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On Fakir Lalon Shah

Saturday, 29 November 2008


Lalon‘s origin is not known. No one knows where he was born, who his parents were, which
religious, ethnic or cultural communities he belonged to. A farmer found him in the Kaliganga
river, a tributary of Ganga, that flowed through Kushtia, but has since dried out; he was a fifteen
to sixteen year old boy when he was found, nearly dying from smallpox when Malam, a farmer in
Cheuria, Kushtia, discovered him early in the morning lying between the muddy edge of the river
and the splash of the water flow. Malam called his wife Matijan and took Lalon to their house,
treated and took care of him and brought him back to health.

That his life was surviving in between soil and water, in between elemental realities of material
being but as non-being, arouses very deep symbolic meaning among Lalon’s followers. That’s the
reason why the symbolic narrative about the origin of Lalon became integral to Lalon’s philosophy
as well: his birth is both known and unknown. It is known because he came from water, from
Kaliganga river, but he is still unknown since he was practically dead and what Malam received is
a being hanging in between the river mud and slash of the water. Except this real story of his
‘birth’ no one knows where he belonged.

Malam and Matijan had no children. They both felt deep affection for the boy who was by then
affected badly by the deadly bacterial attack, particularly in the face. Lalon lost an eye to small
pox. The care and love Lalon received from Malam and Matijan helped him to recover well and
for the rest of his life the couple was his family. Matijan and Malam’s household became his place
of re-searching, learning and articulating the wisdom of life.

When the wisdom of Lalon started to become obvious he drew many disciples. But it was Matijan,
it seems, who was the first devotee to grasp Lalon. In recognition of her wisdom, love and
motherly care Lalon did instruct that Matijan be buried next to him. In fact, and it is important to
note, Lalon’s shrine should be named as Matijan-Lalon shrine – and that was the wish of Lalon;
but this wish remained unfulfilled because of the dominance of patriarchal culture in the society,
despite the fact that to the Lalon followers it is the shrine where Lalon and Matijan are sleeping
side by side and Malam is also buried along with Lalon’s other close disciples.

Lalon died at the age of 116 years. On the first of the Bengali month Kartik (mid October). The
day he was ready to say good bye to his disciples it was a kind of celebration in songs and joy.
Lalon did not believe there was anything beyond death, but death was a personal event, an
experience that remained beyond language. No one could taste death for others. So he was
anxious to develop a cultural encounter with death to destroy its theological spectre.

It is said that he was singing a song when the time arrived for him to leave. ‘I am going’ – he said
to his disciples. It is sung throughout a whole night. For Lalon, death was not something fearful,
as theologians have made people believe. You have to prepare happily for death. This is a
cultural preparation. Dying is like a marriage. Something you look forward to. Fear of death must
be overcome. Therefore the white colour signifies the preparation for death, a cultural thing and
not any so-called spiritual emblem.

He lived a very healthy life, taking care of health very meticulously and developed a food system
which is unique in Bengal. It is inspired by the Vaishnavites of Bengal, but unlike Vaishanavs and
Brahmins, Lalon rejected the idea of food hierarchies or in other words vegetarianism. If one
starts making hierarchies in food system sooner or later it is reproduced as social hierarchies, into
caste systems, or vice versa. His food system was based on metaphoric avoidance of certain
food since food is also a symbol and element of language. One should avoid meat if animal in
any culture is metaphorically seen as devoid of control of emotion and biological propensities. He
was not an ascetic and not a vegetarian. Vegetarianism in Bengal was associated with
Brahmanism and Lalon did not believe in the food regime of ‘pure and impure food’ of the higher
castes.
To the Lalon followers the proper name ‘Lalon’ is immortal and will generate a plethora of
meanings if the name is evoked in any social context and will guide people to journeys to joyful
lifestyles, although, bodily, he disappeared. Lalon appeared as an idea in flesh and blood and
such appearance is known as ‘abirvhab’; accordingly the death or the disappearance is called
‘tirodhan’. These terms are full of philosophical implications.

It is interesting to note that the biological act of birth has no meaning as such to Lalon or Lalon’s
followers, it is the appearance of the wisdom in the biological forms and our capacity to transcend
the naturally given biological being, the event of ‘appearing’, that we should look for. This event is
to be celebrated, not the birth. So Lalon has no birth date, no one knows when he was born. But
when the proper name ‘Lalon’ appeared as the symbol of wisdom, we instantly realise that an
event had been born in time, place and in specific being. This event could never be erased by
death or time. This event is known in Lalon’s philosophy as ‘Shahaj Manush’, literally means
‘simple appearing of being’ but went deeper than the preceding Vaishnava movements known as
‘Shahajiyas’.

Hindus claimed Lalon as their own as did Muslims. Both communities wanted to communalise
him, after his name became a household word. Communalisation of his birth is a possibility he
anticipated in his life time and that is the reason he never revealed his identity. His followers were
humble people and their protests went unheard because of intense communal claims by two
religious communities. Hindus said he was a Kayastha, adopted by a Muslim guru, and Muslims
said he was a Muslim by birth. Yet Lalon never revealed his guru. He just continued to live with
Matijan and Malam, who adopted him as their son and later as their Guru, throughout his life. He
was not very widely known during his life time, although he was noted by many eminent writers
and intellectuals of his time, such as Rabindranath Tagore.

However, Lalon did not search contact with the middle and upper class. He did not even want to
come near Rabindranath Tagore, because Tagore came from a Zamindar family. When Tagore
invited him, he did not go; both lived around the same time in Bengal. Another famous man of
that time was Ramakrishna.

But Lalon could never become like Ramkrishna, charming the elites of Kolkata. All his life he
lived at the outskirts of Kushtia.
Lalon was against all forms of socio-economic hierarchy, caste, class, and gender and any
forms of politics of identity based on race, nationality, etc. He did not believe in divisions
according to jat (caste), path (hierarchies by which who can accept food and water from whom),
class, patriarchy, religion and nation.

Lalon was not a nationalist, despite the fact the anti-colonial nationalist movement was
fomenting in the subcontinent. It does not imply that he is not against colonial oppression, of
course he was; he was against all forms of oppression. However, when the oppressed constitutes
an identity as a necessary tool to encounter the oppressor, the identity overtakes the universality
of human beings. Perhaps he saw the danger in identity politics decaying into fetish. It is a
hindrance to resolve human conflicts and go beyond the difference to celebrate the unity of the
human beings.

When he was found by Malam and Matijan, Lalon was already a grown up boy and it is obvious
that he knew about his family, his village and his community. Nevertheless, he never revealed his
family background or the so called ‘identity’. This act of non-disclosure of his origin that Lalon
maintained all of his life is highly political. Living in a society violently divided by caste, hierarchy
and communal division, Lalon knew very well that the so-called natural origins or birth histories
always create social meaning and produce politics of identities. He was vehemently opposed to
caste, all forms of social and economic hierarchies, communal identities or all forms of social
difference that might carry slightest potential to breed political division in the society. No wonder,
he wrote many songs against caste, family status and hierarchy. He adopted the name ‘Lalon’, a
curious choice – it could be a name belonging to any community and could also be a name of a
woman.
Lalon is brilliant in raising very fundamental issues relating to woman-man relationships playing
on the margin between biological and the social construction of this relation. The famous song
‘mayere bhajile hoy tar baper thikana’ is based on a story known in rural Bengal. Parvati, one of
the great Hindu Mother-Goddesses, the wife of Mohadeva or Shiva, was once asked by her
husband about the origin of the world. ‘Is it from the masculine or the feminine principle?’
Mohadeva asked Parvati. Parvati thought for a while, but decided consciously not to reply, she
went into ‘silence’. Why? Because if she said the world originated from women, implying her, she
will be a sinner for being a bad wife, since patriarchal rules were dominant. On the other hand, if
she said it is from the masculine principle, implying Shiva, she will become a liar. So her ‘silence’
became her words, or her words are constructed by her silence. Silence is the the feminine
punctuation in the masculine discourse and it must be rewritten as a methodology known in
Lalon’s philosophy as the ‘nigam bichar’. It is the task of the sadhus or the saints to read the
‘silence’ and break the dominant structure of the existing discourse.

Most importantly, Lalon raised the difficult methodological question of addressing the biological
difference between men and women and the social meaning they produce in different social
contexts constituting various forms of patriarchal hierarchies between women and men. The
famous song, ‘mayere bhajile hoy tar baper thikana’ is a brilliant example. The meaning of the
Father is revealed only through the naming the name of the Mother and that is indeed the task of
the real wisdom, he claimed. The philosophical twist of the Bengali word ‘bhajana’ is almost
impossible to translate into other languages. ‘Mayere bhajile’ literally means ‘worshipping
mothers’ but Lalon was meaning completely opposite of deifying the women as Devi, but inviting
intellectual and meditative engagement to reveal the meaning of being Mother (not motherhood).
Mother signifies the origin of all beings both as the ceaseless process (Prakriti), as well as the
subject of the process. Father or Shiva is not an independent entity outside Mother, or Parvati,
but integral to the notion of Mother. So, one knows Father only by knowing the Mother.

He did not use the concept nari (woman), but always referred to “mother-father“ dialectics. ‘If
you want to know the father you have to worship mother’ – an unconditional submission to the
feminine principle is demanded by his philosophy and the lifestyle.
He was familiar with Hindu as well as with Muslim religion and mythology and used both freely
in his talks and songs. Thus, the Hindu god Krishna played a great role in his songs.
About Lalon’s philosophical and mystic school
Chaitanya Mohaprabhu or Lord Sri Chaitanya was born at Nabadwip, a small village in
undivided Bengal and the district it belonged was known as ‘Nadia’. The present district of
Kushtia where we have Lalon’s shrine was indeed part of Nadia. Nabadwip means New Island
that rose from the river Ganga. Lalon carried the philosophical legacies of Nadia. It is not merely
a geography, an administrative district, but the history of a unique formation where Islam in the
Eastern part of India grounded itself, encountered and mingled with Jainism, Buddhism, Hinduism
and other religions and cultural practices and generated great literary, philosophical and the
cultural movement Bengalis are proud of. Nadia was the center of learning, the great place for
Indian Logic, Sankhya and Baisheshik philosophy and a strong oral tradition of dissemination of
knowledge. The theoretical and the philosophical sophistication of Lalon was not surprising at all,
if we remain aware of the glory of Nadia.

It is said that Lalon belonged to the ‘Nadia’school of Vaishnavism retaining all the legacies of
Bengal’s Tantric tradition. It is partly true, but wrong because he is also a break in the Nadia
school. Broadly speaking, there were two paradigms in Vaishnavism recognised by Lalon
followers: the Brindavan school and the Nadia school. They would argue that after Chaitanya, the
great spiritual leader of Vaishnavism left Nadia for Brindabon leaving Nadia in charge of
Nityananda, the struggle against caste and social hierarchies continued. Nityananda is the great
Guru of Bengal’s tantric, bhakti and socio-political movement of the most oppressed. He was one
of the trinity, in Bengal known as ‘tin pagol’, or three mad men of Bengal, the other was
Aidaitacharya. Needless to mention that they infused different elements in the Nadia school, but
the movement took specific character under the leadership of Nityananda, followed by his son
Birbhadra and a Muslim woman known as Madhab bibi. This is the reason why all the spiritual
movements of Bengal that grew from the grass root and articulated the voice of the subalterns,
invariably refers to Nityanada as the Guru of all Gurus of wisdom. Because, they claim, it is
Nityananda and not Chaitanya, the great logician and master in linguistic and rhetoric or the great
Brahmin scholar Aidaityacharya – both coming from the higher caste Brahmin family, was central
to the great philosophical revolution in Bengal that started with Chaitanya’s appearance in Nadia.
Even until today any subaltern socio-spiritual movement articulating in songs, known in Bengal as
‘bauls’ or ‘bayatis’ will first offer his or her song to Nityananda.

In contrast to Nadia, the Brindabon school appropriated the glory of Chaitanya to turn his
teachings into a canonical ‘shastra’ (religious discipline) of Vaishanavism. Two types of
transformations took place: (a) oral to the textual – the oral tradition of knowledge production
through songs, theatrical performances and social mobilisation had been turned into canonical
texts; (b) secondly, the religious texts were rendered lifeless, they were taken away from the
popular knowledge practice and were written in Sanskrit. Brindabon is therefore a returning back
to the caste ridden Hindu tradition to become an integral part of Hinduism. Chaitanya was uplifted
again to the upper caste, this has always remained the complain of the school developed after
Nityananda in Nadia and culminated in the figure we now know as Fakir Lalon Shah. The
Brindavan school is popular among middle and upper classes and castes and accepted to
Brahmanism. Nadia rejected Brahmanism all along. And so did Brindabon and the profound
philosophical turns in Nadia has been systematically ignored and silenced by the educated elite
of Bengal by simply referring them as ‘Lok Sangeet’ – folk songs. Fakir Lalon and others are
simply known as ‘bauls’ — a misused and abusive term by the upper caste and upper class elite
implying that these philosophical utterances rendered in songs should simply be treated as
musical performances by some lowly rural minstrel who resigned on life and has nothing to do in
the real material world. Their musicals are overly sad overtures of some poor fellows that often
break your heart!

Having said this, we must also say it categorically that Lalon was not a mystic, in the sense of,
let’s say, Jalaluddin Rumi as a mystic. He is strongly grounded in the philosophical traditions of
Bengal and one can easily make sense of him. To produce meanings of Lalon’s poetico-
philosophical statements, that could also be sung, one must have some basic readings in
Chaitanya teachings, an understanding of the difference between the Shakta and Vaishanava
bhakti movements, Navya Naya (or Bengal’s logical systems), Shankhya philosophy and good
command over Islamic philosophy and others.

It is very difficult to talk about Tantra because of its vulgar representation and understanding in
the west: a sexual art of maximizing pleasure, which is completely opposite what Lalon would
mean by it. In this ‘exotic’ subcontinent there have been utterly perverse Tantric traditions that
attracted the tourists and the Orientalists, of course. The consumer capitalist society has also
discovered in Tantra a ‘spiritual’ or ‘new age’ justification to practice all kinds of sexual perversion
and packaged them as commodities to sell in the market. Nevertheless, Tantra is a generic term
and there are many Tantras. So, responding to the enquiry ‘Is Lalon a Tantric?’ the reply should
depend what you mean by Tantra or Tantric? Yes Lalon is a Tantric but he is also not a Tantric as
we understand Tantra. He was bitterly critical of Tantra as well, as named his practices as ‘Karan’
– literally meaning practice.
To make our point intelligible, Lalon was a materialist, that is what Tantra meant to him, and he
is situated within the tradition of Nityananda. It means that there is no truth outside the material
body and separation of the human ‘body’ from its capacity to think is simply wrong or absurd. He
would definitely reject the position of Descarte and the whole of western epistemological and
ontological tradition for its false premise ‘I think therefore I am’. He would argue that the ‘body’ is
given to us before we even start thinking; the obsession to be certain of the existence or certainty
of the truth of a statement will have to be assessed by the desire behind such impulse. There is
no truth as such, we become true through the use of our ‘body’ in a self determined way in the
material-historical world – this is the meaning of his Tantra for Lalon. He will also reject western
materialism that began with weird and mystical conception of ‘matter’ in order to reconstitute body
and consciousness by that category remaining eternally forgetful that all these categories are
products of his or her thinking bodies.

The ‘body’ is the universe and the universe is the body — it is the first axiomatic principle of
Tantra. One can easily notice that there nothing about sex or sexuality in this basic premise. So
‘body’ is not an individual entity but a continuum, the challenge is to ‘taste’ the universe in and
through the body as a material being, both as a means as well as the being of all knowing.
To do it well one should remain healthy, must remain conscious about body and follow how the
body behaves under different conditions and how it is related to our faculties, etc. Body has
sexual impulses known in Bangla as ‘Kam’, it is natural. However, the body of the human being
also has the capacity to transform ‘kam’ into ‘prem’ – that is love, love for others. In human bodies
Kam and Prem is mixed together like poison and nectar. It is the task of the wise person to
extract the nectar from the poison. One cannot taste love without the material impulse of the
body, but love transcends the body – and it happens only in the case of human bodies – and that
is his point.

Lalon was not a Sufi at all. Sufi traditions do not have the same ontological or epistemological
premise as Lalon, more so, since Lalon was never theological. Sufis, being a spiritual movement
originated within Islam, can not but accept the existence of Allah before any other being. In love
of Allah Sufis desire to be reunited with the Being of all beings. In contrast Lalon will never
assume a Being outside the given ‘body’ of human beings. Allah is right here in the human shape
to ‘know’ and ‘taste’ himself, Lalon would argue.
Allah Ke bujhe tomar opar Lile
Tumi Apni Allah dako Allah bole
O Allah who could decipher your endless play
You are the Allah but calling for Allah yourself
‘Allah’ is what human beings experiences in their thinking bodies and calling out for that being
in their language and theologies.
He is misunderstood as Sufi because his songs are replete with Arabic words and Islamic
metaphors. However, careful readings reveal that he not only criticised and distanced himself
from Sufis, but offered a quite original interpretation of the meaning of prophethood and the
spiritual mission of Islam – to rediscover Allah in the human body. He never deviated from the
Nadia School, but encountered and absorbed the great Sufi traditions as well as Islamic
philosophy resolving the questions raised by those traditions within his system of thought.

Nevertheless Sufis were his close allies. He never undermined the spiritual strength of Islam
and one is simply astonished to note how the converging and often conflicting trends are being
resolved and absorbed by him. He wrote plenty of songs for Mohammed and similarly plenty for
Chaitanya and Nityananda. His songs interpret the philosophical meaning of Chaitnaya over and
above the appearance of a historical figure. These are known as songs deciphering ‘Gourtattya’.
Similarly, he interpreted in ‘Nabitattya’ – the meaning of the arrival of the last prophet, explained
the significance of the prophethood of Muhammed, the messenger of Islam. Through these songs
he brilliantly positioned himself as the great philosopher explaining the idea of the ‘wise’ and the
‘wisdom’ and the necessity in every epoch of the arrival of a Guru — the wisest of the wise —
who in flesh and blood must re-interpret all texts and utterances that went before her or him to
remind the human beings their mission of becoming true through their socio-historical role to
emancipation.

It is profoundly important to understand Lalon within the Nadia tradition or as the apex of the
philosophical schools within ‘Nadia Parimandal’ (circle of Nadia) and not as Sufi tradition, despite
the fact that Sufis are allies to Nadia, otherwise one could completely miss the contribution of
Lalon to philosophical discourse. Let me try to make this point clearer.
Let’s go back to Chaitanya. Chaitanya did not want to become a Brahmacharya (a celibate). He
was married. He accepted celibacy only after he decided to become a Sanyashi (determination to
give up all worldly affairs). He is one of the famous Indian logicians. But in the day to day rhetoric
with his wife his intelligent philosophical mind concluded that the neither Logic nor rhetoric is the
way to truth; in the same degree intellectualism is not the ideal human practice to become true.
Chaitnaya’s philosophy is based on the love story of Krishna and Radha. Chaitanya started to
claim that when Krishna as a man made love with Radha he tasted the ‘body’ as a masculine
being. But how did Radha – the feminine – taste Krishna? How did Radha feel the ‘body’? Taste
here is used in a very literal and sensuous way but at the same time in a highly philosophical
sense. The actual Bangla word is ‘ashwadon’. In the western philosophy taste as faculty of
knowledge has hardly any role and pathetically undermined in the hierarchy of senses.
But Chaitanya, biologically is a man. Is it possible for the man to taste the body as a woman
does? Chaitanya claimed yes it is possible and thus he made the first philosophical revolution in
the history of Tantra. To Tantra or to the pre-chaitanya Tantric tradition body is material in the
sense of materialism in the western sense. Chaitanya said, when you do not see your lover and
physically feel the loss — the feeling, the imagination of the loss of the lover, the imaginary pain
of the heart are at the same time the pains of the body. What Chaitanya was arriving at is the role
of imagination in human history.

Imagination is real, and human beings can transcend the body by imagining himself as woman.
Femininity can not be locked in the biology. Chaitanya transformed his bodily desires as the
desire of Radha for Krishna. But neither Radha nor Krishna are real beings. Desiring the
imaginary as the object of sensuous love opened up a new philosophical horizon is the great
philosophical revolution in Bengal. Chaitanya’s practice is both a practice of the body as well as
the imagination. He used to be called ‘Gour’ or ‘Gora’ meaning fair. He was very handsome and
very attractive. The legend goes that through his practice he incarnated both Krishna and Radha
in his body. Philosophically it implies that imagination can take material form and human history
can not be explained without taking account of the human dreams and imaginations, including
revolutionary or radical departures.
Lalon accepted Chaitanya but with a reservation. He realised that Chaitanya brought the desire
for the imaginary non-being of love-object at the center of human objective and this unfolded the
immense possibility of the human ‘body’. However, in his songs he argued, Chaitanya must also
be understood in epistemological terms and not simply as a metaphor, e.g. incarnation of
Krishna.

So he metaphorically raised the first brilliant question. If Chaitanya is the incarnation of


Krishna, why is he not ‘black”? Why is he ‘fair”? In Bangla Krishna means black. Well because
Chaitanya is both Krishna and Radha in one body, he is both male and female. If so, why did
Krishna re-incarnate again in Bengal? The reply from Lalon is that he had three incomplete tasks.
What were these tasks? One could decipher the tasks from the activities of Chaitanya.
1. To destroy the dominance of male or masculine principle and erase the gender divide,
biology should not be the determinant of our desire for the good life or should not be the
hindrance for emancipatory imaginations.
2. To develop the will to transcend worldly affairs, to cultivate authentic human desires; implying
to do away with the ego and the private property.
3. To transform the personal love into universal love for all and to be a self conscious ‘slave’ to
the community (all non-Brahmanical desires).
I am interpreting his famous song, ‘moner katha bolbo kare ami moner katha bolbo kare / mon
jane ar jane maram mojechi mon diye jare…'

(Based on an interview by Prof Maria Mies with Farhad Mazhar in Dhaka on January 28, 2004)

Resource:
NEW AGE EID SPECIAL 2005
04 November 2005
http://www.newagebd.com/2005/nov/04/eidspecial05/non-fiction06.html

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