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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!ogicse!Raghu
- From: Raghu Seshadri <seshadri@hpindda.cup.hp.com>
- Newsgroups: soc.religion.eastern
- Subject: Divine Tricksters
- Message-ID: <45965@ogicse.ogi.edu>
- Date: 14 Nov 92 01:56:27 GMT
- Article-I.D.: ogicse.45965
- Sender: nabil@ogicse.ogi.edu
- Distribution: world
- Organization: ----
- Lines: 45
- Approved: nabil@cse.ogi.edu (Aaron Nabil)
-
- >From dorothy@cvedc.prime.com Wed Nov 11 10:04:40 1992
-
- -This discussion of Indo-European mythology brings to mind a question
- -that occurred to me the other day. Most cultures seem to have a divine
- -trickster, who is often also a messenger and wisdom-bringer. In
- -Native American traditions it's Coyote, in the Mediterranean complex it's
- -Thoth/Hermes. What Hindu deities are tricksters and teachers of magic?
-
- -Dorothy Mokuren Robinson dorothy@cvedc.prime.com
-
- This is such a vast subject that one doesn't know where to
- begin; countless stories detail a divine or semi-divine
- person who outwardly tricks or brings discomfort; when the
- true purpose is revealed, he is seen as a messenger of
- wisdom, or beneficence..
-
- One of the most popular is the sage Narada who plays the cymbals
- or the Veena as he sojourns thru the 3 worlds; his arrival
- usually signifies some trouble. For instance it was he who
- reveals to the tyrant Kamsa that Kamsa's beloved sister Devaki
- will bear a son who will kill him. The evil king immediately
- imprisons his sister .... read the story of Krishna to find out
- how it all ends.
-
- Again, Narada was on the scene when the sage Valmiki temporarily
- lost his cool and cursed a hunter who had disturbed the peace
- near his abode. The demigod then explains how it presages the
- compilation of the grandest story in the history of India's
- civilization - the Ramayana.
-
- The elephant headed god Ganesha also has mischievous propensities; he
- plays the role of a busybody or a smart aleck in several stories;
- he uses the fact that everyone finds him cute and adorable to
- have his way against their "better" judgment. Only, when it
- all ends, it turns out that it was all for the best.
-
- If there is any further interest, I will post some of these
- stories .. In Hinduism, the "stories" are much grander than
- the word "story" implies - they are metaphors for all the
- psychic undercurrents in our subconscious, they are parables
- carrying metaphysical truths, they have defined the values
- of society and they are pointers to unravelling the knots that
- bind the mind.
-
- raghu
-