Female aesthetics and ecological connect in Kolam
Kolam is a beautiful, renewal
performing and visual art that has a deep-rooted connection with nature and
ecology.
Vijaya Nagarajan in her writings on ritual
practices in Hinduism has referred to kolam as the ritual of ‘embedded ecologies’.
She states that rituals like kolam serve the purpose of binding social
relationships between the natural and the cultural worlds (Nagarajan 2001,
2000, 1998a). According to her, this establishing of a sacred relationship with
the natural world is facilitated by performing the act of danam (generosity). In kolam making the main ingredient used is
rice powder that serves as an offering to ants, insects, birds, bees, maggots
and flies; thus fulfilling the karmic duty of ‘feeding a thousand souls a day’.
Nagarajan clarifies her idea of ‘embedded ecology’ by explaining that:
Implicit
in the use of the term ‘’ecology’’ is the understanding that each culture and
each community within a culture has its own myths, memories, associations and
cultural obsessions about the natural world.
This article explores the notions of ecology through the lens of women who practice kolam as a daily ritual. In my conversations with Tamil women, i enquired about those cultural, aesthetic and religious conceptions that orient perceptions of natural space as a sacred realm. This is evinced by the significance of Bhu-Devi in the ritual art of kolam. In Hinduism, Bhu-devi is the mythic, iconic and metaphysical personification of the earth. Interestingly, the image of Bhu-devi is perceived as both cosmic and local -as a large living being with a soul and as the particular soil at a woman’s feet in a particular village, town or city. Sivakalai of Kumbhakonam district in Tamil Nadu explains that ‘Bhu-devi should be our first thought in the morning and we draw the Kolam to remind us of Bhu-devi and ask for forgiveness for stepping on her and burdening her with our body weight’. Another women Vellaiyiammal from the Cuddalore district who works in the rice paddy fields as a wage labor since her house was destroyed by the Tsunami in 2004, says that ‘the whole world depends on her for sustenance and she (Bhu-devi) bears us and our endless activities with such patience’.
This virtue of patience is believed to
be transferred from the Bhu-devi to the women through the kolam. On festive and
special occasions, the women exemplify this virtue of patience by bending down
and enduring the long hours of physical and mental involvement needed for
large-sized, intricate, traditional kolam design. By just having a look at the
Kolam in the household, elderly people or otherwise anyone could make out the
nature of women in a particular household - how creative, patient, active,
involved one is. A beautiful Kolam is seen as possessing Sri lakshanam (prosperity) for the household inmates.
Mrs Raji Ramanan (a Sanskrit scholar
and a Kolam expert) who has been practicing kolam since her marriage at the age
of eighteen, states that the Tamil women were well aware of the integral
relationship of each household with ecology and cosmos.
She explains that -
She explains that -
Nature
was her (Tamil women’s) first and continued inspiration. She knew her
ingredient source. They were available from nature and nothing other than that.
She never disturbed nature. Through the
kolam a relationship with the divine (Shridevi, Shri Lakshmi and Bhudevi) is
established. In the act of drawing
kolam, the divine is invoked, invited and hosted at the cultural space –the
threshold.
Eminent environmental and feminist activist Vandana Shiva (who was trained as a physicist in Canada in the 1970s) emphasizes in her most famous book –‘Staying Alive: Women, Ecology and Development (1989)’ that the Hindu women have been and continue to be ‘naturally’ and ‘culturally’ ecological. She argues, in Hinduism, there is no divide between humanity and nature. Contextualizing this idea from the point of the Tamil women’s worldview, the kolam can be seen as a process of renewing the relationship of the home with the cosmos and the world process. There are some explicit and implicit ways in which this relation is initiated, established and renewed, beginning with the ingredients itself.
The
Kolam is put on the ground first cleaned and made wet with the mixture of cow
dung and water. Cow dung is used for its anti-septic qualities. The cow here
means in the modern context the indigenous cow - bos indicus. It is said in Hindu
scriptures like Vishnudharmottar Purana, Padma Purana, Brhamana Purana, Skanda
Purana, and Mahabharata that Goddess Lakshmi resides in the excreta of the cow
which is called gobar (Gita Press VS 2068). Using of cow dung is also believed
to be a reflection of prosperity in the house.
The wet base allows the mild coarse rice powder to adhere to the ground. The main ingredient in Kolam making is rice powder.Traditionally, the rice flour used in drawing the kolam was prepared in chakki – an indigenous, hand operated grindstone consisting of two stone slabs. Nowadays, it is prepared in the grinding machines at home. Rice paste is also used in special occasions, to make large-sized Kolam called 'Makolam' and for keeping the Kolam for many days on the ground.
The rice paste is prepared keeping rice soaked overnight and then made a paste on Sil-batta, known as ‘Ammi’ in Tamil (wikipedia November 13, 2017). The other materials used are red ochre called geru in Hindi and known as kaavi in Tamil, yellow mud, haldi (turmeric) called as manjal in Tamil. Manjal was used only on special occasions or festivals. Some natural crushed white stone powder is also used at times for just practicing or at places other than the sanctum sanctorum. Mrs Ramanan says if she (the woman) did Kolam with fine ground rice powder or rice paste at times, then for making it colourful and more vibrant ingredients like kaavi , yellow mud, manjal , flowers or other ingredient taken from nature are also included. Even the motifs like the lotus, conch, the Surya, kalash, creepers, birds, animals, flowers, fruits, leaves of mango (called maavilai ) etc. included in kolam made on different festivals, occasions and ceremonies, were all derived from nature .
Nagarajan says that ‘in making the Kolam, the hope is that the auspicious power embedded within the rice flour and invoked by the ritual will be transferred to the community generating abundance and goodwill (Nagarajan 2000) ’. This mutually reinforced relation between the natural and the cultural realms is best described by a Balinese Shaman and quoted by
David Abrahm as:
(These
rituals) act as an intermediary between the human community and the larger
ecological field, ensuring that there is an appropriate flow of nourishment not
just from the landscape to the human inhabitants, but from the human community
back to the local earth. By his constant rituals …he ensures that the relation
between the human society and the larger society is balanced and reciprocal and
that the village never takes more from the living land than it returns to it,
not just materially but with prayers, propitiations and praise. (Abrahm 1996)
The
Tamil women too establish and reinforce the interdependent relationship through
the practice of kolam.
However,
the notion that the earth needs protection in the way we understand ideas of ecology
and environmental conservation , does not necessarily apply to the realm of
ritualistic art practices like kolam.
As
Nagarajan states
I
was puzzled by the contradiction between women’s reverence for Bhu-devi and
their seeming disrespect to her throughout the day, as they throw trash and
garbage on the earth, the very same place that they considered to be sacred.
Was it my own ecological hope that a mythological link to the earth would lead
to a greater reverence to the soil in everyday life (Nagarajan 1998a)?
In
the contemporary times, kolam is often made with coloured powders bought from
the markets and is popularly referred to as ‘rangoli’ under the influence of
the more northern version of similar women’s ritual art. The ingredients used
in such kolam designs are mostly chemical and lack both the sanctity of the
traditional kolam as well its purpose as an act of generosity and offering to
petite beings. Polyviny rollers have replaced fingers in urban settings of
apartment living in urban settings. Many women say that it is not economically
feasible for them to make kolam, especially large-sized kolam only with rice.
An
elderly Thulasiyammal from Tanjavur bemoans the use of bazaar bought chemical
colours for making kolam in the contemporary times and recalls that in the
traditional kolam:
Nature
was given back to nature. The nature giving sustenance through food was offered
back to other beings. Through rice powder or paste they would consume. The
material used in Kolam from cow dung to rice, geru, manjal or any other
natural resource was making the mother earth feel secure and comfortable.
Whenever the rice flour from the Kolam mixed with the ground, there was no burden
to dispose. Every material got mixed, consumed and decomposed within itself.
During
my conversations with the older generation of Tamil women in Tanjavur,
Kumbhakonam and Cuddalore district of Tamil Nadu, I found that that most
elderly woman feel that with the coming of modernity, there is a loss in the
layered meanings associated with the practice of kolam. Just like
Thulasiyammal, other women also pointed out the loss of the practice of
generosity, manifested through daily rituals like the kolam.
Concluding
remarks:
The
identification of ‘embedded ecologies’ in the practice of kolam is ascertained
by dialogues with the Tamil women in different parts of Tamil Nadu. The idea of
locating sacredness in the landscape, plants (like tulsi, peepal etc), rivers
and places is central to the ideology and practice of folk Hinduism. It is my
personal observation that the rationale for using rice as the ingredient in
kolam is linked to the fact that rice is the staple food in Tamil Nadu and
hence becomes a symbol of fertility, good health, nourishment and
auspiciousness.
To make a kolam with rice hence becomes a symbolic act of
offering a portion of the produce as an offering to the soil which originally
bear and nurture it.However there are also intermittent contradictions and the inference
that ‘embedded ecologies’ in the context of ritual practices like kolam must
obviously lead to a more ecological sensitive behavior on the part of the
household may not always be true. While it is true that in the modern times,
the new generation of Tamil women may not have the time, space and skills to
continue the daily ritual practice of kolam in the same way as it was done
traditionally, but the fervor and enthusiasm for kolam (at least during the
auspicious month of Margazhi that falls between mid-December and mid-January)
has still not dwindled.
References
·
Gita Press.
Vikram Samvat (VS) 2068. Gosewa - Anka.
Gorakhpur: Gita Press.
·
Nagarajan, V. “The Earth as Goddess Bhūdevī: Towards a Theory of
Embedded Ecologies in Folk Hinduism” .in: L. Nelson, ed., Purifying the Earthly
Body of God. New York. 1998a
·
Nagarajan, V. “Hosting the Divine: The Kōlam as Ritual, Aesthetic,
and Ecology in Tamil Nadu, India” .diss. University of California. 1998b.
·
Nagarajan, V. “Hosting the Divine: The Kōlam in Tamil Nadu,” in:
N. Fisher, ed., Mud, Mirror, and Thread: Folk Traditions of Rural India.
Albuquerque. 1993.
·
Abram, David.1996. The spell of the sensuous Perception and
language in a more than human world. Pantheon Books. New York.
·
Comments
Post a Comment