
Lamp/Diya Table
Oil lamp or Diya table should be in the SE (Agni corner) or East (Surya's quarte
Local term: आधुनिक LampDiya वास्तु — Lamp/Diya Table (Ādhunika LampDiya Vāstu — Lamp/Diya Table)
Modern Vastu strongly recommends SE or E placement for oil lamps. The SE position is safe (away from drafts), symbolically correct (Fire in Fire's quarter), and practically effective (illuminates deities from the front).
Source: Contemporary Vastu synthesis
Unique: Modern practice accepts LED diyas as Vastu-neutral alternatives when fire safety is a concern.
Lamp/Diya Table
Architectural diagram for Lamp/Diya Table

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
SE, E
The lamp/diya table shall be placed in the Southeast (SE) or East (E) direction, where Fire energy is strongest and most harmonious. The Contemporary Vastu synthesis prescribes this alignment to ensure the fire properties of the placement resonate with the directional energy of the dwelling, creating balanced spatial harmony. Placement in Northwest (NW) or West (W) is strictly avoided as it creates elemental dissonance.
Acceptable
NE, S
NE facing deity or South section.
Prohibited
NW, W
NW (draft exposure) or West (decline symbolism).
Sub-Rules
- Diya or oil lamp table in the SE or East of the room▲ Major
- Lamp in the NW — exposed to wind energy▼ Major
- Lamp illuminates the deity's face or entrance from its position▲ Moderate

Principle & Context

Oil lamp or Diya table should be in the SE (Agni corner) or East (Surya's quarter). The flame aligns with Fire's domain and illuminates the deity's face. NW placement exposes the flame to wind; West placement directs light toward decline.
Common Violations
Oil lamp in the Northwest — Vayu exposure
Traditional consequence: The flame in Vayu's quarter is perpetually unstable — the lamp flickers, sputters, and often goes out. Symbolically, the unstable flame represents unstable prosperity and intermittent divine grace. Practically, wind-exposed flames are fire hazards.
Lamp facing away from the deity
Traditional consequence: The lamp's purpose is to illuminate the divine face — a lamp that faces away directs its sacred light into empty space while the deity remains in shadow. The worship loses the visual-devotional connection that the lamp creates.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects the domestic Deepak to the Agni of Vedic fire rituals — both are Agni's presence.
Marathi Samai tradition includes the perpetual Nanda-deep in the SE.
Tamil Kuthuvilakku tradition is one of the most elaborate domestic lamp traditions in India.
Kakatiya stone lamp stands in the SE of temples validate this tradition.
Hoysala temple lamp niches in SE walls provide architectural evidence.
Kerala's Nilavilakku tradition integrates flame height with deity-face height — unique alignment principle.
Gujarati Aarti tradition positions the lamp for deity illumination from SE/E.
Bengali Sandhya Pradip ritual connects the daily lamp-lighting to SE placement.
Jagannath Temple lamp placement in the SE informs domestic practice.
Sikh Akhand Jot (perpetual flame) follows the same SE placement as Hindu Nanda-deep.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Place a small table or shelf in the SE for the daily Diya. Use a windproof lamp if the SE has air movement. LED diyas are acceptable when real flame is impractical.
Modern VastuPlace the Diya stand or Deepak table in the SE corner of the pooja room, positioned so its light falls on the deity's face
If SE is occupied by the Havan Kund, place the Diya in the East — aligning with Surya's illumination energy
Use a traditional brass Nilavilakku (standing lamp) or multi-wick lamp for enhanced Fire energy in the SE/E position
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate pooja-room/living-room toward the Agneya zone — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate pooja-room/living-room toward the Agneya zone — Hemadpanthi stone remediation tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Deepa-sthana (lamp place) in the Devagriha shall be in the Agneya or Purva — where Fire and Light are sovereign. The Deepak whose flame burns in Agni's quarter illuminates the dwelling with divine radiance; its light carries Agni's blessing to every corner of the griha.”
“The Deepa-stambha (lamp stand) or Deepa-peeth (lamp platform) in the shrine room shall occupy the Agneya or Purva position. The flame placed in the Fire quarter burns steadily and brightly — it neither flickers from Vayu's interference nor dims from Water's suppression.”
“In the Devagriha, the Deepak shall rest upon a Peeth in the Agneya direction. The flame of the Deepak is an offering of Agni to Agni — fire honoring fire — and this offering belongs in the Fire quarter.”
“Vishvakarma taught that the Deepak in the worship room is Agni's domestic representative. It shall stand in the Agneya or face the Purva — the direction of dawn. A lamp in the Purva lights the deity's face as Surya lights the world at dawn.”
“The Ratnakara prescribes: the Deepa-peeth in the Agneya creates Jyoti-pravaha (light flow) that purifies the dwelling. The lamp whose flame burns in Fire's quarter radiates Sattvic energy through all cardinal directions.”

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