Aghori sadhus

Aghori sadhus
   Paradoxically named, the Aghori (“non-terrible”) SADHUS are among the most strange and frighten-ing of all the mendicants of India. Their practice is similarly called aghora—“non-terrible.” They inhabit cremation grounds, where they perform their esoteric rituals. They eat the flesh of human corpses and smear their bodies with ashes from human cremations. They carry begging bowls made from human skulls (they do not beg but will not refuse anything) and eat their food from them. They are popularly known as evil sorcerers who command fearsome magic powers.
   The practices of the Aghoris are calculated to outrage; they are known copraphages (eaters of human excrement), and folklore reports their kidnapping and sacrificing children for their out-rageously transgressive rites. They trace their sect to the great guru of the NATHS, GORAKHNATH; they embody the extreme left-handed tantra (see TA N-TRISM), which finds the divinity everywhere, and they believe that complete release is to be found in discovering the essence of the divinity in that which is most horrific. They are often devotees of the fierce aspect of the GODDESS, but also, of SHIVA. Their origins are probably to be found in the ancient SHAIVA cult of the Kapalikas. These sad-hus are given a wide berth by most contemporary Indians and are looked down upon as evil.
   Further reading: R. G. Bhandarkar, Vaisnavism, Saivism and Minor Religious Systems (Banares: Indological Book House, 1965); N. N. Bhattacharya, The History of the Tantric Religion (Delhi: Manohar, 1982.); Shashibhusan Das Gupta, Obscure Religious Cults (Calcutta: Firma KLM, 1995); Sadhus: India’s Holy Men, 3, Aghori, Liv-ing with the Dead (videorecording)/a Bedi Films/Denis Whyte Films Production for BBC TV, Canal Plus, Premiere (Princeton, N.J.: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 1995); Robert Svoboda, Aghora: At the Left Hand of God (Albuquerque: Brotherhood of Life, 1986).

Encyclopedia of Hinduism. . 2007.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Aghori — Du sanskrit A Ghor , Ce qui n’est pas terrible , sans peur , absence de difficultés (en hindi, aghori signifie « sale, négligé » [1]), le terme Aghori désigne les adeptes d’un courant de l’hindouisme dont les origines demeurent peu… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Aghora —    See Aghori sadhus …   Encyclopedia of Hinduism

  • Sâdhu — Deux Sâdhu à Katmandou …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Saddhu — Sâdhu Deux Sâdhu à Katmandou Les hindouistes considèrent que le but ultime de toute vie est la moksha, la libération de l illusion (mâyâ), l arrêt du cycle des renaissances et la dissolution dans le divin, la fusion avec la conscience cosmique.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Sadhu — Sâdhu Deux Sâdhu à Katmandou Les hindouistes considèrent que le but ultime de toute vie est la moksha, la libération de l illusion (mâyâ), l arrêt du cycle des renaissances et la dissolution dans le divin, la fusion avec la conscience cosmique.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hinduistische Orden — Die verschiedenen religiösen Ordensgemeinschaften des Hinduismus werden üblicherweise Sampradaya, manchmal auch Pantha genannt. Ihre Mitglieder, also die Mönche und Nonnen, heißen Sadhus oder Swamis. Die hinduistischen Orden lassen sich… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sampradaya — Die verschiedenen hinduistischen Orden der Sadhus und Swamis teilen sich auf in die drei Hauptrichtungen des Hinduismus: Vaishnava, Shaiva und Shakta. Jede dieser Hauptströmungen hat zahllose Untergruppierungen. Diese Unterscheiden sich mehr oder …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Swami-Orden — Die verschiedenen hinduistischen Orden der Sadhus und Swamis teilen sich auf in die drei Hauptrichtungen des Hinduismus: Vaishnava, Shaiva und Shakta. Jede dieser Hauptströmungen hat zahllose Untergruppierungen. Diese Unterscheiden sich mehr oder …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sadhu — A sadhu in Haridwar, India, during Kumbha Mela. A sadhu in Kathmand …   Wikipedia

  • Nudity in religion — Attitudes to nudity differ among world religions. Contents 1 Abrahamic religions 1.1 Judaism 1.2 Christianity 1.3 Islam …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”