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.
………………………….
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