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One Mother, everywhere
You've often heard of God, the Father, creator of the universe.
Have you ever heard of God, the Mother? Mothers create too, don't
they? -- even more than fathers, because we draw our very life
and nourishment from them. So, do not be surprised that in some
countries and among some people, God is also worshiped as "Mother".
This is especially true in India. Over there, October is the time
when the year's crops of vegetables, grains and fruits are harvested.
In the festival to celebrate this many people gather around images
of "the Mother" -- beautiful, painted and decorated
forms depicting the Divine Mother, looking just as they have imagined
(or perhaps seen) Her, for centuries. They praise Her and sing
hymns and dance in honor of Her who has given them land and crop,
cattle and goods. In short, everything has come from the hand
of the Mother, who is Creator, Sustainer and Dissolver of it all.
Here are two stories often told, about how one little boy,
son of the Divine Mother Durga, discovered Her true nature. His
name was Ganesha. He is considered to have been very wise, which
is one reason he's shown in pictures with the head of an elephant!
Ganesha went outdoors one day to play and found a stray cat.
Too small to know better, he began to pull her ears and tail.
He roughed up that poor cat and even began to beat her with a
stick, making marks on her head till, yowling, she ran for her
life. Some hours later Ganesha went into the house. His mother,
to his astonishment and dismay, was looking terrible. Her hair
was a mess, she had scratches on her face and she limped from
the bruises on her body.
"Mom!" cried Ganesha. "Who beat you up?"
Sadly Sri Durga replied, "It was you, I'm afraid."
"No way! What do you mean? I never did it!"
"Do you remember, his mother asked, "a while ago,
how you treated a certain cat?"
Now Ganesha though that the cat's owner must have come and
beat Mother Durga on account of him, and he burst into tears.
"Where is that man?" he sobbed.
"No, not that. You see, my boy, I am not just your physical
mother. I have filled the whole universe with My Being. As a matter
of fact, whatever you do to any least part of it, you do that
to Me."
Some years later the Mother was sitting in her dressing room
in a very lofty mood. She had recently been meditating and in
that mood had become quite conscious of her own divinity. Now
she put around her neck a lovely necklace of gems, a gift from
her husband, Shiva. But seeing Ganesha and her other son, Kartik
(Karteek), playing nearby, she said to them "Look, I will
give this precious necklace to whichever of you comes back first,
after traveling all around the universe. So run this race, but
cover every mile of the universe."
Kartik immediately dropped what he was doing, went out, and
finding the animal he most liked to ride upon (which was a magic
steed), he set off on the long journey. He went as fast as he
could, over the earth, out to the moon and planets, sailed through
the galaxies and visited the asteroids, even peeping into a black
hole or two. Almost exhausted, he recalled that he had to save
energy enough to return. When Kartik finally reached home he saw
his brother was already wearing the necklace of gems! Ganesha,
you see, had become much wiser now: he had simply gone all the
way around his Mother's body and then bowed down before Her. He
knew full well that apart from Her there was no universe.
Puranas
Aum
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