Vishnu
As one of the most important gods in the Hindu pantheon, Vishnu is surrounded
by a number of extremely popular and well-known stories and is the focus of a
number of sects devoted entirely to his worship.
Vishnu contains a number of
personalities, often represented as ten major descents (avatars) in which the
god has taken on physical forms in order to save earthly creatures from
destruction. In one story, the earth was drowning in a huge flood, so to save it
Vishnu took on the body of a giant turtle and lifted the earth on his back out
of the waters.
A tale found in the Vedas describes a demon who could not be
conquered. Responding to the pleas of the gods, Vishnu appeared before the demon
as a dwarf. The demon, in a classic instance of pride, underestimated this dwarf
and granted him as much of the world as he could tread in three steps. Vishnu
then assumed his universal form and in three strides spanned the entire universe
and beyond, crushing the demon in the process.
The incarnation of Vishnu known to almost everyone in India is his life as
Ram (Rama in Sanskrit), a prince from the ancient north Indian kingdom of
Ayodhya, in the cycle of stories known as the Ramayana (The Travels of
Ram). On one level, this is a classic adventure story, as Ram is exiled from the
kingdom and has to wander in the forests of southern India with his beautiful
wife Sita and his loyal younger brother Lakshman. After many adventures, during
which Ram befriends the king of the monkey kingdom and joins forces with the
great monkey hero Hanuman, the demon king Ravana kidnaps Sita and takes her to
his fortress on the island of Lanka (modern Sri Lanka). A huge war then ensues,
as Ram with his animal allies attacks the demons, destroys them all, and returns
in triumph to North India to occupy his lawful throne.
Village storytellers,
street theater players, the movies, and the national television network all have
their versions of this story. In many parts of the country, but especially in
North India, the annual festival of Dussehra celebrates Ram's adventures and his
final triumph and includes the public burning of huge effigies of Ravana at the
end of several days of parties.
Everyone knows that Ram is really Vishnu, who
came down to rid the earth of the demons and set up an ideal kingdom of
righteousness--Ram Raj--which stands as an ideal in contemporary India. Sita is
in reality his consort, the goddess Lakshmi, the ideal of feminine beauty and
devotion to her husband. Lakshmi, also known as Shri, eventually became the
goddess of fortune, surplus, and happiness. Hanuman, as the faithful sidekick
with great physical and magical powers, is one of the most beloved images in the
Hindu pantheon with temples of his own throughout the country.
Another widely known incarnation is Krishna. In the Mahabharata
(Great Battle of the Descendants of Bharata), the gigantic, multivolume
epic of ancient North Indian kingdoms, Krishna appears as the ruler of one of
the many states allied either with the heroic Pandava brothers or with their
treacherous cousins, the Kauravas. Bharata was an ancient king whose
achievements are celebrated in the Mahabharata and from whose name
derives one of the names for modern India, that is Bharat.
During the final
battle, Krishna serves as charioteer for the hero Arjuna, and before the
fighting starts he bolsters Arjuna's faltering will to fight against his kin.
Krishna reveals himself as Vishnu, the supreme godhead, who has set up the
entire conflict to cleanse the earth of evildoers according to his inscrutable
will.
This section of the epic, the Bhagavad Gita , or Song of the
Lord, is one of the great jewels of world religious literature and of central
importance in modern Hinduism. One of its main themes is karma-yoga ,
or selfless discipline in offering all of one's allotted tasks in life as a
devotion to God and without attachment to consequences. The true reality is the
soul that neither slays nor is slain and that can rejoin God through selfless
dedication and through Krishna's saving grace.
A completely different cycle of stories portrays Krishna as a young cowherd,
growing up in the country after he was saved from an evil uncle who coveted his
kingdom. In this incarnation, Krishna often appears as a happy, roly-poly
infant, well known for his pranks and thefts of butter.
Although his enemies
send evil agents to destroy him, the baby miraculously survives their attacks
and kills his demonic assailants. Later, as he grows into an adolescent, he
continues to perform miracles such as saving the cowherds and their flocks from
a dangerous storm by holding up a mountain over their heads until the weather
clears.
His most striking exploits, however, are his affairs as a young adult
with the gopis (cowherding maidens), all of whom are in love with him
because of his good looks and talent with the flute.
These explicitly sexual activities, including stealing the clothes of the
maidens while they are bathing, are the basis for a wide range of poetry and
songs to Krishna as a lover; the devotee of the god takes on a female role and
directs toward the beloved lord the heartfelt longing for union with the divine.
Krishna's relationship with Radha, his favorite among the gopis , has
served as a model for male and female love in a variety of art forms, and since
the sixteenth century appears prominently as a motif in North Indian paintings.
Unlike many other deities, who are depicted as very fair in color, Krishna
appears in all these adventures as a dark lord, either black or blue in color.
In this sense, he is a figure who constantly overturns accepted conventions of
order, hierarchy, and propriety, and introduces a playful and mischievous aspect
of a god who hides from his worshipers but saves them in the end. The festival
of Holi at the spring equinox, in which people of all backgrounds play in the
streets and squirt each other with colored water, is associated with
Krishna.
In iconography Vishnu may appear as any of his ten incarnations but often
stands in sculpture as a princely male with four arms that bear a club, discus,
conch, and lotus flower. He may also appear lying on his back on the
thousand-headed king of the serpents, Shesha-Naga, in the milk ocean at the
center of time, with his feet massaged by Lakshmi, and with a lotus growing from
his navel giving birth to the god Brahma, a four-headed representation of the
creative principle.
Vishnu in this representation is the ultimate source of the
universe that he causes to expand and contract at regular cosmic intervals
measuring millions of years. On a more concrete level, Vishnu may become
incarnate at any moment on earth in order to continue to bring sentient
creatures back to himself, and a number of great religious teachers (including,
for example, Chaitanya in Bengal) are identified by their followers as
incarnations of Vishnu.
this content is derived in part or whole from the
U.S. Library of Congress Country Studies