The life and
teachings of Sri Basavanna
Sri Basavanna was an Indian
12th-century statesman, philosopher, poet, Lingayat saint
in the Shiva-focussed Bhakti
movement, and Hindu Shaivite social reformer during the reign
of the Kalyani Chalukya/Kalachuri dynasty. Basavanna was active during
the rule of both dynasties but reached his peak of influence during the rule of
King Bijjala II in Karnataka, India .
Basavanna spread social awareness through his poetry, popularly
known as Vachanaas. Basavanna rejected gender or social
discrimination, superstitions and rituals but introduced Ishtalinga necklace,
with an image of the Shiva Liṅga to every person regardless of his or
her birth, to be a constant reminder of one's bhakti (devotion)
to Shiva. As the chief minister of his kingdom, he introduced new public
institutions such as the Anubhava
Mantapa (or, the "hall of spiritual experience"), which
welcomed men and women from all socio-economic backgrounds to discuss spiritual
and mundane questions of life, in open.
The traditional legends and hagiographic texts state Basava to
be the founder of the Lingayats. However, modern scholarship relying on
historical evidence such as the Kalachuri inscriptions state that Basava was
the poet philosopher who revived, refined and energized an already existing
tradition. The Basavarajadevara Ragale (13 out of 25 sections
are available) by the Kannada poet Harihara (c.1180)
is the earliest available account on the life of the social reformer and is
considered important because the author was a near contemporary of his
protagonist. A full account of Basava's life and ideas are narrated in a
13th-century sacred Telugu text, the Basava
Purana by Palkuriki Somanatha.
Basavanna literary works include the Vachana
Sahitya in Kannada
Language. He is also known as Bhaktibhandari (literally,
the treasurer of devotion), Basavanna or Basaveswara.
Early life
Arjunavad inscription
of the Seuna king Kannara, dated 1260 CE An inscription related to Basava and
his family details. Names references Basavaraj and Sangana Basava.
Basavanna was born in 1105 CE in the town of Basavan
Bagewadi in the northern part of Karnataka, to
Madarasa and Madalambike, a Kannada
Brahmin family devoted to Hindu deity Shiva. He
was named Basava, a Kannada form of the Sanskrit Vrishabha in
honor of Nandi bull (carrier of Shiva) and the local Shaivism tradition.
Basavanna grew up in Kudalasangama (northwest
Karnataka), near the banks of rivers Krishna and its tributary
Malaprabha. Basava spent twelve years studying in the Hindu temple in the
town of Kudalasangama, at Sangameshwara then a Shaivite school of
learning, probably of the Lakulisha-Pashupata tradition
Basavanna married Gangambike, a cousin from his
mother's side. Her father was the provincial prime minister of Bijjala,
the Kalachuri king. He began working as an
accountant to the court of the king. When his maternal uncle died, the
king invited him to be the chief minister. The king also married Basava's
sister named Nagamma .
As chief minister of the kingdom, Basavanna used the state
treasury to initiate social reforms and religious movement focussed on reviving
Shaivism, recognizing and empowering ascetics who were called Jangamas. One
of the innovative institutions he launched in the 12th century, was the Anubhava
Mantapa, a public assembly and gathering, which attracted men and women
across various walks of life, from distant lands to openly discuss spiritual,
economic and social issues of life. He composed poetry in local language, and
spread his message to the masses. His teachings and verses such as Káyakavé
Kailása (Work is the path to Kailash (bliss, heaven),
or Work is Worship) became popular.
Literary works
Several works are attributed to Basavanna, which are revered in
the Lingayat community. These include various Vachana such
as the Shat-sthala-vachana (discourses of the six stages of
salvation), Kala-jnana-vachana (forecasts of the
future), Mantra-gopya, Ghatachakra-vachana and Raja-yoga-vachana.
Hagiography
The Basava
Purana, a Telugu biographical epic poem, first written by Palkuriki Somanatha in 13th-century, and
an updated 14th century Kannada version, written by Bhima
Kavi in 1369, are sacred texts in Lingayatism.
Other hagiographic works include the 15th-century Mala
Basava-raja-charitre and the 17th-century Vrishabhendra Vijaya,
both in Kannada.
Basavanna Philosophy
Basavanna grew up in a family with a tradition of Shaivism. As a
leader, he developed and inspired a new devotional movement named Virashaivas,
or "ardent, heroic worshippers of Shiva". This movement shared its
roots in the ongoing Tamil Bhakti
movement, particularly the Shaiva Nayanars traditions,
over the 7th- to 11th-century. However, Basava championed devotional worship
that rejected temple worship and rituals led by Brahmins and replaced it with
personalized direct worship of Shiva through practices such as individually
worn icons and symbols like a small linga. This
approach brought Shiva's presence to everyone and at all times, without gender,
class or caste discrimination. Basava's poem, such as Basavanna 703, speak of
strong sense of gender equality and community bond, willing to wage war for the
right cause, yet being a fellow "devotees' bride" at the time of his
or her need.
A recurring contrast in his poems and ideas is of Sthavara and Jangama,
that is, of "what is static, standing" and "what is moving,
seeking" respectively. Temples, ancient books represented the former,
while work and discussion represented the latter.
The rich
will make temples for Shiva,
What shall I,
a poor man do?
My legs are pillars,
the body the shrine,
the head a cupola of gold.
Listen, O lord Kudalasangama,
things standing shall fall,
but the moving ever shall stay.
— Basavanna 820, Translated by Ramanujan
Basavanna emphasized constant personal spiritual development as
the path to profound enlightenment. He championed the use of vernacular language, Kannada, in
all spiritual discussions so that translation and interpretation by the elite
is unnecessary, and everyone can understand the spiritual ideas. Basava
approach is akin to the protestant movement,
states Ramanuja. His philosophy revolves around treating one's own body
and soul as a temple; instead of making a temple, he suggests being the
temple. His trinity consisted of guru (teacher), linga (personal
symbol of Shiva) and jangama (constantly moving and learning).
Basavanna established, in 12th-century, Anubhava Mantapa,
a hall for gathering and discussion of spiritual ideas by any member of the
society from both genders, where ardent devotees of Shiva shared their
achievements and spiritual poems in the local languageHe questioned rituals,
dualism, and externalization of god, and stated that the true God is "one
with himself, self-born".
How can I feel right
about a god who eats up lacquer and melts,
who wilts when he sees a fire?
How can I feel right
about gods you sell in your need,
and gods you bury for fear of thieves?
The lord Kudalasangama,
self-born, one with himself,
he alone is the true god.
— Basavanna 558, Translated by Ramanujan
While Lord Basavanna rejected rituals, he encouraged icons and
symbols such as the wearing of Istalinga (necklace with
personal linga, symbol of Shiva), of Rudraksha seeds
or beads on parts of one body, and apply Vibhuti (sacred ash
on forehead) as a constant reminder of one's devotion and principles of
faith. Another aid to faith, he encouraged was the six-syllable
mantra, Shivaya Namah, or the shadhakshara mantra which
is Om Namah
Shivaya.
Bhakti marga as the path to liberation
The Basava Purana, in Chapter 1, presents a series of
impassioned debates between Basava and his father. Both declare
Hindu Sruti and Smriti to
be sources of valid knowledge, but they disagree on the marga (path)
to liberated, righteous life. Basava's father favors the tradition of rituals,
while Basava favors the path of direct, personal devotion (bhakti).
According to Velcheru Rao and Gene Roghair, Basava calls the
path of devotion as "beyond six
systems of philosophy. Sruti has commended it as the all-seeing. The beginning of the
beginning. The form of that divine linga is the true God. The guru [teacher]
of the creed is an embodiment of kindness and compassion. He places God in your
soul, and he also places God in your hand. The six-syllabled mantra, the
supreme mantra, is its mantra. The dress – locks of hair, ashes and rudrashaka
beads – place a man beyond the cycle of birth and death. It follows the path of
liberation. (...) This path offers nothing less than liberation in this
lifetime."
Roots in the Vedanta philosophy
Sripati, a Virasaiva scholar, explained Basava's philosophy
in Srikara Bhasya, using the Vedanta
Sutra, suggesting Basava's Lingayat theology to be a form of
qualified nondualism, wherein the individual Atma (soul)
is the body of God, and that there is no difference between Shiva and
Atma(self, soul), Shiva is one's Atma, one's Atma is Shiva. Sripati's analysis
places Basava's views in Vedanta school,
in a form closer to the 11th century Vishishtadvaita philosopher Ramanuja, than
to Advaita philosopher Adi
Shankara. However, Sripati's analysis has been contested by other
scholars.
Legacy and influence
Kudala
sangama in Bagalkot
district, where Basava's samadhi is located.
The Lingayats, also known as Virasaivas or Veerasaivas,
traditionally believe that Basava was the founder of their tradition. However,
modern scholarship relying on historical evidence such as the Kalachuri
inscriptions state that Basava was the 12th-century poet-philosopher who
revived and energized an already existing tradition. The community he
helped form is also known as the Sharanas. The community is largely
concentrated in Karnataka, but has migrated into other states of
India as well as overseas. Towards the end of the 20th century, Michael estimates,
one-sixth of the population of the state of Karnataka, or about 10 million
people, were Lingayat Hindus, or of the tradition championed by Basava.
Social reform
A
necklace with pendant containing linga symbol of Shiva are worn by devotees of
the tradition championed by Basavanna. Rudraksha beads
(shown above) and Vibhuti (sacred ash on forehead) are other
reminders of one's principles of faith.
Basava advocated that every human being was equal, irrespective
of caste and that all forms of manual labor was equally important. Michael
states that it wasn't birth but behavior that determined a true saint and
Shaiva bhakta in the view of Basava and Sharanas community. This,
writes Michael, was also the position of south Indian man, that it was
"behavior, not birth" that determines the true man. One
difference between the two was that Sharanas welcomed anyone, whatever
occupation he or she might have been born in, to convert and be reborn into the
larger family of Shiva devotees and then adopt any occupation he or she wanted.
Synthesis of diverse Hindu traditions
Basavanna is credited with uniting diverse spiritual trends
during his era. Jan Peter Schouten states that Virashaivism, the movement
championed by Basava, tends towards monotheism with Shiva as the godhead, but
with a strong awareness of the unity of the Ultimate
Reality. Schouten calls this as a synthesis of Ramanuja's
Vishishtadvaita and Shankara's Advaita traditions, naming it Shakti-Vishishtadvaita,
that is monism fused with Shakti beliefs An individual's spiritual
progress is viewed by Basava's tradition as a six-stage Satsthalasiddhanta,
which progressively evolves the individual through phase of the devotee, to
phase of the master, then phase of the receiver of grace, thereafter Linga in
life-breath (god dwells in his or her soul), the phase of surrender (awareness
of no distinction in god and soul, self), to the last stage of complete union
of soul and god (liberation, mukti). Basava's
approach is different than Adi Shankara,
states Schouten, in that Basava emphasizes the path of devotion, compared to
Shankara's emphasis on the path of knowledge – a system of monistic Advaita philosophy
widely discussed in Karnataka in the time of Basava.
Jessica Frazier et al. state that Basava laid the foundations of
a movement that united "Vedic with Tantric practice, and Advaitic monism with
effusive Bhakti devotionalism."
Icons and symbols
Basava advocated the wearing of Ishtalinga, a
necklace with pendant that contains a small Shiva
linga. He was driven by his realization; in one of his Vachanas he
says Arive Guru, which means one's own awareness is his/her
teacher. Many contemporary Vachanakaras (people who have scripted Vachanas)
have described him as Swayankrita Sahaja, which means
"self-made".
(Source Internet)
Comments
Post a Comment