"Juggernaut: a massive, inexorable force that crushes everything in its path."
— Oxford Dictionary
Spiritual
and intellectual efforts of hundreds of
millions of people over millennia have
graced India with a rich and complex culture
— a culture whose subtlety knows
no rival. During the last three centuries
the attempts of most Westerners to penetrate
the spiritual dimension of Indian culture
has at best been doomed to superficiality.
Although
some sincere seekers of truth from outside
India's borders have succeeded in their
pursuit of Indian spirituality (and this
is increasing as time goes on), still,
the vast majority of the Western world
remains caught in the slumber of misconception,
much of which can be traced to an insufficient
fund of knowledge and misinformation.
Without the benefit of a preliminary briefing
or education in Indian spirituality, a
newcomer to India is certainly at a decided
disadvantage, and is apt to view things
according to his or her own cultural or
religious biases. Of course this cultural
cataract has marred many attempts to understand
another's culture, yet the British view
of India is perhaps one of the most vivid
examples of misunderstanding that continues
to take its toll today, some 40 years
after Indian independence. Thus perhaps
the richest spiritual heritage on Earth
has been relegated to obscurity in modern
times.
After
a visit to India, Mark Twain once said,
"East is East and West is West and
ne'er the twain shall meet." This
is certainly true on the physical plane,
but the very nature of spirit is that
it is neither Eastern or Western. India
has, as her trademark, demonstrated an
exemplary attitude of religious tolerance
for many centuries, accommodating a vast
number of different religious traditions
within her borders: Jewish, Christian,
Zorastrian, Muslim, and Hindu, among others,
thus demonstrating that religious harmony
does not depend on geographical considerations.
How
the basic misconceptions about Indian
spirituality first developed vividly comes
to light when we examine history between
1690 and 1947, during which time Great
Britain occupied India.
The
British began their conquest of India
from Calcutta, where they established
the East India Company — a business
venture that was destined to rule India
with an iron fist for almost 250 years.
When
the Britishers returned to their motherland,
they depicted India as a barbaric, uncivilized
country filled with polytheism, mythology,
and idolatry. The scene they painted portrayed
India as a country of primitive worshipers
bowed down before a ghastly statue of
some god or goddess. To them this represented
one of the most hideous examples of human
degradation, one of those horrors of ignorance
which the British had long left behind.
The British summed up India as a hodgepodge
of heathenistic superstitions. This attitude
toward India and her spirituality was
shared by just about every Britisher in
India and at home, from the King and Queen
of England down to the desk clerk at the
East India Company in Calcutta.
They
felt nothing of value could be gained
from the "primitive Hindus"
except their abundance of gold and jewels.
However, in actuality the British had
stumbled upon the oldest and most civilized
society — in terms of spiritual
culture — in the world. Sadly, the
British view of India was to become the
prominent world view of India.
During
the early days of imperial rule in India,
the British received some of their first
impressions of India's spiritual culture
via their encounters in the holy city
of Jagannath Puri — encounters which
plunged the British deep into severe cultural
shock.
Jagannath
Puri is located on the east coast of the
Indian sub-continent in the tropical state
of Orissa, about 310 miles south of Calcutta.
It has been a holy place of pilgrimage
for devout Hindus since ancient times.
The city is shaped like the silhouette
of a conchshell. The shape of the conchshell
bears the spiritual significance of Jagannath
Puri being the abode of the Godhead, Vishnu,
who carries a conchshell as part of his
eternal paraphernalia. In the center of
the conchshell silhouette there is a portion
of raised ground called Nilgiri or "the
blue hill." On the crest of Nilgiri
stands an imposing temple complex dedicated
to Vishnu as Jagannath, "the Maintainer
of the Universe." In Sanskrit jagat means the universe, and natha means the maintainer.
It
has been a standard practice in India
since ancient times to develop a city
or village around a central holy shrine.
Thus the temple of Jagannath is established
at the center of Jagannath Puri. Situating
the temple at the center of the city had
a twofold justification: apparent and
transcendental. The apparent reason was
a practical one; the temple being in the
center of the community provided easy
access for community gatherings. The transcendental
reason was a philosophical one: the people
of ancient India conceived of the Godhead
as being at the center of the universe
and at the center of all activities in
the universe. Thus the temple being at
the center of the community acted as a
reminder that human life is ultimately
successful when everything is dedicated
to the Godhead at the nucleus.
The
proper name of the temple in Jagannath
Puri is Sri Mandir, and according to the
palm leaf chronicles therein, the temple
has existed for a very long time. The
present temple structure, built in the
twelfth century by King Chodaganga Deva,
soars 215 feet into the air and spans
an area of more than 428,000 square feet.
Surrounding this massive structure is
a stone wall 20 feet high with four large
gates: the elephant gate, the lion gate,
the horse gate, and the tiger gate. These
gates face north, east, south, and west
respectively; the temple itself faces
east as is customary in Indian temple
construction.
Within
the main compound of Sri Mandir there
are over one hundred shrines of lesser
importance which are committed to the
demigods in charge of universal affairs
or the sub-controllers of the universe.
In the midst of these lesser shrines is
the main temple hall called the Bada-deula,
in which resides the predominating deity
of the temple, Sri Jagannath. The deity's
eyes are large and round like the lotus
flower, his complexion is blackish, and
his nature is all-merciful to his devotees.
Sri
Mandir is one of the best examples of
spiritual culture found anywhere in India,
past or present. The standards of worshiping
the deity have been going on for many
centuries without interruption in the
grandest style imaginable. Fifty-four
separate offerings of vegetarian food
are prepared daily and offered to Jagannath.
For the preparation of these offerings,
an exceptionally large kitchen called
the bhoga mandap is required. This happens to be the
largest kitchen in Asia, and it employs
650 people as cooks and assistants.
It
is believed that the food offered to Jagannath
becomes prasadam, "the mercy
of God," which when eaten, destroys
one's karmic reactions and thus helps
to purify one's existence. Over 50,000
people take prasadam at the Jagannath
temple every day.
Before
entering the main shrine of the deity
there is a finely crafted hall with many
pillars called the nata mandap or "dancing hall," and pilgrims,
devotees, and worshipers of Jagannath
often perform dancing and singing there
for the pleasure of Jagannath. Previous
to British rule, the Jagannath temple
maintained several hundred devi dasis,
or maidservants of Jagannath,
who would frequently perform dance and
drama in the nata mandap. The system of the devi dasis was a voluntary one, and never involved
any kind of slavery, as was misconstrued
by the British overlords during their
rule in India.
In
the bada-deula
main hall of Sri Mandir, Jagannath rests
on a five-foot-high stand called the ratna
singhasan, the jeweled throne. The deity itself
is also about five feet tall. To the right
of Jagannath are two other thrones: one
for Subhadra, the sister of Jagannath,
and one for Baladeva, the older brother
of Jagannath.
According
to the worshipers of Jagannath, Godhead
is never alone. He (in this case it is
he, the male aspect of Godhead, purusha) is eternally engaged in transcendental
pastimes via the manifestation of his
own internal energies. These pastimes
are said to exist eternally on the absolute
plane of reality. Godhead, they say, is
complete in his existence, yet for the
pleasure of himself and his loving servants,
he creates a world of transcendental variegatedness
called the paravyoma, the spiritual sky. Subhadra and Baladeva
are said to exist in the spiritual sky
as members of the divine family and are
thus worshiped along with Jagannath at
Sri Mandir.
Six
times a day beginning at 4 A.M. and ending
at 9 P.M., the main hall is open to the
devotees for viewing the deity. This is
called darshan. During these
times the worship of Jagannath is enthusiastically
performed and the devotees become absorbed
in ecstatic rapture.
How
the deity of Jagannath appeared and came
to be worshiped at Jagannath Puri is an
interesting story which one can learn
from any of the temple priests: A millennia
ago there was a pious king named Indradyumna
who ruled the province of Malava, extending
from Jagannath Puri to the southern tip
of India. King Indradyumna was a spiritual-minded
man, and as such he always favored the
association of sages and saintly persons.
One day while listening to the sages,
the king heard that the ultimate realization
is that of the personal form of Godhead.
From that day on the king cultivated a
desire to see the form of Godhead in the
core of his heart. Knowing that such a
desire may take many lifetimes to perfect,
the king continued to rule his kingdom
and to associate with the saints and sages.
One
night King Indradyumna had a dream that
Vishnu came to him. During this dream,
Vishnu said that the king would find a
wooden log at the seashore and that he
should take this special log and get it
carved into a deity according to the direction
found in the Shilpa Shastra, the authorized scripture which governs
such things. When the king awoke from
his dream he was exceedingly happy and
went directly to the seashore, where he
found a very large log lying on the beach.
King
Indradyumna's men carried the heavy log
back to the palace, and the king ordered
his carpenters to begin the wood carving.
However, the wood was so hard that whoever
tried to carve it simply broke his tools.
The king was very perplexed and thus he
took rest for the night.
The
next day, Vishvakarma, the architect of
the celestial world, came to see King
Indradyumna. Vishvakarma informed the
king that the log which he had found at
the seashore was daru-brahman or divine wood. Vishvakarma said that
it would not be possible for any mortal
to carve this wood, but that he himself
would do it if the king desired.
As
Vishvakarma prepared to do his work, he
informed King Indradyumna that there was
one stipulation: no one should be allowed
to observe the work of carving until everything
was complete. Vishvakarma said that if
his meditation were disturbed, he would
immediately abandon the king and return
to the celestial world. The king agreed.
Many
days passed and King Indradyumna patiently
waited while Vishvakarma carved away in
a secluded chamber. Unfortunately, the
king's wife Gundicha was not so patient
as her husband; Gundicha repeatedly urged
her husband to take a peek at the progress.
Remembering his agreement with Vishvakarma,
King Indradyumna was naturally reluctant.
Then one day, the noise of hammering and
chiseling stopped and not even the slightest
sound could be heard coming from Vishvakarma's
studio. The suspense of silence pushed
the king to the edge of his patience and
he and Gundicha slowly opened the door
to the studio. Before the door was halfway
open, Vishvakarma vanished from sight,
leaving his tools on the floor and his
work unfinished.
King
Indradyumna was mortified at this turn
of events and his heart felt heavily burdened.
In order to expiate for the interruption
and incomplete work, the king decided
to fast until death. While fasting he
again had a dream in which Vishnu told
him that the incompleted forms of the
deities were in fact perfectly worshipable
forms. The so-called incompleteness, he
said, represented bodily transformations
resulting from intense love in separation,
a particular ecstatic mood known as vipralambha. In the case of Jagannath, it was the
purusha's longing for
his female aspect prakruti in intimacy. Overjoyed by these instructions, King
Indradyumna arranged for the building
of a beautiful temple and for the worship
of the deity which continues even to this
day.
The
British regarded all these stories about
the appearance of Jagannath as mythology
and never took them seriously. Neither
did the British ever enter the temple
to observe the loving ecstasy of the devotees
who worship Jagannath. They assumed the
whole affair to be idol worship. However,
there was one occasion when the British
did get the opportunity to see Jagannath
face to face and to witness the great
devotion of his devotees. Every year the
temple of Jagannath holds a marvelous
festival called Ratha Yatra. It appears
from the temple records that this festival
is the oldest regularly performed spiritual
function in human society.
The
Ratha Yatra
is held annually in mid-July and lasts
for several days. Preparations begin months
before with the construction of three
exceptionally large chariots or rathas. To build the large chariots, vast amounts of wood
are required, which is brought to the
main road in front of the temple and placed
in stacks. Day and night workers paint
the individual parts of the chariot and
begin to assemble them one by one; soon
the shape of the chariots becomes manifest.
Each chariot towers three stories high while standing
on sixteen wheels. When the super-structure
is complete, the upper portion of each
chariot is covered with a brightly colored
canopy of red, yellow, black, and green
silk. The wheels are eight feet in diameter
and a slightly sagging hand rail encloses
the upper deck of the chariot. On top
of the canopy there is an impressive gold
spire flanked by two green parrots carved
in wood and a yellow silk flag.
Pilgrims
are astonished to see the beautiful decorations
of the chariots. The chariots have a celestial
beauty and appear as high as a great mountain.
The decorations include bright mirrors,
white whisks, pictures, sculptures, brass
bells, and iron gongs. When the chariots
are completed, thousands and thousands
of pilgrims begin to arrive from all over
India. On the actual day of the festival,
over one million people are present, including
some of the top ministers in the Indian
government, generals from the army, and
occasionally even the prime minister.
At the lion gate everyone gathers with
an intense eagerness as they wait for
Jagannath to be brought from the temple
and placed on his chariot. Suddenly, heralded
by the blowing of conchshells, the smiling
face of Jagannath appears in the doorway
of the temple. The crowd stands, jumps,
and shouts a welcome praise to the Lord
of the universe, "Jagannath kijay!
Jagannath kijay! Jagannath kijay!"
As
the deity emerges from the temple he is
supported on both sides by strongly built
men called dayitas. A series of sturdy cotton pillows called tulis are spread out
from the temple door to the chariot, and
the heavy deity of Jagannath is carried
from one pillow-like pad to the next.
Moving from pillow to pillow with a graceful
swaying motion, Jagannath gradually ascends
his chariot.
The
dayitas
say,"Jagannath is the maintainer
of the whole universe. Therefore, who
can carry him from one place to the next?
Jagannath moves by his personal will just
to perform his pastimes." This first
aspect of the festival where Jagannath
mounts his chariot is called the pandu-vijay and takes about
one hour.
The
deities of Subhadra and Baladeva are similarly
transported to their chariots as the parade
is about to begin. Joining Jagannath on
his chariot are dozens of enthusiastic
servants and devotees. Surrounding the
chariots are devotees from Bengal and
Orissa who begin to sing melodious devotional
songs accompanied by the music of clay
drums and hand cymbals. A minister of
the government then comes forward and
sweeps the road in front of the chariots
with a gold and silver broom. Then sandalwood-scented
water is sprinkled on the freshly swept
road. Seeing the highly posted minister
engaged in menial service to the deity,
the people become very happy.
Four
long, extra-heavy ropes are attached to
the front of each chariot and extended
into the crowd of people. Taking the ropes
in hand, a hundred or more people on each
rope, everyone awaits the signal from
the chariot driver to begin to pull. A
whistle sounds one long blast, the rope
tightens, and the chariot begins to roll.
The huge wooden wheels wobble from side
to side as they squeak and turn on their
heavy wooden axles. The chariot pullers,
called gaudas, pull with great
happiness. The chariot sometimes moves
quickly, sometimes slowly. Mysteriously
the chariots sometimes come to a complete
stop even though everyone is pulling very
hard. It appears that the chariots are
moving by the will of Jagannath. Making
their way along a stretch of road for
about three miles, the chariots arrive
in front of the Gundicha temple, where
they remain for some days and then return
to the Jagannath temple in a similar manner.
There
is a profound spiritual meaning behind
the Ratha Yatra which the great
sages and devotees of Jagannath have described
thus: "The worship of Jagannath is
generally conducted on a grand scale of
awe and reverence wherein his devotees
see and revere him as the Supreme Godhead.
This mood of awe and reverence, however,
is not as pleasing to Jagannath as the
mood of spontaneous love of God exhibited
by his most confidential devotees the
gopis, the milkmaids
of Vrindavan. In the mood of awe and reverence,
Jagannath is always found in the company
of Lakshmi, the goddess of fortune. But
sometimes Jagannath remembers the intimate
loving affairs between himself and the
gopis, and thus he
is overwhelmed with feelings of separation
and desires to return to Vrindavan. Jagannath
then leaves his temple and mounts his
chariot to go to Vrindavan and meet with
the gopis. As Jagannath sees the white stretch of sandy road
in front of his chariot with beautiful
gardens on both sides, he is reminded
of the Yamuna River and the groves of
Vrindavan where he sported with his gopis. Jagannath's
mind becomes filled with pleasure at these
thoughts and he smiles intensely."
The
esoteric meaning of the Ratha Yatra
combined with the actual beauty of the
event have inspired many devotees to compile
excellent songs and poetry in praise of
Jagannath. Famous in Jagannath Puri are
the beautiful verses known as Jagannath-astakam, which are vibrated
from the lips of thousands of pilgrims
during the festival:
"Sometimes in great happiness Jagannath, with his flute, makes a loud concert in the groves on the banks of the Yamuna. He is like a bumblebee who tastes the beautiful faces of the cowherd damsels of Vrindavan, and his lotus feet are worshiped by great personalities such as Lakshmi, Shiva, Brahma, Indra, and Ganesh. May that Jagannath be the object of my vision."
"In his left hand Jagannath holds a flute. On his head he wears a peacock's feather, and on his hips he wears fine yellow silken cloth. Out of the corners of his eyes he bestows sidelong glances upon his loving devotees, and he always reveals himself through his pastimes in his divine abode of Vrindavan. May Jagannath be the object of my vision."
"Jagannath is an ocean of mercy and he is beautiful like a row of blackish rain clouds. He is the storehouse of bliss for Lakshmi, the goddess of fortune, and Saraswati, the goddess of learning, and his face is like a spotless, full-blown lotus. He is worshiped by the best of demigods and sages, and his glories are sung by the Upanishads. May that Jagannath be the object of my vision."
"When Jagannath is on his chariot and is moving along the road, at every step there is a loud presentation of prayers and songs chanted by large numbers of brahmanas (priests). Hearing their hymns, Jagannath is very favorably disposed towards them. He is the ocean of mercy and the true friend of all the worlds. May that Jagannath be the object of my vision."
Unfortunately,
the British did not have the same visions
of Jagannath as did his devotees. Not
only did they see something less beautiful
and charming but they saw something quite
ghastly. Perhaps it was a projection of
their own inner natures since it was they
who had come to India as conquerors and
not as seekers of truth.
The
British described Jagannath as "a
frightful visage painted black, with a
distended mouth of bloody horror."
Seeing the grand procession of the Ratha
Yatra,
the British experienced further disdain
and coined the term "juggernaut."
This word gradually found its way into
the Oxford Dictionary with the meaning
"a massive, inexorable force that
crushes everything in its path."
It could hardly be expected that the British
should have immediately fallen in love
with Jagannath or worshiped him, but at
least they could have investigated the
meaning and philosophy behind him. Instead
they maligned Jagannath to the world as
"a horrible, bloodthirsty idol."
Lamentable as it was, the British view
of India spread throughout the world,
and thus for centuries the real beauty
of India's spiritual conceptions remained
undiscovered.
But
fortunately, we in the Western world are
gradually maturing culturally, and are
becoming more open-minded and receptive
than ever before to learning what India
has to offer the West. And Jagannath's
big eyes are still beaming, and his wide
smile still invites all people to come
to Jagannath Puri every year to enjoy
the spiritual bliss of the Ratha Yatra. I have seen this festival with
my own eyes, and I doubt that I will ever
experience anything quite as prodigious
and jubilant in my life.
Amazing Blog
ReplyDeletethanks for sharing
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