--- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
<snip>
> Interestingly, a Google search
> for humor in Hinduism doesn't seem to turn up much.

>From Hinduism Today:

The Kwest for Kosmic Komedy 

Palani, Sivasiva 

[excerpt]

...There is in fact a rich Hindu comic tradition....In Indian 
aesthetics, comedy is called hasya-rasa, and is one of nine "tastes" 
of which others are heroism, fear tranquility and love....

...The human spirit, you already know, laughs at its fears, pokes fun 
at its demons, and pokes puns at its enemies. In India, people who do 
this professionally are called pundits; those who try but fail are 
called pandits....Lee Siegel, who spent five years studying it, 
says, "At the core of Indian comedy there is an irony, a revelation 
of the humanness of the gods and the divinity of human beings. The 
human comedy has two heroes - the fool and the trickster. The divine 
comedy recapitulates the human. The trickster and fool and find their 
wholeness embedded in consciousness as the laughing child, and that 
child is defied as Krishna. As that God has been examined for the 
ways in which He reveals the seriousness of humor and its capacity to 
affirm life, so Siva has been invoked to indicate the humor of 
seriousness - the ludicrousness of all human endeavors in the face of 
death." Both Krishna and Siva sanctify humor, but in different ways. 
Krishna giggles and teases, Siva roars with the ascetic's scoff. 
Either way, their laughter links heaven and earth.

If you think about it, this is unique in the ever-so-somber world of 
spirituality. Where else is there laughter in heaven, even among the 
Gods?...It seems right that the Divine would have immense capacity 
for the joy and fun He built into His creation.

This not-so-serious side of Hinduism is evident among saints and 
stages. Some consider it a warrant of egolessness and spiritual 
attainment, for the greatest souls often have the finest sense of 
humor. Ramakrishna was full of playfulness and facetious stories. 
Many of our outstanding swamis today are card-carrying punsters, 
tickling us with words until we weep with laughter, smiling that know-
it-all grin that tells us they know something we don't. Why not? They 
are liberated, unrepressed, done with sorrow. You'd be happy, too!

In literature, both sacred and secular, Hindu humor is rampant. The 
Rig - Veda rishis jested about our ordinary human state of mind, full 
of its endless imaginings and untethered meanderings: "Our thoughts 
wander in all directions and many are the ways of men: the cartwright 
hopes for accidents, the physician for the cripple and the priest for 
a rich patron. For the sake of Spirit, O Mind, let go of these 
wandering thoughts." X.112.1. In the same Veda (X.121) there are 
clever metaphysical puns in the Hymn to Who that presage Abbot and 
Costello's "Who's on first?" In folktales, there is, of course, the 
magical Panchatantra, one of the world's greatest collections of 
fables, filled with humanness, repartee, jest and jocularity - all in 
the name of learning about life....

The stories of Birbal are another source. Raja Birbal (1528-1583) was 
a poor but witty brahmin writer who became one of Emperor Akbar's 
favorites. The tension between Hindus and Muslims in Akbar's non-
Hindu court was real, and Birbal apparently had the ability to soften 
it with levity. Their comic battle was always waged at the expense of 
his Muslim brothers, though sometimes Akbar himself was the target. 
One day Akbar lamented to his friend Birbal, "As emperor, I am 
allowed to meet only wise and learned men. Show me the ten greatest 
fools in the kingdom." Birbal brought him a collection of morons, 
figures typical of the fool in Indian literature: the first man, 
riding a horse, carried a bundle of firewood on his head, reasoning 
that the bundle would be dropped it in the dark under a tree, but in 
a clearing where the light would make his efforts easier. Birbal 
brought eight such fools to the king who reminded him that he had 
asked for ten. "There are ten," the trickster laughed, "including you 
and I - the two biggest fools of all - you for giving me such a 
ludicrous order, and me for obeying it!"

That, dear readers, is our belated offering of cheerfulness for the 
year 5092, Pramoda, which means "delightful or bringing joy." 
Remember to laugh each day, with others and at ourself. Enveloping us 
completely, laughter can be an embrace with Loving Existence, a self-
transcendent sharing of the essence of things, of Brahman's inmost 
heart, our innermost Self. Humor is like God. You cannot explain it. 
Either you get it or you don't.

Article copyright Himalayan Academy.

http://tinyurl.com/3yccmu




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