RIG VEDIC SOCIETY PART 3 2924 3924

Rig Veda mentions many female deities but none of them is central to the
text. Ushas is the most celebrated goddess along with Aditi, Prithvi,
Rathri, Sarasvathi and Vac. It does not however mean that Rig Veda is
unimportant in understanding the Hindu goddesses. The female deities in Rig
Veda form the basis for the emergence of the later Hindu goddesses such as
Shakthi, Devi and other mother goddesses glorified in the puranas. In the
Vedic lore the female power Shakthi was not seen as independent but as a
force residing within the gods. They are treated with curiosity and love
for the powerful natural phenomena and abstract forces they represent.

*Ushas:*

Ushas is the most important goddess in Rig Veda (sometimes viewed as
representing several goddesses). She is celebrated in twenty hymns and
mentioned more than three hundred times. She is delicate, shy, luminous and
beautifully adorned. Ushas is compared to a graceful dancer. Daughter of
sky (Dayus), consort of Sun and mother of Ashwins. She arrives each day in
a chariot drawn by her sons. She leads Surya and reveals to the world his
brilliance and fire.

She is identified with dawn; praised for driving away Rathri the darkness.
She rouses life and sets life in motion. She bestows strength and fame; and
like Prithvi is called the mother. She is associated with bounty and gifts
that are given away at the time of sacrifices, though she has no part in
sacrificial rituals.

*udu śriya u**ṣ**aso rocam**ā**n**ā** asthurap**ā**ṃ** normayo ru**ś**anta*
*ḥ*
* k**ṛṇ**oti vi**ś**v**ā** supath**ā** sug**ā**nyabh**ū**du vasv**ī** dak*
*ṣ**i**ṇ**ā*
*maghonī bhadrā dad**ṛ**k**ṣ**a urviy**ā** vi bh**ā**syut te
**ś**ocirbh**ā**navo
dy**ā*
*mapaptan āvirvak**ṣ**a**ḥ** k**ṛṇ**u**ṣ**e **ś**umbham**ā**no**ṣ**o devi
rocam**ā**n**ā**mahobhi**ḥ** (**RV-6.64.1–2*
<http://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/1_veda/1_sam/1_rv/rv_06_u.htm>
*)*


*The radiant Dawns have risen up for glory, in their white splendor like
waves of water;*


*She maketh paths all easy, fair to travel and rich; hath shown herself
benign and friendly.*


*We see that thou art good; far shines thy luster; thy beams, thy splendor
have flown up to heaven.*


*Decking thyself, thou makest bare thy bosom, shining in thy majesty, thou
Goddess Morning.*

*(RV-6.64.1–2 Griffith)*

Sri Aurobindo describes her as “medium of awakening, the activity and
growth of other gods; she is the first condition of the Vedic realization.
By her illumination, the nature of man is clarified; through her, he
arrives at the Truth and through her he enjoys beatitude”. Ushas also
symbolizes each person’s awakening to truth. Ushas is the principle
operating each time we connect, realize, or gain some insight into our life.

She is referred to as one “who sees all” and is invoked to drive away and
punish enemies. She is also a skilled hunter who “wastes away peoples’
lives. “Perhaps there is in Ushas a hint of a goddess both nurturing and
fierce.

Despite her importance in Rig Veda, she is rather forgotten later in the
epics where Aditi gains more importance as the Mother principle and mother
of gods.

*Aditi:*

Aditi is the mother principle. In Rig Veda she is the mother of all the
gods and all creation. Her name stands for “boundlessness and freedom”. As
one who unbinds, her role is similar to that of her son Varuna as the
guardian of *rta*, the cosmic moral order. She is the supporter of all
creatures. She is invoked for protection and wealth. Aditi is mentioned
about sixty times in the Rig Veda; yet, no hymn is exclusively addressed to
her. She is usually mentioned with other gods and goddesses. It is
difficult to get a clear picture of her nature. She is not a consort of any
god. She is also not related to a natural phenomenon. Physically, she is
rather featureless. Unlike Ushas and Prithvi her nature is undefined. She
appears to be an ancient deity whose original function and nature are
forgotten in later Rig Veda.

*aditirdyauraditirantarik**ṣ**amaditirm**ā**t**ā** sa pit**ā** sa putra**ḥ*
*viśve devā aditi**ḥ** pa**ñ**ca jan**ā** aditirj**ā**tamaditirjanitvam –*
*RV_01.089.10.1–2*
<http://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/1_veda/1_sam/1_rv/rv_01_u.htm>

Perhaps the most outstanding feature of Aditi is her Motherhood. She is
*Devamatri*. She is the mother of Adityas. She is the mother of Indra, the
mother of kings and of all the gods. She is also the mother of Vamana an
incarnation of Vishnu. She is the source of the entire manifested
reality-the past, the present and the future; “all that has been and will
be born”.

She bestows safety, wealth and abundance. She is sometimes compared to a
cow that provides health, nourishment and holiness. Her milk is compared to
redemptive, invigorating drink Soma.

Sri Aurobindo addresses her as the goddess of infinity and the infinite
consciousness.

*A**diti guard our herd by day, Aditi, free from guile, by night,*

*Aditi, ever strengthening, save us from grief!*

*And in the day our hymn is this: May Aditi come nigh to help,*

*With loving-kindness bring us weal and chase our foes.*




*Aditi is Heaven, Aditi is the Atmosphere, Aditi is Mother (Mata), Father
and the Son (putra) . Aditi is the Universal Deities, Aditi is the Five
Races, Aditi is all that has been and will take birth.*

*–Rig Veda.I.89.10*
<http://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/1_veda/1_sam/1_rv/rv_01_u.htm>

*Prithvi:*

Prithvi the earth principle is the mother while sky is as a father. The
earth and Dyaus the sky principles are together referred to as
*Dyava-prithvi*. She is the basis of all existence on the planet, of all
beings animate or otherwise. She protects, she shelters and feeds. Without
her support no existence is possible. She is the mother, warm, nurturing
and protective. Prithvi is stable, fertile and benign forgiving our
trespasses. She is *sarvam saha. *She is also *Vasundhara,* one who has in
her womb all the riches.


*O Mother, auspicious be thy woodland, thy snow-clad mountains and thy
ever-running streams.*


*May the Earth pour out her milk for us, a mother unto me her son.”*

*–Prithvi Sukta,AV-12.1–63*
<http://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/1_veda/1_sam/avs___u.htm>

Prithvi manifests herself in the scent of women and men,. She is the luck
and light in men and splendid energy of maids.

Prithvi, along with Dyaus in the Rig Veda is praised for her supportive
nature. She is frequently called ‘firm’, ‘she who upholds and supports all
things’. She encompasses all things, is broad and wide, and is motionless.
The waters they produce together are described as ‘fat, full, nourishing
and fertile’. They protect people from danger, to expiate sin and to bring
happiness. Together they represent a wide, firm realm of abundance and
safety, a realm pervaded by the order of Rta, which they strengthen and
nourish. They are un-wasting, inexhaustible and rich in gems.

Vishnu strides over her, and Parjanya. Prajapati and Vishwakarma all
protect her,. Agni pervades her. She is the source of all plants, crops,
and nourishes all creatures that live upon her.

Prithvi is also known as Indrani in *Prithvisukta* of Rig Veda, and Lakshmi
or Shri or Bhoodevi etc.

In a funeral hymn the dead one is asked to go now to the lap of his mother
earth, Prithvi the gracious and kind. She is requested not to press down
too heavily upon the dead but to cover him gently as a mother covers her
child with her garment.




*“Approach thou now the lap of Earth, thy mother, The wide-extending Earth,
the ever-kindly; A maiden soft as wool to him who comes with gifts, She
shall protect thee from destruction’s bosom.*




*“Open thyself, O Earth, and press not heavily; Be easy of access and of
approach to him, As mother with her robe her child, So do thou cover him, O
Earth!”*

*(421. 31).****

*Sarasvathi:*

There are numerous references to the Sarasvathi in the Rig Veda. She is the
mighty river. She is a haven -sent stream to bless the earth and the
celestial regions. She is bountiful, fertile and brings fruitfulness to
earth. She is the best of mothers; the source of vigor and strength. She
personifies purity, healing, life giving maternal divinity.

And as the river began to decline , the virtues and attributes of
Sarasvathi merged with the goddess Vac. The flow of the river Sarasvathi
came to be associated with the flow of speech. In later times both Vac and
Saravathi became identical to represent wisdom, learning, intellect and
culture.

*Vac :*

In Rig Veda, Vac is the goddess associated with speech, a concept of
central importance to the Vedas. Vac, the speech gives a sensible
expression to ideas by use of words and is the medium of exchange of
knowledge. She gives intelligence to those who love her. She is elegant,
embellished in gold. She is the mother who gave birth to things by naming
them. She is the power of the rishis. “*She is the mysterious presence that
enables one to hear, see, grasp and then express in words the true nature
of things. She is the prompter of and vehicle of expression for visionary
perception, and as such she is intimately associated with the rishis and
the rituals that express or capture the truths of their visions*.”.

The power of speech is honored in several hymns.




*Where, like men cleansing corn-flour in a cribble, the wise in spirit have
created language, Friends see and recognize the marks of friendship: their
speech retains the blessed sign imprinted*

In hymn 125 of the tenth mandala Vac or speech is praised having penetrated
earth and heaven, holding together all existence.

In another passage of the Rig Veda, Vac is praised as a divine being. Vac
is omnipotent, moves amongst divine beings, and carries the great gods,
Mitra, Varuna, Indra and Agni, within itself. “*All gods live from Vac,
also all demigods, animals and people. Vac is the eternal being; it is the
first-born of the eternal law, mother of the Vedas and navel of immortality*.”
The reason, the Vedic rishis paid such glowing tributes to Vac was perhaps
because they attached great importance to intelligent communication through
speech and to its purity.

In the later parts of the Rig Veda, Brahman (one of the three distinct
voices in the Soma sacrifices) is associated with word without which speech
is not possible. Brahma (word) and Vac (speech) are partners working
towards good communication, spread of knowledge and for the fulfillment of
the devotees’ aspirations. If word is flower, speech is the garland. If Vac
is the weapons, it is Brahman that sharpens them. In Rig Veda the
Vac-Brahman relation is a “growing partnership” (RV 10.120.5
<http://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/1_veda/1_sam/1_rv/rv_10_u.htm>,
and 9.97.34)

In the early Rig Veda, Sarasvathi is the river vital to their life and
existence. Sarasvathi is described as *‘nadinam shuci*; sacred and pure
among rivers. It was, however, in Krishna Yajurveda, that Vac (speech
personified, the vehicle of knowledge) for the first time is called
Sarasvathi. The Aitreya Aranyaka calls her mother of Vedas. From here on,
the association of Vac with Sarasvathi gets thicker.

Sarasvathi is invoked with Ida and Bharathi. The three, Ida, Bharathi and
Sarasvathi are manifestation of the Agni (*Yajnuagni*) and are
*tri_Sarasvathi*. The goddess Sarasvathi is also the destroyer of Vrta and
other demons that stand for darkness (*Utasya nah Sarasvati ghora
Hiranyavartanih / Vrtraghni vasti sustuition*).

As the might of the river Sarasvathi tended to decline, its importance also
lessened during the latter parts of the Vedas. Its virtues of glory, purity
and importance gradually shifted to the next most important thing in their
life — speech, excellence in use of words and its purity. Emphasis shifted
from the river to the Goddess. With the passage of time, Sarasvathi’s
association with the river gradually diminished. The virtues of Vac and the
Sarasvathi (the river) merged into one divinity- Sarasvathi; and she was
recognized and worshipped as goddess of purity, speech, learning, wisdom,
culture and intellect. The Rig Vedic goddess Vac thus emerged and shined
gloriously as Vac-devi, Vedamatha, Vani, Sharada, Pusti, Vagishvari,
Veenapani , Bharathi and Sarasvathi.

The association of the intellect and purity (Vac, Sarasvathi) with the word
(Brahma) acquired a physical representation in the Puranas*.***

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CAL5XZoqcdjvogPtMEL25ouDcpDjA58tVywk8vkr9Pi6vtDC4Tg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to