Agastya and Vasishtha were two great sages, each with their own unique attributes and contributions to Veda Dharma; but one event combines them both in what appears metaphorical description of a secret of Nature and also of their lives. That event pertains to the story of their combined birth in a pitcher to Mitra-Varuna. The plausible meaning of this event is deciphered in this article.
Birth
in water pot
There
are quite a few references to birth in water pots. Iravatham Mahadevan has collected
all pitcher-born stories from olden texts of the Veda Dharma, in a bid to
relate it to the ‘jar’ symbol in the Indus seals. When I read his article,
“Meluhha and Agastya: Alpha and Omega of the Indus Script” for my paper
critiquing his works, I came to realise that all those stories cannot be taken
literally, for, there was a common under-thread in all of them of a ritual
related to water pot of the kind we use in Udaka
Shanthi ritual. Some kind of mantra-upasana or penance was done in the
water-pot as a result of which the concerned person was deemed to have attained
a new identity or a kind of rebirth. Normally Udaka Shanti water is meant for
purification, rejuvenation or a revival. Such kind of renewal into a fresh
identity can be noticed in pitcher-borns.
Quoting
from the Jar born myths given by Mahadevan in pages 13 and 14 of that paper, “Vasishtha
and Agastya were generated by Varuna and Mitra in a ‘sacred pitcher’ or
‘water-jar used in sacrifice’”, Of the two, Agastya came to be known as Kumbha
Yoni or Kuda Muni.
Drona
“was generated in a ‘wooden trough’ by
Bharadvaja”. “The Kauravas were born from pots filled with clarified
butter in which Gandhari’s foetus was stored.”
Coming
to Southern traditions, the Pallavas of Kanchi who descended from Ashwatthama,
the son of Drona, have written in their Pallankoyil Plates that they descended
from a water-pitcher (paattra- skhalita- vrttiinaam). Similarly, the Chalukyas claimed
descent from ‘Suluka’ (water pot).
There
are similar rebirths from Fire sacrifices. For example, the Tamil Sangam poem
(Purananuru) contains a verse by poet Kapilar on the birth of ‘Velir’ from
‘Tadaavu’ of a northern sage which refers to sacrificial fire pit. The Agni-Kula
kshatriyas were born from Yajna fire, which was similar to the narration on the
birth of Velir from fire. When someone is given a new identity, it is done following
a Vedic Yajna. Similar are the re-birth kind of change for the people doing
Ghar wapsi after a Vedic Homa.
In
the light of these events giving clear lead on getting a revival or a new
identity or a kind of rebirth for going forward with a new work, the story of
Vasishtha and Agastya taking fresh birth from the water pot are better understood.
Birth
from Mitra- Varuna
Taking
up the co-born nature of Agastya and Vasishtha from Mitra Varuna, the leads
come from Srimad Bhagavatam and Valmiki Ramayana. Though this story finds mention in
the Rik Veda, we must keep in mind that Vedas cannot be understood or
interpreted without Itihasa- Puranas.
Bhagavatam
states that ‘by the semen of Varuṇa, the great mystic
Vālmīki took birth from an anthill. Bhṛgu and Vālmīki were specific sons of
Varuṇa, whereas Agastya and Vasiṣṭha Ṛṣis were the common sons of Varuṇa and
Mitra’ (6-18-5)
Examining
the more familiar birth of Ratnakar as Valmiki, the
Bhagavatam reference to his birth from Varuna solves the mystery. Anthills are
formed by the ants where is there moisture. The perspiration from the body of Ratnakar
staying motionless in deep penance for a very long time, had attracted the ants
to build their house around him. (Even as per astro-meteorology, we gauge the
presence of water in a place by the growth of anthills in the location) Wherever
water is released by evaporation, there Varuna is said to be present. (By this
logic Bhrgu (who was fire-born) must have emanated
humidity by perspiration while engaged in a penance, which gave him the name
Varuni-Bhrgu when he emerged with new powers)
In
the case of Vasishtha and Agastya, both Mitra and Varuna were the fathers. To
understand this, we must look at the way the basic Gods, Mitra- Varuna- Aryama are saluted at the beginning of the
prayers as in Taittriya Upanishad.
Aryama,
Mitra and Varuna are the three Gods who travel with the Sun every day. They
always appear together in the sky and take up the Havis
offered from the earth and by the earth. Of these three Gods Aryama is Pirtu
God representing the 3 Pitru Devas namely Vasu, Rudra
and Aditya. (Read the details of these three in my blog here (https://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2008/03/3003-303-and-33-gods-of-hinduism.html
) The water oblation (tarpan) given to three generations of ancestors reach Aryama
through Vasu, Rudra and Adityas. This is the Havis for
Aryama.
Aryama
means ‘bosom friend’. He is always in the company of the two – Mitra and
Varuna. Mitra also means friend who takes care of the kine. Varuna, the God of
water never leaves these two.
The
Havis for Mitra and Varuna are water evaporating
from all the water bodies of the world. That is the Soma offered to them or
taken by them which they give back to the earth as rains (RV 1-152-7). In many
Rik Vedic verses we come across reference to the Sun accompanying Mitra-Varuna.
This sun goes by the name Bhaga, the blind sun (Bhaga
is the name of the sun when he scorches everyone alike, without any discrimination
– like a blind man who cannot differentiate. Bhaga is also the name of one of
the years in the 60-year cycle. Each year represents a Sun by the nature of
heat expected to be felt in the year. The year of Bhaga will be felt hot by
everyone)
We
find the same combination of Mitra- Varuna- Bhaga and also Agni in the verses on
Vishvadevas for whom we give a place in Pitru
ceremonies that we do even today for our departed ancestors and in whom all the
oblations reach, though given through Vasu, Rudra Aditya and Aryama. In the Pitru
ceremony, Aryama is the receiver of the water oblation. Mitra and Varuna also receive
the offerings everyday as they cross the sky along with the sun, but that
offering is the evaporated water from the water bodies of the world.
Their
combination is central to the Vaastu Mandala as depicted in Eka ShIti Pada Vaastu (below) which is applied to all
habitations. The same central alignment of Sun- Aryama – Mitra – Varuna is also
found in Satapada Vaastu that is preferred for Mantapa-s (pavilions).
When
the sun crosses the sky from east to west, it is followed by Aryama who absorbs
the water oblations given for Pitrus after crossing mid-day in a place (that is
why Tarpan and annual Pitru ceremonies are done after the sun crosses the zenith
at a place). On further cruising through the sky, water evaporation accelerates
from all the water bodies of the earth which is absorbed by Varuna and
facilitated by Mitra.
This
can be physically observed in the morning hours in Dhanur Maasa when the sun is
crossing Purvashadha (in Sagittarius) whose lord
is Varuna or Aapas. One can see the mist in the morning sky transforming into
clouds as the sun starts heating the earth (Agni) by eight a.m. in the morning. Vayu plays a
gentle role at that time which is also observed as part of astro-meteorology. Those
14 days of the Sun’s transit in Purvashadha are the only time Varuna’s work becomes
palpable to human eye. On the other months, the oblation by the earth by means
of evaporation happens during late afternoon when the sun starts dropping towards
western sky. That is why Varuna is placed in the west.
This
is the basic idea behind Varuna and Mitra. When they are well taken care of,
Indra confers bounty on the land as rains. Vaayu when he does his role in
moderate or at required level, there is
happiness from the rainfall or else there is destruction. Agni is fundamental
to the entire process because only if he emanates heat in the right quantity,
all these Devas can function optimally. That is why the basic Upasana is to Agni. Paramacharya of Kanchi says
that the entire compendium of Rik Vedas is for Agni
Upasana. The mutual help between man and devas, outlined by Geetacharyan is about this Upasana so that the earth
gets sufficient rains to make food for everyone.
The
absorption of water from all water sources are the food for Mitra-Varuna. When
a rishi does a penance standing in a restricted water source, and attains
exalted state as a result, he is said to have been born to Mitra-Varuna. Such
birth, rather re-birth is reported of Agastya in Valmiki Ramayana.
Birth
of Agastya as Kumbhayoni
In
Valmiki Ramayana, there is an account of how Agastya transformed into
Kumbhayoni by which he came to be known as having born to Mitra-Varuna. (Written
earlier here: (https://jayasreesaranathan.blogspot.com/2018/04/contemporariness-of-agastya-and-rama.html )
The
name Kumbhayoni appears for the first time in Uttara Kanda of Valmiki Ramayana when Rama addressed
Agastya thus. This was at the conclusion of 12 years of penance by Agastya in
the receptacle of Kaviri waters.
Initially,
Agastya was living in the southern edge of the Dandaka Forest. In the 11th
year of Rama’s exile, Rama met Agastya near Panchavati. After that Agastya’s
residence is mentioned to be in the Kaviri on top of the Malaya Mountain. This
appears in the 14th year of exile when Sugreeva described the route
towards the South. This shows that Agastya had shifted his residence to the
Kaviri which was confined within a pot like formation. Ramayana mentions Kaviri
as a receptacle (Aashaya) Even today one can see the source of river Kaviri
within a pot like formation. Kaviri was
not flowing as a river at the time of Agastya’s penance.
Source
of Kaviri inside the small opening in front of the Mantapa.
From
the Tamil Epic Manimekalai we come to know that Agastya
caused Kaviri to flow down as a river which he led to Pumpuhar
– then known as Samba-pati.
Pumpuhar was the new name to that place after Kaviri entered Samba-pati and
entered the sea from there. Pumpuhar is the shortened name of “Kaviri Pum Pattinam” the new name given at that time.
Coming
back to Agastya doing penance in the Kaviri on the Malaya Mountain, Rama
happened to be there (for Sambuka Vadha) when
Agastya had completed his 12-year-old penance in the Kaviri Kund. It was
Rama who addressed Agastya as Kumbhayoni then. The birth of Kumbhayoni was
indeed a rebirth for Agastya who shifted to Kavaatam,
the newly established capital of the Second Tamil Sangam Age in the 6th
millennium BCE. He started his new-found work as a Tamil Grammarian.
The
Story of twin birth from Mitra-Varuna can be resolved from this.
Birth
of Vasishtha to Mitra-Varuna
As
per the logic of Kumbhayoni, well attested in Ramayana, Vasishtha also must
have done a penance in a water receptacle and gained newer identity and powers.
That
story revolves around Nimi, the king who did a
Yajna which Vasishtha could not attend due to his prior commitment to attend Indra’s
Yajna. But Nimi went ahead with performing the yajna without Vasishtha which
went on for 500 years. The yajna was over by the time Vasishtha returned. Infuriated
by this, Vasishtha cursed Nimi that his body should fall. Nimi in turn cursed
Vasishtha that he would lose his body. Following this Vasishtha went to the
Ashrama of Mitra-Varuna and merged with their brilliance. During that time, Urvashi came to the ashrama. Seeing her, Mitra-Varuna
let off the semen by which Vasishtha was born again, so goes the story.
Now
deciphering the story, let us begin from the etymology of Nimi. Nimi means ‘closing the eyes’ according to Shiva Purana (2.2.30),
though it refers to winking of the eye. When he was cursed by Vasishtha for having
done the yajna without him, the story says that the Gods ordained him to stay
on the eyelids of the living beings. This conveys two scenarios – of a time
when human beings could not see because of closed eyes and of a time later when
they could see (with eyelids starting to wink). In the time in between Vasishtha
was with Indra in his realms and yajna was going on in the world with closed
eyes (darkness). This scenario speaks of absence of Indra’s bounty (rains) on
the earth and people having difficult times as though there is darkness everywhere.
There
was a time of absence of South west monsoon after its first arrival in the
Holocene. We must understand that rainfall is dependent on heat received by the
land. Indian monsoon started only after the current period of warm Holocene
started. The first bout was for a period of 500 years between 11,000 to 10,500
BCE as per research. (Pages 100 to 105 in my book “Mahabharata 3136 BCE). Then
there was long lull for a period of 1500 years. None of the rainfed rivers of
the Deccan plateau was running then. Some sparse vegetation started in North
India and in the Dandaka region in South India during the first season of 500
years of rainfall. Some pools of water must have been formed during that time,
of which Mitra-Varuna ashrama must have been one. The absence of rainfall after
10,500 BCE is characterized as Yajna happening in Indra loka (not on earth) for
which Vasishtha had gone.
In
the 1500 period following that first rainfall, there was slow increase in
insolation to melt the Himalayan glaciers such as Gangotri (as per research
articles) but no scope for flowing rivers. Sometime then, Vasishtha was doing
penance in Mitra-Varuna kund. The location can be deduced from the story of Urvashi.
As per the story, she was playing in Badrikashrama
(Badrinath) when she was seen by Mitra-Varuna. From the etymology of Urvashi,
it is known that Urvashi was another name for River Ganga.
It
is because she sat on the ‘Uru’ (thigh) of
Bhagiratha, Ganga came to be known as Urvashi. Ganga, who descends at Haridvar passes through Badrinath (known by the name Alakananda) before joining Bhagirathi. Thereafter she
is known as Ganga.
Going
by the course of Ganga, it is deduced that Mitra-Varuna kund was near Badrinath.
The time it was inundated by the first flow of Ganga near Badrinath is
indicated by the story of Urvashi, seen by Mitra-Varuna by which Vasishtha was
born afresh.
This
represents the conclusion of the penance of Vasishtha in the kund much like Agastya
who stood in the water pot of Kaviri for 12 years in penance. Bhagirathi started
flowing at the conclusion of Vasishta’s penance. Kaviri too started flowing
after the conclusion of Agastya’s penance. King
Rajendra Chola has stated in the Thiruvalankadu
Copper Plate inscriptions that King Chitradhanva
desirous of repeating the feat of Bhagiratha in bringing River Ganga, caused
the river Kaviri to come down from the mountain.
Two
sages, having accomplished their penance by standing in water- pool by offering
Soma (evaporated water) for Mitra-Varuna came up with newer energy. That is the
import of birth of the two in a Kumbha to Mitra-Varuna. Chronologically,
Vasishtha’s penance must have been earlier than Agastya’s – during Bhagiratha’s
time, whereas Agastya’s rebirth as Kumbhayoni occurred after Rama ascended the
throne. With clear reference to Kumbhayoni appearing in Ramayana, it is
inferred that the story of the co-born nature of the two sages must have been conceived
after Rama started calling Agastya as Kumbhayoni. That is why no explicit
reference to Vasishta’s penance is available. The sages have wanted us to
think, explore and grasp the nuances.
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