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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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In terms of formalized religious practice, celibacy is institutionalized<br />

in the life stage of brahmacharya, in the sense of chaste discipleship. In this<br />

sense a brahmachari is not simply celibate, although certainly and primarily<br />

that, but also a novice scholar who submits himself to the absolute<br />

authority of a guru (adept master). As the first stage of the ideal life course,<br />

brahmacharya is roughly congruent with the age through which most children<br />

attend school, with marriage when a young man is in his early to midtwenties.<br />

In the idealized scheme, a brahmachari is a high-caste Brahman<br />

boy who must learn by rote the Vedic scriptures and all of the formal ritual<br />

protocol associated with those scriptures. <strong>The</strong> concept of chastity is relevant<br />

here insofar as a boy who is able to control his desire is not distracted,<br />

better able to learn—in the sense that he has a greater capacity for<br />

memory—and also in appropriately good physical health, both strong and<br />

pure. Although brahmacharya as a life stage is associated with ritual and<br />

Vedic learning, it also has much wider pedagogical salience as a model for<br />

all forms of instruction, both explicitly spiritual, as when a person submits<br />

to the devotional teaching of a holy man, as well as more secular, as when<br />

a person learns a craft, a musical instrument, or a martial art from an accomplished<br />

teacher. It is significant that these “secular” forms of the master-disciple<br />

relationship are only secular in terms of content. <strong>The</strong> mode of<br />

instruction and the attitude of complete submission to authority and total<br />

identification with the guru that are incumbent on the disciple stem directly<br />

from the idealized Vedic model. Celibacy factors into this attitude because<br />

of the extent to which a disciple must be able to focus his whole being on<br />

the act of learning and literally embody the knowledge his guru imparts.<br />

Hindu scriptures are replete with references to the link between sex,<br />

fertility, and mastery of power, both supernatural and natural—and the<br />

link is complex. In many instances, it is also inherently ambiguous, insofar<br />

as sex—understood as an analog for divine creation—is the source of great<br />

power, but also—understood as an instinctual, bestial, subhuman drive—is<br />

regarded as an act through which all power can be lost if it is not carefully<br />

controlled. In any case, the deity who is celibacy incarnate, most clearly<br />

manifests shakti, iconographically embodies the physiology of ojas, and<br />

translates all of this explicitly into the domain of martial arts is Lord Hanuman,<br />

hero of the epic Ramayana. Although he is most closely associated<br />

with wrestling and is known for having performed feats of incredible<br />

strength, in fact the nature of Hanuman’s power is more complex. To begin<br />

with, Hanuman is a monkey, or the son of a nymph and a monkey, and<br />

is thought to possess the nascent attributes of his simian lineage. This is<br />

made clear in many of the myths and folktales associated with him that, in<br />

essence, depict him “monkeying around.” In one notable instance, as an infant,<br />

he flew off intent on eating the sun, manifest as the chariot of the god<br />

466 Religion and Spiritual Development: India

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