Surya Graha Mantra
Surya (the Sun) represents vitality and clarity in Navagraha worship.
Sunday japa with Om sooryaya Namaha is a common discipline.
Meaning of the mantra
Om sooryaya Namaha
Chant with a calm mind, offering salutation rather than demanding specific outcomes.
Benefits of japa (traditional view)
- Builds festival discipline
- Deepens deity bhakti
- Community yagnas may align with season
- Educational — not outcome guarantees
How to chant 108 times
- Set daily 108 sankalpa for festival period
- Keep fast/vrat rules from your family tradition
- Visit temple when possible
- Use Japam counter between work/study
When to chant
Sunday sunrise is ideal; offer water (arghya) if doing puja.
Practice with Japam
Practise Surya japa in Japam with on-screen counting.
Frequently asked questions
- Exact festival date this year?
- Check Hindu panchang for your region — we avoid locking a Gregorian year in this guide.
- How many japas per day?
- 108 minimum for many vows; some do 1008 on main day under guidance.
- Guest mode OK?
- Yes for try; sign in to save progress across festival weeks.
- Replace temple?
- No — digital japa supports home practice.
- Join collective yagna?
- See Maha Japa Yagnas in Japam menu during campaigns.
This article is for educational and devotional practice only. Japam does not provide medical, legal, or financial advice. Results depend on personal faith and consistent practice. Mantra text and audio in the app are for japa support; consult your family priest or tradition for formal puja rules.