Kanakadasa Jayanti
Kanakadasa Jayanthi is a festival
celebrated by people of Karnataka in general and Kuruba Gowda community in
particular. It is celebrated every year on the birth anniversary of the great
poet and saint shri Kanaka Dasa. In tribute to the great saint, the Government
of Karnataka has declared the birthday of Kanaka Dasa as a state holiday. All
the government offices, schools and colleges around the state celebrate the
birth anniversary of Shri Kanaka Dasa as a tribute to one of the great social
reformers of Karnataka.
Kanaka
Dasa (1509 – 1609) was a Haridasa, a renowned composer of
Carnatic music, poet, philosopher and musician. He is known for his Keertanas
and Ugabhoga, compositions in the Kannada language for Carnatic music. Like
other Haridasas, he used simple Kannada language and native metrical forms for
his compositions.
Originally named
Thimmappa Nayaka, Dasa belonged to a chieftain Kuruba Gowda caste of Kaginele in
Haveri district. He was born in Baada village, near Bankapura and he was a
warrior at Bankapura fort. Based on one of his compositions, it is interpreted
that he was seriously injured in a battle and was miraculously saved. After
this incident, he gave up his profession as a warrior and devoted himself to
composing music, writing literature and explaining philosophy to the common
man. His early work includes poems titled Narasimha stotra, Ramadhyana Mantra,
and Mohanatarangini.
In
Udupi
Kanakadasa has a special
association with Udupi as he was the disciple of Vyasatirtha Swamiji. On the
request of Vyasaraya Swamiji of Vyasaraja Matt he had come to Udupi. But it was
an era when discrimination on the basis of caste was at its peak. The Brahmin
priests would not let him enter the temple as he was from a "low"
caste though Vyaasaraaya Swamiji asked them to let Kanakadaasa into the temple.
Kanakadaasa was outside the temple meditating on Krishna, his Lord, and singing
songs in praise of Sri Krishna. He did this for weeks, camping outside the
temple, cooking his own food. Though distraught over being prevented from
entering the temple, he composed poems in praise of Lord Krishna and composed
Kirthanas (Poems) which are relevant even today. He sings about how all humans
being equal, as everyone is born the same way physically, everyone shares the
same water and sees the same sun helping life on earth. Hindu temples and the
deity in the temples always face east. In Udupi, though, Lord Krishna, in deity
form, faces west. It is believed that something unnatural must have happened
when Kanakadasa was outside the temple for days waiting to be allowed to go
into the temple and see the. It is believed that during those days, when
Kanakadaasa was not allowed to have darshan of Lord Krishna, he poured his
heart out singing kirthanas for his dear Lord. Miraculously, the deity of Lord
Krishna turned around to face west. Through a crack in the outer walls of the
temple, Kanakadaasa the ardent devotee of Sri Krishna was able to see his Lord.
This left the orthodox community flabbergasted why something like that had
happened. Ever since, Sri Krishna's deity has been facing west, though the main
entrance is east-facing. The miracle remains. Today that window (commonly called
"Kanakana Kindi") stands as a tribute to Kanakadaasa. Devotees who
visit Udupi's Sri Krishna temple, try to have a darshan of Lord Krishna through
this small window seeking to re-live the ecstasy where Kanakadaasa had when
granting the divine ‘darshan’. It is a memorial to Kanakadaas, and also
testimony to the eclectic Hindu belief that devotion, poetry, and sainthood are
above caste and creed and certainly above rigidly maintained orthodoxy. It is
said that Kanakadasa lived in a hut in this place in front of the “gopura”.
Later, a small shrine was built in his memory and it came to be known as
“Kanakana Kindi” or “Kanakana Mandira”.
Although many saints
such as Purandaradaasa and Vijayadaasa visited Udupi and were devotees of Lord
Krishna, it is Kanakadaasa's association with Lord Krishna, that conveys a
deeper meaning.
Writings
His writing started
showing his innovativeness in using the day-to-day activities of the common
man. For e.g. Ramadhanya Charite is a poetic expression of conflicts between
rich and poor classes where he uses Ramadhanya ragi (staple food of poor and
high in nutrients) and rice (main food of rich but not as rich in nutrients) to
synonymously represent poor and rich. He joined Haridasa movement and became a
follower of Vyasaraja who named him as Kanakadasa. His poems and krithi deal
with many aspects of life and expose the futility of external rituals. They
stress the need for the cultivation of moral values in life. His compositions addressed
social issues in addition to the devotional aspect. Kanaka Dasa was very
aggressive and straight forward in criticizing evils of society such as
superiority claims using caste system. His poem "Kula Kula Kulavendu
hodedhadadiri" asks humans not to segregate themselves from one another,
because every human is born the same way, everyone eats the same food and
drinks the same water, hence none is superior or inferior to one another.
The deity he worshiped
was Adhikeshava of Kaginele, presently in Haveri district of Karnataka.
Kaginele, now a village, was a prosperous place and trading center in the
Middle Ages. Out of the many of his compositions, about 240 are fully
accountable today. All his Karnataka Music compositions end with mudra (signature)
Kaginele Adhikeshava. In addition to being a poet, he worked as a social
reformer by downplaying dogmatic communities that were suppressing the
disadvantaged communities. Kanakadasa made an extreme effort in reforming the
disadvantaged communities by convincing them to give up their age-old obsolete
social practices and adapt to the changing world. He effectively used music to
convey his philosophy. He lived at Tirupathi in his last days. He is one of the
greatest musicians, composers, poets, social reformers, philosophers and saints
that India has ever seen.'
Major works
Nalacharithre (ನಳಚರಿತ್ರೆ)
Haribhakthisara (ಹರಿಭಕ್ತಿಸಾರ)
Nrisimhastava (ನೃಸಿಂಹಸ್ತವ)
Ramadhanyacharithre (ರಾಮಧಾನ್ಯಚರಿತೆ),
a rare work on class struggle
Mohanatarangini (ಮೋಹನತರಂಗಿಣಿ)
Kanakadasa wrote about two hundred forty Karnataka Music compositions (Kirtane, Ugabhogas, padas, and mundiges or philosophical songs besides five major works. His compositions are published in many languages. For example, about 100 songs in Kannada and 60 songs in English are published in popular books.
His writings were
unique in style. In Ramadhanyacharitre, an allegory on the conflict between the
socially strong and weak castes and classes, presented as an argument between
two foodgrains, rice and ragi, is a most creative literary piece with a
powerful social message, In the work, rice represents the socially powerful and
ragi (millet) represents the working people. The two grains come before Rama to
argue their case and establish their superiority. In the end, Rama sends both
of them to prison for six months. At the end of the period, rice has turned
rotten while the hardy ragi survive, earning Rama's blessings. This shows the
intelligence of Kanakadasa in trying to reform society. He was blunt in
criticizing those who opposed the good practices. In one of his compositions,
he says,"Eternal hell is for those who criticize noblemen, for those who
condemn teachings of jagadguru...".
Nalacharitre (Story of
Nala)
Haribhaktisara (crux of
Krishna devotion)
Nrisimhastava
(compositions in praise of Lord Narasimha)
Ramadhanyacharite
(story of ragi millet) and an epic
Mohanatarangini
(Krishna-river).
Kanakadasa rationalized
bhakti (devotion) by giving worldly similes. His writing has an intimate touch
that identifies the reader with the poet himself. His two famous compositions
in the translation are given below. One condemns the caste system in a refined
poetic way and the other wonders at the colorful and baffling creation of God
Almighty in childlike wonder.
His Nalacharite is
based on the famous love-story of Nala and Damayanti, which appears in
Mahabharata. Though a great devotee of Lord Krishna, Kanakadasa gives his own
interpretation. Nala who is in love with Damayanti exercises restraint in the
svayamvara (choosing bride/bridegroom) ceremony to win over Damayanti by
allowing Indra and other gods a chance to win over her. When he loses
everything in a dice-game and gets exiled to the forest, stubbornly followed by
Damayanti, he deserts her in sleep, hoping that she may go back to her parents
and have a better life. He later drives king Rituparna to the second svayamvara
of Damayanti, to see his wife married to a suitable person and be happy! Lord
Krishna appears only once casually to rescue the caravan in which the hapless
Damayanti was traveling and was attacked by wild elephants.
Nrisimhastava is a work
dealing with the glory of god Narasimha (half human and half lion).
Kanakadasa's
Ramadhanyacharite has quite an unconventional theme. It is about a battle of
words between ragi (millet) and rice, each claiming superiority. They go to
lord Rama for justice. With the help of the sages, Rama proves the superiority
of ragi over rice. Ragi becomes blessed by absorbing the qualities of Raghava,
another epithet of Rama. It is interpreted as poverty and humility being upheld
by the poet above material wealth. Even today, Ragi is the food of the poor,
having high nutritional value compared to rice, especially for people with diabetes
because of its low sugar content.
Mohanatarangini,
although a kavya (a poem in classical style) written with all conventional
eighteen descriptions, deals with eroticism. Pleasure-based eroticism of Shri
Krishna with the consorts. The eroticism between Aniruddha and Usha forms the
main theme.
It excels in depicting contemporary life. The description of Shri Krishna's Dwaravati (Dwaraka) is very similar to that of Vijayanagara, under Krishnadevaraya as noticed by foreign travelers. The market place with colorful stalls with various commodities, well-demarcated lanes brimming with craftsmen, clients and merchants, royal garden parties and glory of the palace find their place in Mohanatarangini. It echoes the contemporary Portuguese travelers' accounts. A drinking bout of men and women of the working-class is very picturesque. The reader feels as if Kanakadasa is providing a commentary of a live event. It is for such unconventional and down-to-earth descriptions as also for social awareness that the great poet-saint has become immortal.
In tribute to the great saint, the Government of Karnataka has declared his birthday as a state holiday. All the government offices, schools, and colleges around the state celebrate the birth anniversary of Shri Kanaka Dasa.
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