Killing for ‘Mother’ Kali
For the magic to work, the killing had to be done just right. If the goddess were to grant Khudu Karmakar the awesome powers he expected from a virgin’s death, the victim had to be willing, had to know what was happening, watch the knife, and not stop it. But even tranquilizers couldn’t lull 15-year-old Manju Kumari to her fate. In his police confession, Karmakar says his wife, daughter and three accomplices had to gag Manju and pin her down on the earthen floor before the shrine. In ritual order, Karmakar wafted incense over her, tore off her blue skirt and pink T shirt, shaved her, sprinkled her with holy water from the Ganges and rubbed her with cooking fat. Then chanting mantras to the “mother” goddess Kali, he sawed off Manju’s hands, breasts and left foot, placing the body parts in front of a photograph of a blood-soaked Kali idol. Police say the arcs of blood on the walls suggest Manju bled to death in minutes.
Human sacrifice has always been an anomaly in India. Even 200 years ago, when a boy was killed every day at a Kali temple in Calcutta, blood cults were at odds with a benign Hindu spiritualism that celebrates abstinence and vegetarianism. But Kali is different. A ferocious slayer of evil in Hindu mythology, the goddess is said to have an insatiable appetite for blood. With the law on killing people more strictly enforced today, ersatz substitutes now stand in for humans when sacrifice is required. Most Kali temples have settled on large pumpkins to represent a human body; other followers slit the throats of two-meter-tall human effigies made of flour, or of animals such as goats.
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In secret ceremonies, however, the grizzly practice lives on. Quite simply, say the faithful known as tantrics Kali looks after those who look after her, bringing riches to the poor, revenge to the oppressed and newborn joy to the childless. So far this year, police have recorded at least one case of ritual killing a month. In January, in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, a 24-year-old woman hacked her three-year-old son to death after a tantric sorcerer supposedly promised unlimited earthly riches. In February, two men in the eastern state of Tripura beheaded a woman on the instructions of a deity they said appeared in their dreams promising hidden treasures. Karmakar killed Manju in Atapur village in Jharkhand state in April. The following month, police dug up the remains of two sisters, aged 18 and 13, in Bihar, dismembered with a ceremonial sword and offered to Kali by their father. Last week on the outskirts of Bombay, maize seller Anil Lakshmikant Singh, 33, beheaded his neighbor’s nine-year-old son to save his marriage on the advice of a tantric. Said Singh: “He promised that a human sacrifice would end all my miseries.” |
Far from ancient barbarisms that refuse to die, sacrifice and sorcery are making a comeback. Sociologists explain the millions who now throng the two main Kali centers in eastern India, at Kamakhya and Tarapith, as what happens when the rat race that is India’s future meets the superstitions of its past. Sociologist Ashis Nandy says: “You see your neighbor doing well, above his caste and position, and someone tells you to get a child and do a secret ritual and you can catch up.” Adds mysticism expert Ipsita Roy Chakaraverti: “It’s got nothing to do with real mysticism or with spiritualism. It comes down to pure and simple greed.” Tarapith in particular is a giant building site of new hotels, restaurants and stalls selling plastic swords and postcards of Kali’s severed feet. Judging by the visitors here, Kali appeals to both rich and poor: the rows of SUVs parked outside four-star hotels belong to the ranks of businessmen and politicians lining up with their goats behind penniless pilgrims. (“The blood never dries at Tarapith,” whispers one villager.)
There are no human sacrifices at the temple these days. But the mystique of ritual killing is so powerful that even those who actually don’t perform it claim to do so. In their camp in the cremation grounds beside the temple, a throng of tantrics tout for business by competing to be as spooky as possible, lining their mud-walled temples with human skulls and telling tall tales of human sacrifice. “I cut off her head,” says 64-year-old Baba Swami Vivekanand of a girl he says he raised from birth. “We buried the body and brought the head back, cooked it and ate it.” He pauses to demand a $2 donation. “Good story, no?” While most of this is innocent, some followers, like Karmakar, are inevitably emboldened to take their quest for power to the extreme. Karmakar, like many others, was caught. But in the dust-bowl villages of India, where superstition reigns and blood has a dark authority, the question is how many other “holy men” have found that ultimate power still rests in the murderous magic of a virgin sacrifice.
Reference: Monday July 22, 2002:
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,322673,00.html#ixzz2FrVdbvdc
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http://www.nnnforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=10326
Man sacrifices wife for kali, eats her tongue
Press Trust of India
Posted online: Friday, July 09, 2004 at 1627 hours IST
Dehradun, July 9: A woman was hacked to death allegedly by her husband to propitiate goddess kali to “cure” their son who was said to be under influence of a ghost in the Rajpur area of the city.
Bharat Lal was offering prayers at the kali temple along with his wife Kamla Devi when he hacked her to death with a sharp-edged weapon on Thursday evening as the couple’s three children watched, police said.
Lal also cut off his wife’s tongue and ate it before setting her body afire. The gory incident took place in t
e presence of the couple’s three children. Lal has been arrested and a case of murder has been against him.
During interrogation Lal admitted to killing his wife.
http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?…eats~her~tongue
#2
07-14-2004, 01:33 PM
albion
Top Reporter
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 494
Mother Kali is known as Kali-Ma, the Black Goddess, Maha Kali, Nitya Kali, Smashana Kali, Raksha Kali, Shyama Kali, Kalikamata, and Kalaratri. Among the Tamils she is known as Kottavei. Maha Kali and Nitya Kali are mentioned in the Tantra philosophy. ‘Kal’ means Darkness; Kali takes away that Darkness. She takes away the darkness from every individual who strives in the path of perfection by performing the spiritual disciplines of purifying austerities. Just as all the colors of the spectrum mix into black, yet still black remains black, so too, Kali, who is completely Dark, Unknowable, takes away all the Darkness, yet She, Herself, remains unchanged.
[img]http://www.kateca
twright.com/kali_card.jpg[/img]
‘Kal’ also translates as Time and ‘i’ means the Cause; Kali, the Cause of Time or She Who is Beyond Time, activat
es Consciousness to perception, allows Consciousness to perceive. See Kalpa as well as Indra
‘s Jeweled Net.
Kali’s nudity implies a similar meaning. In many instances she is described as garbed in space or sky clad. In her absolute, primordial nakedness she is free from all covering of illusion (see Digambara). She is Nature (Prakriti in Sanskrit), stripped of ‘clothes’. It symbolizes that she is completely beyond name and form, completely beyond the illusory effects of maya (false consciousness). Her nudity is said to represent totally illumined consciousness, unaffected by maya. Kali is the bright fire of truth, which cannot be hidden by the clothes of ignorance.
Her disheveled hair forms a curtain of illusion, the fabric of space – time which organizes matter out of the ch
aotic sea of quantum-foam. Her garland of fifty human heads, each representing one of the fifty letters of the Sanskrit alphabet, symbolizes the repository of knowledge and wisdom while the heads themse
lves represent impure thoughts, which She has severed from the personalities of Her devotees. She cuts down
all the conflicting concepts which debate their various ideologies within the arena of mind, silences the tumultuous roar of mental conflict and the anguish of egotistical attachment, takes the physical manifestations to Herself, and makes a garland of perplexity. Thus She wears all Karma as an ornament, while She stops the chattering voices of the active mind, so that Her devotees can experience the purity of inner peace in the absorption of solitude.
As the Destroyer of Madhu and Khaitabha, Too Much and Too Little, She puts Her devotees in the balance of divine meditation.
#3
08-17-2004, 08:58 PM
Whitebear
Publisher/Editor-in-chief
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Northern California Republic
Posts: 9,519
Killing for ‘Mother’ Kali
It was at most a fringe practice, but a spate of ritual killings in India
shows that human sacrifice lives on
BY ALEX PERRY ATAPUR
For the magic to work, the killing had to be done just right. If the goddess were to grant Khudu Karmakar the awesome powers he expected from a virgin’s death, the victim had to be willing, had to know what was ha
pening, watch the knife, and not stop it. But even tranquilizers couldn’t lull 15-year-old Manju Kumari to her fate. In his police confession, Karmakar says his wife, daughter and three accomplices had
to gag Manju and pin her down on the earthen floor before the shrine. In ritual order, Karmakar wafted incense over her,
tore off her blue skirt and pink T shirt, shaved her, sprinkled her with holy water from the Ganges and rubbed her with cooking fat. Then chanting mantras to the “mother” goddess Kali, he sawed off Manju’s hands, breasts and left foot, placing the body parts in front of a photograph of a blood-soaked Kali idol. Police say the arcs of blood on the walls suggest Manju bled to death in minutes.
Human sacrifice is still practiced all over the world today
Killing for
‘Mother’ Kali
In secret ceremonies, however, the grizzly practice lives on. Quite simply, say the faithful
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