Friday, 25 September 2015

Id-ul-Zuha: The Festival of Sacrifice



Id-ul-Zuha: The Festival of Sacrifice
Jawhar Sircar

        The festival of Id-ul-Zuha, also known as Eid-al-Adha falls on the 10th day of the month Zul-Hajj and goes up to four days. It finds mention in the fifth chapter or Surah of the Holy Quran and it coincides with the descent of Hajj pilgrims from Mount Arafat, the hill east of Mecca. In Persian, it goes by the name Eyd-e-Ghorban; in Turkish as Kurban Bayrami; in the Balkans as Kurban Bajram; in Mandarin Chinese it is Guerbang Jie and the Malaysians and Indonesians call it Hari Raya Korban, while in Bengali it is  Korbanir Eid.
Namaz is offered at the Eid congregations before taking breakfast and the Sunnah prayers are followed by the Khutbah or sermon, after which the sacrifice takes place. Different local cultures may practice some variations within the broad structure of Islam like Quranic recitation contests that are held in a small place called Tabergen in Indonesia, when the Takbir, or the proclamation of God’s greetings is tried out in every permissible manner, right from dawn.
        Bakr-id often conjures an image of slaughter of numerous goats, camels, cattle and other animals  but it is worth studying why 150 crore Muslims, which is roughly one fourth of the human race, engage in this sacrifice with so much passion and devotion. Large-scale slaughter of animals is not a prerogative of any one religion and such customs exist elsewhere as well.  At the Gadaimai celebrations in Nepal, some 3 to 5 lakh buffalos are reportedly hacked to death in an open field.
But let us leave blood aside and get to the original legend that centres on Prophet Abraham or Ibrahim, who is at the root of three major religions of the world: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. He is universally respected by all three and on this day, Ibrahim was ready to perform the greatest act of devotion that a human can ever be called to. He was to sacrifice his own son at the altar, as the Lord had commanded him. Muslims believe that this was son Ismail, while Jews and Christians insist that he was Isaac or Ishaq. The Quran also mentions Ismail’[s own devotion and conviction, as he begged Ibrahim to uphold God’s order and to cover his eyes so that his hands did not tremble. But when Abraham removed his blindfold, he saw a ram had taken the place of his son, who was alive, thanks to divine intervention.
        This total devotion is at the core of the sacrifice and Muslims believe the animal is destined for such a religious task. It is chosen with a lot of care, so that it is free from every defect and even in 1917, CH Buck noted that "there is considerable sale of the sacrificial animals on the evening before the festival". It is treated with care, almost like a member of the family. Abdellah Hammoudi, who camped among villagers in Morocco, recalled the love with which rural women lined the eyes of the sacrificial animal with Kohl, as part of a folk ritual. Muslims emphasise on the importance of sparing the victim undue anxiety and that the sacrificer keeps his knife away until the chosen moment.  The animal faces the holy Kaba and prayers are read out in the name of the almighty. The knife is wielded strictly in consonance with the rites of halal.  
          It is more meritorious for the sacrificer to carry out the zabah himself or he should at least recite the sacrificial prayers. This induces a strong involvement and the strengthening of one’s mind, body and resolve as part of religion. Eid-al-Adha  has often been used by rulers to reinforce their own legitimacy and emperors from Aurangzeb to the Shah of Iran have participated directely in the zabah in public squares.  The rulers of Morocco, for instance, use it to publicly reaffirm their claim to be the direct descendants of the Prophet Mohammad. Millions of living creatures are slaughtered every day at abattoirs all over the world, but those who partake of their flesh do not sully their hands with blood or even witness the reality of slaughter.
Surah 22, Verse 37 of the Holy Quran mentions that it is “neither their flesh nor their blood (that) reach God, but it is piety that reaches Him”. The substitution of a human by an animal is loaded with multiple meanings and John Bowen, Anthropologist of Islam says that “it is clear that in some cultures, the victim represents a person sacrificing an animal and its flesh stands for his flesh”.
There are several Muslims who are vegetarian and animal sacrifice is not an imposition on every person. Islam follows a very strict form of “redistributive justice” and that ensures compulsory charity, the zakaat. The sacrificial meat is, therefore, not meant for personal consumption and at least a third of it is given to the poor and needy. “The skin of the sacrificed animal can also be donated in the name of God", comments Dr Majida Azad, "or else it may be sold and the proceeds distributed amongst those who are eligible for Zakat”.
A century ago, Jaffer Sharif mentioned in his book Islam in India that only those who had spare animals or a certain degree of affluence were commanded to perform this sacrifice, for the greater benefit of society. Sharif said that “only quadrupeds and only those whose meat is lawful food may be sacrificed”, but researchers have found that in poorer parts of the east, even ducks and chickens were sacrificed and shared. Muslims believe that only the righteous can cross over to heaven on the Pul-sirat, the Bridge of Death, and Eid sacrifices mattered a lot.  This bridge is finer than a hair and sharper than the edge of a sword and others would fall off it to open jaws of hell.
British commentators in 19th century India observed that often "seven persons jointly sacrificed" an animal as "they believed these animals would quickly travel over the Pul-sirat.”  An illiterate villager of Malaysia put it so succinctly when he said: “only one person can ride a goat or sheep (to heaven), but seven can ride on a buffalo”.

Saturday, 25 July 2015

Ratha Yatra


Ratha Yatra
Jawhar Sircar, July 2015


        There was a hue and cry in 1948 when Harekrishna Mahtab declared that the Jagannath cult originated from Buddhism.  Rajendralal Mitra had said so earlier and British scholars and historians like Hunter, Cunningham, Monier-Williams had also advocated this theory.  But historians on the other side had equally strong arguments and issue was finally settled, stating that the “cult did not originate from Buddhism but was subjected to profound Buddhist influence later”.  Historian Kedar Nath Mahapatra added that the Jaina Tri Ratna had influenced the three gods in Puri, while the Triguna chapter of the Gita is said to be personified through Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra.
        This is not the first time that Jagannath had excited speculation.  In 1633, Willion Bruton, the first Englishman to visit Puri, declared that it was “the mirror of wickedness and idolatry”, thus beginning the European tirade against the deity.  Even in 1900, W.J. Wilkins condemned Ratha Yatra as a “disgusting and demoralizing exhibition” and in English, the word ‘juggernaut’ means merciless, unstoppable, destructive force.  Some foolish Europeans mistook the scramble of huge crowds to touch the chariot’s holy rope to be “mass-scale suicide” under the wheels.  In the 1970s and 1980s, Heidelberg University dedicated several German scholars to study the cult and publishes interesting works on this tradition, which explains it better.
        This worship attracts extreme attention because it one of the most vibrant ones in India, with countless passionate followers. It represents a rare instance of a tribal deity being directly and consciously elevated to the highest echelons of the Hindu pantheon, rather than enter it though the usual long stage-by-stage absorption. It is generally accepted that this cult arose from the Savara or Saura tribes who worshiped wooden stumps with no human features (manab-akriti), though some say the Konds are actually the original worshippers. Even today, one comes across special non-Brahman priests of Jagannath called Daita and Soaro, who claim to be the descendants of the Savaras. Several fascinating origin tales speak of Raja Indradyumna, the blue mountains Nilakandar and Lord Nilamadhaba.

        The idols of Jagganath and his two companions do not pretend to be ageless antiquities like many others do, because everyone knows that the neem stumps are changed every 10 to 20 years, through the ornate Nabakalebara ritual.  It literally means leaving the old body and consecration of new one and this is a special year of the double Ashadh months for Nabakalebara to be celebrated.  The elaborate ritual of searching for the holy tree started quite early and was conducted by a large team consisting of different types of priests and 30 police officers led by 2 inspectors.  The tree was located and a yagna performed, after which it was felled and carted to the temple.  Traditional hereditary sculptors work in secret for 21 days and nights and the old idols are buried in secret again.  Hindus worship gods in both human form and through non-human representations like the Shiva-linga, but Jagannath stands somewhere half way.  Though tribal worshipers did not insist on it, later Hindu traditions carved two outstretched arms so as to lend some human touch and the huge eyes, are of course, painted on the logs.


        One of the reasons for the immense popularity of the cult is its democratic nature as it is a rare exception, as temples do not permit the original deities to be taken out of the sanctum-sanctorum (garbha-griha). Most temples therefore carry only iconic representations called the utsavamurti in public processions. The idols of Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra are, however, mounted on extravagantly decorated chariots and taken out on the second day in the bright fortnight of Ashadh. They go some two kilometres away to the Gundicha temple, stopping on the way at their 'aunt' for Jagannath's favourite Poda Pithaa. Most religious acts and rituals re-enact historic agreements between different socio-economic groups and these halts and the return journey a week later appear very interesting to researchers. Jagannath's open processionstrengthens mass participation, irrespective of caste and class right from the medieval period, making it rather unusual for inegalitarian Hinduism. The three Rathas are constructed afresh every year from the wood of special trees brought all the way from Dasapalla, a former kingdom, where the logs set afloat on the Mahanadi and collected at Puri, to be crafted by hereditary carpenters.  Every part of the exercise is planned and executed in such an elaborate mannerthat it defies the normal ad hoc nature of Indians.

        It is believed that Adi Sankaracharya set up the four centres or Dhams of Hinduism, among which one was in Puri, while the Vaishnavite saint Acharya Ramanuja set up a Matha there in the 12th century. The temple chronicles of Puri, the Madala-panji, say that Raja Ananga Bhima of the Eastern Gangas constructed the existing temple in the first half of the 13th century.  But the Dasgopas inscription mentions that it was Choda-ganga who set it up two centuries before. The German scholars state that Yayati I started the temple even one century before this, which heightens the mystery.  The early inscriptions refer to the deity as Purushottam and he must have taken at least a couple of centuries to get fully absorbed into Hinduism and bring his two companions into the temple.

          The Purushotham-Kshetra Mahatmya has interesting stories of  Vidyapati meeting the chief of the Savaras for a glimpse of the original deity, Neelamadhava.  The exact dates in history notwithstanding, there is no doubt that the Jagannath cult was responsible in uniting the Odiya people of all classes to one common worship, right from the 13th century. Thishardly happened anywhere else in India, as caste and class still dominate and it explains why Odisha could offer united resistance to successive invasions by Turkis and Pathans for almost four centuries after Bengal's Sen rulers had collapsed.

          In Bengal there were many like Sri Chaitanya who looked up to Jagannath as a fountain of inspiration. Priests from Puri visited several homes here for centuries singing praises of Puri Dham and successive generations of Bengalis made this pilgrimage a must. Ratha Yatras were copied in south Bengal and the one at Mahesh is said to be six centuries old, while those at Guptipara and Jangipara are really crowded and colourful. The ratha at Mahisadal is welcomed with gunshots and innumerable places in this state have their own Ratha-talas, where towering wooden platforms are parked throughout the year.  Ratha Yatras and colourful Ratha Melas go together, as piety and commerce combine with a lot of fun and oily papads and piyajees to lift the spirits, even as it heavens pour on us. 

At the end, we must remember that it is neither wood nor stone that determine the phenomenal popularity of any worship, but it is its universal appeal and exceptional traits that really stand the test of several millennia and thrive. 

  (English Version of Bengali Article Published in Ananda Bazar Patrika on 26th July,2015)

Thursday, 2 July 2015

Why We Celebrate Makar Sankranti : Makar Sankranti: An Interpretation

   
India's Many Sankranti Festivals
                             Jawhar Sircar

Edited version was published in Bengali in the Ananda Bazar Patrika, Kolkata

12 January , 2015

            We talk a lot about India's 'unity in diversity', a phrase that was popularised by Jawaharlal Nehru to describe the complex state of equilibrium between the Indian nation and its many linguistic, religious or even cultural constituents. Most of us do not seek any further proof of this concept, but if we do want to look for evidence, all one has to do is to observe any one of the many pan-Indian celebrations. They do retain a lot of their own historic regional differences and yet converge on a fixed date or period in tandem with the rest of India. Our new year, for instance, is not celebrated on one common day but on a range of dates that are usually in mid-April, around the first day of Vaisakh, though the official Saka calendar begins almost one month before. To gather  evidence for these phenomena, one has literally to struggle with sparse nuggets of facts that our religious history and folklore weave in through tales. The rest has to be gleaned through anthropological analysis of tales that have to be considered more as 'allegorical' than factual. These 'united festivals of diverse Indians' come full out in play not only during Holi and Diwali, or in Navaratri and the Durga Pujas, but also in many other pan-Indian festivals.
        Makar Sankranti is one such festival that offers a good case study of this phenomenon of unity in diversity and it is held normally on the 14th of January, or a day before or after. In most states it is a one day celebration, but in certain regions it can go on for even four days and vary a lot in the rituals. It is called Paush Sankranti in Bengal, Pongal in Tamil Nadu, Uttarayan in Gujarat, Bhogali Bihu in Assam, Lohri in Punjab and Jammu, but it is also known as Maghi in that state as well as in adjoining Haryana and Himachal. It is Makara Sankramana in Karnataka and Saen-kraat in Kashmir. It goes by its standard all-India name, Makara Sankranti  in Odisha, Maharashtra-Goa, Andhra-Telengana, Kerala and the rest of north India, but it co-exists with local names like Sukaraat in Madhya Pradesh or Khichdi Parwa in parts of Bihar, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh. It is not that Hindu celebrations enjoy such variety only in India: they are equally diverse in other countries that were influenced by the Hindu religion. In Nepal it is Maghe Sankranti, in Thailand it becomes Songkran, in Cambodia the event is Moha Sangkran, in Myanmar it is Thingyan and in Laos it is celebrated as Pi Ma Lo.
             But why was this date important? Its astrological significance is that the sun enters Capricorn (Makara) zodiac constellation and the 14th of January has remained constant in the Gregorian calendar for several decades, though a thousand years ago this astrological event was on the 31st December. In the next thousand years or so, the date would shift to February, so even the more reliable Gregorian solar calendar also moves its dates around though not as rapidly as the lunar calendar that determines the Muslim festivals and many Hindu celebrations as well. Makar Sankranti ends the inauspicious phase of the preceding month that is called called Paush in many parts of India,i.e., from mid-December to mid-January. Traditionally and scientifically, it is said to mark beginning of the end of biting winter. The celebration of the northward journey of the sun, Uttarayan, is marked with more gaiety in colder countries that lie north of India and the winter solstice of 22nd or 23rd of December is indeed a very big day. People in western civilisations believed that the worst was over with this solstice and it is this pre-Christian Yuletide festival that was absorbed by the Church, to be celebrated as Christmas!
             Let us take a look at our variety with which this Sankranti is observed all over India. We may begin with Tamil Nadu, where it comes with a lot of fervour, starting from the last day of our Paush to the third day of the next month that they call Thai. Telegus also celebrate it over four days, though most other regions prefer just one or two days. On the first day, the Tamils light a bonfire, which reminds of the Lohri celebrations in Punjab, and old clothes and rejected household materials are thrown into it. The idea is both to destroy the outgoing and prepare for the new, as well as to reduce the stuff that cluttered our homes, that were traditionally rather small. The next day, new fried rice and moong-dal are boiled in milk and jaggery, until the milk and rice actually spilled over. This is exactly the auspicious sign that the household was waiting eagerly to see and once the burning smell fills the air, families break out into congratulatory celebrations. It is greeted with cheers of "Ponggalo Pongal" and with the blowing of many conch shells.  It is interesting to see how the two primary objects of pan-Indian celebrations, sugar cane and sesame are 'superseded' by rice and milk in Tamil Nadu, though these are also present. This state gets two rainy seasons and Pongal marks the harvest of paddy that the South-Eastern monsoon has gifted it, rather specially. Thus, it is a harvest celebration for three crops: paddy, sugar-cane and sesame, with paddy getting primacy over the other two.
      But what have sugar-cane and sesame to do with religion? Plenty: because these two crops lie at the very root and are the reason for observing the Sankranti celebrations. This is where analysis takes over, to explain that numerous religious events do not centre on some archaic superstition but are actually celebrations of man's covenant with his eco system. It took centuries to arrive at dates or periods as humans realised that certain times of the year herald specific solutions to their eternal problems and insecurities. Every householder knew throughout the ages that there were four essentials that his kitchen required to cook decent meals, and this applied to every culture or nation. These four fairly-common but essential items that one required, other than cereals, vegetables, protein-foods and fuel, were salt, sugar, oil and spices or flavouring agents. Salt and pepper were indeed very critical to European civilisation that just had to have them to in preserve their precious meat and add some taste as without these they could hardly survive through the dark, long winters. European nations undertook, therefore, both trade and conquests to grab salt and spices. This quest were responsible for Europe's perennial wars with various West Asian people, before Islam or after it, which gained momentum through the bloody Crusades. It also led to the exciting race for discovering a sea route to India that was finally won by Vasco da Gama, and Christopher Columbus discovering the Americas, in a fit of serendipity. They are expressions of their sheer desperation for salt, pepper and other spices. This is not to belittle the importance of items like cotton and silk, that surely mattered, but our focus here is on salt and spices. No self respecting dining table in the West or in cultures influenced by the West can afford to do without salt and pepper: maybe just for comfort or as symbols of their historical triumph for these two taste enhancers.
         Where India was concerned, both salt and spices were in abundance and domestic traders ensured their free flow within the subcontinent. Special ceremonies or wars were, therefore, not called for in India where these two commodities were concerned. But householders and societies were indeed tense and expectant where the other two kitchen essentials were concerned, i.e., oil and sugar. Europeans could and did use animal fat like the lard of pigs to fry and cook, but in India this was totally taboo. Vegetable oils were essential and the very fact that the root word for 'oil' in Sanskrit is 'tailam' or the oil of sesame seeds called 'til' indicates that this was the mother of all vegetable oils in India. Thus the sesame crop was tended with care as the whole year's cooking medium lay within its tiny seeds. In the same manner, the annual supply of the traditional sweetening agent in our kitchens and many million kitchens outside this country depended on how well the sugar cane crop turned out to be. The householder prayed to the almighty for these crops as they were two of the four essential commodities that mattered where his daily meal was concerned.
         And, lo and behold, both the crops normally ripened in almost all parts of India around the same time, i.e., early January that falls in the latter half of the Indian month of Paus. Now the pieces fall in place and we understand why the traditional condiments that are prepared at this time of the year consist of both sugar or indigenous jaggery and sesame or til or gingley. North India enjoys its rewri or sugary sweets coated with white sesame seeds and gajjak or light crunchies made from both, while other regions produce their own variants of both sugar and sesame. It is also time to celebrate, rejoice with friends and family and, of course, thank god for his munificence. It is my submission, Sankranti is celebrated at this juncture because of the almost simultaneous arrival of the two of the four critical kitchen items that India is worried about.
It is interesting to observe how the ripened sugar-cane and til crops dominate the festival from Punjab to Tamil Nadu, and sweet items made of both are distributed almost mandatorily, all over the Indian subcontinent. But wet States like Kerala and Bengal, that did not traditionally have much of either crop, celebrate Sankranti with lesser fervour than the rest of India. These two States thus share not only certain brands of politics in common  and their love for passionate arguments: but they also ensure that coconut sweets find their place in Sankranti. Bengal has another difference, as palm gur is often used  in place of cane-sugar jaggery, and this is also  the right  occasion for sweet delicacies: its pulir pitha, paati-shapta, tiler naru that are sweetmeats made from ground coconut, local palm sugar, a bit of sesame and other items. Frankly, most Bengalis are not obsessed with this date and this celebration as other states are, though they do observe it. South Bengal   and Kolkata actually wake up to Paus Sankranti only when they see huge crowds from neighbouring States thronging and over-crowding all roads and launches to Ganga Sagar for the holy bath at the confluence of the mighty river with the sea.
Assam has a new rice crop, therefore its Bohgali Bihu is a harvest festival, marked with fast, feast and bonfires.  All over the north, from Punjab to Bihar, the kihchdi of dal, rice and seasonal vegetables, is an additional treat, beyond til, jaggery and milk-based sweets. But halwa is another popular in certain States like Punjab and Maharashtra, and many use suji as a base, while Tamils and others prefer milk, rice pudding and sweet payasam. But Ganga-snan or the ritual bath is common throughout India, even in Kerala and Bengal, and Brahmanism ensures rather conveniently, that the Ganga can easily be  substituted by the local river. Even cattles are taken for a ritual bath in this  cold water, whether they like it or not. In some regions, their horns are coloured or tied with fancy ribbons, small bells and beads and brought out in processions. Some southern States hold bullock cart races and Tamil Nadu goes one step ahead, by organising bull taming contests, called Jalli-kkattu: something close to bull fights in Spain. Human strength and skills are pitted against these angry beasts, but the injuries and death to both men and cattle in this 'sport' prompted the Supreme Court recently to prohibit this dangerous custom. But then, law enforcement in India is often notoriously slack in many social spheres.
In this manner, many rituals have found their way into Makara Sankranti, which has slowly converted into an agreed festival and is celebrated in all parts of India. Even kite flying is included in States like Gujarat and Jharkhand. There is reason to believe that some of these customs were in existence for centuries when one observes tribes like the Bhuinya tribals of Odisha and the western frontier of Bengal celebrate thir Tusu during this period.  In Manipur too, many tribes pray to Lining-thou, their supreme god, and even in far off Arunachal Pradesh, the Ramayana, Mahabharat and Kalika Puran are invoked during this seasonal worship. One grand Brahmanical ceremony appears to reign supreme at Brahm-kund and attracts thousands of pilgrims on this day even though it is at the farthest end, so near to India's borders with China. Incidentally, even crows are invited with claps and rhythmic folk songs in the hilly regions of Uttarrakhand: the variety is, thus, mind boggling! It is really difficult to say today as to whether formal Hinduism borrowed customs from indigenous religion, or vice versa, but the uniting and harmonising role of Brahmanism is evident, all through.
       The erstwhile Buddhist deity Saastha, who now resides in the extremely popular Hindu temple of Sabarimala, also receives his dues from lakhs of pilgrims who undergo a lot of self torture for penance, just to meet him on this very day. This wide range of celebrations truly represent the remarkable diversity of our plural culture, but what is more remarkable is how almost all the different festivals did come together through an unwritten agreement to unite on a narrow band of dates for their observance. It is obvious from several cultural traces that are still visible to the trained eye that the whole process must have taken centuries of persistent Brahmanical persuasion. It is quite possible that it was  accompanied by some amount of appropriation of local beliefs and their assimilation, but the fact is that it must have also taken a lot of patience to standardise so many widely-different local festivals to finally come under a common banner. What emerged from this long and almost unique process was a unity that was called Bharatvarsh or India.
                                  ………………………….


Tuesday, 30 June 2015

How Buddhism was re-discovered in modern India


6th Kripasaran Memorial Lecture
Bengal Buddhist Association.
                                                 22nd June 2015
How Buddhism was re-discovered in modern India
Jawhar Sircar
       
          
A few days ago, the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh did a bhoomi  puja at a site in Guntur district that he called the new city of Amravati, the new capital of Andhra. It is interesting because it was in this area that Col. Colin Mackenzie had stumbled upon some puzzling ruins in 1798, about which he had heard from local villagers.  He was in the Guntur-Nellore region, as part of the British campaign against Tipu Sultan of Mysore, and he had thus to move on with his troops for the assault upon Tipu Sultan at Srirangapatnam. But something must have twirled in Mackenzie's mind, because he revisited the area several years later, in 1816: in his new capacity as the Surveyor General of India. For the next four years, he made several illustrations of what he thought were some old ruins of Deccan Jainism and he presented his documents and 85 sketches of Amravati before the Asiatic Society in Kolkata.

No one understood then that these findings actually related to another religion that India had almost forgotten, Buddhism. It was soon to come back silently, to haunt India’s historical landscape from which it had disappeared a thousand years ago, as silently. So effectively had Buddhism been “forgotten” that very few people had even a proper idea of what had been it's phenomenal contribution to art and architecture. Almost all the grandeur that existed in pre-Islamic India, like the mighty stupas at Sarnath and Sanchi or the ancient universities of Taxila and Nalanda had been lying covered under centuries of neglect or destruction, or both. The mighty stupas of yore had become ghostly ruins from which some would steal bricks. They were reduced to just names like dhansa-stupa, which could mean “the stupa that was destroyed”, as well as “the ruins of a stupa”. Very interesting! Even place names like Paanch-tupi (five-stupas) and Bhilsa Topes meant so little, and the majesty of early Indian architecture and the sculpted arts of Ajanta or Sanchi, had little relevance to Indians, just two centuries ago.
       
How many knew where the great temple of Bodh Gaya ‘the veritable Vatican of Buddhism’ had disappeared? Buddhism had survived and prospered outside its homeland, but in its cradle and nursery its existence was snuffed out: not only physically but in terms of history, education and popular memory. So strong was the power of ‘amnesia’ that when some officers of the Madras Army stumbled upon some caves in the Bombay Presidency in 1819, no one could even recall its name. So the site had to be denoted by the name of the nearest village: Ajanta. Even after that, it took another eighty years more for the British and Indians to understand and appreciate the real purport of what was unearthed at Ajanta. It was only after that could we start telling the whole world that it was this magnificent Ajanta art of India that had influenced the religious art of more than one third of human race.

Let us quickly recapitulate some of the other major Buddhist monuments that were discovered in less than a century from Mackenzie’s Amaravati.  The next significant discovery made by General Ventura in 1830 who uncovered the Manikyala Stupa at Taxila. This very ancient city, was said to be the capital of Parikshit, the grand-son of Arjuna of Mahabharata, and Vyasa is reputed to have had organised the first recital of the epic poem here.  It had been an important Buddhist centre and the Jataka tales describe it in great details.  Taxila had seen Darius of Persia and Alexander the Great.  Taxila carried valuable evidence of several periods, pre-Mauryan, Indo-Greek and Kushan. This ancient centre of India’s first university had been destroyed by the Huns in the 5th century CE, but it lay in ruins for 1400 years.  They had been lying close to the Grand Trunk Road and so near Rawalpindi: yet, no one was really bothered to excavate the area and to rediscover its past glories. It appears, therefore, that India had not only forgotten its Buddhist centres, but had at times also forgotten a large part of its non-Buddhist history.

But how did the British find out what Indians had forgotten? One was their boundless curiosity and the other was their scorn for Indian concepts of ‘purity’ and ‘impurity’, as well as for ghosts and evil spirits that prohibited Indians from venturing into ruins. Cobras, and other dangerous creatures that inhabited these ruins did not deter them either. But in all fairness, some British scholars and archaeologists did utilize Indian or Chinese texts, that provided valuable clues to many historical sites.  The question here is: Why is it that the British used texts that were available to us, but we had chosen to ignore?

Alexander Cunningham, who later became the first Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India depended a lot on the testimony of Chinese pilgrims and their travel accounts of the Buddhist sacred places in India. By using the bearings and distances mentioned by travellers like Fa Xian and Xuan Zang, Cunningham succeeded in fixing the locations of many of the famous sites mentioned in ancient Indian texts and thus rediscovering them. These records, of course, had their own limitations which resulted in all kinds of controversies as, for instance, the identification of Kapilavastu. Here, for instance, the field of speculation was very wide because the bearings in the accounts of Chinese pilgrims were not consistent.

Cunningham unravelled the mighty Dhameka Stupa at Sarnath in 1835, which was quite unlike other hemi-spherical stupas, because it was cylindrical.  It marked the spot of the ‘Deer Park’, where Buddha gave his first sermon after attaining his enlightenment.  Dhamma-Cakkappa-Vattana Sutta containing the 4 noble truths.  And yet, it lay in complete ruins that had to be rediscovered afresh.

But it was James Prinsep’s remarkable discovery of the Brahmi script two years later in 1837 that really shook our history.   Just the words ‘Devanampiya Piyadasi’ which translate as “Beloved of the Gods of Gracious Mein” brought Ashoka, out of the dark recesses of history. He had been mentioned in the Buddhist chronicles of Sri Lanka by the same epithet, but he could now be fixed with historical accuracy.  After so many years of speculation, Ashoka Maurya was finally demystified and firmly established on the throne of Buddhism and India. This helped in joining the dots of the missing grandeur of India’s real heritage, for none personifies the plural soul of India more than him.

Cunningham’s discovery of Sanchi Stupa in 1851 was perhaps the most educative of all our stupa sites, and here again, we find that its name was lost from our memory. When one glances through the pages of James Fergusson’s History of India and Eastern Architecture one would observe that even as late as the mid-19th century, this mound was in ruins and its toranas and vedikas were covered with vegetation all over. ASI’s restoration has indeed done wonders and we are now able to recognize the characters from the Jataka Tales that embellish the gateways.  In 1854 he published the Bhilsa Topes which attempted to establish the history of Buddhism based on whatever architecture and archaeology evidence so available up to that point of history.  In fact, Himanshu Prabha Ray mentions Sanchi with special emphasis in her significant work ‘The Return of the Buddha: Ancient Symbols for a New Nation’.

Cunningham’s doggedness led him to rediscover and re-excavate Bodh Gaya in 1861 that Hamilton Buchanan had reported half a century ago as a place covered by a thick forest. He had also remarked with sadness that there was no trace or respect for the faith of the Buddha, at all. One may be justified in feeling that as a symbol of defiance, Bodh Gaya required more than just the forces of nature to be obliterated from human sight and mind. Cunningham’s further discoveries in 1862-63 were as important in the treatment of historical memory loss. He, identified Ramnagar as the ancient ‘Ahich-chatra’; Kosam as the great ‘Kausambi’ and Sahet Mahet as the historic ‘Sravasti’.  These jewels from our past had all to be discovered by the British, who actually retrieved them on the basis of textual evidence and archaeology, what India had chosen to forget.

The indefatigable Cunningham then moved to the Bharhut Stupa and physically uprooted large numbers of stone carvings from this site,in true imperial style, and transported them to Calcutta’s Indian Museum. They served there as a ‘classroom’ and exhibition of the excellence of Buddhist art and architecture. Succeeding generations of art historians, archaeologists, museologists and connoisseurs derived their education from these eloquent stones in Kolkata. Thus, within just eight decades, Buddhism “that had died a natural death in India” was suddenly brought back from the graveyard of our memory, and resuscitated. These structures and sculptures of Buddhism compensated somewhat for the apparent lack of outstanding tangible cultural heritage that stared blankly at us from the end of the Harappan period: which, itself was yet to be re-discovered properly, until the 1950s. Thus, if the grandeur of Buddhist architecture and cave temples had not been discovered, the present country called India would not have much to show by way of its grandest architectural heritage for about nearly two millennia years, starting from 1500 BC: except for a few temples at places like Ellora, and those of Pallavas. 

It is still open to speculation as to whether the Buddhist edifices that British archaeologists, especially the Scots who went about with a mission, took pains to unearth had actually crumbled into unrecognisable ruins.  Was it just because patronage had shifted to a revived and recharged Brahmanism? Some felt, however, that many Buddhist sites were still better off as compared to quite a lot of neglected Brahmanical spots.  The former had, at least, some continuing patronage from pilgrims from Ceylon, Thailand and other countries.  It is of course, a fact that Indians were not unduly bothered about this history, until Western education did the job and therefore, it may not be surprising that there was no serious interest in rediscovering and reclaiming our past glory.  But, is rather surprising that while Ellora, that lay on the trade routes, was never forgotten, Ajanta which is just up the hills some distance away, lay completely obliterated from memory.  We had surely exported the most significant intellectual and cultural contribution to the world, the religion of Buddha and of universal peace. But why did we lose the material civilization of Buddhism almost forever, until the spade of the British archaeologists hit stones under the ground?  Charles Allen touches this issue in his “The Buddha and the Sahibs” as well as in his “Ashoka: The Search for India’s Lost Emperor ” It is recalled that for nearly a thousand years, between the reign of Emperor Ashoka in third century BCE to the death of Harsha Vardhana in 647 AD, Buddhism had ruled the minds of innumerable Indians. What happened during this dark interregnum of nearly twelve centuries, between Harsha Vardhana and Amaravati that Buddhism was forgotten, so vigorously?

        One can see signs of both ‘destruction’ and ‘preservation’ quite prominently. No statue or icon of any deity has been beheaded in such large numbers as those of the Buddha. In fact, many actually associate him not with a full bodied statue, but with a decapitated head.  We see these truncated heads of Buddha in hundreds in museums and galleries all over India and the world but do we ask who beheaded such a large number of Buddha sculptures? The second tendency of ‘preservation’ of Buddhist statuaries has often been for appropriating them within the larger religion. Kalyan Kumar Dasgupta (1985, 6-7) cites several sculptures of Bodhisattva Avalokiteswara have been taken into temples and worshiped as the popular Lokeswara Siva in Bengal. The assimilation of diverse beliefs, or even appropriating their best features, has been intrinsic to Hinduism and several of the great contributions of Buddhism like ahimsa and vegetarianism, the saffron robe, the institution of monasteries and monks have been internalised by the major religion of India.  To most common Indians, there was really no great conflict between (say) Shaivism and Vaishnavism or even Buddhism or Jainism, as all had the same Indian appearance and rituals. 

         Is there any evidence that Buddhism was physically eliminated? This is not the subject of the present talk and this question is an explosive one.   But one would just touch upon the issue and cite the legend of Mihirkula, the Hun ruler who was converted to Brahmanism in the 6th century AD. He is reported to have unleashed a wave of violent destruction of Buddhist monasteries in Punjab and Kashmir (Berzin 2001) and this is quoted by Kalhana in his Rajatarangani some 600 years later. The deeds of Pushyamitra Sunga, the Brahmin minister who overthrew the last Mauryan Buddhist ruler in Magadha are also cited (Omvedt, 2013) to prove the first ‘anti Buddhist reaction’. Shashank, the ruler of Gaur-Bangla, took pride in the destruction of many stupas and cutting down the sacred Bodhi tree at Gaya. Even the historian SR Goyal mentions that “according to many scholars, hostility of the Brahmans was one of the major causes of the decline of Buddhism in India” (Goyal, 2002). 

Epigraphica India (Vol XXIX P 141-144) records that Vira Goggi Deva, a South Indian king, described himself as…”a fire to the Jain scripture……and adept at the demolition of Buddhist canon”.  It also records “the deliberate destruction of non-Brahmanical literature like books of Lokayat-Carvaka philosophy by Brihaspati that was mentioned by Alberuni in the 11th century” (Mookerji). Similarly, AN Longhust, who conducted excavations at Nagarjunakonda, recorded (1938, 6) in his Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India that “the ruthless manner in which all the buildings at Nagarjunakonda have been destroyed is simply appalling. This cannot represent the work of treasure-seekers alone since so many pillars, statues, and sculptures have been wantonly smashed to pieces.” There is no doubt that Islam did play a major role in physically destroying Buddhist centres like Nalanda and Odantapuri,  and also in slaughtering thousands of monks as well driving them away from India.

The point here is that there may have been occasions when over-zealous groups have attacked or destroyed some of the edifices of Buddhism, but this does not appear to be the usual modus operandi, before the arrival of Islam.  A recent study of the Bengal Puranas indubitably shows that the Buddhists were mocked at, cast as mischievous and malicious in Brahmanical narratives, and subjected to immense rhetorical violence. But rhetorical attacks are not the same as physical destruction. The silent word-of-mouth stigma that the very sight of any image or likeness of Buddha was ‘inauspicious’ was perhaps more dangerous and more effective in removing his memory from the minds of Indians, than any real physical assault.  That the Brahman did not like the Sramana (Buddhist) is clear from a lot of stories and sayings, though among the thousands of pages of sacred Hindu literature, there is hardly any exhortation to go and destroy the structures of someone else’s religion.  But one cannot vouchsafe what small overzealous groups may have committed though it is best not to enter into speculation, as to what could have happened more than a millennium ago.  Because at that time, there were reports of strong sectarian conflicts even between different groups of Hindus and medieval passions are difficult to re-examine, in the modern context.

When we use the term ‘amnesia’ we relate to memories of architectural and artistic grandeur of India that was definitely Buddhist, in origin and development.  We are not discounting the fact that Pala Kings of Bengal had continued to support Buddhism between the 8th and early 12th centuries, i.e, well after the rest of India had moved away from Buddhism.  It created the ‘Pala School of Sculptural Art’ and some of the gigantic structures of Vikramshila, Odantapuri and Jagat Pala are evidence of their munificence.  In fact Dharma Pala’s Buddhist  Vihara of Somapura in Paharpur, Bangladesh, is considered to be the largest such structure in the Indian sub-continent and is now a “World Heritage Site”.   The Palas were better known for sculptures, and these consisted of both Buddhist and Brahmanical deities as the Palas were rather even handed when it came to patronage of the arts.  But let us not forget that even the Viharas and other architectural creations of the Pala era lay under tons of earth once they were destroyed by the forces of Bakhtiyar Khilji in the first decade of the 13th century.  Six hundred years is a long enough  time for people to forget even the last gasp of Buddhism in India, especially if the mainstream of Indian memory, attention and discourse moved away so drastically from Buddhism, even though Southeast Asia, China, Japan and Tibet continued to follow the Pala style of architecture.

What is interesting is that once Buddhism was rediscovered, however, several Indians came forward to celebrate its glory. Most of them incidentally belonged to the Brahmanical castes that earlier had been accused of having “taken pains” to erase the glory of Buddhism from public memory. The first name that comes to mind is Anagarika Dharmapala (1864-1933), the Sri Lankan Buddhist revivalist and Writer who pioneered the revival of Buddhism in India and was the first Buddhist in modern time to preach this religion in the West and other parts of Asia.   As Anagarika Dharmapala has recounted, Neel Comul Mukherji was one of those who helped him settle down and says that when he had visited Buddha-Gaya in January 1879 and witnessed the abandoned and neglected condition of the central shrine of Buddhism and resolved to restore it, it was Babu Neel Comul who had “remained true and loyal, encouraging and protecting at all crises in the subsequent history of the Maha-Bodhi Society. Such sweet sympathy and so much human love I was shown that the utopian idea of the resuscitation of Buddhism in the land of its birth actually came into objectivity”.

When the Buddha Gaya Maha Bodhi Society was founded in Sri Lanka on May 31, 1891, its cause was taken up not only by Buddhists, but also by other genuine souls like Mary Elizabeth Foster and Col. Henry Alcott  (1832-1987). While the former was often called the foster mother of Dharmapala, the latter was complimented as one who had “dedicated his life to Buddhism and the people of Asia”.  Madam Blavatsky (1831-91) identified herself as a Buddhist but not “with the sorry state of the Buddhist community” that they found even in Sri Lanka in the second half of the 19th century.  Alcott and Blavatsky set up the Buddhist Theosophical Society in June 1880, though Anagarika did not join it for ideological reasons.

One year after the founding of the Maha Bodhi Society, Karmayogi Kripasaran Mahastavir (1865-1926) founded the Bengal Buddhist Association in Kolkata. We are fortunate to get this opportunity to celebrate the 150th Birth Anniversary of Kripasaranji this year when Sir Asutosh Mookherjee was elected Life President of the Maha Bodhi Society in 1916 unanimously, Anagarika Dharmapala said: “We thought it an honour to have the foremost personality in Bengal as the President of the Maha Bodhi Society. He was at heart almost a Buddhist, he openly confessed his love for the Lord Buddha and was always prepared to help the cause of Buddhism. The introduction of Pali in Calcutta University was due to his personal effort.”We must also remember the role of Ven. Kripasaran in this momentous decision of Calcutta University and in starting the study of Pali in the schools and colleges.  He urged Sir Asutosh to extend affiliation to numerous schools and colleges.  Unlike the sophistication of Anagarika Dharmapala, the approach of Kripasaran Mahasthavir was essentially vernacular and more earthy.  He came from Chittagong, the only district in the whole of ‘mainland’ India that had a very sizeable population of Buddhists for several past centuries.  His preachings were essentially in Bengali and his own dialect of Chittagong, which may explain why his fame has remained largely confined mainly to Bengal. 

Kripasaran’s tireless efforts helped in producing generations of scholars who studied the Buddhist texts once again and conveyed the sublime messages to the modern world. Ven.Kripasaran also selected three young students to go to the University of London for higher studies on Government scholarship, and one of them was the iconic Benimadhab Barua. Kripasaran was successful in convening a World Buddhist Conference, where monks and lay congregated from many parts of the world and Buddhism was back on the radar.  In the early part of the 20th century, the Barua Buddhists of Chittagong followed Kripasaran to set up several Viharas and in many cities of India, like Lucknow, Hyderabad, Shillong and Jamshedpur.  While the Maha Bodhi Society had attached the educated and upper castes of India to part-take in the glory of Buddhism, Mahasthavir was perhaps the first Indian Buddhist leader who spoke for the downtrodden. 

The revival of Buddhism in the 20th century was also due to great social reformers like Jyotiba Phule (1827-1890) and Periyar Ramaswamy (1879-1973) who relied upon Buddhist egalitarianism as indigenous counterpoise to brahmanical casteism in India.  Movements for ‘self-respect’ like the Dravidian one or the Dalits utilized Buddhism are extensively and Mahima Gosain of Odisha even rejected Hinduism altogether in favour of the new Buddhist creed.  The Sakya Buddhist Society in Madras and similar groups came up all over India to espouse Buddhism, around this time.
Bodhanand took up the case of Dalits and this is where the largest support base would be coming from in modern times.  His associate, Chandrika Prasad, founded the Bahujan Kalyan Prakashan  in UP. 

Kripasaran Mahasthavi’s disciple, Bodhanand Mahastavir (1874-1952)  was ordained in Kolkata in his presence in 1914, though he was born into a Bengali Brahmin family. The last name that I would mention is that of Acharya Ishwardatt Medharthi of Kanpur (1900-1971) who also took up the cause of Dalits and Buddhism most passionately. 
 
We may leave the link with the Dalit movement at this stage and return to where we were, i.e, the celebration of the re-discovery of Buddhism in modern India.

We can go on endlessly with this list and among those who made Buddhism their central theme were scholars like Haraprasad Sastri and several others of the Asiatic Society as well as the Bangiya Sahitya Parishad. 

But, Amiya Samanta reminds, "Few had appreciated the teachings of Buddha so deeply as Rabindranath, whose creative genius drew inspiration from Buddha’s teachings on social equality and universal love and produced magnificent literature. To Tagore, Buddha was the greatest human being and before whose image at Bodh Gaya he chose to prostrate himself, an act which Tagore never did again in his life"(Samanta, 1991).  Tagore said with deep emotion: “I am a disciple of the Buddha.  But when I present myself before those holy places where the relics and foot-prints of the Buddha are found I come in touch with him to a great extent”.  On 8th May, 1935, the Buddha Purnima Day, Tagore said, “On this full-moon day of Vaisaka, I have come to join in the birthday celebrations of the Lord Buddha, and to bow my head in reverence to him whom I regard in my inmost being as the greater man ever born on this earth”.  One of the most important statements made by Tagore: “Materials of different shades of Indian thought and culture are confined in Buddhist literature and due to the lack of intimacy with them, the entire history of India remains unfulfilled.  Being convinced of it, cannot a few youths of our country dedicate themselves for the restoration of the Buddhist heritage and make it a mission in life?”

Mahatma Gandhi went one step further and said “what passes under the name of Buddhism now may have been driven out of India, but the life of the Buddha and his teachings are by no means driven out of India”.  “Buddha never rejected Hinduism but broadened its base.  He gave it a new life and a new interpretation”.   Pacifism was impressed as part of India’s International Dharma along with the Panchsheel Route.  India appeared to have made up for all the loss in just one century that started from the 1880s and went up to the 1980s.

Pandit Jawhar Nehru was profoundly influenced by the Buddhist philosophy said that “The story of Gautam Buddha has influenced me right from childhood and I liked the scientific and ethical attitude”.  On Oct 3, 1960, Nehru declared before the United Nations General Assembly: “In ages long past, a great son of India, the Buddha, said that the only real victory was one in which all were equally victorious and there was defeat for no one”.


Thus, even if there may have been some feelings of bitterness a millennium ago, there was no rancour in the minds of any Indian, Hindu or Buddhist, when this great religion was re-discovered. In fact, the name of  Buddha continues to be a favourite among people of this State who name their sons as ‘Amitabha’, ‘Gautama’, ‘Buddhadev’, ‘Siddhartha’, ‘Tathagata’ and so on, as Buddha is now the collective pride of all Indians. Plays and dance dramas abound on his life and the Bengal and other schools of art took him to great heights.

But it still remains a major mystery as to how he and his contribution, as well as all major Buddhist monuments and art was almost forgotten so completely, for a thousand years. Scholars need to work seriously and come up with credible answers. 
                                  



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