Edited by
Sushil Mittal
and
Gene Thursby
Routledge
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25
Sacred
Ramdas Lamb
Sacred 341
influenced by the interpretation of the rules and restrictions embedded in the
Holiness Code of the Torah (Leviticus 17-26) in developing Judaism, the
term came to be interpreted almost exclusively as the preserve of the Creator
and no longer connected with material things. With respect to Catholic
Christianity, sacred has traditionally had a wide use and acceptance. Holy
water, the Eucharist, the tabernacle and altar, and images in a church are
all examples of objects that are sacred. Rituals, especially the tradition of
sacraments, from baptism to last rites, are all seen to have a sanctifying effect.
Additionally, the tradition of saints elevates individuals and even their relics
to the status of holy and sacred. On the other hand, most Protestant Christian
and Muslim religious denominations do not openly recognize sacred objects,
places, or individuals, with the exception of their own sacred texts. Clearly,
the Muslim concept of shirk (literally, association) specifically prohibits its
followers from identifying anything created with the transcendental glory
of Allah.
Sacred 343
theory of purity as well. In their 1968 Village Christians and Hindu Culture,
coauthors P. Y. Luke and John Carman mention the elevated level of purity
that ascetics are believed to possess. The authors suggest that this view exists
primarily because ascetics "have placed themselves outside the ordinary
structure of society" (Luke and Carman 1968: 32). They do not seem to
acknowledge what R. S. Khare (1976: 176) does in the following decade,
which is that religious practice is clearly believed to affect the level of purity
of the individual. The importance of this in understanding the relationship
between purity and sanctity is elaborated on below.
In 1970, Louis Dumont's highly influential Homo Hierarchicus was
first published in English. The focus of the author is on the caste system,
and he explains the concept of purity almost exclusively from the dualistic
orthodox perspective, contrasting it with pollution. Though he elaborates
on the pivotal role it plays in the justification for the caste system and all its
prohibitions, except for a brief mention he ignores the multiple forms and
contexts in which it can be and is applied. Later in that same decade, Veena
Das' Structure and Cognition (1977) does a better job of problematizing the
issue of purity with respect to caste, allows for greater contextualization,
and includes the role of the renunciant, and by inference personal effort, in
her writings. The work of McKim Marriott also questions the approaches of
Srinivas and Dumont. His edited volume, India Through Hindu Categories
(1990), furthers this process by suggesting alternate ways of understanding
theories of purity. Last, two additional volumes are worthy of note here, for
each contains several articles that move beyond the limited understanding of
purity. These are Purity and Auspiciousness in Indian Society (1985), edited
by John B. Carman and Frederique A. Marglin, and Lance Nelson's more
recent Purifying the Earthly Body of God (1998a). However, so influential
were the writings of Srinivas and Dumont that they have set the tenor for
most subsequent scholarly works addressing the concept of purity, and
many newer works continue to reflect this. As a consequence, the broader
use of pavitra has been paid relatively scant attention. It is this expanded
understanding that aligns pavitra with the Western concept of sacred that
this chapter hopes to bring to light. For clarification, though the terms
"pure" and "purity" throughout this chapter are used to express the various
Hindu understandings of pavitra, "sacred" will be used in reference to those
aspects that more closely equate with the Western sense of the term.
For most Hindus, purity and sanctity begin with physical cleanliness.
Thus, for something to be pavitra, it usually must first be .suddha or
physically clean. One basis of the Hindu connection between pavitra and
sacred is the belief that the divine is the source, essence, and substance of
all existence. Therefore, the closer anything is to its natural, inherent, or
pure state, the closer it is to expressing or revealing its divinity and thus to
Though the Abrahamic traditions tend to have strict limits on what can be or
become sacred and who can make these determinations, indigenous religious
cultures are not so restricted. Moreover, the ability to make sacred, to sanctify
or purify is an important aspect to the religious life of the latter, and this
is integral to the Hindu tradition as well. Not only is the conceptualization
of sacred diverse, so is the process of purification and sanctification.
Because of the continuum approach to sanctity, the process of purification
and sanctification is integral in the life of most Hindus. Both occur on a
daily basis, in every temple, at nearly every home altar, and in many other
"secular" aspects of life. How these occur depends on what is being purified
and who is doing it. In the following sections, we discuss various categories
of what is pure or sacred (or both) and how they are understood or realized
in each. Because of the degree of regional differences that exist in India with
respect to the sacred, the discussion focuses primarily on general beliefs and
practices found in Hinduism, with some reference to regional examples. A
significant difference between Western and Hindu approaches to the sacred
that is to be noted is that the latter places the sacred much more in the hands
of the commoner and thus less in the control of specific authority figures.
The implications of this will.become apparent.
The act of consecrating a place or object is both an act of spiritual
cleansing and an attempt to bring out its inherent purity, its inherent
sanctity. Purification and sanctification, then, do not entail the adding of
Sacred 345
a sacred element as much as the removal of the elements that block the
inherent sanctity or purity from becoming apparent or manifest. The tools
for accomplishing this include prayers, mantras, rituals, water, and other
purifying articles. The latter can include such items as sandalwood paste,
turmeric powder, Ganges water, tulasi (sacred basil) leaves, and even cow
dung and cow urine. Once something has been purified, it will typically
remain so for the duration of the ritual in which it is involved. After this, the
site or object may "revert" to its prepurified state, although it could remain
pure, depending on the surrounding context.
Nature as Sacred
Although the Hindu concept of omnipresence posits the essential nature
of everything as divine or sacred, not all philosophical schools support this
notion. According to Lance Nelson, Advaita Vedanta, for example, promotes
a "wholesale objectification and radical ontological devaluation" of nature
(1998b: 68). Samkhya also postulates a dualistic understanding of reality but
sees nature, or prakrti, as the female half of the duality of nature and spirit.
Prakrti is the eternal animate aspect of reality. Although philosophically
nature and creation may be seen either as spiritless matter or as spirit-filled
matter, most Hindus tend toward the latter. For the most part, then, they
see the Earth and nature as closely connected with the Divine and are, in
essence, sacred. Such epithets as Prthvi Ma (Mother Earth), Bharat Mata
(Mother India), or Pavitra Bhumi (Sacred Land) express reverence to the
land as a manifestation of the feminine aspect of the Divine. Additionally,
every Indian river has a deity connected to it, usually a devi (a feminine form
of the Divine); nearly every mountain has a deity associated with it; and
valleys, forests, caves, and almost every unusual outcropping can be seen
as special and even specially pavitra. Here, again, there are many regional
variations. For example, because of the religious significance of Garnga Ma
(the Ganges River), many regional cultures associate a local river with her.
Thus, in the Chitrakut area of Madhya Pradesh, the main river there is
called Mandakini Ganga, and the residents relate a story to show that it is a
manifestation of the Ganga, making her purity and sanctity ever-present and
available to them.
As previously mentioned, because of the essential purity and sanctity
of reality, the more nearly that something is in its primal state, the more
potential it has to express or exhibit the sacred. Consequently, natural
things, such as fruits, flowers, leaves, grains, nuts, most river waters, and so
forth, are inherently pure and can be offered at a temple by almost anyone.
They require no ritual purification. Though they are not necessarily sacred
in the Western sense of the term, they are clearly pavitra and thus capable
of serving as a ritual offering, after which they become sacred and are then
called prasada.
Although all of nature possesses sanctity, there are specific natural
phenomena that are inherently more expressive of the divine. These can be
particular earthly formations and features (e.g., rivers, mountains, volcanoes),
certain forms of plant life (tulasi, lotus flowers, pipala tree, rudraksa seeds.),
or specific types of stones (salagrama or any natural lingam-shaped stone).
All these are seen to have an elevated level of inherent purity and thus have
a special presence and sanctity and are higher on the continuum between
worldly and divine. For example, although water is one of the most purifying
of natural elements, the water from one of the more sacred rivers, such
as the Ganga, Jamuna, and Narmada, is believed to be especially pure and
purifying. Bathing in them, then, is seen as an extremely spiritually cleansing
ritual, even when the water itself is not necessarily believed to be physically
clean or suddha.3
Particularly pavitra items (like those mentioned above) are commonly
found as offerings at a temple or on a home altar. It is common for Hindu
pilgrims to return home with soil from a sacred place, mud from a sacred river,
or a lingam-shaped stone to bless and sanctify their homes. The purifying
leaves of the tulasi plant can also be found on most altars. Depending on
the region, other types of soil, leaves, or items from nature may be used as
well, such as a coconut or a conch shell. The latter are especially common
in Central and South India. Additionally, certain creatures, such as cows,
monkeys, elephants, cobras, and eagles, are traditionally believed to exist
higher on the purity continuum than other animals, although there tends to
be more of a regional aspect to this view.
However, once the natural state of something is altered, its inherent purity
may become obscured. With respect to foodstuffs, for example, cooking
them can destroy their natural state of purity. Thus, though a Brahmana
priest will typically accept uncooked items from almost anyone, he will
traditionally accept cooked food only from certain individuals, usually
either other Brahmanas or members of the upper castes. This is because
the inherent purity of the foodstuffs may be believed by him to have been
lost, depending on who cooked the food, in what utensils, and how. The
food may be viewed as permanently impure or specific prayers or rituals
may be deemed necessary to repurify it. Such rituals are typically done by
Brahmana priests but can also be done by commoners in their homes. At the
same time, some aspects of nature remain pure, irrespective of alteration or
loss of physical cleanliness. Here, the Hindu concept resembles the Western
tradition in the sense that something can be sacred but not clean. A good
example of this is the polluted water of the Ganges River, a soiled copy
of a sacred text, the leftover food of a person considered holy, or physical
Sacred 347
entering the puja room, the place where the home altar is typically found and
where daily or periodic rituals are performed. The space is sacred because
of the presence of an altar or the fact that rituals are performed there. The
significance of this is that having such a space in one's home often provides
comfort and security, for it helps validate the proximity of the divine in one's
daily life. Though Brahmanas typically are called on to purify or sanctify a
home or a site for a ritual, many Hindus have given to them by their guru
or other respected religious figure a mantra that they themselves can use for
purification. This is one reason why some priests resent ascetics acting as
gurus for householders. The latter provide for free that for which the former
usually collect a fee.
Symbols and Objects as Sacred
From an academic perspective, there are several approaches to the understanding of symbols and objects. Symbols that are seen to simply represent
something can , be referred to as representative symbols. They generally have
no special status or power and are thus strictly symbolic. However, the
vast majority of religious symbols, especially for Hindus, are presentative,
that is, they are believed to have a direct link to that which they represent.
They are viewed as hierophanies or theophanies because they manifest
sacred presence. Such objects and symbols are found in the Roman Catholic
tradition as well and include images, crucifixes, rosaries, blessed items, and
so forth. For Hindus, sacred symbols are ever-present in nature as well as
in human-created items such as images in temples, home altars, roadside
shrines, the picture of a divinity, a svastika, the written name of a deity,
yellow and red thread tied on the right wrist during a ritual, the ashes from
a renunciant's fire, and so forth. Almost anything in nature can be viewed
as a sacred symbol: a rock, soil, a leaf, a flower, a piece of bark; a river,
mountain, valley, or outcropping; the wind, the sun, the moon, a star,
the planets. There is no shortage. Moreover, the list of items that cannot
typically be considered sacred is far shorter than that of items that can be.
The most common examples here include anything associated with disease,
death, or human or animal bodily excretions. However, even here there is
an exception. The dung and urine of a cow are seen as pavitra and are used
in rituals of purification. So great is the purifying power believed to be in the
products of the cow that most Hindus believe their power to purify is equal
to that of a purification mantra.
Human-created items are not believed to be inherently pavitra but can
become so through a variety of ritual methods. Additionally, the intent of the
maker, what is made, the substance from which it is made, and what its use
will be are all factors in making something pavitra and qualified to be sacred.
Sacred 349
For example, things made from gold and silver are believed to maintain their
purity; things made from other metals, clay, or wood need to be purified;
whereas items made from aluminum or plastic are typically seen as being
incapable of becoming pure. Purification rituals and the articles involved
in the process are similar to those used to purify spaces. Once pavitra, the
sanctification of an object or symbol may be for a specific period, such as the
length of a particular ritual, for a day or two, or permanently. It all depends
on the use and intent of the person doing the ritual. Because the ability
to purify an object is not confined to priests, almost anyone who knows a
ritual or prayer to use and who has the desire can do so, for fundamental to
purification and sanctification is intent of the performer.
Almost any image or any shaped rock, once cleansed and made
pavitra through ritual and then empowered through other rituals can
become the presentational aspect of a deity. This is obvious with respect
to nonanthropomorphic images of Hanuman, which can be almost any
uncarved stone. Here again, almost any object can be or become sacred in
Hinduism, depending on region, reason, and context.
Act i ons as Sa c red
The concept of karma, the belief that actions have consequences that affect
one's spiritual growth and progress, is fundamental to the major religious
traditions that have arisen in the Indian subcontinent. Like every other
aspect of reality, Hinduism places actions on a continuum from profane to
divine. At one end are those actions that pollute body and soul, such as the
consumption of flesh products and intoxicants, violence, stealing, lying, and
so forth. At the other end are those that purify, such as religious practices
(collectively referred to as sadhana), moral behavior, truth, nonviolence,
compassion, humility, and honesty. Additionally, there are specific forms
of sadhana and a variety of chants and rituals that are done exclusively for
purification purposes.
Rituals are the most common form of religious practice. Like symbols,
rituals can generally be two types, representative and presentative. Social
rituals tend to be of the former, whereas religious rituals are typically
believed to be of the latter, for they help to make manifest the divine
presence or power (or both). Within the class of religious rituals are those
done in conjunction with mantras specifically for the purpose of purification
and sanctification, such as to purify a spot where a subsequent ritual is to
be performed, to purify an object to be used in a ritual, or to purify an
individual about to participate in a ritual. In actuality, all rituals are seen
to indirectly purify participants and observers by granting blessings or by
enhancing their awareness of or proximity to the Divine.
Sacred 3 S 1
regular forms of tapasya in their lives but whose sadhana may consist of
little more than renouncing the householder life and living in an asrama with
other renunciants are not typically viewed as particularly pure or powerful.
There is a common saying in North India that can be loosely translated,
"Only one who does sadhana is considered a [genuine] sadhu" (sadhu nama
sadhana).'
Following ritual rules of personal purity in the form of a moral life,
vegetarian diet, and physical cleanliness are all believed to work in
conjunction with the practice of sadhana to make one's body made both
physically and spiritually pure and sacred. Additionally, purity functions not
only as empowerment but as protection. It is commonly held that when one
follows all rules of purity, one is also largely protected from the dangers
of evil spirits, curses, and so forth. There is a popular belief in India that
ascetics who live in the jungle are not bothered by wild animals because the
power of their tapasya protects them.
Traditionally, it is believed that a highly elevated state of purity and sanctity
is best exemplified in the being of dharma gurus or religious teachers. They
are the ones who are believed to have made great advancements on the path
and have, through the practice of sadhana, cleansed away the "pollution"
of worldly existence and involvement from their bodies, minds, and hearts
and have become pure expressions of the inherent divinity within. For most
Hindus, the guru both defines and reveals to them sacredness and purity, and
they express these through goodness, wisdom, devotion, and compassion,
and sometimes spiritual power as well. Hindus will typically seek out such
individuals to receive blessings, for purity and sanctity are believed to radiate
and can be gained even by being in proximity to such individuals.
Concluding Reflections
The formulation and elaboration of the concept of the "sacred" are
fundamental constructions of all religious traditions, for they set parameters
regarding the ultimate and suggest the relationship between that ultimate
and human beings. For both, there is a clear distinction between Western
religious approaches and Hindu approaches. Although the omnipresence of
the divine is a belief integral in the Western traditions, sanctity is defined by
and integral with separateness. God, then, is presented as being most sacred
in His remoteness. Humans can never know Him, much less become one
with Him. In the Hindu tradition, on the other hand, the sanctity of the
divine comes from its integral presence in all reality and its availability to
the individual to be perceived and experienced. Just as the more a place or
object becomes pure, the more it comes into proximity with the sacred, so is
the case with humans. Physical, mental, and emotional purity are all believed
Notes
1 In an informal poll of more than one hundred Western and Indian scholars and
Hindi-speaking Indian university students conducted by me during 2006, more
than 80 percent said that sacred is best translated pavitra.
2 These terms have been put in alphabetical order, not in the order of popularity.
The definition given for each is the one most commonly used.
3 Numerous studies of the Ganges River and its current state of extreme pollution
do not prevent countless Hindus from bathing in it and drinking its water, as it
is, in their eyes, sacred irrespective of its physical state or properties.
4 I address the importance of sadhana in the life of a renunciant in Lamb (2006).
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