Skip to main content

The X Factor of the Ramayana

Illustration by Gemini AI


We need myths to understand the reality of people. “Art is a lie that makes us realise truth,” Pablo Picasso said famously. Every myth is an art. That is, myth is not truth, but it helps us understand truths. Because ‘the people’ is a mythical category, though historical as well.

People are a mythical category because they represent a living community with a soul, a shared memory, and a common destiny – something deeper than what one can measure or pin down. People form an entity that is much bigger than what logic and reason can explain, with its many complex dimensions like belonging, hope, tradition, and dreams. No one can reduce any people to mere jingoistic slogans and narrowminded concepts like nationalism. There is a mystery that buoys up well above slogans and jingles.

People constantly create relationships beyond themselves. There is something about them “that doesn’t love a wall,” if I may borrow an image from poet Robert Frost. It is not exclusion and strife that people want, but communities of belonging and solidarity. Populist leaders exploit people’s culture for their own advantage, as   Pope Francis wrote in one of his exhortations.

India’s great epics can offer sparkling pointers toward better understanding of the people.  

The X factor of the Ramayana is precisely that it is an effective tool in our quest to understand ourselves. It has everything in it, quite as Vyasa said about his epic: “Whatever is here is found elsewhere; what is not here is nowhere else.” All our virtues and vices, our inner angels and demons, are there in the Ramayana in identifiable shapes.

Rama’s anguish, Sita’s resilience, Lakshmana’s loyalty, Hanuman’s devotion, all are our own characteristics. Love, duty, loss, longing, betrayal, honour, sacrifice, and redemption – that’s what the Ramayana is about and that’s what our life is about too.

The Ramayana presents ideals: the ideal man, woman, brother, and devotee. At the same time, it does not shy away from showing how painful and complex it is to live up to ideals. Rama’s choices are not easy even though he is an incarnation of God. Sita’s trials are heart-wrenching. This tension between dharma and desire, between personal happiness and cosmic duty, is universal and timeless.

The scale of the narrative in the Ramayana is enormous with all those gods, demons, flying chariots, and cosmic battles. At the same time, it is an intimate world of a loving wife accompanying her exiled husband into a dreadful forest. There is a brother who escorts the exile with equal love. Another brother who shuns the royal throne out of love again. So much love. Yet what lies at the core of the narrative is a dreadful war. Conflict can make love stronger. It helps to bring people closer together in supportive hugs. But in this narrative the conflict leads to other complex conflicts. What stands as supreme: love or dharma? What is dharma without love? What value does that have?

The characters in this epic narrative thus become symbols rather than just story elements. Rama becomes the embodiment of dharma, Sita of inner strength and purity, Ravana of ego and unchecked desire, Hanuman of faith and surrender. Thus the narrative acquires a spiritual and philosophical depth.

In the Ramayana, the people – janata or praja – are never just background figures like the pawns on a chessboard. The pawns only appear to be in the forefront. Unlike them, the people of Rama Rajya were a living force, a kind of moral conscience that shaped and reflected the destiny of Rama and the kingdom of Ayodhya.

Finally, the Ramayana teaches that true leadership means entering into the mystery that ‘people’ essentially is with humility and compassion. 

PS. This post has been highly influenced by the autobiography of Pope Francis and is part of an A-Z series which is approaching its climax.

Tomorrow: Yes to Life

Previous Posts in this series:

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

 

 

 

 

 

Comments

  1. This is a fantastic take on Ramayana!

    ReplyDelete
  2. People are a Living Force, with their Agency - the power of determination and destiny. And myths hold a mirror to ourselves and help us weigh our truths to ourselves. Pope Francis,dead or Alive, will continue to challenge us and our consciences and that is his Geopolitical Imact - The Francis Impact, as Jayati Gosh, a respected economist, remarked to KaranThapar in the Recent Wire Interview. Now, back to my Intellectual Property Rights.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In fact, I wish to write more posts based on my reading of Hope.

      Delete
  3. Hari OM
    Xlnt!!! I was awaiting your take on this letter of the alphabet, Xpecting the Xile but finding so much more! YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  4. It is all about self-discovery, isn't it?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Interesting take as usual! Learning a new aspect in relation to today’s prespective

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Today's politics is precisely what drove me to study Ramayana in such detail.

      Delete
  6. In fact, that tension between love and dharma remains as an unresolved dilemma in my mind.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ramayana always feels like the story of every other household & yet has this aura of grandness to it. And yes, a leader without humility & compassion is no leader.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The epic is grand in its vision and exposition. There's much that can be learnt if only readers want to learn.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

In this Wonderland

I didn’t write anything in the last few days. Nor did I feel any urge to write. I don’t know if this lack of interest to write is what’s called writer’s block. Or is it simple disenchantment with whatever is happening around me? We’re living in a time that offers much, too much, to writers. The whole world looks like a complex plot for a gigantic epic. The line between truth and fiction has disappeared. Mass murders have become no-news. Animals get more compassion than fellow human beings. Even their excreta are venerated! Folk tales are presented as scientific truths while scientific truths are sacrificed on the altar of political expediency. When the young generation in Nepal set fire to their Parliament and Supreme Court buildings, they were making an unmistakable statement: that they are sick of their political leaders and their systems. Is there any country whose leaders don’t sicken their citizens? I’m just wondering. Maybe, there are good leaders still left in a few coun...

Death as a Sculptor

Book Discussion An Introductory Note : This is not a book review but a reflection on one of the many themes in The Infatuations , novel by Javier Marias. If you have any intention of reading the novel, please be forewarned that this post contains spoilers. For my review of the book, without spoilers, read an earlier post: The Infatuations (2013). D eath can reshape the reality for the survivors of the departed. For example, a man’s death can entirely alter the lives of his surviving family members: his wife and children, particularly. That sounds like a cliché. Javier Marias’ novel, The Infatuations , shows us that death can alter a lot more; it can reshape meanings, relationships, and even morality of the people affected by the death. Miguel Deverne is killed by an abnormal man right in the beginning of the novel. It seems like an accidental killing. But it isn’t. There are more people than the apparently insane killer involved in the crime and there are motives which are di...

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

When Cricket Becomes War

Illustration by Copilot Designer Why did India agree to play Pakistan at all if the animosity runs so deep that Indian players could not even extend the customary handshake: a simple ritual that embodies the very essence of sportsmanship? Cricket is not war, in the first place. When a nation turns a game into a war, it does not defeat its rival; it only wages war on its own culture, poisoning its acclaimed greatness. India which claims to be Viswaguru , the world’s Guru, is degenerating itself day after day with mounting hatred against everyone who is not Hindu. How can we forget what India did to a young cricket player named Mohammed Siraj , especially in this context? In the recent test series against England, India achieved an unexpected draw because of Siraj. 1113 balls and 23 wickets. He was instrumental in India’s series-levelling victory in the final Test at the Oval and was declared the Player of the Match. But India did not celebrate him. Instead, it mocked him for his o...

Whose Rama?

Book Review Title: Whose Rama? [Malayalam] Author: T S Syamkumar Publisher: D C Books, Kerala Pages: 352 Rama may be an incarnation of God Vishnu, but is he as noble a man [ Maryada Purushottam ] as he is projected to be by certain sections of Hindus? This is the theme of Dr Syamkumar’s book, written in Malayalam. There is no English translation available yet. Rama is a creation of the Brahmins, asserts the author of this book. The Ramayana upholds the unjust caste system created by Brahmins for their own wellbeing. Everyone else exists for the sake of the Brahmin wellbeing. If the Kshatriyas are given the role of rulers, it is only because the Brahmins need such men to fight and die for them. Valmiki’s Rama too upheld that unjust system merely because that was his Kshatriya-dharma, allotted by the Brahmins. One of the many evils that Valmiki’s Rama perpetrates heartlessly is the killing of Shambuka, a boy who belonged to a low caste but chose to become an ascetic. The...