Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 The Story of Saint Poosalar: Conquest of “kaama” --------------- through Sublimation of Desire -- “bhakti yOga” (continued from Part 25) ----------- In the ancient "dharma-sAstras" there is a Sanskrit couplet which when examined closely helps us understand the wisdom exhibited by our Vedic ancestors in the way in which they personally cultivated a certain amount of dispassion and detachment (the opposite of "kaama") towards their earthly property and possessions -- what is symbolized in the expression, "Home Sweet Home". To our ancestors Home was not so much a place on earth meant for enjoyment of conjugal or domestic bliss ("kaama") as it was a place conducive for spiritual atonement, practices and advancement. "panchyasUnA gruhasthasya vartantE'hara-harah sadA khandanI pEsanI chuLLi jalakumbha upaskarah". The verse above is a very interesting one indeed. It attracted the attention of none other than the venerable (late) "AchArya" of Kanchi, Pujyasri Chandrasekherendra Saraswati, who devoted one whole chapter to it in his famous book of spiritual discourses and commentary in Tamil, "deivattin-kural". It would be profitable for us to briefly summarize that chapter in the context of our ongoing discussions on the subject of "kaama" as it extends to Man's "homing instinct". ************** In what comes to us as rather shocking revelation, one's home is a brutal butchery, says the above Sanskrit couplet. And because our home is a butchery, it is a place of rampant "himsa" or violence. There are many sins in the world of which Man can be guilty. Violence is perhaps the most heinous of them. Violence is rather unbecoming too of a man of spiritual refinement. Therefore it is sin that he must shun and avoid in life with all the courage and conviction at his disposal. Unfortunately, Violence sometimes becomes unavoidable in life due to the inexorable working of the law of "karma" i.e. due to the exigencies and vagaries of life. Conditions and circumstances of human existence, as well as the ebb and tide of human affairs sometimes conspire to make violence inevitable. In life sometimes, Violence is imposed upon Man against his personal will and willingness. One such human circumstance, where Violence becomes inevitable and ineluctable, says the above Sanskrit couplet of the ancient "dharma-sAstra", prevails in Man's very home. In his very house, says the verse, day in and day out, Man commits such brutal acts of killing and such savage taking of life, that a home really deserves to be called a bloody butchery. It is a place where the business of violence is conducted daily, unceasingly and unfeelingly, in five different murderous ways. This is what is meant by the phrase: "panchyasUnA gruhasthasya vartantE'hara-harah sadA" **************** Now, why does the "dharma-sAstrA" say a man's home is a butchery where violence is perpetrated daily in five different ways? The answer is in the next line of the verse: "khandanI pEsanI chuLLi jalakumbha upaskarah". The word "khandani" in Sanskrit means "cutter" (some of you may instantly recall the word as it appears in the 2nd stanza of Swami Desikan's famous "stOtra", "sri sudarshanAshtakam": "shubajagadrUpa mandana, suragaNatrAsa KHANDANA"!). Any instrument that cuts, cleaves, minces, chops, sloughs, decapitates, lops... is called "khandanI". In all our homes, we carry all varieties of such "khandani" kitchens --- e.g. knives, cleavers, cutters, mincers, graters etc. --- and in our garages --- e.g. hacksaws, chain-saws, blades etc. Now, with these lethal "khandani" in our kitchen, we commit violence on many life-bearing organisms indeed everyday. In "non-vegetarian" homes, the "khandani" is used to wring out the necks and gouge out the flesh of ducks, turkey and fish. In "vegetarian" homes, they are used to cut, chop, slice and dice root-vegetables, leafy vegetables and fruits (which even though are not locomoting living-creatures like chickens or fish, are nevertheless living organisms too, and who therefore suffer pain when violence is inflicted upon them, though not perhaps to the same degree locomoting creatures do when they meet their end on a kitchen table). Next, there is "pEsani". This is a very interesting Sanskrit word for anyone who is interested in linguistics and philology. There is the English word "pestle" which all of you know. We use pestle and mortar as instruments when we want to grind something, or crush, knead, mash, granulate or powder something. The word English "pestle" probably has its roots in the Sanskrit "pEsani" because that instrument of destruction is exactly what is meant too in the subject verse. At home in the kitchen we use "pesani" to grind and pound seed, gram, pulses and other kinds of grain in order to make food for ourselves. In the olden days they used the stone pestle ("ammi", "worrel", "olakkae", it used to be called in Tamil). These days we use the modern mechanical automatic "kitchen system" with such global brand-names as Moulinex, Philips and Braun that do the same job as the "pesani" more efficiently and at great speeds. The purpose of these "pesani" tools is to pulverize the grains and seeds we use as food items for ourselves. Although such grain or seed is not a locomoting living creature, still it does contain the potential for life and life-giving, isn't it? (If we take a seed of paddy and plant it, it will surely grow and multiply). So by pounding and gnashing grain and seed with "pesani" in our kitchen, says the above verse, we do inflict pain on them and commit violence in our homes. Then there is "chulli". This is the fire-place, hot-stove, hot-plate or oven in the kitchen that we use to cook our food. Today we have "micro-waves" which are the modern avatars of the old "chulli". In the process or cooking with the aid of "chulli", unknowingly and unwittingly, we also burn up little insects and organisms that are present in the air around our kitchen surroundings but which are invisible to the naked eye. When we boil water or milk, or when we roast something or fry something, alongwith the edible portion of what we cook, invariably and quite unavoidably, we also destroy millions of living micro-organisms too that are present in such food-items. So, in that particular and narrow sense, we do commit mass-slaughter of life. Our "chulli" is (in the parlance of Sri George Bush II) indeed a "weapon of mass-destruction" housed within our kitchens. Next, there is "jalakumbha". In the kitchen of the olden days in India, they used big earthen pots to store water. These were called "jalakumbha". Large quantities of water were daily poured in and decanted out for various purposes from these pots. While doing so, again, many tiny insects and creatures and other micro-organisms in the air and on the floor of the house-kitchen would be deluged and drowned. Thus, the "jalakumbha" too in the house was regarded, by this verse, as a tool of great violence. And finally, there was the "upaskarah". This was the most lethan weapon of destruction in the hands of the lady of the house. The broom-stick. The lady of the house who kept the home surroundings tidy and clean did so by daily sweeping away all manner of dust, grime, garbage and trash. IN the process, she also caused death and destruction to the lives and homes of millions of minute creatures, insects and microscopic living organisms that inhabit such dust, grime and garbage. In the modern home, the simple tool of "upaskarah" has been developed and perfected into a technologically advanced and sophisticated killing-machine. It is the Hoover vacuum-cleaner. It can sweep away billions and billions of micro-organisms and germs from our homes with a single swish and a single stroke of Madam. The modern Hoover is to the Vedic-day "upaskarah" what the modern atom-bomb is to the pre-historic spear. **************** It was because of the above orgy of violence perpetrated daily by humans in their homes ---i.e. "panchyasUnA gruhasthasya vartantE'hara-harah sadA" --- that the "gruha", the Home, in spite being undoubtedly a very auspicious and virtuous institution otherwise, was yet regarded by the ancient "dharma-sAstras" as an inexhautible source of unavoidable sin --- the sin of "himsa". It was really a butchery of sorts. And that was the reason why our ancient ancestors did not get over-excited about or go overboard in their love and attachment for the home. They did not allow the "kaama" of the "homing instinct" overpower them or distort their sense of life-values. They maintained at all times "vairAgya", a sense of emotional distance from the Home. The home was a cradle of many human virtues and happiness indeed. But it was also a fountainhead of unwitting sin and error for which, the ancient ancestors recognized, Man needed to atone in a deeply moral and spiritual way. It was for that very reason that they regarded the home not so much as a place for indulgence in personal pleasure, comfort and enjoyment ("kaama"), but as a conducive place for spiritual atonement and penance. It was the reason therefore why the home was considered the fittest place to carry out daily rituals of sacrifice and offerings to the gods (e.g. "sandhyavandana arghya", "agni-sandhAnam") as well as of human charity and expiation ("owpasanam", "vaisvadevam"). It was a measure of our Vedic ancestors' wisdom that not only did they believe that 'charity begins at home' but also that 'self-sacrifice', the greatest of all charitable deeds, too begins at Home. Such deeds were ritualized in the Vedic scheme of things --- in little daily sacraments such as the "vaisvadeva" rite or the daily "arghya-samarpaNam" routine. The Home thus became "yagnya-bhUmi" --- a place primarily meant for Man's self-sacrifice, not self-gratification. Thus, by ritualizing daily life at home into sacrificial expressions of spiritual charity and atonement, the overpowering feeling of "kaama" --- the deep-rooted instinct of attachment and possessiveness that arises in the human heart for one's "own home" and property -- that "kaamic" urge was sought to be conquered. ************* (to be continued) Regards, dAsan, Sudarshan ________ India Matrimony: Find your partner now. Go to http://.shaadi.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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