Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Note on Transliterations
- Introduction
- 1 Current Research on Nāth Yogīs: Further Directions
- 2 Powerful Yogīs: The Successful Quest for Siddhis and Power
- 3 Kingly Corruption and Ascetic Sovereignty in the Telugu Account of the Nine Nāths
- 4 In Siddhis and State: Transformations of Power in Twentieth-Century Gorakhpur Temple Publications
- 5 The Search for the Jugi Caste in Pre-Colonial Bengal
- 6 Back When We Were Brahmins: Historical and Caste Critique Among Bengali Householder Nāths
- 7 Shades of Power: The Nāth Yogīs in Nepal
- 8 Yogī, Paṇḍit, and Rāṣṭra-Bhakta: Some Reconstructions of Yogī Naraharināth’s Religious Career
- 9 The Evocative Partnerships of a Monastic Nāth Temple in Contemporary Rajasthan
- 10 Towards a Nāth Re-Appropriation of Haṭha-Yoga
- Index
6 - Back When We Were Brahmins: Historical and CasteCritique Among Bengali Householder Nāths
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Note on Transliterations
- Introduction
- 1 Current Research on Nāth Yogīs: Further Directions
- 2 Powerful Yogīs: The Successful Quest for Siddhis and Power
- 3 Kingly Corruption and Ascetic Sovereignty in the Telugu Account of the Nine Nāths
- 4 In Siddhis and State: Transformations of Power in Twentieth-Century Gorakhpur Temple Publications
- 5 The Search for the Jugi Caste in Pre-Colonial Bengal
- 6 Back When We Were Brahmins: Historical and Caste Critique Among Bengali Householder Nāths
- 7 Shades of Power: The Nāth Yogīs in Nepal
- 8 Yogī, Paṇḍit, and Rāṣṭra-Bhakta: Some Reconstructions of Yogī Naraharināth’s Religious Career
- 9 The Evocative Partnerships of a Monastic Nāth Temple in Contemporary Rajasthan
- 10 Towards a Nāth Re-Appropriation of Haṭha-Yoga
- Index
Summary
Abstracts
In much of India, including Bengal,Nāth/Yogī/Jogī are officially designated BackwardCastes. This chapter addresses a Sanskritizingmovement that has developed among householderNāths in West Bengal since the early twentiethcentury, considering particularly how authors andorganizers affiliated with the All-India RudrajaNath Brahmin Association use historical argumentsto support their contention that they are in fact“Rudraja” Brahmins. Implicit in their claim is acritique of how caste has been practiced in Bengalsince the twelfth century, since the NBRNBS,promotes the idea that Brahmin Nāths were unjustlydeclared avarṇa bythe Sena monarch Ballāla Sena, the reorganizer ofBengali Hindu society. This chapter explores thesomewhat paradoxical approach to caste and Hinduidentity in the NBRNBS's advocacy.
Keywords: Brahmin Yogī, Nāth, caste,householder, Bengal, Sena, kulīn
The entry for Jugis/Jogis in Herbert Risley's 1892report on the British government's EthnographicSurvey of Bengal identifies this householdercommunity as “a weaving caste” before turning to thequestion of their origins, which Risley deems“extremely obscure”. Judging that “since thebeginning of the century no fresh facts have beenadded” to the surveys conducted in 1807-1809 byFrancis Buchanan, he repeated the latter'sspeculation that the Jogis “were either thepriesthood of the country during the reign of thedynasty to which Gopí Chandra belonged, or Ṣúdrasdedicated to a religious life, but degraded by thegreat Ṣaiva reformer Ṣankara Áchárya, and thatthey came with the Pál Rájás from Western India”(Risley 1892, 355). This loaded but scattershotstatement contains several themes still fundamentalto discourse on the historical and present socialstanding of the Jogī/Yogī/Nāth community in Bengal:the idea (which is central to this chapter) thatthey were previously priests; the use of Nāthreligious literature (e.g., Gopīcandra songs) toreconstruct the community's history; the notion oftheir having been “degraded” to a low status by anagent of orthodox Hindu reform; links to non-Nāthascetic traditions including the Daśnāmī sampradāya (religiousorder) supposedly founded by Śaṅkarācārya; andassociation with the hybrid-Buddhist culture ofBengal under the Pāla Empire of the eighth toeleventh centuries.
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- The Power of the Nath YogisYogic Charisma, Political Influence and SocialAuthority, pp. 163 - 196Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022