Re: question on 'sati'
From the Bhakti List Archives
• December 1, 1999
--- VAgarwalV@cs.com wrote: > The writings of Sri Samkaracharya and Sri > Ramanujacharya represent only a > tiny fraction of what they knew or spoke about. If> their writings are silent > on the status of widows or the correctness of Sati,> it does not diminsh from > their glory. Everyone is not expected to speak on> every topic. ******************* adiyen agrees with Sri.Vishal. Both were "sanyAsis" and probably felt inhibited in holding forth on a subject that was intimately associated with "grihAstAshrama-dharma". In Sankara's case he was not even married. And in the short span of 32 years that he lived, he was probably in such a tearing hurry to accomplish more pressing tasks, I guess, than to find time to dwell on things like "sati" etc. In Ramanuja's case, though a 'grihAstA' for a while, he voluntarily discarded conjugal and familial ties in his mid-life. His wife was politely requested to separate and go back to her parents home and it is said that Ramanuja never saw her thereafter. Yes, I agree with Sri.Vishal Agarwal. You cannot expect Sankaracharya and Ramanujacharya to have had anything candid to say about a matter like "sati". > > Plus, it is doubtful if Satis were forced. I read a > book "India in the eyes of early Muslim travellers" in which a traveller clearly states that Satis were voluntary. Hinduism as such does not have such a blanket negative > attitude towards suicide as the current judicial> system (the anglo-saxon > prejudices against suicide derive from the code of> Emperor Justinian) > although it is certainly looked down upon by our> Smriti Nibandhakaras like > Medhatithi. > Form the Vedantic perspective, the "Wise do not > grieve over the living or the > dead" and so Sati cannot be justified. >> Vishal Here Sri.Vishal, I am afraid, I can't go all the way with you. Just because a deed is "voluntary" can it become morally defensible? If "voluntary" "sati" is permissible then I suppose one can argue for "voluntary" abortion too with equal weight? In vedantic perspective suicide is "atma-hatya" and it is considered "sin"... "pApam"... just as "sishu-hatya" or abortion of un-born foetus is also sin. >From the standpoint of the theory of "karma" also (which BTW is "vedantic perspective" too) suicide or "sati" would be indefensible. If a woman must suffer widowhood in her life, she must suffer or cope with the condition with courage, resignation and with faith in God. She has no right to re-write the rules of her "kArmi-c" destiny by choosing a sort of dubious martyrdom that is "a-shAstrA-ic" in adiyen's view. What do other members think? dAsan, Sampathkumaran __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Thousands of Stores. Millions of Products. All in one place. Yahoo! Shopping: http://shopping.yahoo.com
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