The Devi as Mother
Devi, the Divine Female, revered by all, as is
revered a mother, is better and universally known
as the Mother Goddess. Reverence for 'mother' is
inherent in any one born, a beast or a man, and
is the first pious impulse in a child, which shapes
the flesh to a human face. The first man, it seems,
while contemplating the idea of the unseen Divine,
looked at the face of the woman who bore him, the
protective, caring and loving mother, and discovered
in her the ultimate 'divinity' and the manifest
form of the unseen Divine. Devi, the Goddess, thus,
transformed as mother and is now since ages the
Mother Goddess. The Mother Goddess is India's supreme
Divinity. Myriad are her shrines and unending her
boons. Centuries long tradition of worship has
woven around her innumerable myths and the devotional
mind has discovered in her oceans of mercy. In
fury or in frown, she is always the same protective,
caring, loving Mother with a benign face and a
blessing hand.
Mother Goddess in the Indus Valley

Mother
Goddess in Terracotta
from the Indus Valley |
This impulse seeking to combine the Divine with
mother seems to have been man's earliest spiritual
experience. At some point of time and perhaps for
an effective performance of worship rites, which
a believing or fearing mind necessitated, this
perception of mind was transformed into a material
medium. The Indus dweller further magnified it
when, for realizing his idea of the Supreme Divinity,
he elevated the Mother to the Mother Earth that
blessed him with grain, water, air, fire and afforded
for him a dwelling. The terracotta figurines of
the Mother Goddess, recovered in excavations at
various Indus sites (now mostly in Pakistan), are
not only the ever known earliest manifestations
of the Divine Power in any medium but are also
suggestive of a well evolved Mother Goddess worship
cult. As appears from the so far recovered figurines
of the Goddess datable from 3000 B. C. to the 1st
century B. C., this primitive manifestation of
the proto Mother in terracotta idols seems to have
continued to prevail till almost the beginning
of the Christian era.

Female Deity from Mohenjo-daro (Indus Valley) with Exposed Genitals |
These figurines, being made
of clay and thus defining their kinship with the
earth, of which they are
cast, represented the Mother Goddess as Mother
Earth. As significant and suggestive is her iconography-
the large breasts filled with milk, uncovered genital
organs, beautifully dressed hair and a good number
of bangles on her wrists.
This is the iconic perception
of the Being who bears, feeds, takes all calamities
on her head and covers the born one under her
protective umbrella and, at the same time, defines
in the
modeling of her form an absolute aesthetic beauty.
As suggest her bangles, the traditional emblem
of marital state, besides a mother she is also
a consort. Thus, in her material manifestation,
She represents, with absolute motherhood, also
the absolute womanhood. She causes life and sustains
it, and is also the cause of life, its inspiration
and aspiration, and the reason to live.
Mother Goddess in the Vedas and Other Early Texts

In its contemplation, the Rigveda, which seems
to have conceded to the idea of the Divine Female,
takes two different lines, one mystic and the other
traditional. The traditional line was the same
as prevailed amongst the primitive Indus community,
which perceived the Divine Female as Mother Goddess.
The Rigveda calls the Female power Mahimata (R.V.
1.164.33), a term which literally means Mother
Earth. At places, the Vedic literature alludes
to Her as Viraj, the universal mother, as Aditi,
the mother of gods, and as Ambhrini, the one born
of Primeval Ocean. The Rigveda takes a mystic line, when it perceives
the Proto Female as Vak or Vani, which, as the
creative speech, manifests the cosmos and all existing
things. In Vedic mysticism the cosmos and all things
pre-exist but are unmanifest. The Vak, or Vani
makes them manifest.

The Proto Female has been
perceived also as Ushas, the glowing light of
early morning. What the darkness
of night makes unmanifest, Ushas makes manifest.
In metaphysical theorization, which Vedic literature
enunciates, 'all things exist but become manifest
in Her, that is, in the Proto Female'. The Upanishadas
elucidate this Vedic proposition with greater clarity.
In their contemplation, the Upanishadas identify
this Vedic Proto Female as Prakriti, the manifest
nature, which is the material aspect of the Creation.
The Upanishadas suggest that She is the all-pervasive
cosmic energy inherent in all existing things.
The Vedas and Upanishadas weave around Devi a
body of mysticism, but, in popular tradition, as
suggests Harivansha Purana, a 4th-5th century religious
treatise, when it alludes Her as the Goddess of
jungle and hill tribes, She was yet the same simple
unmystified puritan Mother Goddess. Her ties with
the primitive man were emotional and relatively
strong. However, there also emerged, in simultaneity
to this worship cult, and obviously inspired by
Upanishadas' mysticism, a body of metaphysics,
which perceived the Divine Female as Shakti, the
guided cosmic energy and the transcendental source
and support of all creatures and all created things.
The Mahabharata, keeping in line with the Vedic
mysticism, alludes Her as the source of all things,
the spiritual as well as material. The epic enunciates
that all things, material and abstract, manifest
and unmanifest, are only the manifestations of
the Divine Female. According to the Mahabharata,
this metaphysical Being, the Mother Goddess of
the primitive man, is the basis, the root and the
root cause of everything. She is the eternal upholder
of Dharma and truth, the promoter of happiness
and the giver of salvation and prosperity but also
of sorrows, grief and pain. She removes obstacles
and worries and renders Her devotees' path detriment
free.
Devi in Puranic literature
During the period after the Mahabharata to the
emergence of the Puranic era around the 4th-5th
century A.D., the Devi is only the little quoted
theme in literature and art of the elite. The worship
of Devi was those days a wide spread phenomenon,
yet till her elevation to the status of a Puranic
deity, such worship was confined to only, or mostly,
around the remoter corners of the primitive world
of tribes. The tribes like Santhal, Bhumia and
others of Bihar, Orissa and Bastar yet have a live
convention of announcing their lineage at the time
of wedding of their sons as well as daughters.
Both sides begin with their origin, which is usually
from one of the nature gods and commit themselves
to Shiva, the Yogi of hills and their protector,
and Mahimata, the Mother Earth, as their Dharini,
the upholder. Quite interestingly, it depicts the
five thousand year long continuity of the cult
of worshipping Shiva, as the Mahayogi, representing
the Divine Male and Mahimata, the Mother Earth
or Mother Goddess, representing the Divine Female.
It was only after She was accommodated into the
Brahmanical pantheon, that the Mother Goddess was
an object of worship in the world of elite also.
The Devi theme, once it
becomes a part of the Brahmanical pantheon around
the 5th century A.D.,
almost explodes the entire body of Puranic literature,
with each Purana text coming out with one of Her
aspects or the other. Here, She not only occupies
the thinking mind but also its the altar. She is
invoked not only as the Supreme Power reigning
the cosmos and reigning above all gods, but as
the cosmic energy incarnate, She is invoked also
with greater thrust : "Ya Devi sarvabhuteshu
shaktirupen sansthita, Namastasye namastasye namastasye
namo namah", that is, 'O yea, the Goddess
who in the entire cosmos stands for energy form,
we make our salutations to Thee, over and over
we salute Thee' (Markandeya Purana).
Of all texts, the Markandeya Purana is most elaborate
in its Devi concept and related rites and is considered
as yet the most authentic document on the cult
of Devi. It contains a full book, known as the
Devi Mahatmya, conceptualizing and adoring Devi.
She has been identified in Markandeya Purana primarily
as Durga. On the face of it, the Markandeya Purana
seems to move away from the prior manifestation
of Devi as Mother Goddess, or Mother Earth, but
in reality it is only a continuity of the Indus
valley tradition. It is, at the most, a departure
from the iconic manifestation of the passive Indus
Mother Goddess to the operative personified representation
of the Divine Mother who abounds with myths of
Her origin and exploits, but She is yet the same
Mother Earth or the Divine Mother. The Devi Mahatmya
part of the Markandeya Purana is narrated by sage
Markandeya to king Suratha and merchant Samadhi,
who, having lost respectively their kingdom and
business, approach the sage for knowing from him
how to regain their prior status. After having
narrated the significance of the Divine Mother
and Her unique power, sage Markandeya asks them
to prepare an earthen image of the Divine Mother
and worship it. Obviously, even during Puranic
era, She best manifested as Earth and in an earthen
medium.
Devi in Metaphysical Perception
In Puranic literature, religious conventions,
anthropomorphic iconography and ritual practices,
the Mother Goddess has been diversely conceived
and variedly named. There is, however, a wondrous
unanimity in Her metaphysical visualization and
cosmic perception. In Her metaphysical perception,
whether it occurs in myths or legends, rituals
or rhetoric, classics or folk traditions, or to
the eye of a worshipper, painter, sculptor or poet,
She is the Adi Shakti, the proto energy including
in it all forms of vitality, strength, might, power,
force, proficiency, dynamism and all operative
faculties. As Adi Shakti, She represents Prakriti,
which operates in and on all things, the manifest
or otherwise, materially present or abstract. She
is the dynamic factor of the cosmos, and at the
same time She is Dhatri, the holder of all things,
whether static or moving, and is thus also constant
and firm. She is manifest nature and is thus materially
present, yet She is also the absolute Consciousness,
the thinking Mind, the universal Intellect and
the Controller of senses. She is thus the sleep,
thirst, hunger, as also the light, brilliance,
shadow and darkness. Modesty, contentment, compassion,
mercy, beauty, charm, faith, patience, quietude,
activity, movement as also vengeance, or even violence
are Her aspects. And, above all, She is the Universal
Mother.
Devi's cosmic perception is a mix of metaphysics
and mythology. In India's metaphysical perception
the Creation has been perceived as comprising of
two factors, variedly named as Prakriti and Purusha,
Matter and Self, Male and Female and the like.
Mythology identifies them as Shiva and Shakti.
Prakriti or Matter, which in metaphysical equation
Female represents, is the manifest aspect of Creation
while Purusha or Self its unmanifest aspect. In
mythological perception this equation undergoes
a change. Here Shiva is Shava, the inanimate Being
and Shakti, the energy incarnate, His enlivening
and operative power. Without Shakti Shiva is the
dead mass. Symbolically Shakti is the inherent
energy of all things, whether manifest or unmanifest.
This Shakti factor, a concept of metaphysics, is
perceived in mythological contemplation as Devi
and in primitive vision as the Divine Female.
Other Dimensions of Devi Related Mythology The primitive concept of the Divine Female seems
to be that of a non-operative boon giver votive
deity who the primitive man realized iconically
but did not humanize. The Puranic Devi, or the
Mother Goddess, despite the related metaphysics,
is more a humanized Being with an abundance of
mythology woven around Her. After the Puranas vested
in Her operative attributes, they conceived Her
not only in various roles but also with innumerable
personality aspects and in different manifestations.
There grew around Her theories of Her origin, myths
of Her manifest and incarnate forms, fables of
Her various exploits and annals of Her acts of
charity and benevolence.
As to Her origin, there prevail innumerable myths,
although only two of them are more quoted and have
greater relevance to the over-all Devi cult. One
of them points out towards Her exploits against
evil and restoring righteousness and in the other
She is conceived as preceding all of the Gods-Trio
(Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva).
In one case, She was created
out of the gods' celestial powers with all their
attributes vested
in Her. In the other, She had always existed but
appeared as and when required.
As the tradition has it, a buffalo demon Mahishasura
ruled the earth. The tyrannous demon inflicted
upon all creatures great atrocities and rendered
life miserable. He even invaded heaven, the seat
of Indra and other gods and drove them out of the
holy place. Under a sanction from Brahma Mahishasura
was invincible against any male, a beast or human
born. After Brahma made the disclosure of his boon,
gods decided to seek a female warrior for eliminating
the buffalo demon. When they found none capable
to accomplish their object, they decided to create
such one out of themselves and by their own powers.
They decided to create a female warrior, who was
unique in might and unparalleled in beauty and
charm, as she could be required to bewitch and
beguile the demon also by them. Accordingly, her
head was formed by the powers of Shiva, her hair
by those of Yama and her arms, breasts, waist,
feet, toe-nails, fingernails, nose, teeth, eyes,
brows and ears respectively with those of Vishnu,
Moon, Indra, Brahma, Sun, Vasu, Kuber, Prajapati,
Agni, Twilight and Vayu. Her glittering jewels
and ornaments were Ocean's gift and her necklace
inlaid with celestial gems that of the great Serpent
Shesh.
The Devi emerged with three eyes and eighteen
hands carrying in them various celestial weapons,
the instruments of war and destruction- Shiva's
trident, Vishnu's disc, Varuna's conch, Vayu's
bow, Agni's dart, Yama's iron rod, Surya's quiver,
Indra's thunderbolt, Kuber's mace, Brahma's rosary
and water pot, Kala's sword and shield, Vishwakarma's
battle axe and many others. Himvana gave her a
lion to ride. The enthused gods rejoiced and in
gratitude prostrated before Mahadevi, as they called
Her. Mahamuni Narada then narrated to Her the plight
of gods, hearing which She proceeded to annihilate
Mahishasura and killed him in no time.

As significant is Her other cult. The text called
Devi Bhagawat was the first to propound it. After
the Great Deluge Vishnu emerged as a child floating
upon a fig leaf. In dismay, he asked himself as to who he was,
who created him and why he was there. Suddenly
there emerged a celestial voice that announced-
all that is, it is me. Me alone is eternal. Puzzled
he looked around and saw a celestial female with
four hands emerging before him. She carried a conch,
disc, club and lotus, wore divine clothes and jewels
and was attended by twenty-one powers, more important
ones being Rati, the goddess of love and erotic,
Bhuti, the goddess of riches and prosperity, Buddhi,
the goddess of wisdom, Kirti, the goddess of credibility,
Smriti, the memory, Nidra, the sleep, Daya, the
compassion, Gati, the movement and pace, Tusti,
the contentment, Pusti, the growth and affirmation,
Kshama, the forbearance, Lajja, the grace and Tandra,
the lethargy. Vishnu realized that She was the
Adi Shakti Mahadevi and bowed to Her in reverence.
Devi's Symbolism
In one mythological tradition, Devi's emergence
has been linked with Mahishasura. Mahishasura is
not the beast in man but rather the human face
taking to the face of a beast, and that too, to
none else but to that of a buffalo, the most insensitive,
self-contained epitome of evil. This suggests total
human failure, which none of the gods, equipped
only with this or that attribute or representing
just this or that virtue, could repair. Only Devi,
the supreme virtue equipped with all weapons and
means of war, the Divine Totality, could change
such state of affairs.

The other myth suggests that Devi preceded Gods
Trio. She not only annihilated evil and paved the
way for virtue and good to prevail but also revealed
cosmic mystery. Her multi-arms suggest Her multi-fold
protective umbrella and role. When Mahishasura,
the male, contains energy, it leads to evil, the
self-centered unguided might breeding ego, greed
to acquire and possess more, an ambition to conquer
and rule, but when contained in a female frame,
it is only the guided power eradicating evil, perpetuating
good and virtue and despite that She held arms
and resorted to killing, She has attending upon
Her only virtues and celestial attributes. She
is multi-armed but has a single head, that is,
whatever the number of operative organs, the guiding
faculty that breeds determination, is just one
and single.
The Manifest Forms of the Divine Female

This Devi form, irrespective of Her origin-cult
and evolution, has multiple manifestations, the
prime ones being three. The Markandeya Purana and
almost all other Puranas perceive Devi, the Universal
Mother, primarily in Her role as warrior or destroyer,
sustainer and creator, three aspects of cosmic
act which vest with Trinity. As warrior, She is
Mahakali, the Destroyer who eradicates evil, evil
doers and wrongs and restores good and righteousness.
As sustainer, She is Mahalakshmi, who bestows bliss,
prosperity, wealth and material happiness and yields
good crop and abundant grain. And, finally, as
supreme wisdom and all knowing intellect, She is
Mahasaraswati, who nourishes all creative faculties,
arts, music, dance and creativity. In anthropomorphic
visualization Mahakali, is the Shaktirupa, the
energy incarnate and is hence multi-armed, their
number varying from four to eighteen or even more,
and carries in each of them an instrument of destruction.
She also grants abhaya and varada and thus, on
one hand eradicates evil and on the other protects
good ones.

The four-armed Mahalakshmi carries
primarily the lotus, which rises from the earth,
routes across
and above the water and sprouts into the air and
sky.

It pervades with its glow and fragrance all three
worlds. The four-armed shubhra-vasana, Mahasaraswati,
the Goddess clad in white, rides a lotus, and subsequently
a swan, both symbolizing purity, chastity and detached
knowledge.

The Puranas thus begin personifying Her in various
aspects and initiate Her variedly conceived iconic
and anthropomorphic formations. The warrior and
demon slayer Mahakali is perceived also as Durga
who for accomplishing Her object takes to other
forms and creates for Her aid subordinate powers
as Mahavidyas and Matrikas. Different from the
black complexioned Mahakali, who wears a ferocious
look, Durga, though still the same demon slayer,
has golden complexion, a benign face and feminine
softness.
The Puranas disapproved renunciation and discovered
in family life itself means of salvation. They
hence perceived their Divinities not as recluses
or mendicants but as householders, as the Divine
couples. They perceived the abstract Supreme Being
of the Vedas manifest as Gods-Trio, Brahma, Vishnu
and Shiva, and associated with each of the Trio
one of Devi's manifest form, Durga or Mahakali
with Shiva, Mahalakshmi with Vishnu and Mahasaraswati
with Brahma.
Shiva is also the proto lover and then Durga,
his consort, manifests as the humble domestic Parvati.
Parvati, the white complexioned daughter of Himalaya,
is also Shiva's loving Gauri. While in exile from
Baikuntha to hills of South, Vishnu takes to Venkatesh
as his name. Here his consort Lakshmi, or Mahalakshmi
emerges as Padmavati. When Vishnu incarnates as
Rama his consort Lakshmi emerges as Sita and when
he incarnates as Krishna, Lakshmi incarnates as
Radha. Brahma's consort Mahasaraswati is better
known as Sharada and most of her ancient shrines
are devoted to her only in her name as Sharada.
The ancient sculptures of Sharada follow Durga's
iconic norms.
Matrikas and Mahavidyas
The Puranas like Skandapurana, Devipurana, Brahmavaivartapurana,
Devibhagawata, Prapanchasaratantra, Lingapurana
etceteras, have conceived of other forms of Shakti
to couple other important male gods. The more widely
accepted number of such manifestations of Shakti
is seven, though in some of these and other Puranas
it is eight and even more. They are better known
as the Saptamatrikas, or Seven Mothers. In Matrika
cult, Brahma's consort is known as Brahmani, Shiva's
as Maheshvari, Raudri or Rudrani and Vishnu's as
Vaishnavi. In his Varah incarnation, Vishnu's consort
is Varahi and in Narsimha incarnation Narsimhi.
The consort of Shiva's son Karttikeya is Kaumari,
or Karttikeyani, that of Indra Indrani or Mahendri
and of Yama Chamunda or Chamundi.
There prevail two myths in relation to Saptamatrikas.
A demon Andhaka had the boon to get every drop
of his blood that fell on earth transformed into
yet another Andhaka. The demon thus multiplied
himself in the battlefield rendering his opponent
impossible to eliminate him. Once he attempted
to take away Shiva's consort Parvati. Shiva shot
an arrow at him. The blood gushed from his body
but only to create many more Andhakas. Finally
gods sent their Shaktis to assist Shiva. These
Shaktis licked each drop of demon's blood before
it fell on earth. Another version of the myth is
almost similar to it except that demon's name was
this time Raktabija and instead of Shiva his consort
Durga confronted him. Durga created Saptamatrikas
by her own power to assist her in eliminating the
demon.
Other significant manifestations of Devi have
been perceived in ritual tradition as Ten Mahavidyas.
Though a late cult, individually some of the Mahavidyas,
say Kali, have quite an early origin. Their number
coincides with Vishnu's ten incarnations and is,
hence, interpreted as the Shakta or Shaivite version
of ten-incarnation Vaishnava cult. In Devi theology,
Devi, like Vishnu, has been revered as the creator
and maintainer of the cosmic order. Sometimes Vishnu's
incarnations are considered as arising from these
Mahavidyas, as Kali becoming Krishna, Chinnamasta
becoming Narsimha and so on. These Mahavidyas are
Kali, Tara, Chinnamasta, Bhuvaneshwari, Bagala,
Dhumavati, Kamala, Matangi, Sodasi and Bhairavi,
and are more or less the tantrika innovations of
the Divine Female.
Devi in Popular Tradition
The tradition of worshipping the Mother Goddess,
in whatever name, thus, has very early beginning.
It is believed Rama invoked Devi when he felt that
without her blessings he would not be able to eliminate
Ravana. Sikhs' tenth Guru Gobind Singh and the
great Maratha warrior Shivaji invoked her to assist
them in accomplishing their object.

During India's struggle for freedom her sons resorted
to Devi and perceived their land as Bharat-Mata.
Reciting Vande Mataram, that is, salutation to
Thee, Mother, they laid their lives for her freedom.
She is now India's most widely worshipped deity
and has associated with her more festivals and
events than has any other Divinity.
References and Further Reading
- Aitareya-brahmana (the
Rigveda Brahmana) translated by Arthur B. Keith,
Delhi.
- Bhattacharya, N.N.
The History of Sakta Religion, New Delhi.
- Bhattacharya, N.N.
Indian Mother Goddess, Calcutta.
- Brown, Cheever Mackenzie.
God is Mother: A feminine Theology in India,
Hartford.
- Coburn Thomas B. Consort
of None, Sakti of All: The vision of the Devi
Mahatmya In The Divine Consort: Radha and Goddesses
of India, edited by John Stratton Hawley and
Donna Marie Wulff, Berkeley, California.
- Devi Bhagavata Purana,
Banaras.
- (Devi Mahatmya) The
Glorification of the Great Goddess edited and
translated by Vasodeva Sharan Agrawal, Banaras.
- Dehejia, Vidya. Devi
: the Great Goddess, Washington D.C. & Ahmedabad.
- Hymns to Kali (Karpuradi
Stotra), edited and translated by Arthur Avalon,
Madras.
- Kinsley, David. Hindu
Goddesses, Delhi.
- Kumar Pushpendra. Shakti
Cutl in Ancient India, Banaras.
- Mahabharata. Edited
by Vishnu S. Sukthankar, Poona.
- Marshall, Sir John
(edited) Mohenjo-dara and Indus Civilization
(3 vols.), London.
- Rg-veda with commentary
of Sayan. Edited by Sontakke and C.G. Kashikar,
Poona.
- The Sakta Upanishads,
translated by A.G. Krishna Warrier, Madras.
- Skanda Purana. (3 vols)
Calcutta.
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