Culture
(Wikimedia Commons)
Chilapathikaram, an ancient Tamil epic thought to have been composed at-least 1500 years ago, narrates the drama of the Divine Feminine in a human setting, with its main focus on polity – science of just governance.
Many consider the values enshrined in the work as belonging to Jainism. This is the nuanced, colonial way of viewing India, which says that anything ethical here came from Jainism or Buddhism, while anything magical and/or ritualistic gets attributed to Hinduism.
In reality, the ethics of governance emphasized in Chilapathikaram belong well to the Vedic realm and it was the connecting chord running through the universe of the Hindu family of religions – Saivaite, Vaishnavaite, Buddhist or Jain.
The kavi declares that for those who enter the domain of governance, Dharma could verily kill, were they to deviate from it.
It was not a mere coincidence or even a dramatic device that it was from the throne that the Pandya king falls and dies. There is powerful Vedic Goddess-symbolism here.
Archeologist Frederik David Kan Bosch (1887-1967) who had worked extensively in Indonesia points out how this symbolism continued to be vigorous throughout history. Through a detailed study he identifies the throne with the Vedic Altar and Vedic Altar with both Vac as the primordial source of all existence and through Dharma – that which sustains to Prithvi.
This passage deeply entrenched in Vedic wisdom – coming from a Western archeologist- should shame many of our home-grown political thinkers and Westernized historians. The throne of the king was magical because it was the Vedic altar and also Aditi. But the same space – equally holy and sacred and powerful is present in the inner heart of each and every human being.
No wonder a Kannagi could go to the court of the king and charge him with injustice and cause his death. That is why in India the king was considered as not a person enjoying divine rights but a monarch burdened with divine duties. Yes, there was power and luxury as everywhere else. But only in India did the tradition of the throne as a womb of the Goddess become a living reality.
Thus, the statement of the kavi—that for those who are in the domain of governance and polity, straying from Dharma would bring forth destruction—is verily a Vedic wisdom and wisdom of the Goddess. In fact, this gels far more with the general spirit of the narrative of Chilapathikaram than with the Jain or Buddhist principle as perceived by the colonial and colonised scholarship.
The symbolism of a throne as the Dharmic lap of Vedic Goddess is actually universal.
We know that the idea of the Goddess as the Goddess-of-the-throne was present very much in Egypt. Her name was Isis. She was worshipped in the Nile valley for almost 3,000 years, from the predynastic period to the second century CE, before Christianity took over. She was worshiped as ‘goddess of the words of power; the tender, caring mother of Horus, her son; and goddess of the throne upon whose sovereign lap the king sat as her infant child in the image of all humanity.
Closely associated with Isis and central to the Egyptian pantheon is Maat. Maat is to ancient Egyptians what Rta is to Vedic Hindus. Atum, the solar God of Egypt speaks of Maat as ‘one within me, the other around me.’
Anne Baring and Jules Cashford in their study of the evolution of the Goddess image in the West speak of these double Maat as symbolizing 'at one level, the union of the South and the North (Upper and Lower Egypt), and, at another, the union of individual and universal or cosmic consciousness, which creates harmony.'
Though later Isis herself gets identified with Maat explicitly, the close relation between Isis, the throne Goddess, and Maat, the Goddess of Rta, is shown by Isis wearing Ostrich feathers, the symbol of Maat.
We do not have the faintest idea regarding how Egyptian religion and mysticism would have evolved had they withstood and survived the onslaught of monopolistic expansionism.
Later when Europe itself moved from monarchy and theological state to democracy and secularism they mapped the same conceptual evolution onto the only remaining Pagan civilization – Hindu.