Sunday, October 21, 2012

The Significance of Dasara Festival: Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao


The Significance of Dasara Festival
A Festival With Hoary Past
The Hans India (24-10-2012)
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao

(As narrated by 77 year old Dr. V. Chandra Mowli:
A retired Indian Administrative Service Officer)
             
As the name indicates, Dasara is a festival of ten nights. In the south, the first nine are called “Navaratri” and the tenth “Vijaya Dasami” or the victorious tenth. Dasara could be later comer when compared to the antiquity of many Hindu festivals.

           
 No reference to this season as a festive occasion is traceable in the Hindu Puranas or in the works of early Sanskrit writers. Sutra works of the middle of the first millennium BC refer to it as part of an annual sacrifice-a solemn but not a festive event. Even in the pre-Christian centuries, the Romans were celebrating this season as a festival, in a manner so0 remarkably similar to that of the South Indians, indicating that some sort of connection between the two cannot be ruled out.

            
 In ancient Rome, they observed twelve days of festivities at the termination of the year. At the time of Romulus-founder of Rome, the Roman Year considered to be only ten months totaling 304 days. It commenced with Vasanta Rutu, one month before the vernal equinox and closed with Hemata Rutu at the Uttarayanam (winter solstice). It did not commence with vernal equinox as most European Scholars believe. The Sisira Rutu of two months was ignored as a period of snow and darkness and unfit for any sacrifice. The winter is not so severe in Rome, nor was it at the epoch of Romulus. It is likely that the colonists came from a northern country where the winter was so severe as to stop all activity.

            
 The tenth month with which the year ended was called December, the ninth month November, the eighth October and the seventh September. These are all Indo-Aryan forms. Though “Vaara” which now means a week, its original sense was ‘any period of time’: vaaram meant often and often.

             
In the reformed calendar introduced by Julius Caesar, the Uttarayanam occurred on a date that was then December 25. From next day onwards, they had a festive season of twelve days which ended on January 6, called the twelfth night. December 25 was called “Natalis Solis Invictis” (birth of the victorious sun), as it was from this day that the sun from his lowest height over the southern horizon started growing higher and higher day by day.


            
 The sun was considered re-born, and the festivities commenced. The Saturn alia was also celebrated during this period; a season of unrestrained license and merriment in honor of Saturn, the ancient Roman God of Agriculture whose fabulous reign was called the golden age. Presents would be exchanged and also visits to each other. A festival called “Sigullaria” also occurred at the same time at which earthenware figures were presented to children.

             
After the introduction of Christianity the festivals underwent transformation. Sigullaria came to be called “Presepio”-meaning stable. It was in a stable- building in which livestock is kept-that Jesus was born. The earthenware dolls came to represent Mary, Joseph, the ass, the oxen in the stable etc., as well as the three kings or Magi. In southern Italy, the dolls were usually called Pastori (shepherds). Even today in Naples people in certain streets devote themselves exclusively to the manufacture and sale of such dolls as Christmas approaches.

             
Instead of commencing this festival after December 25, as in the pre-Christian centuries, they now arranged to have it terminate on December 25, so that, the supposed birthday of Savior replaced the birthday of the victorious sun. Nine days before Christmas, the Presepio must be ready. All dolls are installed except the Infant for He is not yet born. Music is played on all the nine days. On the tenth day, the Babe is placed in the manger and the best tunes are played. After this the dolls are packed away to be brought out again the next year.

             
In South India, the custom of procuring earthenware dolls and arranging a tableau for ten days, exchange of visits, playing of music and other festivities are established features. After ten days, the dolls are packed away to be brought out again the next year. The close resemblance of the customs of Italy is so remarkable as to rule out mere coincidence. Even the tenth day is described as “Invicta” which is the same as “Vijaya”, the adjective in Vijaya Dasami.

             
Though December 25 is considered to be the day of the birth of Jesus, it is not so. We do not know for sure even the year of his birth: so they argue about the month or the day? Latest researchers show that he was born four years earlier. As someone facetiously remarked “Jesus was born four years before Christ”. The tenth day on which the Babe is put in the manger is undoubtedly the pagan day of “Natalis Solis Invictas”.

             
Before Julius Caesar reformed the Roman calendar, endless confusion had crept into it, as the priests in charge had been tampering with it to suit the politicians. December 25 occupied a season that was really the autumn equinox or September 25. The Indian Dasara commences ten-eleven days this side or that side of September 25, as a lunar calendar is bound to vary within these limits in relation to the correct solar calendar of the seasons. We may not be wrong in believing that the Italian celebrations are modeled on those of Indians and which the Indians celebrate at the autumn equinox. It may be nearer the truth to say that the Italians and that section of Indians among whom the Dasara festival originated had a common home before they separated.

             
As the Romans were in Italy by the 8th Century BC, the separation of the tribes from the parent stock should have taken place earlier. We do not know which branches of the peoples speaking Indo-Aryan Dialects flocked into India in the first millennium BC. From the evidence of languages we find an amount of correlation not only between Latin and Sanskrit but also between Latin and the so called Dravidian Languages. In many cases where words are common to all three languages, the Dravidian pronunciation is closer to Latin than to Sanskrit. There are many words that are common to Dravidian Languages and Latin but are not found in Sanskrit. Such words could not have become the common property as a result of Roman trade with South India. Added to this, the close resemblance of the South Indian Dasara to the Roman Festival is thought provoking.

            
 The ninth day of Dasara is called “Ayudha-Puja” both in the north and the south. At the autumn equinox the rains would have ceased and military expeditions would set forth. Weapons kept idle during the rains would be taken out, polished and worship was offered to them to ensure success in war. On the tenth day, the king set out with his army to gain victory and hence Vijaya Dasami. The indiscriminate worship of each one’s tools of the trade is meaningless.

             
In ancient times they had a sacrifice which lasted one full year and was an imitation on earth of the apparent revolution of the sun in the heavens. The observances of nine, ten or twelve days had purely an astronomical significance relating to the annual calendar. When the sacrificial religion of the Vedas was displaced by sectarian worship of favorite deities, the Vedic forms were converted to the purposes of new religions. Various explanations were offered as to the significance of the Navaratri or Dasara, suited to the fancy of each sect. Some said that Rama fought with Ravana for ten days and that his victory was on the victorious Dasami. Others said that Durga vanquished Mahishasura on Vijaya Dasami. Some others said that on that day Arjun conquered Kaurava kings in Uttaragograhanam. If only the inventors of these stories had turned their talents to more practical inventions, both they and this country might have benefited from their genius.

             
Rama did not besiege Lanka in the month of Aswayuja. Hanuman and party returned only in late Aswayuja or early Karthik. Rama might have reached Lanka by the end of Karthik. He was back in Ayodhya by Chaitra. Rama’s war with Ravana could have been between Margashira and Phalguna or roughly between December and March. The story about Durga is equally incredible. Even at the time of Buddha, the autumn equinox occurred at the beginning of Karthik according to the calendar then in use. Aswayuja would have been part of the rainy season. In still earlier times it would have been more so. Unless Durga destroyed Mahishasura after the commencement of Christian era, the explanation is untenable.

            
 One may conclude that the observance was linked to the seasons and for some sections of the population it devoted the end of the old year and commencement of new. Most Indians commence the year with Chaitra Shukla Padyami (the first day of the bright half of Chaitra), which once coincided more or less with the vernal equinox or the Shukla Padyami of Aswayuja. The Lunar dates were more convenient for the layman who could not be expected to determine the solstices and the equinoxes which the astronomers alone are capable of doing.

             
Whatever explanation we may offer for the origins of Navaratri or Dasara, they would be as far removed from the truth as the present Christian ceremonies are from their originals and the Hindu festivals from their Vedic Prototypes.

           
 What is more to the point is that human beings need a break from the monotony of their daily grind. Life would be intolerable if every day happens to be a Monday or a Sunday. Our calendar must have red letter days in every season. We must have days for work and days for rest. We must have Ekadasi for fasting and Dwadasi fro feasting. We need days for atonement and days for merriment. An engine needs an exhaust, an oven needs a chimney and human beings must have holidays. That is how they can lay aside their cares, mix with their fellowmen and bring happiness and cheer. If human beings do not shed their differences of wealth, position and privileges once in a while and mix on equal terms with others in society, we shall drift apart and society will disintegrate.

             
The festivals are not for gods in high heaven who have no need for being feted by us, but, it is you and I and our neighbor who need those festive occasions to escape from our narrow lives and to rediscover god. End

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