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The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hindusim vol 2

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Vina<br />

brahmins. <strong>The</strong>se priesthoods are intermediaries<br />

between the deity and the villagers,<br />

usually communicating with the<br />

deities through dreams or possession. In<br />

this way the deities’ wishes become<br />

known, and problems or concerns can<br />

find their solution.<br />

In some cases, local deities have gained<br />

greater stature and have been assimilated<br />

into the pantheon. For female deities, this<br />

process is fairly simple, since they can be<br />

brought into the pantheon by claiming<br />

that their temples are one <strong>of</strong> the Shakti<br />

Pithas, a network <strong>of</strong> sites sacred to the<br />

Goddess that spreads throughout the subcontinent.<br />

Each Shakti Pitha marks the site<br />

where a body part <strong>of</strong> the dismembered<br />

goddess Sati fell to earth, taking form there<br />

as a different goddess; all these individual<br />

goddesses are thus seen as manifestations<br />

<strong>of</strong> a single great Goddess. Male deities are<br />

more commonly assimilated into the pantheon<br />

as manifestations <strong>of</strong> the god Vishnu,<br />

and three prominent examples <strong>of</strong> the former<br />

are Jagannath, Vithoba, and<br />

Venkateshvara. Village deities are less<br />

commonly said to be forms <strong>of</strong> the god<br />

Shiva, but this has happened with<br />

Khandoba, an important regional deity in<br />

the state <strong>of</strong> Maharashtra. See also pitha.<br />

Vimana<br />

(“vehicle”) A word with different specific<br />

meanings in different contexts, a common<br />

feature in the Sanskrit language. It<br />

can refer to the vehicles used by a<br />

deity—either in a mythic sense, because<br />

each <strong>of</strong> the deities has an animal considered<br />

to be his or her vehicle, or in a literal<br />

sense as the cart used to carry them<br />

in procession, or to the human being<br />

who “carries” them through becoming<br />

possessed. In the context <strong>of</strong> architecture,<br />

the word vimana is used to refer to<br />

that part <strong>of</strong> the temple that “carries” the<br />

deity, that is, the sanctuary as a whole.<br />

Vimarsha<br />

(“reflection”) In Hindu tantra, a secret,<br />

ritually based religious practice, vimarsha<br />

is one <strong>of</strong> the bipolar opposites that<br />

are used to characterize the nature <strong>of</strong> all<br />

<strong>The</strong> vina is a classical Indian musical instrument.<br />

reality, with its counterpart being illumination<br />

(prakasha). <strong>The</strong>se two terms are<br />

particularly important for the creation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the world, which is said to happen<br />

when the pure and radiant consciousness<br />

(prakasha) <strong>of</strong> the ultimate<br />

Brahman becomes self-conscious<br />

through the reflection (vimarsha) <strong>of</strong> this<br />

original consciousness. From one single<br />

consciousness, the absolute then<br />

e<strong>vol</strong>ves into a binary divinity—the god<br />

Shiva and his consort Shakti—whose<br />

continued interaction combines to<br />

create the world. This dyad <strong>of</strong> prakashavimarsha<br />

is particularly important in the<br />

Trika school <strong>of</strong> Kashmiri Shaivism. For<br />

further information see Jaideva Singh,<br />

Pratyabhijnanahrdayam, 1982.<br />

Vina<br />

Multistringed musical instrument<br />

with a long hollow body and a sounding<br />

box at the bottom; the top has a<br />

753

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