STORY OF GANESHA
The
rainy season is considered an inauspicious time. The sun is making its journey
south; the days are becoming shorter and the nights colder; the earth is wet,
worms and snakes are wriggling out, the walls are damp, and there is moss in
every corner…it is Chaturmaas, the four months when sages don’t travel, stay
indoors and tell the stories of gods. As the rains start to wane, the earth
covers herself in green, and brings forth her son, the one who will remove all
obstacles as the seasons begin their march towards harvest time. That son is
Ganesha, Gauri’s Ganesha, seated on her lap, corpulent, elephant-headed, cute
and powerful.
Ganesha
is Gana-esha, foremost of Shiva’s Ganas. While the rest of the Ganas –
creatures known as Yakshas and Pramathas and Bhutas – are fearsome and
forbidding with their unusual misshapen forms, loved, included and understood
only by Shiva, their ascetic-master, Ganesha has been able to delight us all.
If
Shiva has his way, there would have been no Ganesha, no harvests, no obstacles,
no world…just snow-covered desolate peaks where everyone meditates in silence.
He is the destroyer – destroying the world through indifference.
But
the Goddess, Shakti, will have none of it. She wants the ascetic to open his
eyes, pay attention, engage with things worldly. As Kali, she dances naked and
as Gauri she prays fervently, forcing Shiva, the hermit, to become her husband,
Shankara, the householder. This happens in Shiv-ratri before the rains, before
the passionate nights of summer, in spring, after the winter mists have parted
and Holi has been celebrated.
And
then, soaked in rain, she asks him to give her a child – for through children
is death conquered and continuity assured. But a much-married Shiva does not
see the point of children. “Why produce children and accept mortality? Why not
renounce the flesh and embrace the immortal soul?” he wonders. The
compassionate Goddess explains, “Because life is soul and flesh, stillness and
movement. Living is about dealing with dying, about celebrating this realm of
cradles and crematoriums, of frustration and excitement, of laughter and tears,
of growth, of discovery. It is this tempest of the sea that makes us yearn for
the tranquility of the mountains.”
Shiva
does not understand. He shuts his eyes and withdraws. Not one to give up, the
Goddess collects the rubbings of the turmeric paste she has anointed herself
with and moulds herself a doll and places it on a betel leaf – and behold, a
son is born, Vinayaka, Vi-nayaka, the one born without a husband. And she loves
him. And asks him to guard the entrance to her cave. He becomes the lord of the
Muladhara Chakra, the base chakra, the guardian who will leads us on that
occult journey called Tantra, that reveals the mysteries of the Goddess.
When
Shiva returns to the cave of the Goddess he is surprised to find a doorkeeper,
one who does not recognize him and one who he does not recognize. The guardian
god blocks the path of the ascetic, an obstacle separating God from Goddess.
For the first time, the self-contained Shiva experiences rage and restlessness
and even a little bit of jealousy. A fight follows in which Vinayaka is
beheaded.
Shiva
experiences momentary triumph followed by guilt when the Goddess wails at the
sight of her beheaded son. Sorrow turns to fury: Shakti demands that her son be
resurrected, else Gauri will become Kali and spread her tongue and swallow
everything in a single gulp.
Shaken,
Shiva orders his Ganas to fetch the first beast they encounter in the northern
direction. Why northern? North is the direction of resurrection, growth,
permanence, as against the south, which according to Vastu, is the realm of
Yama, of Rakshasas, of death, decay and destruction. The Ganas encounter
Airavata, the bull-elephant of Indra, the rain-god. His head is placed on the
severed neck of Vinayaka and the boy is resurrected. This ‘twice-born’ son is
named Ganapati by Shiva, the lord of the Ganas, and his son.
The
arrival of Ganesha made Shiva feel various emotions; without realizing it, the
indifferent ascetic had grown attached to the Goddess, and was not willing to
share her with anyone. By killing and resurrecting the son of Gauri, Shiva had
become a father, a member of society, and a true householder. Ganesha thus
represents the union of material wisdom (the Goddess) and spiritual ideal
(Shiva). His form unites worldly wealth (pot-belly) and divine power
(elephant). It enhances wealth generation (serpents) and stops wealth decay
(rats).
It
is not without meaning that Ganesha’s head is that of Indra’s elephant. Indra
is the rain-god. The cutting of his elephant’s head marks the end of the rain
and the beginning of a great harvest. Incidentally Indra according to Vastu, is
lord of the East. Thus while travelling north, the Ganas found a creature of
the east, making Ganesha the lord of the north-east, the most auspicious corner
of the house, the corner of the gods, the corner of Ishan, who is Shiva.
In
art, when Shiva is half a woman, the Goddess makes up the left half of his form
while he retains the right half. On the left is the heart, of intuition, of
feeling. The right side, the opposite side, is the side of the head, of the
thinking, of intellect and of the soul. When Ganesha’s trunk points to his
heart, he is closer to his mother, the sensual Goddess, who embraces material
reality. But when it points to the right, he is closer to his father, the
intellectual mendicant who wants to shut his eyes to the world. Ganesha’s image
with trunk pointing to his heart is popular in households because it shows a
Ganesha comfortable with the world of matter, senses and emotions. Ganesha with
his trunk curled to his right, is more ascetic in nature, hence not kept inside
homes, and preferably enshrined in temples; the most famous of these is
Mumbai’s Siddhi Vinayak.
The
two tusks of Ganesha represent aggressive masculinity; this is tempered by
breaking one of the tusks, to write the story of man – the itihasa called
Mahabharata, a story of passion, of human weaknesses. All this shows a
compassion and consideration for imperfect man.
In
Ganesha’s hand is a modaka which is essentially a sweet mixture packed in a
conical pack made using steamed flour. It looks like a bag of money. Its roots
are in ancient statues of Yakshas, especially of their king Kubera, who holds
such money purses and is the guardian of treasures. Ganesha’s has many other
Gana or Yaksha characteristic. He has the pot belly, very much like the
Laughing Buddha. It is the symbol of prosperity. The snake wrapped around it
protects the prosperity and ensures its renewal, much as the snake renews its
skin at regular interval. Ganesha’s rats may be depicted in films as a cute
mouse but it is a bandicoot, a fearsome pest that is impossible to control. It
symbolizes the problems of our lives that only Ganesha, lord of the threshold,
the remover of obstacles, can keep out.
When
a bull elephant is in heat during mating season, it sheds a fluid from its
temples; this ichor is called mada in Sanskrit meaning the fluid of sensory
intoxication from which comes the word Madan or the god of love and Madira, the
Hindustani word for wine. This makes the elephant the symbol of sensuality. In
folklore it is said, that when an elephant stays celibate, the retained semen
transforms into a jewel that sprouts from its head. It is the symbol of Siddha,
power earned through sensory control. Ganesha’s head thus is both the symbol of
sensuality and sensory control because one is not sure, if Ganesha is married
or single.
A
Tamil story informs us that Ganesha refused to marry because he felt no woman
was more beautiful than his mother. A Bengali story informs us that no woman
wanted to marry Ganesha because he had an elephant head. So his mother got him
married to the Banana plant, an ancient fertility symbol, who can be seen
wrapped in a sari standing next to him in Durga pandals. In Maharashtra, he is
said to have two wives: Riddhi and Siddhi, goddesses of material and
intellectual growth. Scholars have traced these two wives to Kubera, the king
of Yakshas, once again reconfirming that Ganesha has his roots in these ancient
fertility gods. These two goddesses are more popular as Lakshmi and Saraswati
explaining why Ganesha is often shown with these two goddesses. In Bengal,
Lakshmi and Saraswati are Ganesha’s sisters, children of Durga. In the rest of
India, the relationship does not matter. What matters is the symbolic meaning –
Ganesha removes the obstacles to economic and intellectual growth.
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