The Signal - What exactly is prana pratishtha?
What exactly is prana pratishtha?The January 22 consecration of Ayodhya’s Ram Mandir drew more attention for its attendance. Here’s what the ritual actually denotes.Good morning! The grand inauguration of the Ram Mandir at Ayodhya was a glitzy affair. And in the runup to the prana pratishtha ceremony, reams of newsprint were dedicated to the commercial and infrastructural development transforming the city in Uttar Pradesh. But what is the symbolism of prana pratishtha itself, and why does it matter? A professor of religion explains. Also in today’s edition: our picks of the best longreads. If you enjoy reading us, why not give us a follow at @thesignaldotco on Twitter, Instagram, and Threads. Vasudha Narayanan The consecration rituals of the icon of Lord Rama were performed in a newly built mega-temple in the town of Ayodhya, India, on Jan. 22, 2024. The prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, performed the rituals during a 48-minute period considered auspicious by Hindu astrologers. Lord Rama, an avatara or incarnation of Vishnu, is one of the most important deities in the Hindu tradition. Amid the carefully staged pageantry, the media’s hysteria over the guest lists and the celebrations of exultant Hindus – not just in India but from Golden Gate Bridge to Times Square – the religious significance of the rituals, known in Sanskrit as “prana pratishtha,” or “establishment of breath,” was completely lost. Media all around the world, particularly in India, referred to the icon of Lord Rama as an “idol.” However, the term does not capture the Hindu belief that matter transforms into divine reality during this ritual. Although there are many nuanced Sanskrit words, there is no English term that does justice. In fact, the word “idol” has pejorative implications. As a professor of religion who has studied the religious significance of deities in temples, I want to highlight this important ritual, which is said to transform the material image. From matter to deityThe ritual of “prana pratishtha” is a culmination of several days or even weeks of preparation. At crucial moments during the performance of the ritual, many Hindus, though not all, believe that the divine being comes to abide in a carefully carved icon. In an idea roughly analogous to transubstantiation in the Catholic Church – where, when the priest consecrates the bread and wine, the whole substance of the bread and wine is believed to become the body of Christ – through prana pratishtha, the material icon becomes a divine presence. Although several Hindu texts speak of the supreme being as being beyond form, gender and even number, paradoxically, Hindus also see the supreme entity as graciously taking a “material” form and abiding in a temple as an incarnate deity worthy of worship. Despite textual and regional variations, there are many common practices in this ritual. During the process of prana pratishtha, this image carved by a master sculptor is initially purified, then covered in water, grains, fragrant substances, herbs, flowers and other materials. In doing so, it is said to absorb the energies of the universe. Texts called “Puranas” and “Agamas,” composed in the first millennium C.E., give many details for the procedure. There are fire sacrifices in a pavilion outside, the deity is taken formally into the temple and also in a procession through the town, and there is recitation of mantras. Precious stones and metals, as well as a yantra, a metal plate with geometrical drawings, are buried in the ground in the inner shrine where the deity is to be installed. The eyes of the icon are also ritually opened. Since the unrestricted power or “shakti” of the deity is believed to blaze out through its gaze, a mirror is held in front of it both to guide the sculptor in opening the eyes carefully and also to reflect the power back to it. In Ayodhya, a scarf was removed from the eyes of the deity. The consecration ceremony at the Rama temple in Ayodhya. At the crucial time, the chief priest invokes the divine being, inviting it to abide in the icon. With the opening of the eyes and the invoking and transfer of breath, the material icon is said to be transformed into an incarnation of the deity. Controversies over the temple landThe “prana pratishtha” rituals have been done in thousands of temples in India and globally. But the Ayodhya one has arguably drawn the most attention politically and has also been the most controversial. The new temple has been built on the land where a 16th century mosque – the Babri Masjid – was destroyed by Hindu activists in December 1992. Some Hindus claim that the mosque had been built by razing a 15th century Rama temple, said to be the site of his birth. While there seems to be evidence that a temple stood where the mosque was built, scholars have disputed the claim that that spot was the very one where Rama was born. Representatives of Jainism, another ancient religion of India, have also claimed that a sixth century Jain temple existed on this site before the mosque was built. Several scholars have argued that the destruction of the mosque is directly connected with Hindu nationalism and communal violence. Hindus’ and Muslims’ rights to worship at the site have been litigated for more than a hundred years, and in 2019, the Supreme Court of India ruled that the land be given to a Hindu trust and a five-acre lot be given to the Muslims to build a mosque. Building the temple was started soon after this judgement. Politically, the attention accompanying the rites highlighted the metaphor of Rama “returning home.” It refers to an incident in the story of Rama as told in the ancient epic, the “Ramayana,” when he is exiled from Ayodhya on the eve of his coronation and returns home after 14 years of exile. Devotees’ sentiments as well as speeches at the inauguration of the temple spoke of Rama’s return to Ayodhya after 500 years of being banished from his birthplace. It was a clear reference to what the government and many Hindus believed to be a return of Rama to Ayodhya after his presence was “banished” with the building of the mosque in the 16th century. ‘Not in our names’There were many Hindus who objected to the politicization of the event as well as the active role of the government and its agencies in the ritual fanfare. Indian Air Force choppers rained flowers on the temple after the consecration. Some observers, including outsiders sympathetic to Hinduism, saw these rituals as a glorification of Modi, not Rama. The event was also contested in religious circles. Several monastic heads refused to join the event, but a prominent Hindu writer said that these religious leaders were not representative of Hinduism and refuted their objections. Despite these controversies, for those Hindus who supported the building of the temple, it was a sacred moment. For during the prana pratishtha, the divine is said to become present in the icon, if the rituals are properly performed. The “idol” made of material substance is then transformed, and the temple becomes the home for the deity. Vasudha Narayanan is Distinguished Professor of Religion, University of Florida. This article is republished from https://theconversation.com under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article at https://theconversation.com/the-opening-of-indias-new-rama-temple-made-waves-but-heres-what-the-central-ritual-actually-meant-221715 ICYMIDecolonising space: At the height of the US-Russia (then USSR) space war, a wary world, still reeling from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, united to create the Outer Space Treaty in 1967. The dictum was idealistic: that space is “the province of all mankind”, and that signatories will operate in space only “for peaceful purposes”. But today’s space wars—centred on launching commercial satellites—render the Outer Space Treaty obsolete, especially since there are no treaties or laws governing space traffic. There are over 9,000 active satellites and counting in low earth orbit, and most are operated by one company: Elon Musk’s SpaceX. As Amazon and other private operators scramble to profit from this lucrative industry and concerns mount over inevitable collisions and ensuing wars, budding space lawyers from the Global South are participating in mock trials that prep them for plausible conflicts. The trials are part of the Manfred Lachs Space Law Moot Court Competition (!). And the countries dominating the competition? South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Nigeria, and Chile, to name some. WIRED charts the fascinating story of an intrepid Zimbabwean team that almost reached the finals. Stunning collapse: When you read this profile of the once high-flying genomics start-up 23andMe by The Wall Street Journal, there's a good chance you'd find similarities to Theranos. There’s a high-profile female founder in Anne Wojcicki (sister of former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki, ex-wife of Google’s Sergey Brin), high profile investors in Sequoia Capital and DST’s Yuri Milner, and A-list celebrities using its products. Today, it has all come crashing down, from its market cap (once worth $6 billion) to its reputation. Why? Business. 23andMe once wanted to collect and supply basic ancestry and health data “to give consumers more control over their healthcare”. That goal has now morphed into drug development, where 23andMe had an erstwhile partner in GSK. That resulted in a $69 subscription product, which hasn't scaled, summing up 23andMe’s execution failures. Evergreen trope: In a perfect homage, Los Angeles is becoming a hub for one of the most famous tropes in cinema history: train robberies. Thieves are stealing from moving trains or stopping them in the middle by cutting the brake hoses. These trains generally transport e-commerce packages and the thefts indicate hints of collusion; thieves have come to target specific cars loaded with electronics and tires. This has become such a massive issue that the US Department of Homeland Security estimates $15-35 billion in annual losses from these thefts. A majority of these hijacked goods are laundered into the online ecosystem, turning up for sale on e-commerce platforms like Amazon, eBay, and Facebook Marketplace through third party sellers. It’s like the more things change, the more they stay the same. Art Of Noise: No, not the band, even though we’re suckers for ‘80s synth-pop. They say there’s a word in German for everything, and Stadtklanggestalter is one such. It translates to “urban soundscape planner”, and Berlin-based Thomas Kusitzky is apparently the only person in the world with that job title. His mission is to make cities less acoustically jarring and champion acoustically-sound architecture. Sample this: a Cold War-era structure called the Admiralbrücke is built in such a way that it has an “urban canyon”, which amplifies the sounds within but keeps outside noise, well, out. In this eye-opening piece for Noema, journalist-editor Jeffrey Arlo Brown interviews Kusitzky and in the process, informs us why buildings with glass facades are the worst, why asphalt roads are preferable, and how EVs may or may not be a solution to the noise problem. Most importantly, he writes about the sonic extinction of birdsong—and the way that’s affecting avian reproduction and population; not least the irony of city dwellers who are willing to pay a premium for properties surrounded by more natural sounds, yet paying little heed in contributing to ear-blasting ways of life. They’re (not) out there 🛸: You would think that in the age of the omnipresent smartphone camera we’d stop believing fantastical tales without 4K video evidence. Yet, there is a renewed collective frenzy over an old obsession of the 1990s—that aliens visit us and the US military is hiding UFOs. This time, credible folks, including a Harvard astronomer and a high-ranking US intelligence officer are making such claims. Despite the paltry evidence and an inconclusive hearing in the US Congress, the public firmly believes authorities are hiding evidence of alien visits. So much so that a top Pentagon official resigned. This story in Intelligencer traces the history of UFO mania and profiles the key people involved in its resurgence, including journalist Leslie Kean (whose former partner was a famous UFO advocate/speaker). The story argues that the latest rash of ‘flying saucer’ sightings is probably something more banal: scientific and/or military balloons The childcare parent trap: A woman considering going back to work after having a child is often picking between two terrible choices. (A) She could go back to work, trying to make up for time lost during her maternity break only to spend all her earnings on expensive child care, or (B) forgo her career and financial independence entirely and devote herself to family instead. Working women in rich countries are increasingly demanding laws that make child care more affordable. But, as this column in The Economist points out, motherhood inevitably drives out a large number of women from the workforce. In poorer countries, many abandon their careers right after marriage. As fertility rates fall in countries like South Korea, childfree couples increasingly say having children just isn’t worth it. Data from this story shows they may have a point. The Signal is free today. But if you enjoyed this post, you can tell The Signal that their writing is valuable by pledging a future subscription. You won't be charged unless they enable payments. |
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