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The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hindusim vol 2

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Pravara<br />

526<br />

one <strong>of</strong> several episodes in the Upanishads<br />

in which kshatriyas instruct brahmins,<br />

thus inverting the accepted pattern<br />

that holds brahmins as religious<br />

authorities. <strong>The</strong>se episodes reveal the<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> wisdom as conceived in the<br />

Upanishads—it is conferred, not by<br />

birth or social position, but by individual<br />

striving and realization.<br />

Pravara<br />

A lineage system, primarily among<br />

brahmins, which builds on the assumptions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the gotra system (the tracing <strong>of</strong><br />

brahmin lineage to one <strong>of</strong> seven mythical<br />

sages). In his daily worship a brahmin<br />

would not only mention the name<br />

<strong>of</strong> his gotra, who is the sage believed to<br />

be the family’s immediate progenitor,<br />

but also the names <strong>of</strong> other sages<br />

believed to be remote ancestors. Both<br />

these “lineages” were passed down only<br />

through men, since it was customary for<br />

a married woman to adopt her husband’s<br />

gotra as part <strong>of</strong> her new identity.<br />

<strong>The</strong> only context in which gotra and<br />

pravara were really important was in<br />

fixing marriages, because <strong>of</strong> the<br />

kinship conferred by these mythic<br />

lineages. Marriage within the gotra<br />

was strictly forbidden, since the<br />

assumption that such people were<br />

directly related made this marriage<br />

incestuous. Marriage within the pravara<br />

was also forbidden, although in<br />

medieval times different groups interpreted<br />

this prohibition differently.<br />

For some groups, any shared pravara<br />

ancestry would forbid the marriage, but<br />

for other groups one shared “ancestor”<br />

was deemed permissible. <strong>The</strong> more<br />

lenient interpretation may well have<br />

been spurred by practical difficulties in<br />

making matches.<br />

Prayaga<br />

(“Place <strong>of</strong> Sacrifice”) <strong>The</strong> traditional<br />

Hindu name for Allahabad, the city at<br />

the junction <strong>of</strong> the Ganges and Yamuna<br />

rivers. See Allahabad.<br />

Prayashchitta<br />

A general term meaning atonement for<br />

one’s misdeeds. <strong>The</strong> Hindu religious tradition<br />

gives considerable attention to<br />

penance and expiation, based on the<br />

almost universal Hindu belief in the<br />

inexorable workings <strong>of</strong> karma.<br />

According to this notion, all good and<br />

bad deeds will eventually have their<br />

effect, either in this life or the next, and<br />

thus one must either atone for the evil<br />

one has done or face its consequences<br />

in the future. Prescriptions for such<br />

expiation can be found as far back as the<br />

Vedas, and the acts prescribed for<br />

atonement fall into several categories:<br />

confession, repentance (which was usually<br />

seen as preparation for expiation,<br />

rather than absolution <strong>of</strong> the evil itself),<br />

restraint <strong>of</strong> breath (pranayama), physical<br />

asceticism (tapas), fire sacrifice<br />

(homa), recitation <strong>of</strong> prayers (japa),<br />

gift-giving (dana), fasting (upavasa),<br />

and travel to sacred sites (tirthayatra).<br />

<strong>The</strong> prayashchitta literature is quite<br />

well developed, both in detailing<br />

differing kinds <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fenses and their<br />

potentially mitigating circumstances,<br />

and in laying out the types <strong>of</strong> atonement<br />

to be performed for each <strong>of</strong>fense. For<br />

further information see Pandurang<br />

Vaman Kane (trans.), A History <strong>of</strong><br />

Dharmasastra, 1968.<br />

Prayoga<br />

(“use,” “application”) In the context<br />

<strong>of</strong> Hindu ritual, any prescribed procedure<br />

to be followed during worship,<br />

meditation, or when performing other<br />

ritual actions.<br />

Pregnancy<br />

As in all societies, Hindus regard the<br />

impending birth <strong>of</strong> a child as a time <strong>of</strong><br />

eager expectation tinged with anxiety.<br />

Part <strong>of</strong> this anxiety stems from purely<br />

physical worries that the pregnancy and<br />

birth proceed normally, and that the<br />

mother and child remain in good physical<br />

health. Expectant mothers are usually<br />

encouraged to rest and are <strong>of</strong>ten given

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