Guest guest Posted February 20, 2006 Report Share Posted February 20, 2006 The Story of Tondar-adipOdi: Conquest of “kaama” --------------- through Reduction (“unification”) of Desire -- ------------- “karma yOga” (continued from Part 18) ---------- The events in the life of Vipranarayana are a grim and graphic reminder to us of what happens when “kaama”, our Desires in life, are kept “unified” -- on a tight leash, as it were -- and what might happen too when they swerve away from such unity of purpose. So long as Vipranaryana’s only passion in life, or predominant “kaama”, remained “bhagavath-kainkaryam” (resolute service to a cause far higher than his own narrow individual interests), it was possible for him to attain and experience the Elysian pleasures of an entirely different sort of “kaama” -- that which only a true “karma-yOgi” feels and savours in life. The moment that singleness of Desire was disturbed by the onset of other desires, carnal and other –- i.e. the moment his “kaama” became “maRRu Oru kaaamam”, to use the TiruppAvai paraphrase -- the perfect “yoga” he had all along engaged in, and which had all through life sustained and inspired him, was immediately shattered. (We find a striking similarity here in the life of the Christian medieval saint, St.Augustine who wrote poignantly of his mortal struggle with the problem of “kaama” in life in a celebrated autobiography entitled “Confessions”). To what terrible extent such destruction was wrought upon the AzhwAr’s life and personality is told with frightening vividness indeed in the annals of SriVaishnava hagiography. ************ Having triumphed over Vipranarayana’s virtuous nature, the femme-fatale, Devadevi proceeded next to humiliate him. Slowly and surely, one by one, step by step, she divested Vipranarayana of all his material means and household effects too. Soon enough she rendered him a virtual pauper. She took away his family heirloom of gold and precious gems that were used in the worship of the household deity; she took away his silverware; his fine silks; his stock of rice and grain intended for the SriRangam temple-kitchen; she took away all of the crop his fruit-orchard yielded and the flower-garden too…. She took it all away --- ripping him thereby off every vestige of self-respect and personal dignity. Vipranarayana, now an abject slave blinded by sheer lust for Devadevi (“kaama”), surrendered everything of worth he possessed unto the villainess whom he now held to be his very life-breath. After ruthlessly reducing him to utter penury, and satisfying herself that the conquest of the pious Vipranarayana was now well and truly complete, Devadevi finally left him, high-and-dry, in the lurch, so to say, and returned home to her own former station in life. Poor Vipranarayana, sunk now in the lowest depths of depravity, had really nowhere else to go. He had no kith and kin, no sympathetic friends in SriRangam, no land, no property, no well-wishers, none. It was a pathetic, desperate situation. In his classic work of Tamil verse, the “tirumaalai”, he alluded to his abject condition in a single, truly moving line (Stanza 29): “UrilEn kaaNi illai* uRavu maRRoruvar illai* Vipranarayana thus followed Devadevi to her doorsteps and beseeched her to let him live with her, swearing he would serve her as life-long slave if only she would deign to share her bed with him. Devadevi, being the consummate “dEvadaasi” she was, had no use for Vipranarayana. She promptly turned him out of her house, slamming the door upon one she now regarded as nothing but contemptible wretch. Still Vipranarayana would not learn his lesson. He slunk lower and lower. He hung around Devadevi’s doorsteps, languishing there for days without food or drink, crying out to her to let him in…… Finally, after weeks of such self-debasement, he collapsed in a pitiable heap at her doorsteps. Exhausted, he lay slumbering there like a wasted, rotting piece of log. Again, in the “tirumaalai”, there are a couple of verses of heart-rending pathos that allude to his sordid state in that unfortunate phase in his life: “peNdiraal sukankaL uyppaan* periyathOr idumpai pooNdu* uNdiraak kidakkum pOdhu* udalukkE karainthu nainthu,* (5: “tirumaalai”) ************** When one reads the life-story of Tondar-adi-podi AzhwAr one cannot help tears welling up to choke one’s heart. Every reader would silently ask, “Why should one so noble and virtuous of heart have to undergo such pain and travail in life? Why should such a terrible and cruel stroke of fate befall one who was so utterly blameless and undeserving of it? Why would the Almighty choose to sit back and do nothing about it? If God forsakes even one as good, pure-hearted and devoted as Tondar-adipodi had been, can we expect Him to act any differently in respect of mere mortals like us whose sins in life are probably a hundred times more witting and heinous?” It is seen to be in the nature of God that He comes to the rescue of Man not a second sooner than in the latter’s direst moment. It is often said, and truly too, that “Man’s extremity is God’s opportunity”. The Almighty rushes to redeem Man only when almost all hope of redemption for him is written off. And sure enough, for Vipranarayana too, the Divine revealed its Hand at the very moment when all seemed lost for the poor, wretched soul. It is in the life of Tondar-adipodi that we see the Almighty go about playfully re-writing that old, commonplace quip, “It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all” into the much more profound one, perhaps re-phrased as: “It is better to have loved and lost than never to have lost at all!”. If we contemplate upon and truly understand Vipranarayana’s “lost” plight, we would surely be led into believing that our own souls, with all its imperfections, venality and ugliness, may be utterly “lost” indeed, and our spirit may flounder out too in the tempestuous sea of life, but there will yet be some ray of hope perhaps for Divine redemption at the very end? ************ (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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