JaneSmith105
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1. Introductory
An investigation into the real purpose and significance of ancient institutions like the Hindu Samskaras is beset with many difficulties. First of all, the peculiar circumstances under which they arose are buried deep under thick crusts of ages, and around them have clustered a mass of popular superstitions. So, at such a distance of time, it requires a well-trained imagination coupled with a through knowledge of facts to probe into the problem. The second difficulty is that of national sentiment, which looks only at the bright side of the past and clouds the critical vision so essential for any research work. But a more stubborn difficulty is presented by the a priori tendencies of the modern mind. It is apt to assume that any thing ancient must be superstitious it is suspicious of spiritual values of life; and it is impatient of understanding strict discipline, which is a great characteristic of ancient religions. A student of ancient culture has to guard himself against credulity on the one hand and the ultra skepticism on the other. It should study the Samskaras with due reverence to the past and full sympathy with human nature through its various stages of development.
2. Two fold Purpose
We can broadly divide the purpose of the Samskaras into two classes. The first class is popular and superstitious, which is motivated by unquestioned faith and naive simplicity of the unsophisticated mind. The second class is priestly and cultural. Its origin is due to conscious forces governing the development and evolution of society, when human beings try to improve upon nature. The priest, though not beyond the common run of people, was above the ordinary man in the Street, and he introduced considerable refinement and culture into social customs and rites in a variety of ways. Samskaras of both the types have continued to figure in society from the very beginning, they have reacted on each other and they are still represented in Hinduism.
3. The Popular Purpose
To begin with the popular purpose, the ancient Hindus, like other nations of the world, believed that they were surrounded by superhuman influences which were potent enough for good or evil consequences. They thought that these influences could interfere in every important occasion in man’s life. Therefore, they tried to remove hostile influences and attract beneficial ones, so that man may grow and prosper without external hindrances and receive timely directions and help from gods and spirits. Many items and ramifications of the Samskaras arose out of these beliefs.
(1) The Removal of Hostile Influences. For removing the unfavorable influences the Hindus adopted several means in their Samskaras. The first of them was propitiation. Goblins, demons and other uncanny spirits were offered praise, oblations and food, so that they may return satisfied with offerings, without causing injury to the individual. The householder was anxious to protect the life of his wife and children and regarded it his duty to deal with them. During the pregnancy of a woman, at the birth of a child, during childhood etc., such propitiation took place. In the birth ceremonies "if the disease-bringing demon, Kumara attacks the child, the father murmurs " Kurkura, Sukurkura, who holds fast children, Chet ! Chet ! doggy let him loose. Reverence be to thee, the Sisara, a barkar, a bender". The second method was that of deception. Sometimes propitiation was thought unnecessary or purposely avoided. For example, at the time of tonsure, the severed hair was mixed with cowdung and buried in a cowstall or thrown into a river, so that none could play magic upon it. Deception is also evident in the funeral ceremonies. At the approach of death the image of a man was burnt before his death to deceive it. The motive underlying this act was that death while haunting the proper body of its victim would mistake him for an already dead person. But when propitiation and deception both proved inefficient, a third drastic step was taken. Mischievous spirits were plainly asked to go away, threatened and directly attacked. During the birth ceremonies the father pronounces, May Sunda and Marka, Upavira and Saundikeya, Ulukhala and Malimlucha, Dronasa and Chyavana, vanish hence Svaha"! The householder also invoked the help of gods and deities to drive away foul influences. While performing the Chaturthikarma (the Fourth Day after marriage) the husband invites Agni, Vayu, Surya, Chandra and Gandharva to remove the injurious elements from the newly married wife. But sometimes, he himself, by means of water and fire, frightened and drove them off.
Other devices were also used for this purpose. Water was invariably used in every Samskaras. It washed away physical impurities and warded off demons and goblins. Noise was made at the time of burial to scare away lurking spirits. Sometimes the man himself asserted his boldness. He equipped himself with weapons to face any odds that might come in his way. For instance, the student was given a staff. He was forbidden to part with it and asked always to keep it close to his body. When this staff was thrown away at the end of studentship, he was provided with a stronger bamboo-staff at the time of Samavartana. It is clearly stated that it was used not merely for protection against animals and human foes but also against Raksasas and Pisachas. Shaking was also a means to remove evil influences. Combing the hair at the time of the Simantonnayana (Hair-parting) was done for the same purpose.Selfishness of man sometimes compelled him to transfer bad influences form his side to that of others. The marriage costume worn by the bride was given to a Brahman, as it was thought injurious to her. In this case, however, the Brahman was thought too powerful to be attacked by evil influences. The nuptial clothes were also put in a cowpen or hung on a tree.
(ii) Attraction of Favorable Influences. Just as untoward influences were tried to be got rid of, so the favorable influences were invited and attracted for the benefit of the recipient of a particular Samskara. The Hindus believed that every period of life was presided over by a deity. Therefore, on every occasion, that deity was invoked to confer boom and blessings on the man. At the time of the Garbhadhana (Conception) Visnu was the chief deity, at the time of the Vivaha Prajapati, and at the time of the Upanayana Brihsapati and so on. But there was no entire dependence on gods only. Men helped themselves also by various means. Suggestion and reference to analogous phenomena played a great part. Touch exercised a magic power. By touching things that were beneficial in themselves one expected good influences to follow. In the Simantonnayana ceremonies a branch of the Udumbara (fig) tree was applied to the neck of the wife. Here touch was believed to bring about fertility. Mounting a stone brought about firmness and was therefore prescribed for a student and a bride. Touching the heart was thought to be a sure means of union and producing harmony between student and teacher or husband and wife. As breath was a symbol of life, the father breathed thrice on the newborn child to strengthen its breaths. For securing a male child the expectant mother was required to eat a barley corn with two beans and curd attached to it.The reason is obvious. The things which the expectant mother took were symbolical of the male sex and were expected to impart it to the embryo. To produce off spring's the juice of a many-rooted and luxuriant banyan-tree branch was inserted into the right nostril of the wife. Anointment produced love and affection. In the marriage ceremonies the brides father anointed the couple while the bridegroom pronounced, May all gods, may water unite our hearts... Avoidance of ugly and inauspicious sights, and giving up contact with impure persons preserved the purity of an individual. The Snataka was forbidden even to pronounce a word beginning with an unlucky letter, or containing a repugnant idea. Sometimes dramatic utterances were also requisitioned to bring about the desired thing. In the Simantonnayan ceremonies the wife was asked to look at a mess of rice whereupon the husband inquired whether she was seeing into its off springs, cattle, prosperity and long life for him.
(iii) The Material Aim of the Samskaras. The material aims of the Samskaras were the gain of cattle, progeny, long life, wealth, prosperity, strength and intellect. The Samskaras were domestic rites and naturally during their performance things essential for domestic felicity were asked from gods. It was a belief of the Hindus that by prayer and appeal their desire and wishes were communicated to the deities who responded to them in form of animals, children, corn, a good physique and a sharp intellect. These material aims of the Samskaras are very persistent and they are found uppermost, even now, in the minds of common people. The priest has always welcomed and blessed the material aspirations of people. He has tried to sanctify and thereby make them legitimate for a householder.
(iv) Samskaras as Self-expression. The householder was not only an ever terror-stricken man, nor was he a professional beggar of gods. He performed the Samskaras also to express his own joys, felicitations and even sorrows at the various events of life. The possession of a child was a coveted thing, so on its birth the joy of the father knew no bounds. Marriage was the most festive occasion in the life of a man. Every land-mark in the progressive life of a child brought satisfaction and gladness in the household. Death was a tragic scene which brought forth much pathos. The householder expressed his happy feelings in the shape of decoration, music, feast and presents, his sorrows were manifested in the funeral ceremonies.
An investigation into the real purpose and significance of ancient institutions like the Hindu Samskaras is beset with many difficulties. First of all, the peculiar circumstances under which they arose are buried deep under thick crusts of ages, and around them have clustered a mass of popular superstitions. So, at such a distance of time, it requires a well-trained imagination coupled with a through knowledge of facts to probe into the problem. The second difficulty is that of national sentiment, which looks only at the bright side of the past and clouds the critical vision so essential for any research work. But a more stubborn difficulty is presented by the a priori tendencies of the modern mind. It is apt to assume that any thing ancient must be superstitious it is suspicious of spiritual values of life; and it is impatient of understanding strict discipline, which is a great characteristic of ancient religions. A student of ancient culture has to guard himself against credulity on the one hand and the ultra skepticism on the other. It should study the Samskaras with due reverence to the past and full sympathy with human nature through its various stages of development.
2. Two fold Purpose
We can broadly divide the purpose of the Samskaras into two classes. The first class is popular and superstitious, which is motivated by unquestioned faith and naive simplicity of the unsophisticated mind. The second class is priestly and cultural. Its origin is due to conscious forces governing the development and evolution of society, when human beings try to improve upon nature. The priest, though not beyond the common run of people, was above the ordinary man in the Street, and he introduced considerable refinement and culture into social customs and rites in a variety of ways. Samskaras of both the types have continued to figure in society from the very beginning, they have reacted on each other and they are still represented in Hinduism.
3. The Popular Purpose
To begin with the popular purpose, the ancient Hindus, like other nations of the world, believed that they were surrounded by superhuman influences which were potent enough for good or evil consequences. They thought that these influences could interfere in every important occasion in man’s life. Therefore, they tried to remove hostile influences and attract beneficial ones, so that man may grow and prosper without external hindrances and receive timely directions and help from gods and spirits. Many items and ramifications of the Samskaras arose out of these beliefs.
(1) The Removal of Hostile Influences. For removing the unfavorable influences the Hindus adopted several means in their Samskaras. The first of them was propitiation. Goblins, demons and other uncanny spirits were offered praise, oblations and food, so that they may return satisfied with offerings, without causing injury to the individual. The householder was anxious to protect the life of his wife and children and regarded it his duty to deal with them. During the pregnancy of a woman, at the birth of a child, during childhood etc., such propitiation took place. In the birth ceremonies "if the disease-bringing demon, Kumara attacks the child, the father murmurs " Kurkura, Sukurkura, who holds fast children, Chet ! Chet ! doggy let him loose. Reverence be to thee, the Sisara, a barkar, a bender". The second method was that of deception. Sometimes propitiation was thought unnecessary or purposely avoided. For example, at the time of tonsure, the severed hair was mixed with cowdung and buried in a cowstall or thrown into a river, so that none could play magic upon it. Deception is also evident in the funeral ceremonies. At the approach of death the image of a man was burnt before his death to deceive it. The motive underlying this act was that death while haunting the proper body of its victim would mistake him for an already dead person. But when propitiation and deception both proved inefficient, a third drastic step was taken. Mischievous spirits were plainly asked to go away, threatened and directly attacked. During the birth ceremonies the father pronounces, May Sunda and Marka, Upavira and Saundikeya, Ulukhala and Malimlucha, Dronasa and Chyavana, vanish hence Svaha"! The householder also invoked the help of gods and deities to drive away foul influences. While performing the Chaturthikarma (the Fourth Day after marriage) the husband invites Agni, Vayu, Surya, Chandra and Gandharva to remove the injurious elements from the newly married wife. But sometimes, he himself, by means of water and fire, frightened and drove them off.
Other devices were also used for this purpose. Water was invariably used in every Samskaras. It washed away physical impurities and warded off demons and goblins. Noise was made at the time of burial to scare away lurking spirits. Sometimes the man himself asserted his boldness. He equipped himself with weapons to face any odds that might come in his way. For instance, the student was given a staff. He was forbidden to part with it and asked always to keep it close to his body. When this staff was thrown away at the end of studentship, he was provided with a stronger bamboo-staff at the time of Samavartana. It is clearly stated that it was used not merely for protection against animals and human foes but also against Raksasas and Pisachas. Shaking was also a means to remove evil influences. Combing the hair at the time of the Simantonnayana (Hair-parting) was done for the same purpose.Selfishness of man sometimes compelled him to transfer bad influences form his side to that of others. The marriage costume worn by the bride was given to a Brahman, as it was thought injurious to her. In this case, however, the Brahman was thought too powerful to be attacked by evil influences. The nuptial clothes were also put in a cowpen or hung on a tree.
(ii) Attraction of Favorable Influences. Just as untoward influences were tried to be got rid of, so the favorable influences were invited and attracted for the benefit of the recipient of a particular Samskara. The Hindus believed that every period of life was presided over by a deity. Therefore, on every occasion, that deity was invoked to confer boom and blessings on the man. At the time of the Garbhadhana (Conception) Visnu was the chief deity, at the time of the Vivaha Prajapati, and at the time of the Upanayana Brihsapati and so on. But there was no entire dependence on gods only. Men helped themselves also by various means. Suggestion and reference to analogous phenomena played a great part. Touch exercised a magic power. By touching things that were beneficial in themselves one expected good influences to follow. In the Simantonnayana ceremonies a branch of the Udumbara (fig) tree was applied to the neck of the wife. Here touch was believed to bring about fertility. Mounting a stone brought about firmness and was therefore prescribed for a student and a bride. Touching the heart was thought to be a sure means of union and producing harmony between student and teacher or husband and wife. As breath was a symbol of life, the father breathed thrice on the newborn child to strengthen its breaths. For securing a male child the expectant mother was required to eat a barley corn with two beans and curd attached to it.The reason is obvious. The things which the expectant mother took were symbolical of the male sex and were expected to impart it to the embryo. To produce off spring's the juice of a many-rooted and luxuriant banyan-tree branch was inserted into the right nostril of the wife. Anointment produced love and affection. In the marriage ceremonies the brides father anointed the couple while the bridegroom pronounced, May all gods, may water unite our hearts... Avoidance of ugly and inauspicious sights, and giving up contact with impure persons preserved the purity of an individual. The Snataka was forbidden even to pronounce a word beginning with an unlucky letter, or containing a repugnant idea. Sometimes dramatic utterances were also requisitioned to bring about the desired thing. In the Simantonnayan ceremonies the wife was asked to look at a mess of rice whereupon the husband inquired whether she was seeing into its off springs, cattle, prosperity and long life for him.
(iii) The Material Aim of the Samskaras. The material aims of the Samskaras were the gain of cattle, progeny, long life, wealth, prosperity, strength and intellect. The Samskaras were domestic rites and naturally during their performance things essential for domestic felicity were asked from gods. It was a belief of the Hindus that by prayer and appeal their desire and wishes were communicated to the deities who responded to them in form of animals, children, corn, a good physique and a sharp intellect. These material aims of the Samskaras are very persistent and they are found uppermost, even now, in the minds of common people. The priest has always welcomed and blessed the material aspirations of people. He has tried to sanctify and thereby make them legitimate for a householder.
(iv) Samskaras as Self-expression. The householder was not only an ever terror-stricken man, nor was he a professional beggar of gods. He performed the Samskaras also to express his own joys, felicitations and even sorrows at the various events of life. The possession of a child was a coveted thing, so on its birth the joy of the father knew no bounds. Marriage was the most festive occasion in the life of a man. Every land-mark in the progressive life of a child brought satisfaction and gladness in the household. Death was a tragic scene which brought forth much pathos. The householder expressed his happy feelings in the shape of decoration, music, feast and presents, his sorrows were manifested in the funeral ceremonies.