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November 1991
Never Shake Hands With God
Palani, Sivasiva
"Shake hands and come out
fighting." It's the referee's final counsel to two pugilists about to beat
each other's brains out with clenched fists. Even outside the ring, a
handshake can be a little off-putting. When one returns to the West from
an extended sojourn in India or elsewhere in Asia, the hand suddenly
thrust forward can seem more ominous than friendly, especially if the hand
offered is that of a stranger. Of course, one soon acclimates and the
menacing aspect of this salutation subsides.
Perhaps that moment of
intimidation derives from the history of the handshake. According to one
anthropologist, the handshake evolved in medieval Europe, during the times
of knights. It seems not all were laudable Lancelots or gallant Galahads.
More than a few would approach opponents with concealed weapons and when
within striking distance do the needful, driving dagger or striking sword
into the unguarded paladin. To fend off the fear of a foe's foul foil,
knights took to offering their open and visibly empty hand to each other.
It was a kind of surety, a gesture of trust which said. "See, I am
unarmed, so you may safely let me approach." As the story goes, soon the
gesture itself took on meaning and the less noble, less lethal man on the
street adopted the handshake as the proper way to greet others.
In
much of the world today, people do not shake hands when they meet. They
may hug formally and kiss one another on the cheek, as in Eastern Europe
and Arab states. They may bow softly, eyes turned to the ground, as in
Japan and China. The Hawaiian greeting, termed honi, consists of placing
the nostril gently beside that of the person greeted, a kind of sharing of
breath, which is life and prana.
For Hindus, of course, the
greeting of choice is namaste, the two hands pressed together and held
near the heart with the head gently bowed as one says, "Namaste." Thus it
is both a spoken greeting and a gesture, a mantra and a mudra. The
prayerful hand position is a mudra called anjali, from the root anj, "to
adorn, honor, celebrate or anoint." The hands held in union signify (he
oneness of an apparently dual cosmos, the bringing together of spirit and
matter, or the self meeting the Self. It has been said that the right hand
represents the higher nature or that which is divine in us, while the left
hand represents the lower, worldly nature.
In Sanskrit namas means
"bow, obeisance, reverential salutation." It conies from the root nam,
which carries meanings of bending, bowing, humbly submitting and becoming
silent. Te means "to you." Thus namaste means "I bow to you." The act of
greeting is called namaskaram, namaskara and namaskar in the varied
languages of the subcontinent.
Namaste has become a variable icon
of Indianness. Indeed, there must be an Indian law which requires every
travel brochure, calendar and poster to include an image of some one with
palms pressed together, conveying to the world India's hospitality,
spirituality and graceful consciousness. You knew all that, of course, but
perhaps you did not know that there can be subtle ways of enhancing the
gesture, as in the West one might shake another's hand too strongly to
impress and overpower them or too briefly, indicating the withholding of
genuine welcome. In the case of namaste, a deeper veneration is sometimes
expressed by bringing the fingers of the clasped palms to the forehead,
where they touch the brow, the site of the mystic third eye. A third form
of namaste brings the palms completely above the head, a gesture said to
focus consciousness in the subtle space just above the brahma-randhra, the
aperture in the crown chakra. This form is so full of reverence it is
reserved for God and the holiest of Sat Gurus.
It is always
interesting, often revealing and occasionally enlightening to muse about
the everyday cultural traits and habits each nation and community evolves,
for in the little things our Big Ideas About Life find direct and personal
expression. Take, for instance, the different ways that American and
Japanese tool-makers approach the same task. A saw for cutting lumber, if
designed in the USA, is made in such a way that the carpenter's stroke
away from his body does the cutting. But in Japan saws are engineered so
that the cutting takes place as the carpenter draws the saw toward
himself. A small detail, but it yields a big difference. The American saw
can, if leaned into, generate more power, while the Japanese saw provides
more control and refinement in the cut, requiring surprisingly less
effort. Each has its place in the global toolbox. Each speaks - like the
handshake and namaste greeting - of an underlying perception of man's
relationship with things.
In the West we are more outgoing,
forceful, externalized. We are told by Ma Bell to "Reach out and touch
somebody." We are unabashedly acquisitive, defining our progress in life
by how much we have - how much wealth, influence, stored-up knowledge,
status or whatever. Every culture exhibits such traits to some extent, but
in the East Mother is there to remind us, "Reach in and touch the Self."
Here we are taught to be more introspective, more concerned with the
quality of things than their quantity, more attuned with the interior
dimension of life. So there you have it, the whole of Eastern and Western
culture summed up in the handshake which reaches out horizontally to greet
another, and namaste which reaches in vertically to acknowledge that, in
truth, there is no other.
As a test of how these two greetings
differ, imagine you are magically confronted with the Divine. God walks up
to you on the street. What do you do? Reach out to shake His hand?
Probably not. Though suitable between man and man, it's an unseemly
expression between man and God. We never shake hands with God. I mean,
what if your palms are sweating? So, you namaste instead. The reason it
feels natural to namaste before God is that it is, in its very essence, a
spiritual gesture, not a worldly one. By a handshake we acknowledge our
equality with others. We reveal our humanity. We convey how strong we are,
how nervous, how aggressive or passive. There is a bold physicality to it.
For these and other reasons, Popes never shake hands. Kings never shake
hands. Even mothers don't shake hands with their own
children.
Namaste is cosmically different. Kings do namaste. Sat
Gurus namaste and mothers namaste to their own family. We all namaste
before God, a holy man or even a holy place. The namaste gesture bespeaks
our inner valuing of the sacredness of all. It betokens our intuition that
all souls are divine, in their essence. It reminds us in quite a graphic
manner, and with insistent repetition, that we can see God everywhere and
in every human being we meet. It is saying, silently. "I see the Deity in
us both, and bow before It. I acknowledge the holiness of even this
mundane meeting. I cannot separate that which is spiritual in us from that
which is human and ordinary."
And while we are singing the praises
of namaste, it should be observed how efficient a gesture it is in an age
of mass communication. A politician, or performer can greet fifty thousand
people with a single namaste, and they can return the honor instantly. In
such a situation a handshake is unthinkable and a mere waving of one hand
is somehow too frivolous.
There are other, more mystical meanings
behind namaste. The nerve currents of the body converge in the feet, the
solar plexus and the hands. Psychic energy leaves the body at these
junctures. To "ground" that energy and balance the flow of prana streaming
through the nerve system, yogis cross their legs in the lotus posture, and
bring their hands together. The anjali mudra acts like a simple yogic
asana, balancing and harmonizing our energies, keeping us centered,
inwardly poised and mentally protected. It closes our aura, shielding us
psychically. It keeps us from becoming too externalized, thus we remain
close to our intuitive nature, our superconsciousness.
I asked a
number of Hindus for their insights into namaste, what it means and why we
do it. Here are a few responses:
* Namaste elevates one's
consciousness, reminding one that all beings, all existence is holy, is
God. It communicates, "I honor or worship the Divinity within you." Also,
it draws the individual inward for a moment, inspires reflection on the
deeper realities, softening the interface between people. It would be
difficult to offend or feel animosity toward anyone that you greet as
God.
* Namaste is a gesture of friendship and kindness, also of
thanks or special recognition. Mystically it is called "namaskara mudra"
in the Agamic puja, and it centers one's energy within the spine.
*
I've heard it means "1 salute God within you." The true namaste gesture is
accompanied by bowing the head and shoulders slightly. This is a gesture
that lessens our sense of ego and self-centeredness, requiring some
humility to do it well - whereas shaking hands can be quite an arrogant
event.
* Touching the hands together puts you in touch with your
center, your soul. Namaste puts you forward as a soul, not an outer
personality.
* The gesture has a subtle effect on the aura and
nerve system. Bringing focused attention and a collection of one's forces,
so to speak. It also protects against unnecessary psychic connections
which are fostered by shaking hands. This might be called a form of purity
also-protecting one's energies.
* This form of acknowledgement is
so lovely, so graceful. Just look at two people in namaste and you will
see so much human beauty and refinement.
Article copyright
Himalayan Academy.
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