Mahapurusha Srimanta Sankaradeva : a brief account of his life, philosophy and 
works by Dr Sanjib Kumar Borkakoti
 
            Mahapurusha Srimanta Sankaradeva (1449 AD -1568 AD) 
was an important personality in the annals of Indian history. He was not
 only a religious preceptor, but also a social reformer, who had 
sanskritized the ethnic groups of the volatile North East India and 
assimilated them with the national main-stream. He is considered as the 
father of the modern Assamese race. He was a great messiah, who rescued 
the people of Brahmaputra valley from the regressive medieval practices 
like human sacrifice.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva was a cultural maestro too. He 
created a classical dance form known both as Sankari dance and Satriya 
dance. The Sangeet Nâtak Akâdemi of India recognized it as a classical 
dance form in 2000 AD. Srimanta Sankaradeva also evolved a school of 
classical music, which is named after him. He created as many as 25 
Râgas of his own. He was also the first playright in all modern Indian 
languages. Above all these, he was the first prose writer in the entire 
world. He introduced drop-scene and elevated stage in the world of drama
 way back in 1468 AD. He was also a fine artist. His art works have been
 preserved in the Albert Museum of London.
 
            Mahapurusha Srimanta Sankaradeva is considered by his
 followers as an incarnation of God because of his multi-faceted 
contribution to the mankind as well as his perfect life. He strides over
 the national life of Assam like a giant collossus even five centuries 
after passing away. He went on pilgrimage twice, the first time touring 
the entire length and breadth of the country for long twelve years. He 
gave up his royal power as a king in middle Assam and came down to the 
level of the commoners. He founded the Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma, which 
preached devotion to a single God, lord Krishna. The tools of song, 
dance and drama were used by the saint for this purpose. He was assisted
 by Madhavadeva in his ventures of social reform and proselytizing 
activities.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva lived almost half of his life in
 Tembuwani (Bordowa) near the present Nagaon town and the remaining part
 in several places like Dhuwahata, Patbausi and Kochbehar. He got an 
institutional structure built at Tembuwani in 1468 AD, which came to be 
known as Thân over time. Some people started calling it Sattra in later 
days. It is the centre of entire religious activities and is still going
 strong. It consists of a prayer-house called Kirtanghar, which is 
surrounded by huts lived in by the devotees. The Kirtanghar is popularly
 known as Nâmghar these days.
            Srimanta Sankaradeva preached that there was only one
 God, who controlled the entire creation and remained within all 
sentient and insentient beings. He observed that worship of innumerable 
deities acted as a hindrance for attaining the final beatitude. Of 
course it helped sustain the priest community. Srimanta Sankaradeva 
began preaching devotion to the one and only God, lord Krishna or 
Vishnu. He also suggested that this devotion could be within one’s 
heart, not requiring any religious paraphernalia. Realization of God was
 an internal matter, not external. So the external worship of icons was 
redundant. He talked of universal love for all beings as God resided 
within all beings. He gave a clarion call to all people to shun mutual 
differences as there was no intrinsic difference between different 
ethnic groups, all of them having the same soul within. Thus he talked 
of universal brotherhood and advocated for integration of different 
ethnic groups in the society.
            Srimanta Sankaradeva educated people himself on his 
new and liberal ideas. His kith and kin, the Bhuyans had earlier been 
worshippers of mother goddess and other deities. The Shakti cult was 
very popular in the valley and even human sacrifice was made very often.
 Srimanta Sankaradeva persuaded the people to give up those traditions 
and become Vaishnavites. He also taught them that idol worship was 
unwarranted as the almighty God was not confined to a mere idol. God is 
an all-pervading consciousness, which manifests itself in the form of 
different creatures. Since all the creatures have the same God within 
them in the form of souls, they are all equals. So he began to preach 
equality among the people. He gave equal status to all his disciples. It
 was a major departure from the prevalent system in the society, where 
caste hierarchy was observed very strictly. Earlier only the upper caste
 people were offered access to the knowledge of scriptures. Srimanta 
Sankaradeva opened the door of religion to all and sundry. The Shudras, 
the Muslims, the tribals—all were initiated by him in his path-breaking 
religious system that came to be known as Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma.
            Srimanta Sankaradeva preached his ideology in the 
rest of India during his twelve years long pilgrimage in 1481-1493 AD. 
People accepted him as Guru in different parts of the country. The 
famous Goswami brothers, Rupa and Sanatana, who in their later lives 
became activists of Chaitanyadeva (1486-1533 AD) also, took initiation 
from Srimanta Sankaradeva at Vrindavan. Actually it was the 
extraordinary influence of Srimanta Sankaradeva that brought a 
sea-change in the characters and perspectives of the two brothers, who 
had till then lived royal lives of comfort. Rupa and Sanatana wanted to 
stay on with Srimanta Sankaradeva. They accompanied the saint upto 
Sitakunda. The enlightened wife of  Rupa had also accompanied them. The 
trio were however asked to return from there by Srimanta Sankaradeva. He
 could forsee that they would be a great factor in the spread of 
Vaishnavism in the Northern India. A distinguished person named 
Vrindavana Das also became disciple of Srimanta Sankaradeva at 
Vrindavan. Two ascetics named Radha and Trijata of Vrindavan and 
Vrajadham respectively were won over by Srimanta Sankaradeva to the 
Bhakti discipline. Then there were Ramakanta of Upa-Dwaraka and poet 
Gopinath of Puskar, who became his disciples. Of course, there had been 
hordes of people at Puri who took to Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma. Ultimately
 in 1493 AD, Srimanta Sankaradeva returned home at forty four years of 
age.
 
            Thus Srimanta Sankaradeva sowed the seed of Bhakti 
movement throughout Northern as well as Eastern India. It was mainly 
Chaitanyadeva, who reaped the harvest of Srimanta Sankaradeva’s labour 
in later days. Srimanta Sankaradeva can be called the leading light for 
almost all the later day reformers like Ramakrishna Paramahansa, Bijoy 
Krishna Goswami, Swami Vivekananda and Prabhupada. His contemporary 
preacher and reformer, Kabir also paid high tributes to him in his 
verse.
            Srimanta Sankaradeva built a new Thân campus at 
Tembuwani in 1509 AD. Earlier also a Thân had been set up there in a 
skeleton form way back in 1468 AD. But this time he made it full fledged
 with houses for the devotees within the compound and on the four sides 
of the Kirtanghar. His cousin Jagatananda assisted im in the 
construction work. The new campus was set up in a field where Kusumbar 
used to cultivate mustard once upon a time. The Kirtanghar was the 
nerve-centre of the entire Thân. The Kirtanghar was a long and open 
hall, where the devotees sat together to sing the glory of God. There 
was no idol, but only a book, generally the Bhâgavata symbolizing God in
 the altar. Later, a small scripture Gunamâlâ authored by Srimanta 
Sankaradeva began to be kept there. Gunamâlâ is a summary of Bhâgavata. 
In addition to prayers, cultural functions and religious discourses also
 were held in the Kirtanghar. Over time it came to be an integral part 
of every Hindu village of Assam. Any Kirtanghar set up in the villages 
outside the Thân came to be known as a Nâmghar.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva’s teachings were unique in 
several aspects. He derived these after much contemplation and offered a
 systematic line of thought to his disciples. He enjoined upon people in
 all his books to have company of such persons, who were pious and 
devoted to God. Good company elevates one, while bad company pulls one 
down from meritorious life. People of high moral character have 
tremendous will power, whereby they can inculcate good values in others.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva advised chanting of God's name 
as God's name makes Him available to the devotee. One can elevate 
oneself on the ladder of spirituality by chanting God’s name 
religiously. Chanting His name arouses the dormant spirituality in one. 
God’s name dispels ignorance and cuts asunder the bonds of attachment to
 the worldly life and things. Incessant chanting of His name creates an 
atmosphere of purity and sacredness wherein enlightenment dawn in the 
devotee. The method taught by Srimanta Sankaradeva is the least costly 
one for worshipping God. Also it is the easiest of the different modes 
of sâdhanâ. The modern men do not have sufficient time for other types 
of worship; devotion by chanting God’s name come very handy for them. 
Srimanta Sankaradeva’s ideas are appropriate for even the wireless era 
of twenty first century.
 
            Finally, the saint preached absolute self-surrender 
to God. One should dedicate every thing belonging to one to the almighty
 God and submit oneself at the same time at His disposal. God then takes
 the entire responsibility of the devotee. Actually it is His will only 
that prevails. The self-surrender enables the seekers of truth to 
understand that. The devotee also becomes capable of getting over his 
ego, which is a great handicap in the path of spiritual development. The
 perfect devotee should not have even an iota of ego as it keeps him 
away from God. The devotee should consider himself as a mere tool in the
 hand of God. Such an orientation in the devotee’s attitude can be 
possible only when he follows the triple advices—pious company, chanting
 God’s name and absolute self-surrender to God.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva preached a unique philosophy. 
His teachings were in the line of Upanishadic philosophy of 
enlightenment by knowledge of the self, together with pure devotion to 
the supreme God as preached in Bhâgavata. He made a fine blending of the
 two. There are elements of monism, dualism, qualified monism, dualistic
 non dualism and so many other branches of Hindu philosophy in his 
teachings. Actually he carried the entire spectrum of Hinduism in his 
teachings. But he corroborated his teachings so logically that it came 
to form a whole new school, which can be termed Vivartanavada in our 
view. It was a marvellous presentation of the entire range of spiritual 
inclinations of a person. A devotee could thus evolve through it from 
the gross to the subtle, from mundane to spiritual and from man to God.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva was a great artist as well as an
 architect. The design of Kirtanghar constructed at Tembuwani was of 
futuristic design, the like of which was developed in the Western world 
only in the twentieth century. The Valkishe Theatre of Berlin resembles 
the Kirtanghar designed by Srimanta Sankaradeva, which predates the 
former by about four centuries. It has a linear simplicity and is 
characterized by extensive use of pillars, which also characterize the 
modern architecture. Another characteristic of Srimanta Sankaradeva’s 
architectural design was symmetry, yet another feature of modern 
architecture too. Srimanta Sankaradeva was thus the only religious 
leader in the world to have evolved his own architectural pattern. Other
 saints or religious leaders followed the traditional patterns. In India
 they followed either the Hindu or the Buddhist temples. Contrary to 
that, the Kirtanghar of Srimanta Sankaradeva set off a completely new 
style. The altar of the Kirtanghar also has been found to be a pioneer 
for the modern cubist design.
            Srimanta Sankaradeva founded a whole new school of  
art.  He initiated a new form of painting with his epoch-making 
drama-festival Chihna-Yâtrâ held in 1468 AD, where he drew the imaginary
 pictures of heaven to be used as backdrops. He encouraged illustration 
of his manuscripts and decoration of the Kirtanghar walls with pictorial
 depiction of stories from Bhâgavata. The figures in this manuscript 
have been drawn in an angular pattern and the lines are of flowing type.
 The Sankari art had its own style, which was different from other art 
forms in the country. It was marked by the presence of distinctive hair 
style, costumes, landscapes, local utensils, unique gestures, local 
flora and fauna, abstractness of depiction, presence of the unique 
symbol of winged lion, drawing of thatch-bamboo based indigenous 
architectural pattern etc. Chronological order of the pictures and 
presence of full details in the Sankari art underscores the importance 
given to the storyline than any other objective. The art was subservient
 to the story in the Sankari art form. Colour played an important role 
in these art. The contrast is also very prominent here. The designs of 
hills and mountains are abstract; these are not present as background in
 the picture; the entire art used to be two-dimensional. Rain is shown 
by bold dotted lines. River is framed symbolically in squares with 
lotus, aqua leaves, fishes and geese therein. The eyes of the human 
characters are a little bit of the portruding type resembling the eyes 
of fish. The eye-brows are carefully drawn concave downwards. The use of
 blue, deep red and yellow colours are pre-dominant in this art-form. 
The art on the body of altar also was completely futuristic and 
precursor of modern artists like Jacob Epstein (1880-1959 AD).
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva felt the evil aspect of this 
situation because he was a victim of it himself. He and his fellow 
people had become almost nomads because of such unwarranted conflicts. 
So he keenly felt the need of bringing about unity among the different 
ethnic groups inhabitating the valley. There were Koch, Ahom, Kayastha, 
Brahmin, Kalita, Chutiya, Mising, Kachari, Bodo, Deuri, Tiwa, Rabha, 
Daivajnya and so many other ethnic groups in the valley. But a composite
 race had not yet emerged. Most of these groups were well-conversant in 
military techniques and they had carved out their own kingdoms. It was 
only since arrival of Srimanta Sankaradeva in the scene that a wave of 
spiritualism began to spread among them and unite them by a common 
unseen bond. As more and more people subscribed to the ideology of 
Srimanta Sankaradeva, a feeling of universal brotherhood developed among
 these divergent ethnic groups. For the first time a bond was realized 
among all the warring groups of the valley. Religion has always worked 
as a factor of nation building, even more than the factors like 
language. Actually it has always been religion that worked in 
nation-building in the Indian context. The modern concept of 
self-determination evolved only in the eighteenth century. But even then
 the Indian context remained untouched by it. The formation of India and
 Pakistan in 1947 was also over religion only. Little wonder, the Eka 
Sharana doctrine of Srimanta Sankaradeva was a great bonding factor for 
the modern Assamese race.
 
            The unity among the multi-ethnic population of the 
valley was achieved by the strong emphasis on equality of all people in 
the Vaishnavite Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma cult founded by Srimanta 
Sankaradeva. He enjoined upon all his disciples to treat every creature 
as a manifestation of the one and only God, lord Krishna. One should be 
kind to all creatures as God resides in every creature, the latter being
 only an extension of one’s own self. There was no differentiation over 
caste in this order unlike in other cults. Subscription to this 
philosophy brought about a sea-change in the people. The casteless 
society advocated by Srimanta Sankaradeva became a stepping stone for a 
classless society. The Brahminic social system based on castes had 
earlier maintained a strict hierarchical pattern. Srimanta Sankaradeva 
dispensed with that social division completely and established an 
egalitarian society. A millionaire merchant and a poor farmer did not 
receive different treatments from him.
 
            The saint also specifically asked every one to shun 
aggressive nature, which also began to have its impact over time. The 
subjects of the different kingdoms in the valley began to experience 
peace and religious fervour. A strong affinity grew in them in the 
process. It was thus that the formation of the great Assamese race 
started. Till then the different ethnic groups were only common 
residents of the Brahmaputra valley, but each of them subscribed to 
distinct cultures and ways of life. Only now they got united by a common
 philosophy as well as by a common Assamese culture. The heterogenous 
population of the valley came together, thanks to a common culture and a
 common thought evolved by Srimanta Sankaradeva. Even those who did not 
embrace his ideology accepted the cultural resources created by him. 
That is how the modern Assamese nation came into being.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva authored ten 
plays in his life. These were Chihna Yâtrâ, Patni Prasâda, Kâliya 
Damana, Keli Gopâla, Rukmini Harana, Pârijât Harana, Janma Yâtrâ, Gopi 
Uddhava Sambâda, Kangsa Badha and Sri Râma Vijaya. The first of these, 
Chihna Yâtrâ had been staged in 1468 AD. The second play Patni Prasâda 
was written while the saint was living at Gajalasuti temporarily.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva used the Vrajâwali language in 
his plays like in his Bargeet. As a result, his plays had a wide 
audience covering almost the entire Northern India. The play Kâliya 
Damana had such an impact in Bengal that it led to an era known as 
Kâliya Damana Yâtrâ era there. Similarly the playwrights like Govinda 
and Umapati in Mithila were influenced by the peculiar style of Srimanta
 Sankaradeva.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva brought about many innovations 
in his plays. It was he who introduced the Shanta-rasa for the first 
time in his plays. It had not been there in the Natya-shastra of 
Bharata. Scholars like Ananada Bardhana and Abhinava Gupta incorporated 
it much later, after Srimanta Sankaradeva had already used it in his 
plays. It was again Srimanta Sankaradeva who used Proscenium for the 
first time in entire world for enactment of his plays. However it had 
not been used in his first play Chihna Yatra, where elevated stage was 
used, that too being the first time in the world. He departed from the 
typical norms laid down by Bharata for classical plays. For instance he 
incorporated scenes of eating, wedding, war, killing etc in his plays 
whereas such scenes were strictly forbidden in Sanskrit plays. The 
Sutradhâra or the compere of Srimanta Sankaradeva’s plays also was 
completely different from the Sutradhâra of Sanskrit plays. The former 
remained in the acting arena from the beginning till the end whereas the
 latter departed from the arena just after introducing the topic of the 
play. The Sutradhâra of Srimanta Sankaradeva’s plays even participate in
 acting, singing and playing on the instruments like drum. The 
Sutradhâra keeps on explaining the story as well as its spiritual import
 from time to time. Srimanta Sankaradeva gave so much importance to the 
Sutradhâra that he himself performed this role in his first play Chihna 
Yâtrâ. This character was perhaps influenced by the indigenous Ojâ-pâli 
and Putalâ-nâch (toy-dance).
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva used the medium of play for his 
proselytizing works. All the paraphernalia of his plays were symbolic. 
The curtain that had to be removed at the outset stood for Mâyâ. It was 
only after removal of Mâyâ that one could see God. The nine wicks in the
 Agni-garh implied nine types of devotion. The two Ariyâs stood for 
singing and listening to God’s name and glory. Above all, the altar 
specially set up at the place of enacting the play meant that all these 
were only ways of worshipping the almighty.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva’s use of drama as a medium for 
religious preaching was a great act of innovation. In this respect, he 
was a pioneer in the entire world. Nobody had used this medium for 
proselytizing or propagational work before him. He was thus a 
path-finder for even Bertolt Breckht, who used this medium for 
propagating his socialist message in the twentieth century. Srimanta 
Sankaradeva’s achievement as a playwright and dramatist was also 
phenomenal. It was he who introduced the drop-scene in drama. He used it
 in the Chihna Yâtrâ before it was used in Europe. His dramatic talent 
can be compared only to that of Shakespeare, who came 119 years later to
 the realm of theatre. He was also the first director to use elevated 
stage for play. ‘The swan theatre’ of London introduced such stage as 
many as 128 years after Chihna Yâtrâ was staged at Tembuwani.
 
            Education in those days was a priviledge available to
 only a limited few belonging to the upper echelon of the society. 
People at large remained buried in the dark abyss of ignorance and 
illiteracy. The enlightened and socially conscious disciples of Srimanta
 Sankaradeva constituted a microscopic minority in this vast sea of 
illiterate masses. But nevertheless Srimanta Sankaradeva and his 
followers engaged themselves in the work of propagating knowledge and 
wisdom in their own ways. He authored many songs, plays, prayers and 
philosophical writings. These contained a major portion of the course 
material prevalent in the then residential schools. The teachers of 
these schools taught mostly the religious scriptures like Vedas, 
Purânas, Srimadbhagavat Geetâ, the two epics etc. The teaching was not 
secular in those days. The essence of this curriculam was very much 
present in the writings of Srimanta Sankaradeva. So when his plays were 
enacted, when his songs were sung, when his hymns were chanted, people 
received the very knowledge which one received in the then residential 
schools and which made one educated by the standard of those days. But 
there were more in the teachings of Srimanta Sankaradeva than what those
 residential schools used to teach. For instance, the value education 
imparted by him remains a crucial ingredient in modern education also. 
The saint also taught people by embodying his teachings in himself, not 
merely by uttering those.
 
            Thus Srimanta Sankaradeva was somewhat on a literacy 
mission. He was not only a religious leader like many people think, but 
also an educationist in his own inimitable way. He helped the people 
acquire knowledge of the scriptures as well as of behavioural science. 
There were even elements of social science in his writings albeit in a 
primitive form. Analysis of social conditions are found here and there 
in his writings. His teachings were always full of advices about an 
ideal life-style. There were exhortions to give up aggressive nature. He
 asked people to shun evil. Ethics constituted the main component of his
 teaching. People were also cautioned against pride. Thus he stood as a 
teacher of the entire society. We have also seen how he reminded the 
devotees to abide by the norms of a disciplined life. He was a global 
pioneer in adult education programme. His plays, discourses and prayer 
meetings were always full of people. People of all age groups including 
old ones and ladies invariably attended these. The main message conveyed
 to all and sundry was that there was no intrinsic difference between 
man and man, all being expositions of the same God.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva’s educational programmes were 
not restricted to religious aspect only. Despite the fact that the 
cultural tools adopted by him were seeped in the love of God, there were
 many secular elements too in his dance, music, art and craft. He 
imparted these mainly to his disciples; but gradually these knowledge 
were passed on to the people at large. The artist in him was never 
undermined by the preacher in him. The art forms evolved by him 
flourished because he had a keen interest in those things. He could have
 very well  dispensed with the cultural activities as he had a scholarly
 image among the people to spread his views. Yet he took up the medium 
of art and culture, and trained people in those. In this respect he went
 beyond the then residential schools which remained confined to 
theological teachings. Srimanta Sankaradeva imparted knowledge of 
vocational education too. He was a master craftsman. He supervised the 
manufacturing of musical instruments as well as other accessories used 
by his disciples in rendering of his songs under his guidance. He had 
also been in charge of one hundred weaver families as we have seen 
already. He helped those people increase their productivity and income. 
He was an expert costume designer too. All the costumes of his plays 
were designed by himself. Over time an institutional arrangement came up
 within the Thân to impart all these skills to the new entrants.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva always advised his disciples to 
be very cautious about where and what they ate. He said that food 
offered by a pious man could liberate one while the food offered by an 
unmeritorious person destroyed one’s merits. During pilgrimage, he 
guided his disciples to proper places and proper hosts only. He narrated
 one story to his disciples at Beli Mandal’s house about how food 
affected one. Once a sage had to take shelter in the house of a 
criminal. The latter was pleasantly surprised to find the former at his 
house. He left no stone unturned in treating the sage properly. After 
death, that criminal earned one day’s rulership of heaven for that 
single act of merit in his life. He decided to enjoy the kingdom of 
heaven first as it was the hell all the way thereafter. But he performed
 so much of charity in that single day that all his demerits were done 
away with. On the other hand, the sage earned a single day’s stay in 
hell for the meal at the criminal’s house. He deemed it proper to finish
 with the one day’s suffering before proceeding to heaven for a 
permanent stay. But he sucked so much of human blood during that single 
day that he acquired much more demerits and had to rot in hell for many 
more days. Srimanta Sankaradeva and his disciples abided by the 
principle of this story. He was never overawed by any powerful king to 
partake of unholy and unclean food just because it was offered by a 
king. This happened several times in the court of Koch king Nara 
Narayana also.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva sometimes showered his blessings
 on people who were apparently great enemies of the Eka Sharana Nâma 
Dharma, people who had earlier abused and criticised the devotees. 
Actually such people had devotion for God hidden inside them and were in
 need of some accidental impetus. The temporary spell of rusticism in 
their behaviour was the influence of some misdeeds in the past, which 
was however less compared to the meritoreous works in their lives. It 
was only Srimanta Sankaradeva, who could see through their outer 
personality and read their inner mind and intellect. And he went out of 
his way to rescue them from that temporary spell of evil. One person who
 was fortunate to have such grace of the saint was Chandsai. A 
miraculous incident took place involving him.
 
            Chandsai was the royal tailor of king Nara Narayana. 
He belonged to the Islamic faith and happened to be very arrogant. He 
never thought twice before abusing a person. The royal connection had 
given him that air. He abused even Srimanta Sankaradeva and his 
disciples. He immitated the way the latter performed prayers and singing
 of God’s name in assembly. He mimicked even the saint and wore clothes 
like him. Unfortunately for Chandsai, he had to call on Srimanta 
Sankaradeva on the order of king Nara Narayana. The latter asked him to 
stitch a jacket for the saint as the gold-embroidered jacket earlier 
presented by the king had been donated to a boatman by Srimanta 
Sankaradeva. Chandsai was therefore compelled to visit the saint at the 
latter’s residence. He needed to take the body measure of the saint for 
stitching the jacket.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva was sitting in the veranda when 
Chandsai arrived at the former’s Bhela house. Chandsai saw a divine glow
 around the saint. It brought an immediate change in him. But that was 
not the only thing. Chandsai even saw that Srimanta Sankaradeva had four
 arms. The entire impression he had about the saint changed in that very
 instant. Chandsai rushed near Madhavadeva, who was then staying with 
Srimanta Sankaradeva. Chandsai began to cry his heart out and lamented 
that so long he had a wrong impression about the saint. He now 
understood perfectly that Srimanta Sankaradeva was an incarnation of 
God, Chandsai said.
 
            The Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma preached by Srimanta 
Sankaradeva gradually received wide acceptance in the entire Brahmaputra
 valley. Even the administrative officials of the Ahom kingdom were 
gradually won over to this egalitarian religion. The Ahoms earlier had 
their own traditional religion, which was akin to the Shakti worship of 
the Hindus. Sacrifice of animals to appease their deities was a common 
thing in the Ahom religion. Even human beings were sacrificed in some 
temples. However the Brahmin priests looked down upon the Ahoms as 
belonging to low caste and would not partake of offerings by the king 
before the deity. This led to a dislike for Brahminism among the Ahoms. 
As a result, many of them changed their loyalty to the Eka Sharana Nâma 
Dharma. Satananda Doloi, a devotee hailing from Singari in the erstwhile
 Bhuyan kingdom, was deputed by the saint to preach Eka Sharana Nâma 
Dharma in the Ahom kingdom.
 
            Srimanta Sankaradeva started 
visiting the Koch king Nara Narayana regularly on the wish of the 
latter. The latter showed enormous respect to the former. Nara Narayana 
had changed a lot since the time he had first met the saint. He came to 
understand the saint better with the passage of time. The Eka Sharana 
Nâma Dharma preached by Srimanta Sankaradeva was no longer a subject of 
derision. Rather it had become the common bond unifying the diverse 
ethnic groups in the Brahmaputra valley. People of both the Ahom and the
 Koch kingdom accepted it as the predominant faith. Nara Narayana had 
seen all these. He started believing that his younger brother Chilarai 
had some valid reasons in accepting the saint as Guru. The Koch General,
 Chilarai was a sincere devotee of the saint.
 
            One day the king requested Srimanta Sankaradeva to 
describe the signs of an incarnation of God. When Srimanta Sankaradeva 
described those signs, Nara Narayana went on comparing those with the 
physique of the saint. The king found that Srimanta Sankaradeva had all 
those thirty two characteristics of God mentioned in the scriptures. His
 belief became even stronger that Srimanta Sankaradeva was an 
incarnation of God himself. That day he instructed his wives to pay 
obeisance to the saint and also take initiation from the latter. The 
wives acted accordingly the next day and paid their obeisance to 
Srimanta Sankaradeva. However the latter did not initiate the ladies. 
Every one of them offered one piece of cloth as well as one rupee each 
to Srimanta Sankaradeva. The latter took one piece of cloth and returned
 the rest to the queens as his blessings. Nara Narayana was surprised 
that every queen got one piece each in spite of Srimanta Sankaradeva 
having taken one piece away for himself. There should have been shortage
 of one piece, which did not occur. Nara Narayana became firm in his 
belief thereafter that Srimanta Sankaradeva was an incarnation of God. 
The former decided to embrace Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma from the saint.
 
            Nara Narayana prayed for initiation from Srimanta 
Sankaradeva. The latter tried his best to dissuade the king from this 
decision. It was because Srimanta Sankaradeva knew about the strong 
allegiance of Nara Narayana to the Shakti cult. Moreover the latter had 
not gotten over his ego. Actually the king treated the saint just like 
an exceptional scholar and nothing more. Of course he respected the 
saint. But his behaviour was predominantly that of a king, not of a 
disciple prepared to go to any length. His wish was almost an order to 
the saint to initiate him. Nara Narayana had not gone to Bhela, where 
Srimanta Sankaradeva was residing, to ask for initiation, but declared 
it in the court like any other royal decree. It ran contrary to the 
principle of unqualified submission to God and the preceptor in the path
 of devotion. It was quite clear that accepting the king as disciple 
would have compromised the egalitarian principle of the Eka Sharana Nâma
 Dharma order. The king would never have sat with his fellow devotees, 
which would have created inequality in the democratic order. So Srimanta
 Sankaradeva expressed his inability to initiate the king. The saint 
instilled this spirit in his disciples too. It is because of such 
sincerity to the ideology, that Eka Sharana Nâma Dharma has become the 
foremost religion in Assam.
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