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In praise of the goddess within
Crossing boundaries of class and religion, the ritual of Attukal
Pongala in Kerala is a testimony to the MotherGoddess. Acting as
a link between the women of all communities and the Devi, the
ritual is an unconscious creation of a new tradition, observes
PEGJORDAN.
EVERY time I travel to a matrilineal society, I instantly know
that something is different. Maybe it is the profound respect for
life I feel when a community places its women in high regard. The
state of Kerala has a long matrilineal history, meaning, the
authority for ancestry, property and descent is through the
woman's lineage. There's not too many of those around, believe
me.
So what feels so different about matrilineal societies? You get a
clue by observing where the lion's share of energy and resources
is spent. You notice right away that instead of all the funding
going toward government and military, the actions that nurture
life get the attention. Now there's a switch.
There is also a gentleness and spirituality about community life.
Kerala has a relatively low infant morality rate, and its
literacy rate of 100 per cent is far above the average for the
rest of India. The children and the elderly seem to be well cared
for. And the women and the Goddess are the focal point of one of
the grandest rituals of all time, the Attukal Pongala.
My friend Dr. Dianne Jenett, has for many years, been studying
this massive ritual in which thousands of women of all ages, rich
and poor, and every walk of life, spend several days preparing
vast quantities of red rice into a sweet porridge out in the open
for the Devi, or Mother Goddess. The ritual crosses all class
boundaries, includes all religions, including Hindu, Christian,
Muslim women, and seems to have a traditional link to the goddess
and women's life cycle rituals of several neighbouring
communities that wish to offer prayers of protection and ask for
blessings on jobs, health, and family harmony.
Dianne says the belief is that the Devi comes out of her shrine
and becomes one of the women participating in the Pongala. Dr.
Elinor Gadon, author of The Once and Future Goddess, says, "You
can sense the divine energy or shakti afoot because of the
devotion with which the women go about this ritual."
What amazes me is that this is a fairly contemporary ritual,
although every part of India is vibrant with long-standing
devotional ceremonies to the Goddess. But this Pongala is a sort
of unconscious creation of a new tradition, in which women -
professionals, academics, business women, simple village women -
turn out to cook and join in a sacred practice together. As if
the sacred ritual is deep in their hearts and their bones, and
they cannot resist it.
Dianne may have started as an outsider looking in, but the ritual
soon got under her skin, and if she is not in India celebrating
with the local women, then she is offering Pongala to the Goddess
in her home in California.
Here are some more facts about Kerala, the Land of Green Magic,
that National Geographic ranks as one of the "50 greatest places
to see in a lifetime!"
- It is a land of equal distribution of wealth, or pretty close
to it, anyway. Based in a century-old state policy that created
the most even distribution of land ownership in India, Kerala
enjoys an unusually even per capita income and high agricultural
productivity. Thus, too, a local form of communism has been
popular for decades.
- Family planning values have been effectively embraced and the
State is approaching a much-needed zero population growth. The
deep commitment to human needs is also reflected in the allotment
of some 37 per cent of all tax revenues for health and education.
Sounds like a kind of paradise to me, and the network of some 44
rivers makes the whole country into its own Venice of waterway
transportation and beauty. If you make a visit, maybe you will
see the ancient "Snake boat" rituals.
- The people are friendly and love to talk with tourists. When I
was there, I took a long walk in the balmy evening air with
several teenagers along the coast of the Arabian Ocean, sharing
their passionate ideals about government, women's honoured roles
and the long history of their State. We finished our walk at one
of the many seafood restaurants, walking up to a second storey
dining balcony to order various fish curries, as the sun set over
this ancient land.
- Kerala's religious history is equally fascinating with a 2000-
year-old Jewish settlement in the coastal city of Kochi where
giant fishing nets are lowered by hand from immense wooden
frames, as they have been for centuries, to scoop up the daily
catch. A large Christian population dates nearly as far back too.
Yet when Portuguese sailors landed there in the 1500s, these
devout Christians had yet to hear of the Pope.
Looking healthy and radiant in Kerala is so natural, the
preparations sound good enough to eat. Imagine a traditional hair
oil created from plain or boiled coconut oil with a few
peppercorns thrown in. Shampoo known as thaali is created from a
soapy part of crushed hibiscus rose leaves. A potion of boiled
rice broth is applied to the scalp to cure dandruff. Henna, mixed
with amla (gooseberry, perhaps the most concentrated natural
source of vitamin C on the planet) and beaten egg yolk makes a
harmless hair dye that is very popular. Facial masks are whipped
up from cucumber, sandalwood, papaya and pineapple juices and
oils, made into delicate pastes, while skin moisturisers are in
two forms: honey or tumeric.
Want to erase scarring? Try a paste of red sandalwood and honey
applied twice a day for a month, as these women have been doing
for centuries.
In the month of Dhanu (December-January) and for centuries,
Kerala women have performed the Thiruvathirakali dance to
celebrate the joys of marriage and as a feminine empowerment
ritual. Offered to the Lord of love, Kamadeva, the dance is an
expression of lasya, the amorous charm and grace of the Divine
Feminine in human form. Even Lord Shiva, the great ascetic is
moved by the pirouetting dance, detailed hand and facial
gestures, bright hand claps and empassioned singing. The dance
has become so popular in modern times that Kerala women perform
it all year long.
I like to offer readers a way to support and enhance the
community life of people I write about. A non-profit organisation
called Abhaya which runs a refuge for women in distress, a day
care and treatment centre for the mentally ill, a de-addiction
programme, a home for abandoned children and a counselling centre
is run by Sugata Kumari, an activist, poet and the head of the
Women's Commission.
Read about her at: http://www.oneworld.org/ni/ issue275/
interview.htm.
Write to: Abhaya, Varada, Nandavanam, Thiruvananthapuram 696033,
India.
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