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Article of the Month - February 2008

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Saraswati From Vedas To Our Altar

====================================================

 

'Avirvabhuva tatpashchanmukhatah Paramatmanah', that is, one who

has her origin direct from the mouth of God is Saraswati. One of

the aspects of Vishwadevah - a collective name for a group of

deities with various names, their more widely accepted number

being twelve, Saraswati manifests as Vak - speech, wherein

reveals the world of name and form - material or abstract,

present or past, celestial or terrestrial . all that is known or

shall ever become known. The goddess of learning and intellect

'jyotiswarupa' - lustrous, Saraswati is the light within that

illuminates beyond. As the supreme light, she imparts to the sun

its power to reveal a form, and to man, his desire to discover

the formless. Never ruthless, and hardly ever inclining to

punish, the benign one bestows bliss and delight - always and on

all, and if at all, eliminates maladies and ignorance or other

forms of darkness. She operates as man's creative faculty and is

thus the root-source of literature, art, music and all - ever

thought, conceived or created.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/WH53/

 

Far from a passive boon-conferring divinity, Saraswati has always

represented operative aspect of cosmic existence. A long course

of evolution shaped her image in the devotional mind, the purity

of her being, lustre of her form, benignity of her mind, and

ability to nourish have, however, been the same as ever.

 

 

Saraswati In Vedic Literature

 

As regards her status in the Vedas, Saraswati has priority over

Mahadevi and Mahalakshmi - other two deities of the Puranic Trio

manifesting Divine Female. Saraswati apart, the two deities of

the Rig-Vedic Trio were Ila and Bharti, not Mahadevi and

Mahalakshmi. Both, Ila and Bharti merged into the all-pervading

personality of Saraswati during the later Vedic period -

substantially in Brahmans. Though Vishwadevah is the primary

object of the prayers that the Rig-Vedic richas - usually

four-line verses offer, at least eighty of these richas laud and

pray Saraswati. Saraswati, along with Illa and Bharti, is one of

the twelve components of Vishwadevah. These collective richas

apart, three of the suktas - conceptual hymns, are also devoted

to Saraswati, which elevates her to the status of a sukta-bhak

deity - a deity of higher order with a distinct and independent

identity, one that is the subject of conceptual verses.

 

Its mysticism apart, the Rig-Veda seems to have a dual perception

of Saraswati, one as the sacred river, and the other, as the

deity pervading all three worlds. Most scholars assert that it is

only as river that the Rig-Veda has alluded to Saraswati and what

of it seems to pervade all three worlds is its celestial

character. They discover Saraswati's parallel in Iranian river

Haraihvati, which in contemporary Iranian rituals and literature

was similarly lauded for being benign, humid, heroic, and

immaculate. They argue that the term Saraswati, a combination of

'sara' or 'svara', meaning 'to go', and 'swati', meaning 'tending'

or 'inclining', that is, one that has the tendency of going or

moving, is more characteristic of a river. They emphatically hold

that like the root 'gam', meaning 'to go', from which developed

the name of river Ganga, in the Rig-Veda 'sara' is another root

from which developed several terms that denote a river or an

entity that has river-like moving character. They quote as

examples Sarayu, Saranyu, sarita, sansara. first two, the names

of two rivers, third, a river in general, and fourth, the

transient world. They however concede that the Rig-Vedic

Saraswati, with its origin in Heaven, could have been a celestial

flood, not a terrestrial stream. Invoked by sages to redeem them

from drought it descended on the earth across vast aerial region

pervading it, and hence its all-pervasive character. In similar

vein they interpret Saraswati's other Rig-Vedic attributions. Her

long arms by which Saraswati carves her path are interpreted as

her long banks through which she had her course. To them,

Saraswati's form as the deity is a mere apotheosis of the river

of that name.

 

Other group of scholars is little convinced with the logic. They

feel that motion that 'sara' or 'svara' denoted is the first

requisite also of sound. Apart, 'sara' also meant praise, and

'svara', utterance. So interpreted, the two terms stood for a

goddess who was possessed of sound, utterance and praise, or was

one who has been praised. They often perceive Saraswati as

another form of Vak. Prayed and lauded with Vishwadevah Saraswati

is one of the Akasha-devatas - aerial deities that commands

atmosphere, thunder and lightening, i.e., sound, light, humidity,

rain, and other atmospheric elements. They assert that under the

Rig-Vedic standards two essentials defined a deity. Firstly, it

had to be benign, and secondly, valorous performing acts

requiring prowess. The Rig-Veda has lauded Saraswati as being

'pavaka', the one who purifies and causes rainfall. 'Pavaka'

could be the attribute of a deity as also of the river but a

valorous act - such as eliminating a demon, could be attributed

to a deity, not river. The Rig-Veda lauds Saraswati for

eliminating Vratra, or Bala - demon of drought and the son of

Brasaya, something which a deity alone could accomplish.

 

Both suggestions are substantial. In most of its verses, or in

most part of these verses, the Rig-Vedic attribution to Saraswati

as the river is unambiguous. So interpreted, the demon Vratra

could be a Rig-Vedic metaphor for drought - a usual Rig-Vedic

idiom. But, the emphasis with which the Rig-Veda has personalized

Vratra - giving his father's name and other things, speaks of the

same super-sensibility with which the Rig-Veda has conceived its

most deities - Indra, Varuna, Agni, Sun among others that

otherwise represented an aspect of nature. It is difficult to say

as to when the Vedic seers - the great mystics endowed with

unique power to see beyond material frame, perceived a divine

entity containing an aspect of phenomenal nature, and when to

them an aspect of phenomenal nature rose to divine heights and

deified necessitating them to revere it as part of Vishwadevah

and offer to it their prayers. Thus whatever it stood for, Vratra

might not completely dilute into a mere verbal metaphor nor its

elimination might be treated just as an act of a river redeeming

from drought.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/book/details/IDE430/

 

The Rig-Veda does not perceive Saraswati as an aspect of Vak as

claim those seeing in her only a deity. It was rather Vak that

later - in Atharva-Veda and Yajura-Veda, merged with Saraswati.

The Rig-Veda personalises Saraswati independently and also

straight, not metaphorically as it does Ushas or some other

deities. When talking of Ushas the Rig-Veda alludes to her as one

who unveils herself to the sun as does a bride before her groom.

The Rig-Veda perceives in Saraswati a mother, spouse, sister and

daughter - a complete woman. Virapatni - consort of the heroic,

is her more often used epithet. The substantial part of the two

of the three suktas that laud Saraswati is devoted to her consort

Saraswata. Saraswata has been identified variedly as Vayu, Surya,

Prajapati and Indra. A greater unanimity prevails in regard to

Vira as an epithet of Prajapati. Later, in Puranas, Saraswata

appears as the name of her son by sage Dadhicha - her consort.

Apart that the Rig-Veda lauds and prays Saraswati as Ambitama,

Sindhumata and Mata - terms denotative of 'mother', her form that

it elaborates in one of its richas is essentially a mother's :

" Yas te stanah shasayo yo mayo bhur yena vishva pushyasi varyani

/ Yo ratnadha vasuvid yah sudatrah Saraswati tam iha dhatave

kah " - Saraswati, may we drain that breast of your, which is

exhaustless, source of pleasure, by which you feed all choicest

things, which is wealth giver, treasure finder and free bestower.

The Rig-Veda has also used for Saraswati the term 'kanya' usually

interpreted to mean an unmarried daughter of tender age, and a

couple of other terms interpreted variedly to mean a sister, both

of other rivers, as also of Ila and Bharti - other deities of the

Rig-Vedic Trio.

 

 

Saraswati's Attributes In The Vedas

 

Not so much her physiognomy or anthropomorphic appearance, the

Rig-Veda liberally elaborates her personality, spiritual in

particular - something it has not sought to do in case of most

other deities. In regard to her appearance and basic temperament

the Vedic seers have used three terms 'suyama', sometimes

considered to be 'suvigraha'; 'shubhra'; and 'supeshas', which

some scholars take as 'swarupa', and others, as 'supish'. 'Suyama'

meant easily led, as by prayer or laudation. Its identical term

'suvigraha' meant a beautiful figure with an accomplished

anatomy. The repeatedly used 'shubhra' - meant white, obviously

denoting her costume and adornment.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/WC43/

 

'Supeshas' could either be 'swarupa' meaning beautiful, or

beauteous, or 'supish' meaning well adorned. The Rig-Veda is more

elaborate in its depiction of her benignity, prowess, vigor and

spiritualism. It uses for her terms like 'dhiyavasu' - one who

has exception wisdom and ability to act, interpreted sometimes as

'dhinam avitri' meaning one who perfects or bestows 'dhi' -

wisdom; 'subhaga', fortunate and beautiful; 'vajinivati', one

possessed of abundant food, water, strength, vigor, energy,

wealth, power of speech.; 'pavaka', rain-giver, purifying, fire

and lightening; 'paravataghni', destroyer of Paravatas - a

non-Aryan tribe, or mountains falling on its way; 'chitrayuh',

unique, bright, versatile, wonderful; 'hiranyavartanih', one who

abounds in gold; 'asurya', one who has ceaseless life, breath,

water or spiritualism; 'dharunamayasi puh', one who is firm as a

city made of iron; and, 'akavari', one who is liberal even to her

enemies. The Rig-Veda alludes to her also as destroyer of Vratra,

and 'ghora' - fierce, but in low tone.

 

 

Saraswati In Post-Rig-Vedic Literature

 

In the post-Rig-Vedic literature Saraswati, the deity, begins

gaining prominence over Saraswati, the river. In her merges Vak,

and her two counterparts in the Rig-Vedic Trio, Ila and Bharti,

begin merging into her. At one place in the Atharva-Veda, a

'mantra' - divine hymn, mentions Saraswati with Ila and Bharti

but at another, uses a term 'tisrah Saraswatih' that early Vedic

commentators like Sayan and many other subsequent scholars

interpret as three forms of Saraswati or her three aspects. In

the Mahabharata Ila reduces into a mere linguistic term denoting

intellect, and Bharti, into another name for Saraswati, or an

abstraction denoting pursuit of learning. In their use of terms

like 'Saraswati Vakam' or 'Vak-Saraswati', Atharva-Veda and

Yajur-Veda perceive the synthesis of the two deities as final.

Sayan holds that it is in her synthesis with Saraswati that vak,

ordinary speech, undergoes her apotheosis into Vak, the goddess.

The attribute of Vak being first born from the mouth of

Brahaspati also merges with Saraswati.

 

In Atharva-Veda, Yajur-Veda and their organs - Brahmans,

Aranyakas and Upanishadas, she emerges as a regular operative

deity invoked for destroying a number of diseases, bestowing

offspring, affluence, money and food, and for the attainment of

other ends - winning love of a woman, or a man, harming a rival

in love, or destroying enemies. The Yajur-Veda treats her almost

like a physician. First in Yajur-Veda and then in Aitareya and

Shatapatha-Brahmana Saraswati begins assuming legendary form and

role. As Vak she transforms herself into a woman and goes to

Gandharvas, who had a weakness for women, for restoring from them

the Soma - divine drink, which they had stolen. As is the legend,

Gandharvas guarded Soma - drink of Indra and other gods, in the

heaven. One day, one of the Gandharvas Vishvavasu stole it and

hid it in waters where Gandharvas Svan and Bhraji guarded it. To

help gods, who were unable to win back Soma from Gandharvas,

Saraswati as Vak turned of her own into a woman, went to

Gandharvas and brought back from them the divine drink. It was

from this episode that Saraswati got her 'Anshumati' - full of

the Soma, epithet. Saraswati in her personalized form has been

widely alluded to in different parts of the Mahabharata. She has

been alluded to in Sabha Parva (Chapter 7, Verse 19) as adding

luster to Indra's court by her presence, in Vana Parva (Chapter

185), as advising sages, in Karna Parva (Chapter 34, Verse 34),

as serving as a passage to enable Shiva to take his chariot

across over her and destroy Three Cities, and in Shanti Parva

(Chapter 318, Verse 14), as appearing in the vision of sage

Yajnavalkya the moment he meditated on her.

 

 

Saraswati, Goddess Or River: Puranic Solution To The Enigma

 

The Puranas, too, take up the issue as to whether Saraswati was a

river or a goddess and also seek to settle it finally. As have

the Puranas, Saraswati was a goddess in Vaikuntha - Heaven, born

on the earth as a river under a curse and was thus both, a river

and a goddess and in both cases alike sacred. The Devi Bhagavata

acclaims that Saraswati was one of Mahavishnu's three wives,

other two being Lakshmi and Ganga. One day when all three and

Mahavishnu were engaged in delightful conversation, Ganga was

secretly casting her lustful eyes at Mahavishnu and as secretly

Mahavishnu responded her. When unable to bear it any longer

Saraswati got up and hit Ganga. Lakshmi sought to intervene,

which Saraswati did not like and cursed her to be born on the

earth. Ganga pronounced a similar curse against Saraswati, and

Saraswati against Ganga. Aggrieved by this unrestrained behavior

of his wives Mahavishnu ordained how the curses would work and

each of them would be born on the earth. As for Saraswati, he

ordained that she would be born on the earth as a river but her

divine form would ultimately return back to Vaikuntha and then

she would become Brahma's consort.

 

 

Saraswati In Puranas

 

The Puranic conception of Saraswati, though extremely

diversified, takes off from where the Rig-Veda had left it. She

emerges as one of the three deities of the Puranic Trio of the

Divine Female as she was in the Rig-Veda, though her counterparts

are now Mahadevi and Mahalakshmi, she herself being

Mahasaraswati.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/DI76/

 

As in the Rig-Veda where she had several attributes in common

with other deities of Vishwadevah, in Puranas too, at least

initially, she had a form largely identical with Mahadevi and

Mahalakshmi. She is benign and kind-hearted but also a fierce

warrior and demon-slayer carrying same weapons as carried

Mahadevi or Mahalakshmi. In popular worship tradition this

demon-slayer form of Saraswati was known as Sharda. If anything

distinguished this form of her from those of Mahadevi and

Mahalakshmi it was her 'subhra-vasana' - white attire, again what

the Rig-Veda had prescribed.

 

The Rig-Veda perceived Vak as born from the face of Brahaspati

and hence his daughter, and Saraswati, as Virapatni and hence

Brahma's spouse. Much before Puranas Vak and Saraswati merged

into one entity and so did largely Brahaspati and Prajapati, in

most contexts Brahma being their name. Thus, on one hand,

Saraswati as Vak was Brahma's daughter and on the other, his

consort. Puranas like the Brahmanda Purana allude to her straight

as Brahma's daughter born from his face. As the Brahmanda Purana

has it, while meditating on creation before its process was

begun, 'sattvaguna' - sublime nature, began swelling up in Brahma's

mind. First to be born from it was a girl. Brahma asked her who

she was. She answered that she was born of him and asked him to

fix for her a seat and duties. Brahma named the girl Saraswati

and ordained that she should stay on the tip of everybody's

tongue. He instructed her to dance especially on the tongues of

learned ones. He desired that in her another form she should

descend on the earth as a river and in yet another form reside in

him.

 

As unanimously Puranas acclaim Saraswati to be Brahma's consort.

Usually Puranas allude to Saraswati, Savitri and Gayatri as

Brahma's three consorts. The Matsya Purana, however, opines that

these are only the three names of one person. As the Matsya

Purana has it, Brahma created a woman out of his own effulgence.

The woman - a daughter born from him, became known by four

names - Satarupa, Savitri, Gayatri and Brahmani. Her enchanting

beauty mesmerised even Brahma who falling in love with her looked

at her with lustful eyes. Noticing it she turned to his right to

evade his glance but Brahma created a face on the right side of

his head and continued to gaze at her. She likewise turned from

one direction to other but Brahma created a face on each of his

four sides and kept his gaze fixed on her. The helpless woman

rose into the sky but Brahma created a fifth sky-wards looking

face. Finding escape impossible she yielded to his desire and the

two were then onwards husband and wife honeymooning for a hundred

years. To them was born a son named Swayambhuva or Virat. Thus,

Puranas perceive Saraswati dually as Brahma's daughter and consort.

 

Whatever the myth in regard to duality of relationship between

Brahma and Saraswati, the Vedic mysticism, which the Puranas

often seek to unfold using fiction, seems to reveal a different

cosmic truth. The universe, as it is revealed to the knowing

mind, is the universe of 'form' and 'name', and it is through

Vak - speech or syllable, that it becomes known. Brahma, the

Creator, could not reveal his creation to the knowing mind unless

he had Vak to be his medium. Hence, he first created Vak, his

medium, and then using it rendered the universe of form and name

manifest. Saraswati who represented speech was, thus, born of

Brahma and was hence his creation, and by her he made the

universe manifest and hence was his partner in the act of

creation - one way his daughter and other way, his consort. In

later Puranas and visual arts - sculpture in particular, she is

hardly ever treated as Brahma's daughter. She appears mostly as

his consort and quite often has her name as Brahmani, though

unlike Shiva and Parvati who are often in 'mithuna' - an aspect

of love, and invoked jointly sometimes as Uma-Maheshvara and at

other times as Shiva-Parvati, Brahma and Saraswati have very

rarely a 'mithuna' form and far rarely a joint name.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/book/details/IDI772/

 

 

Other Exploits Of Saraswati

 

Puranas attribute to Saraswati several exploits involving unique

wisdom and prowess. After great austerities Kumbhakarana, Ravana's

elder brother, came to Brahma for a boon. Brahma learned by

foresight that he wanted him (Brahma) to grant him 'Nirdevatva' -

absence of gods. Brahma sought Saraswati's help. Saraswati,

already staying at the tip of Kumbhakarana's tongue, made it

utter 'Nidratva' - sleep, which was granted. Padma Purana credits

Saraswati to have saved the world and all from 'Badavagni' - fire

ensued as the result of the great austerities of Aurva, great

grandfather of Parasurama. For obtaining ability to avenge the

killing of his ancestors by Kshatris Aurva took to great penance.

By the power of austerities his sublime wrath transformed into

cosmic flames that began engulfing the world. The horrified gods

rushed to Brahma for rescue. They told him that Saraswati alone

could save the world by conducting 'Badavagni' into the western

sea. On instructions from Brahma Saraswati conducted Badavagni

into the sea, with which the oceans still boil and occasionally

send back its flames. On her way to the western sea Saraswati had

a brief halt at Pushkara and redeemed people's sins, something

that waters of Pushkara are believed to yet do.

 

Illustration:

http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/badavagni_saraswati.jpg

 

 

Saraswati's Imagery

 

Like her personality, Saraswati's imagery also evolved along

centuries from Vedic days to now. In Vedas, except her large

beautifully shaped breasts full of abundant milk, details of her

limbs or anatomy are missing though those of her appearance are

quite elaborate. The Vedas conceived her as both black and white

but essentially effulgent and lustrous - 'jyotiswarupa', in

body-colour, and as abounding in gold - 'hiranyavartaniya', in

her adornment. Other attributes used for her in Vedas are

'chitrayus' - well shaped and elegantly modeled like a picture,

'suvigraha' - having a beautiful figure, 'swarupa' - endowed with

great aesthetic beauty, 'supish' - well-adorned, 'subhra' - clad

in white, and several others reflecting benignity, spiritualism

and energy in her being. In her early visual representations she

is invariably in 'adhovastra' - clad below the waist, her

ornaments covering the rest. This Vedic perception of Saraswati's

personality and appearance continues in Puranas as well but they

also add some new features which immensely strengthen her deity

form. Her figures brim with unique vigor and timeless youth. She

is now four-armed.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/EX75/

 

In her initial stage as demon-slayer Sharda, she carried in them

attributes of annihilation but later Agni Purana type subsequent

texts represent her as carrying in her three hands a string of

beads, book and vina - lyre, more characteristic of the deity of

learning, arts, music and creativeness, and the fourth, held in a

posture of 'varada' - boon-conferring, 'abhaya' - imparting

fearlessness, or as interpreting. In one of her hands she

sometimes carried a pot, perhaps to denote her water-carrying

distinction - a feature of the river-goddess. In view of her

Shaivite links she sometimes carried attributes of Shiva, and

sometimes a lotus suggestive of her prior links with Vishnu.

Saraswati has far many forms in Jain and Buddhist pantheons.

Saraswati as a Jain deity essentially carries a Tirthankara idol

in her coiffure,

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/jain_saraswati.jpg

 

and as the Buddhist, a number of Buddhist attributes, various

body-colors and postures.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/TF05/

 

Some of Saraswati's early idols are also two-armed. In

contemporary art, too, she is sometimes represented with normal

two arms.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/EZ67/

 

Puranas assign to her a lotus seat and a swan as her vehicle -

symbolizing purity, chastity and detachment which Saraswati

represents in her being.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/HF90/

 

Her votive images are often defined with an elaborate 'prabhavali'

- fire-arch. Her most forms reveal rhythm but not dance.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/product/EZ53/

 

However, a few of her early dancing images are also reported, one

from Udeshvara temple, Udayapur in Madhya Pradesh. As deity,

river Saraswati has the same imagery as has Saraswati the goddess

except that corresponding to her moving character she is more

often conceived as swan-riding, not as lotus-seated or seated.

 

 

Worship Of Saraswati

 

Like Lakshmi, who, as Padmavati, has many shrines dedicated to

her in the southern part of the country, Saraswati as Sharda has

been since ages the presiding deity of the entire Kashmir region

and was widely worshipped in the north and Central India. Even

Kashmir's classical script is named as Sharda after her name. In

Bengal, too, she has great significance. Not in her Vedic form,

or as the river goddess, or even as the consort of Brahma who

himself is no longer in worship, Saraswati enshrines every Indian

mind, if not many sanctums, as the goddess of learning

representing supreme wisdom, all-knowing intellect, and as

nurturer of creative faculties - literature, arts, music, dance.

and occupies pedestals and shelves of lacs of institutions

devoted to pursuit of learning.

 

Illustration: http://www.exoticindia.com/book/details/IDK017/

 

Not only a sanctum-deity, Saraswati is an auspicious presence

that elevates the mind and promotes right knowledge. When with

Ganesh, she assures right perspective and accomplishment of the

goal, while Ganesh, the detriment-free auspicious beginning.

 

Illustration:

http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/saraswati_with_ganesha.jpg

 

Since ancient times and all across medieval days, on

Vasantotsava - Spring festival, which is celebrated on

Vasanta-panchami - the fifth day of Phalguna, the last of the

twelve months of Indian calendar, Goddess Saraswati is worshipped.

 

Vasanta-panchami marks the beginning of man's pursuit of learning

and Saraswati, who represents it, presides over the occasion. As

the tradition has it, with Vasanta-panchami is begun a new

educational session and a child writes on the day his ever first

alphabet. Educational institutions and private persons hold

special rites to hail and worship the goddess and believing minds

place their books and pens around her image so that they reveal

to them more learning and greater wisdom.

 

(Best Wishes to all our Readers on the Occasion of Vasant

Panchami, 11th February)

 

 

===========================================

This article by Prof. P. C. Jain and Dr. Daljeet

===========================================

 

--------------------

Bibliography

--------------------

 

Sanskrit Texts:

 

Rig-Veda

 

Yajur-Veda

 

Atharva-Veda

 

Aitareya Brahman

 

Brahmanda Purana

 

Agni Purana

 

Mahabharata

 

 

Other Texts:

 

Mohammad Ismail Khan : Saraswati in Sanskrit Literature

 

Dr. Raghunath Airi : Concept of Saraswati in Vedic Literature

 

Dr. Daljeet and P. C. Jain : Indian Miniature Painting

 

B. C. Bhattacharya : The Jain Iconography

 

T. A. G. Rao : Elements of Hindu Iconography

 

D. A. Mackenzie : Indian Myth and Legend

 

Thornbury : Geomorphology

 

Encyclopaedia of Religion : (ed.) Ferm, J.

 

Vettam Mani : Puranic Encyclopaedia

 

David Kinsley : Hindu Goddesses

 

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