Durga Puja begins today
and is an important festival in West Bengal and the Eastern parts of the
country and the entire Bengal wears a festive look. People celebrate the
festival with all the gaiety and revelry that goes along with it.
Durga Puja is
the celebration of the killing of the Mahishasura (This
is Utkarsh Speaking: Mahishasura ) who had become a threat to all
the gods and humans and was invincible except by a woman, due to a boon. After
a fierce battle, Goddess Durga kills the demon.
However, this
festival initially did not take place at this time of the year. An interesting
need-of-the-hour is the cause of the celebrations at this time.
According to the
Bengali Ramayan by Kritibash, Goddess Durga was worshipped in the spring season
(and thus Durga Puja was also referred as Basanti Puja, the festival in the
spring season), and never in autumn. But after an inconclusive battle with
Ravan for many days, the gods advised Lord Ram to propitiate Goddess Durga and
seek her blessings. But Goddess Durga was never worshipped in autumn, and thus Ram’s
propitiating the Goddess is referred to as Akal-bodhan,
akal meaning out-of-turn or
out-of-season and bodhan meaning
worship or invocation. In due course of time, the region started celebrating
Durga Puja during the autumn and thus the festival is also known as the sharad-utsav or the spring-festival.
According to the
same version of Ramayan, Ram took the blessings of Durga on the sixth day (Sashti) i.e. today, and went into battle
with Ravan on the seventh day (Saptami)
and killed Ravan at Sandhikshana or
during the crossover between the eighth (Ashtami)
and the ninth (Nabami) day, and
cremated on the tenth day (Bijoya dashami).
The worship of
Durga by Ram too has an interesting legend. According to some versions, Ram was
advised to worship the goddess as she was considered to be the patron deity of
the land of Kuber, i.e. Lanka before Ravan usurped it from Kuber and it would
be in order to seek her blessings before invading the island. It is said that
Ram needed 108 ‘neel kamal’ or blue
lotuses to offer the goddess Durga and after a lot of efforts managed to get
only 107 of them. Ram was also referred to as ‘rajiv-nayan’ or the one with eyes like lotus, and since he could
not arrange for one more to complete a hundred and eight, he offered his eye by
trying to pierce it with an arrow, but the goddess appeared at the right moment
and granted him the blessings of victory. Some versions say that Ram did manage
to get all the required lotuses, but the goddess hid one to test his devotion.
Since then, this
has been a practice to propitiate Goddess Durga before heading for a war and
the same is seen in Mahabharata, where Arjuna and Yudhishtir are mentioned to
be worshipping Goddess Durga for the boon of victory. Later in history, we have
seen Shivaji worshiping Goddess Bhavani, a form of Durga before heading for
any battle.
It is
interesting to see gods in their own right seeking blessings from goddesses
prior to a battle. The cult of Mother Goddess was prevalent from the ancient
times and Goddess Durga has always had a unique place in the pantheon. Though
she is a goddess created by the gods to fight a demon, she does it without the
direct help of any gods. She fights a relentless battle, till she eliminates
the evil force, Mahishasura, who was threatening the universe and all the gods
with his power. To sustain such a dominating feminine power, Shakti, it was
imperative that the later puranic
texts perpetuated her position of someone who has been victorious in battle.
Another
interesting theory is that Goddess Durga was associated with mountains, (she is
also referred to Vindhyavasini, one who resides in the Vindhyas, Parvati
meaning daughter of the mountain or parvat,
Vaishno devi, again residing in the mountains, to name a few) and was probably
a deity of the locals who resided around mountains, where the terrain was tough.
Such regions were at the periphery of civilisations and thus many a tribal
community or marginalised sections of the societies dwelt in such regions. According
to this theory, Goddess Durga is seen to have had her origin in such areas.
Puranic heroes, like Ram, Arjuna, etc. worshiping the goddess indicates the
assimilation of such goddesses in the mainstream pantheon, leading to the
assimilation of the marginalised sections of the society into mainstream
civilisation.
The above can be
seen as an interesting example of mythology having a laudable function at its
core, besides telling interesting myths.
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