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Kamaakhya Peetham--Ambubaachi

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Dear K, Om Shree Mathre Namaha! Kaamaakhye' Praseeda! Praseeda! Persuant to our chat, I did make some inquiries about the same.Please do the Kamakhya sadhana given with full and sincere effort. It will do you good for your grihastha ashrama also.Please place the cloth under the image and tha yantra next to each other and worhsip the 16 yoginis too.However, it must be done very carefully. Iam waiting for the Kamakhya Prasadam to adorn my Pooja room with all eagerness. My heartfelt thanks to you! At the temple complex of Kamakhya, located five kilometres from Gauhati, the capital of Assam, a celebration of the yearly menstruation of the goddess is held during the monsoon, when the Brahmaputra river is in spate. The fair is called Ambubachi Mela. Kamakhya, also called Kamarupa - the form or shape of love or desire - is India's pre-eminent Shakti peeth where the goddess is worshiped in both her maternal and erotic roles. There is no idol of the deity in the Garbhagriha of the temple. She is worshiped in

the form of a yoni-like stone over which a natural spring flows. Kamaakhyaa Devi What is worshipped at Kamakhya during the mela (fair) is not an image of the goddess, but rather a process - and a female process at that - menstruation. It is believed that during the monsoon rains the creative and nurturing power of the 'menses' of Mother Earth becomes accessible to

devotees at this site during Ambubachi. Inside the temple.In keeping with traditional women's menstrual seclusion, the Kamakhya mandir is closed to worshippers during the mela. And devotees, male and female, observe similar restrictions - not cooking, not performing puja or reading holy books, and so on. When the temple is reopened, prasad (part of the food offered to the goddess) is distributed in two forms. Angadhak - literally the fluid part of the body - water from the spring. And angabastra(Angavastra) - literally the cloth covering the body - a piece of the red cloth used to cover the stone yoni during the days of menstruation. (Kamaakhya Temple in Assam,Guwahati) During Ambubachi Mela, the rituals enacted fuse two natural phenomena we usually perceive as distinctly different. The seasonal cycle of monsoon rains merges with female physiology, women's monthly menstrual flow. Both earth body and female body processes are represented as profoundly sacred. (Ambubaachi fervor in an Assamese woman devotee of Kamakhya Mathaji) Shakti practitioners worship the divine female principle, the immanent power of the absolute, in forms such as Durga, Kali, Lakshmi, Tripurasundari, Bhairavi, and local variations. According to one estimate, 51 Shakti Peeths are strewn across the geographical

length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent. Mythology weaves together these sacred sites in the narrative of the grieving Shiva who flew through the skies in anguish at the death of his beloved Sati, dropping her body parts on to the earth. Ambubaachi mela opening............> Kamakhya is considered the Peeth where her yoni descended. However, some scholars view this narrative as a form of geo-mysticism executed by the Brahman authors of Puranic texts, which compiled regional sites and legends into an overarching Hindu mythology.Interestingly, the impetus for the action in this narrative involves Sati's transgressions of both patriarchal and sacrificial convention. Sati or Parvati, had returned to her natal home on the occasion of a yagna (ritual prayer) performed by her father Dakshin, even though

she and Shiva had not been invited. When her father - who did not accept Shiva, ever - publicly humiliated her beloved at the ritual, Sati immolated herself in the sacrificial fire, desecrating it. The Devi, in the form we know as Sati, defied her father in her choice of husband and spoiled the Vedic sacrifice, literally, by despoiling it (polluting it) with her body.The 200,000 to 300,000 pilgrims who trekked the last week of June to Kamakhya to observe this festival were both sadhus and householders, converging to honor the goddess. Sanyasins, black clad Aghoras, the Khade-babas, the Baul or singing minstrels of West Bengal, intellectual and folk Tantriks, Sadhus and Sadvis with long matted hair are ensconced within the temple compound during the mela. Blouseless, impoverished widows and others, particularly women, journey from Bengal or Orissa or Bihar on special bogeys attached to many trains headed for Gauhati.For several years now, feminist scholars

and activists have expressed concern at the role of the dominant religions in reinforcing the oppression of women. Frequently, they point out, religious texts and tenets seem to spout patriarchal ideology rather than any spiritual guidelines for women. Although women are often the most devout of devotees, their capacity for assuming authoritative roles as priests (or imams, pundits, lamas) has not been utilized.The exclusion from these roles is related to female bodily power, both sexual and procreative. And female blood is the mark of that power. In the dominant religious traditions, this blood - be it menstrual or postpartum - is depicted as highly polluting, defiling and at all costs to be kept separate from things sacred: holy books, prayer, temples, mosques, churches.What are we to make of the Ambubachi Mela, where the Goddess herself is rendered as bleeding, and prasad is given in the form of a symbolic red cloth?"The Earth Mother",

points to the connections between the female body and its procreative power (the ability to bring new life into the world) and the 'magical' or sacred rites and beliefs of agricultural and tribal peoples. In some rural societies and Tantric rites, the diagram or yantra was identified with the female generative organ as the goddess Bhaga or Kamakhya, the eye of love and creation, the doorway to the womb. The drawing of mandalas or yantras in the high traditions, floor and wall paintings by women in folk traditions, all display a magical structure. First, a space is created and then the magical rite with its form and intention is enacted in that space. This allowed for the manifestation or actualization of the desired intention. The Ambubachi worship of the simultaneous phenomena of monsoon

rain and menstrual bleeding may reveal an important contribution to global cultural representation of the female body. Kamakhya seems to question both the dominant religious legacies of the pollution inherent in female bodily processes, and the gynaecological and obstetrical representation of menstruation and childbirth as occasions for malfunction and pathology. Many women around the world view their bodies not as a part of nature or even their particular culture, but rather in biomedical terms represented as 'scientific' and real. And yet the mysteries inherent in sexual pleasure, the magic of new life growing inside a woman, giving birth and feeding from the breasts, remains. Perhaps Ambubachi Mela provides a sacred space for empowering images of the female body - a space where the maternal and erotic aspects of women's lives are encoded and celebrated as divine. Yours Yogically, Shreeram Balijepalli Purity, Powers, Parabrahmam... Click

to join Rajarajeshwari_Kalpataru

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Dear Pooja Ma,

 

You will be blessed by a child soon.Please do not worry. Amba Bhavani

Ma Kamaakhya Devi will bless you with a child. Please do not worry.

 

Shreeram Balijepalli

Rajarajeshwari_Kalpataru , Pooja Tiwari

<poojat2005 wrote:

>

> Dear gurujee,

>

> Thanks a lot for giving such useful information about Kamaakhya

Peetham. I am childless and have heard so many miracle stories about

this annual mela. I came to know that there are so many women who

have been blessed with a baby after visiting this mela and taking

prasad.

>

> I also long for a baby, may Kamaakhya devi bless me soon

> Pooja

>

> Group Owner <para_anuloma wrote:

>

> Dear K,

>

> Om Shree Mathre Namaha! Kaamaakhye' Praseeda! Praseeda!

>

> Persuant to our chat, I did make some inquiries about the

same.Please do the Kamakhya sadhana given with full and sincere

effort. It will do you good for your grihastha ashrama also.Please

place the cloth under the image and tha yantra next to each other and

worhsip the 16 yoginis too.However, it must be done very carefully.

>

> Iam waiting for the Kamakhya Prasadam to adorn my Pooja room with

all eagerness. My heartfelt thanks to you!

>

> At the temple complex of Kamakhya, located five kilometres from

Gauhati, the capital of Assam, a celebration of the yearly

menstruation of the goddess is held during the monsoon, when the

Brahmaputra river is in spate. The fair is called Ambubachi Mela.

Kamakhya, also called Kamarupa - the form or shape of love or desire -

is India's pre-eminent Shakti peeth where the goddess is worshiped

in both her maternal and erotic roles. There is no idol of the deity

in the Garbhagriha of the temple. She is worshiped in the form of a

yoni-like stone over which a natural spring flows.

>

>

>

> Kamaakhyaa Devi

>

>

> What is worshipped at Kamakhya during the mela (fair) is not an

image of the goddess, but rather a process - and a female process at

that - menstruation. It is believed that during the monsoon rains the

creative and nurturing power of the 'menses' of Mother Earth becomes

accessible to devotees at this site during Ambubachi.

>

>

> Inside the temple.

>

> In keeping with traditional women's menstrual seclusion, the

Kamakhya mandir is closed to worshippers during the mela. And

devotees, male and female, observe similar restrictions - not

cooking, not performing puja or reading holy books, and so on. When

the temple is reopened, prasad (part of the food offered to the

goddess) is distributed in two forms. Angadhak - literally the fluid

part of the body - water from the spring. And angabastra(Angavastra) -

literally the cloth covering the body - a piece of the red cloth

used to cover the stone yoni during the days of menstruation.

>

>

> (Kamaakhya Temple in Assam,Guwahati)

>

> During Ambubachi Mela, the rituals enacted fuse two natural

phenomena we usually perceive as distinctly different. The seasonal

cycle of monsoon rains merges with female physiology, women's monthly

menstrual flow. Both earth body and female body processes are

represented as profoundly sacred.

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

(Ambubaachi fervor in an Assamese woman devotee of Kamakhya

Mathaji)

> Shakti practitioners worship the divine female principle, the

immanent power of the absolute, in forms such as Durga, Kali,

Lakshmi, Tripurasundari, Bhairavi, and local variations. According to

one estimate, 51 Shakti Peeths are strewn across the geographical

length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent. Mythology weaves

together these sacred sites in the narrative of the grieving Shiva

who flew through the skies in anguish at the death of his beloved

Sati, dropping her body parts on to the earth.

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Ambubaachi mela opening............>

>

> Kamakhya is considered the Peeth where her yoni descended.

However, some scholars view this narrative as a form of geo-mysticism

executed by the Brahman authors of Puranic texts, which compiled

regional sites and legends into an overarching Hindu mythology.

>

> Interestingly, the impetus for the action in this narrative

involves Sati's transgressions of both patriarchal and sacrificial

convention. Sati or Parvati, had returned to her natal home on the

occasion of a yagna (ritual prayer) performed by her father

Dakshin, even though she and Shiva had not been invited. When her

father - who did not accept Shiva, ever - publicly humiliated her

beloved at the ritual, Sati immolated herself in the sacrificial

fire, desecrating it. The Devi, in the form we know as Sati, defied

her father in her choice of husband and spoiled the Vedic sacrifice,

literally, by despoiling it (polluting it) with her body.

>

> The 200,000 to 300,000 pilgrims who trekked the last week of June

to Kamakhya to observe this festival were both sadhus and

householders, converging to honor the goddess. Sanyasins, black clad

Aghoras, the Khade-babas, the Baul or singing minstrels of West

Bengal, intellectual and folk Tantriks, Sadhus and Sadvis with long

matted hair are ensconced within the temple compound during the mela.

Blouseless, impoverished widows and others, particularly women,

journey from Bengal or Orissa or Bihar on special bogeys attached to

many trains headed for Gauhati.

>

> For several years now, feminist scholars and activists have

expressed concern at the role of the dominant religions in

reinforcing the oppression of women. Frequently, they point out,

religious texts and tenets seem to spout patriarchal ideology rather

than any spiritual guidelines for women. Although women are often the

most devout of devotees, their capacity for assuming authoritative

roles as priests (or imams, pundits, lamas) has not been utilized.

>

> The exclusion from these roles is related to female bodily power,

both sexual and procreative. And female blood is the mark of that

power. In the dominant religious traditions, this blood - be it

menstrual or postpartum - is depicted as highly polluting, defiling

and at all costs to be kept

> separate from things sacred: holy books, prayer, temples, mosques,

churches.

>

>

> What are we to make of the Ambubachi Mela, where the Goddess

herself is rendered as bleeding, and prasad is given in the form of a

symbolic red cloth?

>

> " The Earth Mother " , points to the connections between the female

body and its procreative power (the ability to bring new life into

the world) and the 'magical' or sacred rites and beliefs of

agricultural and tribal peoples. In some rural societies and Tantric

rites, the diagram or yantra was identified with the female

generative organ as the goddess Bhaga or Kamakhya, the eye of love

and creation, the doorway to the womb. The drawing of mandalas or

yantras in the high traditions, floor and wall paintings by women in

folk traditions, all display a magical structure. First, a space is

created and then the magical rite with its form and intention is

enacted in that space. This allowed for the manifestation or

> actualization of the desired intention.

>

>

>

> The Ambubachi worship of the simultaneous phenomena of monsoon

rain and menstrual bleeding may reveal an important contribution to

global cultural representation of the female body. Kamakhya seems to

question both the dominant religious legacies of the pollution

inherent in female bodily processes, and the gynaecological and

obstetrical representation of menstruation and childbirth as

occasions for malfunction and pathology.

>

>

>

> Many women around the world view their bodies not as a part of

nature or even their particular culture, but rather in biomedical

terms represented as 'scientific' and real. And yet the mysteries

inherent in sexual pleasure, the magic of new life growing inside a

woman, giving birth and feeding from the breasts, remains.

>

>

>

> Perhaps Ambubachi Mela provides a sacred space for empowering

images of the female body - a space where the maternal and erotic

aspects of women's lives are encoded and celebrated as divine.

>

> Yours Yogically,

>

> Shreeram Balijepalli

>

>

>

>

Purity, Powers, Parabrahmam...

>

>

>

> Click to join Rajarajeshwari_Kalpataru

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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