This story is from February 27, 2016

Good deva-bad asura divide misleading

Good deva-bad asura divide misleading
The eternal battle between the two forces, both descended from Kashyapa, has many layers of meaning. It cannot be seen in simple moral or ethical binaries, writes Devdutt Pattanaik.
If you read the Vedas, which are nearly 4000 years old, the word ‘asura’ does not mean demon, or villain, but quite the opposite, a divine being. It’s a title given to Indra, Agni, Rudra, Varuna, and to most Vedic deities.
Vritra, the enemy of Indra, is however not called an asura.
However, things change in the Puranas, composed around 2000 years ago. Here, asuras are villains and enemies of the devas, or gods. Both devas and asuras are children of Kashyapa, born of different wives. Devas are called adityas, because their mother is Aditi. Asuras are daityas and danavas because they are children of Diti and Danu. The devas and asuras are constantly fighting each other. Indra, leader of the devas, constantly begs his father, Brahma, to save him from the asuras just as asuras seek boons that enable them to drive devas out of Swarga. Devas are blessed with amrita or the nectar of immortality. Asuras have sanjivani vidya, the herb to bring the dead back to life. The two function as force and counterforce, yet one sees a desire to make them complementary, not antagonistic. Thus Lakshmi is Pulomi, daughter of the asura-king Puloman, but also Sachi, wife of Indra, in other words, asura-putri (daughter of asuras) and deva-patni (wife of devas). We wonder what that means? Could it be that asuras, who live under the earth, in Patala, are the source, hence father of wealth, and devas, who live in the sky above the earth, in Swarga, the place where wealth comes to have value?
If one reads the Gita, which is part of the Mahabharata, and also is roughly 2000 years old, Krishna uses devas as an adjective for positive qualities such as generosity, compassion, magnanimity, equanimity, faith and patience, while asuras embody all people who are greedy, self-absorbed, avaricious, territorial, combative and egotistical. Here, the divide is clear: devas are good and asuras are bad. Goodness, in the Gita, is the result of believing in something beyond the material and tangible.
In Puranic stories, the divide remains stubbornly ambiguous. Tales of the good asura and bad deva often puzzle us: asurakings such as Bali is generous, Virochana is wise, Prahalad has faith, while Indra, king of devas, chases Ahalya and is cursed for it. Indra is often shown behaving like an entitled feudal lord, surrounded by damsels and musicians, enjoying a life of luxury. Asuras are shown as being devas in their previous lives: Hiranayaksha, who is killed by Vishnu when he takes the form of Varaha, and Hiranakashipu, who is killed by Vishnu when he takes the form of Narasimha, are both seen as doorkeepers of Vaikuntha, Jaya and Vijaya, who are cursed and so forced to be born as asuras.

Around 1500 years ago, the Devi Mahatmaya came into being as part of the Markandeya Purana. Here we are told that an asura secured from Brahma a boon that he could be killed neither by a god nor man or animal. He forgot to ask for protection from a woman, and so the devas were asked to give up a portion of their power and fuse it together to create a woman, Durga, who rides into battle on a lion and kills this asura with her trident. The asura is called Mahishasura, because he takes the form of many animals, the foremost of which is the buffalo. Mahishasura is clearly the bad guy here. Or so we think. For when we read the Arunachala Sthala Purana from Tamil Nadu, or bits of stories from the Skanda Purana, we learn that Durga finds inside the severed neck of Mahishasura a shivalinga. She realises that he is a devotee of Shiva and so performs penance to cleanse herself of the crime of killing a bhakta. And so in a local temple there is the image of the goddess seated on fire holding a shivalinga in her hand, the same that she found in Mahisha’s throat.
When we study Indian scriptures, we discover that the divide of good deva and bad asura is rather simplistic. The battle between Indra and the many asura-kings has layers of meaning. It cannot be seen in simple moral or ethical binaries. Yet, this is what people try to do. We want Durga to be the force of good who kills ‘evil’ and this leads to subversive counterarguments that make Durga an instrument of colonial and oppressive forces. It’s time to break these binaries and recognise that deva and asura are both children of Kashyapa, constantly fighting each other, trying to overpower and outwit each other. Without the asuras, the devas cannot churn the ocean of milk. And by denying asuras the treasures churned out, the devas can never find peace.
author
About the Author
Devdutt Pattanaik

An Indian mythologist, speaker, illustrator and author

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