The real Uttarayana
(Pragyata, 20 December 2020)
As the
Winter Solstice approaches, this year on 21 December at 10h3 Greenwich Mean Time, or 14h33
Indian Standard Time, we find in our inbox, like in preceding years, a
passionate plea by AK Kaul for a return to celebrating Uttarayana on that day:
“Why should we celebrate Makar Sankranti on December 21, 2020, 15:34 IST”.
Alright, our data yield one minute of difference; but otherwise, the present
article is entirely in support of this Hindu plea for a major rectification of
the Hindu calendar.
Uttarāyana, “northward
course”, is the moment the sun stops its southward course (with ever-shortening
days in the northern hemisphere) and turns northwards. It is an exact
translation of “the half-year period starting with Winter Solstice”, or simply “Winter
Solstice”. However, modern Hindus celebrate this moment on a different date, 14
or 15 January, which they call Makara Sankranti. What has gone wrong?
The
Sankrantis (cusps) are the starting moments of the 12 periods of the Zodiac,
with Makara being Capricorn. The problem is that there are two Zodiacs,
presently more than 24° apart, or technically: with an āyana (“journey,
distance traversed”) of 24°+. The one is called the Tropical Zodiac or Sāyana
Rāśicakra, determined by the Tropics (from Greek trepō, “turn”,
hence “turning-points”), i.e. the Winter and Summer Solstice, i.e. the seasons;
the other the Sidereal Zodiac or Nirāyana Rāśicakra, determined by the
constellations. For the Tropical Zodiac, the stars play no role at all: you
could define it if only the sun and the earth made up the universe; and while
they exist, the stars can fall in any Zodiacal period. For the Sidereal Zodiac,
the seasons play no role at all: its twelve signs can fall in any season of the
year. So, which of the two Zodiacs is it?
Both have a
valid reason for existing. The dichotomy follows from the heavenly movement of
the precession: the slow movement of the stars through the Tropical Zodiac, or conversely,
of the Tropical cusps through the Sidereal Zodiac, at the rate of one cycle in 25,772
years, or 1° in nearly 71 years. So, since the moment ca. 300 CE when the two
Zodiacs coincided (and Makar Sankranti, the entry in Capricorn, did indeed
coincide with Uttarayana), the point marking the start of winter and of the
northward course in the seasonal Zodiac has moved up 24° in the stellar Zodiac.
After waiting for another ten thousand years or so, the constellations
presently marking the winter months will mark the summer.
This
movement is too slow to be perceived in a single lifetime, and had to wait till
the availability of long-term observation tables to be discovered. It was 127
BCE when Hipparchos of Alexandria first realized the precessional motion. Until
then, the Babylonian astronomers who had started the 12-part Zodiac followed
the Sidereal Zodiac thinking it was Tropical. Siderealists sometimes argue that
the original Zodiac was sidereal, which is true, but it was intended as
Tropical. Significantly, already in the 5th century BCE, well before
the discovery of the precession, Euktemōn had introduced the Zodiac in Athens
as a non-lunar calendar system of 12 equal months, with Capricorn on Winter
Solstice and Aries on Spring Equinox, purely seasonal-Tropical.
This primacy
of the Tropical as against the Sidereal Zodiac can be seen from the symbolism
of the Zodiacal signs, which is not linked to the constellations (as a
comparative study of the constellation contours and names in different cultures
shows, you can see all kinds of things in the shapes of star groupings), but to
the seasons. Thus, in the contrast between the voluminous Taurus and the
reduced Scorpio, it is obvious which one signifies the fullness of spring and
which the reduction to the seed form. Virgo symbolizes the harvest, Pisces the
thaw, mountainous Capricorn the coldness of sunny winter days, hospitable Aquarius
the relative cosiness of snowy winter days, Sagittarius the hunting season,
etc.
While
purists could still dismiss these associations as dependent on the climate zone
(e.g. some countries having more than one harvest season), more fundamental are
the links with the mathematical structure of the Zodiac. The dynamic Aries
signifies the pioneering starting-point, so its opposite is the middle of the
Zodiac, aptly symbolized by Libra. At Summer Solstice, the solar arc, or
visible motion of the sun during the daytime, is larger than half a circle, and
has the shape of pincers, Cancer; at Winter Solstice, it it much less than
half, and is shaped like a mountain in the distance, Capricorn. The sectors of
the Zodiac rise in the morning at different speed: slowest for the sign around
Autumn Equinox, viz. Virgo, the sign of analysis and patience, and Libra, the
sign of equilibrium achieved with effort; fastest for the Spring Equinox signs,
viz. Pisces, the sign of flight, fast and even faster, and for Aries, the sign
of speeding forward, also of the falling object at its moment of greatest
speed, viz. upon impact.
At the same
time, the stars and constellations have their own importance. They exist, and
the Hindu Ahimsa view is that all entities have a valid reason for existing.
Rather than the cosy earth-centred and sun-centred view, we can also focus on
the long distance, where seasons are no longer important. But just as life at
home is primary and distant journeys presuppose a grooming period at home, the
Tropical Zodiac is primary and the Sidereal Zodiac a derivative.
Alright, so
both Zodiacs are in their own way legitimate, but which one is being
celebrated? Which one should determine the Uttarayana festival? AK Kaul clearly
opts for the Tropical Zodiac, yielding 21 December, but the traditionalists opt
for the Sidereal Zodiac and for 14 January, present date of the Makara
Sankranti festival. In the many debates or slanging matches we have witnessed
on a Hindu calendar list, the Hindu traditionalists (who control the calendar)
always object that Kaul’s proposal goes against “Vedic” (meaning scriptural)
tradition. About this, we can afford to be brief: this is not true at all.
While Kaul
himself has argued this point with numerous examples (see for starters his
article https://pragyata.com/when-should-pongal-makar-samkranti-be-celebrated-and-why/), we will make do with just two. The Srimad
Bhagavata 5/21/3-6:
“Placed at the centre of the sky,
the glorious sun, the lord of the luminaries, warms by its heat and illuminates
by its light the three worlds (heaven, atmosphere, earth). Coursing by
slow, swift and regulated marches known by the names of Uttarayana (the
northerly march from the Winter Solstice), Dakshinayana (the southerly march
from the Summer Solstice) and the Vaishuvata (Equinox) and rising higher, going
down and taking a mean position whenever and wherever such positions
are inevitable, the sun, while passing the Zodiac, from Makara (Capricorn)
onwards, lengthens the days while shortening the nights and vice verse and
brings their duration on a par."
So
the central concern is the Solstices and Equinoxes, markers of the year cycle
with the seasons, like in most Pagan cultures and the emerging neo-Pagan
practices worldwide. Additionally, the constellations are linked with them, so
that Makara/Capricorn starts the northward course, which is on 21 December. No
word is whispered about a constellation, Makara denotes a time, viz. the
beginning of the sun’s northward course. It focuses on the immediately
available seasonal cycle rather than on the distant constellations.
The
Vishnu Purana 2/8/28-31 is even more explicit: “In the beginning of
Uttarayana (northward course), the sun enters Makara Rashi (Capricorn), from there
going to Kumbha (Aquarius) and then Mina (Pisces). After having passed through
these three signs, it just gains Vishuvati (equinoctial) speed resulting in the
day and night being equal on Mesha (Aries).(…) Then when the sun is in the end
of Mithuna Rashi (Gemini), i.e. when it is just at the verge of entering
Karkata (Cancer), the day is the longest then, as Dakshinayana (southward
course) starts on that date”.
So, as
per scripture, Makar Sankranti is nothing but a synonym of Uttarayana, already
celebrated in the Vedas, Mesha Sankranti of Vedic Vishuva, Karkata Sankranti of
Vedic Dakshinayana, and Tula (Libra) Sankranti of Vedic Śārada Sampāda
(autumnal confluence). As Kaul sums up: “What is material is that they are
related to the seasons -- exactly as is done by the Vedas and the Puranas and Siddhantas.”
So,
while most cultures focus on the seasonal cycle and celebrate its great moments
or its derivatives (e.g. Chinese New Year being the second New Moon after the
Winter Solstice, or Easter being the first Sunday after the first Full Moon
after Spring Equinox), Hindu culture likewise focuses on this earthly
phenomenon. Additionally, it also reckons, more than others, with the
constellations, but these should not displace the primary seasonal cycle. So,
we should celebrate Winter Solstice, not the entry in the Capricorn
constellation which in its precessional motion happened to coincide with it
some 17 centuries ago.
To sum
up, we support Kaul’s practical conclusion: “God helps those who help
themselves: We should not wait for Pujya dharmacharyas (reverend religion
teachers) to streamline the derailed Vedic calendar.”
Shubh Uttarayana, Merry Winter
Solstice!
2 comments:
Thank you for taking a stand on the right date of Sankranti.
Brilliant article!
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