The story of Radha has evolved through history
The story of Radha has evolved through history
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Around this time Prakrit literature started referring to one Radha who was portrayed as Krishna's favourite. In Hala's Gatha Saptasati Krishna removes a dust particle kicked up by cows from Radha's eye thus declaring her exalted position in his heart and humbling the other women. In these songs Krishna is not divine; he is a simple cowherd, a hero of the village folk. The songs lack sensual passion and religious ecstasy. Radha is never wife, and the dominant emotion is one of longing following separation, an emotion that eventually characterizes Radha-Krishna relationship.
In the 5th century, the Tamil epic, Shilapadikaram, refers to one Nal-Pinnai who was beloved of Mal (the local name for Krishna). Scholars believe that she represents an early form of Radha. This idea of a favourite milkmaid gradually spread to the north and reached its climax with the composition of the Gita Govinda, a Sanskrit song written by Jayadeva in the 12th century AD where the passion of the cowherd god and his milkmaid beloved was celebrated in a language and style that took all of India by storm.
Many scholars are of the opinion that Jayadeva was born in a village near Puri, Orissa, which is renowned for the grand temple complex of Jagannath, lord of the world, a local form of Krishna. Research has shown that he was involved with Padmavati, a temple dancer or devadasi and perhaps even married her. His work was inspired by both his personal experience and his religious beliefs. Each of Jayadeva's song is composed of eight couplets known as Ashtapadis. 24 Ashtapadis make a chapter and 12 chapters make up the entire work. In it Krishna is identified as the supreme divine being a radical shift from earlier scriptures where Krishna is one of the many incarnations of Vishnu. The book uses extremely ornamental language to describe in intimate details Radha's passion. As one moves from verse to verse, one is transported from the physical realm into the spiritual realm.
The erotic longing becomes the cry of the soul for union with the divine.
Such an approach was revolutionary; it fired the imagination of the priests and dancers who made it part of the temple ritual. Being a major Vaishnava religious centre, hundreds of pilgrims from all over India poured into Puri. Day and night, they heard the priests sing Jayadeva's song of Radha's love for Krishna and the devadasis depict her yearning for her beloved in graceful dance steps. Before long they were mouthing the lyrics and taking it back to their villages. In less than a century, Gita Govinda transformed from a temporal parochial literary work into a pan-Indian sacred scripture. It completely revitalised Vaishanvism in the subcontinent and catalyzed the rise of the bhakti or devotional movement in India.
In time, down the Gangetic plains especially, Radha became a Goddess in her own right. Without her, Krishna was incomplete. She was the medium through which Krishna could be realised. Metaphysically, Radha came to represent the truth of our soul, the unexpressed, unrequited longings of our heart, suppressed by social realities which cries out to Krishna. Krishna acknowledges this truth of our being that society denies, each time he dances with Radha at night, outside the village, in secret.u00a0
Disclaimer > This column attempts to explain sacred beliefs in the spirit of genuine and respectful curiosity without claiming any authority on the same.
