[The Naked Saints of
India, written by Dadaji, was originally published in the now defunct
Indian magazine Values, edited by the late John Spiers.]
In some of the oldest scriptural texts of India, we
find references to naked saints and sannyasins. In the Rig Veda of Vedic
Aryan tradition reference is made to them but worded in such a way that
shows the Brahmins did not properly understand them but were held in
wonder by the spiritual and psychic powers some of them possessed.
These naked Sadhus belonged to the non-Vedic or
pre-Aryan religion which flourished long before the Vedic religion was
introduced into India. The scriptures of these people were known as
Agamas and the same teachings were later written as Tantras. The earlier
texts of the Agamas are mostly dialogues where the spiritual teaching is
put into the mouth of the Lord Shiva as Guru teachings to Parvati the
Mother Goddess as sishya. The same teachings found their way into the
Vedic texts and were known as Upanishads. The Agamas tell us of naked
sannyasins as revealing the highest expression of renunciation and
suggests that he who wants nothing of the world does not want its rags
either.
Another reference tends to be critical of one who
claims to be a high initiate and yet hides the lingam (penis) which is
the sacred symbol of Shiva. The sannyasins of the non- Vedic religion
practised tapas or austerity. It was the path between needless and
foolish physical discomforts on one hand and sensual luxury-seeking on
the other. It was the path of moderation which was later introduced into
Buddhism as the Middle Way. These sadhus did not take any vow or make
any promises.
Nakedness was accepted as part of their way of life,
but there was nothing to prevent a sadhu from using clothes to protect
himself from extreme cold or in time of sickness. There can now be
little doubt that complete nakedness was the accepted pattern for the
majority of sadhus and a pattern which still existed till the time of
Gautama the Buddha and Mahavira the Jaina. Although the Buddha probably
remained naked until the day he died, his followers introduced robes
into the Buddhist order. Also among the Jain followers of Mahavira,
there came a division into two separate sects -- the Svetambars, clad in
white cloth and the Digambars who sometimes wore clothes but were
expected to end up naked at some future date. Nakedness was never
practised by laymen in the Jain community Many foreign visitors have
often rushed to see a Digambar Jain only to find he was a decorously
dressed shopkeeper. Household Jains take their designation from the sect
which they follow.
The feature of naked sadhus is still fairly common,
even in modern India. Overseas visitors seldom see them because they
seldom live or visit the tourist fleshpots and city terminals. When
Allen Ginsberg, the American poet, visited India some years back, he
expressed in letters which were printed in City Lights his sad
disappointment at not seeing even one naked sadhu. This could be
surprising because in Banaras, which he visited, it is doubtful if this
great city of Shiva has ever been without naked sadhus and in
considerable numbers.
Banaras is still the one city in India where you can
walk about naked and yet remain unnoticed. Even beggars display
mutilated genitals to reveal a mental inclination to celibacy and a
great sacrifice which would make physical delinquency impossible. In
these days most naked sadhus wear a cloth in public or when travelling.
They neither wish to draw needless attention to themselves or amuse the
schoolboy population now sadly conditioned by modern education. Hindu
Digambar sadhus have outnumbered, and still d0, the naked Jains by
thousands to one. Many city councils have introduced bylaws forbidding
public nudity even among sadhus. A new sense of Western respectability
has come to India just at a time when the West is abandoning its
Puritanism.
Even today the great names and outstanding sadhus of
Indian history and tradition have mostly been naked. In the years which
followed the Muslim invasion of India it became obvious that there were
many things which they did not like about Indian Paganism. They showed
their aversion to images by smashing them and destroying temples. They
loathed the sight of the naked sadhus, yet for some reason feared to
interfere with them.
There is only one record where a man was executed by
King Aurangzeb for public nudity. He was not actually a sadhu. Born in
Persia as a Jew, he became a convert to Islam. As a Muslim he came to
India selling embroidered garments in Delhi. There he changed again and
became a devotee of Rama and wrote many beautifu] songs. Even this might
have been ignored but he began to dance around the streets in the nude.
The Muslims would not recognize that a Muslim could possibly embrace
another religion. He was executed by the king as a degenerate Muslim who
exhibited himself naked. Indian
Paganism made its inroads into Islam and in India,
unique among all other Muslim communities, we have records of numerous
Muslim and Sufi saints who adopted nakedness. Some exist even today. It
was the Muslims who seem to have first used the word Hindu and therefore
it is a very recent addition to Indian words. It sprang from their own
references to "people living on the other side of the Indus,' who were
the "Indus' and later refined to Hindu. Many Indians still find the word
unacceptable although it enjoys common usage. It is not found in the
Vedas, Upanishads or the Bhagavad Gita. Since there was a time when the
religion of old India enjoyed a monopoly, a name was unnecessary. After
the invasion of the Aryans, the non-Vedic people began to use the term
Sanatana Dharma, the eternal wisdom or teachings. When the
Vedic and non-Vedic religions merged, the term came to be generally
accepted.
The Agamas of the original Indians have been ignored
by Western scholars in favour of Vedic literature. This, in spite of the
fact that it is the Agama teachings which have dominated Indian
spiritual life for three to four thousand years.
They and not the Aryan Vedas form the basis of all
that is taught in all the Puranas, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita,
the Uddhava Gita and other Gitas.
The Avadhut Gita and the Jivanmukti Gitas, generally
studied only by sadhus, are regarded as teaching the highest principles
of spiritual life and refute much of what is taught in the Aryan Vedas.
Historically the sannyasin goes back to primordial
times. Some Indian scholars, free from Western conditioning, have
speculated that they began in an age when nobody wore clothes and
retained their naked status even after woven cloths and linens came into
common usage. It is only an idea but the spiritual leaders of many
religions do tend to preserve customs and forms long afar the lay
population has abandoned them.
Beyond this, we can consider that stronger than all
other motives was the desire of the sadhu to remain a natural man in his
natural environment. This separated him from the tendencies of worldly
people to become more and more affluent and cling firmer to those
delusions which he had abandoned.
All Upanishadic and Gita teachings lead to the one
simple but inescapable truth that we are not bodies but immortal souls.
So what does an immortal want to hide and should they try to look like
worldly men? The word Digambar is taken from the Sanskrit Dig-ambara.
Its literal meaning is wearing the sky or sky-clothed. Though often used
as a synonym for naked, it has a much deeper meaning. A householder is
separated from his environment by his clothes, and when he removes his
clothes he is separated from his environment by his skin. He fails to
understand or realize the oneness of all nature and life. This should
not be so with the sadhu and when he is digambar he is one and absolute
with everything.