History12 - 2 - Bhakti - Sufi Traditions PDF
History12 - 2 - Bhakti - Sufi Traditions PDF
History12 - 2 - Bhakti - Sufi Traditions PDF
THEME
SIX
141
Fig. 6.2
Jagannatha (extreme right) with his
sister Subhadra (centre) and his
brother Balarama (left)
142
Fig. 6.3
Sculpture of a Buddhist goddess,
Marichi (c. tenth century, Bihar),
an example of the process of
integration of different religious
beliefs and practices
143
Discuss...
Find out about gods and
goddesses worshipped in your
town or village, noting their
names and the ways in which
they are depicted. Describe
the rituals that are
performed.
2. Poems of Prayer
Early Traditions of Bhakti
In the course of the evolution of these forms of
worship, in many instances, poet-saints emerged
as leaders around whom there developed a
community of devotees. Further, while Brahmanas
remained important intermediaries between gods and
devotees in several forms of bhakti, these traditions
also accommodated and acknowledged women and
the lower castes, categories considered ineligible
for liberation within the orthodox Brahmanical
framework. What also characterised traditions of
bhakti was a remarkable diversity.
At a different level, historians of religion often
classify bhakti traditions into two broad categories:
saguna (with attributes) and nirguna (without
attributes). The former included traditions that
focused on the worship of specific deities such
as Shiva, Vishnu and his avatars (incarnations) and
forms of the goddess or Devi, all often conceptualised
in anthropomorphic forms. Nirguna bhakti on the
other hand was worship of an abstract form of god.
2.1 The Alvars and Nayanars of Tamil Nadu
Some of the earliest bhakti movements (c. sixth
century) were led by the Alvars (literally, those who
are immersed in devotion to Vishnu) and Nayanars
(literally, leaders who were devotees of Shiva). They
travelled from place to place singing hymns in Tamil
in praise of their gods.
Alwar= Vishnu
Nayanar=Shiva
144
Source 1
Do you think
Tondaradippodi was
opposed to the caste
system?
Source 2
Shastras or devotion?
This is a verse composed by
Appar, a Nayanar saint:
O rogues who quote the law
books,
Of what use are your gotra and
kula?
Just bow to Marperus lord
(Shiva who resides in Marperu,
in Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu) as
your sole refuge.
145
A demon?
This is an excerpt from a poem by Karaikkal Ammaiyar in
which she describes herself:
The female Pey (demoness)
with . . . bulging veins,
protruding eyes, white teeth and shrunken stomach,
red haired and jutting teeth
lengthy shins extending till the ankles,
shouts and wails
while wandering in the forest.
This is the forest of Alankatu,
which is the home of our father (Shiva)
who dances with his matted hair
thrown in all eight directions, and with cool limbs.
Fig. 6.4
A twelfth-century bronze image
of Karaikkal Ammaiyar
146
Fig. 6.5
An image of Shiva as Nataraja
Discuss...
Why do you think kings were
interested in proclaiming their
connections with bhaktas?
147
Source 4
Describe Basavannas
attitude towards rituals.
How does he attempt to
convince the listener?
148
4. Religious Ferment in
North India
Fig. 6.6
Fragment of a page from the
Quran, belonging to a
manuscript dating to the
eighth or ninth century
149
Sharia
The sharia is the law governing
the Muslim community. It is
based on the Quran and the
hadis, traditions of the Prophet
including a record of his
remembered words and deeds.
With the expansion of Islamic
rule outside Arabia, in areas
where customs and traditions
were different, qiyas (reasoning
by analogy) and ijma
(consensus of the community)
were recognised as two other
sources of legislation. Thus, the
sharia evolved from the
Quran, hadis, qiyas and ijma.
150
A church in Khambat
Fig. 6.7
A Mughal painting depicting
Emperor Jahangir with a Jogi
Source 6
151
Fig. 6.8
A Khojaki manuscript
The ginan were transmitted
orally before being recorded in the
Khojaki script that was derived
from the local landa (clipped
mercantile script) used by the
linguistically diverse community
of Khojahs in the Punjab, Sind
and Gujarat.
Matrilocal residence is a
practice where women after
marriage remain in their natal
home with their children and
the husbands may come to stay
with them.
Fig. 6.9
A mosque in Kerala,
c. thirteenth century
Note the shikhara-like roof.
152
Fig. 6.10
Atiya mosque, Mymensingh district,
Bangladesh, built with brick, 1609
Fig. 6.11
The Shah Hamadan mosque in
Srinagar, on the banks of the
Jhelum, is often regarded as the
jewel in the crown of all the
existing mosques of Kashmir.
Built in 1395, it is one of the best
examples of Kashmiri wooden
architecture. Notice the spire and
the beautifully carved eaves. It is
decorated with papier mache.
Discuss...
Find out more about the architecture of mosques in
your village or town. What are the materials used to
build mosques? Are these locally available?
Are there any distinctive architectural features?
153
Names of silsilas
Most sufi lineages were
named after a founding
figure. For example, the
Qadiri order was named
after Shaikh Abdul Qadir
Jilani. However, some like
the Chishti order, were
named after their place
of origin, in this case the
town of Chisht in central
Afghanistan.
154
Discuss...
Are there any khanqahs or
dargahs in your town or
village? Find out when these
were built, and what are the
activities associated with
them. Are there other places
where religious men and
women meet or live?
YEAR OF DEATH
LOCATION OF DARGAH
1235
Ajmer (Rajasthan)
1235
Delhi
1265
Ajodhan (Pakistan)
1325
Delhi
1356
Delhi
155
The story of
Data Ganj Bakhsh
In 1039 Abul Hasan al Hujwiri,
a native of Hujwir near Ghazni
in Afghanistan, was forced to
cross the Indus as a captive of
the invading Turkish army. He
settled in Lahore and wrote a
book in Persian called the Kashful-Mahjub (Unveiling of the
Veiled) to explain the meaning
of tasawwuf, and those who
practised it, that is, the sufi.
Hujwiri died in 1073 and was
buried in Lahore. The grandson
of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni
constructed a tomb over his
grave, and this tomb-shrine
became a site of pilgrimage for
his devotees, especially on his
death anniversary.
Even today Hujwiri is revered
as Data Ganj Bakhsh or Giver
who bestows treasures and his
mausoleum is called Data
Darbar or Court of the Giver.
156
Fig. 6.13
Shaikhs greeting the Mughal
emperor Jahangir on his pilgrimage
to Ajmer, painting by an artist
named Manohar, c.1615
157
158
Charkhanama
Fig. 6.14
Qawwali at the dargah of
Nizamuddin Auliya
159
160
Discuss...
What are the potential
sources of conflict in the
relationship between religious
and political leaders?
161
Source 10
What is Kabirs
argument against the
distinction made
between gods of
different communities?
162
Fig. 6.16
Roadside musicians, a seventeenthcentury Mughal painting
It is likely that the compositions
of the sants were sung by
such musicians.
163
164
Fig. 6.17
A fifteenth-century stone sculpture
(Tamil Nadu) depicting Krishna
playing the flute, a form of the
deity worshipped by Mirabai
Source 11
165
Discuss...
Why do you think the traditions of Kabir, Baba
Guru Nanak and Mirabai remain significant in
the twenty-first century?
9. Reconstructing Histories of
Religious Traditions
We have seen that historians draw on a variety
of sources to reconstruct histories of religious
traditions these include sculpture, architecture,
stories about religious preceptors, compositions
attributed to women and men engaged in the quest
of understanding the nature of the Divine.
As we have seen in Chapters 1 and 4, sculpture
and architecture can only be understood if we
have a grasp of the context the ideas, beliefs and
practices of those who produced and used these
images and buildings. What about textual traditions
regarding religious beliefs? If you return to the
sources in this chapter, you will notice that they
include a wide variety, written in several different
languages and styles. They range from the
apparently simple, direct language of the vachanas
of Basavanna to the ornate Persian of the farman of
the Mughal emperors. Understanding each type of
text requires different skills: apart from a familiarity
with several languages, the historian has to be aware
of the subtle variations in style that characterise
each genre.
Shankaradeva
In the late fifteenth century,
Shankaradeva emerged as one
of the leading proponents of
Vaishnavism in Assam. His
teachings, often known as the
Bhagavati dharma because they
were based on the Bhagavad
Gita and the Bhagavata Purana,
focused on absolute surrender
to the supreme deity, in this case
Vishnu. He emphasised the
need for naam kirtan, recitation
of the names of the lord in sat
sanga or congregations of pious
devotees. He also encouraged
the establishment of satra or
monasteries for the transmission
of spiritual knowledge, and
naam ghar or prayer halls.
Many of these institutions and
practices continue to flourish
in the region. His major
compositions include the
Kirtana-ghosha.
166
167
Timeline
Some Major Religious Teachers in the Subcontinent
c. 500-800
CE
c. 800-900
c.1000-1100
c.1100-1200
Basavanna in Karnataka
c.1200-1300
c.1300-1400
c.1400-1500
c.1500-1600
c.1600-1700
Note: These time frames indicate the approximate period during which these teachers lived.
168
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Map work
10.
169
Fig. 6.18
The dargah of Shaikh Bahauddin Zakariya,
Multan (Pakistan)
http://www.alif-india.com