प्रज्ञाविवर्धन कार्तिकेय स्तोत्रम् — Benefits & How to Chant
प्रज्ञाविवर्धन कार्तिकेय स्तोत्रम्
Complete guide to chanting correctly for maximum benefit
Benefits of Chanting प्रज्ञाविवर्धन कार्तिकेय स्तोत्रम्
Specifically a 'wisdom-increasing' (pragya-vivardhana) stotra
recited to gain intelligence, memory and eloquence
Its phala-shruti declares that even a mute who recites it with faith becomes a master of speech (muko vachaspatir bhavet)
Promises 'maha-prajna' (great wisdom) to the devotee
popular among students before study and exams
Lists 28 names of Lord Kartikeya, making it both a stotra and a namavali of meditation
Spoken by Skanda himself in the Rudrayamala
held to be especially potent (maha-mantra-maya)
Best recited at dawn (pratyusham) with faith; suited to daily practice on Tuesdays and Krittika days
How to Chant प्रज्ञाविवर्धन कार्तिकेय स्तोत्रम्
Instructions
Bathe and sit facing east before an image of Lord Kartikeya. Recite the stotra at dawn with faith (shraddha), dwelling on each of the twenty-eight names. Students often chant it before study or examinations, and many repeat the 28 names as a namavali. The stotra itself promises wisdom and eloquence to those who recite it regularly with devotion.
Spiritual Significance
The stotra's own phala-shruti tells the great promise attached to it: that one who recites these twenty-eight names of Skanda at dawn with faith, though born mute, would become a master of eloquent speech and attain great wisdom — a power for which devotees, especially students, treasure it to this day.
Origin & History
Source: Rudrayamala Tantra (श्रीरुद्रयामल)
Author: Traditional (revealed by Skanda; from the Rudrayamala)
The Pragya Vivardhana Karthikeya Stotram is drawn from the Rudrayamala, a celebrated Tantric text. It is set as the words of Skanda (Kartikeya) himself, who reveals twenty-eight of his own names and declares them to be made of great mantras. Because Kartikeya is here invoked as Guha, Sarasvata and the ocean of Shabda-Brahman, the hymn became especially beloved as a prayer for wisdom and eloquence — its very name, 'Pragya-Vivardhana', meaning 'that which increases the intellect'. It is widely recited by students and seekers of learning.