Giving
the legend of the Naga Sushruvas, who in his fury burnt to ashes the
kingdom of King Nara when he tried to abduct his daughter already
married to a Brahmin youth, and after the carnage took his abode in the
lake now known as Sheshnag (Kashmiri Sushramnag), Kalahana writes:
“The
lake of dazzling whiteness [resembling] a sea of milk (Sheshnag), which
he created [for himself as residence] on a far off mountain, is to the
present day seen by the people on the pilgrimage to
Amareshwara.”(Rajatarangini, Book I v. 267.Translation: M. A. Stein).
This makes it very clear that pilgrims continued to visit the holy Amarnath cave in the 12th century, for Kalhana wrote his chronicle in the years1148-49.
At
another place in the Rajatarangini (Book II v. 138), Kalhana says that
King Samdhimat Aryaraja (34 BCE-17CE) used to spend “the most delightful
Kashmir summer” in worshiping a linga formed of snow “in the regions
above the forests”. This too appears to be a reference to the ice linga
at Amarnath. There is yet another reference to Amareshwara or Amarnath
in the Rajatarangini (Book VII v.183). According to Kalhana, Queen
Suryamati, the wife of King Ananta (1028-1063), “granted under her
husband’s name agraharas at Amareshwara, and arranged for the
consecration of trishulas, banalingas and other [sacred emblems]”.
In his
Chronicle of Kashmir, a sequel to Kalhana’s Rajatarangini, Jonaraja
relates that that Sultan Zainu’l-abidin (1420-1470) paid a visit to the
sacred tirtha of Amarnath while constructing a canal on the left bank of
the river Lidder (vv.1232-1234) . The canal is now known as Shah Kol.
In the
Fourth Chronicle named Rajavalipataka, which was begun by Prjayabhatta
and completed by Shuka, there is a clear and detailed reference to the
pilgrimage to the sacred site (v.841,vv. 847-849). According to it, in a
reply to Akbar’s query about Kashmir Yusuf Khan, the Mughal governor of
Kashmir at that time, described among other things the Amarnath Yatra
in full detail. His description shows that the not only was the
pilgrimage in vogue in Akbar’s time – Akbar annexed Kashmir in 1586 –
but the phenomenon of waxing and waning of the ice linga was also well
known.
Amareshwar (Amarnath) was a famous pilgrimage place in the time of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan
also. In his eulogy of Shah Jahan’s father-in-law Asif Khan, titled
“Asaf Vilas”, the famous Sanskrit scholar and aesthete Panditraj Jagannath makes clear mention of Amareshwara (Amarnath) while describing the Mughal garden Nishat laid out by Asif Khan. The King of gods Indra himself, he says, comes here to pay obeisance to Lord Shiva”.
As we
well know Francois Bernier, a French physician accompanied Emperor
Aurangzeb during his visit to Kashmir in 1663. In his book “Travels in Mughal Empire”
he writes while giving an account the places he visited in Kashmir that
he was “pursuing journey to a grotto full of wonderful congelations,
two days journey from Sangsafed” when he “received intelligence that my
Nawab felt very impatient and uneasy on account of my long absence”. The
“grotto” he refers to is obviously the Amarnath cave as the editor of
the second edition of the English translation of the book, Vincient A.
Smith makes clear in his introduction. He writes: “The grotto full of
wonderful congelations is the Amarnath cave, where blocks of ice,
stalagmites formed by dripping water from the roof are worshipped by
many Hindus who resort here as images of Shiva…..”
Another
traveler, Vigne, in his book “Travels in Kashmir, Ladakh and Iskardu”
writes about the pilgrimage to the sacred spot in detail, clearly
mentioning that “the ceremony at the cave of Amarnath takes place on the
15th of the Hindoo month of Sawan” and that “not only Hindoos of every
rank and caste can be seen collecting together and traveling up the
valley of Liddar towards the celebrated cave……” Vigne visited Kashmir
after his return from Ladakh in 1840-41 and published his book in 1842.
His book makes it very clear that the Amarnath Yatra drew pilgrims from
the whole of India in his time and was undertaken with great enthusiasm.
Again, the great Sikh Guru Arjan Dev is said to have granted land in Amritsar
for the ceremonial departure of Chari, the holy mace of Lord Shiva
which marks the beginning of the Yatra to the Holy Cave . In 1819, the
year in which the Afghan rule came to an end in Kashmir, Pandit Hardas
Tiku “founded the Chhawni Anmarnath at Ram Bagh in Srinagar where the
Sadhus from the plains assembled and where he gave them free rations for
the journey, both ways from his own private resources”, as the noted
Kashmiri naturalist Pandit Samsar Chand Kaul has pointed out in his
booklet titled “The Mysterious cave of Amarnath”. Not only this,
Amarnath is deeply enshrined in the Kashmiri folklore also as stories
like that of Soda Wony clearly show. One can, therefore, conclude
without any doubt that the Amaranth Yatra has been going on continuously
for centuries along the traditional route of the Lidder valley and not a
century and a half affair. May be during the Afghan rule when religious persecution
of the Kashmiri Hindus was at its height and they were not allowed to
visit their places of worship the pilgrimage was discontinued for about
fifty or sixty years and during this period the flock of some shepherd
may have strayed into the holy cave, but that in no way makes it of a
recent origin or a show window of so-called Kashmiriat.
The temple is reported to be about 5,000 years old[1] and was mentioned in ancient Hindu texts. The exact manner of discovery of the cave is not known.
The Amarnath Yatra, according to Hindu belief, begins on Ashadha Purnima (day of the Full Moon in the Hindu Month of Ashadha) and ends on Shravana Purnima (day of the full moon in the Hindu month of Shravana).
POSTED BY: VIPUL KOUL
EDITED BY :ASHOK KOUL
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