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Saurath
This village is situated in the Mithila region of Bihar.
Metahistory makes it unique. Originally named Saurastra,
literally a cultural and intellectual centre of sau-rastra,
nations associated with Janaka, the ancient king of Mithila,
whose name finds mention in the Ramayana epic. Tradition has
it that the svayambara (self-chosen form of marriage) of
Janaka's daughter, Sita, took place in this village. The
presiding God of this village is Somanath. There is an
interesting parallel between the Somnath of village Saurath (Saurastra)
in Mithila and the Somnath of the Saurastra region of Gujarat.
The village people have an extraordinary ability to combine
myth and history. As historical sources reveal, in AD 1025,
Mohammed Ghazni attacked the famous temple of Somnath located
on the western coast in the Saurastra region. He looted the
fabulous wealth of the temple and destroyed it completely.
From the imagined sources, it is known that Lord Somnath
appeared in the dream of the two Maithil Brahman brothers,
Bhagirathdutta Sharma and Gangadutta Sharma, and asked them to
take His lingam away. The two brothers, following God's
instruction, went to Saurastra, brought the lingam to Saurath
and kept Him in hiding for a long time. Later the lingam was
duly enshrined. In the 18th century a Maithil king constructed
here the temple of Somnath. This village has another
peculiarity. Almost every year, during suddha or auspicious
days for the settling of marriages, thousands of Maithil
Brahmans gather here. Such periodic meetings are called sabha,
marriage mart. It is obligatory for every person desirous of
marriage to get a certificate called asvajajanapatra
(non-relationship) from a genealogist, stating that there is
no "blood relationship" (as per the prescribed rules
of prohibited degrees) between the two contracting parties.
The institution of panjikar, genealogist, was led for the
first time by Maharaja Harsimhadeva (AD 1296-1323) of the
Karnat dynasty. In course of time genealogical records called
utedhpothi assumed gigantic proportions, and it was felt
necessary to make qualified genealogists available to people
at certain appointed places throughout Mithila to facilitate
marriages. Earlier, such marriage marts were held in 14
villages, viz. Saurath, Khamgadi, Partapur, Sheohar, Govindpur,
Fattepur, Sajhaul, Sukhasaina, Akhrarhi, Hemanagar, Balua,
Barauli, Samaul, and Sahsaula in North Bihar. In and about
these villages lived eminent Sanskrit pandits who were
authorities on matters relating to genealogy. It was natural,
therefore, that Saurath was selected as the best place for
Maithil Brahmans to assemble and consult genealogists. While
Saurath maintains the tradition, all other villages have
discontinued holding the marriage mart. Maintaining of
genealogies is invaluable for distinguished Maithil Brahman
families, because the genealogical records show the names of
their ancestors and of the villages where they resided. The
earliest known ancestor of each family, biji-purus, of that
line and the village where he resided was known as moola. Each
moola thus came to represent one stock. In Saurath alone,
according to the village genealogist Harekrishna Jha, there
are Brahmans of 7 gotras and 42 moolas. In course of time the
occupation of genealogist became hereditary. A separate
language was evolved for recording genealogies, which each
successive genealogist had to master. Every family has thus
its genealogy preserved in one of the houses of genealogists,
beginning at least from the 12th century. The genealogies of
each family contain not only the names of persons
generation-wise, as one finds in the genealogies of other
societies, but also the names of villages where they resided
and their social and intellectual attributes. If someone in
the 16th century, for instance, was a mahamahopadhya, an
honorific title denoting Sanskrit scholarship, this was
recorded along with his name. Not only that, the field of his
scholarship and the names of the books he wrote were also
mentioned in the genealogical record of his moola. Saurath
possesses invaluable archives of genealogical records. From
these records one can establish the continuity of Sanskrit
learning in Maithil villages. The genealogy of Pandit
Ghanshyam Mishra, for instance, shows that he had four sons,
all very bright scholars, but the youngest one, Bhanupati, who
used to compose poems and songs with the great poet Vidyapati,
became a saint-scholar. One of the cousins of this family was
Dhare Jha, who lived in another village but finally settled in
Saurath and became a famous scholar of Tantra. Ghanshaym's
great-grandson Giradhari continued the family tradition and
became a scholar of eminence. He had four sons, but his
youngest son mahamahopadhya Rajnath Mishra Rajje was
exceptionally brilliant. He was a scholar of many disciplines,
Veda, Vedanga, Nyaya, Jyotish, Tantra, and Vyakarana, and had
a large number of disciples many of whom received the highest
title of mahamahopadhya. He went to Kashi six months before
his death and stayed there till he breathed his last in 1933.
He had a very bright son named Pandit Subhadra Mishra. From
this illustrious family, Pandit Shiva Kumar Mishra represents
today the great sanskritic tradition. He is versatile in many
fields such as Jyotish, Tantra, and agriculture. He was
influenced by Mahatma Gandhi in his early childhood, and he
continues to spread the message of Gandhi. The ancestral
family of the great poet Vidyapati Thakur, the "Kalidas"
of Mithila, lives in this village, with its glory and
creativity. Purushottam Thakur, a descendant of the Vidyapati
family, is famous for his austerity and religious-mindedness.
He has not taken salt or fried food now for almost 55 years;
he eats only fruits, roots and shoots and does not move away
from his hut and temple. There are several pandits in this
village who perform sanskritic rituals. Undoubtedly, the
Sanskrit tradition has lost its vigour, and scholars of modern
subjects have become important. But people's pride in Sanskrit
learning remains. There is a Sanskrit High School in the
village, which is a reminder of the excellence of the Sanskrit
tradition. There are also a Middle School imparting modern
education, a Homeopathic Hospital, a Folk Museum, and two
Libraries. The educational status of the 42 per cent literates
of the village shows that modern education holds them in
greedy grip, but it does not match the great tradition of
Sanskrit scholarship. Of the 400 graduates, 32.5 per cent
remain unemployed. In the people's world view KNOWLEDGE still
occupies the central position but MAN is placed on the
periphery of TRADITION
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