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Difference between revisions of "Rakshasa"

 
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[[Category:Vampires]]
[[Category:Vampires]]
[[Category:Shapeshifters]]
[[Category:Shapeshifters]]
[[Category:Demons]]

Revision as of 14:28, 21 January 2007

A rakshasa (alternately, raksasa or rakshas) is a demon or unrighteous spirit in Hinduism. A female rakshasa is called a rakshasi, and a female rakshasa in human form is a manushya-rakshasi.


From Kashmire, XVIIth


Nature

Etymology

Sanskrit: रा॑क्षसः, rā́kṣasaḥ

The Rakshasas have a great many epithets descriptive of their characters and actions. They are called Anusaras, Asaras, and Hanushas, 'killers or hurters;' Ishtipachas, 'stealers of offerings;' Sandhyabalas, 'strong in twilight;' Kshapatas, Naktancharas, Ratricharas, and Samanishadas, 'night-walkers;' Nrijagdas or Nrichakshas, 'cannibals;' Palalas, Paladas, Palankashas, Kravyads, 'carnivorous;' Asrapas, Asrikpas, Kaunapas, Kilalapas, and Raktapas, 'blood-drinkers;' Dandasukas, 'biters;' Praghasas, 'gluttons;' Malinamukhas, 'black-faced;' Karburas, etc. But many of these epithets are not reserved exclusively for Rakshasas.


Family

They are not all equally bad, but have been classified as of three types: one as a set of beings like the Yakshas, another as a sort of Titans or enemies of the gods, and lastly, as blood-drinking ghouls which has become the most common use.


Behavior

In the popular lore, rakshasas are demons and fiends who haunt cemeteries, disturb sacrifices, harass priests, possess and devour human beings, and vex and afflict mankind in all sorts of ways. They are said to drink blood and preferred to attack infants and pregnant women.


Description/Morphology

When they show up as monsters, they are usually described as yellow, green, or blue with vertical slits for eyes, large bellies, fangs and poisonous fingernails. They also stink because they feed on human flesh and spoiled food.


Powers/Weaknesses

Rakshasas have the power to change their shape at will and appear as animals (large birds), as monsters, or in the case of the female demons, as beautiful women. Hanuman, during a visit to the rakshasas' home in Lanka, observed that the demons could come in any form imaginable. It is believed that many Rakshasa were particularly wicked humans in previous incarnations. They are most powerful in the evening, particularly during the dark period of the new moon, but they are dispelled by the rising sun.



History/Beliefs

Origin

They are descended, like Ravana himself, from the sage Pulastya. The Vishnu Purana also makes them descendants of Kasyapa and Khasa, a daughter of Daksha, through their son Rakshas. Other sources refer to the rakshasas as children of the Vedic goddess of death, Nirriti, and her consort Nirrita.

According to the Ramayana they sprang from Brahma's foot. When Brahma created the waters, he formed certain beings to guard them who were called Rakshasas (from the root raksh, to guard).



Famous

  • The great ten-headed demon Ravana, enemy of Rama, was king of the rakshasas.
  • Narantaka (or Narantak) is one of the sons of the demon king Ravana, in charge of an army consisting of seventy-two crore (720 million) rakshasas. They were eventually defeated by Hanuman.
  • Ravana’s younger brother Vibhishana was a rare good-hearted rakshasa; he was exiled by his brother the king, who was displeased by his behavior. Vibhishana later became an ally of Rama and a ruler in Lanka. Other notable rakshasas include the guardian god Nairitya, who is associated with the southwest direction.
  • Jatasura (जटासुर) was a Rakshasa who disguised himself as a Brahman and carried Yudhishthira, Sahadeva, Nakula, and Draupadi. He was overtaken and killed by Bhima.
  • Ghatotkacha (Sanskrit घटोत्कच), as per the Mahabharata epic, was the son of Bhima and Hidimbi. His maternal parentage made him half-Rakshasa, and gave him many magical powers that made him an important fighter in the Kurukshetra war, the climax of the epic.
  • In the Ramayana, Prahasta (Sanskrit:प्रहस्‍त) was a powerful Rakshasa warrior and chief commander of Ravana's army of Lanka.

By other accounts, he was a son of Ravana and Mandodari. Prahasta leds Ravana's army in the wars against Yama, Kubera and the Devas, and the Asuras and Daityas, through which Ravana establishes his sovereignty over the three worlds. He also leads the initial Lankan response to the invasion led by Rama, Lakshmana, Sugriva and the Vanara Army. Prahasta is slain by Rama during the Ramayana war.


Stories

When Hanuman entered the city of Lanka to reconnoiter in the form of a cat, he saw that "the Rakshasas sleeping in the houses were of every shape and form. Some of them disgusted the eye, while some were beautiful to look upon. Some had long arms and frightful shapes; some were very fat and some were very lean; some were mere dwarfs and some were prodigiously tall. Some had only one eye and others only one ear. Some had monstrous bellies, hanging breasts, long projecting teeth, and crooked thighs; whilst others were exceedingly beautiful to behold and clothed in great splendour. Some had two legs, some three legs, and some four legs. Some had the heads of serpents, some the heads of donkeys, some the heads of horses, and some the heads of elephants." - (Ramayana.)


In the Mahabharata, Ghatotkacha was summoned by Bhima to fight on the Pandava side in the Kurukshetra battle. Invoking his magical powers, he wrought great havoc in the Kaurava army. In particular after the death of Jayadratha, when the battle continued on past sunset, his powers were at their most effective (at night).
At this point in the battle, the Kaurava leader Duryodhana appealed to his best fighter, Karna, to kill Ghatotkacha as the whole Kaurava army was coming close to annihilation due to his ceaseless strikes from the air. Karna possessed a divine weapon, or shakti, granted by the god Indra. It could be used only once, and Karna had been saving it to use on his arch-enemy, the best Pandava fighter, Arjuna.
Loyal Karna, unable to refuse the request of Duryodhana whose cause he had pledged himself to serve, hurled the missile at Ghatotkacha, killing him[3]. This is considered to be the turning point of the war. After his death, the Pandava counselor Krishna smiled, as he considered the war to have been won for the Pandavas now that Karna no longer had a divine weapon to use in fighting Arjuna.



Theories about origin and existence

It is thought that the Rakshasas of the epic poems were the rude and cannibalistic barbarian races of India who were subdued by the Aryans.