Ganesha


India will soon be flooded with clay figurines of the elephant headed God. The usual rituals - daily aartis, family reunions and street entertainment unplugged - will ensue. Within days, the statues will drift into the sea and dissolve into oblivion until the following year.
How many among the devout will take the time to contemplate, during this fortnight of frenetic worship, on the reasons why Ganesha is known as the god of wisdom? And why the appellation vignaharta, or remover of obstacles, resounds in every boisterous prayer sung in his praise?

Most of us have heard stories about the beloved pot-bellied god - thanks largely to the vividly dramatized Amar Chitra Katha (now on prime time TV). There's the one about Ganesha and Karthikeya in a sibling competition over who could go faster around the world. While Kartikeya clambered onto his peacock and flew off, Ganesha hung around his parents, continued to play and then walked briskly around the divine couple three times, hand folded.

His wisdom in this case lies perhaps, in recognizing that, with the right values and a little ingenuity, you can effortlessly achieve what others strive endlessly to attain. Ganesha recognized the universal God beside him. He did not feel the need to prove his machismo.

Another story tells of the birth of the elephant-headed God, Parvati (wife of Lord Shiva) crated from her flesh, a boy to guard her while she bathed. When Shiva showed up, he was not allowed in. And in a fit of rage, the God of destruction sliced Ganesha's head off. Incensed Parvati ordered her hapless husband to restore her son. He picked the first animal that came before him and brought Ganesha back to life.

It is no coincidence that an elephant ended up being the god of wisdom's better half. Why, indeed was it not a snow bear or a mountain goat - more likely prospects in the lofty abode of the Shiva family? At the risk of making the unlikely connection between philosophy and anatomy, the elephant has enormous ears and a small mouth: the path to wisdom involves listening more, talking less.

It has narrow, tiny eyes, like someone who carefully scrutinizes things around him. A wise person, likewise, always examines a situation closely and attempts to understand its deeper resonances. For instance, if someone unleashes anger or hatred on you, wisdom teaches that one ought not to take it personally, but to realize that the problem may lie within the other person. And to forgive him or her.

Ganesha has a big belly. He is able to digest all that is happening around him, good and bad, praise and criticism. Yet the rotund one is light enough to straddle a tiny mouse. For he does not hold grudges or ill-will - feelings that make one heavy and unwieldy.

Finally, why is Ganesha's vahana (vehicle) a mouse? Our anatomist-philosopher guru suggests that this scuttling creature represents the mind, which has a tendency to dart about, picking up fickle fantasies and devious desires along the way. Ganesha's true wisdom lies in the fact that he is able to control the mouse, to rein it and bring it to rest at his feet. Control over one's mind is thus the ultimate sign of wisdom. The Bhagvad Gita speaks of a stable mind - one which does not jump around chasing ephemeral and base desires, but remains in a state of placidity and eventually attains to bliss.

Let us pray to Ganesha to enable us to rein our thoughts, channelise our energies and bring the manic mouse to rest at our feet.


Article courtesy Kaustubh's Articles

Some photographs of Ganesha

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