|
Goddess Kali Ma - Liberator of Souls - Destroyer of Negativity
The name Kali derives from the Sanskrit root word Kal meaning time. Nothing
escapes from time. Her Tibetan Buddhism counterpart is named Kala, a male
figure. Of the Hindu goddesses, Goddess Kali Ma is the most misunderstood. The
Encyclopedia Britannica is very mistaken in this quote, "Major Hindu goddess
whose iconography, cult, and mythology commonly associate her with death,
sexuality, violence, and, paradoxically in some of her later historical
appearances, motherly love."
It is partially accurate to say the Goddess Kali Ma is a goddess of death.
However, She brings the death of the ego as the delusional self-centered view of
reality. Nowhere in the sriptures is She seen killing anything but demons nor is
She associated exclusively with the process of human dying like Yama the Hindu
god of death. Both Goddess Kali Ma and Shiva are said to inhabit cremation
grounds and devotees often go to these places to meditate. The purpose is not to
glorify death but to overcome the I-am-the-body idea. The cremation grounds
reinforce the idea that the body is a temporary. Kali and Shiva are said to
dwell in these places because it is our attachment to the body that gives rise
to the ego. Kali and Shiva give liberation by dissolving the illusion of the
ego. Thus we are the ever-existing I AM and not the impermanent body. This is
emphasized by the scene in the cremation grounds.
Out of all the Devi forms, Kali is the most compassionate because She provides
moksha or liberation to Her children. She is the counterpart of Shiva. They are
the destroyers of unreality. When the ego sees Mother Kali it trembles with fear
because the ego sees in Her its own eventual demise. An individual who is
attached to his/her ego will not be able to receive the vision of Mother Kali
and She will appear in a fear invoking or "wrathful" form. A mature soul who
engages in spiritual practice to remove the illusion of the ego sees Mother Kali
as very sweet, affectionate, and overflowing with incomprehensible love for Her
children. Ma Kali wears a garland made of 52 skulls and a skirt made of dismembered arms
because the ego comes out of identification with the body. In fact, we are
beings of spirit and not flesh. So liberation can only prevail when our
attachment to the body comes to an end. Therefore, the skirt and garland are
trophies worn by Her to represent the liberation of Her children from attachment
to the finite body. In two of Her hands, She holds a sword and a freshly severed
head that is dripping blood. This represents a great battle in which she
defeated the demon Raktabija. Her black (or sometimes dark blue) skin represents
the womb of the unmanifest from which all of creation is born and into which all
of creation will eventually return. Goddess Kali Ma is depicted as standing on a
white skinned Shiva who is lying beneath Her. His white skin is in contrast to
Her black or sometimes dark blue skin. He is showing a blissful detached look on
His face. Shiva is pure formless awareness sat-chit-ananda
(being-consciousness-bliss) while She represents "form" eternally sustained by
the underpinning of pure awareness.
|
 |