃ kva ca tat-tirohitam | aviddha-dṛk-sākṣy-ubhayaṃ tad-īkṣate sa ātma-mūlo'vatu māṃ parāt-paraḥ ||
Meaning:This creation is projected by His own maya upon His own Self — sometimes manifest, sometimes withdrawn. He, the untainted witness, sees both states. May that self-rooted Lord, greater than the greatest, protect me.
kālena pañcatvam-iteṣu kṛtsnaśo lokeṣu pāleṣu ca sarva-hetuṣu | tamas-tadāsīd gahanaṃ gabhīraṃ yas-tasya pāre'bhivirājate vibhuḥ ||
Meaning:When, in the course of time, all the worlds, their rulers, and all causes are dissolved into oneness, only deep, impenetrable darkness remains; yet the all-pervading Lord shines resplendent beyond that darkness. May He protect me.
na yasya devā ṛṣayaḥ padaṃ vidur- jantuḥ punaḥ ko'rhati gantum-īritum | yathā naṭasyākṛtibhir-viceṣṭato duratyayānukramaṇaḥ sa māvatu ||
Meaning:Neither the gods nor the sages can comprehend His position — how then can an ordinary creature describe or reach Him? Like an actor who assumes many forms, His ways are impossible to trace. May that Lord protect me.
namo namas-tubhyam-asahya-vega- śakti-trayāyākhila-dhī-guṇāya | prapanna-pālāya duranta-śaktaye kad-indriyāṇām-anavāpya-vartmane ||
Meaning:Obeisances again and again to You, who wield the irresistible threefold power (of the gunas), who are the source of all intelligence, the protector of the surrendered, of endless might, the path that the uncontrolled senses can never reach.
yaṃ dharma-kāmārtha-vimukti-kāmā bhajanta iṣṭāṃ gatim-āpnuvanti | kiṃ cāśiṣo rāty-api dehama-vyayaṃ karotu me'dabhra-dayo vimokṣaṇam ||
Meaning:Those who desire dharma, pleasure, wealth, or liberation worship Him and attain their wished-for goal; He even grants an imperishable body. May that Lord of boundless mercy grant me deliverance.
ekāntino yasya na kañcanārthaṃ vāñchanti ye vai bhagavat-prapannāḥ | aty-adbhutaṃ tac-caritaṃ su-maṅgalaṃ gāyanta ānanda-samudra-magnāḥ ||
Meaning:His unalloyed devotees, who have fully surrendered to the Lord, desire nothing whatsoever; immersed in an ocean of bliss, they sing of His most wondrous and auspicious deeds.
tasmai namaḥ pareśāya brahmaṇe'nanta-śaktaye | arūpāyoru-rūpāya nama āścarya-karmaṇe ||
Meaning:Obeisances to that Supreme Lord, the limitless Brahman of infinite power, who though formless possesses unlimited forms — obeisances to Him of wondrous deeds.
Word-by-Word Meaning
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Benefits of Chanting गजेन्द्रमोक्ष स्तोत्रम्
Regarded as the supreme hymn of total surrender (sharanagati) to the Lord
Believed to invoke the Lord's immediate protection in moments of grave danger and distress
Frees the mind from fear, helplessness and dependence on one's own limited strength
Traditionally recited for relief from disease, debt, enemies and life-threatening crises
Cultivates pure, desireless devotion that seeks the Lord alone and not His gifts
Said to grant liberation (moksha) at the end of life, as it did for Gajendra
Recitation at dawn is held to remove the burden of accumulated sins
How to Chant गजेन्द्रमोक्ष स्तोत्रम्
Bathe and sit facing east before an image of Lord Vishnu. Light a lamp and recite the Gajendra Moksha Stotram slowly with full attention, contemplating Gajendra's complete surrender. The Bhagavata states that the Lord rises to protect the helpless the instant the devotee gives up all other shelter, so chant with a heart that relies on Him alone. It may be recited daily, or read in full during illness, danger or moments of helplessness, and is traditionally read for the welfare of the departed.
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