|
-: Avatars, Divinities :-
Shiva |
Nataraja |
Avatars of Vishnu |
Narasimha | Ganesh
| Krishna
Ganesh,
also known as Ganapati, is immediately
recognizable as the elephant-headed god. He is
the god of wisdom and learning, as well as the
remover of obstacles, and consequently the sign
of auspiciousness. It is customary to begin
cultural events, for example, by propitiating
Ganesh, and older Sanskrit works invoked his
name at their commencement. Ganesh is said to
have written down the Mahabharata from the
dictation of Vyasa. He is the lord (Isa) of the
Ganas or troops of inferior deities, but more
well-known as the son of Shiva and Parvati. In
the most common representations of Ganesh, he
appears as a pot-bellied figure, usually but not
always yellow in color. In his four hands, he
holds a shell, a discus, a club, and a water
lily; his elephant head has only one tusk. Like
most other Indian gods, he has a vehicle, in
his case a rat: this rat is usually shown at the
foot of the god, but sometimes Ganesh is astride
the rat.
There are a number of stories about how Ganesh
came to acquire an elephant head. Perhaps the
most popular of these legends relates how
Parvati, when she once took a bath, asked Ganesh
to stand guard. When her husband Shiva wished to
enter the bathroom [in other variants, it is the
bedroom], he was opposed by his son; in his
rage, Shiva cut off Ganeshs head. Distressed by
her husbands enraged behavior, Parvati asked
him to replace his head; and Shiva did so with
the head of the first living being that he
encountered, namely an elephant. According to a
second legend, Shiva slew Aditya, the sun, but
was condemned by the Vedic sage Kasyapa to lose
the life of his own son in return; and when he
replaced his sons life, Shiva did so with the
head of Indras elephant. Yet another story
about the origins of Ganeshs elephant head
relates how Parvati, admiring of her sons
handsome looks, asked Saturn (Sani, from which
is derived sanivar, or Saturday) to gaze at her
son. But in so doing she forgot that the effect
of Sanis glance would be to burn the object he
gazed at to ashes. In her distress, Parvati went
to Brahma, who told her to replace Ganeshs head
with the first head that she could find. The
sacred "Om" sign with which Ganesh is often
associated points to yet another myth of his
birth. According to this myth, one day Parvati
saw the "Om" sign, and with her glance she
transformed it into two elephants, from whose
act of intercourse emerged Ganesh. They then
resumed the form of "Om", but ever since "Om"
became known as the sign of Ganesh.
Though all Indian myths are subject to
interesting psychoanalytic interpretations, the
myths associated with Ganesh particularly lend
themselves to some obvious psychoanalytic
readings. Ganesh can be seen as competing with
his father for his mother, and Parvati is
herself, in some myths, seen as casting a far
too admiring look at her own son; on the other
hand, one can reasonably view Shiva as opposing
the apparently incestuous relationship between
his wife and their son. Shivas conduct towards
his son Ganesh is of a piece with his conduct
towards others who are viewed as being in sexual
competition with him, when one recalls that he
burnt Kama with his third eye and beheaded
Brahma with the touch of his hand. In some
myths, the beheading of Ganesh is replaced by
the act of castration. The roots of Shivas
violent conduct toward his own son may lie in
the profound ambivalence he feels towards his
own progeny. On the one hand, Shiva stands for
fertility, and he is everywhere associated with
the lingam or phallus; on the other hand, he is
also the presiding god of ascetics.
Consequently, Ganesh is, in a manner of
speaking, his unwanted offspring.
Ganesh remains, in many respects, among the most
interesting of the Indian deities. Though the
myths and legends attached to the figure of
Krishna are immeasurably richer, no other Indian
deity is as malleable, so amenable to creative,
amusing, ironical, cubist, and three-dimensional
representations, whether in painting,
literature, or sculpture. There is no medium
stone, glass, cloth, paper, bamboo, wood,
bronze, and numerous others in which artists
and craftspersons have not offered
representations of Ganesh. He is unquestionably
the most lovable and mischievous of the deities
with his grandfatherly presence, his protuberant
belly, and the twinkle in his eyes. Though there
are many festive occasions on which Ganesh is
honored, and he has an abiding presence in many
Hindu households, his devotees everywhere in
India, and most particularly in the state of
Maharashtra, celebrate the Ganapati festival
with great fanfare. As this festival
unequivocally suggests, even Ganesh has been
politicized, but seldom is much wisdom shown
when this god of wisdom is put to use by
ideologues to further the political agendas of
militant Hindus. |