Guest guest Posted April 5, 2004 Report Share Posted April 5, 2004 [An excellent article by Dr Nanditha Krishna.]http://www.newindpress.com/sunday/sundayitems.asp?id=SEC20040403221854&eTitle=Columns&rLink=0Sunday April 4, 2004Winds of changeNanditha KrishnaOn April 4th, when the asterism Uttiram appears in the month of Panguni,Tamil temples dedicated to Shiva celebrate the thirukkalyanam or divinemarriage of Shiva and Parvati. The wedding is preceded by 10 days ofprocessions and celebrations, commemorating the 10 days when Devi fasted andprayed for Shiva to marry her. On the 10 day, or Panguni Uttiram, Meenakshiweds Sundareshvarar at Madurai, Karpagam weds Kapalishvarar at Mylapore(Chennai) and Kamakshi weds Ekamreshvarar at Kanchipuram. These threetemples are famed for their grand celebrations, but all temples of Shivacelebrate the wedding.Each town has a local legend with a reason for the divine association. AtKanchipuram, Kamakshi built and worshipped a mud (bhoomi) Linga andprotected it from a flood, for which she was rewarded with marriage toShiva. At Mylapore, Parvati was distracted by a beautiful peacock (mayil)during Shiva’s discourse, and was cursed to become a peahen. She fasted andprayed till Shiva appeared and married her. Meenakshi was a local princessof Madurai who succeeded her father to his throne and even defeated Shiva’sarmy. Then she met and was charmed by Shiva, who married her. These arethree of many stories where Amman or Devi is as powerful and independent asShiva.Each of Shiva’s devotees - including Nandi, Ravana and the 63 Tamil Shaivitesaints (Aruvathimoovar) - is given the honour of becoming a vahana orvehicle for a day and carrying the exquisite bronze statues of the Godsaround the locality during Panguni Uttiram. Every tribe, caste andsub-group - no caste is unrepresented in the Nayanmars - is integrated intoHindu society when their devotees marry the local form of Devi to Shiva.These are marriages made and blessed by people on earth, and fulfilling veryearthly motives. Added to this diversity is the utsavam itself, whendevotees irrespective of caste and class come together to pull the vahanasand the massive ratha or chariot, making the occasion a massive melting potof Hindu society.This festival becomes very important when we consider the on-going debate onthe “Sanskritisation” of the tribals and lower castes. Many commentatorswould have us believe that this is a new phenomenon invented by the BJP togarner votes. Not so. Upward mobility - social and economic - is as old asIndian civilization, and always attractive: the BJP has merely identifieditself with the process, a clever move that speaks well for the party’sunderstanding of Indian society.The Mother Goddesses of Indian villages protected their people from disease,ensured human, animal and plant fertility, and so on. As the population grewand villages became towns, the village goddesses were identified withParvati and Lakshmi and, as their incarnations, married Shiva or Vishnu.Karpagam the peahen was an anthropomorphic goddess, while Meenakshi was adeified princess. When the goddesses married Shiva or Vishnu, primitivepractices like blood sacrifice ceased and the ritual became more sattvik andmainstream Hindu.The 10 days of prayer by the goddess reflects the “transformation” process,when the female deity realizes the inevitability - even superiority - of thealliance, and her cult followers join the mainstream. At the end of theperiod, each retains his or her importance: Meenakshi and Kamakshi are thepatron deities of Madurai and Kanchi with their own temples, while Karpagamhas her own shrine in Shiva’s temple. Most Shiva temples have a separateshrine for Amman, a creation of the Chola period. During Panguni Uttiram,the Goddess “enters” Shiva’s temple and marries him, thus sealing analliance through matrimony, a common feature among past dynasties. Theseweddings represented alliances between different local cults and mainstreamHinduism.Whenever this amalgam of the village goddess and Shaivism happenedhistorically, it was not termed as “Sanskritisation” or “Aryanisation”, norwas any opposition created against it, as the Congress is trying to createamong some tribal groups in Central India. It was a natural process, aresult of entire communities moving voluntarily into the mainstream.Absorption and acculturation have been dominant features of the Indiansub-continent, and have been responsible for the diversity of Hinduism. Ithas nothing to do with caste, and everything to do with economic progress.I have seen the process happen very naturally in Tamil Nadu, away from theeyes of the media. CPR Environmental Education Centre has an on-goingprogramme of restoring sacred groves. Seeing the emerging forests, gardensand water bodies, the local people in most sites have renovated theirtemples for the goddess of the grove, choosing to reject primitive cruelrituals such as animal sacrifice and preferring more sophisticated forms ofworship. The priest of the Amman temple is generally the local potter.Occasionally, the potter-priest has even become vegetarian, adopting asacred thread and changing the rituals. I would not be surprised if he werehailed as a Brahmin in a few years. Upward mobility is a very naturaldesire, and society does facilitate it. We are very proud of ourmobile-toting farmers and cooking gas using Self Help Groups, a part of“India Shining”. With economic prosperity comes a natural sequel - thedesire for social equality and acceptance.When Vedic society degenerated into the primitive, a public revulsionagainst bloody sacrifices and the rigid caste system resulted in thephilosophic debates of the Upanishads, Buddhism and Jainism, and a religiousand spiritual revival. This gave the trading class position and powercommensurate with their wealth. The ultimate winner was the bhakti movement,when devotion was concentrated in a personal deity, Shiva, Vishnu and Devi,who were acceptable to all social forces. Their local forms were absorbedinto mainstream Hinduism.In this context, it is a pity that the Tamil Nadu Animals and BirdsSacrifice Act (1950) was repealed for electoral reasons. The DMK objectedwhen the Act was enforced, and the AIADMK responded by removing the Actitself. Today, as Hinduism is reinventing itself, practices like sacrificerepresent a primitive past that Hindus want to change. I do not think thatthe Act will give either the DMK or the AIADMK any extra votes.An agricultural society worships female fertility deities, while industrialor urban societies revere powerful male gods. But agricultural societies aredependant on industrial societies for technology, while the latter depend onthe former for food. The mutual dependence results in social coalitions,sealed by religious coalitions.Religion is dynamic, not static, and an economically dynamic India will seemore religious dynamism and more change. >From time to time, Indian societyhas gone through inner upheavals resulting in change. A political party maybe the immediate beneficiary in the 21st century - as several dynasties werein the past - but the churning is from within. New religious coalitions arebeing thrown up every day, in response to the fast-changing socio-economicscenario. The religious dynamic of the present is one such churning. Divineweddings are among the many expressions of human coalitions, when two sidescome together voluntarily, in the past or in the present.The author may be reached at nankrishna (AT) vsnl (DOT) comTo change your subscription options go to this URL..IndianCivilization/join?referer=1iption options go to this URL..IndianCivilization/join?referer=1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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