Monday, May 21, 2012

Monkey

courtesy: Sri.KV.Anantanarayanan


कुर्वन् शाखासु सञ्चारं
जनयन् द्विज सध्वसं
पश्चात् बालद्विजोऽध्य
अयमागतो राम वानरः॥
kurvan śākhāsu sa�cāraṁ
janayan dvija sadhvasaṁ
paścāt bāladvijo'dhya
ayamāgato rāma vānaraḥ||

How to call a great man a monkey
About two hundred years ago there lived in Thrikkandiyur (the place from
where Narayana Bhattathiri and Thunjathu ezhuttassan also hailed from ) one
great Sanskrit Scholar by name Kaikkulangara Rama Variar. He was erudite in
all disciplines of the language like tarka, vyakarana, etc and also a
scholar in four Sakhas (Vedas). The brahmins were jealous of him and were
also very wary of his scholarship because it would make inroads into their
source of income as poets and teachers. They wanted to call him a monkey
but their innate decency did not permit it. So one poet among them
announced the arrival of Variar thus.

A monkey called Rama is arriving.. he always jumps from one branch of a
tree to another, he makes the birds panicky, but is having all the younger
birds flying behind him.
The sakha means the Vedas, dwija also connotes brahmin because he is twice
born, one natural birth and the second the initiation, and the bird which
is once born as an egg and then comes out of the egg is also a dwija. The
natural tendency of younger birds is to follow a monkey in his jump from
branch to branch. The young brahmins had started the studentship of this
Rama (Variar) abandoning their brahmin teachers.
And the nambudiris called the variar Vanara, a man with caste name
starting with the word Va..
So the sloka would also mean,
Here comes the man with Va, the Rama (variar) who frequently expounds the
substance of the four vedas, and in this process is causing awe and
disturbance even to brahmins, and the younger boys of the brahmin community
are now running after him for education, forsaking their traditional
brahmin preceptors.

The nobility of a learned man shows even when he is rebuking someone else.

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