There
are many eerie customs prevailing all over the globe from prehistory of
mankind. Some customs fade away on
onslaught of modern thinking but some are so stubborn that it is not possible
to eradicate them. ‘Kule Madime’ (=Ghost
Marriage) is one of such customs that was prevalent in Tulu Nadu since ages.
During
my childhood, I noticed a kinship between our family and another family in our
neighborhood. One Janaki-akka used to
address my aunt (my mother’s younger sister) as ‘maami (mother-in-law). We had not seen any living couple, connected
to this relation. We youngsters were
told that this odd relationship was brought about by performing a ‘titinakalena madime aka kule madime’, i.e. marriage of the dead,
in a symbolic way. The bride was my aunt’s unmarried dead daughter and the
groom was the unmarried dead brother of Janaki-akka. The symbol used, as I
faintly remember as told, was two coconut trees. (However hard I try to
remember the exact symbol, I am unable to recollect it. Moreover, it is impossible
to get details of ritual now as our elders are dead).
Kule
Madime
‘Kule
Madime’ in Tulu means: a marriage between two souls or spirits of the
dead. Besides Tulu Nadu, it is also
practiced in other parts of India. It is also a tradition, practiced world-wide
– from Africa to France (Europe) to Asia and to American countries.
Supposedly,
this ritual is practised on the belief that it would bring a sense of
satisfaction and completeness to the departed souls, who died young without
marriage. “Divinity in man is not accidental” (Post-250 Dt: 20.08.2010). It is said to be a re-incarnation of
spiritual light in a human body to do things – good or bad – at the bidding of
primordial energy, the Source, i.e. Paramaatma.
Sacred rituals are performed at different stages of one’s life. If a human-being dies young, not undergoing
the ritual of marriage, his or her unsatisfied soul remains in
suspension-state. As is believed or
feared, the circumstances of its leaving the body makes it ill-disposed to
others in the family and starts haunting them.
Haunted
family consults a soothsayer who says that the delay in getting alliance for a (living)
girl or boy in a family is due to unsatisfied souls, who died without
marriage. The affected family looks out
for a suitable dead boy or girl for solemnizing their marriage. Sometimes,
departed soul (mostly of a male) possesses a person in its family and points
out the household where it can get a suitable bride. These days ‘Preta or Pitru Sanskara Kriya’ ritual is performed through priests when
calamities befall in a family.
Ghost
Marriage in China
It
is an age-old belief (for more than 1000 years) in China that if a man dies
unmarried, he will haunt his surviving relatives. His family members would
perform a Ghost Marriage where a bride would be found and wed in his
post-mortem. This practice has created a
class of ‘Ghost Match-makers’, thriving on a brisk business of providing brides
at high prices. Female corpses are pilfered
secretly from tombs and are traded in black market. So the ghost marriage is outlawed in China
since 1949.
There
was a news item in Indian Express of 16th October 2015 under the heading:
“Corpse stolen for Ghost Marriage in China”. The news item, was about three
persons who have been detained in North China Shanxi Province for stealing s
female corpse from a village tomb to sell it as a bride for an ancient ritual
of the marriage of the deceased. The
incident was reported to the police by the villagers when the accused were
raiding the tomb. Such incidents are
happening time and again in China in spite of ban on the ritual.
Other
Forms of Ghost Marriage
There
are many interesting stories documented in the Internet on following types of
ghost marriages:
Posthumous
marriage (necrogamy) is a
marriage in which one of the participating members is dead. It is legal in France. Similar forms are practiced in Sudan and
China. It is in practice since 1950 (to
support the World War II widows and their children).
Levirate
marriageis a tradition related
to posthumous marriage or ghost marriages.
In a Levirate marriage, the brother of a deceased man is obligated to marry
his late brother’s widow. The reasoning
behind it is to support widows and their children.
This
is comparable to ‘Niyoga’ custom, sanctioned by Vedas and codified in
‘Manusmriti (Manu’s Injunctions).Such action is necessitated to continue the family-line. So it is called ‘Apaddharma Niyoga’ [Read the
Chapter in ‘Satyartha Prakasha’ (in
Sanskrit) by Swami Dayananda Saraswati (Vernacular translations are available; In
Kannada version, p.155). In Mahabharata,
births of Dritarashtra, Pandu and Vidura to Vichitravirya’s widows by Sage
Vyasa, Pancha Pandavas to Kunti and
Madri through celestial beings Yama, Vayu, Indra, and Ashwini Kumaras are
progenies by Niyoga to keep up the dynasty of Kuru. Such practice is still in
vogue in North India. Remember the Hindi
film ‘Ek Chhadar Maili Si’ (1986) about such a marriage, based on Sahitya
Akademi Award winning Urdu Novelwritten by Rajinder Singh Bedi.
Conclusion
Tulu
Nadu is known for practice of ‘Animism’.
Its inhabitants revere all things in Nature – water, trees, snakes,
stones, departed souls, etc. Their devoutness to super-humanly forces is manifest
in Bhutaradhane (Worship of Divine
Spirits) to this day. Their reverence to
family ancestors is praised by foreign travelers of yore. Are we justified in dismissing the belief as
mere superstition?
Mind
works in a similar way, guided by emotions – say, awe, fear love, greed and
hate - of that moment. It is, therefore,
no wonder to find similarity in religious/social practices in other parts of
the world.
Kule
Madime was in vogue in the past, mainly keeping in mind the salvation of souls
of the dead and bringing peace to the family. This practice may continue as
long as there is a soothsayer; perhaps, in remote villages where modernity has
not set in.
**
Anyone
who has witnessed such ritual or has knowledge about it, may share it with us.
-Hosabettu
Vishwanath, Pune
Nirel songs are too good. Listen to them on muzik247 tulu youtube channel.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vF0Oc9XQoiQ