Hindu Samskriti - Family Life And Culture -1

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Family Life
And Culture






Hospitality

How Guests Are Treated
As God in the Hindu Home

 Raising children as good Hindus, cues and
clues for travelers, rites of passage, the duties
of homemaking, and honoring Hindu heros.


By Lavina Melwani, New York
B e one to whom the
mother is a God. Be one
to whom the father is
a God. Be one to whom the
teacher is a God. Be one to
whom the guest is a God.” So
advises the Taittiriya Upanishad
of the Yajur Veda, affirming the
remarkable Hindu reverence for
a guest. The Sanskrit word for
guest is athithi, “without time,”
i.e., “one who has no fixed day
for coming.” It remains today the
accepted custom of Hindus to
visit friends, relatives and even
strangers without notice. Hosting
guests is one of the five central
religious duties or “sacrifices” of
the Hindu householder: paying
homage to seers, to Gods and
elementals, to ancestors, to living
beings and, manushya yajna,
“homage to men,” which includes
gracious hosting of guests. The
ancient Tamil scripture, Tirukural,
says, “The whole purpose of
earning wealth and maintaining
a home is to provide hospitality
to guests.” In this article we explore
the many facets of Hindu
hospitality, from how to receive
a guest to how to behave in the
home, to the impact of modernization,
urbanization and the advent
of the nuclear family upon
this most ancient and revered
obligation of our faith.


Do you think you are the perfect Hindu host? Well, here’s
a story that will make you reevaluate your hospitality
skills, for the host in this tale is none other than Lord
Krishna. When his boyhood friend, Sudama—hungry,
impoverished and in rags—arrived at the palace, the guards refused
to allow him in. But Lord Krishna, overjoyed to see his old
friend, received him with open arms and joyfully led him to his
throne. He personally washed Sudama’s feet and fed him with
his own hands. Sudama had brought a humble gift, a handful of
parched rice tied in the corner of his shawl and was too ashamed
to give it to Lord Krishna in front of all the fine courtiers, but
Lord Krishna opened it with delight and ate the grains with pleasure
and appreciation. To him, the true value of this meager gift
lay in the affection with which it had been offered. Similar stories
abound in our scriptures and histories.
Although I did not grow up in a particularly religious household,
the concept of hospitality was still very traditionally Hindu,
both in giving and receiving. I remember we stopped at a
friend’s home in Mathura after a pilgrimage to Haridwar. The
hosts received us like VIP s, with open hearts and minds. We
ate a wonderful vegetarian meal in the cool evening air in their
garden, and then, as the stars came out, the string beds were
brought out into the open, for family and guests, each covered
with a mosquito net to ward off insects.
Another time, I was with my older brother, who had to stop at
an acquaintance’s home in Old Delhi to pick up some paperwork.
The family knew we were coming and had prepared a feast. In
this very Hindu home, we removed our shoes, washed our hands
and feet and sat on the immaculate kitchen floor with the hosts
while a brahmin cook served us one of the most memorable
meals I have ever eaten.
Indeed, you can never leave an Indian household without


gaining a few ounces, for you will certainly be plied with some
snacks, some tea at the very least, or a glass of cold rose sherbet
in the heat of summer. In our home in New Delhi, family
and friends came to us from everywhere, and they certainly got
more than a glass of water: delicious meals, a comfortable bed,
domestics hanging over their every need and, yes, even a guided
tour of Delhi, and, sometimes, even Agra. Nor was the hospitality
reserved just for visiting guests. Daily food was never eaten
without my mother’s consecrating a small portion to God, and a
portion being given to a passing needy person or a cow.
Relatives came and were joyously received, especially on days
of shraddha when the priest, uncles, aunts and cousins would
descend on the house to honor the memory of ancestors. The
house would take on an almost festive air, as scores of children
erupted out of the arriving cars. After prayers and feeding the
priest, the aroma of sizzling puris and pakodas wafted from the
kitchen while elders embarked on a massive talkathon.
Sundari Katir of California told Hinduism Today, “When I
was growing up in Sri Lanka, guests would always be visiting us
from different parts of the country and India. The whole household
would jump into action. My mother would assemble the
meal, and we children would get our rooms all ready, because
we would give them up and sleep on mats on the floor. It was
such a natural thing to do, and we were always delighted to have
guests. Today my brother Ranjan is one of the few relatives left
in Colombo, and he carries on the tradition. He treats everyone
as God, with good food, comfortable beds and heartfelt hospitality.
I have become a better hostess after observing him.”


God as Guest: The most common Hindu form of worship, puja,
is, in fact, an act of hosting. Rare is the Hindu home without a
shrine for the Deities. From huge family temples
of marble in
the homes of the wealthy to modest shrines, Hindus revere their


Gods. Daily, images of the family Gods are bathed, clothed and
offered fruit, flowers and incense, accompanied by chanting and
the tinkle of the bell, all in the format of hosting a guest. The
full 16-step puja begins with an invitation for God to come to the
home, continues through offering of a seat, washing the feet with
water, offerings of drink and food, garments and incense, flowers,
etc., until finally the God is thanked and bid adieu. While the
standard human guest would receive less adulation, a holy man
visiting a family’s home may well be welcomed and worshiped
in this complete manner.
Festivals bring a more intense program to host God. At Dipavali,
the Festival of Lights, when Goddess Lakshmi visits the homes
of devotees, there is a frenzy of cleaning, sweeping and painting
as homes are beautified and decorated with hundreds of earthen
lamps to greet Her.


Guest as God: At the very heart of Hinduism is the belief that
the Almighty permeates everything. Indeed, the Hindu belief in
the presence of the Paramatma in every living thing transforms
each one of us into God. The ancient Hindu texts say the guest
has to be shown honor by the host’s going out to meet him, offering
him water to wash his feet, by giving him a seat, lighting a
lamp before him, providing food and lodging and accompanying
him some distance when he departs. Thousands of years have
passed, but this code of etiquette remains little changed from the
ancient scriptures.
In the Manu Dharma Shastras, for example, the host is directed
thus: “All the food shall be very hot, and the guests shall eat in
silence. Having addressed them with the question: ‘Have you
dined well?’ let him give them water to sip, and bid farewell to
them with the words: ‘Now rest.’” K.T. Achaya in Indian Food: A
Historical Companion points out that guests had an honored rank
in Vedic society and, after being ceremoniously received, were
curd, milk, honey and sugar.
According to the Dharma Shastras, hosting guests is one of the
five obligatory sacrifices or duties of the householder. Anusasana
states, “The host should give his eye, mind and agreeable speech
to the guest, he should personally attend on him and should accompany
him when he (the guest) departs; this sacrifice (yajna)
demands these five fees.”
The visit of a holy person is given extra special attention, and
for good reason. Vriddha Harita Dharma Shastra says that if a
bramachari ascetic stays as a guest in a householder’s home for
a single night, the latter’s accumulated sins are destroyed, and
when such an ascetic takes food at a man’s house, it is Vishnu
Himself who is fed.

Common Sense: It should be clearly stated that Hindu hospitality
does not extend to being careless with the safety of one’s family
and home. Even Krishna’s guards kept Sudama—a brahmin at
that—outside the gates. When Hinduism Today’s founder, Satguru
Sivaya Subramuniyaswami (Gurudeva), was in Sri Lanka
as a young man, he experienced wonderful hospitality across the
island from all the communities. Part of the time he stayed in the
traditional Tamil village of Alaveddy at the home of Kandiah
Chettiar, one of his teachers, receiving instructions on, among
other things, the hosting of guests. One day, Chettiar had given
food to a suspicious-looking man at the gate, rather than inviting
him to the porch of the house. When the young Gurudeva asked
why he didn’t invite the man in, Chettiar replied, with characteristic
frankness, “Because he would steal everything in the
house.” The Dharma Shastras discuss at some length the issue of
unworthy or even dangerous guests, yet advising that, no matter
what the circumstances, the visitor should at least receive food.

Village Traditions: Sheela Venkatakrishnan of Chennai, Tamil
Nadu, told Hinduism
Today, “You offer your guest the same
love and respect that you would offer to God. Simple! A striking
example of hospitality is when the whole town of Kumbakonam,
where my father hails from, turns host during the week of the
Mahamaham.” Thousands upon thousands of people come for
the holy bath in the tank of the Kumbareswaran
temple, and
every home opens its doors to accommodate and feed all who
reach its doorstep. No one is turned away.
Sheela explained, “Houses in the villages and towns of Tamil
Nadu usually have a fairly large platform just outside their front
door, called a thinnai. This serves two purposes. One is temporary
storage of grain during the harvest and also an airy place to
sleep during the hot and humid summers. I t is not unusual for a
traveller to use this as a resting place. You could open your front
door in the morning and find someone sleeping on your thinnai.
This is where you would find the strangers during Mahamaham.
Of course, family and friends would be accommodated inside
the house. But everyone is fed, irrespective of caste. It is possible
that in the morning there is one set of people, in the afternoon
another and a totally different group at night. The meals served
would be according to whatever time of day it is. Also, the bath
area often has a separate access from outside the house.”
In her grandfather’s day, Sheela noted, it was the practice for
the head of the household to stand at his doorstep at mealtime
and ask loudly, not once but thrice, “Is there someone who needs
to be fed?” Sometimes a traveler or a poor man would come in for
food. It was only after the guest had been fed that family would
eat—one of the explicit instructions in the Dharma Shastras. The
Apastamba says, “He who eats before his guest eats destroys food,
prosperity, progeny, cattle and the merit of his own house.”
Hospitality permeates Indian culture, both on a personal and
institutional level. In Tamil Nadu, many of the bigger and older
temples have the annadanam scheme—a daily free feeding. Recently,
with the active patronage of the government, many more
temples have revived this practice, where they feed a minimum
of 100 people each day at noon. Muslim darghas
have adopted
this practice, while the Sikh gurudwaras have always followed it.
Mention also has to be made of the Hyderabadi brand of hospitality
that has few parallels. Made famous by the Muslim nawabs
of Lucknow, those on the receiving end enjoyed courtesy, food,
drink and congeniality—all served with an elegant world-class
flourish. Every ethnic and religious subculture of India puts a
premium on hospitality.
Little wonder, then, that in multicultural India these varied
streams of hospitality have coalesced to produce a generous and
warm people. Visitors to India come away with awed stories of
the way they were embraced and included in every family celebration—
in fact, made part of a larger, extended family. Often
these relationships last over the years.
You cannot go to even the humblest home without being honored
with food and Indian drink, as Janet Chawla found out some
years back. Chawla, an American who married a Sikh and now
lives in New Delhi, believes the charm of India is in the graciousness
of its people, although it is getting less so in the big cities. She
feels there is a grace, a way of sitting together, singing together at
weddings. People in small villages, she says, really are very giving,
sharing the little they have.
“In America, if we were sitting and working together, and I had
a sandwich—I would open it and eat it alone. An Indian would
never do that,” she says. “There is this kind of culturally prescribed
sharing which I find very gracious.” Janet didn’t mention
it, but some Westerners visiting India can find the level of hospitality
discomfiting, especially the tradition of never leaving a
guest alone. That impinges upon the Westerner’s desire for privacy
and “personal space”—concepts absent from the Indian milieu.


Hospitality at Home: Hindu tradition lays great stress on the
respect due to guests. The greatest hurt for a guest is the thought
that the host or hostess does not enjoy one’s presence. Therefore,
Hindus go out of their way to make each guest feel welcome.
It is proper protocol to drop whatever one is doing, no matter
friendship in the East is being able to drop by any time without
advance notice.
Mitesh Patel, whose family hails from Kathiawad region of
Gujarat, says that in his hometown hospitality is extended to everyone:
“When a guest comes to our house, we rarely let them
go without offering a good meal. We don’t feel that guests are a
burden, whether they are staying for few hours or few days, and
offer them full assistance.”
He gives the example of his uncle who left the ancestral village
30 years ago to settle in the city of Rajkot. Three decades later, if
anyone from the village comes for a medical checkup to the big
hospital in the city, his uncle makes sure healthy, home-made
meals go out to the patient every single day.
The level of hospitality depends upon several factors, the most
obvious being family ties. Traditionally, any known or unknown
member of one’s extended family—and the Hindu extended family
includes not only blood relatives to several degrees removed,
but also all the in-laws by marriage—is basically treated just like
a member of the immediate family. It would not be uncommon,
for example, for a student at the university to stay with distant
relatives throughout his entire schooling.
Then there are friends, business acquaintances, people from the
same village or state and so on, all of whom have some connection
to the host. They, too, may be treated just like a member of
the extended family, as Janet Chawla experienced, though commonly
a bit more formally. We can see from Sheela’s description
of her childhood village that the homes were designed to accommodate
even total strangers in a convenient fashion.
The concept of hospitality extends to welcoming customers to
business settings, where it certainly makes good sense. Go into a
sari shop in crowded marketplaces and the owner will automatically
offer you a soft drink in the heat. If you’re shopping for an
expensive wedding trousseau, they are even more solicitous—offering
coconut water, a snack and drinks from the market. I recall
my father in his jewelry store not only offering soft drinks,
paan in silver containers and candy, but also giving the kids who
came to the shop small items as gifts.


Untouchables: Yet, one does have to admit that Hinduism’s
glowing hospitality report card does have one very big black
mark on it, something which the Gods probably did not ordain
but which wily man has reinterpreted for his own gain—the
treatment of the so-called lower castes. It is really quite inconceivable
that a loving religion, which proclaims that God is in
every living thing, would denigrate a whole class of human beings
as untouchables.
The story of everyday village India is full of the low castes
being turned away from village wells, being castigated for worshipping
at the temple or merely for passing by the home of a
brahmin. While things are improving in the big cities where
caste and creed lose their importance in the great economic bazaar
and where politicians see the lower castes as potential votes,
the village scene remains woefully medieval. Buried in the back
pages of newspapers are frequent stories of atrocities, which
should shock us all from our complacency and our conceit of just
how “hospitable” we may really be.


Loss of Tradition: In the larger hospitality picture, things seem
to be changing for the worse as the time-honored extended family
finally battles modernity. Dr. T. H. Chowdary
of Hyderabad
writes, “As people leave their villages and joint families break up
and the educated move to flats in the cities, the old idea of hospitality
is fast dying. In the villages and small towns in the past,
in the evening when beggars came for food, whatever was left
in the house would be given away. In those days of no refrigeration,
food could not be kept. Now in the towns and cities, surplus
is stored in refrigerators, which have thus come to be known as
garibmar, the killers of the poor.
“Even when brothers and sisters and such near ones come, one
silently wishes that they will stay in a hotel and, at best, they
might come for a dinner or a breakfast,” he goes on. “What to
speak of caring for the parents or relatives when the wife and
husband have no time even to talk to one another! Or when the
one-year-old child, the only child, is put in a day-care center
so that both the wife and husband can earn enough to satisfy
their ideas of modern comforts, including that refrigerator or
new TV
“What to speak of hospitality for friends and unknowns,” says
Chowdary, “when the nuclear family of wife and husband are
saying that the old father must stay with one son and the old
mother with another son? They want to separate the old parents,
considering them burdens to be shared by the sons.”
As Chowdary observes, with women joining the work force in
large numbers, and time, effort and budgets stretched by modern
life, the old-time hospitality is often compromised.
Earlier,
visitors could just drop in, but now hosts get agitated to find unexpected
guests on the doorstep—a far cry from the hospitality of
the village home’s thinnai.
Sheela Venkatakrishnan agrees: “In recent years, the trend has
become, as Gurudeva said, ‘The women going out of their homes
to work.’ Living in nuclear families, who is there to take care of
the home, leave alone a guest? You tend to think twice about visiting
a friend or relative, not wanting to impose or inconvenience
them in any way.” Still, she points out that they have many relatives
in joint families who welcome them with open arms. She
herself lives in a joint family in Chennai where someone is always
home: “The doors of our home and our hearts are open to
God and all whom He chooses to send our way.”


 





Om Tat Sat
                                                        
(Continued...) 





(My humble salutations to Sadguru Sri Sivaya Subramuniyaswami ji, Hinduism Today  dot com  for the collection)




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