The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras: Divinisation Rituals among Contemporary Śrīvidyā Practitioners in India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Divinised Bodies
So, Devi means life. My life, your life, every living being’s life … If I am worshipping life, I am worshipping Devi … She is my life, she is in me, she is me. She is in every limb of me. The real point to remember in Devi puja [worship] is that it is for your own life … Devi puja is adoring life … Power flows to you by loving yourself.
2.1. Divinisation Rituals through the Lens of Praxis
With experience you will get to know … Go back [to your room] and meditate. Knowledge only comes like this. Nowadays we just want to know immediately—instead we should find out through practice. There are translations [of sacred texts] for foreigners who keep asking [for explanations]. [But] it is not usual to question the guru. Even I don’t know all the meanings of the Lalitāsahasranāma … but the benefits [of chanting it] are there.
2.2. The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras
As long as [Kuṇḍalinī] is not awakened, we will lead an ordinary life: you will make money and fill your stomach, from womb to tomb. What will you have achieved? Maybe some bank balance. But when [Kuṇḍalinī] gets up … you need to give it the path, and the path is given by the mantra … then, Kuṇḍalinī starts moving [up the spine unblocking cakras].
[Her] pūjā … is a bit strenuous. I cannot say boring, because she [Śyāmā] won’t like it. You have to do so many nyāsas in this pūjā. With the nyāsa you are putting the power of that letter into your body … just how we have two ears, two eyes … the letters are written on the body of Devī. So, if you can visualise those letters in your body, you can see Devī in yourself … when Śyāmā comes to you, you feel that the snake [Kuṇḍalinī] that [until then] is going all wavy-wavy in you, will go [orderly] through the placement of the letters.
3. The Corporeality of Samayācāra Rituals
3.1. The Practice of Yantrapūjās
3.2. Sirījyotipūjā: When the Body Becomes the Yantra
4. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The Kaula tradition indicates the worship of families of goddesses, kula meaning family. While largely originating from Kashmir, the Kaula tradition branched into four transmissions: the eastern, from which arose the Trika system of Kashmir Śaivism; the northern, which is basis of the Krama system concentrating on ferocious deities; the western, focusing on the hunch-backed Kubjikā; and the southern, from where Śrīvidyā developed (Flood 1996; Sanderson 1988). |
2 | It should be noted that identification with a deity is not limited to Tantric traditions alone. Besides frequent moments of divine possession, oneness between human and divine is established, for example, by Odia men who assume goddess Gaṅgāmmā’s guise (Flueckiger 2013) and by the celebration of oneness between goddess Thakurani, the Earth and women (Apffel-Marglin 2008). |
3 | See, among others, White (1998, 2003); Golovkova (2019, 2020); Kinsley (1997); Hatley (2016); Broo (2019); Padoux (1990); Rosati (2017). Among the few authors who look at contemporary Śrīvidyā traditions see Karasinski-Sroka (2021) on divinisation and healing in Kerala, Kachroo (2013) on pamphlets used in Tamil Nadu, Brooks (1992) on practices in Chennai, Dempsey (2006) on a tradition in New York State and Lidke (2017) who combines the study of primary sources and lived practices in Nepal. An ethnographic work on Tantric traditions more generally is offered by McDaniel (2004), while Caldwell studies rituals around goddess Kālī (Caldwell 1999). |
4 | I use pseudonyms for the temple-complex where I conducted fieldwork between 2014 and 2019 and for the practitioners, protagonists of this study (while I have been initiated into the tradition, this work is not auto-ethnographic). Like in other Tantric traditions, in Śaktipur neither caste- nor gender-based restrictions limit the practice of rituals, with a majority of ritual services being performed by female practitioners. Approximately fifteen-to-twenty people live in Śaktipur, while the number of visitors varies between about one hundred during regular days and up to two-thousand during festivals, with about two-thirds of them being women. Differently from other Tantric traditions, Śaktipur’s guru did not advocate secrecy and suggested that practitioners should worship Devī in the way they—and Devī—prefer; therefore, he encouraged the free transmission of Śrīvidyā’s esoteric rituals, alongside its conventional rituals. |
5 | These are the pañcamakāra, five Ms, as per their initials: madya (wine), māṃsa (meat), matsya (fish), mudrā (parched grain) and maithuna (sexual intercourse). Gurujī did not promote this path, apart from exceptional cases necessitating Devī’s prompt response. |
6 | The Śrīcakra has nine levels, or cakras, each of which corresponds to one cakra in Devī’s body, from her feet to the area above her head. Practitioners’ bodies present only seven cakras—Mūlādhāra, Svādhiṣṭhāna, Maṇipūra, Anāhata, Viśuddha, Ājñā and Sahasrāra—which are superimposed with Devī’s and the Śrīcakra’s levels from the coccyx area to the crown area. |
7 | |
8 | I expand on Śrīvidyā’s existentiality, spanning gross and subtle domains, and the relationship between grossness and subtleness elsewhere (Hirmer 2022b). |
9 | In full-fledged non-dual fashion, advaita in Śaktipur includes grossness. This differs from the term’s use in Advaita Vedānta, where it indicates objectless consciousness, and is pursued by overcoming the phenomenal world (Bartley 2011). |
10 | I discuss the term vidyā in detail in my PhD thesis (Hirmer 2022a), illustrating it as an embodied, collective and diffused knowledge that defies Western expectations, for it requires neither verifiability, nor purpose nor meaning (without, thereby, becoming meaningless) to be legitimised. Śrīvidyā is often rendered as ‘wisdom of the Śrīcakra’, where vidyā indicates wisdom and śrī auspiciousness and various goddesses. |
11 | |
12 | Sādhakas often chant the Lalitāsahasranāma as a time-pass several times a day. During my stay in Śaktipur, it became customary for some priestesses and myself to chant the hymn each afternoon together. Thereafter, Rajeshwarammā would usually explain at length the meaning of one of Devī’s thousand names. |
13 | While Rajeshwarammā lives primarily in a modest room in the ashram on the temple premises, Manjulammā spends most of her time in her urban home, where she set up an elaborate shrine. |
14 | The yoni is present in both female and male practitioners, indicating the ultimately female nature of everything existing in Śaktipur (I elaborate on this ultimate femaleness in my PhD thesis, Hirmer 2022a). |
15 | This does not mean mastering the deity’s powers or even achieving thorough familiarity with them. |
16 | At the time of writing, it is Vārāhī Navarātrī, a festival of nine nights of worship dedicated to Vārāhī. |
17 | As is evident, mainstream Western mind–body dichotomies are not applicable in the context of Śrīvidyā. |
18 | Some authors are more inclined to acknowledging sensorial experiences in ritual: while not concerning Tantric texts, regarding the Chāndogyopaniṣad, Frazier notices a radical, experiential change of the entire self through the replacement of ‘a structure of experience (our ‘I’-ness or ego) so that the whole phenomenological framing of the world is substitutionally altered’ (Frazier 2019, p. 17). In his juxtaposition between modern science and Śrīvidyā’s aim to identify with Devī, Lidke suggests that ‘the ritual produces a multi-layered synthetic condition in which the Devī’s form is at once heard, seen, felt, smelt, and tasted’ (Lidke 2011, p. 254). Describing ritual in a contemporary Śrīvidyā tradition, Dempsey notes that ‘the body, in all of its physiological complexity becomes a conduit for virtual identification with divinity’ (Dempsey 2006, p. 32). Karasinski-Sroka, while focusing on meditative practices, shows that Śrīvidyā’s aim is holistic health—and, thus, inclusive of the body (Karasinski-Sroka 2021). |
19 |
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Hirmer, M. The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras: Divinisation Rituals among Contemporary Śrīvidyā Practitioners in India. Religions 2022, 13, 738. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080738
Hirmer M. The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras: Divinisation Rituals among Contemporary Śrīvidyā Practitioners in India. Religions. 2022; 13(8):738. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080738
Chicago/Turabian StyleHirmer, Monika. 2022. "The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras: Divinisation Rituals among Contemporary Śrīvidyā Practitioners in India" Religions 13, no. 8: 738. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080738
APA StyleHirmer, M. (2022). The Self as Combination of Deities and Yantras: Divinisation Rituals among Contemporary Śrīvidyā Practitioners in India. Religions, 13(8), 738. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13080738