What are the parameters by which you can gauge if you have grown spiritually? Are there common milestones on the path that indicate your rate of evolution? More>>
Why is spirituality a source of much needed source
of nourishment for women today? Do women relate to spiritual concerns in unique
ways? Does spirituality empower women in real and definite ways? An examination
of these core issues
Not
my way of salvation, To reject the world! Rather for me the Taste
of Infinite Freedom While yet I am bound By a thousand bonds To
the wheel.
Rabindranath Tagore
As
I allow spiritual currents to enter my life, I recognize a certain brashness
in my earlier rejection of the spiritual realm. Spirituality connects
many different realities, like a bridge. I find myself stretching, embracing
opposites. The more the universe seems to step in and take over. If I
display courage, I know that it has, in some beautiful way, been gifted
to me. I value solitude, yet begin to experience a fluid ease in relating
with people. I feel a sense of personal
growthand deep gratitude. My feminist politics remains sharply
etched: a concern for justice, well being, and dignity for all.
As I speak with
other women about their spiritual concerns, some core issues emerge. As women
seek to crave out new identities, does spirituality remain a source of strength,
guidance and wisdom? How do women integrate the spiritual with the nitty-gritty
of daily lives and varied responsibilities? Are women articulating spiritual concerns
in ways that help empower them? Does a very basic spirituality shape the lives
of ordinary women? Are there messages here that we need to tune into?
I hope these explorations provide glimmerings of a spirituality that is intense,
caring, committed, and deeply inclusive.
SPIRIT AND FLESH
For women, typically, spirituality is not only otherworldly. It is as
much about the body, about relationships
and work, as it is about soul and spirit. Janet Chawla, a researcher specializing
in women's health and religio-cultural traditions, talks about her unease
when a Buddhist
teacher referred appreciatively to persons who, in response to the inner
call, had left their families, even children. "This is very objectionable
in a world where children are being abandoned for all sorts of reasons,"
she says. "This sort of spirituality valorizes renunciation and negates
life, responsibility, the
world." She projects the notion of a spirituality that respects life that
cares for the personal and everyday details of living.
Across the board, women seem to respond to the element of love, which
interpenetrates the world of material life. Tripta Batra, a Sikh
woman from Delhi, India, has, from early childhood, valued "service, love,
faith, being honest, kind and helpful". She says: "I am a Sikh, but I
believe that these are the basic teachings of all the religions of the
world. All of them teach us to love and honor human beings, and God."
St Therese, a Philippines
scholar and writer, taught in a university for 26 years before she took the vows
and became a cloistered nun. She calls Saint Therese, the 'foundress' of the religious
order to which she belongs, a 'genuine feminist' whose "very life of the 'little
way' provides us with such a clear, lived-out experience of the thirst for God."
Commenting on her own role, she says: "My only contribution as a nun
is through prayer, and the quiet pursuance of simple household tasks. I pray and
share whatever God gives me." Yet, she emerges from the cloister to take special
lectures at the university on philosophy, aesthetics and women's studies.
Suffering
can provide occasion for the active confirmation of faithas we found during
the aftermath of the '84 riots (the brutal backlash on the Sikh community in India,
as a result of the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, by her Sikh
bodyguards), in which a number of Sikh women were widowed in the most violent
of circumstances. Women whose lives had been so ruthlessly violated expressed
the need to work out their grief through rituals of mourning and of collective
path (scriptural reading).
At times like this, being part of a community
that practices a certain faith and has mutually shared beliefs lays the ground
for empathy and a sense of connectedness. A fundamental trust can then be rebuilta
trust that is sorely needed to hold on to one's sanity, keep intact one's instincts
for survival, and, in time, be able to again open oneself to light and growth.
Hurt, anger and fear are natural emotions
and we need to allow ourselves the opportunity to feel them. But can women
actually try moving out of the grip of situations of violence by refusing
to participate? In Mother WitA Feminist Guide to Psychic Development,
Diane Mariechild writes about women confronting violence: "You have been
raped. Should you send negative energy to the rapist, hoping that he will
break his leg, or worse? No, to do this would only perpetuate the violence
as well as bind you to him because of the intense emotion. Surrounding
yourself with white light and using affirmations to acknowledge your health,
strength and wisdom are two ways of protecting yourself psychically. (This,
of course, does not eliminate the need for protection on the physical
level: having strong locks on your doors and learning self-defense.) If
you have been the victim of a violent attack, it is important to confront
your fear and anger and learn to release them."
It is easy to participate
in cycles of revenge and anger. But if one could bring back a certain inner balance,
become focused and calm, one could creatively influence others to move in a different
direction.
After a traumatic loss, Shah Jahan Begum helped create a
women's shelter home, Shaktishalini in Delhi. "My daughter was killed by her in-laws.
I could not get justice, I was in despair. Yet I had faith in Allah's rahmat
(mercy), and began working in society, so that such horrors will never be repeated!"
In a situation of war, Shulamith Koenig, an Israeli author, writes: "As
difficult as it may be, let us learn to be 'pro' not 'anti'-pro-Israeli,
pro-Palestinian. All my life I was very proud that I was a Jew, a woman,
an Israeli, a mother. Today, there are times when I am ashamed. I need
to work together
with my sisters from around the world to find a way forward. My question
is this: How do we stop humiliating one another? How do we turn from the
experience of humiliation, and yet not go on to humiliate others? How
do we break the cycle?"
COPING
AND CONNECTING
Renuka Jane Ramanujan, a sociologist, shattered by the
loss of her first baby to a degenerative liver disease, says: "A friend of mine
had been participating in Buddhist chanting. I went along. Chanting in the group
has given me tremendous strength. I feel a sense of power, of control, again."
Renuka draws succor from a basic faith that goes beyond the boundaries
of religion. "I find having faith helps a person deal with problems
in life and be less tense, because there is someone helping you. Women
take on so much suffering and pain.
There must be ways to deal with it. With prayers and chanting I create
a clean energy field around myself. This helps me handle things in my
own way." In the midst of conflicting and disturbing external situations,
spirituality can provide an anchor. The inner core can be like a well
from which one draws daily nourishment, to cope and survive with integrity.
Many women today are carving out their independent space and chosen
paths. Simran, a young professional who went to Igatpuri in Maharashtra,
India, for vipassanameditation,
says: "I was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
Everything was going wrongmy
parents wanted me to give up my work and marry; I broke up with my boyfriend;
my boss started harassing me. When I went to Igatpuri I was in a daze, I didn't
know whether I would ever return. The quiet time there helped bring back a sense
of purpose and determination."
Aruna Roy, a seasoned social activist working in Rajasthan, India, admits:
"My life is and for this I meditate. I have been for intensive vipassana
courses in which complete silence is maintained for a certain period:
two weeks, one month."
Kamla Padmanabhan, 46, an acupressure
practitioner who works long hours, says: "I have always been interested
in naturopathy
and the body's natural ability to heal itself. With my son in college
I was able to pursue my interest in healing. During treatments, I get
so involved I even dream of my patients. Earlier, I would feel a sense
of loneliness even while socializing in a party. In this work, I feel
a strong sense of connection. My mother was religious, she would tell
me that by serving people, one is serving God. So this work truly satisfies
my spiritual instincts."
Radha Bhatt, dedicated to the Gandhian
vision, lives it out in her daily life. She runs Lakshmi Ashram in Kausani in
Uttar Pradesh, India. "Gandhiji wanted this institution set up," she explains,
"to awaken the hidden shakti of hill women, I came here as a young girl
to study. Now, I teach girls from remote villages.
"The day begins with
a morning prayer and spinning. The schoolgirls spin as they pray together. Then
there are classes and practical work. Satyagraha (upholding the truth)
and sarvodaya (the upliftment of all) involve integration of the various
elements of the selfthe spiritual with the mundane." For Bhatt, this is
a family, connected by bonds deeper than the blood ties.
ROOTS
AND DEPTHS During 1993-94, I was part of the Delhi-based Forum for Women
and Religion. Here we explored spirituality and religion from women's perspectives.
These discussions became the starting point for a churning and reevaluation of
my own skepticism.
I saw that my rejection of religion was essentially
a reaction to the dogmas, arrogance and distortions that have crept into organized
religions. I also began to notice a tremendous arrogance in the modern view of
the human being as potentially all-powerful; in a way that pits the individual
against nature, against other human beings, and against the softer, humane, emotional,
intuitive and spiritual parts of one's own self.
Drawn by the power
of the very extraordinary faith that many ordinary people displayed, I began to
understand that deeper growth and real empowerment come from an acceptance of
the boundless potential of the human self. One can accept oneself as small yet
integrally connected to all else. The wave is small if it sees itself as an isolated
wave, but large if it knows itself as part of the limitless oceanis able
to become that ocean. It is important to understand and know oneself both as wave,
and as ocean. For women, this points first of all to the significance of examining
and deepening our own concerns, values and identities.
Through the Forum
we began to reclaim the potential for positive growth that exists in most religions.
If we look at often concealedfor our struggles.
In Kanpur, we
asked a number of Hindu women why they believe in Sita as an ideal. Their answers
are thought provoking, they said that she coped with extremely tough circumstances,
and coped very well. Any other reason? "Yes. She brought up her children on her
own. We too bring up our children, without much help. Sita's example helps us,
fills us with courage." Contrary to the notion of Sita as 'weak', women identify
Sita as a capable, autonomous woman, who meets every challenge with strong, feminine
grace and exemplary courage.
Costa Rican author Elsa Tamez writes: Jesus'
life exemplifies a new attitude towards women: a woman is recognized and respected
as a person in herself; she is dignified; and she participates in society and
in history as a transforming social agent of action…We in Latin America prefer
to speak about a double struggle of women and the poor-part of the global process
of liberation… Woman have found a new inspiration, when they read and interpret
the Bible from the perspective of the poor, from the perspective of liberation."
Urges
Egyptian writer Nawaal el Saadwi: "In Islam and the Arab world, and in
all our cultures, we must claim those things that are positive, and discard
without hesitation those things that are negative. In Egypt we have a
long tradition of women of power. For thousands of years, for example,
we have had the Goddess Isis, and her tradition. Thank God, thank Goddess,
we still have her spirit with us!"
Madhu Khanna,
a scholar of medieval tantric
traditions, says: "Feminine energy is central to tantric understanding.
This energy has many aspects, benign as well as fierce. In tantric
symbolizing the yoni (vagina) is energized and worshipped. Female
power here denotes balance. It does not negate the male principle in any
way, yet it is independent and sufficient in itself. Tantric representations
are a rich source for understanding female power and autonomy. And they
strike a deep chord with women."
In her book Passionate EnlightenmentWomen in Tantric Buddhism,
Miranda Shaw writes that a large number of womenDombiyogini,
Sahajayogicinta, Lakshminkara, Gangadhara, Siddharajni,
Mekhala, Kankhala and otherswere highly respected
gurus, yoginis (female yoga exponents), and advanced seekers on
the path to enlightenment.
Anthropologists say it was women who discovered plants
and adapted these for daily nutrition, medicine and agriculture, and made the
first homes. Over the centuries men began to establish control over homes, families
and fields. Ancient goddess-worshipping cultures gave way, in different parts
of the world, to belief systems in which God, or godhead, reigns supreme.
In her book Devi and the Spouse Goddess, historian Lynn A. Gatwood
shows that female status declined during the characteristics of the devis
(goddesses) also changed. Over the centuries, the devis became weaker versions
of their original selves. Even as marriage rules became rigid for high caste women,
"the three gods of the Hindu trinity were given wives (Saraswati, Lakshmi, Parvati).
Meanwhile, unadulterated village and regional devis continued to be propitiated
by the non-literate majority." The motif of marriage as oppressive vis-à-vis the
freedom of a life lived according to one's own terms is a recurring theme throughout
Indian mythology, poetry and culture. In the sixth century B.C. some women chose
to become Buddhist bhikhunis (female mendicants) and described their complex
motivation for doing so:
A
Woman Well Set Free
A woman well set free! How free I am, How
wonderfully free, from kitchen drudgery, Free from the harsh grip of hunger,
And from empty cooking pots, Free
too of that unscrupulous man, The weaver of sunshades. Calm now, and
serene I am, All lust and hatred purged. To the shade of the spreading
trees I go And contemplate my happiness.
Sumangalamata, 6th Century B.C.
Though I Am Weak
Though I am weak and tired now, And my youthful step long gone,
Leaning on this staff, I climb the mountain peak. My cloak cast off,
my bowl overturned, I sit here on this rock. And over my spirit blows
The breath Of
liberty I've won, I've won the triple gems. The Buddha's way is mine.
Mettika, 6th Century B.C. translated by Uma Chakravarty and Kumkum
Roy in Women Writing in India
In
the fifteenth century, Mirabai
chose her own spiritual path and way of life. Muses historian Parita Mukta: "Mira's
bhakti (devotion) must be seen essentially as enunciating the principle
of love in an age and a society marked by war, vendetta and the rising power of
the state. Bhakti enabled Mira to uphold a life based on love. It enabled
her to establish a direct relationship which was of her choice and which was self-directive."
Resisting social norms and obligations that she found morally and personally
repulsive, Mira upheld an alternative code of ethics.
She spurned the power of ruler and husband, paid allegiance only to Krishna,
and kept company with itinerant bhaktas (devotees), dancing and
singing in their company. Even today, her bhajans (devotional songs)
are preserved and widely sung, especially by women, peasants and the working
classes.
RECLAIMING THE POWER OF THE SPIRIT Dhapa, an 80-year-old Rajasthani
midwife, describes a baby's advent into the outer world as 'mukti'. For
her, mukti (freedom) is not the cessation of the cycle of birth and rebirth.
Rather, it is liberation from one state into the next. Mukti is what is
appropriate for the given moment in time: the snake shedding skin which has fully
lived out its purpose, the being moving from darkness into light, and, once again,
transiting into darkness.
Wise women of our land celebrate and value continuities and connections,
seeing the cosmic in the mundane, preserving practices wherein body, emotion,
mind and spirit are inextricably intertwined. The human being engages
in a spiraling dance that comprises movements of birth,
life, deatheach
appropriate in its own place, its own time. For Dhapa, there is no valorization
of the 'otherworld', no denigration of 'this' one.
For Sudha Hingorani, a housewife, spirituality
exists at many levels: "Our Upanishads contain some of the fundamental questions
of life: the search for truth, beauty, and goodness (Satyam Shivam Sundaram).
One feels there still must be some source, some gurus, who will provide authentic
answers.
"There is a revival of interest in spirituality, I think what people are
seeking is balance. Intellectually there is jnana (knowledge) yoga,
but practically speaking, people need to get back equanimity and poise,
bring down stress levels. Our lifestyles are out of balance. Consumerism
creates tremendous imbalances, affecting everybody at a very intimate
level.
"I turned to reiki, pranic
healing and acupressure as a practical need when my five-year-old
daughter developed rheumatic arthritis. I found reiki very powerful. It
gave me strength. I think women as a group are more comfortable with these
systems. After all, the root of healing are the kitchen, the witch, the
garden and forest." Reiki,
the universal life force energy, is recognized as feminine much like shakti
(female power) or prakriti (nature). These are notions of energy:
powerful, creative, flowing through the cosmos. Women's actual lives,
of-course, are a strange blend of power and powerlessness.
Documentary
filmmaker Saba Dewan, comments on some Banda women she met: "Shanti had been beaten
black and blue by her husband and in-laws. Yet, by her own definition, Shanti
is not a victim; she is 'the chosen one' who has stood by her beliefs and accepted
the consequences of doing so.
"I was fascinated enough to follow through
and explore her world. She is a classic yogini figure: ambivalent, willful,
as well as nurturing. I made the film Khel, and for me this opened up something
at many levels. I visited yogini temples, read texts, began bonding with
certain symbols and spaces which earlier were totally outside my worldview. I
emerged from the experience feeling very humbled.
"Coming from a privileged
class we are arrogant because we can negotiate the world. But here was another
world which I lacked the skills to understand. I had a sensitivity and respect
for this world which came from my father, who had related to Sufism. So there
was an openness to this dimension. The strength of people's beliefs awoke an emotional
response in me. For me spirituality became a bonding with something bigger than
one's selfwith a certain mystical force.
"I realize that people exist at many different levels. Ram Kali is a Kol,
a tribal
who has lost her forest and land, been dispossessed; Shanti is poor, low-caste,
a victim of domestic violence. But this is not a multiplicity of identities,
a plurality of visions. Each person is so many different beings, can be
defined in so many different ways. This helps me look beyond a reductionist
viewpoint that puts people into neat slots.
"For me spirituality and sexuality
are related issues; I see both as autonomous spaces that women can reclaim.
I found myself stimulated to question anew my own roles in life. Although
I have never been bound by very conventional role-definitions, still there
are many internalized attitudes. Certain contradictions in my own choices
became starker."
Chachi, 61, lives in a joint family, in a small town of Uttar Pradesh, India.
She was married early, and relentlessly mistreated by her sister-in-law. Over
the years, she has suffered from some very apparent neuroses. She washes vegetables
obsessively, afraid there is a needle hidden between the leaves.
But she has come
into her own in a world of gods and goddesses, which, she claims, respond to her
efforts to propitiate them. "Now everybody comes to me for help," she says. "They
come when they have exams, or illness, or want to marry. I fast. Whatever I ask
for, comes about. Of course it is tiring. I cannot take on everything for everybody."
A COMMON HUMANITY A COMMON SPIRITUALITY
In Delhi, four young women have recently created a center consecrated
to the vision of Sri
Aurobindo and the Mother. Called The Gnostic Centre, it regularly
holds workshops, readings and meditation sessions. At the inauguration
of the center earlier this year, Ameta Mehra introduced all four as being
professionals: Ritika is a lawyer , Anuradha an educationalist, Seema
an interior designer, while Ameeta herself manages a stud farm.
Ritika
says there is no gender distinction in the realm of the spiritual, for:
"Spirituality deals with One Reality, the Divine, in which there is no
distinction between men and women. It's true that generally men are more
vital and emotional, women closer to the psychic
and mental. But it is not uniformly so: you will find some men more psychic
and mental, some women more vital and emotional."
Ritika's conviction underlines
a very significant metaphysical reality which is acknowledged by virtually all
religions: that sexual identity is insignificant at the level of the Ultimate
Self. The soul is ungendered, beyond gender.
Yet, organized religions
often privilege the male persona. Says Shah Jahan Begum: "I am deeply religious.
Our religion does not teach injustice violence. The Prophet taught that women
are equal to men. We have female divine teachers in Islamthe paigambarzadis.
The Prophet allowed four marriages but only if a man can treat his wives with
absolute equality. Many marriages nowadays are actually against our religionmen
are, discarding the first wife, abandoning the children. I encourage our women
to read the Koran, the hadiths, so that we can understand for ourselves
and use our own minds to interpret what is our religion."
Ma Jnanananda,
a well-known south Indian guru, commenting on the tradition which regards women
as unsuitable candidates for spiritual initiation or leadership, dismisses such
ideas as "foolish and wrong. Of course, there are emotional differences between
men and women, but these do not relate to self-realization".
Did she
feel that men and women are exactly equal in spiritual characteristics? "Have
you ever seen the image of Shiva as Ardhanarishwara?" she responded. "He
is depicted in two sexes but one body. It is primarily at the gross physical level
that we must perceive precise distinctions. When the male and female elements
are completely developed and complement each other in the same individual, the
soul is fully realized. For myself I no longer feel that I inhabit the body of
a particular gender."
My mother, Preet Vanti Mehrotra, who grew up in Dayalbagh, center of the
Radhasoami Satsang faith near Agra, comments: "I have strong faith
in my religion. I have grown up with it, studied it. Although I accept
all the tenets, there is one that I question: women in our faith cannot
be sant-satgurus.
"The sant-satguru has to be a man. If men and women are equal,
why this ban? I have asked those senior to me, consulted the texts. Women, they
say, can be aspirants, in the same way as men, that's good! But a woman has to
go through further births: it is only as a man that the param dham (final
destination) can be reached. I reject this!"
Through the centuries of
patriarchal control, women have negotiated many layers and levels of existence,
working out forms of resistance that are often unnoticed and subtle, though subliminally
and powerfully effective. Women's articulation is often at odds with the dominant
male voice.
Women need to speak in their own way, define their own truths,
in voices that revision society and polity, relationships and religion. Bahena
Bai's voice echoes through the corridors of time, poignant in its appeal to acknowledge
the common humanity and spiritual unity of women and men, an appeal still relevant.
More than ever today.
The
Vedas Cry Aloud
The Vedas cry aloud, the Puranas shout,
"No good may come to woman"
I was born with a woman's body
How am I to attain Truth?
"They are foolish, seductive, deceptive
Any connection with a woman is disastrous."
Bahina says, "If a woman's body is so harmful,
How in this world will I reach Truth?"
Bahena
Bai, 17th century.
tr. from Marathi by Justin E. AbbotWomen's Writing in India