Posted on: 13 April 2019

Essay:
VANARA

Mythical creatures in the Ramayana

Vānara (Sanskrit: वानर) refers to a group of people living in forests (Vān - forest, nara - human in the Hindu epic the Ramayana and its various versions. In the Ramayana, the Vanaras help Rama defeat Ravana.

There are three main theories about the etymology of the word "Vanara":

It derives from the word vana ("forest"), and nara(man) means "belonging to the forest" or "forest-dwelling".

It derives from the words vana ("forest") and nara ("man"), thus meaning "forest man".

It derives from the words vav and nara, meaning "is it a man?" or "perhaps he is man".

Although the word Vanara has come to mean "monkey" over the years and the Vanaras are depicted as monkeys in the popular art, their exact identity is not clear. Unlike other exotic creatures such as the rakshasas, the Vanaras do not have a precursor in the Vedic literature.The Ramayana presents them as humans with reference to their speech, clothing, habitations, funerals, consecrations etc. It also describes their monkey-like characteristics such as their leaping, hair, fur and a tail.

According to one theory, the Vanaras are strictly mythological creatures. This is based on their supernatural abilities, as well as descriptions of Brahma commanding other deities to either bear Vanara offspring or incarnate as Vanaras to help Rama in his mission. The Jain re-tellings of Ramayana describe them as a clan of the supernatural beings called the Vidyadharas; the flag of this clan bears monkeys as emblems.

G. Ramdas, based on Ravana's reference to the Vanaras' tail as an ornament, infers that the "tail" was actually an appendage in the dress worn by the men of the Savara tribe. (The female Vanaras are not described as having a tail.) According to this theory, the non-human characteristics of the Vanaras may be considered artistic imagination. In Sri Lanka, the word "Vanara" has been used to describe the Nittaewos mentioned in the Vedda legends.

In the Ramayana

Vanaras are created by Brahma to help Rama in battle against Ravana. They are powerful and have many godly traits. Taking Brahma's orders, the gods began to parent sons in the semblance of monkeys (Ramayana 1.17). The Vanaras took birth in bears and monkeys attaining the shape and valor of the gods and goddesses who created them (Ramayana 1.17.17-18). After Vanaras were created they began to organize into armies and spread across the forests, although some, including Vali, Sugriva, and Hanuman, stayed near Mount Riskshavat.

According to the Ramayana, the Vanaras lived primarily in the region of Kishkindha (identified with parts of present-day Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh & Maharashtra). Rama first met them in Dandaka Forest, during his search for Sita.An army of Vanaras helped Rama in his search for Sita, and also in battle against Ravana, Sita's abductor. Nala and Nila built a bridge over the ocean so that Rama and the army could cross to Lanka. As described in the epic, the characteristics of the Vanara include being amusing, childish, mildly irritating, badgering, hyperactive, adventurous, bluntly honest, loyal, courageous, and kind.

Other texts:

The Vanaras also appear in other texts, including Mahabharata. The epic Mahabharata describes them as forest-dwelling, and mentions their being encountered by Sahadeva, the youngest Pandava.[citation needed]

Shapeshifting:

In the Ramayana, the Vanara Hanuman changes shape several times. For example, while he searches for the kidnapped Sita in Ravana's palaces on Lanka, he contracts himself to the size of a cat, so that he will not be detected by the enemy. Later on, he takes on the size of a mountain, blazing with radiance, to show his true power to Sita.

Notable Vanaras:

Angada, son of Vali, helped Rama find his wife Sita

Anjana, Hanuman's mother

Gandhamadana, incarnation of Kubera

Hanuman, devotee of the god Rama and son of Vayu

Kesari, Hanuman's foster father

Mainda and Dvivida, sons of Ashvins

Macchanu - the son of Hanuman (as per the Cambodian and Thai versions)
Makardhwaja - the son of Hanuman (as per the Indian versions)

Nala, son of Vishwakarma

Nila, son of Agni

Rumā was the wife of Sugriva.

Sharabha, son of Parjanya

Sugriva, king of Kishkindha, son of Surya

Sushena, son of Varuna

Taar, incarnation of Brihaspati

Tara, wife of Vali

Vali, Sugriva's brother, and a son of Indra

Source :Wikipedia


 View Post on Facebook

Comments from Facebook

The word Vānara is probably a loan-word in Sanskrit from a substrate language. Perhaps a very old tribal name. The folk etymology "forest man" doesn't work, linguistically, for several reasons.

To repeat: mythical.

Hanuman, as Jason Wilson has argued, is seen as “a metaphor of pensée, the total flow of the activity of the unconscious, without control or regulations.” ( https://thewire.in/books/hanuman-the-ninth-author-of-grammar )

❤️

Hemant, Thank me later :P

Gonds still wrapcrope round their waists during ceremonies dragging them behind like tails.

All the rajput rulers belong to the Suryavansh.They are sons of Vaivasta Manu,whose father was Surya.They are the offsprings of the nine sons of Manu. Rathores belong to the Suryavansh.Then there are many sects spring up from time to time.Example:Rathores,have,Jodhas,Chanpawats,Mertiya,karnot,Koonpawat Kandhal,.among them was Vanar which is extinct now.

Vanara in the olden days was a sect of the Rathore rajputs.Over the period it has got extinct.