VQ 122 LL ICHX7 XSF BXYsr

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 15

CHAPTER

06
Bhakti-Sufi Traditions:
Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts

Introduction
We saw in an earlier chapter that by the mid-first millennium CE the landscape of the subcontinent was dotted with a
variety of religious structures like stupas, monasteries, temples. If these typified certain religious beliefs and practices, others
have been reconstructed from textual traditions, including the Puranas, many of which received their present shape around
the same time, and yet others remain only faintly visible in textual and visual records.
New textual sources available from this period include compositions attributed to poet-saints, most of whom expressed
themselves orally in regional languages used by ordinary people. These compositions, which were often set to music, were
compiled by disciples or devotees, generally after the death of the poet-saint. What is more, these traditions were fluid,
generations of devotees tended to elaborate on the original message, and occasionally modified or even abandoned some of
the ideas that appeared problematic or irrelevant in different political, social or cultural contexts. Using these sources thus
poses a challenge to historians.
Historians also draw on hagiographies or biographies of saints written by their followers (or members of their religious
sect). These may not be literally accurate, but allow a glimpse into the ways in which devotees perceive the lives of these path
breaking women and men. As we will see, these sources provide us with insights into a scenario characterized by dynamism
and diversity. Let us look at some elements of these more closely.

1. A Mosaic of Religious Beliefs and Practices:


Perhaps the most striking feature
of this phase is the increasing
visibility of a wide range of gods
and goddesses in sculpture as well
as in texts. At one level, this
indicates the continued and even
extended worship of the major
deities – Vishnu, Shiva and the
goddess – each of whom was
visualized in a variety of forms.

1.1 The integration of cults:


Historians who have tried to understand these developments suggest that there were at least two processes at work.
One was a process of disseminating Brahmanical ideas. This is exemplified by the composition, compilation and
preservation of Puranic texts in simple Sanskrit verse, explicitly meant to be accessible to women and Shudras, who were
generally excluded from Vedic learning. At the same time, there was a second process at work – that of the Brahmanas
accepting and reworking the beliefs and practices of these and other social categories. In fact, many beliefs and practices
were shaped through a continuous dialogue between what sociologists have described as “great” Sanskritic Puranic
traditions and “little” traditions throughout the land. One of the most striking examples of this process is evident at Puri,
Orissa, where the principal deity was identified, by the twelfth century, as Jagannatha (literally, the lord of the world), a
form of Vishnu.

You will notice that the deity is represented in a very different way. In this instance, a local deity, whose image was
and continues to be made of wood by local tribal specialists, was recognized as a form of Vishnu. At the same time, Vishnu
was visualized in a way that was very different from that in other parts of the country. Such instances of integration are
evident amongst goddess cults as well. Worship of the goddess, often simply in the form of a stone smeared with ochre, was
evidently widespread. These local deities were often incorporated within the Puranic framework by providing them with
an identity as a wife of the principal male deities; sometimes they were equated with Lakshmi, the wife of Vishnu, in other
instances, with Parvati, the wife of Shiva.

1.2 Difference and conflict:


Often associated with the goddess were forms of worship that were
classified as Tantric. Tantric practices were widespread in several parts of
the subcontinent, they were open to women and men and practitioners often
ignored differences of caste and class within the ritual context. Many of these
ideas influenced Shaivism as well as Buddhism, especially in the eastern,
northern and southern parts of the subcontinent.
All of these somewhat divergent and even disparate beliefs and practices
would come to be classified as Hindu over the course of the next millennium.
The divergence is perhaps most stark if we compare Vedic and Puranic
traditions. The principal deities of the Vedic pantheon, Agni, Indra and Soma,
become marginal figures, rarely visible in textual or visual representations.
And while we can catch a glimpse of Vishnu, Shiva and the goddess in Vedic
mantras, these have little in common with the elaborate Puranic
mythologies. However, in spite of these obvious discrepancies, the Vedas
continued to be revered as authoritative. Not surprisingly, there were
sometimes conflicts as well – those who valued the Vedic tradition often
condemned practices that went beyond the closely regulated contact with
the divine through the performance of sacrifices or precisely chanted
mantras. On the other hand, those engaged in Tantric practices frequently
ignored the authority of the Vedas. Also, devotees often tended to project
their chosen deity, either Vishnu or Shiva, as supreme. Relations with other
traditions, such as Buddhism or Jainism, were also often fraught with tension
if not open conflict. The traditions of devotion or bhakti need to be located
within this context. Devotional worship had a long history of almost a
thousand years before the period we are considering. During this time, expressions of devotion ranged from the routine
worship of deities within temples to ecstatic adoration where devotees attained a trance-like state. The singing and chanting
of devotional compositions DO YOU KNOW?
were often a part of such Great Tradition: The cultural practices of major social groups are called great traditions.
modes of worship. This was Small tradition: This is a tradition that does not match the great tradition.
particularly true of the The Unification of the Cult: Methods of Worship.
Vaishnava and Shaiva sects. Jagannath: Lord of the worlds.
Tantrism: Gold worship.
1. Poems of Prayer Early Traditions of Bhakti:
In the course of the evolution of these forms of worship, in many instances, poet-saints
emerged as leaders around whom there developed a community of devotees. Further, while
Brahmanas remained important intermediaries
between gods and devotees in several forms of
bhakti, these traditions also accommodated and
acknowledged women and the “lower castes”,
categories considered ineligible for liberation
within the orthodox Brahmanical framework.
What also characterized traditions of bhakti
was a remarkable diversity. At a different level,
historians of religion often classify bhakti
traditions into two broad categories: Saguna
(with attributes) and Nirguna (without attributes). The former included traditions
that focused on the worship of specific deities such as Shiva, Vishnu and his avatars
(incarnations) and forms of the goddess or Devi, all often conceptualized in
anthropomorphic forms. Nirguna bhakti on the other hand was worship of an abstract form of God.

2. The Alvars and Nayanars of Tamil Nadu:


Some of the earliest bhakti movements (c. sixth century)
were led by the Alvars (literally, those who are
“immersed” in devotion to Vishnu) and Nayanaras
(literally, leaders who were devotees of Shiva). They
travelled from place-to-place singing hymns in Tamil in
praise of their gods.
During their travels the Alvars and Nayanaras identified
certain shrines as abodes of their chosen deities. Very
often large temples were later built at these sacred places.
These developed as centers of pilgrimage. Singing
compositions of these poet-saints became part of temple
rituals in these shrines, as did worship of the saints’ images.

2.2 Attitudes towards caste:


Some historians suggest that the
Alvars and Nayanaras initiated a
movement of protest against the
caste system and the dominance
of Brahmanas or at least
attempted to reform the system.
To some extent this is
corroborated by the fact that
bhaktas hailed from diverse social
backgrounds ranging from
Brahmanas to artisans and
cultivators and even from castes
considered “untouchable”. The
importance of the traditions of the
Alvars and Nayanaras was
sometimes indicated by the claim that their compositions were as important as the Vedas. For instance, one of the major
anthologies of compositions by the Alvars, the Naalayira Divya Prabandham, was frequently described as the Tamil Veda, thus
claiming that the text was as significant as the four Vedas in Sanskrit that were cherished by the Brahmanas.
2.3 Women devotees:
Perhaps one of the most striking features of
these traditions was the presence of women.
For instance, the compositions of Andal, a
woman Alvar, were widely sung (and
continue to be sung to date). Andal saw
herself as the beloved of Vishnu; her versus
expressing her love for the deity. Another
woman, Karaikal Ammaiyar, a devotee of
Shiva, adopted the path of extreme
asceticism in order to attain her goal. Her
compositions were preserved within the
Nayanaras tradition. These women
renounced their social obligations, but did not join an alternative order or become nuns. Their very existence and their
compositions posed a challenge to patriarchal norms.

2.4 Relations with the state:


There were several important chiefdoms in the Tamil region in the early first millennium CE. From the second half of the first
millennium there is evidence for states, including those of the Pallavas and Pandyas (c. sixth to ninth centuries CE). While
Buddhism and Jainism had been prevalent in this region for several centuries, drawing support from merchant and artisan
communities, these religious traditions received occasional royal patronage. Interestingly, one of the major themes in Tamil
bhakti hymns is the poets’ opposition to Buddhism and Jainism. This is particularly marked in the compositions of the Nayanaras.
Historians have attempted to explain this hostility by suggesting that it was due to competition between members of other
religious traditions for royal patronage. What is evident is that the powerful Chola rulers (ninth to thirteenth centuries)
supported Brahmanical and bhakti traditions, making land grants and constructing temples for Vishnu and Shiva. In fact, some
of the most magnificent Shiva temples, including those at Chidambaram, Thanjavur and GangaiKondacholapuram, were
constructed under the patronage of Chola rulers. This was also the period when some of the most spectacular representations
of Shiva in bronze sculpture were produced. Clearly, the visions of the Nayanaras inspired artists. Both Nayanaras and Alvars
were revered by the Vellalar peasants. Not surprisingly, rulers tried to win their support as well. The Chola kings, for instance,
often attempted to claim divine support and proclaim their own power and status by building splendid temples that were
adorned with stone and metal sculpture to recreate the visions of these popular saints who sang in the language of the people.
These kings also introduced the singing of Tamil Shaiva hymns in the temples under royal patronage, taking the initiative to
collect and organise them into a text (Tevaram). Further, inscriptional evidence from around 945 suggests that the Chola ruler
Parantaka-I had consecrated metal images of Appar, Sambandar and Sundarar in a Shiva temple. These were carried in
processions during the festivals of these saints.

3. The Vira Shaiva Tradition in Karnataka:


The twelfth century witnessed the emergence of a
new movement in Karnataka, led by a Brahmana
named Basa-Vanna (1106-68) who was a minister in
the court of a Kalachuri ruler. His followers were
known as Virashaivas (heroes of Shiva) or Lingayats
(wearers of the Linga). Lingayats continue to be an
important community in the region to date. They
worship Shiva in his manifestation as a Linga, and
men usually wear a small linga in a silver case on a
loop strung over the left shoulder. Those who are
revered include the jangama or wandering monks.
Lingayats believe that on death the devotee will be
united with Shiva and will not return to this world.
Therefore, they do not practice funerary rites such as
cremation, prescribed in the Dharmashastras.
Instead, they ceremonially bury their dead. The
Lingayats challenged the idea of caste and the
“pollution” attributed to certain groups by Brahmanas. DO YOU KNOW?
They also questioned the theory of rebirth. These won Alwar: A devotee of Vishnu in South India.
them followers amongst those who were marginalized Nayanaras: Shiva devotees in South India.
within the Brahmanical social order. The Lingayats also Saguna Bhakti: Bhakti focuses on the worship of Shiva, Vishnu
encouraged certain practices disapproved in the and Devi.
Dharmashastras, such as post-puberty marriage and the Nirguna Bhakti: Worshiping the formless or formless form of
remarriage of widows. Our understanding of the Vira- God.
Shaiva tradition is derived from vachanas (literally, Tavaram: A collection of poems in Tamil.
sayings) composed in Kannada by women and men who
joined the movement.

3. Religious Ferment in North India:


During the same period, in north India
deities such as Vishnu and Shiva were
worshiped in temples, often built with
the support of rulers. However,
historians have not found evidence of
anything resembling the compositions of
the Alvars and Nayanaras till the
fourteenth century. How do we account
for this difference? Some historians point
out that in north India this was the period
when several Rajput states emerged. In
most of these states Brahmanas occupied
positions of importance, performing a
range of secular and ritual functions. There seems to have been little or no attempt to challenge their position directly. At the
same time other religious leaders, who did not function within the orthodox Brahmanical framework, were gaining ground.
These included the Naths, Yogis and Siddhas. Many of them came from artisanal groups, including weavers, who were becoming
increasingly important with the development of organized craft production. Demand for such production grew with the
emergence of new urban centers, and long-distance trade with Central Asia and West Asia. Many of these new religious leaders
questioned the authority of the Vedas, and expressed themselves in languages spoken by ordinary people, which developed over
centuries into the ones used today. However, in spite of their popularity these religious leaders were not in a position to win the
support of the ruling elites. A new element in this situation was the coming of the Turks which culminated in the establishment
of the Delhi Sultanate (thirteenth
century). This undermined the power of DO YOU KNOW?
many of the Rajput states and the Mama: Religious scholar of Islamic studies.
Brahmanas who were associated with Sharia: The law governing the Muslim community.
these kingdoms. This was accompanied Maktubat: Letters written by Sufi saints.
by marked changes in the realm of Tajkiras: Biography of the Saints.
culture and religion. The coming of the Sangat: A religious community where followers gather in the morning and
sufis (Section 6) was a significant part of evening to listen to the teacher's sermons.
these developments.

4. New Strands in the Fabric Islamic Traditions:


Just as the regions within the subcontinent were not
isolated from one another, so too, contact with lands
beyond the seas and mountains had existed for
millennia. Arab merchants, for instance, frequented
ports along the western coast in the first millennium
CE, while Central Asian people settled in the north-
western parts of the subcontinent during the same
period. From the seventh century, with the advent of
Islam, these regions became part of what is often
termed the Islamic world.
5.1 Faiths of rulers and subjects:

One axis of understanding the significance of these connections that is frequently adopted is to focus on the religions of ruling
elites. In 711 an Arab general named Muhammad Qassim conquered Sind, which became part of the Caliph’s domain. Later
(c. thirteenth century) the Turks and Afghans established the Delhi Sultanate. This was followed by the formation of Sultanates
in the Deccan and other parts of the subcontinent; Islam was an acknowledged religion of rulers in several areas. This continued
with the establishment of the Mughal Empire in the sixteenth century as well as in many of the regional states that emerged in
the eighteenth century. Theoretically, Muslim rulers were to be guided by the ulama, who were expected to ensure that they
ruled according to the shari‘a. Clearly, the situation was complicated in the subcontinent, where there were populations that did
not subscribe to Islam. It is in this context that the category of the zimmi, meaning protected (derived from the Arabic word
zimmi, protection) developed for people who followed revealed
scriptures, such as the Jews and Christians, and lived under Muslim DO YOU KNOW?
rulership. They paid a tax called jizya and gained the right to be 1206: Delhi Sultanate established
protected by Muslims. In India this status was extended to Hindus as 1236: Death of Sheikh Moinuddin Chisti
well. As you will see (Chapter 9), rulers such as the Mughals came to 1469: Birth of Guru Nanak Dev ji
regard themselves as emperors of not just Muslims but of all peoples. In 1604: Compilation of Guru Granth Sahib
effect, rulers often adopted a fairly flexible policy towards their subjects. 1699: The Khalsa sect is founded by Guru
For instance, several rulers gave land endowments and granted tax Gobind Singh, a prominent religious
exemptions to Hindu, Jaina, Zoroastrian, Christian and Jewish religious leader of the subcontinent. This
institutions and also expressed respect and devotion towards non- chronology refers to the periods of the
Muslim religious leaders. These grants were made by several Mughal major sages and the Reformation era.
rulers, including Akbar and Aurangzeb.

5.2 The popular practice of Islam:


The developments that followed the coming of Islam were not confined to ruling elites; in fact they permeated far and wide,
through the subcontinent, amongst different social strata – peasants, artisans, warriors, merchants, to name a few. All those who
adopted Islam accepted, in principle, the five “pillars” of the faith: that there is one God, Allah, and Prophet Muhammad is his
messenger (shahada); offering prayers five times a day (namaz/salat); giving alms (zakat); fasting during the month of Ramzan
(sawm); and performing the pilgrimage to Mecca (hajj). However, these universal features were often overlaid with diversities
in practice derived from sectarian affiliations (Sunni, Shia), and the influence of local customary practices of converts from
different social milieus. For example, the Khojahs, a branch of the Ismailis (a Shia sect), developed new modes of communication,
disseminating ideas derived from the Qur’an through indigenous literary genres. These included the ginan (derived from the
Sanskrit jnana, meaning “knowledge”), devotional poems in Punjabi, Multani, Sindhi, Kachchi, Hindi and Gujarati, sung in special
ragas during daily prayer meetings. Elsewhere, Arab Muslim traders who settled along the Malabar coast (Kerala) adopted the
local language, Malayalam. They also adopted local customs such as matriliny and matrilocal residence. The complex blend of a
universal faith with local traditions is perhaps best exemplified in the architecture of mosques. Some architectural features of
mosques are universal – such as their orientation towards Mecca, evident in the placement of the mihrab (prayer niche) and the
minbar (pulpit). However, there are several features that show variations – such as roofs and building materials.

5.3 Names for communities:


We often take the terms Hindu and Muslim for granted, as labels for religious communities. Yet, these terms did not gain
currency for a very long time. Historians who have studied Sanskrit texts and inscriptions
dating between the eighth and fourteenth centuries point out that the term musalmaan
or Muslim was virtually never used. Instead, people were occasionally identified in terms
of the region from which they came. So, the Turkish rulers were designated as Turushka,
Tajika were people from Tajikistan and Parashika were people from Persia. Sometimes,
terms used for other peoples were applied to the new migrants. For instance, the Turks
and Afghans were referred to as Shakas (Chapters 2 and 3) and Yavanas (a term used for
Greeks). A more general term for these migrant communities was mlechchha, indicating
that they did not observe the norms of caste society and spoke languages that were not
derived from Sanskrit. Such terms sometimes had a derogatory connotation, but they
rarely denoted a distinct religious community of Muslims in opposition to Hindus. And as
we saw (Chapter 5), the term “Hindu” was used in a variety of ways, not necessarily
restricted to a religious connotation.

5. The Growth of Sufism:


In the early centuries of Islam, a group of religious minded people called Sufis turned to asceticism and mysticism in protest
against the growing materialism of the Caliphate as a religious and political institution.
They were critical of the dogmatic definitions and scholastic methods of interpreting
the Qur’an and Sunnah (traditions of the Prophet) adopted by theologians. Instead,
they laid emphasis on seeking salvation through intense devotion and love for God by
following His commands, and by following the example of the Prophet Muhammad
whom they regarded as a perfect human being. The Sufis thus sought an interpretation
of the Qur’an on the basis of their personal experience.

6.1 Khanqahs and Silsilas:


By the eleventh century Sufism evolved
into a well-developed movement with a
body of literature on Quranic studies and
Sufi practices. Institutionally, the Sufis
began to organize communities around the
hospice or khanqah (Persian) controlled by
a teaching master known as shaikh (in
Arabic), pir or murshid (in Persian). He
enrolled disciples (murids) and appointed
a successor (khalifah). He established rules
for spiritual conduct and interaction between inmates as well as between
laypersons and the master. Sufi Silsilas began to crystallize in different parts of
the Islamic world around the twelfth century. The word Silsila literally means a chain, signifying a continuous link between
master and disciple, stretching as an unbroken spiritual genealogy to the Prophet Muhammad. It was through this channel that
spiritual power and blessings were transmitted to devotees. Special rituals of initiation were developed in which initiates took
an oath of allegiance, wore a patched garment, and shaved their hair. When the shaikh died, his tomb-shrine (dargah, a Persian
term meaning court) became the centre of devotion for his followers. This encouraged the practice of pilgrimage or ziyarat to
his grave, particularly on his death anniversary or urs (or marriage, signifying the union of his soul with God). This was because
people believed that in death saints were united with God, and were thus closer to Him than when living. People sought their
blessings to attain material and spiritual benefits. Thus evolved the cult of the shaikh revered as wali.

6.2 Outside the khanqah:


Some mystics-initiated movements
based on a radical interpretation of
sufi ideals. Many scorned the khanqah
and took to mendicancy and observed
celibacy. They ignored rituals and
observed extreme forms of
asceticism. They were known by
different names – Qalandars, Madaris,
Malangs, Haidaris, etc. Because of
their deliberate defiance of the
sharia’s they were often referred to as
Be-sharia’s, in contrast to the Ba-
sharia’s Sufis who complied with it.

DO YOU KNOW?
500-800: CE Upper, Sambandar, Sundaramurthy in Tamil Nadu
800-900: The teachings of Nammalwar, Manikkavachar, Andal and Thondaradipodi in Tamil Nadu influence people all
over India.
1000-1100: Al Hujwiri, Data Ganj Bakhsh in Punjab, Ramanujacharya in Tamil Nadu
1100-1200: Basavanna in Karnataka
1200-1300: Muktabai in Gyandev, Maharashtra; Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti in Rajasthan; Bahauddin Zakariya and
Fariduddin Ganj-e Shakar in Punjab; Qutbuddin Bakhtiyar Kaki from Delhi.

6. The Chishtis in the Subcontinent:


Of the groups of sufis who migrated to India in the late twelfth century, the Chishti were the most influential. This was because
they adapted successfully to the local environment and adopted several features of Indian devotional traditions.
7.1 Life in the Chishti khanqah:
The khanqah was the center of social life. We know
about Shaikh Nizamuddin’s hospice (c. fourteenth
century) on the banks of the river Yamuna in
Ghiyaspur, on the outskirts of what was then the city
of Delhi. It comprised several small rooms and a big
hall (Jama ‘at khana) where the inmates and visitors
lived and prayed. The inmates included family
members of the Shaikh, his attendants and disciples.
The Shaikh lived in a small room on the roof of the
hall where he met visitors in the morning and
evening. A veranda surrounded the courtyard, and a
boundary wall ran around the complex. On one occasion, fearing a Mongol
invasion, people from the neighboring areas flocked into the khanqah to seek refuge.
There was an open kitchen (langar), run on futuh (unasked-for charity). From morning till late night people from all walks of
life – soldiers, slaves, singers, merchants, poets, travellers, rich and poor, Hindu jogis (yogi) and qalandars – came seeking
discipleship, amulets for healing, and the intercession of the Shaikh in various matters. Other visitors included poets such as
Amir Hasan Sijzi and Amir Khusrau and the court historian Ziyauddin Barani, all of whom wrote about the Shaikh. Practices that
were adopted, including bowing before the Shaikh, offering water to visitors, shaving the heads of initiates, and yogic exercises,
represented attempts to assimilate local traditions. Shaikh Nizamuddin appointed several spiritual successors and deputed
them to set up hospices in various parts of the subcontinent. As a result the teachings, practices and organisation of the Chishtis
as well as the fame of the Shaikh spread rapidly. This in turn drew pilgrims to his shrine, and also to the shrines of his spiritual
ancestors.

7.2 Chishti devotionalism: Ziyarat and qawwali:


Pilgrimage, called ziyarat, to tombs of Sufi saints is prevalent all over the
Muslim world. This practice is an occasion for seeking the sufi’s spiritual
grace (barakat). For more than seven centuries people of various creeds,
classes and social backgrounds have expressed their devotion at the
dargahs of the five great Chishti saints (see chart on p.154). Amongst
these, the most revered shrine is that of Khwaja Moinuddin, popularly
known as “Gharib Nawaz” (comforter of the poor). The earliest textual
references to Khwaja Moinuddin’s dargah date to the fourteenth century.
It was evidently popular because of the austerity and piety of its Shaikh,
the greatness of his spiritual successors, and the patronage of royal
visitors. Muhammad bin Tughlaq (ruled, 1324-51) was the first Sultan to
visit the shrine, but the earliest construction to house the tomb was
funded in the late fifteenth century by Sultan Ghiyasuddin Khilji of
Malwa. Since the shrine was located on the trade route linking Delhi and
Gujarat, it attracted a lot of travellers. By the sixteenth century the shrine
had become very popular; in fact it was the spirited singing of pilgrims
bound for Ajmer that inspired Akbar to visit the tomb. He went there
fourteen times, sometimes two or three times a year, to seek blessings for
new conquests, fulfillment of vows, and the birth of sons. He maintained
this tradition until 1580. Each of these visits was celebrated by generous
gifts, which were recorded in imperial documents. For example, in 1568
he offered a huge cauldron (degh) to facilitate cooking for pilgrims. He
also had a mosque constructed within the compound of the dargah. Also,
part of ziyarat is the use of music and dance including mystical chants
performed by specially trained musicians or qawwals to evoke divine
ecstasy. The Sufis remember God either by reciting the zikr (the Divine
Names) or evoking His Presence through sama‘ (literally, “audition”) or
performance of mystical music. Sama‘ was integral to the Chishtis, and
exemplified interaction with indigenous devotional traditions.
7.3 Languages and communication:
It was not just in Shama‘a that the Chishtis adopted local languages. In Delhi, those associated with the Chishti silsila conversed
in Hindavi, the language of the people. Other sufis such as Baba Farid composed verses in the local language, which were
incorporated in the Guru Granth Sahib. Yet others composed long poems or masnavis to express ideas of divine love using human
love as an allegory. For example, the prem-akhyan (love story) Padmavat composed by Malik Muhammad Jayasi revolved around
the romance of Padmini and Ratansen, the king of Chittor. Their trials were symbolic of the soul’s journey to the divine. Such
poetic compositions were often recited in hospices, usually during sama‘. A different genre of sufi poetry was composed in and
around the town of Bijapur, Karnataka. These were short poems in Dakhani (a variant of Urdu) attributed to Chishti sufis who
lived in this region during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. These poems were probably sung by women while
performing household chores like grinding grain and spinning. Other compositions were in the form of lurinama or lullabies and
shadinama or wedding songs. It is likely that the sufis of this region were inspired by the pre-existing bhakti tradition of the
Kannada vachanas of the Lingayats and the Marathi abhangs of the sants of Pandharpur. It is through this medium that Islam
gradually gained a place in the villages of the Deccan.

7.4 Sufis and the state:


A major feature of the Chishti tradition was austerity,
including maintaining a distance from worldly
power. However, this was by no means a situation of
absolute isolation from political power. The sufis
accepted unsolicited grants and donations from the
political elites. The Sultans in turn set up charitable
trusts (auqaf ) as endowments for hospices and
granted tax-free land (inam). The Chishtis accepted
donations in cash and kind. Rather than accumulate
donations, they preferred to use these fully on
immediate requirements such as food, clothes, living
quarters and ritual necessities (such as sama‘). All
this enhanced the moral authority of the shaikhs,
which in turn attracted people from all walks of life.
Further, their piety and scholarship, and people’s belief in their miraculous powers
made sufis popular among the masses, whose support kings wished to secure. Kings did not simply need to demonstrate their
association with sufis; they also required legitimation from them. When the Turks set up the Delhi Sultanate, they resisted the
insistence of the ulama on imposing shari‘a as state law because they anticipated opposition from their subjects, the majority of
whom were non-Muslims. The Sultans then sought out the sufis – who derived their authority directly from God – and did not
depend on jurists to interpret the shari‘a. Besides, it was believed that the auliya could intercede with God in order to improve
the material and spiritual conditions of ordinary human beings. This explains why kings often wanted their tombs to be in the
vicinity of sufi shrines and hospices. However, there were instances of conflict between the Sultans and the sufis. To assert their
authority, both expected that certain rituals be performed such as prostration and kissing of the feet. Occasionally the sufi shaikh
was addressed with high-sounding titles. For example, the disciples of Nizamuddin Auliya addressed him as sultan-ul-mashaikh
(literally, Sultan amongst shaikhs).

7. New Devotional Paths Dialogue and Dissent in Northern India:


Many poet-saints engaged in explicit and implicit dialogue with these new social situations, ideas and institutions. Let us now
see how this dialogue found expression. We focus here on three of the most influential figures of the time.
8.1 Weaving a divine fabric: Kabir:
Kabir (c. fourteenth-fifteenth centuries) is perhaps one of the most outstanding
examples of a poet-saint who emerged within this context. Historians have
painstakingly tried to reconstruct his life and times through a study of compositions
attributed to him as well as later hagiographies. Such exercises have proved to be
challenging on a number of counts. Verses ascribed to Kabir have been compiled in
three distinct but overlapping traditions. The Kabir Bijak is preserved by the
Kabirpanth (the path or sect of Kabir) in Varanasi and elsewhere in Uttar Pradesh;
the Kabir Granthavali is associated with the Dadupanth in Rajasthan, and many of
his compositions are found in the Adi Granth Sahib (see Section 8.2). All these
manuscript compilations were made long after the death of Kabir. By the
nineteenth century, anthologies of verses attributed to him circulated in print
in regions as far apart as Bengal, Gujarat and Maharashtra. Kabir’s poems have
survived in several languages and dialects; and some are composed in the
special language of nirguna poets, the sant bhasha. Others, known as ulat bansi
(upside-down sayings), are written in a form in which everyday meanings are
inverted. These hint at the difficulties of capturing the nature of the Ultimate
Reality in words: expressions such as “the lotus which blooms without flower”
or the “fire raging in the ocean '' convey a sense of Kabir’s mystical experiences.
Also striking is the range of traditions Kabir drew on to describe the Ultimate
Reality. These include Islam: he described the Ultimate Reality as Allah, Khuda,
Hazrat and Pir. He also used terms drawn from Vedantic traditions, alakh (the
unseen), nirakar (formless), Brahman, Atman, etc. Other terms with mystical connotations such as shabda (sound) or shunya
(emptiness) were drawn from yogic traditions.
Diverse and sometimes conflicting ideas are expressed in these poems. Some poems draw on Islamic ideas and use monotheism
and iconoclasm to attack Hindu polytheism and idol worship; others use the sufi concept of zikr and ishq (love) to express the
Hindu practice of nam-simaran (remembrance of God’s name). Were all these composed by Kabir? We may never be able to tell
with certainty, although scholars have tried to analyze the language, style and content to establish which verses could be Kabir’s.
What this rich corpus of verses also signifies is that Kabir was and is to the present a source of inspiration for those who
questioned entrenched religious and social institutions, ideas and practices in their search for the Divine. Just as Kabir’s ideas
probably crystallized through dialogue and debate (explicit or implicit) with the traditions of sufis and yogis in the region of
Awadh (part of present-day Uttar Pradesh), his legacy was claimed by several groups, who remembered him and continue to do
so. This is most evident in later debates about whether he was a Hindu or a Muslim by birth, debates that are reflected in
hagiographies. Many of these were composed from the seventeenth century onwards, about 200 years after Kabir’s lifetime.
Hagiographies within the Vaishnava tradition attempted to suggest that he was born a Hindu, Kabirdas (Kabir itself is an Arabic
word meaning “great”), but was raised by a poor Muslim family belonging to the community of weavers or julahas, who were
relatively recent converts to Islam. They also suggested that he was initiated into bhakti by a guru, perhaps Ramananda.
However, the verses attributed to Kabir use the words guru and satguru, but do not mention the name of any specific preceptor.
Historians have pointed out that it is very difficult to establish that Ramananda and Kabir were contemporaries, without
assigning improbably long lives to either or both. So, while traditions linking the two cannot be accepted at face value, they show
how important the legacy of Kabir was for later generations.

8.2 Baba Guru Nanak and the Sacred World:


Baba Guru Nanak (1469-1539) was born in a Hindu
merchant family in a village called Nankana Sahib
near the river Ravi in the predominantly Muslim
Punjab. He trained to be an accountant and studied
Persian. He was married at a young age but he spent
most of his time among sufis and bhaktas. He also
travelled widely. The message of Baba Guru Nanak is
spelt out in his hymns and teachings. These suggest
that he advocated a form of nirguna bhakti. He firmly
repudiated the external practices of the religions he
saw around him. He rejected sacrifices, ritual baths,
image worship, austerities and the scriptures of both
Hindus and Muslims. For Baba Guru Nanak, the
Absolute or “rab” had no gender or form. He
proposed a simple way to connect to the Divine by
remembering and repeating the Divine Name, expressing his ideas through hymns called “shabad ” in Punjabi, the language of
the region. Baba Guru Nanak would sing these compositions in various ragas while his attendant Mardana played the rabab .
Baba Guru Nanak organised his followers into a community. He set up rules for congregational worship (sanga t) involving
collective recitation. He appointed one of his disciples, Angad, to succeed him as the preceptor (guru), and this practice was
followed for nearly 200 years. It appears that Baba Guru Nanak did not wish to establish a new religion, but after his death his
followers consolidated their own practices and distinguished themselves from both Hindus and Muslims. The fifth preceptor,
Guru Arjan , compiled Baba Guru Nanak’s hymns along with those of his four successors and other religious poets like Baba
Farid, Ravidas (also known as Raidas) and Kabir in the Adi Granth Sahib . These hymns, called “gurbani”, are composed in various
languages. In the late seventeenth century the tenth preceptor, Guru Gobind Singh, included the compositions of the ninth guru,
Guru Tegh Bahadur, and this scripture was called the Guru Granth Sahib. Guru Gobind Singh also laid the foundation of the
Khalsa Panth (army of the pure) and defined its five symbols: uncut hair, a dagger, a pair of shorts, a comb and a steel bangle.
Under him the community got consolidated as a socio-religious and military force.

8.3 Mirabai, the devotee princess:


Mirabai (c. fifteenth-sixteenth
centuries) is perhaps the best-known
woman poet within the bhakti
tradition. Biographies have been
reconstructed primarily from the
bhajans attributed to her, which were
transmitted orally for centuries.
According to these, she was a Rajput
princess from Merta in Marwar who
was married against her wishes to a
prince of the Sisodia clan of Mewar,
Rajasthan. She defied her husband and did not submit to the traditional role of wife and mother, instead recognising Krishna,
the avatar of Vishnu, as her lover. Her in-laws tried to poison her, but she escaped from the palace to live as a wandering saint
composing songs that are characterized by intense expressions of emotion.
According to some traditions, her preceptor was Raidas, a leather worker. This would indicate her defiance of the norms of caste
society. After rejecting the comforts of
her husband’s palace, she is supposed DO YOU KNOW?
to have donned the white robes of a 1300-1400: Lai dies in Kashmir, Shahbaz Qalandar is brought to Sindh;
widow or the saffron robe of the Nizamuddin Auliya of Delhi; Ramanand in Uttar Pradesh;
renouncer. Although Mirabai did not Chokhamela in Maharashtra; Sharfuddin Yahya Maneri in Bihar
attract a sect or group of followers, she 1400-1500: Kabir, Raidas, Surdas in Uttar Pradesh; Baba Guru Nanak in Punjab;
has been recognised as a source of Vallabhacharya in Gujarat; Mir Syed Muhammad Gesudaraz in
inspiration for centuries. Her songs Gulbarga, Sankardev in Assam; Tukaram in Maharashtra.
continue to be sung by women and 1500-1600: Sri Chaitanya in Bengal; Mirabai in Rajasthan; Sheikh Abdul Quddus
men, especially those who are poor Gangohi, Malik Muhammad Jayasi, Tulsidas in Uttar Pradesh.
and considered “low caste” in Gujarat 1600-1700: Sheikh Ahmed Sirhindi in Haryana; Mian Mir in Punjab.
and Rajasthan.

8. Reconstructing Histories of Religious Traditions:


We have seen that historians draw on a variety of sources to reconstruct histories of religious traditions – these include
sculpture, architecture, stories about religious preceptors, compositions attributed to women and men engaged in the quest of
understanding the nature of the Divine. As we have seen in Chapters 1 and 4, sculpture and architecture can only be understood
if we have a grasp of the context – the ideas, beliefs and practices of those who produced and used these images and buildings.
What about textual traditions regarding religious beliefs? If you return to the sources in this chapter, you will notice that they
include a wide variety, written in several different languages and styles. They range from the apparently simple, direct language
of the vachanas of Basavanna to the ornate Persian of the farman of the Mughal emperors. Understanding each type of text
requires different skills: apart from a familiarity with several languages, the historian has to be aware of the subtle variations in
style that characterize each genre.
SUMMARY
The Bhakti movement, Islam and the Sufi movement played an important role in the history of medieval India in the 8th-
18th centuries. Alwar and Nayanaras are considered to be the founders of the Bhakti movement in South India. While the
Alvars were devotees of Lord Vishnu, the Nayanaras followed the Shaivite religion.
According to Muslim tradition, the Qur'an is a compilation of messages sent to the Prophet Muhammad by his messenger
Archangel Gabriel in Mecca and Medina between 610-632.
Sufism emerged as a powerful movement in India during the Middle Ages. Sufis are called because of their purity of heart
(safa). They are in the front row before God. There are a few more

Different religious beliefs and practices:


Many types of gods and goddesses are found in sculptures and scriptures. The epic texts were designed and adapted in simple
Sanskrit language to be generally accessible to women and Shudras far removed from Vedic education. Many beliefs and
practices have evolved by constantly mixing mythological traditions with local traditions. Jagannath worship in Odisha is
recognized by local tribal experts as a local deity made of wood and a form of Vishnu.

Early traditions of devotion:


Historians have divided the devotional traditions into two broad categories: Nirguna (without attributes) and Saguna (with
attributes).
In the sixth century, devotional movements were led by Alvars (devotees of Vishnu) and Nayanaras (devotees of Shiva). He
wandered around singing Tamil devotional songs. During their travels, Alwar and Nayanaras discovered some temples and
later large temples were built in these places.

“Veer Shaiva” tradition in Karnataka:


A new movement emerged in Karnataka in the 12th century under the leadership of a Brahmin named Basavana. His
followers were called “Veera Shaivas” (Shiva heroes) or Lingayats (those who wore the linga). Lingayats continue to be an
important community in the region to this day. Lingayats challenged the theory of caste, pollution, reincarnation, etc. and
encouraged marriage and widow remarriage after puberty.

The Rise of Islamic Traditions:


In the 13th century, the Turks and Afghans invaded India and established the Delhi Sultanate. Theoretically, Muslim rulers
should be guided by ulama and follow Shariah rules. Non-Muslims had to pay a tax called jijya and get the right to be protected
by Muslim rulers. Many Mughal rulers, including Akbar and Aurangzeb, donated land and granted tax breaks to Hindu, Jain,
Parsi, Christian and Jewish religious institutions.

Development of Sufism:
During the early centuries of Islam, a group of Sufis with religious ideas leaned towards monasticism and spirituality against
the growing materialism of the Caliphate. Sufis were critics of the dogmatic definitions and educational methods of
interpreting the Qur'an and sought its interpretation based on their personal experience. By the 11th century, Sufism had
developed into a highly developed movement. Suites began to form communities around hospices or Khanqah (Persian)
known as sheikhs, piers or murshids. He nominated the disciples (murids) and appointed the successor (caliph).

Chishti on the subcontinent:


Chishti are an important group of Sufis who migrated to India. Khanqah was central to social life. In the fourteenth century,
the Sheikh Nizamuddin Dharamshala on the banks of the Yamuna River in Ghiyaspur was very famous. Sheikh lives here and
meets visitors in the morning and evening. There were an open kitchen (langar) and people from all walks of life used to
come here from morning till midnight. Tourists visiting here include Amir Hassan Sizzi, Amir Khusrau and Ziauddin Barani.

New Ways of Devotion in North India:


Kabir was a 14th-15th century poet-monk. Kabir's poems have been compiled in three different traditions. Kabir Bijak was
preserved by Kabir Pant in Uttar Pradesh. Kabir's bibliography is related to Dadupanthi from Rajasthan. Many of his verses
are included in the Adi Granth Sahib. Kabir described the ultimate truth as Allah, Khuda, Hazrat and Peer-o-Murshid. He also
used words from the Vedic traditions such as Alakh, Nirankari, Brahmana, Atama etc. Kabir accepted all kinds of philosophies
i.e., theological traditions, yoga traditions and Islamic ideas. Kabir’s ideas were probably made clear through conversations
and discussions. Important information about that period, but many aspects of social life go unnoticed.
Questions For Practice
1. What common term is used to refer 9. Which of the following is a part of 20. Vittala is the presiding deity of the
to immigrant communities? Chishti Worship?
(a) Shakas (b) Juanci Vithal Temple. Vithal was called the
(a) Dance (b) Music
(c) Turkish (d) Mleccha incarnation of God?
(c) Qawwali (d) All of these (a) Brahma (b) Vishnu
2. What is the meaning of the word
10. Khwaja Moinuddin was teacher of? (c) Shiva (d) Ganesh
'Silsila'?
(a) A Series (a) Sant Kabir (b) Khwaja 21. Which of the following is the capital
(b) Disciple Usman Harun
of Akbar?
(c) Devotion (c) Sant Farid (d) Ramananda
(a) Lahore
(d) None 11. Who were Nayanaras saints _______? (b) Multan
3. Which of the following methods in (a) Group of Saints (b)Kings (c) Delhi
Chishti’s Khanka represents an (c) Courtier (d) None (d) Fatehpur Sikri
attempt to assimilate local
traditions? 12. Nayanaras Saints Worship ________? 22. Who compiled the book of Adi?
(i) Bend in front of the shake (a) Vishnu (b) Lakshmi (a) Guru Teg Bahadur ji
(ii) Providing water to visitors (c) Indra (d) Shiva (b) Guru Arjan Dev ji
(iii) Shaving the heads of initiates 13. Who introduced jizya to pay a (c) Guru Nanak dev ji
(iv) Yoga exercises (d) Guru Gobind Singh ji
religious tax first time India?
(a) 'i' and 'ii'
(b) 'I' only (a) Balban (b) Akbar 23. Choose the correct option:
(c) 'iii' and 'iv' (c) Mohammad bin Qasim (d) Islamic law is called _?
(d) All of the above None of these (a) Sharia (b) Rule
4. Who composed the love story 14. Which of the following is a part of (c) Ulema (d) None of these
'Padmavat'? Chishti Worship? 24. Select the appropriate option:
(a) Amir Khusrau (a) Dance (b) Music Alwar and Nayanaras are devotees
(b) Baba Farid (c) Qawwali (d) All of these (a) Kerala
(c) Malik Muhammad Jayasi
15. Swami Ramananda was teacher of? (b) Karnataka
(d) Ratan Singh
(a) Sant Kabir (b) Sant Ravi Das (c) Tamil Nadu
5. Which of the following statements (d) Andhra Pradesh
about Sant Kabir is incorrect? (c) Sant Farid (d) None
(a) Kabir used words derived from 16. Which of these capitals was the 25. Vithal is the main deity of the
theological traditions. capital of Akbar? temple. Vithal was called the
(b) Kabir describes the ultimate (a) Lahore incarnation of God
reality as Allah, Khuda, Hazrat (a) Brahma (b) Vishnu
(b) Multan
and Peer. (c) Shiva (d) Ganesh
(c) Many of his compositions are in (c) Delhi
the Adi Granth Sahib. (d) Fatehpur Sikri 26. What is Sharia?
(d) Poems attributed to Kabir 17. Who composed the book 'Guru (a) Muslim Sufi Saint
mention the name of his mentor Granth'? (b) Fasting during the month of
Ramananda. (a) Guru Teg Bahadur ji Ramadan
6. The devotees of Vishnu are called _? (b) Guru Ram Das ji (c) Laws governing the Muslim
(a) Alvar (b) Veershaiva (c) Guru Nanak Dev ji community
(c) Nayanaras (d) Zimmi (d) All of the above (d) Giving alms
7. Alvar Saints Worship _____? 27. What does Ulema mean?
18. Islamic law is called _______?
(a) Shiva (b) Lakshmi (a) Devotee of Shiva
(c) Indra (d) Vishnu (a) Sharia (b) Rule
(c) Ulema (d) None of these (b) Devotee of Vishnu
8. Non-Muslims are required to pay a (c) Muslim Religious Person
religious tax of _______? 19. Alwar and Nayanaras was belonged (d) Scholars of Islamic Studies
(a) Zakat in which century?
(b) Venus (a) 4th Century 28. What are the devotees of Vishnu
(c) Jizya (b) 1st Century called?
(d) None of these (c) 5th to 10th Century (a) Alvar (b) Nayanaras
(d) None (c) Lingayat (d) Chishti
29. Which of the following is incorrect 32. Who compiled the book of Adi? (c) Muslim Sufi Saint
regarding Karaikal Ammaiyar? (a) Guru Teg Bahadur ji (d) Scholars of Islamic Studies
(a) She is a devotee of Shiva. (b) Guru Arjan Dev ji
38. Who were the devotees of Vishnu
(b) He took the path of intense (c) Guru Nanak Dev ji called?
penance. (d) Guru Gobind Singh ji (a) Alvars (b) Nayanaras
(c) His writings are preserved in 33. Head in Islamic law is called as? (c) Lingayat (d) Chishti
the Alwar traditions. (a) Imam (b) Sharia
(d) His writings challenged 39. Which of the following is incorrect
(c) Maulvi (d) None of these
patriarchal norms. regarding Karaikal Ammaiyar?
34. Alwar and Nayanaras belonged to (a) She is a devotee of Shiva.
30. Regarding Kabir, consider the which state? (b) He took the path of intense
following statements: (a) Kerala penance.
1. Kabir verses are compiled in (b) Karnataka (c) His writings are preserved in
three different traditions. (c) Tamil Nadu the Alwar traditions.
2. Kabir's poems are available (d) Andhra Pradesh (d) His writings challenged
only in Urdu. 35. Vithal is the main deity of the patriarchal norms.
3. Kabir used many traditions to temple. Vithal was called the 40. Regarding Kabir, consider the
explain the ultimate reality. incarnation of God following statements:
4. Kabir called the ultimate truth (a) Brahma (b) Vishnu 1. Kabir verses are compiled in
Allah. (c) Shiva (d) Ganesh three different traditions.
Which of the following statements is 2. Kabir's poems are available
incorrect? 36. What is Sharia?
(a) Muslim Sufi Saint only in Urdu.
(a) 1, 2, 3 (b) 2, 4 3. Kabir used many traditions to
(b) Fasting during the month of
(c) 1, 4 (d) 3, 4 explain the ultimate reality.
Ramadan
31. Which of the following is the capital (c) Laws governing the Muslim 4. Kabir called the ultimate truth
of Akbar? community Allah.
(a) Lahore Which of the following statements is
(d) Giving alms
(b) Multan incorrect?
37. Who is the Khwaja Moinuddin? (a) 1, 2, 3 (b) 2, 4
(c) Delhi
(a) Devotee of Shiva (c) 1, 4 (d) 3, 4
(d) Fatehpur Sikri (b) Devotee of Vishnu

Solutions
1. (d) 5. (d) 9. (d) 13. (c) 17. (d) 21. (d) 25. (b) 29. (c) 33. (a) 37. (d)

2. (a) 6. (a) 10. (b) 14. (d) 18. (a) 22. (b) 26. (c) 30. (b) 34. (c) 38. (a)

3. (d) 7. (d) 11. (a) 15. (b) 19. (c) 23. (a) 27. (d) 31. (d) 35. (b) 39. (c)

4. (c) 8. (c) 12. (d) 16. (d) 20. (b) 24. (c) 28. (a) 32. (b) 36. (c) 40. (b)

You might also like