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"Ya
devi sarva bhuteshu buddhi rupena samastitha
Namastasyai
namastasyai namastasyai namo namaha"
Hail
the Goddess, who sojourns in all beings in the form of 'wisdom'.
Salutations to Her, Salutations to Her, Salutations to Her again
and again.
KALI,
THE DARK GODDESS, THE COSMIC-FEMALE POWER
THE
MYTH
Hindu
mythology is replete with tales of feud and war between the two
adverse powers of good and evil, personified in the Gods or Devas
and the demons or Rakshasas. One such calamitous power wrecking
the Heavens and earth was the demon Raktabija. Such was the power
of this invincible monster that every drop of his blood that touched
the ground was instantly transformed into another Raktabija. No
sooner would the fatal blow fall on him than the battlefield would
resonate with a million clones of the demon. Hopeless and at a loss,
the devas turned to Shiva for help, only to find him in deep meditation.
It was then that Shiva's divine consort Parvati consented to help
end this threatening power.
Thus
was born the dreaded, dark Goddess Kali out of Parvati. Red eyes,
dark as the night, unbound hair, teeth sharp as fangs, she rode
into the battleground on her lion, ordering the Gods to spread attack.
She then flung her tongue wide to cover the entire battlefield.
This, to prevent a single drop of Raktabija's self-renewing blood
to touch the ground. The battle was won, the evil one defeated,
and Kali, inebriated on the blood of Raktabija. She ran across the
universe slaughtering any that dared cross her path, adorning Herself
with the heads, limbs and guts of her victims. To pacify the raving
Goddess and end Her frenzied havoc, Shiva threw Himself at her feet.
She stopped, struck her tongue out at her mistake, embraced Her
husband and shed Her rapacious form to become the becalmed Mother,
Gauri.
KALI'S
IMAGE/ICON
Legend
has it that one Krisnananda Agamavagisa chanced upon a bathing village
belle at a river in Tarapith or Bakreswar, West Bengal. Unclothed,
dark-skinned with long, dishevelled hair, the girl was engrossed
in scrubbing herself with a skullcap that she had picked up from
a nearby funeral pyre. Embarassed by Krisnananda's presence, the
belle stuck her tongue out in shyness. Krisnananda, who had been
trying to comprehend the external representative form of the Dark
Goddess, knew directly the vision before him as a potent icon for
the Goddess Kali.
The
blackness of Kali is exhibitive of the endless beginning, the black
sky of eternity, a dark deep from where creation began. Her long,
dark hair in disarray are the black clouds of the eternal sky. The
wreath of severed heads around her neck is a relic of death, destruction
and calamity. The lower left arm holding a human head just severed
betokens no escape from time, while the upper left holds a sword,
the arm of destruction. Lower right hand is posed as if giving a
boon, and the upper right hand is posed granting freedom from fear.
She wears two corpses or arrows as ornaments for her ears, and a
girdle of the hands of her victims. Her features are gaunt, her
three eyes are Sun, Moon and Fire, of which the third, represents
foresight and wisdom, a harbinger of supreme knowledge that opens
once the human sight is cleared of ignorance. Surrounded by jackals
and powers of the night, she stands astride Mahadeva, lying beneath
Her, corpselike.
KALI
- THE SYMBOL - THE FIRST CONSONANT AND VOWEL
Kali,
the Primordial Mother Goddess of archaic, matriarchal religion is
known variously as Tara, Mahavidya, Shoroshi, Bhubaneswari, Bhairavi,
Chhinnamstha, Dhumbati, Bagala and Matangi. Variations of this female
wisdom energy can be found in many ancient cultures outside India.
There is Kele, the powerful Goddess of pre-historic Ireland, Goddess
Kal-ma of ancient Finland, Goddess Kalu of the Sinai region of the
Middle East, Kalli of ancient Greece, and Lhamo, the God Mother
of the Tibetans.
The
Hindu Kali could well have been the warrior Goddess of ancient dark-skinned
tribes who worshipped Her with blood sacrifice, flesh and liquor,
much of which is still continued in Her present rituals.
Mahabharata,
the Indian epic, describes Her as 'red-eyed, red-faced, garlanded
with red, terrible to look at and holding a noose.'
Early
Buddhists identified Her with their Prajnaparamita, the 'perfection
of Wisdom'.
Mythologically,
in relation to Shiva, She is exactly opposite of Parvati. While
Parvati calms Shiva's destruction, Kali compliments Him. She is
the feminine 'other' of the destroyer Shiva. They both have their
respective dances of destruction. She threatens stability and order,
and in association with other Goddesses, she embodies their cumulative
wrath and fury, and is the dangerous dimension of the feminine power.
And
last but not the least, Kali is time, or 'kala'. Time, that is the
annihilator and creator of all, cannot be comprehended in the passive,
immemorial Brahma. It is thus perceivably delineated in Her as the
'night of destruction' that swallows all that exists. She stands
on the corpse of the ruined universe, a reminder of the temporal,
the fleeting, and the cycle of life and death.
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