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Hinduism - What Is A Caste In Hindu Society?









The most well-known name for the ancient Hindu social system in which groups are placed in a hierarchy of rank based on the perceived purity of each group's customary profession. 




The term "caste" comes from a Portuguese word that means "chaste." 

Different groups in Indian culture maintained their distance from one another, especially while dining and marrying, according to the Portuguese. 

This social phenomena was referred to as "caste" by them. 




The most significant notion for social organization among Hindus is known as the jati ("birth"). 




A person is born into a jati and becomes a member of it. 

The jatis were typically split into groups based on their traditional occupations, which were supposed to be done only by that jati. 

The social standing of a jati was usually determined by its profession, and jatis who worked as latrine cleaners or tanners were considered to be polluted by their work. 





The body was used to represent society as a whole, with various jatis corresponding to different bodily parts. 



While each component had a unique status and purpose, they all had to work together for the entire to operate properly. 

To keep one group separate from the others, rigorous regulations were used to designate and enforce these distinctions in rank



The most stringent rules applied to marriage, and members of a jati would only marry inside that group in the past. 


It was almost as though the jatis were considered a distinct "species" of human beings who needed to be kept apart. 

Although there is currently much more intermarriage than in the past, marrying within one's jati is still the ideal. 




The four main social classes (varna) outlined in the dharma literature: 


  • brahmin (priest), 
  • kshatriya (warrior-king), 
  • vaishya (merchant), 
  • and shudra (slave) are the best-known model for organizing Indian society (servant). 




The multitude of distinct jati groupings, on the other hand, makes the social order much more complicated. 



A small hamlet may have dozens of jatis, each providing a specific function, while a metropolis may have hundreds of jatis, some of which are extremely specialized. 


There are various brahmin jatis even within the brahmin varna (for example, Saraswat, Chitpavan, Kanyakubja, and Kanaujia). 

The situation is much more complicated for other varnas. 

Some jati groups, for example, lie between the vaishya and shudra varnas, while modest jati clans with political success may claim kshatriya ancestry. 


The social standing of the same jati may differ from area to region, depending on whether they are a majority or minority of the population, or whether they are a land-holding group. 


The status of a group is typically determined by local circumstances, as it is in most aspects of Hindu life; but, in the last fifty years, such status determinations have also been influenced by changes in Indian culture, which have tended to loosen social differences. 





See McKim Marriot, “Hindu Transactions: Diversity Without Dualism,” in Bruce Kapferer (ed.), Transaction and Meaning, 1976, for more details. 


Shamvuka

 


 Shudra ascetic who appears in both the Ramayana, the earlier of the two major Indian epics, and the poet Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha, which is based on the Ramayana's plot arc.

According to legend, a brahmin approaches Rama, the epic's protagonist, and laments the death of his son due to the wickedness that afflicts the kingdom.

Rama instantly asks the brahmin for additional information, since the king is held accountable for the overall moral condition of his country.

He is informed that a guy called Shamvuka has been practicing physical asceticism (tapas) in order to produce spiritual qualities via his suffering, despite the fact that Shamvuka is a servant (shudra) and such religious practices are banned to someone of such low social position.

Rama finds Shamvuka dangling his head downward over a blazing fire and kills him because he refuses to give up his ascetic habits.

Several critical themes are conveyed in this episode.

The Indian cultural concept that physical hardship develops spiritual and/or magical qualities is one of them.

When this idea is paired with a deeply hierarchical social paradigm, it becomes critical for the upper classes to maintain control over those who are permitted to do so, lest the lower classes acquire influence over their "betters." Finally, this narrative exemplifies the Ramayana's overall tenacity in upholding societal ideals and bounds.

Hinduism - Who Is Bahina Bai?

 




(1628–1700) Bahina Bai Poet and saint associated with the Varkari Panth, a religious order dedicated to the worship of the Hindu deity Vithoba at his temple in Pandharpur, Maharashtra. 


Bahina Bai defied conventional wisdom not just because she was a female religious icon, but also because she was a brahmin student of the shudra poet-saint Tukaram, a connection that flipped societal status norms. 




  • This is because a brahmin is a person of high social status, while a shudra is a member of Hindu society's lowest and least prominent caste. 
  • Tukaram accepted Bahina as his pupil in a dream, according to legend, since Bahina's husband—a educated brahmin who was acutely aware of his brahmin status—had prohibited her from meeting with him. 
  • Bahina also published an autobiography, which was strongly inspired by her religious views, in addition to her devotional poetry. 
  • Bahina is noteworthy as one of the few female bhakti (devotional) personalities who was able to combine the demands of her marriage with her devotion to God, but this was not without difficulty and heartbreak. 



Bahina Bai, translated by Justin E. Abbott, 1985; and Anne Feldhaus, “Bahina Bai: Wife and Saint,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 50, 1982.


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Shudra

 


The shudras are the lowest and least influential of the four major social groups (varnas) in traditional Hindu society.

The shudras' social function in this model was to serve everyone else.

The creation story known as the Purusha Sukta describes the shudras as being created from the Primeval Man's feet, reflecting their low social status.

Because the feet are the lowest and most basic part of the body, the shudra was regarded as the lowest caste in Hindu society.

Unlike the "twice-born" varnas—brahmin, kshatriya, and vaishya—whose adolescent males were entitled to a ritual second birth that allowed them to study the Veda, shudras were always once-born and thus prohibited from studying or even hearing the Veda.

In practice, the status of shudras varied greatly by region; for example, many of the land-owning jatis (endogamous social subgroups) in southern India were shudras, and they were powerful communities.

At the very least, unlike the untouchables, who were considered completely impure due to their hereditary occupations, they were given a distinct place in Hinduism's caste system.

Rama

 

The deity Vishnu's seventh incarnation, the crown prince of the Solar Line and the protagonist of the Ramayana, one of India's two major epics.

Rama is created to slay a creature powerful enough to knock the universe out of balance, in this instance Ravana, the demon-king of Lanka, as with all of Vishnu's avatars.

Rama's attempt to reclaim his wife Sita, who has been kidnapped by Ravana, is the central struggle in the Ramayana.

Rama's conflict with Ravana, Ravana's death, and the reestablishment of cosmic equilibrium, symbolized by Rama's accession to celestial kingship, make up the epic's finale sequence.

Rama is a cornerstone of society, unlike the deity Krishna, whose divine play (lila) sometimes subverts or ignores established societal standards.

The Ramayana as a whole tends to promote and defend traditional social ideals like as religious obligation (dharma), social hierarchy (varna), and life phases (ashrama).

Rama, the epic's protagonist, embodies all of these ideals.

He is dependable, steady, righteous, and consistent.

In Hindu tradition, Rama is seen as the ideal son, and he demonstrates this by being completely committed to his parents and placing considerably more emphasis on his responsibilities as a son than on his responsibilities as a spouse.

Rama is married and faithful, unlike Krishna, who has countless liaisons with his female followers (bhakta) all in the name of divine play.

When it comes to battle, he is the most fearsome of fighters, embodying the warrior (kshatriya) ethos of utilizing power to preserve justice, protect the good, and punish the bad.

He personifies some of Hindu culture's most deeply ingrained beliefs in all of these ways.

However, there are also disturbing occurrences, especially in the Valmiki Ramayana, the epic's first edition.

These occurrences either show Rama acting out of character or highlight significant contradictions in traditional Hindu norms.

Rama shoots Bali in the back from a hidden location in order to aid monkey-king Sugriva fight his rival Bali, a conduct that is incompatible with the concept of fair and honorable combat.

His activities in upholding the current social order demonstrate the repressive and restricted character of the system.

In one episode, Rama murders a low-status shudra who is seen practicing physical asceticism (tapas), a privilege reserved for his superiors, and pours molten lead into the ears of another shudra who is caught lis tening to the holy Vedas, which is a forbidden act for such a person.

Both episodes demonstrate the hierarchical character of idealized Hindu society, as well as the king's role in maintaining and protecting it.

When Ravana's sister Shurpanakha approaches Rama and his brother Lakshmana, they first deceive and insult her, then mutilate her by chopping off her ears and nose.

Ravana kidnaps Sita in retaliation for these deeds, which appear incompatible with the kshatriya ideal of respect for women and the just use of force.

Rama's treatment of his wife Sita raises some of the most unsettling questions.

She undergoes an ordeal by fire shortly after being freed from servitude, from which she emerges unharmed, proving her assertion that she stayed chaste while imprisoned.

Despite this conclusive evidence, Rama insists on a second test, in which Sita is swallowed by the soil in protest.

As a result, the epic paints a picture of Rama as a character who was virtuous by his time's standards yet strict and uncompromising at times.

This depiction significantly transforms in later versions of the Ramayana, especially the Ramcharitmanas by poet-saint Tulsidas (1532–1623? ), probably in an effort to soften or erase these troubling episodes.

Tulsidas' passage has been altered to emphasize the primacy of devotion (bhakti) above all other religious emotions.

Rama is more clearly shown as God incarnate in Tulsidas' Rama, a person who is conscious of his divine position and whose acts are carried out for the benefit of his believers.

This Rama is still concerned with societal values, especially the kshatriya responsibility to defend and safeguard religious duties (dharma).

The centrality of bhakti, which is depicted as the ultimate religious ideal, is in contrast with — and occasionally in antagonism to — this ethic.

These small modifications in the later text allude to a clash between two opposing ideals—dharma and bhakti—both of which are accepted as necessary.

For more on Rama, see the Ramayana texts (the Valmiki Ramayana, Kamba Ramayana, and Ramcharitmanas) or translations from the Sanskrit puranas, such as Cornelia Dimmitt and J.

A. B. van Buitenen (eds. and trans. ), Classical Hindu Mythology, 1978; secondary sources include V.

Raghavan (ed. ), The Ramayana Tradition in Asia, 1980; 

Hinduism - Who Are The Vellala Of Tamil Nadu?

 



The landlord community throughout much of traditional Tamil Nadu.

Although technically the Vellalas were of shudra status, their control over the land gave them considerable influence and prestige in the region.

The Vellala community was the source for many of the Alvars, a group of twelve poet-saints whose stress on passionate devotion (bhakti) to the god Vishnu transformed and revitalized Hindu religious life.

Most of the Alvars’ influence undoubtedly stemmed from the strength of their religious devotion, but this was undoubtedly reinforced by Vellala status as a land holding community.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Is Bhartrhari?




Bhartrhari is a 5th c. C.E.  Sanskrit poet and philosopher who wrote the Shatakatrayam (“Three Hundred”), a three-part collection of poetry on politics, love, and renunciation. 



Bhartrhari was the son of the brahmin Vidyasagara and his shudra wife, Mandakini, according to tradition. 


  • Vidyasagara was the king of Kalinga's advisor, and when the monarch died, he was granted the kingdom; following Vidyasagara's death, Bhartrhari's brothers recognized him as king. 
  • Bhartrhari was ecstatic till he discovered that his wife was cheating on him. 
  • When her secret was out, she attempted to blackmail him. 
  • Bhartrhari, completely disillusioned, abandoned the world and became an ascetic, at which time he is said to have written his poems. 
  • Bhartrhari was most likely a courtier, despite the fact that this is a nice tale. 





Many of these poems emphasize the degradation inherent in courtly life. 


  • All of life's traditional purposes are addressed in his poetry. 
  • The first two parts deal with strength (artha), sensual desire (kama), and virtuous conduct (dharma), while the third section deals with the ultimate goal, or soul liberation (moksha). 





Barbara Stoller Miller (trans. ), The Hermit and the Love-Thief, 1978, has further information.



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Hinduism - What Is Varna?

 

Varna (“color”) Brahmin, kshatriya, vaishya, and shudra are four major groups in Indian society, each with a different occupation and social status.

The brahmins, who were priests and scholars, had the highest status, followed by the kshatriyas, who were kings and soldiers, the vaishyas, who were in charge of economic life, and finally the shudras, who were supposed to serve the others.

This picture is expressed as early as the Vedas, the oldest Hindu religious texts, in particular by the Purusha Sukta, a hymn in the Rig Veda (10.90).

The creation of the world and society is described in the Purusha Sukta as stemming from the sacrifice of the Primeval Man (purusha), with brahmins coming from his mouth, kshatriyas from his shoulders, vaishyas from his thighs (a common euphemism for the genitals), and shudras from his feet.

Although this four-fold scheme is conceptually appealing, the reality was far more complicated.

For one thing, none of these four varnas was as uniform as this scheme might lead one to suppose: Each of the varnas had multiple occupationally defined subcommunities known as jatis, which often competed for status with one another, even though they may have been members of the same varna.

The other discrepancy was that local circumstances had a great effect on any particular community’s social status.

As one example, the Vellala community in Tamil Nadu had a great deal of status and power, even though they were technically shudras, because they were a landholding community.

On the opposite end, it is not uncommon for brahmins in northern India to earn their living by trading or other businesses.

This four-fold varna plan does give the general status picture, but the specifics are much more detailed.


~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - Who Was Tukaram?

 

Tukaram. (1598–1650) was a poet and saint associated with the Varkari Panth, a religious order dedicated to the worship of the deity Vithoba at his temple in Pandharpur, Maharashtra.

Tukaram was a shudra (one of four primary socioeconomic divisions in ancient Hinduism, with the shudras being the lowest and least prominent) born in the little town of Dehu, where his father was a modest trader, according to legend.

Tukaram continued to work at the family business, which finally collapsed due to his lack of interest in the outside world.

Instead, he desired the life of a renunciant, in which he could devote himself entirely to God.

He, like many other bhakti saints, is said to have been persecuted by traditionalist brahmins who were concerned that a person of his humble standing might achieve spiritual glory.

He is best known for the songs known as abhangs, which are still widely sung in Maharashtra despite his lack of education.

He had numerous pupils, including the poet-saint Bahina Bai, and legend has it that he was transported to heaven on a chariot of fire at the end of his life.

G. A. Deleury's The Cult of Vithoba was published in 1960, and Justin E. Abbott's The Life of Tukaram was published in 1980.

~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - What Is Brahmahatya?





("brahmin assassination") Brahmahatya is one of the four major sins that renders one an outcast from society, according to the dharma literature, which instructs on religious obligations. 



The gravity of this crime comes from brahmin holiness and prestige; with the exception of self-defense, the intentional murder of a brahmin has severe consequences. 


Even gods are susceptible to the bad karmic repercussions of this conduct. 

According to Hindu legend, after chopping off one of the deity Brahma's heads, the god Bhairava wanders the world for years. 

The skull remains attached to his hand as a conspicuous reminder of his crime until it comes off at Kapalamochana. 



The penalty for a brahmin murderer is similar to that of Bhairava in the more mild instructions in the dharma literature. 


The killer must carry the deceased man's skull for twelve years while wearing just a ragged cloth to cover his loins, and he must live on alms for the whole time, begging at no more than seven homes each day. 

Unless the murder was deliberate, in which case the sentence is quadrupled, he is considered pure after twelve years. 


According to many commentators, the only conceivable expiation (prayashchitta) for a brahmin who is killed by a kshatriya, vaishya, or shudra is death.



Hinduism - What Is The History Of Indian Culture?

 


A BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF INDIA'S CULTURAL HISTORY. 

 


The "animistic" and "polytheistic" Indian subcontinent is home to tens of thousands of local cults that have native shamanic roots, that perhaps reminds one of civilizations described in the African continent or resemble the Pscythian tribes of Eurasia. 


  •  However, Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism are four main spiritual traditions that rank among the global religions. 
  •  As a result, India's contribution to global spirituality is unparalleled. 


More than any other race, Indians have shown great versatility in spiritual issues, inspiring many other countries and resulting in a much-needed spiritual enrichment of our spiritually sick Western civilisation in our century. 


  •  For millennia, Hinduism has been the main tradition of the Indian subcontinent, with more than 1.2 billion followers worldwide. 


There are about 967 million Hindus in India, about 80% of the population which today stands over 1.4 billion people. 


  • Muslims, are the second biggest religious group, followed by Christians and Sikhs.
  •  In India, Buddhists make up a tiny minority, although they are well-represented in Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon), Tibet, and Southeast Asia. 

 

The word "Hinduism" is a bit of a misnomer. 

 

  • It is often used to refer to the whole culture of all Peninsula residents, excluding those who adhere to clearly recognized faiths like as Buddhism and Christianity. 
  •  More precisely, the term refers to a number of traditions that are historically and ideologically linked to the ancient Vedic civilization of more than 6,000 years ago, and which took on its distinctive shape around the turn of the first millennium c. E. 


NOTE: The term "Hinduism" is used on this site in the broadest meaning possible. 

 

Hinduism is a philosophy as well as a religion just as much as it can be a universal identity today. 


  •  It is a complete civilization with its own particular lifestyle, defined by a distinctive social structure: the caste system, much like the other global religions. 

For thousands of years, Hindu society has been divided into four estates (varna), which are incorrectly referred to as castes: 

  1. the priestly or briihmana estate or class;
  2. the warrior or kshatriya class; 
  3. the "common people" or vaishya class (comprising farmers, traders, and artisans); 
  4. and the servile or shudra class. 

 

This arrangement is believed to have its origins in the heavenly order. 

  •  The primal being or macranthropos is depicted as giving birth to the four estates as follows in the RigVeda's "Hymn of Man" (purusha-sfi.kta) (1 0. 90.  1 2): 
    • The brahmin is His lips; the warrior is made of His arms; the merchant is made of His thighs; and the servant is made of His feet. 
  •  Members of the slave estate were systematically barred from acquiring holy knowledge, and they ultimately became outcasts. 
    •  The feet are metaphorically "filthy," and the shudras' assignment to the Cosmic Man's lower limbs denotes their poor social position.
    • However, since the feet are an essential component of a fully functioning human person, the servile estate is also vital to society's well-being. 
    •  However, the shudras are karmically predestined for menial labor rather than intellectual, leadership, or creative activity, according to Vedic beliefs, since their awareness is of a darker color (varna). 


 It is a common misconception that the word varna ("color") relates to skin color and that the four states are divided by ethnic lines. 


  •  All four estates, however, are part of the Vedic Aryan social body, which, according to the Rig-Veda, valued the hue of the soul above ethnic traits. 
  •  Only the top three estates are regarded "twice-born" (dvija), meaning they have been "born again" via appropriate Vedic initiation. 
  •  Boys and girls from the priestly, military, and agricultural/mercantile estates were customarily married at the ages of eight, eleven, and twelve, respectively. 
  •  They were then given a holy thread (yajna-upavita, spelled yajno­ pavita) to wear permanently over the left shoulder, hanging diagonally across the chest, as part of the investiture (upanayana) ceremony. 

 

Allowing marriages between members of different estates resulted in the formation of social groupings known as castes (jati). 


  •  As a result, a growing number of subcastes emerged. 
  •  The conduct and actions of members of various castes are tightly regulated by complex rules that control this social order. 
  •  This stratification very certainly resulted in marginalized people being labeled "outcasts" or "untouchables."

Visionaries and reformers have often questioned this enormous social superstructure. 

 

  • The founder of Buddhism, Gautama, was one of the first to reject it. 
    •  Despite this, it has persisted throughout the ages and has had a strong effect on all other subcontinental cultures. 
  •  Social innovators who opposed the caste system in general had to oppose the Vedic revelation that legitimized it as well. 
  •  The caste system, with its social inequalities, is as natural to the devout Hindu as democracy is to us.
  •  The caste system is justified by citing the law of karma, much as we defend democratic principles by emphasizing the value of the individual. 
    •  Because of previous decisions and acts, each individual has a certain station in life. 
    •  Brahmins are brahmins because of their past lives' moral and spiritual endeavors. 
    •  Outcasts are outcasts for a variety of reasons, including a lack of desire for a better life or serious crimes. 



 Although the caste system offends our modern Western sensibilities, our forefathers formerly had beliefs and ideals that were comparable to those of traditional Hindus. 


  • The old social order, which was clearly hierarchical, was only questioned, contested, and eventually destroyed with the development of a strong individualism during the Renaissance. 
  •  Even our modern so-called egalitarian countries, with a super-wealthy elite at one end and a large number of impoverished people at the other, are not without social stratification. 



The caste system's rigidity has been counterbalanced by a considerable ideological flexibility. 

  •  As a result, Hinduism has shown an incredible ability for absorbing even the most diametrically opposed elements inside itself. 
  •  For example, at one end of the spectrum is Shankara's extreme non­ dualist school, and at the other end is Classical Samkhya's rigorous dualist school, which, despite its atheism, is nevertheless considered one of Hinduism's six main philosophical systems (darshana). 
  •  The "cool" contemplative approach of nondualist Jnana-Yoga of the Upanishads on the one hand, and the passionate emo­ tionalism of certain schools of monotheistic Bhakti­ Yoga on the other, is another example of such radically divergent philosophical views. 
  •  The medieval way of devotionalism (bhakti-marga) is very syncretistic, including aspects from Islamic Sufism, for example. 
    •  The Allah-Upanishad, a late book written under Muslim influence, exemplifies Hinduism's all-inclusive ethos. 
  •  Even a well-defined religious tradition like Christianity fell prey to Hinduism's spongelike absorptive capacity, and had to be saved from Hinduization by Jesuit missionaries in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. 

The inclusive nature of Hinduism is often misconstrued as universal tolerance, which is not the case. 


  •  There have been many examples of intolerance between different schools or factions of Hinduism throughout India's history, such as the long-standing conflict between the Vaishnavas and the Shaivas. 
  •  Hinduism is best understood as a complex sociocultural process that has evolved via the dynamics of continuity and discontinuity, or the survival of ancient forms and the incorporation of new cultural and religious manifestations. 
  •  Thus, Hinduism may be considered to have begun with Vedic civilization from one perspective (possibly as early as the fi fth millennium B . C. E. ). 
  •  From another perspective, the Vedic sacred culture and Hinduism as we know it now have genuine and significant contrasts. 
  •  Nonetheless, the general consistency has been remarkable, perhaps more so than the shifts that have occurred through time. 

 Most Western and Indian academics, until recently, emphasized the discontinuity in India's cultural development. 


  •  They perceived a conflict between the Indus Valley civilisation and the Vedic "Aryan" culture, which they believed originated outside of India. 
  •  However, this long-held Aryan invasion hypothesis is currently being actively contested. 
  •  A increasing number of academics in India and the West view this historical model as a scientific fiction that was created without sufficient evidence and has had a negative impact on our knowledge of ancient India's history and culture. 
  •  The book In Search of the Cradle of Civilization documents this significant shift in scholarly thinking. 

 

All evidence suggests that the Sanskrit-speaking Aryans who wrote the Vedas were not barbaric nomads who arrived from outside India and wreaked havoc on the local people. 

 Rather, the available evidence suggests that they were genuine Indian natives. 


Furthermore, there are compelling grounds to believe that the Vedic civilization, as represented in the Rig-Veda and the other three Vedic Samhitiis, was substantially, if not entirely, similar to the so-called Indus civilization. 


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Hinduism - What Is The Treatment Of Women In Dharma Literature?

 



Women from all socioeconomic categories were deemed shudras in the dharma literature, which meant they couldn't have another child, couldn't hear the Vedas, couldn't execute certain religious ceremonies, and in many regions couldn't possess land or resources unless they were married to a shudra.

At the same time, as daughters, mothers, wives, and patrons, women played (and continue to play) a vital role in Hindu religious life.

Women had their own specific role to play in traditional dharma literature, depending on their position as women.

Also see stridharma.


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Hinduism - What Is Asura Marriage?



    Asura Marriage is one of the eight methods to conduct a marriage that the Dharma Shastras, or religious treatises, acknowledge (dharma). 


    • It is called after the asuras, a strong celestial demoniac race whose goals often conflict with those of the gods (deva), giving the term a negative meaning. 
    • As is observed in most modern societies globally, an asura marriage is characterized by its transactional nature where in sacred marital vows are not consented to or volunteered by devotion or affinity, but rather sold in exchange for financial gain, be it capital, immovable or in kind. 
    •  In an age of increasing divorces and infidelity, this unholy form of marriage has taken center stage among global societies in the Kali Yuga.

    Because of the implication that the bride is being sold, this is one of the four terrible (aprashasta) types of marriage; nevertheless, like the other deplorable forms, it is considered to establish a legal marriage



    • Despite this widespread condemnation, it is one of the two traditional types of marriage that is still performed (the other being Brahma marriage).







    Definition Of Asura marriage according to Manu Smriti's section IV - Eight varieties of marriage. 



    It is known as Asura marriage when a man (groom) brings away a lady (bride or maiden) after offering riches as may be desired by her father on the plea to reclaim the money spent on her upbringing. 


    • This is recommended for Vaishyas and Shudras among four varnas of the Hindu social order in Hinduism, as specifically mentioned in Manu Smriti (Verse 3.21) among eight types of marriages defined in Hinduism, namely

    (1) Brahma

    (2) Daiva

    (3) Arsha

    (4) Prajapatya

    (5) Asura, 

    (6) Paishacha

    This kind of marriage is not encouraged for Brahmins and Kshatriyas, and it is hence illegal. 

    • Typically, it is determined by the man's will and desire, as well as his riches, regardless of the bride's willingness.

    • This sort of marriage entails paying a fee to the bride's relatives in order to purchase her. Or the Asura kind of marriage requires the bridegroom to provide money directly to the bride's father or kinsman. 
    • A wealthy but incompetent guy may have as many wives as he wants by taking advantage of this sort of marriage, whereas a poor but competent man may not be able to pay the money to be paid. 


    Why is Asura marriage seen as inferior rather than dignified?



    • The bridegroom determines the fee based on the bride's family's social standing. 
    • Money is the most important factor in this kind of marriage. 
    • In this kind of marriage, the bride is essentially bought.

    • The groom in an Asura marriage is not at all fit for the bride. He happily provides the bride's parents and relatives as much money as he can. It may be seen as a bribe in exchange for the boy's desire for the girl, even if he is in no way a match for her. 
    • As a result, the marriage system is similar to purchasing a commodity, which makes it unpopular in today's society. The groom is usually from a lower social class or caste than the bride.


    The Asura marriage is either an ancient habit or a necessary evil, according to the Smriti authors. 


    According to Manu, the girl's smart father should not take even the smallest sum of money. 


    • If he accepts it, he will be referred to as a child seller. 
    • This kind of marriage is still widespread among low-caste Hindus and several other Indian tribes today.
    • Because of the dowry system and other factors, it is not praised by knowledgeable people.


    Unapproved forms of Hindu Marriage.




    The unapproved forms of marriage include Asura, Gandharva, Rakshasa, and Paisacha. 


    • The property of a childless woman married in one of the prohibited forms falls to her family rather than her spouse, according to Rajbir Singh Dalal versus Chaudhari Devi Lal University, 2008.



    Asura Marriage In Mythology.


    • This is one of the most often denounced types of union. The father of the bride gives away her daughter in this fashion after the bridegroom has offered all of the riches he can to the bride's father and the bride herself. 
    • The guardian of Kaikeyi was granted an exorbitant sum of money for her marriage to King Dasaratha, according to the Ramayana
    • This was essentially a business transaction in which the bride is bought. 



    Modern Day Asura Marriage In India.


    In the case of Kailasanatha Mudaliar v. Parasakthi Vadivanni, 1931, the standard for deciding whether a marriage is "asura" or not was established. 

    • Asura marriage occurs when the bridegroom provides money or anything of value (such as wheat, cows, or other livestock) to the bride's father for his profit or in exchange for him giving her daughter in marriage.





    Rakshasa Marriage.




    The bride is kidnapped and her family and relations are ruthlessly murdered in the Rakshasa style of marriage. 


    • Another need, according to certain writings, is that the bridegroom battle with the bride's family while following the ceremonial rituals in a peaceful wedding. 
    • This criterion, however, is not required for a "Rakshasa" marriage. According to renowned Indologist P. V. Kane, this kind of marriage is called Rakshasa because Rakshasas (demons) are believed to have been brutal to their captives throughout history.
    • Kshtraiyas, or military classes, practiced this kind of marriage. The "Rakshasa" marriage mimics a victor's claim over a prisoner of war.


    This is a criminal offense under section 366 of the Indian Penal Code in the contemporary age. Abducting/kidnapping a woman to force her into marriage is punished by up to ten years in jail and/or a fine under Section 366.



    Paishacha Marriage.





    This is the eighth and last kind of marriage since it is the most heinous of the eight. 


    • A guy seduces a woman and performs a sexual act on her when she is asleep, inebriated, or mentally ill, usually at night. 
    • Because of the disgrace of such behavior, the girl and her parents must accept to the man's marriage. 
    • Paishacha refers to nighttime goblins who are intended to operate in secrecy.


    It mimics rape, which is the most heinous conduct a person can do in the contemporary period and is punished under section 376 of the Indian Penal Code. Rape is punishable by a minimum of seven years in jail and a maximum of life in prison, as well as a fine.




    Relatable Modern Marriages Observed in Today's World.



    There are now only two types of marriage: 


    • Brahma and Asura, as mentioned in A. L. V. R. S. T. Veerappa Chettiar versus S. Michael Etc, 1962.


    As stated in A. L. V. R. S. T. Veerappa Chettiar vs S. Michael Etc., 1962, the Asura marriage has developed from an actual sale transaction to a kind of marriage in which the parties' or community's knowledge implies that the marriage is "Asura" in origin.


    • Other kinds have nearly gone obsolete in recent years, since they are now considered a criminal offense under the IPC and are considered inappropriate by society norms and morality. 
    • However, certain lower castes continue to perform and engage in these marital practices and behaviors, thus they are not completely gone.



    Final Thoughts.


    • The eight types of marriage, as outlined in dharma books such as the Manu-smriti, were developed to accommodate various classes of people. 

    • Brahmins were the ones who generally practiced the sanctioned marriage forms. 
    • Kshatriya, Vaisya, and Shudra were the most common practitioners of the unapproved forms.

    Some of these practices have been acknowledged as customary under the Hindu Marriage Act of 1956, while others have been made illegal under India's numerous penal codes.



    Related to - The eight classical types of marriage.



    Kiran Atma


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    References And Further Reading.


    • Derrett, J. Duncan M. “AN ASPECT OF THE ARRANGED MARRIAGE IN DHARMAŚĀSTRA.” Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 58/59 (1977): 107–20. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41691682.
    • Sternbach, L. and Dave, J.H., 1981. Manu-smriti with Nine Commentaries by Medhātithi, Sarvarjñanārāyaṇa, Kullūka, Rāghavānanda, Nandana, Rāmacandra, Maṇirāma, Govindarāja and BhāruciManu-smriti with Nine Commentaries by Medhatithi, Sarvarjnanarayana, Kulluka, Raghavananda, Nandana, Ramacandra, Manirama, Govindaraja and Bharuci. Journal of the American Oriental Society101(2). https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/manusmriti-with-the-commentary-of-medhatithi/d/doc199802.html
    • GUPTA, GIRI RAJ. “Love, Arranged Marriage, and the Indian Social Structure.” Journal of Comparative Family Studies 7, no. 1 (1976): 75–85. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41600938.
    • Kumar, Vijender. “BIGAMY AND HINDU MARRIAGE: A SOCIO-LEGAL STUDY.” Journal of the Indian Law Institute 59, no. 4 (2017): 356–82. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26826614.
    • Schlegel, Alice, and Rohn Eloul. “Marriage Transactions: Labor, Property, Status.” American Anthropologist 90, no. 2 (1988): 291–309. http://www.jstor.org/stable/677953.
    • Jayasekera, M. L. S. “MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE IN ANCIENT SINHALA CUSTOMARY LAW.” Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Sri Lanka Branch 26 (1982): 77–96. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23730735.
    • Sternbach, Ludwik. “A SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE FORMS OF MARRIAGE IN ANCIENT INDIA (A Résumé).” Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 22, no. 3/4 (1941): 202–19. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43975949.
    • Bhat, S.G. “LAWS OF MARRIAGE FROM ‘SASTRAS’ TO STATUTES - INEQUALITY TO EQUALITY.” Journal of the Indian Law Institute 45, no. 3/4 (2003): 400–408. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43951870.
    • Chowdhry, Prem. “Private Lives, State Intervention: Cases of Runaway Marriage in Rural North India.” Modern Asian Studies 38, no. 1 (2004): 55–84. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3876497.
    • Ranjana Sheel. “Institutionalisation and Expansion of Dowry System in Colonial North India.” Economic and Political Weekly 32, no. 28 (1997): 1709–18. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4405621.
    • Bhattacharji, Sukumari. “Economic Rights of Ancient Indian Women.” Economic and Political Weekly 26, no. 9/10 (1991): 507–12. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4397402.
    • Polit, Karin. “Gifts of Love and Friendship: On Changing Marriage Traditions, the Meaning of Gifts, and the Value of Women in the Garhwal Himalayas.” International Journal of Hindu Studies 22, no. 2 (2018): 285–307. http://www.jstor.org/stable/44983948.