How monsters become gods
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| Alli and Nambi - AI-generated |
Question: When does a monster become a goddess?
Answer: When society realises it
created the monster.
Neeli was Kerala’s very own vampire. Her full name in
the various legends of the state is Kalliyankattu Neeli. She is not a ‘vampire’
in the Western sense. The idea of a blood-sucking undead being, like Dracula with
his ruined castle in a dark forest, comes largely from European Gothic
imagination. In Kerala’s folklore, Neeli is a yakshi. A yakshi
is a wronged woman who dies unjustly and then returns as a powerful and
vindictive spirit.
Neeli was originally Alli. She has
different names in different legends. I’m taking the version given in
Sreekumari Ramachandran’s book, The Evergreen Legends of Kerala. Alli
was an extraordinarily beautiful young woman, daughter of a Devadasi in the
village of Pazhakannur on the border of ancient Thiruvithamkoor (what the
British called Travancore) and the Chola kingdom (9th-13th
century CE).
Alli fell in love with Nambi, the
priest of the local temple. Nambi was a cunning and greedy man whose real
interest lay in the Devadasi’s wealth. When the Devadasi understood his evil
motives, she asked him to get lost. Alli chose to accompany him because her
love for him was genuine. Her mother gave her all her gold so that her future
would be secure.
Nambi killed Alli and took possession
of all her gold.
Genuine love was cruelly deceived and
killed. Neeli had reasons to become a yakshi.
There are many other details added to
this story in the diverse legends that Kerala has created around this
fascinating supernatural woman who eventually became a goddess too in a few
temples.
I was aware of Neeli’s story because it appeared in many novels, dramas, and movies. But her divinity revealed itself to me only today as I was reading a Malayalam weekly, Deshabhimani. The periodical mentioned that Neeli was worshipped in many temples in Kerala and Tamil Nadu. A yakshi is a cruel blood-sucking monster driven solely by vindictiveness. How does she become a goddess in temples?
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| Temple of Neeli in Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu |
Two months back, I wrote about another
fascinating deity in Kerala, Kappiri
Muthappan. Fear
and guilt feeling drove people to deify some African spirits (souls
of Negro slaves in Kerala).
Something similar happened with Neeli
the yakshi too.
Neeli was betrayed, abused, and
killed unjustly. Then she became a diabolic supernatural power. People were
afraid of her. But they were also aware of the injustice perpetrated against
her. The recognition of
monstrous injustice, together with fear of the evil spirit engendered by that
act of injustice, stirs a community’s need to restore moral balance. The
monstrous spirit thus becomes a supernatural guardian.
I guess there can be a lot of other
motives too. Like, we humans tend to ritualise what we cannot eliminate. If you
cannot destroy an evil spirit, you give it a shrine, worship it, and integrated
it into the sacred order.
The society creates monsters. The
same society creates gods out of those monsters.
An afterthought: It is quite scary to enter the social media nowadays. Too many
monsters are being created there. Will India have enough space to construct
temples for all these monsters after the right-wing politics implodes under its
own weight in the due course of time?


Hari OM
ReplyDeleteSo many people look outside themselves for answers... and guardianship. They want to absolve themselves of responsibility and having a deity upon whom to lay one's troubles (and blame) suits all needs! YAM xx