Musings on Vega-setu stotram
From the Bhakti List Archives
• November 19, 1996
srimathE lakshmi-nrsumha parabrahmaNe namaha sri vedanta desika guravE namaha. Dear bhAgavatOttamas, Over the week-end I was browsing through some past postings and read the most touching comments of Sriman Sadagopan and Srimathi Lakshmi N.Srinivasan many weeks ago on our Lord YathOktakari while translating Swami Desikan's "vega-setu stotram". I could not help being transported into a personal reverie while musing on this most exquisite composition of Swami Desikan and thought I may share it with you all as well.I am borrowing for this posting of mine from Sriman Sadagopan his wonted title viz. "Musings" which he often uses for his own similar efforts and I hope he will forgive my act of petty larceny. About 20 kms. east from where I live in Bahrain the land ends into a narrow strip of the Arabian Gulf. Here across 25 kms. of shallow sea there is a huge causeway that links Bahrain island to the great empire of Saudi Arabia. This great bridge is a marvel indeed of modern civil architecture and was built in 1988 and christened "King Fahd Causeway". I don't know if it is worthy of any comparison to your own "Golden Gate" in San Francisco but all the same this great bridge of Bahrain is an awesome sight indeed for many tourists to the Gulf Region who come on week-ends just to witness it and have a pleasant picnic in the surrounding gardens and boulevards.This great bridge is a great boon for Bahrain as it turned the emirate in 1988 immediately from a small island trading-post which Bahrain was until then into a flourishing entrepot on the eastern seaboard for the entire pan-Arabian provinces.The island economy has prospered since mainly because of this great causeway. Everytime my family and I visit King Fahd causeway I am reminded of our Lord YathOkthakari. I often stand alone on the great towering bridge, look out into the vast turquoise-blue expanse of sea, with the nippy desert-breeze stinging my face, and invariably find myself muttering in the silence the verses from Swami Desikan's "vega-setu stotram". I cannot help wondering now how universal is the appeal of Swami Desikan that even in this day in a strange, Muslim land far away from India, some sights and scenes immediately evoke in my mind the wonderful imagery and phrases he used in his hymns over 700 years ago. I am amazed too that Swami Desikan can be enjoyed not only through the vedic idiom of his days; one can, and must indeed, enjoy him too in the "loukika" ways of our present times, if one only makes an effort. He was no doubt a poet of many dimensions. It is not just accident that Swami Desikan chose a "vega-setu" i.e. a dam-cum-bridge-cum-causeway as his subject in the subject "stotra".He chose it because, the wonderfully percipient poet that he was, he realized its power as a symbol,icon and image that strikes some deep chord of response in all human beings of all ages. The sight or image of a great magnificent bridge somehow affects the mind of man in a very deep and psychic way, indeed. The attraction and awe that a bridge or a dam holds for the human mind can be said to be immemorial. Man is known to have read deeply esoteric and spiritual meanings into the archetypal structure of a causeway because it seemed to represent his own empyrean efforts to conquer and transcend the formidable forces of Space and Time that constantly overshadow his existence on earth. Somehow a bridge appears to Man as the only sure means through which he crosses the hurdles that lie strewn all over the path that leads from "humanity to divinity". Look at it this way : One can easily become aware of the special meaning that "bridges" have for the human mind by noticing the way it is often used and referred to even in day-to-day life. We hear many phrases, do we not, like the following, for instance : "build bridges"- is an oft-used term in the word of interntional diplomacy and politics ; "burn my bridges" - is an expression that effectively conveys individual commitment to a new and fresh future course of action; "much water has flown under the bridge"-- is a phrase that we use to convey that the past has passed and "let's get on with the future"; "bridge the gap" -- is a phrase we use often to draw attention to the need to reconcile analomous situations in life We also know that the word "bridge" is employed in titling many works of art and literature. I can think of some great motion-pictures to come out of even Hollywood and which I enjoyed thoroughly e.g. "The Bridge on the River Kwai", "A Bridge Too Far" and most recently the Oscar-winning "The Bridges of Madison County" etc. In the history of human warfare, too, from the earliest known military engagements of Man to the 1990 Gulf War, adversaries try to first destroy bridges in each other's civilian territories. The Americans did this devastatingly in Iraq in '90 and which crippled Saddam Hussain's armies more than any other attack on his other military installations. This targetting of bridges is done to cut-off communication and transport channels and to consequently paralyse or immobilise the opponent first before slaughtering him down like "sitting-ducks". Thus one can indeed easily appreciate, from observing even the "loukika" world around ourselves, why a great poet like Swami Desikan chose the primordial image of a "causeway" in which to portray the Lord's "kalyana guna" of MAGNIFICENCE in the "stotra" in praise of the "vega-setu". As a poet par-excellence he knew which poetic symbol would remain ever vibrant and unfaded in the minds of men who read and contemplate on his hymns and accordingly Swami used it to telling effect. Swami Desikan was a poetic genius indeed. More of my ponderings in my next posting. SrimathE srivan satagopa sri narayana yathindra mahadesikaya namaha. sudarshan. srimathE lakshmi-nrsumha parabrahmaNE namaha sri vedanta desika guravE namaha
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