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Goddness Kali
Kali makes her 'official' debut in the Devi-Mahatmya, where she is said
to have emanated from the brow of Goddess Durga (slayer of demons) during
one of the battles between the divine and anti-divine forces. Etymologically
Durga's name means "Beyond Reach". She is thus an echo of the
woman warrior's fierce virginal autonomy. In this context Kali is considered
the 'forceful' form of the great goddess Durga.
Kali is represented as a Black woman with four arms; in one hand she
has a sword, in another the head of the demon she has slain, with the
other two she is encouraging her worshippers. For earrings she has two
dead bodies and wears a necklace of skulls ; her only clothing is a girdle
made of dead men's hands, and her tongue protrudes from her mouth. Her
eyes are red, and her face and breasts are besmeared with blood. She stands
with one foot on the thigh, and another on the breast of her husband.
Kali's fierce appearances have been the subject of extensive descriptions
in several earlier and modern works. Though her fierce form is filled
with awe- inspiring symbols, their real meaning is not what it first appears-
they have equivocal significance:
Kali's blackness symbolizes her all-embracing, comprehensive nature,
because black is the color in which all other colors merge; black absorbs
and dissolves them. 'Just as all colors disappear in black, so all names
and forms disappear in her' (Mahanirvana Tantra). Or black is said to
represent the total absence of color, again signifying the nature of Kali
as ultimate reality. This in Sanskrit is named as nirguna (beyond all
quality and form). Either way, Kali's black color symbolizes her transcendence
of all form.
A devotee poet says:
"Is Kali, my Divine Mother, of a black complexion?
She appears black because She is viewed from a distance;
but when intimately known She is no longer so.
The sky appears blue at a distance, but look at it close by
and you will find that it has no colour.
The water of the ocean looks blue at a distance,
but when you go near and take it in your hand,
you find that it is colourless."
... Ramakrishna Paramhansa (1836-86)
Kali's nudity has a similar meaning. In many instances she is described
as garbed in space or sky clad. In her absolute, primordial nakedness
she is free from all covering of illusion. She is Nature (Prakriti in
Sanskrit), stripped of 'clothes'. It symbolizes that she is completely
beyond name and form, completely beyond the illusory effects of maya (false
consciousness). Her nudity is said to represent totally illumined consciousness,
unaffected by maya. Kali is the bright fire of truth, which cannot be
hidden by the clothes of ignorance. Such truth simply burns them away.
She is full-breasted; her motherhood is a ceaseless creation. Her disheveled
hair forms a curtain of illusion, the fabric of space - time which organizes
matter out of the chaotic sea of quantum-foam. Her garland of fifty human
heads, each representing one of the fifty letters of the Sanskrit alphabet,
symbolizes the repository of knowledge and wisdom. She wears a girdle
of severed human hands- hands that are the principal instruments of work
and so signify the action of karma. Thus the binding effects of this karma
have been overcome, severed, as it were, by devotion to Kali. She has
blessed the devotee by cutting him free from the cycle of karma. Her white
teeth are symbolic of purity (Sans. Sattva), and her lolling tongue which
is red dramatically depicts the fact that she consumes all things and
denotes the act of tasting or enjoying what society regards as forbidden,
i.e. her indiscriminate enjoyment of all the world's "flavors".
Kali's four arms represent the complete circle of creation and destruction,
which is contained within her. She represents the inherent creative and
destructive rhythms of the cosmos. Her right hands, making the mudras
of "fear not" and conferring boons, represent the creative aspect
of Kali, while the left hands, holding a bloodied sword and a severed
head represent her destructive aspect. The bloodied sword and severed
head symbolize the destruction of ignorance and the dawning of knowledge.
The sword is the sword of knowledge, that cuts the knots of ignorance
and destroys false consciousness (the severed head). Kali opens the gates
of freedom with this sword, having cut the eight bonds that bind human
beings. Finally her three eyes represent the sun, moon, and fire, with
which she is able to observe the three modes of time: past, present and
future. This attribute is also the origin of the name Kali, which is the
feminine form of 'Kala', the Sanskrit term for Time.
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