|
The Karthikai Deepam Day
The Karthikai Deepam Day
Karthikai Deepam, the festival of lights basically a Tamil
festival is celebrated throughout Tamil Nadu during the month of
Karthikai (November-December). Not many of us are aware that it
is one of the oldest festivals celebrated in the State, perhaps
even before people began celebrating Deepavali and
Navarathri.
The Karthikai Deepam day commemorates the
appearance of the Lord as a jothi sthambam, an infinite pillar of
light at Arunachala. This festival falls in the Tamil month of
Kartigai when the star Krithika is on the ascendant and usually
occurs on a full moon day.
One of the earliest references to the festival is
found in the Ahananuru, a book of poems, which dates back to the
Sangam Age (200 B.C. to 300 A.D.). The Ahananuru clearly states
that Karthikai is celebrated on the full moon day (pournami) of
the Tamil month of Karthikai. It was one of the most important
festivals (peruvizha) of the ancient Tamils. Avaiyyar, the
renowned poetess of those times, refers to the festival in her
songs.
In ancient Tamil literature, the oldest available
work Tolkappiyam gives in concise verse form rules for Tamil
grammar as well as other topics. Scholars agree that this work
dates back to 2000 or 2500 BC. In one of the formulae Tolkapiyar
in his treatise uses the phrase "like the lamp´s flame
pointing upwards." In another epic Jeevakachintamani written by a
Jain poet, Thiruthakka Thevar, the poet describes how people
celebrated the Karthikai Deepam festival. In Karnarpadu, the poet
in one of the stanzas, describes how in the Tamil month of
Karthikai during the time of the Krithika star, the lamps lit by
people blossomed on earth, bringing rain in its wake. In another
Tamil work, the Kalavazhi Narpadu dating back to the third Sangam
period (after 1000 B.C) the poet says, "In the battle the blood
oozing out from the dead soldiers´ bodies is like the red
coloured flame of the lamps lit during Karthikai Deepam
festival". In another Sangam work, Pazhamozhi, in stanzas ending
in proverbs, one stanza ends with this phrase, "like the beacon
on the Hill."
Inscriptions in our temples also refer to the
festival. A mid-sixteenth Century inscription at the
Arulalaperumal temple in Kancheepuram, refers to the festival as
Thiru Karthikai Thirunal.
In Sambandar´s Tevaram, while trying to raise
a young girl Poompavai from the dead, he asks with deep feeling,
"O Poompavai, have you gone without seeing the ancient Karthikai
festival?" Another song in Tevaram says that the Lord is verily
the deepam (lit during the Karthikai festival).
There is a work on Karthikai Deepam consisting of a
hundred stanzas, praising the festival. When Muruganar asked
Bhagavan Ramana about the significance of the Karthikai Deepam
festival, Bhagavan composed a stanza of four lines in which he
says, "The true significance of the Karthikai Deepam festival is
that it turns the intel-lect inwards and having fixed it in the
Heart merges it with the indweller of the Heart".
Karthikai is essentially a festival of lamps. The
lighted lamp is considered an auspicious symbol. It is believed
to ward off evil forces and usher in prosperity and joy. While
the lighted lamp is important for all Hindu rituals and
festivals, it is indispensable for Karthikai.
A story is told like this. There was a demon who
had, by severe austerities, obtained the boon that he could be
invincible and immortal so long as the three forts in which he
had entrenched himself were not demolished at one stroke. Because
of these three forts or cities he had come to be known as
Tripurasura. The forts were impregnable, one within the other. If
only one or two of them were destroyed by his opponents, they
would immediately spring up again as strong as ever and the demon
would remain unconquerable for such was the boon. Only when all
the three forts were demolished and razed to the ground at one
stroke and at one time could the demon be vanquished and
destroyed. All the forces of good-the gods-tried to rid the world
of the atrocities and tyranny of the demon but could not succeed
They could destroy one fort or at least two and that too one
after the other and the forts would spring up again, none the
worse in all the onslaughts of the gods. In despair the defeated
gods approached Lord Shiva to come to their help and protect the
world.
The merciful Lord Shiva agree. All the gods joined Him and made
up His equipment. Armed with the organised strength of the gods,
he took up his great bow and sallied forth against the demon. In
the beginning, He too demolished one fort or two but found them
springing up again and again without even so much as a scratch.
Then remembering the boon the demon had been blessed with, Lord
Shiva took out His terrible Arrow and shot it at the three forts
and lo! The impregnable walls came crumbling down and became dust
and could not come into being again and the fearful demon
deprived of his invincible shelter was slain The whole creation
heaved a sigh of relief and once again righteousness reigned in
the world People could freely follow their religious duties and
live in peace and prosperity. It was this auspicious Kartika
Purnima-Full Moon Day-when this great victory of good over evil
was achieved and so it is observed as a day of rejoicing and at
night a big light is lighted in honour of the Lord's victory.
All our religious stories or the so-called myths are fraught with
deep meaning and this story is no exception. The philosophical
teaching is clear. Every individual soul is encased in three
bodies-the Karana, Sukshma and the Sthula. The food and breath
sheaths make up the gross or physical body, sthula sharira. The
breath, emotion and intelligence sheaths make up the subtle or
astral body, sukshma sharira. The intelligence and bliss sheaths
make up the causal body, karana sharira.
The three bodies are the different vehicles of our
consciousness. They are encasements for the inner being. Only the
physical body is a body in our usual sense of the term. The
astral has the same form as the physical body but is made up of
subtle matter. The causal is of the form of an egg, a body of
light.
The Sthula is easy of destruction but the other two
soon reconstruct it in another birth and the fetters binding the
soul remain unbroken. If by great effort the Sthula, i.e., the
physical body, and also the Sukshma, the finer mental sheath, are
destroyed, the Karana-the causal body, still remains storing in
it all tendencies and Karmas and it brings into again and again
the Sukshma and the Sthula bodies and thus the cycle of births
and deaths goes on and the soul continues in its agonising
bondage.
It is only when by the Grace of the Guru, the Lord
Shiva - the Paramatman - takes the field and at one stroke
destroys all ignorance that the Karana Shareer is totally
annihilated resulting in the complete destruction of the other
two grosser sheaths and the soul - Jiva - stands unfettered, face
to face with the Lord and becomes free- Mukta and merges in the
Formless Shiva, abode of everlasting Bliss The cool brilliance of
the full moon and the lights lighted in grateful adoration to the
Lord are emblems of the victory of light over darkness, of
knowledge over ignorance., of immortality over death of freedom
of the spirit over the bondage of Maya.
This so-called myth bears one more interpretation and has a
lesson for us-the Hindu people of today. We are essentially
devoted to the spirit though today we seem to have forgotten our
holy heritage. Whereas people in the rest of the world are
following in the pursuit of happiness in this life - happiness
supposed to be born of material " prosperity and power - our
great thinkers have realised the evanescence of mundane pleasures
and sought after real happiness, pure unadulterated, eternal and
realised that Truth, the effulgent, immortal, all surpassing
Bliss, the principle which as the material, efficient and
intelligent cause of all creation, past, present and future, is
imminent in it and transcends it as well, knowing which and
becoming one with which, the individual attains the ultimate goal
of existence. This Truth is in our keeping as it were, handed
down to us by our seers and the sacred duty is cast upon us to
broadcast it to the world and see that every human being realises
it and becomes one with all-pervading spirit. We have to live so
as may be able to discharge this duty efficiently.
|