The Great Indian Goddess
The Great Indian Goddess
4 (May, 1975), pp. 235-265 Published by: The University of Chicago Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1062045 . Accessed: 13/03/2014 13:17
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Stella Kramrisch
In India, the Great Goddess has many names. She also has many shapes. "When she reveals herself, it is then said that she is born" (MP. 81.48). In essence she is immortal, in appearance feminine. She reveals herself in creation, in the manifest cosmos. Or, she has created it. She acts differently from any woman and any god. She is the Great Goddess in any of the forms which she assumes. They are her symbols and, as such, polyvalent. Some of the myths of the goddess will be recounted here; step by step they are part of the structure in which her living image has its being. In three of her figures the goddess confronts us moving, acting at great and decisive speed. The one rushes into existence out of the creator, out of the source itself, to return and be taken back again by the gods. Her name is Saranyu, she who runs. No description is given of her, no evocation of how she looked. She is what she does, pristine goddess, no embodiment, a power unallayed driving herself into situations which she creates. We are free to think of her to lend her human shape-that of a young woman-which she does not retain or which she changes in the course of her story as first told in the Rg-Veda and rendered differently subsequently.
The following abbreviations are used in the text: A V. = Atharva-Veda, Br. Ar. Up. = Brhad-Aranyaka Upanisad, H V. = Harivarha, Jaim. Br. Jaiminiya Brdhmana, KS. = Kdthaka Samhitd, M. Bh. = Mahd Bharata, MP. = Markandeya Purdna, Mund. Up. = Mundaka Upanisad, P. = Purana, RV. = R?g-Veda,S. = Samhitd, Sank. G. H. = Sdikhdyana Grhya Sutra, SB. = Satapatha Brdhmana, Svt. Up. = Svetdgvatara Upanisad, TS. = Taittiriya Samhitd, Up. = Upanisad, VS. = Vdjasaneya Samhitd. 235
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Saranyu is the daughter of Tvastr, the god who fashioned the cosmos and all living beings (RV. 10.17.1). She had a brother Visvarupa, probably her twin, who, as his name says, had all forms. He had three heads (R V. 10.99.6), which would have destined him to rule over the three realms of the cosmos, heaven, midair, and earth. But perfect and complete as he was as form, he kept all the power to himself; he did not communicate, neither did he propagate. This was monstrous, for by keeping all his endowments, all his potentialities and wealth ("the cows"), cooped up, he deprived the cosmos of sustenance (RV 10.8.8-9). In the perfectness of his form he was felled by Indra, the new creator god, who was to open up all hidden treasures so that the world could share and enjoy them. Indra threw back into chaos the triple head of Visvarupa, the perfection of form itself (see RV. 10.8.9). Saranyu, the sister of Visvarupa, was of a different nature. She rushed out from the father into creation. She hurried out into creation and got married (RV. 10.17.1). The wedding was announced by Tvastr. The time was the dawn of creation, and all the world came together on this occasion. She was married to Vivasvat, the Radiant. He is luminous and illumined, he is the creative Fire of the mind, the archetypal poet; through his messenger he brought the fire to man. Vivasvat's brilliance comes from heaven and shines on earth. He is immortal by nature when he acts as priest on earth. Marrying him, Saranyu has rushed into the light of creation as
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History of Religions it shines in heaven and earth. Her firstborn were twins. This runs in her family. She herself most probably was a twin. Her twin brother, though, was unlike her. As twins, fathered by Tvastr, the Shaper of all things, they represent two possibilities come into existence. The one is form in its perfection, a completely finished form, an end in itself, without future, and thus condemned. The only place for this finished form is a return to chaos. That was the destiny of Visvarupa, her brother. Saranyu rushed into the light of creation which expands from heaven to earth and here her twins were born (RV. 10.10.10-12, 10.17.1). They were Yama and Yami, were male and female and, as their names imply, each in turn was a twin in itself, was of twofold nature. This they had inherited from Vivasvat, immortal by nature if acting as priest on earth. Yama, born here on earth, knew the possibilities within him. He was in creation, into which his mother had rushed. He knew he had to choose when acting: To stay in creation, to remain here, meant to propagate as creatures do. His sister tempted him, offered herself to him. He refused-and chose to die. He became the first mortal, and by his death he, the god, left the world of mortality and left his dear body behind in it as a token. "For [the sake of] the gods Yama chose death" (RV. 10.13.4)-and found for men the way beyond. There Yama the immortal drinks with the gods, in the furthest recess, under the well-leafed tree (RV. 10.135.1; 10.14.8). Yami's passion for Yama, the immortal, remained unfulfilled. Mankind did not spring from him who had brought death into the world and had returned to the gods. By his decision to become mortal he redeemed his immortal nature and showed mortal man the way to his kingdom. He opened the gate leading out of existence, the way back to the source. But Yami's passion was for Yama the mortal. She did not embrace him in his other nature, that of the creative fire. Yama is Fire (Agni), a fire that consumes and cannot be consumed. He is the fire of Death and the fire of Love. They burn at the gates of life, at the entry into life and the exit. Yama remains the immortal god. Of Yami little is heard but that woe seized her when the passion of her body had found no response. Yama and Yami did not become the parents of the human race. The fires of Yama keep burning at the gates of life. While all this happened Saranyu had become pregnant again. This time once more she carried twins. But now the gods removed
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History of Religions
and she gives birth to twins twice over. The first twins are male and female though each in its nature is a twin, both mortal and immortal. The second twins are free from the duality of sex; they are distinct by their birthplaces, namely, heaven and earth. Through all these dualities, headstrong Saranyfi goes her straight way until, no longer by her own will but that of the gods, the celestial intelligence, she is made to reverse her direction that had led her from her source in heaven down to earth. Her ascension to heaven is a return, a homecoming from the world of pain, death, and dichotomy which she had brought about. If Visvaruipa, her twin brother, was finished in his perfection which he kept to himself, unsharing, incommunicative, fit only to be thrown into the chaos of indistinction, Saranyui, speeding away from the source, giving herself to Vivasvat, is also removed from the cosmos by the gods who decree her ascension. Moreover, they fill her place with another-a likeness-and it is from this substitute that the human race was to spring. Saranyu herself is beyond duality; she is untamed creative will, creating life in its heyday with its problems, ills, and balm. In her rush into creation and in her ascension she brought about the pattern of life. In her rush into creation she became the mother of death. In her ascension she gave birth to the Saviors. She leaves the dual world in a dual integrity. She left behind what she had created. The compassionate gods filled the void left by having taken her back, by placing a likeness in her place. This substitute acted out Saranyii's role on earth. The likeness became the mother of mankind. The gods could afford to act with compassionate irony. Yama left his body on earth, left his earthly remains: he left death on earth. Of his mother, whom the gods had taken back, nothing remained on earth. The gods filled the void with her likeness. They replaced her by a deception, not noticed by Vivasvat her husband nor by mankind who descended from her, but known to the poet-seers. Saranyu having rushed into creation set up the pattern for man's life on earth. Single minded and headstrong, the goddess in her creative will was drawn into the current of her own doing. She was saved by the gods in her ascension. At that moment she bore the Saviors of the world, the Asvins, They were to heal the calamities of the world to which the progeny of her substitute would fall victims. In this creative foresight, Saranyi, the goddess, protects the progeny of Vivasvat, the husband whom she left on earth in the embrace of her likeness.
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As swift as Saranyu, the daughter of Tvastr and wife of Vivasvat, is Sarama (.RV. 10.108). It is not said whose child she was. She did have children of her own, the Sarameyas, two dogs of varied color; mythically she was a bitch, the bitch of the gods (Nirukta 11.25). The Rg-Veda speaks of her as the messenger of Indra. Different from that of Saranyu, her progeny does not act out her role (.RV. 10.14.10-12). While they take part in her nature their role is subordinate to her adventurous, imperious self. She is a bitch and acts for Indra, the new-in comparison with Tvastrcreator god. She carries out a mission. Daring in her purpose, she achieves her end. The time of her exploit is later in the cosmic day-or night. The Panis, who were demons, robbers, and hoarders, had stolen "the cows" and other treasures (the Light) of the Angirases, the primeval fire priests and seers, and hidden them in a mountain cave deep down and far away on the other side of the Rasa. Sarama finds the track of the robbers; she discovers the cave where the Panis guard the stolen treasures, the horses and cows. The Panis ask her how it was possible for her to cross the waters of the Rasa: "Which was the decisive point?" (paritakmya; RV. 10.108.1). Sarama replies that she came as Indra's messenger (duti); in fact she came as his forerunner. She tells the Panis that the Rasa, afraid Sarama would leap over her current, helped her across as she was flying over the ends of the sky (RV. 10.108.5). So she came, driven forward by celestial power on an otherwise insuperable way, to the stronghold of treasures at the bottom of the rock. She refuses the offer of the Panis to stay with them and to become their sister; her only concern is that the cows should leave their rocky confinement by the right way (rtena), according to the order in the universe. Not in every version of the myth does Sarama act as detachedly. Although she persists in rejecting the offer of the demons to stay with them-at the further bank of the Ras--and of becoming their sister, the Brhad Devati (8.24-35) tells of her weakness for the milk of the hidden cows. She greedily drinks the milk which the demons serve her. Her strength stimulated, she returns and again crosses the Rasa. On her return Indra asks whether she had seen the cows. Under the influence of the milk served by the demons
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History of Religions
she replied "no" to Indra. Enraged, Indra struck her with his foot. She then threw up the milk and trembling with fear she went back to the Panis. Indra in his chariot followed her steps by the track of the spilled milk. This additional account not only throws light on the weaknesses of Sarama, but it also clarifies the significance and timing of her exploit. Her great feat is the crossing of the formidable Rasa. This great river flowing around the heavenly sphere (?RV.9.41.6), as told elsewhere (Jaim. Br. 2.440), helped her to cross the Rasa in a ford at the ends of the sky in order to reach the cave of stolen treasures guarded by the demon robbers, far away on the other bank of the Rasa. The first question put to Sarama by the demons was on what critical point she had crossed the Rasa. We know she followed the path of cosmic order (rta: see R V. 10.108.11; 1.72.8; pathyd rtasya 3.31.5). But let us make sure what the Rasa is. This formidable river describes a great circle on the celestial sphere. It is the apparent annual path of the sun; on it shine the twenty-seven constellations or naksatras, which are traversed by the moon in its monthly course. The course of the sun and of the moon is flanked by the circle of the zodiac, which revolves on its axis once in a day. The planets revolve around the sun; they move along the ecliptic each in its own orbit or period of revolution around its own axis. This mighty stream of visible time, the ecliptic with its currents and eddies, was traversed by the daring Sarama at the critical moment of her venture. She crossed it by the path of Rta, that is according to the order of the cosmos. We know the road that she had taken. She left her mark on it when, having rushed back to Indra full of the milk served to her by the Panis, there was an incident. She had indeed not seen the cows; she had found them, heard them bellow (RV. 3.31.6), and the Panis brought her some milk at her request. Anyhow Indra, getting a no in reply to his question whether she had seen the cows, kicked her in anger. Meaning to run back to the Panis and show Indra the way, she threw up the milk and it marked her path which Indra followed. Sarama's path to the Panis is seen to this day. It is the milky way, the galaxy. In the sky "the galaxy was and remains the belt connecting North and South, above and below. But in the Golden Age [the Krta Yuga], when the vernal equinox was in Gemini, the autumnal equinox in Sagittarius, the milky way had represented a visible equinoctial colure, a rather blurred one, to be true, but the celestial North and South were connected by this uninterrupted broad 241
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History of Religions
to the Fathers feasting in the furthest beyond; they also walk among men where they steal life (RV. 10.14.10-12). They are four-eyed uncanny dogs and have been thought to be sun and moon that take away the life of men. In the Purdnas, the Sarameyas have multiplied: they number 720. One of the twenty-eight hells where they live is called after them, Sarameya-dana (Bhdgavata P. 5.26.7, 27). The number 720 is significant; 360 nycthemerons are a year, 360 nights watched by the moon dog, 360 days by the sun dog. As the time aspects of sun and moon, the two dogs give away their planetary origin, being the sons of Sarama, who traveled, marked-and maybe is herself-the milky way. The milky way in post,Vedic times is called "Akasa Gafiga." The descent of this celestial river to earth and the hitherworld is told in the Ramayana and, in a different though less revealing myth, in the Mahdbhdrata. The myth here and in the Purdnas establishes the correlation of the sweet waters of heaven and those here on earth. The heroic exploit of the bitch of heaven belongs to the past. Gafiga of the Puranic myth is one of the mothers of Karttikeya, who was nursed by the Krttikas, the Pleiades. Many goddesses offered themselves and were accepted by him as his mothers. It is exceptional that a god should have so many mothers (see p. 262). Sarama was one of them. By that time she was considered a demoness and her authentic progeny, the Sarameyas had gone to hell. Another world age was beginning. Sarama, the bitch of heaven, is not a creative power at the beginning of things. The world already existed when she arrived on its scene to set things right. Evil already had come into existence and exerted its power, having robbed the Light of heaven and of the Aigirases, the priests. The light and the dawns, these shining cows and horses of heaven, they kept to themselves, locked up in a dark fastness. Not that they were of much use to them. They had to be liberated so that the world could go on. With this intention, Sarama, relying on her keen sense of hearing, carried out a mission before Indra himself could fulfill the task by which he was to establish himself as the creator of a new age of the gods. In this cosmic situation Sarama insisted on acting according to the law of the cosmos, Rta. She knew that only by so doing could she find the treasure of the Afigirases; only by coming out of the cave prison by the right way could this treasure be restored. Sarama threw herself into her task, racing, flying across the dark night sky, but encountered a formidable obstacle-a gigantic
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History of Religions
creation. She had no time to lose. It did not exist as yet; it came about as she went on from event to event. She traced the pattern of life which is interwoven with death, and she completed its design by drawing the line from here to there, from earth to heaven where her sons travel-the Asvins, the celestial Healers. Saranyui brought about on earth the condition of mortals. When she was taken back by the gods she left her sons, the Healers to travel between heaven and earth. Sarama's concern however is the reestablishment of cosmic order. It had been badly damaged. Its great Treasure, the Light of the sun, had been stolen by the Panis. Being canine and having very sharp hearing, she succeeded in finding the stolen cattle which the robbers were hiding in a dark, inaccessible mountain cave. The intrepid fleetness and sense of duty of this goddess, the bitch of Indra, accomplished a task which it would have been difficult for the creator god by himself to achieve. Nonetheless he did not treat her with consideration. However it was his illtempered cruelty that made Sarama mark for all time the way she had found to the Treasure. On the other hand, it was the sympathy of the river Rasa that helped her at the critical moment to pursue her path from heaven into the netherworld. The milk of the cows of Light, served to the bitch by the robber-demons and thrown up by Sarama as she raced in the darkness of the night across the sky, left its indelible trace in the stars of the milky way. The critical moment when Sarama had crossed the Rasa is fixed in time, a significant astronomical moment that confirms the resolve of the far-hearing bitch to move along the path of cosmic order. While the myth of Saranyu accounts for man's lot, that of Sarama concerns the stars in their wondrous and calculable courses.
SARASVATI
The stars, light in motion, form mighty rivers in the ocean of heaven. The Rasa or ecliptic and the milky way which later myth calls the celestial Gafiga are the most impressive. Other rivers of heaven have names of those on earth, foremost among them Sarasvati. She is one of seven sisters, or she has seven sisters (.RV. 6.36.10), and their mother is the river Sindhu (RV. 7.36.6). The rivers of heaven shine with stars; their sacred number, which is seven, is that of the planets. Seven is the star number, the seven Rsis of
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History of Religions
VAK
These are the opening verses in which she introduces herself, moving with the host of gods in mighty strides while she carries the great gods. She is their supporting power and the mistress who rules over them. Thus she enters the stage of the world and reveals herself to whom she loves. Her song continues: "Whom I love ... him only I make mighty-a seer, a sage. I string the bow for Rudra, I bring about strife amongst people. I give birth to the Father on top of this world, my origin is in the waters, in the ocean. Thence I take my stand in all the worlds and with the crown of my head I touch yonder heaven. I blow like the wind seizing all the worlds, further than heaven, further than earth." The Great Goddess has come, striding, carrying with her all the gods, and now she addresses herself to those who can hear her, declaring her love for them and them only. She has come to bring strife for the others, who are not chosen. She is the Word and the Will. She wills to string the bow of Rudra, and the arrow will kill the enemy of sacred speech. Exclusive, commanding and fierce, she is the power who smites deaf ears. By her attack she establishes her domain. Warrior and lover of whom she chooses, she withdraws on top of the world to give birth to the Father whom she conceived. While she proclaims this immaculate conception, she reveals her origin. It is in the luminous waters whose waves moving beyond the firmament are heard in the mind. Then she unfolds her sway over the world and touches yonder heaven with the crown of her head. Now she is the Great Goddess, exceeding axis of the cosmos, creator of the Father in Heaven, her own father, up on high. Wind is her breath, she sways the world in the gale of the spirit. "The heavenly oceans flowed from her and then the Word, the Aksara, the creative syllable" (RV. 1.164.42). Striding and carrying with her the gods, she halts in her movement when she touches with the crown of her head the transcendental heavens in the limitless flood, her own birthplace (yoni) where she gives birth to the Father, at the top of the World. Born with the gale of the spirit which is her breath, she stands and lets the heavenly ocean flow from her in sacred speech. She is the movement of and in the waters of creation, mother of
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History of Religions Her breath has seized them and their meaning can carry them "further than heaven, further than earth." Sarasvati, the daughter of lightning, the voice of thunder, manifests in the tremendousness of intuition. Vak, born in the flowing waters of transmundane creation, moves in stately procession; she carries with her the gods, in her gait which is so steady that she seems to stand still touching heaven with the crown of her head when she gives birth to her father. The heavenly ocean of light flowed from her. All the worlds were in her breath. The wind carried their names.
ADITI
Another and comprehensive form of the Great Goddess is Aditi. She is comprehensive because, as her name reveals, she is Boundless. More even than that she is anything, she altogether is. In that boundless fullness she is the Mother. "In the highest heaven non-being and being are in the lap of Aditi" (RV. 10.5.7). Nonbeing and being, the abyss and life, lie side by side in her transcendental womb. Being unbounded, having no limits, who can discern them? When born, only Aditi knows their identity as she knows her own, for "Aditi is the sky, Aditi is the air, Aditi is the mother, the father, the son, all the gods, the five kinds of beings, Aditi is what is born and what will be born" (R V. 1.89.10). Now in the first age of the gods (RV. 10.72.3, 9) she does not look back, only the pregnant present counts. Being all mother, the boundless one exceeds sex and gender, she is spoken of as he when she is being addressed as father and as son. Having no limits she extends boundlessly beyond what is born and what will be born. Everything that is born is born from her, in this welter of birth giving there are no bounds; she herself is drawn into it for "Daksa is born of Aditi; Aditi of Daksa" (RV. 10.72.4). On whichever level Daksa's identity is interpreted, it does not affect this reciprocal relation. She carries him, but only when he is born is she born of him as his mother. She comes into existence as mother by his birth only. Aditi is the transcendental pregnant androgyne, all mother by virtue of her pregnancy and not of her femininity. Being the boundless one, she is mother, father, and son. Everything is born from her. Daksa is born of Aditi. Daksa means skill, the ability to do things-the sacrificial rites in particular. He carries out conceptions: what is conceived in Aditi becomes reality through Daksa. Reciprocally, Aditi is born from Daksa. Skill or competence
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History of Religions
Aditi, the great mother, had a bad moment when she saw her issue a seeming paradox, an abortion, Martanda, a "dead egg," the very shape of life to be yet without it. She lost control of herself and threw away the dead child. When she saw him alive, she brought him back, to live and to die. Saranyi, the Rushing One, was taken back by the gods from this world when Yama, her son, left his dead body on earth. Aditi, the Boundless, stepped into this world in the first age of the gods at dawn, when her dead child arose as the glowing sun from the ocean. Impetuous Saranyu was not equal to her impulse. She drew back from death, and the gods helped her flight and ascension. Having assumed the shape of a mare, she had then become pregnant, Vivasvat, the Radiant, her husband, having consorted with her in the shape of a horse (Brhad Devatd 7.1-6). The horse is a symbol of the sun, and her twin children of this union were born, one here on earth, the other in heaven. They were the healers of the woes of life which Yama and Yami had brought into the world. Aditi in her boundlessness gave birth to death. But she redeemed her shock and made good the abandonment of this son of hers recognizing his double nature, strung out in time, his life a dying and arising in aeviternal succession. Aditi is featureless, parturient, birth giving. No image could be made of her based on her evocation in the texts. In the whole of Indian art, however, one vision is frequently given shape of a goddess shown lying or sitting in the birth posture. Her name is not known though the theme persists over more than a millennium and is known in stone and terra cotta reliefs from the Ganges Valley into the Deccan. With all her amplitude of body and limbs widely splayed out, the figure has no face, though it has a head and the head is a lotus flower. In some instances the two-armed image holds lotuses.
MOTHER EARTH
The goddess Lotus or Padma (RV. Khila, 2.6), Sri, the auspicious, Laksmi, "having wealth," is extolled as lotus born, lotus eyed, standing on a lotus, abounding in lotuses. As mother of created beings she is called Earth (Ksama; HV. 3.12.4). Like a lotus this earth of ours floats on the waters. The lotus flower was predestined to become divinized as woman. The life cycle of the plant completes itself within the flower itself. Its seedpod does not scatter
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History of Religions (AV. 6.29.1) of matter invested with life. In this aspect, Earth (Prthvi) is a goddess of cruel mouth and iron bond (TS. 4.2.5). Nirrti seen by herself is the negation of Rta, she is decomposition, death herself ( RV. 1.117.5). The dissolution of living substances is her power, it seems to go against Rta, the cosmic order and its continuity. In this anguish Prthvi, the Earth, is invoked together with Heaven, with whom she forms the primal couple; may they protect against this calamity "Heaven and Earth the wise encompassing with cosmic order" ( V. 10.36.2). Mother Earth, conjoint with Heaven, gives the reassurance so badly shaken by her in her own domain. There she opens her gruesome mouth to devour, imprison, and destroy all living beings whom she, together with Father Heaven, had enclosed day and night in aeviternal succession. Prthvi is the great mother (mahi mdta Prthvi; SB. 13.1.6.1). Dual in her nature she acts destructively, disintegrating in her role as elemental earth. But seen with Father Heaven vaulting over her, she responds under his cosmic presence to the light of the sun and the darkness of night; she is the bounteous Mother. Then her nature as Nirrti loses its desperate isolation; Prthvi is known under her greater name, she becomes Aditi (SB. 2.2.1.19); and she also is known to be Vak (SB. 4.6.9.16; prthvi vai vdk). They are not identical. Where they merge, the one into the other they blend, shading off ever so subtly into the being of the other. Prthvi as the Great Mother is raised in the Brdhmanas to the being of Aditi. She is ensconced in her. Aditi of the Rg- Veda is boundless, she gives birth to all the suns that ever shone. When she gives birth to Daksa she is born from him in an instant as timeless as that when Vak gives birth to the Father. Aditi and Vak precede and bring about creation. Prthvi is the Great Mother of created beings. Her realm includes that of Laksmi, though Laksmi is not a Rgvedic goddess. Laksmi, the goddess Lotus, embodies this marvel of a flower. It holds the entire cycle of the life of the plant within its petals. This self-contained continuity of the lotus is of the nature of Padma, the goddess Lotus, who is also known as Sri, the goddess Beauty, and Laksmi, the goddess Luck. Her antagonist is Nirrti. While Nirrti withdraws from theophany after the Vedic Age, she surfaces in the shape of more than one form of the Great Goddess like that of Kali or of Camunda, or she assumes different shapes while retaining some of her attributes. Nirrti is one of the names of the dread goddess in her many shapes. Alaksmi, the
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History of Religions
are guarantors of existence of earth; Bhu Devi, the Earth goddess being soft and loving, Sri Devi the Lotus goddess by the flowerlike quality of her femininity. Was not "Mother Earth wide extended, very dear Prthvi" invoked in the Rg-Veda to protect "from the lap of Nirrti" (RV. 10.18.10).
DYADIC DEITY
Usas, Cosmic Dawn, the virgin daughter of heaven, is seen in the morning and evening, in every twilight, and is invoked in the dual: this "bride" or "brides" of the sun (R?V. 7.75.5; AV. 8.9.12). She leads into the day and out of it. She leads to the night, is the sister of night (R?V. 1.113.2-3); sometimes her darker aspect prevails over her blushing loveliness. Once she had to abandon her chariot (RV. 10.138.5). Frightened, she ran away into the beyond. She was of evil intent because Indra had smashed her wain. It fell into the river Vipas. All this happened because she had been arrogant (RV. 4.30.8-11). Though she is the daughter of heaven, Indra defeated her in her dark and demoniac second nature. The story is told amid victories of Indra over unambiguous demons (R?V. 4.30.7; 4.30.13 f.) who threatened his supremacy-or did Indra loathe her voyage into night, she who was born as the daughter of heaven, dawn of the world and bride of the sun? Brhaspati once had to liberate her from the cave of the demons deep down in the abyss (R?V. 10.68.9). Had she now been heading for it, back into cosmic night, the realm of demons? Night, the sister or also alter ego of Usas, the Dawn, herself has two aspects. "The goddess Night looks out of a thousand eyes. With the light she has driven away the darkness" (RV. 10.127.1-2). She is illumination herself, by her own light she shines in the darkness. When she opens her eyes light is in them a thousandfold. It could not be seen but for the darkness of this goddess studded with stars. But in her other aspect she is impenetrable, cloying darkness (tamas) leaving her stain on whatever she touches (RV. 10.127.2), like sin, like guilt. This is the darkness in the cave in the pit. The night of illumination and the night of stupefying, cosmic darkness are the two natures of Night whom the poet experiences while he invokes the goddess Night, daughter of
Indica, vol. 29 [1951-52].) Among monumental images of this goddess in Alampur in the Deccan, one in lying position is still being worshiped today. Only women are allowed to enter her sanctuary. The officiating priest told me the name of This corresponds to Prthvi. the Goddess-Elamma. 255
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History of Religions
enters Prajapati. Vak, the Word, in this myth was in the Father. Once uttered, Vak, the power of speech, creates all creaturesand returns to the father. Though Vak here is not the omnipotent Great Goddess but rather the wayward child who does her own thing, she is the creatrix, and not herself the beginning of, created creatures. However Purusa, the primordial male, felt alone. "He who is alone has no delight. Purusa desired a second. He became as large as a man and woman in close embrace. He caused himself to fall in two. From that arose husband and wife. He united with her. From that human beings were born. She thought how can he embrace me after having produced me? She hid herself. She then became a cow, the other became a bull, united with her and from that cows were born. She then became a mare, an ass, a she goat, a ewe, he became the corresponding male animal, he united with her. From them all the respective animals were born, whatever exists in pairs, down to the ants" (see Br. Ar. Up. 1.4.3-4). Out of loneliness, desire, and longing, Purusa works himself into a state of gestation. He becomes as big as man and woman together; he re-creates himself as cosmic egg, as monad and, falling apart, he embraces the woman. To this primal gesture she responds with social comment and then hides herself, to be found in animal shape by her similarly transformed mate. Their descent into animal nature brings about the animals. Purusa, the primordial male, lacks the wholeness of dyadic deity. This lack fills him with emotion; he is full of loneliness and desire. They drive him to widen his being into wholeness. He fulfills himself, but in order to know and savor this wholeness he has to split himself-and finds himself as man and woman who embrace and unite. Purusa, the primordial male in the Brhad Aranyaka Upanisad, acts out of need, not spontaneity. He is a projection into the beginning of the human condition from which he is redeemed by being dyadic deity. With the woman he has evoked in him, he unites and procreates. Cosmogony in Indian myth is an ongoing ontology. It came to a hurdle when created creatures were to make their appearance. The hurdle arises on the way from the dyadic monad to the creation of actual woman. The Puranas treat of this at length. The ease of splitting the world egg from outside, as Indra did, was not the general solution in which division sprang from within the egg inasmuch as Brahma, born from the golden world egg, divided the egg (HV. 1.1.37-39) or himself like Purusa into two halves, 257
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Rudra emerged androgyne from Hiranyagarbha the golden egg (Vdyu P. 1.9.75-77). He acts as Brahma does and takes Brahma's place. This phase in Indian myth is that of the demiurgs, Brahma, Visnu, Siva. Each was an androgyne and born of himself (HV. 2.125.32). However, in most of the Purdnas, Rudra does not substitute for Brahma but springs from him, is born by Brahma's frustration and wrath when the mind-born sons of the creator had no interest in sexual intercourse, did not propagate, and went out of creation. They will have to be created afresh, in every new world age. This is the lot of creations of the mind. There is no contradiction in androgyne Siva born of himself and his having sprung from the world egg or from Brahma's anger. As supreme deity, however, Siva is self-existent. He enters the myth at a critical moment in which he manifests according to the role he will play in manifestation. As far as a particular situation requires it, he enters it. This is his mythical birth, an event in the myth of Siva, whereas Siva is self-born in his nature. In his total identity Rudra-Siva manifests in any event, in any guise. Brahma exerted himself, practiced tapas, but failed to produce procreative issue. From his wrath, from the angry frown of his forehead, androgyne Rudra sprang forth (Visnu P. 7.2-4; Lihga P. 1.41.7-9; Siva P. Rudra S. 1.15.15). At Brahma's behest, Rudra separated himself into his male and female natures. Other accounts say that androgyne Rudra sprang from infuriated
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History of Religions Brahma's mouth (Linga P. 1.41.38-43, 3.4.41.37; Kurma P. 11.1) when infuriated Brahma expired, for Rudra-8iva is the Lifebreath (prana). When Siva separated himself the goddess was born, of Siva's own will. She divided herself into a white and black half (Vdyu P. 1.9.81 f; Linga P. 1.70.324). In one version of the Siva Purdna, Siva the female half of Siva was given the power to create woman; she created a Sakti like herself from the middle of her brow, the topos of mental birth. This goddess in another world age became the daughter of Daksa; she was to be the wife of Siva. In one world age after another, Siva, the female half of Siva, assumes the shape of Siva's consort. Her name is Sati, the daughter of Daksa who consumed herself in the fire of her tapas. In another world age she is Parvati. Siva, entranced by her austerities, by the ardor of her tapas, offers her the left half of his body, hymning her "I am the sea and you the wave. You are Prakrti and I Purusa." But elsewhere (Matsya P. 2.57.1-18) Parvati is in a suicidal mood because Siva called her dark. She asks for a golden color, Brahma rewards her with a golden complexion and with half of Siva's body. The vision of the androgyne, the state of wholeness, clings to Siva and to the Goddess as well even though the androgyne had separated himself into Siva and Parvati. Yet in name Siva is but the feminine form of Siva. From the beginning Siva is Ardhanarisvara, the "Lord whose half is woman"; his body is half male, half female (M.Bh. 13.14.298; Vdyu P. 1.9.75). By his body he shows both the sexes as the cause of creation. "All creatures bear these signs. For the welfare of this world the Goddess becomes Sati" (Linga P. 2.70.327) who, from this point of view, paradoxically consumes herself in her inner fire. She has no offspring. But in another aeon as Parvati she is again united with Siva, and their love is intense and long lasting. "Siva is Siva's Sakti in the form of bliss. Lord Siva never sports with Sakti in a form different from him" (Siva P. Satarudra S. 8.34.35). "That goddess gives pleasure to him" (Skanda P. 3.1.24.24). She is the delight within deity itself. The sexual union of Siva and Parvati is within God. It does not bring about the human race nor is any god their bodily child. Karttikeya was born by other mothers from the seed spilled by Siva when he cohabited with Parvati, and Ganesa was born without sexual contact from Parvati's skin. The quest of procreation, on account of the unity of Siva and Parvati, is unfulfilled by this union. Procreation is not its purpose. In it are acted out polarities latent
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History of Religions
The king became the father of many sons. Once when he went hunting in a forest and plunged into a lake, Indra changed him into a woman. The king, ashamed to meet his family, decided to abdicate and went back into the forest where he met an ascetic. From their intercourse a hundred sons were born. The wife of the ascetic with her sons returned to the capital which had been hers as king Bhangasvana. The two sets of sons started fighting, and many were killed. Mollified, Indra granted the woman a boon that her sons would be revived, but she had to choose between those born to her when she was king and those of hers as the wife of an ascetic. She decided for the latter, as the love of a woman is greater than that of a man and also because the sexual pleasure of a woman exceeds that of a man. At her request Indra allowed her to remain a woman. On the level of the gods, it was Parvati who practiced severe austerities in order to win Siva. Yet, in more than one of her shapes did the Great Goddess, having left the god for her own creative work, return and become absorbed in his androgyne totality. Uma or 8iva who is Parvati is the Sakti or Power of Siva. At times they seem to play separate roles. Having won Siva in marriage, Parvati is his wife. They act disguised in human terms and situations which are part of the inexhaustible repertory of interactions of their androgyne nature in divinity. Just as right and left interact in the body of man-the right half of the brain being effective in the left half of the person, the left half in the right-and also, as on the human level, the effect of one action releases a corresponding action on whatever has been acted upon, so Parvati, in her images as goddess, holds up a mirror to Siva. But since Siva is everything there is, her gesture is within his total ambience; she is part of Siva, but being Parvati she is also Maya (Svet. Up. 4.10), and if her mirror reflects Siva, it is only what can be caught in a mirror and not the whole all-round reality which is 8iva, the total androgynous shape around the axis which divides and unites Ardhanarisvara. A cult image of this kind is no longer called Ardhanarisvara, the Lord whose half is woman. The name of this image is Uma Mahesvara, Uma and the Great Lord or the togetherness of Uma with the Great Lord. In another form of their togetherness, the axial relation of God and Goddess is different. On the horizontal of Siva lying on the ground, the dancing Goddess rises. His figure is without action, dead. She is active power embodied, Sakti. By the rhythm of her
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The great gods of the R-g-Veda and their Powers-the name of Indrani, the consort of Indra is Saci or Power which is the same as Sakti-as well as the Great Goddess in her many shapes are set off against hosts and swarms of femininity collectively called "wives of the gods" and "birth giving" (gdah). Others are Apsarases, water elementals. Unlimited in number, maternal groups and water nymphs float against the fixed number of yet another group of maternal potencies. They are the seven mothers of Soma (RV. 9.102.4) or of Agni (R?V. 1.141.2). They are the seven flames of Agni (VS. 17.79; Mund. Up. 1.2.7) of whom Kali is the first. Or, the seven are rivers. What all these heptads have in common is their maternity and their movement. Great Mother Rasa (RV. 5.41.15) the celestial river, tosses her waves in heaven; their movements can be traced in the ecliptic on the sky. The celestial rivers are rivers of light, primarily that of the planets. The seven planets have their representatives in other groups of seven which shine in the celestial sphere. The Pleiades, the Krttikas are the foster mothers of Skanda, the son of 8iva, though only six out of the heptad nursed Skanda. The planetary powers are also, in their second nature, female "grahas" or seizers. They come to exercise their baneful powers, they devour children. In the Mahdbhdrata they are joined by the seven mothers of Agni and other great ancient mothers, including Sarama. These, now named "Great Mothers of the Universe," offered themselves as mothers of the new savior god, Skanda. Not only that, they demanded that the goddesses Brahmesvari, Mahesvari, and the other Saktis of great gods be dispossessed. Finally, the "Great Mothers of the Universe" are assuaged. They are to preside over the destiny of children up to sixteen years of age. The swarms of these ancient great mothers, acting out their various often demoniac propensities on children, henceforward
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History of Religions
coexist with the consorts of the great gods. The latter are known henceforward as the Seven Mothers, the Saptamatrkas, assembling in a Saiva conception, under the leadership of Siva as Vinadhara or Virabhadra. These Saktis or consorts of great gods maintained the exalted position that Indrani, Varunani, and Agnayi had held in the Rg- Veda (R1 V. 1.22.12), together with further Saktis of gods Bh. (M. 9.45), hypostases of the power of the respective male god. Furthermore, all of these are joined by the female spirits of the dead, the "Divine Mothers"-to whom worship was due anciently even before the Fathers, the Pitrs (dank. G. S. 4.4.3, 11). Also, the village goddesses accede to their ranks. They threaten life from heaven and on earth. Other "mothers" or better, female fiends, were created by Siva (Matsya P. 60.155; and other Purdnas) for the destruction of demons. The evil female power thus, fighting evil, becomes a positive agent in the destruction of evil. The swarming multitudes of floating female powers, attack from the stars, and arise from the earth. They are born of fear and intensify it. Ultimately the fear is that of death, of disintegration, of Nirrti. But Nirrti, the dread ancient goddess Death is none but Mother Earth (SB. 7.2.1.11) whose lotus face is that of Laksmi. The dread goddess is said to be older than this radiant goddess, she is said to have come out of the ocean before her. She is dark, dead black night (cf. R. V. Rdtri Sukta). But she is also the serpent queen, Sarparajnii (Kausitaki B. 27.4) who sheds her dead skin and is young again ever anew. Mother Earth is the lap of death, the renewal and the lotus of life. Her life-giving images prevail, carved in stone, on the temples. Images of Surasundaris, the beautiful women of the gods, Yaksinis, Naginis and Apsarases are arrayed in the walls of the temples in zones of femininity. They are the messengers (duti) and attractions (dkarsini) by which deity draws man to its presence.
THE GREAT GODDESS: DEVI
While the host of celestial women and the swarms of sevenfold "great mothers of the universe," of "divine mothers," and the group of "seven mothers" or Saktis, that is, powers envisaged as female, float across time and space, rising and falling, the "Great Goddess," or Devi, is known in innumerable shapes yet remains totally herself. She addresses herself to mankind. She is elegant in the consciousness of her power, whatever her appearance; a woman of fashion, created, like everything else, exclusively
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History of Religions every energy, she herself is the energy of evil and that of goodness (MP. 81.63). She is herself the great Asuri or demoness (MP. 81.58). One demon, Surbha by name, wanted to marry her. But she replied that she could not marry anyone who did not conquer her in fight and who would not force her pride from her (MP. 85.69). The demon succumbs. She remains unassailable in her power. Sarama, the intrepid bitch, resisted the blandishment of the demons, the Panis, when she had found the path to the hidden treasures-the Light captive in darkness, in the beyond, deep down below the earth. They had no hold on her. Sure footed she had faced and crossed the unsurmountable obstacle, the Rasa that heaven had placed in her way, and she left her own luminous trail on the dark sky of the night. Mahamaya, the Great Goddess acts without cease and in many shapes. She knows the magic she creates. She is Consciousness itself (cetand). This is her supreme role in the display of herself wherein she plays every role herself. By her magic, Mahamaya, cosmic illusion, keeps man in bondage (MP. 81.44). In her stride the Great Goddess leads him beyond it: as Mahavidya, transcendental knowledge, the creatrix of the universe is a bounteous goddess. She who had admitted man to her display and made him part of it becomes his guide to final liberation of which she is the cause (MP. 81.43,44). Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
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