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THE SOURCES OF INQUIRY
Introductory
The Grhyasutras, the oldest manuals of the Hindu Samskaras, do not cite their authorities as the Dharmasutras do for their contents. The cause of this silence is that the Samskaras, mostly being domestic rites and ceremonies, were based more on precedent and popular traditional usages than on any definite written code. The Dharmasutras, the Smritis and the mediaeval treatises produce authorities on Dharma or Law, both sacred and secular. But these works do not go deep into ritualistic details and are mainly concerned with the social aspects of the Samskaras. Therefore, for the full information about the Samskaras, we have to ransack other sources also ignored by them.
2. The Vedas
The Vedas are universally recognized as the primary source of the Hindu Dharma. According to the Gautama Dharmasutra "the Veda is the source of Dharma and the tradition and practices of those who know it." Other Dharmasutras and the Smritis endorse the above view. From the perusal of the Vedas also we arrive at the same conclusion.
The oldest document of the religious literature of the indo-Aryans is the Rigveda. Though the religious picture painted in it is by no means complete, as it contains hymns used by the priests in the sacrifices to high gods, we catch glimpses of popular religion at several places. Moreover, there are a few specific hymns that are particularly concerned with popular rites and ceremonies. The Wedding the funeral and the conception are narrated in them.
The narrations or descriptions may not be ritualistically exact but they are historically approximate. The later-day Samskaras, the Vivăha, the Antyesti and the Garbhădhăna were direct descendants of these hymns. Then, there are those hymns of the Rigveda that are of general applicability in the sacramental rituals. They are recited at different occasions, which show that they were not originally composed for a particular Samskara. But their connection with popular ceremonies cannot be denied altogether. Again, we find in the Grhyasutras many citations homonymous to the Vedic Mantras. This fact indicates that a large number of the items of the Samskaras were suggested by the Vedic verses in question and they originated in the later Vedic or the post-Vedic period.
As regards the details and regulations of the Samskaras, it must be confessed that the Rigvedic hymns do not contain positive rules. They contain many incidental references which throw light on the Samskâras. In fact, the Vedic hymns were composed under inspirations for invoking the help of gods in events, public and private, that immediately interested the Vedic people. There are invocations relating to a life of hundred years with children and grand children, securing wives, children and other domestic articles, and the destruction of the demon who kills offsprings. These and similar references have a great correspondence with the Samskăras that were performed at the various important occasions in the life of a man. Besides, there are other references in the Rigveda that bear on the social aspects of the Samskaras. For example, it was difficult to secure a husband for a brotherless girl. "Like a woman growing old in her parents’ house etc." Different forms of marriages are also hinted at. The purchase of a bride (Asura marriage) was prevalent in the Rigvedic period. The Vasistha Dharmasutra quotes a passage from the Maitrayaniya Samhita which runs, "she, who being purchased by husband." The Gandharva form is also referred to in these words, "when the bride is fine-looking and well-adorned, she seeks by herself her friend among many men.’’ The Rigveda praises the stage of a student.
The Sămaveda almost entirely borrowed from the Rigveda, supplies hardly any material worth the name for the history of the Samskaras. It is mainly interesting for its musical tune. It was sung at great sacrifices and other auspicious occasions, e.g. marriage etc. The Varaha-Grhyasutra prescribes Vandana and Găna (music) as a part of the marriage ceremonies. But as regards the form of the Samskăras, the Samaveda has nothing to contribute.
The Yajurveda represents an advanced stage in the progress of rituals. During the period of its composition the functions of different priests were specialized. In it all those formulas are fixed, which were used by the Adhvaryu and his assistants in the performance of the great sacrifices. But the Yajurveda is concerned with the Srauta sacrifices only. So we do not get any material help from it for the study of the Samskaras. The only useful reference found in it is to the shaving ceremony, a common feature, which preceded a Srauta sacrifice—where prayers are offered to the shaving razor and directions are given to the barber. This reference supplies a link between the Srauta and the Grhya ceremonies.
In contradistinction with the other Samhitas, the Atharvaveda is rich in information about popular religion, rites and ceremonies. Here we get mantras for almost every end of human life. The wedding and the funeral hymns are more elaborated in the Atharvaveda than in the Rigveda. To the praise of the Vedic Brahmachari a full hymn is devoted. The act of conception has found mention in a larger number of hymns than in the Rigveda. In the book XVIII of the Atharvaveda there are prayers for long life that are called Ayusyakarmăni, "hymns achieving long life." These prayers were used chiefly at domestic rituals, such as the first haircutting of the boy, the first shaving of the youth and the initiation. It also contains hymns that refer to marriage and love and form a separate class. Kausika calls them 'Strikarmani' or women’s rites. Through them a maiden tried to obtain a bridegroom or a young man a bride by stimulating love in indifferent lovers and unresponsive sweethearts, benedictions upon the bride were offered, conception was accelerated and the birth of a male child effected. These hymns have also got prayers for the protection of the pregnant woman, the unborn and the new-born child, and so on. Considering this popular character of the Atharvaveda, Ridgeway concludes that it is not a record of the Aryan religion but represents the beliefs of the aboriginal people. This view cannot be accepted. It is just possible that the Indo-Aryans assimilated many non-Aryan elements in their religion, but the lower strata of the Aryan community were not less interested in the lower side of religion than the non-Aryan population. The Atharvaveda reflects the faith and rites of the common people rather than the highly specialized religion of the priests.
3. The Brâhmanas
After the Vedas, we come to the Brahmanas as the source of our information. They are thorough treatises on the Vedic rituals. The Brahmanas give rules for the performance of the Srauta sacrifices and the Arthavada or explanation of the purpose and meaning of the sacrificial acts. They contain many discussions on the sacrifices, give interpretations of Vedic hymns, trace etymology of words and try to explain symbols. But the Brahmanas are mostly occupied with the Srauta sacrifices that were the supreme religious concern of the time. In them, however, we get sporadic references that supply some data for constructing the history of the Samskăras. A fragmentary account of the Upanayana is found in the Gopatha Brahmana. The Satapatha gives a different account of it and the word "Brahmacharya" used here denotes the condition of the life of a student. The word Antevasin’ (living with a teacher) in the sense of a student is used both by the satapatha and the Aitareya Brahmanas. Ajina ‘the deer-skin’ is mentioned in the Satapatha Brăhmana. Godana ceremonies are described in the same Brăhmana. Recognition of marriage within the third or the fourth degree is also found in it. The Tandya-Brahmana mentions the Vratyas and the Vratyastoma sacrifices through which they were reclaimed to the Aryan community. The satapatha-Brahmana, Books XI-XIV, besides appendices to the preceding books also contain a few interesting sections on the subjects which are otherwise not dealt with in the Brahmanas e.g. on the Upanayana, the initiation of a pupil, on the daily Vedic Study and on the death ceremonies or the raising of the mound.