Ganesa: Remover of Obstacles
by
Satyaraja Dasa
BTG
THE JOYOUS ELEPHANT-FACED DEITY known as
Ganesa is revered by one billion Hindus worldwide, and though his worship has
little place in the modern-day Hare Krsna movement, his personality and pastimes
are part of ISKCON's heritage.
Ganesa is often seen as the creator and
remover of obstacles, as the guardian at entrances, and as a spiritually potent
figure who can avert all evil influences. In popular Hindu lore he is thus the
god to be worshiped first, before all religious ceremonies, public and private.
Things tend to start off with Ganesa, and this is reflected even in common
idiomatic phrases. For example, in Maharashtra when a dedication or
inauguration is to be performed, a Marathi speaker may refer to the occasion as
Sri ganesa karane ("doing the Sri Ganesa"). Another such expression
is ganapatice kele ("to conceive a child"). Similar phrases are found
in other Indian languages.
Since Ganesa is considered the lord of
beginnings, for the first installment in this series about the demigods we
start with him.
According to the Vedic literature,
behind the workings of the cosmos stand powerful controllers, known as devas,
or demigods. As we people in this world control our cars or homes, the devas
control various aspects of the cosmos.
Ganesa is a popular hero whose image
adorns the walls of shops, homes, and temples throughout India. Even for people
unfamiliar with Indian culture or the Vedic literature, Ganesa is perhaps the
easiest of all demigods to identify, with his human body, elephant head, and
potbelly. He is usually pictured standing, sitting, or dancing, with his jolly
elephant face looking straight ahead. Ganesa is at times depicted with quill on
palm leaf, for as Vyasa dictated the Mahabharata, Ganesa served as the scribe
to write it down.
Ganesa is missing one tusk, a piece of
which can sometimes be found in one of his four hands. In another hand he
sometimes holds a hatchet (parasu), which, according to some texts, is for
cutting away illusion and false teachings. Another of Ganesa's hands often
gestures fearlessness and reassurance (varada-hasta-mudra). He also holds a
goad (ankusa) like that used by an elephant trainer, symbolizing his insistence
on proper training or spiritual discipline. He sometimes holds a noose (pasa)
used for restraining wild animals, here representing the restraint of passion
and lustful desires. Sometimes he is seen holding sweets (modaka), for which he
is said to have an inordinate fondness. Hence the belly.
Who is this strange-looking god, and
what, if anything, does he have to do with the worship of Krsna or Visnu?
Vedic texts reveal that Ganesa is the
son of Siva and Parvati, although his sonship like that of his half-brother,
Skanda-Subrahmanya, is peculiar. Ac cording to one version, Siva
"emits" from his body a handsome son who becomes a seducer of women.
Parvati is offended by her son's exploits and curses him to have the head of an
elephant and a big belly-in other words, to be ugly. Though with this he would
seem fated to celibacy, he gradually settles down with two wives: Buddhi
("wisdom") and Siddhi ("success"), who can see beyond his
physical ugliness.
As time passes, Ganesa becomes the
commander of Siva's troops (gana- isa or gana-pati), and because he be comes
famous as one who creates obstacles for the demons and removes obstacles for
the demigods or the devotees, he is known as Vighnesvara ("lord of
obstacles") and Vinayaka ("one who removes [obstacles]"). The "obstacle"
theme also tells us why Ganesa uses a rat as his vehicle. As rodents generally
succeed in gnawing their way through any obstruction, the rat, it is said,
symbolizes Ganesa's ability to destroy every obstacle.
In another, more popular version of the
Ganesa story, Parvati, wanting to seclude herself from her passionate husband,
Siva, especially while bathing, creates a son from her perspiration and
appoints him the guardian of her quarters. Soon after, when Siva seeks
admission into Parvati's inner chambers, Ganesa, unaware of Siva's identity,
refuses him, pushing him away from Parvati's door; Not one to be slighted, the
enraged Siva summons his attendants (ganas) to do away with this bothersome
upstart. But Ganesa defeats them one by one. Finally Visnu arrives, and drawing
upon His maya (mystic potency) He creates confusion on all sides. This enables
Siva to cut off Ganesa's head.
Parvati, furious at what has become of
her "son," decides to send a multitude of goddesses to harass the
demigods. These celestial women succeed in making it clear to the noble gods
that their queen can be appeased only if her guardian is revived. Siva then
tells the gods to go north and cut off the head of the first living being they
see. The head is to be mystically placed on the body of the decapitated Ganesa,
who will then come back to external consciousness. As fate would have it, the
first living being to cross the path of the gods is an elephant.
The various Ganesa stories described
above -- found primarily in the Siva Purana and the Brahma-vaivarta Purana --
are somewhat divergent, and tradition accounts for this by placing the
variations in different cycles of cosmic time. "Because of the distinction
between kalpas [ages]," the Siva Purana explains, "the story of
Ganesa's birth is told in different ways." The cyclical structure of Vedic
time allows for repeated descents of the Lord and His devotees, so details of
the pastimes may vary.
According to popular Indian tradition,
Ganesa is a benign and helpful deity who brings success and assures worldly
well-being. Since devotees of Krsna are more interested in spiritual
realization than in worldly security, ISKCON tends to forgo the worship of
Ganesa. Lord Krsna says in the Bhagavad-gita (9.23), "Those who are
devotees of other gods and worship them with faith actually worship only Me, 0
son of Kunti, but they do so in a wrong way." Lord Krsna uses the word
avidhi purvakam: "in an inappropriate way." Why is such worship of
demigods inappropriate? Because it is materially motivated. As Lord Krsna says,
"Men in this world desire success in fruitive activities, and therefore
they worship the demigods." (Bg. 4.12)
Since we are essentially spiritual
beings in a material body, material rewards can never truly satisfy us. Only
spiritual rewards are satisfying for a spirit soul. Therefore Srila Prabhupada
concurring with the above two Gita texts, says "[To worship] Ganapati is
not required, but sometimes we do it. Just like the gopis-they worshiped
Goddess Durga, Katyayani. They did not require to worship her, but that was
part of the social system. But they asked, Mother Katyayani, give us the
opportunity to have Krsna as our husband. Their aim was Krsna." (Morning
walk, Los Angeles, January 10, 1974)
So the worship of Ganesa, like that of
his mother, Durga (Parvati), is not condemned, but it should be done for the
proper reasons: Ganesa is a devotee of Lord Krsna, and we can pray to him to
remove obstacles on the road to Krsna consciousness. In this regard, Brahma-
Samhita (5.50) explains that Ganesa is Krsna's devotee. The success achieved by
worshiping Ganesa depends on Lord Krsna, and therefore such worship should
ultimately be directed to Krsna: "For the power to destroy all obstacles
to progress in the three mundane worlds, Ganesa holds on his elephant head the
lotus feet of Govinda. I worship Govinda, Krsna, the primeval Lord."
Satyaraja Dasa is a disciple of Srila Prabhupada and a regular contributor to Back to Godhead. He has written several books on Krsna consciousness. He and his wife live in New York City.