Tukaram

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Sant Tukaram (तुकाराम) (c.1608 – c.1650), also Shri Tukaram, and colloquially referred to as "Tuka" (तुका), was a seventeenth century Marathi poet Sant of India, related to the Bhakti movement of Maharashtra. Tukaram was a devotee of Vitthal (a form of Lord Krishna), the supreme God in Vaishnavism. He is especially revered by the Varkari community. Tukaram's poetry is widely recognized as the climactic point of the Bhagawat tradition which began with Namdev.[1]

Born the son of a family and traders, Tukaram was innocent of worldly ways, and was often cheated and humiliated in dealings with the public. His dramatic misadventures as an unworldly man are a favorite topic for story tellers. After being visited in a dream by Namdev, and Lord Vitthal himself, Tukaram began to write abhangas (religious poetry). His religious activities antagonized the Brahmin, who persecuted him. The Mantra Gita, a translation of the Bhagavad Gita in the abhanga form, interpreting the Gita from a Bhakti perspective, is ascribed to Tukaram, as well as over 4,600 abhangas (religious poems). Tukaram emphasized a life of devotion to God and loving service to mankind over the performance of religious rites and ceremonies.

His Life

Most of the information on the saints of Maharashtra comes from the biographies written by Mahipati in the 1700s, called Bhaktivijaya and Bhaktililamrit. Scholars assign various dates to Tukaram's birth; the most frequently assigned dates are 1568, 1577, 1608 and 1598 C.E. There is less debate over the date of his death, 1650 C.E.

Tuka, or Tukaram, was born in Dehu, very close to modern Pune city in Maharashtra. His father, barely literate, was a small trader or peddler. His family were successful grain sellers and farmers of the Maratha community, pious and charitable by nature, who worshipped the family deity Vithoba of Pandarpur. Tukaram was married at the age of fifteen, but lost his wife Rakhumabai and a son to starvation in the famine of 1629. His second wife, Jijabai (also called Avali), was a capable but worldly woman who could not understand or appreciate her husband's spiritual aspirations, and took to nagging. Tukaram fathered six children, including three sons, named Santu or Mahadev, Vithoba and Narayana. After the death of his first wife and son in the famine, Tukaram lost interest in the life of a householder. Though he did not quite forsake his family, he was unable to maintain his second wife and his children, and was ultimately reduced to penury and bankruptcy, besides being stripped by the village of his position as mahajan.

After his father died, Tukaram is said to have destroyed the records of loans he had made to the poor, and waived the debts. Tukaram was innocent of worldly ways, and was often cheated and humiliated in dealings with the public. His dramatic misadventures as an unworldly man are a favorite topic for Keertankars (reciters and story tellers in praise of God).

Tukaram spent much of his time in contemplation and study of the works of Jnaneswar, Namdev and Eknath, famous saints of his native land. He received spiritual guidance from a guru, Raghava Chaitanya, in a dream. On another occasion, it is said that he was visited in a dream by Namdev, and Lord Vitthal himself, and was informed that it was his mission to compose abhangs (religious poems). After a period of contemplation in isolation and severe austerity, he began to write poems, inspired by his devotion for Lord Vithoba (Vitthal), the family deity.

In composing abhangs, Tukaram incurred the wrath of the Brahmins, who believed themselves to be the only true custodians and interpreters of religion. Not only did he dare to impinge upon this prerogative, but he wrote in Marathi rather than Sanskrit. According to legend, the local Brahmins compelled him to throw the manuscripts of his poems into the river Indrayani, and taunted him with the observation that if he were a true devotee of God, the manuscripts would reappear. It is said that Tukaram then commenced a fast-unto-death, invoking the name of God; after thirteen days of his fast, the manuscripts of Tukaram’s poems reappeared, floating on the river. Some of his detractors became his followers; and over the remainder of his life, Tukaram acquired a reputation as a saint.

Final Days

In the forty-eighth year of his life, in 1649, Tukaram disappeared. There is disagreement about Tukaram's final day. Some say that he informed his wife early in the day that he was going to Vaikuntha (the Divine Abode), and his wife laughed at him. He went up the hillock and waited for Vithoba. By that time, news had spread around Dehu and people had gathered around the hillock, waiting for the Divine event. From eyewitness accounts, a large vehicle appeared from the skies and Vithoba emerged. Eyewitnesses rushed to Tukaram's home and informed his wife that Tukaram was on his way to Vaikuntha, the Abode of God. His wife ran toward the hills, only to see him take off in the Viman (flying vehicle). Modern devotees still gather at the hillock and sing his praises. However, Starr offers the suggestion that he was probably murdered because of his successful reformist activity, which had agitated the Brahmins, and that his followers hid the body and spread the rumor that he had gone to heaven in a heavenly chariot.[2] Tukaram’s son Narayana was a great bhakta like his father.

Works

Though Tukaram was not a great scholar like Jnanadev, Ekanath, or Vaman, and his formal education had not gone beyond reading and writing, once he turned to a spiritual life, he educated himself by reading several Marathi works on Puranas and philosophy, having a number of Sanskrit books explained to him, and by attending performances of kirtan and readings of Puranas. The Jnaneshwari and the Bhagwat of Ekanath formed the solid basis of his poetry. The depth of his knowledge of the world and of human nature is evident from the hundreds of topics dealt with in his abhangs, which provide a vivid picture of the state of society, religion and the nation at that time.

Tukaram wrote in a special verse form called abhanga, a run-on couplet of three and a half feet, with the first three rhyming. He was unrivaled in the use of this poetic device, and others have practically left it alone after him in a tacit acknowledgment that nothing more can be done with it. As was the tradition, he also added his signature, Tuka Mhane (तुका म्हणे) or "Tuka Says," at the end of each verse. Besides the Abhangs, Tukaram wrote a quantity of other verse in a variety of forms, such as shlok, arati and gaulani. He also wrote some verse in Hindi. The present form of the language of Tukaram's poetry does not appear to be the original one. Several abhangs written in Tukaram's own hand differ considerably from the abhangs printed in the traditional collection, but are the same as those found in the manuscripts written by Tukaram's cymbal-player, Santaji Teli Jagnade, indicating that Tukaram himself wrote in his rustic fashion, and later Rameshwar Bhatt or some other disciple must have given it the form that is found in the' traditional collection.

Words are the only Jewels I possess
Words are the only Clothes that I wear
Words are the only food That sustains my life
Words are the only wealth I distribute among people
Says Tuka Witness the Word He is God
I worship Him With my words[3]

The Mantra Gita, a translation of the Bhagavad Gita in the abhanga form, is ascribed to Tukaram. It is an interpretation of the Gita from a Bhakti perspective. Another work ascribed to him is the Ghata (Traditional Collection), a compilation of 4,500 abhangas[1], but it is believed that Tukaram composed many more during his lifetime. A number of abhangs known to have been composed by him were not published in “Traditional Collection,” and the authorship of some of those in the collection is attributed to Tukaram's brother Kanhoba.[4] Tukaram's poetry has remained popular until this day. No other Marathi poet, medieval or modern, has been so universally appreciated. Several of his lines have become household sayings. The British Government in India gave Tukaram the unique honor of officially publishing the first authoritative collection of 4,607 of his abhangs works in 1873. Since the Government compilation, more than twenty-five editions of Tukaram's abhangs have been published. Though Tukaram has been credited with being the single most influential figure in the history of Marathi literature, the body of scholarship on Tukaram outside Marathi is rather small. The only nearly complete translation of Tukaram into English, entitled The Collected Tukaram, was attempted by J. Nelson Fraser and K. B. Marathe, and published in Madras by the Christian Literature Society (1909-1915). A more recent translation of a selection of Tukaram’s poetry by Dilip Chitre has been published as Says Tuka (Delhi: Penguin, 1991).[5] Tukaram used rustic, but striking and effective language, often strongly admonishing his listeners. Critics have sometimes characterized his language as ' harsh,' 'indecent,' and 'vulgar', but his sincerity and his motivation is not doubted. Tukaram firmly believed that his verse was not his own, that his mouth was merely a vehicle for God.

The power of speech is not one's own;
God's the friend-the 'speech is His!
What is a maina to sing sweet tunes!
Else is the Master who makes it sing!
Who, poor me, to speak wise words?
It is that World's supporter has made me speak.
Who, says Tuka, His art can gauge?
He even makes the lame walk without legs!

Bhakti

Tukaram is widely recognized as the climactic point of the Bhagawat tradition which began with Namdev. Tukaram's abhangs mostly deal with topics such as the Puranas (mythology); lives of Saints; panegyric of Shri Pandurang; laudatory descriptions of Pandharpur; autobiography and self-scrutiny; moral instruction; personal explanation; defense of his religious principles. He emphasized liberation through devotion to God and loving service to mankind, rather than through rituals and sacrifices. He did not favor elaborate rituals, displays of asceticism or preoccupation with austerities, saying, "even dogs come in saffron color, and bears have matted fur. If living in caves is being spiritual, then rats who inhabit caves must be doing sadhana (spiritual practice)."

For the bhakti devotee, the greatest anguish was separation of the soul from the God, known as Viraha to Hindu mystics:

How can I know the right
So helpless am I
Since thou Thy face hast hid from me
O Thou most high!
I call again and again at thy high gate
None hears me, empty is the house, and desolate.[6]

Tukaram opposed the acquisition of siddhis (or spiritual attainments), viewing these as obstructions to authentic sadhana. He urged his listeners to cast away the “clothes of traditions” for often they restrained a devotee from growing in the love of God. He exhorted his followers to see God in all, and to make God the center of life.

See also

  • Hindu reform movements
  • Backward-caste Hindu Saints
  • Sant Mat

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 K. Ayyappapanicker and S. Akademi, 1997, Medieval Indian Literature, an Anthology (Sahitya Akademi), 364.
  2. Chester G. Starr, A History of the Ancient World (Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-195-06629-6), 305.
  3. Translation by Dilip Chitre (Says Tuka) Tukaram Retrieved March 4, 2008.
  4. [http:/www. tukaram.com Tukaram] Retrieved March 4, 2008.
  5. Tukaram, Religions. Retrieved March 4, 2008.
  6. Jyotsna Kamat, Saint Tukaram, Kamat's Potpourri. Retrieved March 4, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ayyappapanicker, K. and Sahitya Akademi. 1997. Medieval Indian Literature: An Anthology. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 8-126-00365-0
  • Chattopadhyaya, Harindranath. Tukaram. New Delhi: Rupa & Co, 2002.
  • Lopez, Donald S. Religions of India in Practice. Princeton readings in religions. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1995. ISBN 0691043256
  • Starr, Chester R. 1960. A History of the World. Rand McNally.
  • Ranade, Ramchandra D. 1994. Tukaram. New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-2092-2.

External links

All links retrieved May 2, 2023.

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