Document Type

Article

Publication Date

Summer 2026

Keywords

Garbha Samskara, Garbha Upanishad, Adi Shaiva tradition, prenatal communication, Indigenous knowledge systems, traditional medicine, maternal wisdom, cognitive development, spiritual consciousness

Abstract

This paper examines Garbha Samskara practices described in the Garbha Upanishad within the Adi Shaiva tradition, exploring how ancient prenatal sciences cultivated cognitive development and spiritual consciousness in children. Drawing on original Sanskrit verses, the eNpregnancy program revived by Supreme Pontiff of Hinduism Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam (SPH), Akashic record readings, historical accounts of royal women who raised enlightened children, and testimonies of parents participating in the eNpregnancy program in modern times, the study demonstrates that pre-colonial Indian societies possessed advanced understandings of fetal consciousness and maternal–fetal bonding. It argues that modern Western educational paradigms and the contemporary expectations imposed on women have eroded access to these knowledge systems, leading to a disconnection from embodied feminine wisdom. Through analysis of ritual structures, philosophical foundations, and methodologies, the paper positions Garbha Samskara as an indigenous alternative to medicalized pregnancy and calls for epistemic justice and recognition of women’s traditional medicine as legitimate science.

Comments

Originally published as:

Reclaiming the Sacred Science of Garbha Samskara: The Adi Shaiva Tradition’s Vision of Conscious Conception and Prenatal Care. (2026). Fourth World Journal, 26(1), 83-105. https://doi.org/10.63428/fqv1zb98

Share

COinS