24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

from these austerities is thought to develop phenomenal powers before<br />

achieving final liberation. Significantly, the powers that a sannyasi comes<br />

to possess through the performance of austerities are embodied, even<br />

though the final realization of liberation entails a complete dissolution of<br />

the body. In popular imagination, sannyasis can tell the future, read minds,<br />

and perform other miracles. <strong>Of</strong>ten the act of performing intense austerities<br />

is said to generate tremendous heat, referred to commonly as tapas. <strong>The</strong><br />

heat of tapas is closely linked both conceptually as well as in a theory of<br />

physiology associated with the retention of semen. In many respects, therefore,<br />

the sannyasi is an ascetic analog of the divine ape, Hanuman, and<br />

practitioners of the martial arts in India draw on both models to define the<br />

nature and extent of their own strength and skill.<br />

Interestingly, recent scholarship has shown that sannyasis were, in all<br />

likelihood, themselves practitioners of various martial arts. Although past<br />

scholarship has tended to emphasize the asocial, ascetic, and purely cognitive<br />

features of sannyas, it is clear that at various times in the history of<br />

South Asia, groups of sannyasis (known tellingly as akharas, a term that can<br />

mean either “gymnasium” or “ascetic order, celibacy, and yoga”) have used<br />

their power to develop specific fighting skills. <strong>The</strong>se so-called fighting ascetics<br />

were retained by merchants, landlords, and regional potentates to defend<br />

or extend their various interests. In some instances sannyasis of this<br />

kind amassed significant amounts of wealth and exercised considerable political<br />

power. A recent permutation of this practice is manifest in present-day<br />

Ayodhya, a prominent religious city in north India, where the heads of various<br />

akharas have tremendous political clout, as well as in the articulation<br />

of aggressive, chauvinistic, communal Hinduism, wherein the powerful<br />

sannyasi is seen as the heroic embodiment of idealized Hindu masculinity.<br />

In contrast to East Asia, where the ascetic practices associated with<br />

Daoism produced the archetypal martial arts, there is very little known<br />

about how the fighting ascetics of India refined their skill. However, it is<br />

clear that yoga as a form of rigorous self-discipline is an integral part of ascetic<br />

practice, and that yoga makes reference to a theory of subtle physiology<br />

that translates very well into the language and practice of martial arts,<br />

even though in recent history it has come to be regarded, by most practitioners,<br />

as the antithesis of these arts. Although yoga is often thought of as<br />

being cerebral, supremely metaphysical, and concerned with such<br />

ephemeral concepts as the transmigration of the soul and the dissolution of<br />

consciousness, many of the basic or preliminary steps in yoga entail clearly<br />

defined codes of conduct, comprehensive ethical standards, and detailed<br />

prescriptions for personal “moral hygiene,” as well as the more commonly<br />

known methods of asanas (physical postures) and pranayama (breathing<br />

exercises). <strong>The</strong>se preliminary steps of yoga are designed to build up a prac-<br />

468 Religion and Spiritual Development: India

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!