TY - JOUR
T1 - The invisible path of karma in a himalayan purificatory rite
AU - Moran, Arik
N1 - Funding Information: Department of Asian Studies, University of Haifa, Abba Khoushy Ave 199, Haifa 3498834, Israel; [email protected] † This paper benefited from discussions at the Society for Tantric Studies Conference at Flagstaff, the Asian Studies Seminar at Tel Aviv University, the Advanced Studies Colloquium on South Asia at the Max Planck Institute in Berlin, and the ANR Symposium on ‘Encounters with the Invisible’ at the Château de Marçay, France; my thanks to the organizers and participants of these platforms, as well as to the reviewer of an earlier version of this paper. Special thanks to Nadav Harel, Csaba Kiss, Kulwanth Thakur, and the hosts and guests of the ritual under study for thoughtful comments and guidance. The research for this paper was funded by the EU-FP7 Curie-Skoldowa Actions (grant number 334489). Funding Information: This paper benefited from discussions at the Society for Tantric Studies Conference at Flagstaff, the Asian Studies Seminar at Tel Aviv University, the Advanced Studies Colloquium on South Asia at the Max Planck Institute in Berlin, and the ANR Symposium on ‘Encounters with the Invisible’ at the Château de Marçay, France; my thanks to the organizers and participants of these platforms, as well as to the reviewer of an earlier version of this paper. Special thanks to Nadav Harel, Csaba Kiss, Kulwanth Thakur, and the hosts and guests of the ritual under study for thoughtful comments and guidance. The research for this paper was funded by the EU-FP7 Curie-Skoldowa Actions (grant number 334489). Publisher Copyright: © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2018/3/12
Y1 - 2018/3/12
N2 - Indic rites of purification aim to negate the law of karma by removing the residues of malignant past actions from their patrons. This principle is exemplified in the Kahika Mela, a rarely studied religious festival of the West Himalayan highlands (Himachal Pradesh, India), wherein a ritual specialist assumes karmic residues from large publics and then sacrificed to their presiding deity. British officials who had ‘discovered’ this purificatory rite at the turn of the twentieth century interpreted it as a variant of the universal ‘scapegoat’ rituals that were then being popularized by James Frazer and found it loosely connected to ancient Tantric practises. The However, observing a recent performance of the ritual significantly complicated this view. This paper proposes a novel reading of the Kahika Mela through the prism of karmic transference. Tracing the path of karmas from participants to ritual specialist and beyond, it delineates the logic behind the rite, revealing that the culminating act of human sacrifice is, in fact, secondary to the mysterious force that impels its acceptance.
AB - Indic rites of purification aim to negate the law of karma by removing the residues of malignant past actions from their patrons. This principle is exemplified in the Kahika Mela, a rarely studied religious festival of the West Himalayan highlands (Himachal Pradesh, India), wherein a ritual specialist assumes karmic residues from large publics and then sacrificed to their presiding deity. British officials who had ‘discovered’ this purificatory rite at the turn of the twentieth century interpreted it as a variant of the universal ‘scapegoat’ rituals that were then being popularized by James Frazer and found it loosely connected to ancient Tantric practises. The However, observing a recent performance of the ritual significantly complicated this view. This paper proposes a novel reading of the Kahika Mela through the prism of karmic transference. Tracing the path of karmas from participants to ritual specialist and beyond, it delineates the logic behind the rite, revealing that the culminating act of human sacrifice is, in fact, secondary to the mysterious force that impels its acceptance.
KW - Himachal Pradesh
KW - Human sacrifice
KW - Karma
KW - Khas
KW - Kullu
KW - Nar
KW - Ritual
KW - Scapegoat
KW - Shaktism
KW - Tantra
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85044788828&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9030078
DO - https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9030078
M3 - Article
SN - 2077-1444
VL - 9
JO - Religions
JF - Religions
IS - 3
M1 - 78
ER -