Devdutt Pattanaik is a well known name among the readers
of Indian writing in English. While people like Ashok Banker had been
re-interpreting tales from India’s sacred history before Devdutt came into
prominence, it is to the latter’s credit that he opened up almost a new genre
by retelling religious stories in a simple, lucid manner. While nowhere close
to the impact Amar Chitra Katha has had, it won’t be a stretch to say that for
many young Indians, Devdutt, through his columns in various newspapers and
books, has provided the only glimpse to India’s rich sacred history.
Last week, I happened to watch 2 back to back episodes of
a new series ‘Devlok with Devdutt Pattanaik’ on Epic Channel. The format of
this show is of Devdutt responding to questions posed by the host. Mr Pattanaik needs to commended for his
articulation, for possessing that rare capacity to hold the viewer's interests,
that too on such ‘non-cool’ topic.
Yet, some aspects of Devdutt’s assertions, particularly,
looked at in context of the views he has been propagating since long, are
worrisome. It is times like these which makes one wonder whether absence of
knowledge is preferable to prejudiced, ill-formed opinions which
disturb the very foundations of our collective consciousness.
One of the episodes of this show had Devdutt talking
about Ramayana. He made some valid points on how the Indians see time as a
circular concept and how collective memories are history for our people. He
further shared titbits of Ramayana which while believed to be an integral core
to the main story, are later additions (e.g.. the Lakshman Rekha). However, he
then asserted that there is nothing such as the first teller or original teller
of Ramayana and that all compositions are as valid as Valmiki Ramayana. In
support of his assertion, he claimed how the story of Ramayana was narrated by
Narad Muni to Valmiki and Narad had himself heard from other sources. Or how
Garud had heard it from Kakbhushundi or how the tale of Mahabharat was narrated
by Vyasa, by Vaishmapayana and so many others. The example about Mahabharata
was a little ridiculous as Vaishampayana was Vyasa’s pupil and as per tradition
itself, expanded Vyasa’s Mahabharat Jaya to Bharat. Hence, the argument that both
of them are as original or non-original can be dismissed altogether.
The fallacious argument that any retelling of Ramayana is
as good as the core tale is the same claim that Wendy Donigers of the
world make. This approach allows them to project
fringe and obscure tales on a higher pedestal, equivalent or even superior to the mainstream versions of Ramayana as we know it. When they talk of 300
versions of Ramayana, they conveniently omit that a large number of these
versions are virtually unknown and stand at absolutely no comparison with
Valmiki’s text so far as quality and popularity are concerned. Even more
critically, almost all of the better known composers of these renditions
recognise Valmiki as the ‘original’.
Unlike Valmiki Ramayana, which portrayed Rama as a mortal but with superior
quality, the later day renditions are more driven by Bhakti and Rama is
unquestionably God. While Valmiki challenges Rama’s acts and states that the
Ramayana is actually Sitayana for it is actually her tale and her immaculate
conduct in all circumstances, hardly can any later day Ramayana be seen as
questioning any of Rama’s act.
Valmiki, unlike other poets, was not only a witness, but
also a participant in the story of Ramayana. That Tulsidas mentions
Kakbhushundi or Shiva narrating the tale to Sati in no way impacts the identity
and contribution of the 'original' composer.
At another point, Devdutt ‘corrects’ the facilitator when
she uses the honorific 'Rishi' for Valmiki, claiming that the latter was a poet
and not a Rishi. Of course Valmiki was a
poet but that is not a disqualification for being a Rishi. As per our stories,
Ratnakar robber became 'Rishi' Valmiki through austerities, had an ashram and
provided shelter to Sita when she was banished by Rama. Just how does being a poet, in fact, Aadikavi make Valmiki any less of a Rishi?
An even more startling claim which Devdutt made was
regarding the relative ages of Ramayana and Mahabharata. As per him, while the
collective memory of Indians makes Mahabharata a younger tale, on all
parameters, it is the Ramayana which is younger. While there have been some
who are propagating this view, the only seemingly valid argument (which Devdutt
did not forward) was that archaeological artefacts excavated at Mahabharata
sites are older compared to what has been found at Ayodhya.
The grounds which Devdutt presented are specious and
ill-argued.
· Style
of Sanskrit of Mahabharata being cruder - had not read or heard of
this argument ever before. Yet, given that my knowledge is pretty limited, some scholar might have made this claim. Even
considering it to be true, we are very well aware that almost all works of
Sanskrit barring the Vedas were re-composed post Panini's 'finalising' the
language. While even Ramayana may not be the work of a single poet, Mahabharata
is an outright mosaic and even the best efforts towards the critical edition
cannot piece the original Jaya. Hence, to make a judgement on grounds of polish
of language does not seem very proper.
· Knowledge
of the country - Devdutt claimed that while the Mahabharata
spoke only of Northern India, the Ramayana showed knowledge of geography of the
South proving that the Aryan civilisation had already spread across India by
this time. This assertion is incorrect. Ramayana is more focused on the region
of East UP, Bihar, South Nepal and makes only cursory mentions of other
kingdoms. Even more critically, Ramayana's South India was a forested land with
little civilisation, the kingdoms being of people who were compared to bears
and monkeys. On the other hand, the Mahabharata talks about cities and proper
kingdoms from Uttarpatha to Manipur to at least Vidarbha and Kalinga. The
lifestyle of people and palaces mentioned in the Mahabharata are more advanced
compared to Ramayana, all of which shows an earlier vintage for the latter.
More pointedly, while the Ramayana
abounds with demons, the Mahabharata has demons spoken of sporadically, like
Ekchakra and Hidimba. The premise of the Mahabharata was that the demons had
taken birth as humans and a big war had to be fought to cleanse Earth of their
evil. Anthropologically, presence of the scary, non-human other denotes a more
archaic civilisation, something which corresponds to the lives and times of
Ramayana.
· Drying
up of Saraswati – Devdutt claimed that the Mahabharata mentions
drying up of Saraswati which roughly corresponds to the time Aryan civilisation
began and hence has to be older. But Ramayana does not mention the river simply
because the theatre of events happened in very different geographies, i.e.,
Mahabharata in the Bramhavarta and Ramayana much further east. And in any case, this will be a
disqualification only if we believe that the fantastic time spans mentioned in
our epics are factual and not allegorical. The only reason why Devdutt’s logic
could be valid is an absolute negation of the Out-of-India theory and
continuity between the Indus-Saraswati civilisation and the Vedic people.
· Archaic
social practices – Devdutt states that polyandry is a
primitive practice and its prevalence in Mahabharata is a proof of it being
older than Ramayana which celebrates monogamy. This assertion is
laughable. The Mahabharata abounds in
ridicule of Pandavas for their marriage with Draupadi. Each of their opponents taunted
Draupadi as a harlot and Pandavas as lesser men for sharing a wife. The story
leaves little in doubt that polyandry was an exception, an act while not
considered illegitimate, was very clearly an object of scorn and contempt. Polygamy though, was widespread and even during Ramayana times and Rama
had made a vow of being devoted to one wife, again an exception to the general rule.
On the other hand, we had widow remarriages happening in Ramayana, something
which was totally missing in Mahabharata, which together with a definite
increase in polygamous practices indicated that patriarchy had become
institutionalised. In any case, the Vedic literature does not mention polyandry
as a practice, so Mahabharata cannot be closer to Vedic period compared to
Ramayana.
The most duplicitous words, though, were around the lip service paid to collective memories of those very people who hold these epics in high esteem.
Anyone even remotely familiar with the Hindu eons would be aware that the Ramayana is set in a more pristine time, in the Treta yuga while the Mahabharata has been placed in Dwapara, the succeeding age. There is absolute unanimity in Hindu scriptures and Puranas, that the events of Ramayana pre-dated Mahabharata. Within the epics themselves, Ramayana, all the so-called 300 versions of it, are silent on the tale of Krihsna or Mahabharata while the latter epic is dotted with references to the tale of Sita-Rama.
So here we have a peculiar situation that false proxies are being used to determine something which runs diametrically opposite to what the itihaas has to state.
How does it matter to the lay Hindu if the Mahabharata is being projected as being older to Ramayana?
It matters a lot and here is why –
It will be little exaggeration to say that much more than
any scripture, the Ramayana has moulded Indian society. For millennia after millennia,
this tale of morality has provided us the framework on how each one of us
should act and which standards to strive for. Much of it comes from the general
belief in Rama’s divinity and that it really had happened.
If one has to battle against Hinduism, what better tool
to adopt than to raise doubts among the believers on the very foundation of the
text? Can Christianity remain what it is if it were to be proved that there was
never a historical Jesus? The same way, if there are enough modern-day Hindus
who doubt the authenticity of Ramayana and made to believe that Hindu
traditions are so ridiculously primitive that they couldn’t even track their
so-called history properly, how can it not decisively weaken their steadily eroding
religious convictions?
When the mlecchha
invaders started destroying temples and breaking down idols, the astounded
Hindu, who was expecting divine wrath to strike the desecrators down, consoled
himself that the Gods had left their idols owing to their (the Hindus’) sins.
Now, when they start doubting if they at all had any Gods (if the tale is
false, the characters in it cannot be true), how long will the native religion
sustain?
It will not be a stretch to believe that Devdutt
Pattanaik, for all his pretensions of being culturally in sync with the Indian
way of interpreting events and beliefs, is just one more adherent to the Wendy
Doniger school of Indology where anything which is sacred has to be made
profane. Like Wendy and her children, Devdutt too has promoted obscure tales,
particularly around sexuality and has given an impression of a religion speaking
in multiple, often contradictory voices.
While anyone is entitled to his opinion, the dangers with
Devdutt’s tales are that, they will remain the only source of information about
Hinduism’s sacred history to many of our youth, particularly the upper middle or
the elite class, which will, whether we like it or not, continue to define our
narratives.
With so many sepoys, it is little wonder that Breaking
India project goes on smoothly.
A very fitting rebuttal to Devdutt's ridiculous claims as a result of his misunderstanding of all our traditions and learning the epics the wrong way, from wrong and teachers hostile to Dharma. His conclusions are indeed laughable and hope nobody takes him seriously! He should be detoxified.
ReplyDeleteI must agree with Nagendra's comment that Pattnaik doesn't understand our Hindu traditions and mangles and misinterprets Hindu dharma constantly.
ReplyDeleteAs evidence, here is what I found after a brief review of his nonsense blog on Misunderstanding Saraswati, which can be found at http://devdutt.com/articles/indian-mythology/shakta/misunderstanding-saraswati.html
I detect at least seven Pattnaikisms in this blog, meaning irresponsible, unresearched and nonsensical generalizations about Hinduism that would embarrass any Hindu able to read. There may be more, but I could only stomach these seven. Post a comment if you agree or disagree with my responses. Pattnaik will probably block my blog and yours too on this site, but as he is to discover, the can't block social media.
Pattnaikism 1 “Most Hindus have reduced Saraswati to vocational training — something you learn in school to get a job.”
My response: No that is wrong. Even Wikipedia says SarasvatÄ«) is the Hindugoddess of knowledge, music, arts, wisdom and learning..” Not vocational training!
Pattnaikism 2: “She ( Saraswati) belongs to the priests and artists, just as Lakshmi or wealth belongs to baniyas (traders) and Durga or power belongs to kshatriyas (landowners).”
My response: Nonsense. Sarawsato does NOT belong to priests and artists, nor Lakshmi to traders or Durga to landowners. Where is Pattnaik getting this rubbish from? No research necessary.
Pattnaikism 3; “Animals know who they are.“
My response: Really? How does Pattnaik know this? Is he reading animal thoughts?
Pattnaikism 4: “Animals seek food (Lakshmi) and power (Durga) to get that food, or to ensure one does not become food..”
My response: Lakshmi is now food and Durga is power? What is wrong with this man Pattnaik? Again no research necessary to show what foolishness this is. Lakshmi is food indeed!
Pattnaikism 5: In social sciences, the study of Lakshmi becomes economics and study of Durga becomes politics. The study of Saraswati becomes philosophy.
My response: In whose social science does the study of Lakshmi become economics, study of Durga becomes politics and study of Saraswati become philosophy? We Hindus have no such ridiculous social science, so it must be Pattnaik and his guru the sex crazy Wendy Doniger. Again no research necessary. This is just more Pattnaik rubbish..
Pattnaikism 6 It (science) has become about technology (tantra) that enables us to control the world.
My response: Unbelievable. Technology is now tantra!!!!!!! This tantra technology enables us to control the world!!!!!!! I have to prevent myself from vomiting...
Pattnaikism 7. This wisdom-evoking Saraswati is what Brahma does not grasp even though he ‘creates’ the world. Instead, Brahma gets obsessed with controlling the world in fear.
My response: I had to read this several times before understanding its true lunacy. He says Brahma who creates the world does not grasp the wisdom inducing Saraswati! Research time again. This web site http://www.sanatansociety.org/hindu_gods_and_goddesses/brahma.htm#.WDnHR9UrLm4
says that in order to create the world Brahma made a goddess of himself, whom he called Gayatri but who was also known as Saraswati. So Saraswati is Brahma, and Brahma does not understand himself!!! Should I believe the Sanatan Society or Devdutt Pattnaik about who is Brahma and who is Saraswati? You know the answer.
Ram Jagessar
Toronto, Canada
ram.jagessar@yahoo.ca