Ramananda

 

Ramananda  (14th century?)

Traditional references to him as the spiritual teacher (guru) of poet-saints Kabir, Ravidas, Pipa, and others.

The Sants were a group of poet-saints from central and northern India who shared a number of common traits, including a focus on individualized, interior religion leading to a personal experience of the divine, a dislike for external ritual, particularly image worship, faith in the power of the divine name, and a willingness to disregard traditional caste distinctions.

Ramananda was a prominent spiritual leader who was reported to be a direct pupil of Ramanuja, a southern Indian philosopher who sent Ramananda north to assist promote the devotional movement.

Given that the single passage incontrovertibly attributed to Ramananda is contained in the Adigranth, the Sikh community's scripture, the latter assertion is probably definitely untrue.

This poem indicates the impact of the Nathpanthi ascetics, who emphasised yoga, rather than Ramanuja's Shrivaishnava tradition, in which Vishnu is the major god.

Other lines attributed to Ramananda have been found in subsequent sources, although their validity is disputed, and nothing is known about his life.

Renunciant ascetics, worshippers of the deity Vishnu (bhakta), who are by far the most numerous and influential of the Vaishnava ascetics.

The Ramanandis believe that their order was created by Ramananda, a religious teacher about whom nothing is known for certain.

For a while, the Ramanandis claimed that Ramananda was a student of the southern Indian philosopher Ramanuja, and that their sect sprang from Ramanuja's Shrivaishnava religious society, but this claim was falsely denied following a disagreement during the Kumbha Mela event in Ujjain in 1921.

Ramananda is also claimed to have been the guru of a number of northern Indian bhakti personalities, including Kabir, Ravidas, Pipa, and Sen, however there is little strong historical evidence for this.

All of the anecdotes about Ramananda, on the other hand, indicate to a guy who was steadfast in his dedication and eager to initiate individuals from all areas of life.

Rama, as depicted in the Ramcharitmanas, a vernacular version of the epic Ramayana penned by the poet-saint Tulsidas (1532–1623? ), is the tutelary god for the Ramanandi ascetics.

The text's principal topic is the power of devotion, and Tulsidas presents Rama as God incarnate, who has come to earth for the sake of his believers.

Within the greater Ramanandi fold, however, there are various diverse variants on practice that have little in common with one another.

The tyagis, for example, emphasize renunciation and austerity.

A second thread is that of the Nagas, who fought ascetics in the past but whose military structure is now mainly prominent during the Kumbha Mela bathing (snana) processions.

The fourth strand is that of the rasiks ("aesthetes"), whose religious practice is based on very intricate vision patterns in which they see themselves in Rama's palace; this kind of visualization was definitely adopted from Krishna devotion patterns in the Braj area.

The rasik tradition is by far the most literate and sophisticated; the tyagis and Nagas execute comparable ceremonies to other ascetics, but their inter pretation and deity are unique to their order.

For further detail, read Peter van der Veer's 1988 book, Gods on Earth.