Caṇḍīdās

Caṇḍīdās

▪ Indian poet
flourished 15th century, Bengal, India

      poet whose love songs addressed to the washerwoman Rāmī were popular in the medieval period and were a source of inspiration to Vaiṣṇava and Sahajiyā religious movements that explored parallels between human and divine love.

      The popularity of Caṇḍīdās' songs inspired much imitation, making it difficult to establish firmly the identity of the poet. Furthermore, the details of his life have been overlaid with legend. The poems themselves relate that the author was a Brahman and a village priest (in either the village Chhātna in Bānkura district or Nannur in Bīrbhūm district) who broke with tradition by openly declaring his love for the low-caste Rāmī. The lovers viewed their relationship as sacred, the closest possible analogy to the spiritual union of the divine lovers Rādhā and Krishna. Caṇḍīdās refused to relinquish either his temple duties or his love for Rāmī, much to the chagrin of his family. A feast to placate the village Brahmans was prepared but was thrown into confusion by the unexpected appearance of Rāmī.

      What happened afterward is obscured by legend. One version relates that Caṇḍīdās assumed the form of Vishnu; another claims that he was dismissed as priest and fasted to death as a protest but came to life again on the funeral pyre. A third version (based on poems supposedly written by Rāmī) states that he was whipped to death while tied to the back of an elephant, on the orders of the nawab of Gaur, for having attracted the attention of the Begum.

      The poetry of Caṇḍīdās had a strong influence on later Bengali art, literature, and religious thought. In the sahajiyā (Sanskrit: “natural”) movement of the 16th-century Sahajīya cult, religious experience was pursued through the senses, and the love of a man for the wife of another or for a woman of unsuitably low caste was praised above others for its intensity in the face of social disapproval.

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