The Ideology of Patronage and the Question of Identity in the Early Dādūpanth
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Dādū Dayāl and Jangopāl’s Dādū Janma Līlā
2.1. Creating the Image of Dādū as an Idealized and Sanskritized Sant
Dādū, Kabīr and the Forming of Sectarian Identities
3. Dādū Janma Līlā as Part of the Manuscript Culture
3.1. Two Types of Manuscripts for Two Types of Patronage
4. Dādū Janma Līlā and the Ideology of Court Patronage
4.1. Dādū, Rulers, and Some Ideological Aspects of Rejecting Court Patronage
4.2. Patronage-Related Historical Background of the Dādū–Akbar Debate
4.3. The Debate as a Discourse on Authority
5. Changes in Dādūpanthī Ideology and Identity under Royal Patronage in the 18th Century
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | There were actually three disciples of Dādū bearing the name Gopāl, out of whom the author of the DJL supposedly lived in Fatehpur Sikri (Orr 1947, p. 209; Callewaert 1988, p. 83). |
3 | Throughout the article, the term ‘sect’ is used to indicate both panth and saṃpradāya. They cover similar semantic ground, with panth usually (but not exclusively) used to denote religious movements from the Sant tradition (Lochtefeld 2001, pp. 497–98; Wood 2008). |
4 | However, it is crucial to acknowledge the ties that Sants have with Indian Sufism (cf. Gold 1987, pp. 201–13). As far as this section is concerned, it is worth noting that the figures of shaikhs in the Sufi hagiographical literature were often presented in an exaggerated, authority-emphasizing manner (e.g., by stressing their supernatural powers and miracle-workings) that could have influenced not only the ‘Vaishnava bhaktamālas and Sikh janamsākhīs’ (Digby 2003, p. 238), but perhaps also the hagiographies of Sants. |
5 | Evidence for Dādū’s Muslim background is given by Orr (1947, pp. 50–51); e.g., his name is supposedly a distorted version of Dāūd or a diminutive of Allāhdād, although Horstmann (2012, p. 209) considers ‘Dādū’ to be a respectful Rajasthani term for ‘grandfather’). |
6 | This tendency might simply indicate that the authors of the second recension of the DJL were ascetics. In the initial period (1603–1693), the leadership of the community of Dādū’s disciples lay in the hands of his family members. All were celibate, except for Maskindās (the younger brother of Garībdās) (Orr 1947, p. 191). According to some sources, the gaddī was, for some time, held by two daughters of Dādū. Moreover, after the death of Faqirdās (1693), his aunt took over the role of mahant. Nonetheless, after this mentioned period, the male ascetic fraction began to dominate the leadership of the sect and ‘the opinions of householders’ (Hastings 2002, pp. 39–40). |
7 | All translations are the author’s unless marked otherwise. |
8 | Deha hamārai hai pari nāhīṃ jyuṃ drapana maiṃ dīsai chāhī. ‘I have a body, but not one reflected in a mirror’ (DJL 15.18.5). Here, Dādū could be suggesting that his body has become invisible, like a transformed body of a yogin (Cf. DJL 15.31.2–3 where Dādū’s physical body is described as disappearing soon after death and 15.31.5–6, where Dādū is said to have ‘met God’ through his ‘subtle body’ (kāyā sūkhima) [15.31.5–6]) (On the power of the yogin to make his body invisible, see Patañjāli’s Yogasūtra III.21; on haṭhayoga as bestowing immortality and transforming the body, see Haṭhapradīpikā 1.9; 3.3; 3.87–88; 4.48; 4.103). Furthermore, one can observe that the extended recension endows the process of transferring authority from Dādū to Garībdās with symbols of yogic legitimation (on the complex and uneasy relationship between Sants, Nāths, and haṭhayoga, see Horstmann (2014, 2021)). |
9 | Later, in the same passage, Dādū is given the status of a primordial being, existing before creation (DJL 15.18.21). |
10 | I will use Sanskritization to designate the process of social emancipation of low-caste peoples through the deliberate adoption of the social and religious practices of the higher castes, not necessarily Brahmins. Hinduization, in turn, is the shaping of a religious tradition in order to conform it to the orthodox standards of purāṇic Hinduism (Lorenzen 1981, pp. 161–62) (cf. https://lubin.academic.wlu.edu/sanskritization-brahmanization-hinduization, accessed on 4 April 2022). |
11 | Striking examples of the relatively recent Sanskritization pertaining to Dādū suggest it as a longstanding and probably still ongoing process (especially as the sect’s identity shifts toward Vaiṣṇava). In Dādū Gāyatrī, penned by the 19th-century poet, Mangaldās, a Nāgā Mahant, Dādū is an avatāra of Niranjan (i.e., Viṣṇu). One contemporary Dādūpantī author made Dādū into an incarnation of the Vedic r̥ṣi Sanaka, while another translated the Dādūvaṇi into Sanskrit (Hastings 2002, pp. 298–99). |
12 | …mānahu autare dāsa Kabīru (‘just as if Kabīr had descended’ [DJL 1.17]). |
13 | Dādū is said to have embraced cotton-carding only to seek isolation by exposing himself to ridicule, just as Kabīr is said to have done when he let himself be seen with a prostitute (DJL 4.5.3). |
14 | Cf. the Heidi Pauwels-inspired scheme above. |
15 | E.g., the Bhaktamāl of Nābhādās (c. 1585–1623) (Cf. Hare 2011, pp. 44–45). |
16 | According to Vaudeville ([1993] 1997, p. 46), up to the point of Bhaktirasabodhinī (1712), Priyādās’ commentary on the Bhaktamāl of Nābhādās, Kabīr’s Muslim roots were left undisputed. In the most popular legend created after the said period, Kabīr is the abandoned son of a Brahmin widow, found and adopted by a Muslim couple, Nīrū and Nīmā, or a Viṣṇu avatāra descended onto a lotus (Lorenzen 1981, p. 157; Vaudeville [1993] 1997, pp. 46–47; Keay [1931] 1997, p. 9). |
17 | Even the Parcaī of Anantadās mentions the body of Kabīr being immortal (amara) (10.10) (Lorenzen 1992, pp. 114, 183). |
18 | DJL 1.4 (singing Kabīr); cf. (Horstmann 2000, pp. 520, 526–27; Horstmann 2015, pp. 34–35). |
19 | That can be inferred from the verses of Tulsīdās, which criticize the notions of heterodox low-caste Sants (Pauwels 2010b, pp. 525–26). |
20 | Cf. Rizvi (1975, pp. 203–22). A major example of this initiative, requiring many resources and the combined efforts of multiple translators, was the rendering of the Mahābhārata and Rāmāyaṇa into Persian in the 1580s (Truschke 2012, pp. 181–253, 279–301). |
21 | The dating of this work is uncertain. Although it places itself not long after Dādū’s death, its present form might be a modern rendering (Callewaert 1978, pp. 22–23; Horstmann 2006b, p. 167). |
22 | The resolve of Dādūpanthī sādhus to always carry the words of the Sants prompted the production of portable manuscripts (Horstmann 2000, p. 548). |
23 | According to the Bhaktamāl of Rāghavdās it was Mohān, Rajab, and Jagannāth, who undertook the task of revising and arranging of sākhīs (Horstmann 2006b, p. 169). Cf. (Williams 2018, pp. 97–98). |
24 | DJL 2.8; 4.12–13; 16.2; 16.24–25. |
25 | |
26 | For the examples of royal patronage for the Dādūpanth, see Section 5. |
27 | The process of forming a ‘territorial structure’, based on the exchange between ascetics and lay followers, has been termed ‘domestication of the panth’ by Horstmann (2006b, p. 173). |
28 | Jangopāl himself and Dādū’s stepfather were of a merchant background; there is a story of a saudāgar saved by uttering the name of Dādū and offering half of his stock in return (DJL 8.21–22); seven hundred merchants are saved by uttering the name of Rām (8.23.1–2); Dādū is accused of proclaiming the equality of Brahmans and baniyās (10.4); the merchant Prāgdās is mentioned as an exceptional disciple (12.22); traveling merchants (baṇijāra) are liberated on hearing Dādū’s words (15.6.1–2). |
29 | DJL 9.18; 13.1; 13.4. |
30 | DJL 9.19; 13.7; 14.9, 14. |
31 | DJL 14.2–3, 5; 14.17, 24, 28. |
32 | DJL 4.3–4; 8.6; 14.11. |
33 | As he told Bīrbal: ‘if you want to please me, remember I only take to give, I do not receive (svāmī kahyau hamahi sukha dehu tau laina daina kau nāva na lehu) (DJL 8.6) (after Callewaert 1988, p. 56). Cf. (Horstmann 2000, p. 520). |
34 | In the hagiographical literature of the Sufis, there is a disparity between the prescribed mode of behavior (poverty, ‘avoidance of contact with the rich and powerful’) and the actual practices of Chishtī shaikhs, who accepted patronage and accumulated wealth. In the case of Chishtīs, an analogy with the topos of patronage rejection is visible in examples such as the rejection of a grant of Ulugh Khan (later Sultan Balban [r. 1266–1286]) by Farīduddīn Ganjshakar (1179–1266), which can be contrasted with the later acceptance of gifts from the Tughluq dynasty by the descendants of the shaikh (Digby 2003, pp. 243, 249). |
35 | Minor examples of Dādū’s contacts with the ruling classes encompass also Bhagavantdās (1527–1589), king of Āmer and adoptive father of Mānsingh I (DJL 5.1). Moreover, a certain Īśvar Kachavāhā from Naulāsā is described as a devotee (sevaga) (12.20). Nobles of the Rāṭhoṛ clan are also mentioned: Kanakāvatī (14.7–9, see above, Section 3.1) and the disciples Kisansingh (11.16), and Mānsingh of Bhavādi (11.19). |
36 | Cf. (Lorenzen 1992, pp. 6–8) and the case of Anantadās’ Kabīr Parcaī. |
37 | DJL 4.6.14–15; 5.27.2; 7.25.1; 8.14.2. |
38 | However, he abandoned the city that same year and never returned to it (Rizvi 1975, p. 129). |
39 | Even though she considers the event to be factual, Horstmann admits that ‘there are no other sources to support it.’ |
40 | In fact, the rule of Akbar began an era of increased popularity for the bhakti movements (especially Vaiṣṇava), propelled by the Mughal and Kachavāhā patronage (Burchett 2012, pp. 34–59). |
41 | Reference to the six classical schools of Brāhmaṇic philosophy: Sāṃkhya, Yoga, Mīmāṃsā, Vaiśeṣika, Nyaya, and Vedānta. |
42 | In a broad sense, this concept states the essential unity of God and his creation (created things are a reflection of God’s hidden essence) without falling into pantheism (Khoury 2009, p. 327). |
43 | |
44 | |
45 | |
46 | For, if devotion is present, the wilderness of the ascetic (vairāgī) and the home of the householder (gharbārī) are equal (samāna) (Dādūvāṇī 16.29). |
47 | Cf. DJL 1.15.1; 10.4–5; 10.22. Furthermore, one can find a fair amount of social critique in the Dādūvāṇī. Let us, however, note the opinion of Harbans Mukhia, who stated that Dādū did not see himself as a social reformer and ‘accepted the social institutions of his time’ (Hastings 2002, p. 34). |
48 | However, this provoked criticism as, in the context of the tawḥīd-i-ilāhī, this practice was seen by some as another way of deifying the Emperor. To alleviate discord, Akbar made prostrations voluntary (Nizami 1989, pp. 136–40). |
49 | Cf. the case of Harirām Vyās who, in order to ‘affirm the priority of divine over mundane power’, was against bhaktas ‘lobbying for material grants from kings’ (Pauwels 2010a, p. 69). |
50 | According to Rāghavdās; cf. (Hastings 2002, p. 38). |
51 | Cf. (Callewaert 2011, p. 532). Most Māraṭhī Sants, before Kabīr, were associated with the cult of Viṭhoba (Viṣṇu/Kr̥ṣṇa): Nāmdev (1270–1350) composed songs describing Kr̥ṣṇa (Gold 1987, pp. 57, 203–4). Kabīr, being the most prominent of the aniconic (nirguṇa) Hindī Sants, is traditionally connected with the Vaiṣṇava faith through Rāmanānda; both Kabīr and Dādū refer to God as Rām; this name is also used in a popular mantra-cum-greeting among Dādūpanthīs: Dādūrām, Satyarām (Hastings 2002, p. 291). The Vaiṣṇava hagiographers from the 17th–18th century (Nābhādās, Anantadās, Priyādās) appropriated important nirguṇī Sants as archetypal Vaiṣṇava bhaktas (Bahuguna 2008). |
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Zapart, J. The Ideology of Patronage and the Question of Identity in the Early Dādūpanth. Religions 2022, 13, 447. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050447
Zapart J. The Ideology of Patronage and the Question of Identity in the Early Dādūpanth. Religions. 2022; 13(5):447. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050447
Chicago/Turabian StyleZapart, Jarosław. 2022. "The Ideology of Patronage and the Question of Identity in the Early Dādūpanth" Religions 13, no. 5: 447. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050447
APA StyleZapart, J. (2022). The Ideology of Patronage and the Question of Identity in the Early Dādūpanth. Religions, 13(5), 447. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13050447