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Death for Ideals and Veneration for Death: Martyrdom and Its Possible Models in Indian Culture

https://doi.org/10.22394/2073-7203-2022-40-1-150-175

Abstract

This article is an attempt to analyze the problem of understanding and defining the phenomenon of martyrdom in relation to the history and culture of India. The application of the concept of “martyrdom” to different (in particular, non‑Abrahamic) religions and to different societies poses a number of problems related to the cross‑cultural conceptualization of this phenomenon and the application of the very term “martyrdom” or its analogues to those cultures where such a concept was initially absent. Being originally Christian, the concept of martyrdom undergoes all kinds of transformations and modifications as applied to different contexts. We therefore start with defining some key criteria of the phenomenon. First, it is the presence of external forces and circumstances causing the death of a martyr; second, it is a reference to some good ideas or goals for which the martyr died; third, it is a posthumous memory and veneration, directly related to the death of a martyr who thus becomes a role model. The authors single out three possible models of martyrdom, known in the history and culture of India: shahadat — suffering and death for one’s beliefs, both religious and political, underlying the modern Indian national “pantheon” of martyrs; the kshatriya model, associated with military ethics; and the vernacular model, which underlies the formation of locally worshiped deities and deified heroes.

About the Authors

S. Ryzhakova
Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Federation

Svetlana Ryzhakova — Leading Research Fellow

Moscow



E. Renkovskaya
Institute of Linguistics, Russian Academy of Sciences 
Russian Federation

Evgeniya Renkovskaya — Research Fellow, Minority Language Research and Preservation Lab

Moscow



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Review

For citations:


Ryzhakova S., Renkovskaya E. Death for Ideals and Veneration for Death: Martyrdom and Its Possible Models in Indian Culture. State, Religion and Church in Russia and Worldwide. 2022;40(1):150-175. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22394/2073-7203-2022-40-1-150-175

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