Pages

Pages

Hinduism - Who Is Skanda?

 


He is a Hindu deity who is Shiva's son.

Skanda is created to slay the demon Taraka, who has been granted the celestial benefit of being able to be destroyed only by a Shiva son.

Shiva is immersed in meditation following the loss of his wife Sati when Taraka makes this request, and it is improbable that such a son would ever be born.

After Taraka becomes too powerful, the other gods attempt to persuade Shiva to marry, which leads to Shiva's marriage to the goddess Parvati.

Skanda is born in an odd fashion, despite Shiva and Parvati's marriage.

Shiva and Parvati are said to be disturbed while making love, and Shiva accidentally spills his sperm over the ground (the word skand meaning "to spring" or "to ooze").

Semen is seen as a man's concentrated essence in Indian culture, which implies that for a god like Shiva, the semen is inordinately strong, capable of destroying the planet.

The deity Agni, who is fire personified, is the first to hold the semen, but it proves too strong for him.

Agni then throws it into the Ganges, which deposits a brilliant infant in the reeds along its bank after 10,000 years.

The kid is found by the Krittikas (personifications of the Pleiades), who all want to breastfeed him.

Skanda sprouts five more heads to appease them.

One of his epithets, Kartikkeya, is a symbol of the Krittikas' care.

Skanda grows quickly, ascends to the throne of Shiva's celestial troop (gana), and kills the thorny Taraka.

Unlike his brother Ganesh, who is a scholar and sage, his character remains that of a warrior prince.

Skanda is considered a part of Shiva's family in northern India, and although his power is acknowledged, he is not a prominent object of devotion.

Skanda has been linked to Murugan, a regional god connected with the hunt, but also with conflict, in southern India.

In this environment, he has undertaken a much larger position, notably in Tamil Nadu, and has taken on the mantle of a Shaiva Siddhanta philosopher and exponent.

~Kiran Atma


You may also want to read more about Hinduism here.

Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.