

The Philosophy of Sadhana and the God-Realization Process
This book, The Philosophy of Sadhana and the God-Realization Process, aims to give a brief and concise exposition of the elaborate matrix of spiritual disciplines and practices (sadhana) from the point of view of the great spiritual tradition of Shetaut Neter and the Trika Mysticism of Black India, which has been wrongly attributed to “Aryan” or non-Afrikan (Vedic) Sages and philosophers by the racist scholars of Indiology and Asian studies. Trika (as well as every other form of Shaivism in India) was (is) the spiritual wisdom of the indigenous black people of India (Dravidians). It is a direct “remnant” of the ancient wisdom tradition of Afrika brought with them when they migrated to that part of the world thousands of years ago—long before any so-called “Aryan” invasion occurred. Therefore, I have attempted to shed some “light” on this important, but thus far neglected, tradition of African-Indian mysticism and its philosophy.
The Philosophy of Sadhana and the God-Realization Process
This book, The Philosophy of Sadhana and the God-Realization Process, aims to give a brief and concise exposition of the elaborate matrix of spiritual disciplines and practices (sadhana) from the point of view of the great spiritual tradition of Shetaut Neter and the Trika Mysticism of Black India, which has been wrongly attributed to “Aryan” or non-Afrikan (Vedic) Sages and philosophers by the racist scholars of Indiology and Asian studies. Trika (as well as every other form of Shaivism in India) was (is) the spiritual wisdom of the indigenous black people of India (Dravidians). It is a direct “remnant” of the ancient wisdom tradition of Afrika brought with them when they migrated to that part of the world thousands of years ago—long before any so-called “Aryan” invasion occurred. Therefore, I have attempted to shed some “light” on this important, but thus far neglected, tradition of African-Indian mysticism and its philosophy.