Indian Literature: A Cultural Manifestation
Indian Literature: A Cultural Manifestation
Indian Literature: A Cultural Manifestation
J. K. Khuman, Ph. D.
Head, Deptt. of English, Shree Parekh College, Mahuva
itself coming to existance after the mingling of many rivers of culture such as Vedic,
Aupnishadic, Shraman, Anarya, Asur, Vratya, Das, Shabar, etc. Describing its
significance it is said:
YATHA SAMUDRO BHAGAVANYATHA CHA HIMAVANGIRIHI |
KHYATAVUBHAU RATNANIDHEE TATHA BHARATAMUCHYATE||1
[As the ocean and the Himalayas are the popular treasures of jewels, the Mahabharat
is also a treasure of various jewels] and as maintenance of body is impossible without the
shelter of food, no tale would be possible without the shelter (source) of this great story-
ANASHRITYAWADAKHYANAM KATHA BHUVI NA VIDHYATE|
AHARAMANAPASHRITYA SHARIRASYEV DHARANAM || 2
Thus as Himavan gives water to all, Mahabharat has given the water of inspiration to all
languages of India.
Ramayan is also the great epic resembling the true spirit of Indian culture
through the life sketch of Ram and his manners. It also deals with great ideas and ideals
of society, humanity, philanthropy, fraternity and generosity in enmity with extra
ordinary cultural vitality. It shows the true way of life and the ideal living standards and
mannerism illustrated through the life of Ram and other great characters. For example,
even Vibhishan, the brother of the enemy like Ravan, is also given protection when he
asks for the shelter of Rama. Despite of the opposition of Sugriva and others, Ram sets
example of true valour and speaks:
generousness may be found in Javerchand Meghani‘s story ―The Killer of his son‖ . 4 The
way, the overlord of the village Davaliya Mandodarkhan, forgives and saves the life of
the Charan, who killed Mandodarkhan‘s son, is really heart touching. The Charan
actually did not intend the act and was about to be killed when the overlord, with
tremendously generous heart, gives him his own horse and provides the opportunity of
the escape.
Thus, from Mahabharat and Ramayan, the great classical resources to the treasures
of folk literature, we find the throbbing and pulsating Indian culture with all its vitality
and versatility. Dineshchandra Sen has picked up the excellent jewels of old Indian
culture in his work Folk Literature of Bengal in the form of tales and songs, and proving
the women to be the authors of some of them, referring the style and manner in which
they were delivered. W.R. Gourlay gets utterly impressed by the beauty of some tales
especially ―Malan Chamala‖ as he writes: ―The beautiful story of Malan Chamala is a
tale of which a nation might well be proud: it has all the attributes of a beautiful lyric: it
contains a conception of purity and love which evince a high state of civilization.‖ 5
The famous Gujarati writer and poet Meghani has created and edited wonderful
tales of oral history depicting the true colour and spirit of true Indian culture in about
twenty books edits many Rasa ballads, composed by women in Saurashtra, in his book
Radhiyali Rat. His Saurashtra –ni Rasadhar and Sorathi Baharvatiya are really the
landmarks of folklore as far as world literature is concerned. In Europe these folk stories
are of popular literature, here it is oral history concerned with distinct races, Nomadic
men and women,their origin, places, customs, disguise, dialect,etc. So they have
ethnological as well as socio- cultural significance. Kathiyawad has its own history,
traditions and culture and is believed to be the main spring of Gujarat‘s folk literature, in
Meghani‘s words ―A peninsula of hoary antiquity‖. It is the only place where lions roam
in majesty and folklores flourish because of abundance of valor, honesty, nobility,
generosity and love filling up the treasures of folklore of legendary human beings, of the
land of the real heroic born of earnest unions, true sacrifices, of the land where the
undercurrents of civilization continue to flow- the sagas of sheer bravery and heart
touching love stories, lilting ras-ballads, pathetic elegies arousing the interest of people in
any corner of the world. The tales of Rasdhar and Baharvatiyas, with historical
background and socio-cultural significance within, have variety and uniqueness
reflecting the land of the time with cultural vitality and with the mesmerizing charm that
cannot be paralleled by any literature of the world.
Hindustan is really a nation of diversity of a wonderful culture, sublime traditions and
religions, castes and languages. And almost the literature of every region deals with an
integrated form of India. In the famous River-verse of Rugved, the Rishi inspires people
to awaken towards the fundamental unity of the country by depicting undivided India:
IMAMMEGANGEYAMUNESARASWATI SHUTUDRISTOMAMSAPARUSHNAYA
ASIKANYAMARUDVADHE VITASTAYARJIKEE YESHRNUYASUSHOBHAYA||6
The language variety enrooting from the same resource Sanskrit and enrooted to the same
morals and values, also shows the integrated cultural phenomena of our nation and proves
to be unique. The mother of most Indian regional languages is Devavanee-Sanskrit. It is
also one of our distinguished features to honour our motherland as well as our own
mother and consider them even greater than heaven itself-Janani Janmbhoomishcha
Svargadapi Gariyasi| And the mother, of course, is considered unique and greater than
anything,see how the Gujarati poet Botadkar depicts awoman in her eternal mother form-
with everflowing and overflowing affect tion --
MEETHAN MADHU NE MEETHA MEHULA RE LOL,
ETHI MEETHEE TE MORI MAT RE,
JANANI NI JOD SAKHI! NAHI JADE... RE …LOL,
PRABHUNA E PREM TANEE POOTALEE RE LOL,
JAGATHEE JUDEREE ENEE JAT RE.
JANANEE—NEE.......7
[Sweet is the honey, and sweet is the rain, the sweeter though (honeyer than honey)
is my mother. There is no equal to mother, my dear. She is the idol of Godly love. Her
own self is different from the rest of the world.]
The foreign scholar like Monier Williams also praise this variety and the religious
and scientific ideals of Sanskrit-
INDIA, THOUGH IT HAS MORE THAN 500 SPOKEN DIALECTS, HAS
ONLY ONE SACRED LANGUAGE AND ONLY ONE SACRED LITERATURE,
ACCEPTED AND REVERED BY ALL…SANSKRIT….RELIGIOUS AND
SCIENTIFIC IDEALS|| 8
For centuries we have sustained this spirit through the utterances, praises and writings of
saints, thinkers and litterateurs and kept its glory and dignity up. See the picture drawn by
Swami Ramtirth taking India as his own body and its different parts like limbs-
THE LAND OF INDIA IS MY OWN BODY.
THE COMORIN IS MY FEET, HIMALAYAS MY HEAD.
FROM MY HAIR FLOWS THE GANGA,
FROM MY HEAD COMES BRAHMAPUTRA
I AM THE WHOLE OF INDIA, AND ITS EAST AND WEST
I AM UNIVERSAL IN MY LORE......
This is an unforgettable depiction of one‘s own motherland, especially as the
body is not perfect without any particular limb. One integrated Hind is to be seen with
people of different regions, religions and languages together. Not only that but it is also
to be felt: When I walk.... I feel India walking
When I breathe..... I feel India breathing.
THIS IS THE HIGHEST REALISATION OF PATRIOTISM AND THIS IS
PRACTICAL VEDANTA. 9
Ravindranath Tagore rightly saluted the India of unity in diversity in his poem ‗The
Song of India‘.
HEART OF MINE, AWAKE IN THIS HOLY PLACE OF PILGRIMAGE
IN THIS LAND OF INDIA ON THE SHORE OF VAST HUMANITY.
HERE DO I STAND WITH ARMS OUTSTRETCHED TO SALUTE MAN DIVINE
AND SING HIS PRAISE IN MANY A GLADSOME PAEAN.
Further, the poet reminds the world of India‘s pious soil and addresses every clan,
every caste, every race and every culture--
(COME O ARYANS.....NO-N ARYANS, HINDU, AND MUSALMAN
Thus, Toru‘s Ancient Ballads contains rare poetic versions of the famous legends of
classic Sanskrit literature. Thus, using her genius and under the influence of the mingled
culture of East and West Toru has harmonized the sense of universal brotherhood and
exquisite sense of beauty, she has contributed immensely to Indo-Anglian literature even
when the term did not exist. Dr. G. Seth rightly writes: Toru‘s expression was like a
glorious sound of trumpet, which heralded the renaissance of knowledge and culture in
India‖. 13
Finally, it is perhaps the versatile culture of India, which is one of the most
significant aspects keeping her integrity otherwise as Earnest Renan remarks ―Nations
were and are profoundly unstable formations likely to collapse into sub-divisions of clan,
tribe, language, religion etc.‖ [Bill Ashcroft; Griffiths and Tiffin, Key Concepts in Post-
Colonial Studies, Routledge, London, 2004.] Our national anthem itself reveals this
unique and unparalleled cultural vitality, referring to the variety of religion, caste,
language, region etc.
Jana-Gana- Mana- adhinayak jay he Bharat bhagya- vidhata
Punjab- Sindh –Gujarat- Maratha......
That is why Dr. S. Radhakrishnan remarks –
―It looks on this country as one and requires us to use our spiritual energies for the
cultural and emotional integration of the country‖14
REFERENCES
Vyas, Ved Mahabharat (Adiparva 56: 27)
Vyas, Ved Mahabharat (Adiparva2: 240)
Tulsidas ,Ramayan ( Sundarkand 44: 612)
Meghani, Jhaverchand A Noble Heritage (Translated : Vinod Meghani) Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan,
Mumbai 2003 p 85
Sen, Dineshchandra, The Folk Literature Of Bengal Gyan Pub. House, Delhi, 1997 p x
Mukerjee, R Bhavan’s Journal, Bombay, July, 1961, p 24
Botadkar, Mehulo Gaje Ne Mor Nache, Gurjar Granth Ratna, Ahmedabad, 1996, p 15
Williams, Monier Bhavan’s Journal ,Bombay, July 9, 1961 p. 25
Ramtirth, Swami Bhavan’s Journal ,Bombay,October, 1962, p 13
Tagore, R. Bhavan’s Journal ,Bombay,October, 1962,p 32
G. A. Nateson &Co. ,Toru Dutt’s Life and Works, Madras,1917, p 27
Dutt, Toru Ancient Ballads and Legends of Hindustan (ed.A. Dwivedi)Bareilly, 1994, p 112
Seth, G Evaluation of Toru Dutt’s Literary Genius (Thesis ) 2006, p 23
Radhakrishnan, S. Bhavan’s Journal ,Bombay,October, 1962,p 36