Author: Ishita Banerjee Dube
Publisher: Indian Institute of Advanced Study
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 195
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8185952884
Description
This work is an invaluable contribution to pilgrimage studies in South Asia. Uniting meticulous historical documentation and ethnographic sensitivity, this scholarship significantly improves our understandings of the complex ways religion and politics intertwine in a sacred center.
Divine Affair is an invaluable contribution to pilgrimage studies in South Asia. Uniting meticulous historical documentation and ethnographic sensitivity, Ishita Banerjee Dube’s scholarship significantly improves our understandings of the complex ways religion and politics intertwine in a sacred center. She provides a detailed subtle, and compelling portrait of Jaghannath – the Lord of the Universe in Puri – not only as an object of political manipulations but as the all-powerful subject of worship.
For centuries Jagannath, the Lord of the Universe, at Puri dominated cultural and political life in Orissa. This book introduces us to the fascinating story of his transformation from a tribal wooden deity, to the sate deity of the erstwhile imperial Gajapati kings and the Rajas of Khurda/Puri to Jagannath’s defamation as Juggernaut by British evangelicals and his emergence as a key symbol of modern Oriya identity.
The focus of the study is the colonial and postcolonial period when Puri’s vast temple complex developed into an arena of contestation between the priests, the Rajas of Puri – in their double function as Superintendents of the temple and as Asyasevaka of Jagannath – and the secular state authorities of the colonial regime and of Independent India. The study reveals that it was not only the colonial expropriation of Jagannath as a symbol of state authority, but also Brahmin and non-Brahmin agents, and in particular other postcolonial state, which undermined the ritual supremacy of the Rajas of Puri.
This process culminated in the Shri Jagannath Temple Act of the year 1955 bringing to an end the Rajas’s superintendence but not the postcolonial predicament of administering eastern India’s largest religious establishment by a secular state administration. Here, the state’s inconsistencies and contradictions to regulate religious practices are caused by radically different notions of improving order and efficiency and the ideal of dharma, revealing too the enduring nature of colonial legacies. At the same time, the book also analyses puri’s two most important socio-religious institutions: the priests, and the great annual car festival. It demonstrates the anomalies that plague Puri’s temple administrators, on the one hand, and the enduring greatness of Jagannath and the devotion of his pilgrims, on the other.
The book breaks new ground and provides important insights into the embedded ness of religious institutions in political processes in colonial and postcolonial India.
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Abbreviations
* Introduction
* Lord’s Domain: Legends and Rituals
* Lord’s Deputy and God’s Patron: The King and the State
* Lord’s Coterie: Temple Priests and Temple Servants
* Lording it Over: Devotees and Detractors
Glossary
Bibliography
Index