Ram's Sister "Shanta"

Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#1
Just came across this article and wanted to share it😉
Since there was a mention of Ram sister in first episode
And also this article has been written by Devdutt Pattanaik
who is involved in the making of Siya Ke Ram

The story of Ram's elder sister

shantaram

Published in Devlok, Sunday Midday, April 07, 2013

Valmiki Ramayan does not mention Ram's sister, however, in the Mahabharata we learn of King Lompada who adopts the daughter of Dashratha. In later literature, this daughter of Dashratha becomes Ram's elder sister, Shanta. In Telegu folk songs she is described as being furious when Ram abandons Sita following street gossip.

According to the Oriya Ramayan, following adoption, Shanta is given in marriage to Rishyashringa, a sage whose celibacy causes drought in Lompada's kingdom. Following the marriage, the rains come back. This tale is consistent with the traditional theme of Vaishnava literature that condemns absolute abstinence which is seen as world-denying hence world-destructive.

Though Dashrath seems to have fathered Shanta without any difficulty, he is unable to father any more children. Dharma insists that a man must father a son and continue his lineage and that a king must produce an heir for the throne. A desperate Dashrath therefore marries a second and a third time. When nothing works, he decided to perform a yagna and compel the gods to give him a child.

The priest, who Dashrath invites to perform the ceremony that will restore the fertility of his household is none other than his son-in-law, Rishyashringa, implicitly suggesting that Rishyashringa's celibacy was in someway responsible for the barrenness of his queens. Just as Rishyashringa's marriage to Shanta brought rains to Lompada's kingdom, Rishyashringa's yagna will bring children to Dashrath's queens.

One can argue that is it a later interpolation and therefore not valid. But we must not forget that Valmiki's Ramayan does not mention the famous Lakshman Rekha' and that in Valmiki's Ramayan there is no mention of Ahilya turning into stone or of Shabari feeding Ram berries. These ideas come from later regional tellings of the Ramayan.

Ramayan is like an open source software, much like Hinduism, where new ideas continuously enter and only that which survives the test of time is celebrated. What is often celebrated in India is emotional bonds. Ramayan revolves around relationship between father and son, brothers, king and subjects, husband and wife. Perhaps someone felt the need for Ram having a sister and so Shanta, adopted daughter of Lompada, becomes Dashrath's biological daughter.

We find this in Shiva's story too where Shiva, associated with sons, has occasionally, as in a brief reference in Padma Puran, been associated with a daughter called Ashok Sundari, amplified by the popular television serial, perhaps in keeping with the times where we want to celebrate our girl children too.

What is especially interesting with Shanta is that she is described not like Ram, stoic and serene, but as rather sensuous. Descriptions of how she seduces Rishyashringa, transforms him from hermit to householder, are rather erotic. The sage has never seen a woman and so wonders what kind of a man she is. This opens up a whole world of sexual possibilities for narrators who have let their imagination go wild. But I guess, that we shall keep out of our traditional telling of the epic.


http://devdutt.com/articles/indian-mythology/the-story-of-rams-elder-sister.html

Edited by -Mano- - 8 years ago

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Ramyalaxmi thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#2
@Mano: Thanks for sharing. I heard this story as a followup of vishwamitra birth. There also the son-in-law Ruchika helped the father-in-law to get the heir for the throne.
Edited by Ramyalaxmi - 8 years ago
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Posted: 8 years ago
#3
Thanks for the story😃
I too have read it in 'Sita' by Devdutta Patnayak. This is not a well known character and I am glad that this is being addressed in the serial...


Love
Kshithi
darkchocolates thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#4
Thank you so much for sharing. Never knew about it.
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#5

Originally posted by: Muggle_Diaries

Thanks for the story😃

I too have read it in 'Sita' by Devdutta Patnayak. This is not a well known character and I am glad that this is being addressed in the serial...


Love
Kshithi


The team seems to have done it's research properly
And also has source and reference for all that they show
Though major portions will be retained
from the most main and popular versions
Sub stories will be incorporated from different versions
Mainly the part that glorifies women
As it's from a Women's perspective😃

Edited by -Mano- - 8 years ago
HeyDeviMaiyya thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#6
Very interesting.. Thank you for sharing, Mano xx
Thushi thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#7
thanku for sharing the article ... 😊 I hope they will show her story too .. since they already mentioned about her i think they will show about this too ...
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#8

Originally posted by: Thushi

thanku for sharing the article ... 😊 I hope they will show her story too .. since they already mentioned about her i think they will show about this too ...


Hope so da
I am looking forward to it😃
sambhavami thumbnail
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Posted: 8 years ago
#9
Yes, Shanta is a prominent character in most B-grade Bengali mythos.
Nice analysis. What Devduttji suggests is perfectly possible, but, Shanta must have been much much older to Ram, isn't it?
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Posted: 8 years ago
#10

The Vasishta Ramayana believed to be written by Valmiki himself does mention things about Dasaratha, his marriage to Kousalya and their female child.


Dasaratha married Kausalya who was found in an unconscious state in a box floating in the Ganga. Kausalya gave birth to a female child, who unfortunately had a handicap in her leg. The child was named Shanta. Vashistha said the handicap was due to the marriage between close cousins (Dasaratha and Kausalya belonged to the same clan, sagotra) and she would become normal if given in adoption to a divine couple.


Shanta was given in adoption to Lompada, she later married Rishyasringa.

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