Along
similar lines it was prescribed that during a sraddha
ceremony it was also required that brahmanas
be fed. The brahmanas were not to
be considered as mere human beings, but as representative
of the pitrs. The position of the brahmana
in a sraddha rite was therefore
very high and they were regularly worshiped by the performer
of the sraddha. When the brahmanas
ate they ate on behalf of the pitrs. Their
satisfaction was the satisfaction of the fathers. Although
the germ of paying homage to the brahmanas
is found in the Rg-Veda, the practice of
feeding brahmanas was not in practice.
In the Vedic period offerings for the dead were poured
directly into the fire, which then carried the food to
the fathers. The feeding of brahmanas
was a practice that developed from the Grhya
period. In the later periods, the brahmanas
even came to occupy the position of the sacrificial fire.
And so food and other such articles formally offered to
the pitrs began to be offered to the brahmanas
as their representatives on earth. In a further extension
to this idea the brahmana began to
represent, not only the pitrs, but even
Brahman Itself. Consequently, when a brahmana ate Brahman ate, which meant that the whole world
also ate.
The Time for Honoring the Pitrs
It
is prescribed that the pitrs be worshiped
during the dark times. As such, the new moon (amavasya),
the dark side of the lunar month (krsna-paksa),
the southern half of the sun's course (daksayana), the afternoon,
during an eclipse, during the night, and so forth, became
the times when the pitrs were to be most
respected. In fact, any degree of diminution of light
has come to be associated with the worship of pitrs.
The
Satapatha-brahmana
explains how darkness and some other details came
to be selected for the worship of the dead: The gods once
approached Prajapati and said, "Give us a
means to live." Thereupon the gods were properly
invested with the sacred thread over the left shoulder
and were taught to bend using the right knee. To the gods
Prajapati said, "Sacrifice shall be your food,
immortality your sap, svah your call and
the sun your light." Then the pitrs
approached Prajapati wearing the sacred thread
over the right shoulder and bending from the left knee.
To them Prajapati said, "Your eating shall
be monthly, your call shall be svadha and the moon shall be your light."
In this way the harmony between the gods and the pitrs
was maintained. One is worshipped in light and the other
is worshipped in darkness.
The
operative rule underlying most of Hindu culture is that
the light of the sun was used as a symbol for knowledge
and consciousness. Vastu-sastra prescribes
that temples and homes must open to the rising sun in
the east. Temple images should also face the east. Uttarayana,
the time of increasing daylight, is considered more auspicious
than daksinayana, the time of diminishing daylight. In contrast, death, which is associated
with the loss of consciousness, has come to be symbolized
by darkness. As the sun is an eternal source of light
and so has become a symbol for God and the divine life,
so the moon, has become a symbol for the cycle of birth
and death. The moon regularly moves between light and
darkness. Similarly, the word deva
is derived from the Sanskrit root div meaning to
shine. The devas are, therefore, "the shining
ones." The pitrs, on the other hand,
are bathed in the light of the moon and so in this way
are distinguished from the gods.
Pitr-paksa
In
the Satapatha-brahmana it
is stated that three seasons, the spring, the summer
and the rainy season belong to the gods. These
three seasons together make the uttarayana or
the time when the sun is on the northern course.
As noted above, this is the time of increasing light
in the northern hemisphere. In contrast, autumn,
early winter and late winter belong to the fathers.
These three seasons comprise daksinayana,
the time when the sun is on the southern course.
This of course is the time of failing light in the
northern hemisphere. In particular, the dark side
of the month of bhadrapada (September
October) has been singled out as the best time for
the worship of fathers. A sraddha performed
in this period was said to produce special merit.
The
manner in which the worship of the pitrs
are worshiped during the month of bhadrapada
is as follows. If one's father happened to pass away on
the 5th lunar day of any month (pancami-tithi)
then the 5th tithi during the dark side of the
month of bhadrapada would be used for honoring
one's father and the other pitrs of the
family. If one's relative happened to pass away on the
6th tithi then the 6th tithi
during the dark side of the month of bhadrapada
would be used for honoring one's father and the other
pitrs. In this way, all 16 tithis
of the dark side of the month of bhadrapada
cover all the possible lunar days on which a family member
could expire.