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Tantra Goddess
KALI: THE PRIMORDIAL GODDESS
"O Dark Primordial Mother! Thou givest birth to and protectest
the universe, and at the time of dissolution does withdraw to
Thyself this world and all beings."
(Karpuradi Stotra)
"Dark Mother! Always gliding near with soft feet, Have none
chanted for Thee a chant of fullest welcome?"
(Walt Whitman)
Kali, the Primordial Mother Goddess of Hindu tantric tradition,
has her origins in India's archaic matriarchal culture. Her
radiant blackness protected the dark-skinned tribes who
worshipped her and inspired fear and dread in their enemies. She
was, originally, a warrior goddess, worshipped with blood
sacrifice and offerings of flesh and liquor. She was always
viewed as all-powerful, awesome, as mysterious as night, fierce,
passionately sensual and demanding. Yet to her worshippers she
was always the all-merciful Protectress, filled with sublime love
and compassion, a Granter-of-boons. Above all, Dark Kali was and
still is Kali Ma, "Kali the Mother", the Cosmic Female Power,
always available for Her devotees, ready to remove their
suffering, their negative Karma, their fear of time (Kala) and
death, always ready to bestow bliss and liberation.
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Variations on the name Kali for female divinity can be found in
many ancient cultures outside India, which suggests that in the
distant past a common or related matriarchal religion pervaded
much of the world. For example, in pre-historic Ireland people
worshipped a powerful goddess known as Kele (her priestesses were
known as Kelles), in ancient Finland there was the all-powerful
goddess Kal-ma, in the Sinai region of the Middle East there was
the goddess Kalu, and in ancient Greece an aspect of the goddess
was known as Kalli. It is likely that these very similar names
for the Great Goddess in different cultures was the result of the
export of spiritual ideas and practices "out of India" prior to
the early invasions by light-skinned Aryans (probably around 1500
BC.).
The use of Mantras, repeated power phrases and "spells", using
language whose exact meaning is now largely forgotten or kept
secret, is a common feature of most archaic cultures and was
likely transmitted from matriarchal India.
During the early Vedic period, society having become patriarchal,
subordinated the female deities. However they did not disappear
but continued to be worshipped by tribals. More than a hundred
matriarchal tribes survive to this day in remote areas of Eastern
India, in Assam, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh, as well as in Madras,
Mysore and Kerala in the South. Among the Khasi tribe, goddesses
predominate over gods, and priestesses over priests. The Kadir
tribe of Kerala, a matriarchal people, still worship a dark
goddess known by them as Kali. The "wild" Shabara tribes of
Orissa still worship their form of the dark goddess with meat and
wine -aspects of worship generally associated with Hindu Tantra.
The earliest literary mention of the name Kali in India is found
in some Vedic hymns, but the context does not suggest much
familiarity with or commitment to the Dark Goddess. Not
surprising, since these hymns were composed largely by
light-skinned Aryan invaders, who lived in a patriarchal culture.
Some scholars see a connection between the Vedic goddess Ushas,
the goddess of the dawn, with the goddess Kali. Though Ushas is
generally conceived of as white and bright, she has another dark
or grey-black form. According to Dr Pushpendra Kumar: "These are
the points to be noted in the physical representation of Ushas:
her youth and beauty, her forwardness and her virginity. Ushas is
a warlike goddess and there are many references to her martial
spirit. She is invoked to destroy enemies." There may be some
connection between the dark form of Ushas and the Great Goddess
Kali, who is also "forward", "warlike" and is indeed invoked "to
destroy enemies". But it is not a compelling connection,
especially since we hear little, if anything, of the
transcendental, bliss-bestowing or liberating functions of this
goddess, which are essential features of Kali Ma, the Dark Cosmic
Mother.
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KALI'S SACRED SITES: HER TONGUE AND HER YONI
Throughout India one finds sacred sites associated with Kali.
Known as "Pitths" or "seats", these are places where, according
to popular myth, parts of the Great Goddess' body fell to earth.
A story tells how, in the distant past, the Great God Shiva
("Maha Deva") became crazed over the death of his Beloved Goddess
("Devi") and carried her body on his back as he roamed about the
heavens, causing havoc. Eventually the Goddess' body was cut into
pieces, which fell to earth in some 50 or so places- places which
are now great pilgrimage destinations for followers of Hindu
Tantra. Each Pitth is associated with a particular part of the
Goddess' body. Though traditions vary as to which part fell
where, the sacred sites of the Goddess are always extraordinary
places charged with spiritual energy and one will invariably
encounter Kali-devotees encamped at them.
The name Kali occurs in one of the Upanishads, the sacred texts
which follow the Vedas. Here, Kali is the name given to one of
the seven tongues of Agni, the all-consuming sacrificial fire
deity. Another of the tongues is called Kalika, also a name of
Kali. This reference to Kali as the sacrificial tongues of flame
may be linked to the Jvalamukhi sacred site and temple at
Nagarakota in the Kangra district of the Punjab Himalaya, where
different forms of the Dark Goddess are still worshipped and
where the main power- spot is a cave with a natural gas-fueled
blueish flame burning spontaneously above a pool of water.
Jvalamukhi is said to be the place where the goddess' head once
fell to earth, and the natural flame is believed to be her
all-consuming tongue. This "seat" of the Great Goddess is one of
the important pilgrimage places of Northern India and is
particularly sacred to all followers of Shakti, the Goddess
Power.
Stone sculpture of a squatting goddess,on the outer wall of the
Kamakhya Yoni temple, Assam.
Another great pilgrimage place associated with Kali is in the
ancient Indian country known as Kamarupa ("In the Form of
Desire", one of the many K-beginning names of Kali), present-day
Assam, in the North East. There, on the sacred hill near Gauhati,
is the Temple of Kamakhya, where the goddess' Yoni once fell to
earth. Within the tribal-hut-shaped building is a cave with a
block of stone resembling a Yoni. This "seat" of the goddess is
always moist from a sacred spring, and once every year (at
Navratri, at the time of the Autumn Equinox), when the spring
waters naturally turn reddish, it is said that the goddess' Yoni
menstruates. The outer walls of the present sixteenth century
temple are decorated with several stone carvings of goddess
forms, including a squatting woman exposing her Yoni, a mother
suckling her child, and a warrioress or "Amazon" holding a drawn
bow. Together these three goddess forms illustrate three of the
most compelling and easy-to-understand aspects of Kali - her
uncompromising sexuality, her motherly compassion and her
protective ferocity. The Kamakhya Yoni temple is one of the main
pilgrimage places for followers of the Great Goddess and one will
always find Kali being worshipped there.
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FORMS AND MEANINGS OF KALI
Kali is mentioned in the epic Mahabharata, described as
"red-eyed, red-faced, garlanded with red, terrible to look at,
and holding a noose." Here the color red indicates her sensual
sexual nature and her close connection with the life-force, blood
- the sacrificial blood of offerings and the potency of menstrual
blood- and Kali's transcendent power over death.
Over the centuries many different iconographic forms and names
for the Dark Goddess became known in India and surrounding
countries. These icons were revealed in visions coming from
spiritual practice, dreams, drugs, trances, or austerities and
all are but aspects, variations, of the one Great Dark Original
Mother, Kali. Some early Buddhists identified Her with their
Prajnaparamita, the "Perfection of Wisdom", conceived of as a
multi-armed goddess/female wisdom energy. Buddhist tantrics
viewed Prajnaparamita as the original Buddha-consort, and over
time, developed this vision further. They viewed Her as the
saviouress Tara, "the Compassionate One", "She who helps the
devotee overcome suffering". As the dark four-armed Ugra Tara,
with the dark blue Dhyani-Buddha Aksobhya on her crown, she
became "the Wrathful Saviouress", externally fierce to ward-off
enemies and unbelievers, but internally compassionate, the
"Embodiment of Compassion". Buddhists also knew the Dark Goddess
as Shyam (the "Dark One") and Kali. According to the noted
Bengali authority on Indian Buddhist Tantra, Dr Benoytosh
Bhattacharyya, "Kali, according to Buddhist tradition, is Kadi or
Kakaradi, or, in other words, all the consonants of the
alphabet....all the consonants of the (Sanskrit) alphabet are
deified in her."
The mystery of Kali's name, which begins with the first consonant
of the Sanskrit alphabet, attached to the first vowel, is deep
indeed. From tantric tradition we learn that the whole material
universe is but an expression of certain primordial sounds or
vibrations. These are expressed by the consonants and vowels of
the Sanskrit alphabet, combined together in different ways.
"Seed-syllables" (Bija Mantras), short combinations and "Spells"
(Dharanis), long combinations of differing measures, are the very
"fabric" from which this universe is formed. From tantric
tradition we learn that the garland of heads about Kali's neck
symbolize the letters or vibrations of the Sanskrit alphabet. We
learn Kali's seed-syllables, names and potent Mantras, the tools
by which we can transform ourselves and become one with Her.
[LINK]Stone sculpture of a dancing Chamunda from central India.
In the Devi-Mahatmya and several Purana texts of the medieval
period, Kali is generally described as dark, witch-like, fanged,
emaciated and terrible to look at. A myth tells how the body of
Devi or Parvati (daughter of the Himalayas and consort of Shiva
the Supreme Yogi) was transformed and turned black, becoming
known as Kali or Kalika. In this form she terrorised the
patriarchal demons who had begun to take over the universe. In
her emaciated "hag-like" form, she was the only divine power able
to defeat two particularly egoistic demons named Chanda and
Munda. After she defeated them she made their spirits serve her
and she became known as Chamunda, a type of Kali, became
affiliated with a group of seven or eight Hindu Mother Goddesses,
known as Matrikas.
EOF