Why do Hindus light lamps?
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Why do Hindus light lamps?

November 30, 2017

By Dr. Devdutt Pattanaik – Author, Speaker, Illustrator, Mythologist

It is curious that the practice of lighting lamps seems integral to Hinduism today, but it was not a dominant one in Vedic times, when the fire-altar of the yagna took centre-stage. Perhaps its entry as a ritual owes much to non-Vedic Hinduism.  Lamps slip into the Hindu ritual landscape subtly as Hinduism changes from invoking Vedic Gods to venerating Puranic deities. The earliest indicator of this shift is the Bhagavad Gita verse 9.26, where Krishna says he accepts from his devotee a fruit, a flower, a leaf and even water (though he does not refer to lamps).

A key feature of Hinduism, whether Vedic or Puranic, whether Nigamic or Agamic, whether Shrauta or Smarta, is the invocation of a God (avahan), inviting him for a meal (bhog) and asking him or her for a boon after he has been fed (phalastuti), and then bidding him farewell (visarjan).

In Vedic Hinduism, this was done through fire created using burning wood placed in an elaborate fire pit made of bricks. This fire was Agni, the mouth of Gods. Food was offered in the form of ghee (clarified butter) made potent by the chant of mantras (formulae).

But in later Puranic Hinduism, whose rise we saw 2,000 years ago, the Gods are no longer abstract entities. They become icons and offerings become very understandable: bath (abhishek), clothes (vastra), food (naivedya), unguents (gandha), incense (dhoop), and lamp (deep). Here, fire is admired not for its ability to consume ghee or generate heat, but for its ability to bring light.

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This was, perhaps, the practice of common folk in India who worshipped trees and rocks and rivers and mountains, the various yakshas and nagas, using these rituals. In the evening, people were encouraged to light a lamp so that travellers could find refuge. Even today, people are asked to light lamps in the evening and, usually, the lamp is placed near the doorway, helping people find their way. A lamp indicated the presence of a potter who made the clay lamp, or the affluent who could afford a metal lamp, the oil presser who provided the oil, or a cowherd who provided ghee, or a farmer who provided the cotton wick. In other words, the lamp was a symbol of culture and lighting it indicated both abundance and consideration.

The lamp was lit primarily by home-makers and is very different from the fire in the yagna shala lit by brahmins, which, in turn, is very different from the campfire (dhuni) of sanyasis. The campfire has no container (vedi) of bricks, revealing its wild nature. The fire of the yagna shala indicated domestication. And the lamp, a shift from the public to the private, indicated the rise of a more settled agrarian rural lifestyle of later Hindus, as against the nomadic lifestyle of early Hindus, or Vedic people.

More lamps naturally indicated affluence. There would be lamps decorating the walls of the house. Lamps were put on boats to be floated in ponds and rivers during festivals. And lamps were placed in sky (kandil or akash deep) using lanterns.

Philosophically, humans are the only animals who control fire. So the journey from dhuni, to yagna-shala agni, to deep-lakshmi reveals increased cultivation of culture. It is also a journey to affluence and abundance, and so lighting lamps was an indicator of wealth and power. Grand temples lit with lamps placed on their vast roofs revealed the majesty of local deities and kings. In Maharashtra, one finds tall pillars with lamps on the side that are lit during festivals, that recreate the pillar of fire through which Shiva appeared before the world.

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In art, Gods are shown holding fire in their palms or their hair appearing as flames. Fire thus plays a key role in mythology. It embodies hunger that consumes, heat that comforts and wisdom that illuminates. That is why lamps are lit during Diwali, to mark the end of the rainy season and the beginning of the New Year. With lamps, Gods are invited into the house, the foremost being Ram, the responsible sage-king, and Lakshmi, the Goddess of fortune.

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