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RELIGION AND MYTHOLOGY

Vamana and Onam: The tale of Mahabali that began it all

Here's a peek into the myths that emerge from Vaishnavite texts into
the Indian consciousness.

Yesterday · 08:30 pm
Updated 30 minutes ago

Mrinal Pande

The Skanda Purana (Kedar Khanda) version of the Bali story did the
rounds in our area in the central Himalayas. Each year, we heard of
the famed Bali Raja from the family priest, a tall, lean and stern
figure of authority. Every year on Raksha Bandhan, he would arrive
with a ball of cotton yarn dyed in turmeric and proceed to tie it
around the wrists of everyone in the family, the right hand for men
and boys, the left hand for women and girls.

“Yen Baddho Bali Raja Danveero ca Mahabalee, Tenaham tvam bdhnami,
rakshasu janmani janmani.” (I tie here the same thread that was tied
to that most powerful and generous king, Bali Raja, may it also guard
you birth after birth.)

Who was this Bali Raja, the Asura king of kings, who allowed Vishnu,
the powerful Sura rival dressed clumsily as a dwarf, to place his foot
upon his head and, as a result, was pushed down into the nether world,
losing his vast kingdom in the process?

Was it a north-south divide? Or a tribal versus non-tribal tableau? Or
a clash of civilisations?

Good questions all. If only some present day eager-to-win-
brownie-points-with-the-northern-electorate leaders had done their
homework, a lot of trouble in Twitterland and in Bharat that is India
today would have been forestalled.

View image on Twitter
View image on Twitter
 Follow
 Amit Shah ✔ @AmitShah
आप सभी को "वामन जयंती" की हार्दिक शुभकामनाएं |
12:09 PM - 13 Sep 2016
  1,515 1,515 Retweets   3,635 3,635 likes
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 IndiaTodayFLASH ✔ @IndiaTodayFLASH
BJP leader @AmitShah has insulted Kerala, Keralites & Kerala’s culture
by sharing greetings of Vamana Jayanti on the eve of Onam:@CMOKerala
10:13 PM - 13 Sep 2016
  45 45 Retweets   21 21 likes
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 CMO Kerala @CMOKerala
Vamana is a myth. Onam is a dream. A shared dream about a bright
#egalitarian future. Happy Onam to all.
4:00 PM - 14 Sep 2016
  118 118 Retweets   128 128 likes
Here are the bare bones of the myth as it materialises out of (largely
Vaishnavite) texts. Make what you will of it.

Vamana Vishnu Avatar Stamp Paper 20 cms X 30.5 cms
Vamana Vishnu Avatar Stamp Paper 20 cms X 30.5 cms
How Vamana defeated Mahabali
The ancient sage Kashyap had two wives, Diti and Aditi. The Asuras
were born of the first and the Suras of the other. They were, thus,
initially related and, like many relatives we know, had many clashes
and guarded secrets. Their gurus (Brihaspati for the Suras and
Shukracharya for the Asuras) remained great friends and frequently
poured oil over troubled waters.

Thus the myths where Shaivite Asuras turn Vaishnavites and vice-versa.

After I learnt to read, among the calendar art illustrations nestling
in the pages of a Hindi magazine, Kalyan, I found a picture of the
great Bali Raja, a large, dark man with a bushy, royal moustache,
resplendent in gold and gems and a gold crown. He stood with hands
folded in veneration before a dwarfish figure.

The object of his veneration, I read on the facing page, a young
ascetic in a dhoti carrying a hollowed gourd, or Kamandalu, was
actually Lord Vishnu, cleverly disguised as a dwarf (Vamana) Brahmin
to try and curb the powers of Maharaja Bali, which were threatening
his Sura brothers. Vishnu, as a dwarfish Vamana, first praised and
then humbly requested the Great Giver the grant of a piece of land big
enough for him to cover in just three strides. Wish granted, he
immediately increased his form, it was reported, till he had measured
the sky and the Earth in two paces. “Where shall I put the third
foot?” he asked Mahabali. In the manner of our hassled mothers
irritated by our whinging, "where shall I put this?", Bali seems to
have muttered, “Upon my head!”

Raja Bali Temple Bilara. Wiki Commons
Raja Bali Temple Bilara. Wiki Commons
This done, the good king was gently pushed into the nether world never
to be seen again. Mahabali was, however, granted a compensating boon
that allowed him to visit his erstwhile kingdom the day after Diwali
on Bali Pratipada. Varanasi still celebrates his one-day rule after
each Diwali. Down South, he emerges again for a day to joyous
celebrations on Onam.

Throughout India, Vishnu has left his footprints. But the ongoing
competition between the Suras and Asuras is never fully resolved. The
Raksha Sutra the priest tied on our wrists, Onam festivities and Bali
Pratipada keep reminding us of the Danveer and Mahabali Asura, pushed
out of sight by trickery or force, but not out of minds, no never
quite out of the minds of men and women he protected and helped
prosper.

Love conquers all
Bali’s son Ban (or Banasur), too, was to become a great and powerful
king in Assam. He was initially said to be a worshipper of Shiva.
Vaishnava lore in Bengal and Bihar has it that after his daughter,
Usha, eloped with Krishna’s grandson, Aniruddha, he asked Shiva for
help. Kartikeya, the son of Shiva, arrived with his army of fierce
demons and waged a bloody battle against Krishna’s forces, led by who
else but Cupid (Kamdeva, the god of love). The celibate Kartikeya,
according to Vaishnava lore, lost out to the flower-tipped arrows Kama
directed towards his poisonous darts. (According to grandmothers’
remedies, mango blossom juice still remains the best remedy for a
poisonous bite.)

Thus, love defeated hatred and blossoms won ultimately over poison.
Amor Vincit Omnia , or love conquers all, as the old saying goes.

Corrections and clarifications: "Amor Vincit Omnia" had erroneously
been attributed to the wife of Bath instead of the Prioress in
Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales in an earlier version of this
article.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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