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There is one aspect
of Indian religion which
is absolutely remarkable
but goes largely unnoticed.
That is the fact that
India remains the only
country where there
is any significant worship
of the Great Mother
Goddess whose worship
was once spread over
the known world. This
is a phenomenon that
is nothing short of
a major miracle, considering
how completely she has
been forgotten elsewhere.
There are some covens
of pagan worshippers
left in Europe and the
Wiccans gamely carry
on with an ancient connection
to the Mother but in
real terms, these are
recreations of tradition,
new religions in ancient
garb. Japan has a Sun
goddess Amaterasu, but
I don't think that she
is seriously prayed
to within the encompassing
folds of a Shinto that
has to contend with
Zen, Buddhism and Christianity.
The Buddhists have a
Tara, but that stream
of devotion has long
become a trickle. Christianity,
of course, has a major
trump card in Mary,
all the old energies
of Mother worship in
Europe coalesced around
her. Nevertheless she
is not regarded as God,
only his mother and
a co-saviour. As I was
saying, it is only in
India that the old religion
remains.
People are not aware
of the extent of that
faith. If you take all
the thousands of Mother
Goddess temples and
its variants around
the country, a rough
guesstimate would be
around 300 million believers.
That makes Goddess worship
a world religion in
itself, within the larger
fold of Hinduism. As
in every part of the
world the archeological
evidence is clear that
there was a thriving
goddess faith in most
parts of India. It was
however, never part
of the mainstream, except
as a grudgingly accepted
adjunct. Male prejudices
and insecurites could
not tolerate a female
divinty, and the whole
concept is still distaseful
for the puritanically
traditional. For the
Goddess, as befits her
ancient origins, is
as much a force of chaos
as for order and she
is too lustily uninhibited
in her affirmation of
Life and Living for
the sour pusses who
set themselves up as
arbiters of morality
and tradition - sanitized,
bowelderized and safe.
In reaction perhaps
to all of this, a stream
of Goddess worship exploded
about a thousand years
ago that flamboyantly
proclaimed her to be
the Supreme Diety. These
people were having no
truck with the usual
compromises that the
forces of the establishment
were offering - respect,
and a subordinate status
for the goddess, if
she agreed to be potrayed
as the wife of Shiva,
and sometimes Vishnu.
They wrote their own
Puranas to combat those
written by the followers
of Shiva and Vishnu,
and in them the Goddess
or Devi, to be exact,
rose to becoming the
Mahadevi - The Great
Goddess.
This Mahadevi was, and
remains, a supreme creatrix
figure, independent
of and prior to any
male diety. In fact
so adamant were her
followers that they
even went to the extent
of describing the Great
Trinity, Brahma, Vishnu
and Shiva, as the three
legs of her foot-stool.
She is specificallly
described as the Consort
of None, and the Shakti
of all, i.e the Real
power behind the puffed
up pretensions of the
male gods. This is no
Vedic goddess who has
her token verses of
praise and is set aside.
This is the Absolute
Reality, the Absolute
Truth, the Brahman Itself
(or is that Herself?).
In the 19th century,
the great Ramakrishna
calmly said the same
thing about his Mother
goddess Kali, who is
one aspect of the Mahadevi.
The Mahadevi is also
the ruler and personification
of Maya (see our glossary).
In the typical yin-yang
approach that characterises
such descriptions she
is immediately described
also as:
"the supreme eternal
knowledge (vidya) that
becomes the cause of
salvation (moksha)".
Mother therefore is
a tough cookie, one
who can keep you in
ignorance or choose
to release you from
its bondage. What matters
therefore is her grace,
obtained by devotion.
Even Shiva, Pure Consciousness,
is Shiva only because
of devotion to Her.
Otherwise he too would
be in bondage to Prakriti
(nature) and Maya and
be merely Shava (a corpse)!
Vishnu, Preserver of
Worlds, is allowed his
quota of herioics only
because She is properly
indulgent with him!
This is of course hot
stuff, and the various
sects had many interesting
confrontations about
such material. However,
the confidence of the
Shaktas, as devi worshippers
are called, was never
shaken. Finally, in
an obvious attempt to
broker peace, as well
as a delightfully sly
assertion of the Mahadevi's
supremacy, an official,
agreed-upon-by-all myth
came into being to explain
the perplexing reality
of the Mahadevi.
This myth became the
standard version of
the Mahadevi and sparked
off an unprecedented
wave of creative output
in India's artisans
and sculptors. An Asura
demon named Mahisha
gained unprecedented
powers by the force
of his austerities.
He was now invincible
and immortal and forthwith
proceeded to give the
gods a torrid time.
However, his boons had
a fatal flaw in them,
one that his misogynistic
pride had overlooked.
He was immune only to
men. So what? He was
the great Mahishasura
- the shapeshifting
buffalo demon - and
what could a mere woman
do to him? One can almost
sense the glee with
which the myth was being
formed, the male arrogance
being castigated here
is not just Mahisha's.
The great trinity of
Gods got together to
help the lesser dieties
who were fighting a
losing battle againt
Mahisha. As they listend
to the tales of woe
of the devas, their
faces became filled
with a rage that shone
and gleamed and then
burst out in fiery beams
of light. These beams
merged together with
the energies that instinctively
poured forth from that
of the lesser gods,
and a great refulgent
mountain of light was
created which gradually
took form and shape.
This cleared itself
upto into the twenty-armed
form of the Mahadevi,
popularly known as Durga.
Of course, in this myth
is clearly vindicated
her claim to be the
power behind all the
gods.
Mahisha gets his lumps
in passages of bloodletting
that seem to have been
written by Sam Peckinpah.
Significantly, after
wiping Mahisha and his
armies out the Mahadevi
is not reabsorbed into
the gods. She vanishes,
the text says, a cosmic
diffusion that underscores
her constant prescence
in the world, her unwavering
upholding and support
of creation. She thus
becomes very literally
the breath of the world;
omnipresent, not remote
and incompetent like
the other gods.
Curiously enough, the
Mahadevi herself is
rarely worshipped today.
She is obviously rather
strong stuff to interact
with and what we have
all over India are shrines
dedicated to one or
several aspects of her
personality. These are
all called independent
goddesses in their own
right, but they are
the Mahadevi. These
are less challenging
of the worshipper and
they are consequently
the more popular. Also
the Consort of None
aspect has been discreetly
forgotten. Indian social
norms deem being married
as very desirable indeed
and for a devi to be
considered unmarried
would be unacceptable
rudeness on the part
of the believer.
The feminist potential
in the Mahadevi has
been totally overlooked
and it is bizarre that
more energy is spent
trying to revive Diana
and Athena than in tapping
into a religion that
is alive. India has
a peculiar relationship
with the Mahadevi, a
fearful respect that
keeps her at arm's length,
rather than try to live
the hero's life that
her worshipper will
be drawn instinctively
into. However, she remains
the supreme example
of the Divine Feminine
for all who truly wish
to find her. |