Sarama
{{Short description|Female dog of the gods in Hinduism}}
{{for|character in the Ramayana and wife of Vibhishana|Sarama (Ramayana)}}
In Hindu mythology, Sarama ({{langx|sa|सरमा}}, {{IAST|Saramā}}) is a mythological dog being referred to as the female dog of the gods, or Deva-shuni (देव-शुनी, {{IAST|devaśunī}}). She first appears in one of Hinduism's earliest texts, the Rig Veda, in which she helps the king of the gods Indra to recover divine cows stolen by the Panis asuras. This legend is alluded to in many later texts, and Sarama is often associated with Indra. The epic Mahabharata, and some Puranas, also make brief reference to Sarama.
Early Rig-Vedic works do not depict Sarama as a dog, but later Vedic mythologies and interpretations usually do. She is described as the mother of all dogs, in particular of the two four-eyed brindle dogs of the god Yama, and dogs are given the matronymic Sarameya ("offspring of Sarama"). One scripture further describes Sarama as the mother of all wild animals.
Etymology and epithets
Orientalist Max Müller suggests that the word Sarama may mean "the runner", with the stem originating from the Sanskrit root sar ("to go"), but he is unable to account for the second part of the name, ama.Müller p. 482 Professor Monier-Williams translates Sarama as "the fleet one".{{Cite web|url=http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/cgi-bin/monier/serveimg.pl?file=/scans/MWScan/MWScanjpg/mw1182-sayoni.jpg|title=Monier-Williams Dictionary p. 1182}} The etymological treatise Nirukta by Yaska mentions that Sarama derives her name from her quick movement. Mahidhara, a commentator of the Vajasaneyi Samhita, states that Sarama is "she who entertains (remante) the gods".Singh pp. 158–61 More broadly, Sarama has also come to mean any female dog.
There are two epithets for Sarama in the original Rig Veda. Firstly, she is described as supadi, which means "having good feet", "fair-footed" or "quick", an epithet only used for Sarama in the text. Her other epithet is subhaga – "the fortunate one", or "the beloved one" – a common epithet of the Ushas, the Dawn.Müller p. 487 Sarama's other name Deva-shuni means "divine bitch" or "bitch of the gods".{{cite book |author=Mani, Vettam |title=Puranic Encyclopaedia: A Comprehensive Dictionary With Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1975 |location=Delhi |isbn=0-8426-0822-2}}{{rp|694}}
It has been suggested that the Greek Hermes is a cognate of Sarama.{{cite book |last=Debroy |first=Bibek |title=Sarama and her Children: The Dog in the Indian Myth |publisher=Penguin Books India |year=2008 |isbn=978-0143064701 |page=77}}
Finding the stolen cows
Parentage and children
The Taittiriya Aranyaka states Sarama is a vedi – a holy altar, daughter of Dyaus ("Heaven") and Prithvi ("Earth"), and the sister of Brihaspati and Rudra.Singh pp. 156–7
In a late hymn in the tenth Mandala of the Rig Veda, two Sarameya (literally, "sons of Sarama"), Shyama and Sabala, are described without an explicit reference to Sarama as their mother. They are four-eyed and brindled; messengers of Yama, the Lord of the Law in the Vedas and later the god of death. They are guardians to the path of heaven, protecting man on their path.{{rp|859}} A hymn in the Paraskara Grihya Sutra says that Shyama and Sabala are sons of Sarama, their father Sisara. In a spell called Ekagni-kanda, intended to drive away the Dog-spirits (sav-graha) like Shyama, Sabala, Alaba, Rji etc. which cause cough in children, Sarama is mentioned as their mother. Sarama's spying on the cows is mentioned, with Indra giving her the right to pester children in return.Singh pp. 157–8
Often described as the mother of all dogs, she is also sometimes regarded as the mother of all beasts of prey, including lions and tigers, as in Bhagavata Purana. She is also a daughter of Daksha and wife of the sage Kashyapa in this Purana and not a dog.{{Cite web|url=http://vedabase.net/sb/6/6/24-26/|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100712011112/http://vedabase.net/sb/6/6/24-26/|title=Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 6 Chapter 6 Verses 24-26|archivedate=July 12, 2010|website=vedabase.net}}
Epics
File:00005 Janamejaya and brothers.jpg
The epic Ramayana does not mention Sarama herself. However, it does mention an incident in which the god Rama punishes a Brahmin for beating a Sarameya – descendant of Sarama – for no reason. The epic Mahabharata has a similar story.Singh pp. 187–92 In the first book of the epic Adi Parva, king Janamejaya's brothers beat up a dog, who comes near Janamejaya's yajna site. The crying dog complains to its mother Sarama that it was beaten by Janamejaya's brothers for no reason. Sarama reaches Janamejaya's sacrifice site and curses him that since he has harmed her son without reason, unseen danger will befall him. The curse frightens the king and he finds a priest, named Somashravas, to free him from the curse.{{cite book|last=van Buitenen|first=J A B|title=The Mahabharata: The Book of the Beginning|year=1973|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=0-226-84663-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/mahabharata03buit/page/44 44]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/mahabharata03buit/page/44}} In the second book, Sabha Parva, Sarama is listed among the many goddesses that worship the god Brahma in his court or are members of his court. In the third book, Vana Parva, Sarama is listed among the Matrika ("Mothers") or manushya-grahas (evil spirits), who are allowed by their "son", the war-god Skanda to devour children under the age of sixteen. It says Sarama, the mother of all dogs, Lord of the world, snatches human fetuses from wombs.{{rp|859}}{{cite book|last=van Buitenen|first=J A B|title=The Mahabharata, Volume 2: Book 2: The Book of Assembly; Book 3: The Book of the Forest|year=1975|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=0-226-84664-4|pages=52, 658}}
Interpretations and associations
Scholars, including Max Müller, Sri Aurobindo and Wendy Doniger emphasize that most references in the early Veda do not refer to Sarama as canine. She may be a fair-footed goddess to whom the Panis are attracted and whom they ask to be their sister. It is only in later interpretations of the Vedic imagery that Sarama becomes a divine hound, who sniffs out the Panis and leads her master to them. According to Sri Aurobindo, the phrase in which Sarama demands food for her progeny is misinterpreted with equating Sarama's children to a dog-race born of Sarama. It is the reference to the Sarameya dogs – sons of Sarama – in a late hymn that cements the notion of Sarama being a dog.Singh p. 143
The role of Sarama in the Rig Vedic legend leads Sri Aurobindo to say, "Sarama is some power of Light and probably of Dawn". She "must be a forerunner of the dawn of Truth in the human mind". Sarama is "the traveller and the seeker who does not herself possess [the Truth] but rather finds what is lost". However, about the interpretation of Sarama as canine, Sri Aurobindo adds, "The image of the hound of heaven is, however, exceedingly apt and striking and was bound to develop out of the legend".{{cite web | url=https://www.aurobindo.ru/workings/sa/10/0020_e.htm | title=Attention Required! | Cloudflare }} Max Müller relates Sarama to the Ushas, the Dawn. The tale of kidnapping of the cows and their recovery, he explains, is the disappearance of the bright cows or rays of the Sun. Sarama, the Dawn, finds them and is followed by Indra, the god of light.Müller pp. 487–491
When explaining the two references in which Sarama follows the "path of Truth", Sayana calls Sarama the heavenly dog or Speech (Vāc) herself. The Vac-identity of Sarama is also emphasized in the Yajus-samhitas and by Mahidhara, commentator of the Vajasaneyi Samhita. The Brhaddevata, which speaks of Sarama's unfaithfulness, also mentions Sarama as one of the names of Vac in the middle sphere (world), where Vac is said to have three forms in three spheres. Sarama is also mentioned as a deity within Indra's sphere in the same text.Singh p. 161-2
Notes
{{Reflist|2}}
References
- {{cite book|last=Müller|first=Max|author-link=Max Müller|title=Lectures on the science of language|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=je5YAAAAMAAJ&q=sarameya&pg=PA486|volume=2|year=1865|pages=481–543|chapter=Lecture XI: Myths of the Dawn}}
- {{cite book|last=Singh|first=Nagendra KR|title=Indian Legends|year=1997|publisher=APH Publishing|isbn=81-7024-902-3 }}
Further reading
- Debroy, Bibek (2008). Sarama and Her Children: The Dog in Indian Myth, New Delhi: Penguin, {{ISBN|978-0-14-306470-1}}.
{{HinduMythology}}