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Lingayats

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Shaivism sect founded in 12th century

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Lingayats / Veerashaivas
Basava, 12th-century statesman, philosopher, poet and Lingayat saint
Founder
Basava (1131–1167 CE),Allama Prabhu,Akka Mahadevi,Channabasavanna and Siddharama.[1]
Regions with significant populations
Karnataka15,893,983[note 1][2]
Maharashtra6,742,460[note 2][2]
Telangana1,500,000[note 3][3]
Religions
Hinduism
Scriptures
Vachana sahitya • Karana Hasuge • Basava purana • Shunyasampadane • Mantra Gopya
Languages
Kannada • Marathi[4]
Related ethnic groups
Website
https://virashaiva.com/

TheLingayats are amonotheistic religious denomination ofShaivism withinHinduism.[5][6] Lingayats are also known asliṅgāyataru,liṅgavanta,vīraśaiva,liṅgadhāri.[7] Lingayats are known for their unique practice ofIshtalinga worship, where adherents carry a personallinga symbolizing a constant, intimate relationship withParashiva.[8] A radical feature of lingayats is their staunch opposition to the caste system and advocacy for social equality, challenging societal norms of the time.[9] Its philosophical tenets are encapsulated inVachanas, a form of devotional poetry.[10] The tradition also emphasizes Kayaka (work) and Dasoha (service) as forms of worship, underscoring the sanctity of labor and service to others.[11] Unlike mainstream Hinduism, Lingayats reject scriptural authority ofvedas,puranas,superstition,astrology,vedic priesthood ritualistic practices, and the concept of rebirth, promoting a direct, personal experience of the divine.[7][8]

Lingayats are considered as aShaiva tradition orSampradaya (sect).[12][13][14] because their beliefs include many Hindu elements.[15] Worship is centered onShiva as the universal god in the iconographic form ofIshtalinga.[16][17][note 4] Lingayats emphasizequalified monism, with philosophical foundations similar to those ofRamanuja.[web 1]

Contemporary Lingayats are influential inSouth India, especially in the state ofKarnataka.[17][18] Lingayats celebrate anniversaries (jayanti) of major religious leaders of their sect, as well as Hindu festivals such asShivaratri andGanesh Chaturthi.[19][20][21] Lingayats have their own pilgrimage places, temples, shrines and religious poetry based on Shiva.[22] Today, Lingayats, along withShaiva Siddhanta followers,Naths,Pashupatas,Kapalikas and others constitute theShaivite population.[web 2][note 5]

Etymology

[edit]

The word 'Lingayat' is derived from the Sanskrit rootlingam "mark, symbol" and the suffixayta.[23] The adherents of ishtalinga are known as "Lingayats". In historical literature, they are sometimes referred to as Lingawants, Lingangis, Lingadharis, Sivabhaktas, Virasaivas or Veerashaivas. The term Lingayat is based on the practice of both genders of Lingayats wearing aniṣṭaliṅga contained inside a silver box with a necklace all the time. Theistalinga is an oval-shaped emblem symbolisingParashiva, the absolute reality and icon of their spirituality.[24]

Historically, Lingayats were known as "Virashaivas"[25] or "ardent, heroic worshippers of Shiva."[26] According to Blake Michael, Veerashaivism refers both to a "philosophical or theological system as well as to the historical, social and religious movement which originated from that system." Lingayats refer to the modern adherents of this religion.[27] The term Lingayats came to be commonly used during the British colonial period.[25]

The termsLingayat andVeerashaiva have been used synonymously.[6][28][29][web 1][note 6]Veerashaivism refers to the broaderVeerashaiva philosophy and theology as well as the movement, states Blake Michael, while Lingayata refers to the modern community, sect or caste that adheres to this philosophy.[27][25] In the contemporary era, some state that Veerashaiva is a (sub)tradition within Lingayats with Vedic influences,[web 3] and these sources have been seeking a political recognition of Lingayats to be separate from Veerashaivas, and Lingayats to be a separate religious community. In contrast, Veerashaivas consider the two contemporary (sub)traditions to be "one and the same community" belonging to Hinduism.[web 4]

Origin

[edit]

The origins of Lingayats is traced to the 11th- and 12th-century CE in a region that includes northern Karnataka and nearby districts of South India. This region was a stronghold ofJainism andShaivism. According to Iyer and other scholars, the Lingayat theology emerged as a definitive egalitarian movement in this theological milieu, growing rapidly beyond north Karnataka. The Lingayats, states Burjor Avari quoting Jha, were "extremely anti-Jain".[30] The Veerashaiva philosophy enabled Lingayats to "win over the Jains to Shiva worship".[24][31] The Lingayats were also anti-Brahmin as evidenced by the polemics against the Brahmins in early Veerashaiva literature.[32]

According to a tradition which developed after Basava's time,[33][note 7]Veerashaivism was transmitted by fivePanchacharyas, namely Renukacharya, Darukacharya, Ekorama, Panditharadhya, and Vishweswara, and first taught by Renukacharya to sageAgasthya, a Vedic seer.[web 5] A central text in this tradition isSiddhanta Shikhamani, which was written in Sanskrit, and gives an elaboration of "the primitive traits of Veerashaivism [found] in the Vedas and the Upanishads" and "the concrete features given to it in the latter parts (Uttarabhaga) of the Saivagamas."[web 6][36] While Veerashaivas regard theSiddhanta Shikhamani to predate Basava, it may actually have been composed in the 13th or 14th century, post-dating Basava.[web 5]

History

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Basava (12th century)

[edit]
See also:Basava
Basava, the influential leader of Lingayats[web 7]

TheSharana-movement, which started in the 11th century, is regarded by some as the start of Veerashaivism.[37] It started in a time whenKalamukha Shaivism, which was supported by the ruling classes, was dominant, and in control of the monasteries.[38] The Sharana-movement was inspired by theNayanars, and emphasised personal religious experience over text-based dogmatism.[39]

The traditional legends and hagiographic texts state that Basava was the founder of the Lingayats and its secular practices.[40][41][web 1] Basava was a 12th-century Hindu philosopher,statesman,Kannada poet in the Shiva-focusedBhakti movement and asocial reformer during the reign of theKalachuri kingBijjala II (reigned 1157–1167) inKarnataka, India.[42][web 7][note 8]

Basava grew up in aBrahmin family with a tradition of Shaivism.[41][43] As a leader, he developed and inspired a new devotional movement namedVirashaivas, or "ardent, heroic worshippers of Shiva". This movement shared its roots in the ongoingBhakti movement, particularly the ShaivaNayanars traditions, over the 7th- to 11th-century. However, Basava championed devotional worship that rejected temple worship with rituals led by Brahmins, and emphasized personalised direct worship of Shiva through practices such as individually worn icons and symbols like a smalllinga.[26]

Hexagonal star and Istalinga on saffron coloured flag.

Basavanna spread social awareness through his poetry, popularly known asVachanaas. Basavanna rejected gender or social discrimination, and caste distinctions,[44] as well as some extant practices such as the wearing of sacred thread,[40] and replaced this with the ritual of wearingIshtalinga necklace, with an image of theShiva Liṅga,[45] by every person regardless of his or her birth, to be a constant reminder of one'sbhakti (loving devotion) to god Shiva. As the chief minister of his kingdom, he introduced new public institutions such as theAnubhava Mantapa (or, the "hall of spiritual experience"),[43] which welcomed men and women from all socio-economic backgrounds to discuss spiritual and mundane questions of life, in open.[46]

After initially supporting Basava, king Bijjala II disagreed with Basava's rejection of caste distinctions. In 1167 the Veerashaivas were repressed, and most of them left Kalyāna, Bijjala's new capital, spreading Basava's teachings into a wider area in southern India. The king was assassinated by the Veerashaivas in 1168.[47]

Consolidation (12th–14th century)

[edit]

After Basava's death, Shaivism consolidated its influence in southern India, meanwhile adjusting to Hindu orthodoxy.[48] Basava's nephew Channabasava organised the community and systematised Virasaiva theology, moving the Virashaiva community toward the mainstream Hindu culture.[49] Basava's role in the origins of Shaivism was downplayed, and a mythology developed in which the origins of Veerashaivism were attributed to the five Panchacharyas, descending to earth in the different world-ages to teach Shaivism. In this narrative, Basava was regarded as a reviver of this ancient teaching.[48][note 9]

Monasteries of the older Saiva schools, "such as theKalamukha," were taken over by the Virasaivas.[50] Two kinds of monastic orders developed. Due to their roots in the traditional schools, thegurusthalada monasteries were more conservative, while theviraktas "constituted the true Virasaiva monastic organisation, shaped by the ideals of Basava and his contemporaries."[51]

Vijayanagara Empire (15th–17th century)

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In the 14th-15th century, a Lingayat revival took place in northern Karnataka in theVijayanagara Empire.[51][52] The Lingayats likely were a part of the reason why Vijayanagara succeeded in territorial expansion and in withstanding the Deccan Sultanate wars. The Lingayat textSunyasampadane grew out of the scholarly discussions in an Anubhava Mantapa, and according to Bill Aitken, these were "compiled at the Vijayanagara court during the reign of Praudha Deva Raya".[53] Similarly, thehagiographicalepic poemBasava Purana, detailing the life of Basava, was expanded and translated into Kannada in 1369 during the reign of Vijayanagara rulerBukka Raya I.[52]

Ikkeri Nayakas, Keladi dynasty (16th-18th century)

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The Virasaivas were an important part of the Vijayanagara empire army. They fought the Bijapur Sultans, and the Virasaiva leader Sadasiva Nayaka played a key role in leading the capture of Sultanate fortress such as at Gulbarga.[54] This success led to Nayaka being appointed as the governor of the coastal Karnataka Kanara region. This emerged as a Lingayat dynasty, called theNayakas of Keladi. Another group of Virasaivas merchants turned warriors of the Vijayanagara empire were successful in defeating the Deccan Sultanates in theLepakshi region (Karnataka-Andhra Pradesh border region).[54] After the collapse of the Vijayanagara empire, the Lingayat Keladi/Ikkeri dynasty ruled the coastal Karnataka till the invasion and their defeat by Hyder Ali seeking a Mysore-based Sultanate.[55][56]

The Virasaiva dynasty Nayaka rulers built major 16th to 18th-century shrines and seminaries of Lingayats, repaired and built new Hindu and Jain temples,[57][58][59] sponsored major Hindu monasteries such as the AdvaitaSringeri matha as well as forts and temples such as atChitradurga.[57][60] They also started new towns and merchant centres in coastal and interior Karnataka.[54][55][61]

Varna-status debates (19th–20th century)

[edit]

In early decades of the 19th century, the Lingayats were described by British officials such as Francis Buchanan as a conglomeration of Hindu castes with enormous diversity and eclectic, egalitarian social system that accepted converts from all social strata and religions.[62] However, the British officials also noted the endogamous tradition and hereditary occupations of many Lingayats, which made their classification difficult.[63] In the 1871 and the 1881 colonial era census of British India, Lingayats were listed asshudras.[64][note 10] According to the sociologistM. N. Srinivas, Lingayats traditionally believed themselves to be equal in status to Brahmins, and some orthodox Lingayats were so anti-Brahmin that they would not eat food cooked or handled by Brahmins.[65][66] The egalitarian Lingayats, states Srinivas, had been a major force in Sanskritization of Kannada-speaking (Karnataka) and nearby regions but against elitism.[65][66]

After being placed in the shudra category in the 1881 census, Lingayats demanded a higher caste status.[64] This was objected and ridiculed by a Brahmin named Ranganna who said that Lingayats were not Shaiva Brahmins given their eclectic occupations that included washermen, traders, farmers and others, as well as their exogamous relationships with the royal family.[67] Lingayats persisted in their claims for decades,[64] and their persistence was strengthened by Lingayat presence within the government, and a growing level of literacy and employment in journalism and the judiciary.[68] In 1926, the Bombay High Court ruled that "the Veerashaivas are not Shudras."[69][page needed]

According to Schouten, in the early 20th century Lingayats tried to raise their social status, by stressing the specific characteristics of their history and of their religious thought as being distinctive from the Brahmin-dominated Hindu-culture.[70] In the 1910s, the narrative of Basava and Allama as the "founding pillars" of the Lingayats gained new importance for the identity of parts of the Lingayat-community, with other parts responded with rejection of this "resurrection."[68]

Separate religious identity (21st century)

[edit]

According to Ramanujan, "A modern attempt was made to show Lingayats as having a religion separate from Hindu when Lingayats received discrete entry in the Indian constitution of 1950."[15][web 8][web 1] Individuals and community leaders have made intermittent claims for the legal recognition of either being distinct from Hinduism or a caste within Hinduism.[note 11]

In 2000, theAkhila Bharatha (All India) Veerashaiva Mahasabha started a campaign for recognition of "Veerashaivas or Lingayats" as a non-Hindu religion, and a separate listing in the Census. Recognition as a religious minority would make Lingayats "eligible for rights to open and manage educational institutions given by the Constitution to religious and linguistic minorities."[web 8][note 12] In 2013, theAkhila Bharatha (All India) Veerashaiva Mahasabha president was still lobbying for recognition of Lingayats as a separate religious community, arguing that Lingayats rejects the social discrimination propagated by Hinduism.[web 9]

In 2017, the demands for a separate religious identity gained further momentum on the eve of the 2018 elections in Karnataka.[web 10] While the Congress party supports the calls for Lingayatism as a separate religion,[web 11] the BJP regards Lingayats as Veerashaivas and Hindus.[note 13] In August 2017, a rally march supporting Lingayatism as "not Hinduism" attracted almost 200,000 people,[web 10] while the issue further divides the Lingayat and Veerashaiva communities,[web 13] and various opinions exist within the Lingayat and Veerashaiva communities. According to India Today, "Veerashaivas claim that the two communities are one and the same," while orthodox Lingayats claim that they are different.[web 13] Veerashaivas further "owe allegiance to various religious centres (mutts), [while] the Lingayats mostly follow their own gurus."[web 13] Nevertheless, some mutts support the campaign for the status of a separate religion, while "others content to be counted as a caste within Hinduism."[web 10]

In March 2018, the Nagamohan Das committee advised "to form a separate religion status for the Lingayats community." In response, the Karnataka government approved this separate religious status, a decision which was decried by Veerashaivas.[web 4][web 3] It recommended the Indian government to grant the religious minority status to the sect.[web 16][web 3] Central Government later declined this recommendation.[71]

According to Shivsundar, associate ofGauri Lankesh and formercolumnist of the Gauri Lankesh Patrike, by the 15th century, Lingayats were absorbed into the Hindu order and associated with Veerashaivas, despite resistance. Over time, they were relegated to a subordinate status. In the 20th century, leaders like Bahu Halakatti revived the egalitarian Vachana philosophy, asserting Lingayat distinctiveness and challenging caste hierarchies. Demands during the British era, such as separate kitchens and Sanskrit education, reflected tensions between their egalitarian ideals and aspirations for higher social status.

Post-independence, Lingayats gained political and educational power but remained culturally tied to Veerashaivas. By the 1980s, a movement sought minority religion status, which gained momentum in 2017 with CM Siddaramaiah’s support. This sparked widespread mobilization among Lingayats but faced opposition from theBJP andRSS, while the Veerashaiva Mahasabha showed mixed reactions.[72]

In the 1980s even theRamakrishna Mission, which was under pressure from Bengal’sCommunist government to reconstitute the governing bodies of some of the Mission-run colleges, claimed it was a non-Hindu minority institution and hence insulated from state interference underArticle 30 of the Constitution.[73]

According to Gauri Lankesh, Veerashaivism is preserved and transmitted by five peethas (Rambhapuri, Ujjaini, Kedar, Shreeshail, Kashi), which play an essential role in the Veerashaiva tradition.[web 5] In contrast, thevirakta monastic organisation upheld "the ideals of Basava and his contemporaries."[51][note 14] According to Bairy, thevirakta tradition criticised "[t]he Panchacharya tradition, the Mathas which belonged to it and the (upper) castes which owed their allegiance to them" for their support of Brahmins and their deviation from Basava's ideals.[74][note 15]

According to Sri Sharanbasava Devaru of Charanteshwar Mutt, interviewed in 2013, Lingayat is a separate religion, distinct from the Hindu cultural identity, while Veerashaivism is a Shaivite sect "based on Vedic philosophy."[web 17] Sri Sharanbasava Devaru further states that Veerashaivism "started gaining importance only after 1904 with some mutts mixing Veerashaivas with Lingayats."[web 17]

Characteristics

[edit]

Lingayats consider themselves a Hindu sect.[75] Ishtalinga worship is centred onHindu godShiva as the universal god in the iconographic form ofIshtalinga.[6][note 4] They believe that they will be reunited with Shiva after their death by wearing thelingam.[76]

Ishtalinga

[edit]
An idol ofAkka Mahadevi holding anishtalinga in her left hand

Lingayat worship is centred on theHindu godShiva as the universalsupreme being in the iconographic form ofishtalinga.[6][17][note 4] The Lingayats always wear theishtalinga held with a necklace.[17][web 1] Theistalinga is made up of a small blue-black stone coated with fine durable thick black paste of cow dung ashes mixed with some suitable oil to withstand wear and tear. It is viewed as a "living, moving" divinity of the Lingayat devotee. Every day, the devotee removes theishtalinga from its box, places it the in left palm, offerspuja, and then meditates about becoming one with thelingam, in their journey towards theatma-linga.[77]

Soteriology

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Shatsthala

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Lingayat principle teaches a path to an individual's spiritual progress, and describes it as a six-stageSatsthalasiddhanta. This concept progressively evolves:[78]

  • the individual starts with the phase of a devotee,
  • the phase of the master,
  • the phase of the receiver of grace,
  • Linga in life breath (god dwells in his or her soul),
  • the phase of surrender (awareness of no distinction in god and soul, self),
  • the last stage of complete union of soul and god (liberation,mukti).

Thus bhakti progresses from external icon-aided loving devotional worship of Shiva to deeper fusion of awareness with abstract Shiva, ultimately to advaita (oneness) of one's soul and god formoksha.[79]

Mukti

[edit]

While Lingayats accept the concept of transmigration of soul (metempsychosis, reincarnation),[80] they believe that they are in their last lifetime[80][81] and will be reunited with Shiva after their death by wearing thelingam.[76][82][81] Lingayats are not cremated, but "are buried in a sitting, meditative position, holding their personal linga in the right hand."[82]

Indologist F. Otto Schrader was among early scholars who studied Lingayat texts and its stand onmetempsychosis.[83] According to Schrader, it was Abbe Dubois who first remarked that Lingayats rejects metempsychosis – the belief that the soul of a human being or animal transmigrates into a new body after death. This remark about "rejecting rebirth" was repeated by others, states Schrader, and it led to the question whether Lingayats make a religion distinct from other Indian religions such as Hinduism where metempsychosis and rebirth is a fundamental premise.[83] According to Schrader, Dubois was incorrect and Lingayat texts such asViramahesvaracara-samgraha,Anadi-virasaivasara-samgraha,Sivatattva ratnakara (by Basava), andLingait Paramesvara Agama confirm that metempsychosis is a fundamental premise of Lingayats.[84] According to Schrader, Lingayats believe that if they live an ethical life then this will be their last life, and they will merge into Shiva, a belief that has fed the confusion that they do not believe in rebirth.[83] According to R. Blake Michael, rebirth and ways to end rebirth was extensively discussed by Basava, Allama Prabhu, Siddharameshawar and other religious saints of Lingayats.[85]

Shiva: non-dualism and qualified monism

[edit]
Main articles:Panchachara,Ashtavarana, andShatsthala
A necklace with pendant containing linga symbol of Shiva are worn by Lingayats.Rudraksha beads (shown above) andVibhuti (sacred ash on forehead) are other symbols adopted as a constant reminder of one's principles of faith.[86]

Qualified non-dualism

[edit]

Shunya, in a series of Kannada language texts, is equated with the Virashaiva concept of the Supreme. In particular, theShunya Sampadane texts present the ideas ofAllama Prabhu in a form of dialogue, whereshunya is that void and distinctions which a spiritual journey seeks to fill and eliminate. It is the described as state of union of one's soul with the infinite Shiva, the state of blissful moksha.[87][88]

This Lingayat concept is similar toshunya Brahma concept found in certain texts ofVaishnavism, particularly inOdiya, such as the poeticPanchasakhas. It explains theNirguna Brahman idea of Vedanta, that is the eternal unchanging metaphysical reality as "personified void". Alternate names for this concept of Hinduism, includeshunya purusha andJagannatha in certain texts.[87][89] However, both in Lingayats and various flavors of Vaishnavism such asMahima Dharma, the idea ofShunya is closer to the Hindu concept of metaphysicalBrahman, rather than to theŚūnyatā concept of Buddhism.[87] However, there is some overlap, such as in the works of Bhima Bhoi.[87][90]

Sripati, a Veerashaiva scholar, explained Lingayat philosophy inSrikara Bhashya, inVedanta terms, stating it to be a form of qualified non-dualism, wherein the individualAtman (soul) is the body of God, and that there is no difference between Shiva and Atman (self, soul), Shiva is one's Atman, one's Atman is Shiva.[86] Sripati's analysis places Lingayat philosophy in a form closer to the 11th centuryVishishtadvaita philosopherRamanuja, than toAdvaita philosopherAdi Shankara.[86]

Qualified monism

[edit]

Other scholars state that Lingayat philosophy is more complex than the description of the Veerashaiva scholar Sripati. It united diverse spiritual trends during Basava's era. Jan Peter Schouten states that it tends towards monotheism with Shiva as the godhead, but with a strong awareness of the monistic unity of theUltimate Reality.[78] Schouten calls this as a synthesis of Ramanuja's Vishishtadvaita and Shankara's Advaita traditions, naming itShakti-Vishishtadvaita, that is monism fused with Shakti beliefs.[78] But Basava's approach is different thanAdi Shankara, states Schouten, in that Basava emphasises the path of devotion, compared to Shankara's emphasis on the path of knowledge—a system of monisticAdvaita philosophy widely discussed in Karnataka in the time of Basava.[91]

Panchacharas

[edit]
Kudalasangama inBagalkot district, a temple and pilgrimage site linked to Guru Basavanna

ThePanchacharas describe the five codes of conduct to be followed by the Lingayats. ThePanchacharas include:[92]

  • Lingāchāra – Daily worship of the individual Ishtalinga icon, one to three times day.
  • Sadāchāra – Attention to vocation and duty, and adherence to the seven rules of conduct issued byBasavanna:
    • kala beda (Do not steal)
    • kola beda (Do not kill or hurt)
    • husiya nudiyalu beda (Do not utter lies)
    • thanna bannisabeda (Do not praise yourself*, i.e., practice humility)
    • idira haliyalu beda (Do not criticize others)
    • muniya beda (shun anger)
    • anyarige asahya padabeda (Do not be intolerant towards others)
  • Sivāchāra – acknowledgingShiva as the supreme divine being and upholding the equality and well-being of all human beings.
  • Bhrityāchāra – Compassion towards all creatures.
  • Ganāchāra – Defence of the community and its tenets.

Ashtavarana

[edit]

TheAshtavaranas, the eight-fold armour that shields the devotee from extraneous distraction and worldly attachments. TheAshtavaranas include:[92]

  • Guru – obedience towards Guru, the Mentor;
  • Linga – wearing theIshtalinga on your body at all times;
  • Jangama – reverence for Shiva ascetics as incarnations of divinity;
  • Pādodaka – sipping the water used for bathing the Linga;
  • Prasāda – sacred offerings;
  • Vibhuti – smearing holy ash on oneself daily;
  • Rudrāksha – wearing a string ofrudraksha (holy beads, seeds ofElaeocarpus ganitrus);
  • Mantra – reciting the mantra of "Namah Shivaya: (salutation to Shiva)"

Kāyakavē Kailāsa doctrine and karma

[edit]
Kayakave Kailasa inKannada

Kayakave kailasa is a slogan in Veerashaivism. It means "work is heaven" or "to work [Kayakave] is to be in the Lord's Kingdom [Kailasa]". Some scholars translateKayaka as "worship, ritual", while others translate it as "work, labour". The slogan is attributed to Basava, and generally interpreted to signify a work ethic for all social classes.[93]

Lingayat poet-saints accepted the concept ofkarma and repeatedly mention it in their Shiva poetry. For example, states Ramanujan, Mahadeviyakka mentions karma and resulting chain of rebirths that are cut short by bhakti to Shiva.[94] Lingayats have the concepts of karma and dharma, but the Lingayat doctrine of karma is not one of fate and destiny. Lingayats believe inkayaka (work) and the transformative potential of "one's work in the here and now".[95] According to Schouten, Siddharama and Allama debated the doctrine of karma as the law of work and merit, but Allama persuaded Siddharama that such merit is a low-level mechanism, and real mystical achievement transcends "the sphere of works and rewards" and is void of self-interest.[96] These ideas, states Schouten, are similar to those found in Bhagavad Gita which teaches "work must be done without any attachment to the results".[97][note 16]

Dāsoha doctrine

[edit]

Dasoha is the purpose and result ofKāyakavē Kailāsa in Lingayat philosophy.[99]Dasoha means "service", and more specifically "service to other Lingayats" including theJangama. Regardless of one's vocation, Lingayats suggest giving and donating a part of one's time, effort and income to one's community and to religious mendicants.[99][100]

According to Virasaivism, skilful work and service to one's community, without discrimination, is a means to experiencing the divine, a sentiment that continues to be revered in present-day Virasaivas.[101] According to Jan Peter Schouten, this doctrine is philosophically rooted in the more ancientSo'ham Sanskritoneness mantra related toShiva, and which means "I am He".[102] This social ethic is also found among other Hindu communities of South India, and includes community provisioning of grains and sharing other essentials particularly with poorer members of society and those affected by natural or other disasters.[103]

Lingadharane

[edit]

Lingadharane is the ceremony of initiation among Lingayats. Thoughlingadharane can be performed at any age, it is usually performed when a fetus in the womb is 7–8 months old. The family Guru performspooja and provides the ishtalinga to the mother, who then ties it to her own ishtalinga until birth. At birth the mother secures the new ishtalinga to her child. Upon attaining the age of 8–11 years, the child receivesDiksha from the family Guru to know the proper procedure to perform pooja of ishtalinga. From birth to death, the child wears the Linga at all times and it is worshipped as a personal ishtalinga. TheLinga is wrapped in a cloth housed in a small silver and wooden box. It is to be worn on the chest, over the seat of the indwelling deity within the heart. Some people wear it on the chest or around the body using a thread.[citation needed]

Vegetarianism

[edit]

Lingayats are strictvegetarians. Devout Lingayats do not consume meat of any kind including fish.[104] The drinking ofliquor is prohibited.[web 18]

Temples and rites of passage

[edit]

Lingayats believe that the human body is a temple. In addition, they have continued to build the community halls and Shaiva temple traditions of South India. Their temples include Shiva linga in the sanctum, a sitting Nandi facing the linga, with mandapa and other features. However, the prayers and offerings are not led byBrahmin priests but by Lingayat priests (Veerashaiva Jangama).[105] The temple format is simpler than those of Jains and Hindus found in north Karnataka.[106][107] In some parts of Karnataka, these temples are samadhis of Lingayat saints, in others such as theVeerabhadra temple of Belgavi – one of the important pilgrimage sites for Lingayats,[108] and other historic temples, the Shiva temple is operated and maintained by Lingayat priests.[105][19] Many rural Lingayat communities include the images of Shiva, Parvati and Ganesha in their wedding invitations, while Ganesha festivities are observed by both rural and urban Lingayats in many parts of Karnataka.[19] Colonial-era reports by British officials confirm that Lingayats observed Ganesha Chaturthi in the 19th century.[20]

Festivals

[edit]

They celebrate most of the Hindu festivals and their own festivals;

Literature

[edit]
Main article:Vachana Sahitya
Vachana Sahitya (also calledSharana Sahitya) on aPalm Leaf

Lingayat literature

[edit]
A vachana (poem) byAkka Mahadevi

Several works are attributed to the founder of Lingayat movement, Basava, and these texts are revered in the Lingayat community. In particular, these include variousVachana (literally, "what is said")[40] such as theShat-sthala-vachana,Kala-jnana-vachana,Mantra-gopya,Ghatachakra-vachana andRaja-yoga-vachana.[110] Saints and Sharanas like Allamaprabhu, Akka Mahadevi,Siddarama and Basava were at the forefront of this development during the 12th century.

Other important Lingayat literature includes:[citation needed]

TheBasava Purana, aTelugu biographical epic poem which narrates the life story of Basava, was written byPalkuriki Somanatha in 13th-century, and an updated 14th-century Kannada version was written byBhima Kavi in 1369. Both are sacred texts for lingayats.[111]

Vedas and shastras

[edit]

Lingayat (Veerashaiva) thinkers rejected the custodial hold of Brahmins over theVedas and theshastras, but they did not outright reject the Vedic knowledge.[112][113][113] The 13th-century Telugu Virashaiva poetPalkuriki Somanatha, author ofBasava Purana—a scripture of Veerashaivas, for example asserted, "Virashaivism fully conformed to theVedas and the shastras."[112][114] Somanatha repeatedly stated that "he was a scholar of the four Vedas".[113]

Lingayats consider the Vedas as a means, but not the sanctimonious end.[115] It rejected various forms of ritualism and the uncritical adherence to any text including the Vedas.[116]

Anubhava Mantapa

[edit]

TheAnubhava Mantapa literally means the "hall of spiritual experience".[26] It has been a Lingayat institution since the time of Basava, serving as an academy of mystics, saints and poet-philosophers for discussion of spiritual and mundane questions of life, in open.[117] It was the fountainhead of all religious and philosophical thought pertaining to the Lingayata. It was presided over by the mystic Allamaprabhu, and numerous sharanas from all over Karnataka and other parts of India were participants. This institution also helped propagate lingayat's religious and philosophical thought. Akka Mahadevi, Channabasavanna and Basavanna himself were participants in theAnubhava Mantapa.[26]

Demographics

[edit]

Lingayats today are found predominantly in the state ofKarnataka, especially in North and Central Karnataka with a sizeable population native to South Karnataka. Lingayats have been estimated to be about 16% of Karnataka's population[2] and about 6-7% ofMaharashtra's population.[2][13][note 17]. Lingayat Vani community is present inmarathwada andKolhapur,Konkan region and were traders,Zamindars in medieval era.[118][119] The Lingayat diaspora can be found in countries around the world, particularly theUnited States,Britain andAustralia.[web 10][better source needed]

Reservation status

[edit]

Today, the Lingayat community is a blend of variouscastes, consisting ofOBC[120][121] andSC.[122] Currently, 16 castes of Lingayats have been accorded the OBC status by the Central Government.[121] According to one of the estimates by a Lingayat politician around 7 per cent of people in Lingayat community come under SC and STs.[122] Veerashaiva Lingayats get OBC reservation at state level in both Karnataka[123] and Telangana.[124]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^16% of state's population
  2. ^6% of state's population
  3. ^4.2% of state's population
  4. ^abcRoshen Dalal (2010): "The linga is worshipped by all Shaivites, but it is the special emblem of the Lingayats or Virashaivas, a Shaivite sect."[6]
  5. ^For an overview of the Shaiva Traditions, see Flood, Gavin, "The Śaiva Traditions", in: Flood (2003), pp. 200–228. For an overview that concentrates on the Tantric forms of Śaivism, seeAlexis Sanderson's magisterial survey articleŚaivism and the Tantric Traditions, pp. 660–704 inThe World's Religions, edited by Stephen Sutherland, Leslie Houlden, Peter Clarke and Friedhelm Hardy, London: Routledge, 1988.
  6. ^Lingayatism-Veerashaivism:
    * Roshen Dalal (2010): "Lingayats or Virashaivas, a Shaivite sect."; "A Shaivite sect, also known as Virashaivas."[6]
    * Encyclopedia Britannica: Encyclopedia Britannica: "Lingayat, also called Virashaiva"[web 1]
  7. ^Dating ofPanchacharyas tradition:
    * Schouten (1995): "The death of Basava certainly did not bring the Virasaiva movement to an end [...] Virasaivism gained a firm foothold in Hindu culture. In this process of consolidation, it was felt to be appropriate to emphasize the agreements, rather than the deviations, with the dominant religion. Hence, the Virasaivas tended to present themselves as pure Hindus who shared the age-old religious tradition. This went so far that the role of Basava as the founder of the movement was downplayed. Virasaivas even claimed that their school of thought already existed long before Basava. In their imagination, they sometimes traced the history of Virasaivism back to primordial times. Legends arose among them which related that five teachers, sprung from the five faces of Siva, descended to earth, in each of the ages of the world under different names, in order to preach the eternal truth of Virasaivism. Basava would have been nothing more than a reviver of this religion which had existed from times immemorial."[33]
    * Bairy: "[Venkatrao, in 1919 the president of the Karnataka History Congress], mentions that many Lingayaths took objections to him mentioning Basava as the founder of Veerashaivism in his writings. Finding that very strange and unfathomable, he asks a Lingayath friend about the reasons for this. The friend tells him how that very question - of whether Basava is the founder of Veerashaivism (accepting which would not only mean that it is dated to as recent as the twelfth century but also subverts the Panchacharya tradition which claimed a more antiquarian past) or just a reformer - was a major bone of contention between the two sections of Lingayaths.[34]
    * According to Aditi Mangaldas, in the 14th centuryVeerashaivism developed as a sub-sect of Lingayatism.[35]
  8. ^Encyclopedia Britannica: "Basava, (flourished 12th century, South India), Hindu religious reformer, teacher, theologian, and administrator of the royal treasury of the Kalachuri-dynasty king Bijjala I (reigned 1156–67)."[web 7]
  9. ^According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, "According to South Indian oral tradition, he was the actual founder of the Lingayats, but study of Kalachuri inscriptions indicates that, rather than founding a new sect, he in fact revived an existing one."[web 7][dubiousdiscuss]
  10. ^According to S.M. Jamdar, "who is spearheading the demand" in 2017/2018 for recognition of Lingayats as a separate religion, and M.B. Patil, Chandan Gowda also claims that "the Lingayats were recorded as a caste within the Hindu religion for the first time in the 1881 census done in Mysore state."[web 3]
  11. ^Separate identity:
    * Ramanuja (1973): "A modern attempt was made to show Lingayats as having a religion separate from Hindu when Lingayats received discrete entry in the Indian constitution of 1950.[15]
    * The Hindu (11 December 2000): "Mallaradhya, who became a prominent politician after his retirement from the IAS, had laid claim to the non-Hindu tag in the mid-Seventies at a time when the Devaraj Urs government had appointed the First Karnataka Backward Class Commission, headed by Mr. L.G.Havanur."[web 8]
    * Encyclopedia Britannica: "In the early 21st century some Lingayats began to call for legal recognition by the Indian government as a religion distinct from Hinduism or, alternatively, as a caste within Hinduism."[web 1]
  12. ^ Arguments centre on the wording of legislation, such as "This Act applies to a Hindu by religion... including Veerashaiva, a Lingayat," making a distinction between Lingayats and Veerashaivas. Others opposed the campaign, noting that "the population of Lingayats would be mentioned separately alongside those of Arya Samajists and a few others considered as subgroups of Hinduism in the final Census figures."[web 8]
  13. ^In July 2017, Congress – the political party in power in Karnataka – formed a team to "evolve public opinion in favour of declaring Veerashaiva Lingayat community as a separate religion", according toThe New Indian Express, "to outflank the BJP in a poll year."[web 12] According to India Today, reporting August 2017, the ruling Congress party has publicly endorsed that Lingayatism is a separate religious group, not Hinduism.[web 13] In contrast, the BJP Party leader, former Karnataka chief minister and a Lingayat followerYeddyurappa disagrees,[web 10] stating that "Lingayats are Veerashaivas, we are Hindus" and considers this as creating religious differences, dividing people and politicizing of religion.[web 14][web 15] According to the Indian Times, "both Lingayats and Veerashaivas have been strong supporters of the saffron party for over a decade," and historian A. Veerappa notes that "Congress has carefully crafted a divide within the Lingayat community by fuelling the issue," cornering BJP-leader Yeddyurappa on the issue, who "has been forced to stress the common identity of Lingayats and Veerashaivas."[web 13]
  14. ^According to Chandan Gowda, these five mathas "predate Basava."[web 3] Yet, according to Schouten, monasteries of the older Saiva schools, "such as theKalamukha," were taken over by the Virasaivas.[50] Two kinds of monastic orders developed, the more conservativegurusthalada monasteries, and theviraktas which were faithful to "the ideals of Basava and his contemporaries."[51]
  15. ^Bairy: "The Panchacharya tradition, the Mathas which belonged to it and the (upper) castes which owed their allegiance to them were accused by those espousing the Viraktha tradition of actively collaborating with the Brahmins in order to defame the 'progressive' twelfth century movement, which apparently spoke against caste distinctions and often incurred the displeasure of the upper castes within the Lingayath fold."[74]
  16. ^According to Venugolan, the Lingayatism views on karma and free will is also found in some early texts of Hinduism.[98]
  17. ^Levinson & Christensen (2002): "The Lingayats are a Hindu sect concentrated in the state of Karnataka (a southern provincial state of India), which covers 191,773 square kilometres."[13]

References

[edit]
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  7. ^abHastings, James; Selbie, John A. (John Alexander); Gray, Louis H. (Louis Herbert) (1908).Encyclopædia of religion and ethics. Wellcome Library. Edinburgh; New York: T. & T. Clark; C. Scribner's Sons. pp. 68–74.
  8. ^abRamanujan, A. K. (Ed.) (1973). Speaking of Śiva (Vol. 270). Penguin.
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  13. ^abcLevinson & Christensen 2002, p. 475.
  14. ^डेस्क, डीएनए हिंदी वेब."Lingayat Samuday: कौन हैं लिंगायत समुदाय के लोग, जानें कैसे हिंदू रीति-रिवाजों से अलग हैं इनकी परंपराएं".DNA Hindi (in Hindi). Retrieved18 December 2024.
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Sources

[edit]

Printed sources

[edit]

Web-sources

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefgLingayat: Hindu sectArchived 2 February 2017 at theWayback Machine, Encyclopedia Britannica (2015)
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Are Lingayats Hindus ? a comparative study of Lingayatism and Hinduism , Volume II, by Dr SM Jaamdar (IAS Retd) (English and Kannada) ..EnKn
  • Are Lingayats and Veershaivas Same or Different? , by Dr. G. R. Channabasappa (in Kannada).Kn
  • Veerashaiva Panchacharyas (Facts vs Fiction) by Dr. G. R. Channabasappa (in Kannada).Kn
  • Did Veerashaivism Exist Before the Twelfth Century? by Dr. G. R. Channabasappa (English)En
  • Lingayat as Independent Religion, Documentary Evidence Volume I , by Dr SM Jaamdar (IAS Retd) (English)En
  • Mysore Veerashaiva Agitation of 1890's and Its Long Term eff, by Dr SM Jaamdar (IAS Retd) (English)En

External links

[edit]
Origins
Saints
Beliefs and practices
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