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SATI
150 x 200 cm (58" x 77½"), Acrylic/Canvas, 2002
"Sati, der Abschied" (Sati , the
Farewell) describes the feeling of embarking on a voyage to unknown
territries. Materially the women jumps onto the pyre, but is the
fire really worse than what she leaves behind? She steps through
a door of fire, a short pain of burning, to find liberation from
her existence as a prisoner to her environment's condexes in death.
You can click the image for a larger view.
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DER HIMMEL (The Sky)
150 x 200 cm (58" x 77½"), Acrylic/Canvas, 2002
"Der Himmel, das Bett in den Wolken" (The
Sky, the bed in the clouds) makes reference to the matrimonial
bed - which finally will become a burning pyre, for her to reunite
one last time with her husband. But the bed in the fire transforms
into a bed in the clouds; cool and airy, heavenly and free. The
airy element is reflected in the coolness of the blue.
You can click the image for a larger view.
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Paintings on Sati, the Indian Ritual of Widow
Burning
In 2001 I traveled to India for several months.
For years I have had an interest in herbal medicine and wanted
to experience Ayurveda in its country of origin. Being there
I could not but be deeply moved by the situation of the Indian
women. Out of my experiences I wrote the text "On Feminine Solidarity" (i)
and started a series of paintings that deal with the topic of
Sati, the burning of widows. Sati is a ritual forbidden in today's
India, but occasionally still practiced in some remote regions.
The rural population considers it a heroic act, but for me the
question arises: what kind of a choice and survival possibilities
has a single woman in the traditional (Indian) society?
On the history of Sati: roots and rumors
The ritual of Sati (or Suttee) is the killing a
favorite wife on her husband's grave. It is not exclusively an
Indian ritual but has been practiced in many parts of the world
such as China, Oceania, Africa and Scandinavia from where it
arrived in India only late.
While often seen as a part of the Hindu tradition by outsiders, actually
there is no statement in the classical Hindu scriptures concerning Sati.
On the contrary, according to the funeral hymns in Rigveda (ii), there
is a ceremony of a widow sleeping next to the corpse of her dead husband
and then being allowed to marry anyone she pleases.
According to some sources, the practice of Sati came to India through
the Kushans (iii) in 1 A.D. and was practiced by the Rajputs (iv), a
warring tribe living in the north-western parts of India who were in
constant battle amongst themselves and the Moslems. An interesting explanation
for their practice of Sati is that due to the constant warfare many young
men were killed and the young widows were considered a danger to the
moral stability of society. The introduction of Sati was thus an extreme
measure of eliminating them. (The Moslems, who had the same problem of
young widows solved it by allowing polygamous marriages) (v).
Sati, which has never been practiced in Southern India, was abolished
by the British in India in 1829 and classified as a criminal offence.
(vi)
Sati as a form of suicide
By definition, suicide is the deliberate taking
of one's own life. Ideally it is an individual's conscious decision,
but as soon as it is a behavior judged by culture or tradition,
the line between social pressure and personal motivation begins
to blur. Depending on the time and place, suicide may be regarded
as a heroic deed or condemned by religious and civil authorities
(vii).
According to the Indian Sati ritual, the widow follows her deceased husband
onto the pyre. The following aspects show the similarities between Sati
and a comparable Viking Age practice of sacrificing a widow and thus
illustrate that the basic concept of this custom lies beyond the traditional
Indian context (viii):
(1) a considerable amount of time passes between
the death of the man and the cremation of the woman[/women],
who die at the funeral ceremony later
(2) the wives and concubines are allowed to choose whether or not they
will accompany their husband or master, but once the decision is made
they may not change their minds
(3) the woman who volunteers to die is pampered and treated as a privileged
person until the day of (her) sacrifice
(4) the victim is encouraged to face her death by emphasizing her role
as wife/concubine, how much she desires to be with the man, and also
by the use of calming or narcotic drugs to prevent resistance
(5) sacrifice or release of birds which may represent the soul or journey
of the spirit
(6) an old woman or old women accompany the girl(s)(women) to the pyre
and instruct/encourage/and even sacrifice the girls(women).
Sati is a form of suicide closely related to honor:
in committing suicide, the widow not just shows ultimate loyality
to her deceased husband, but also transforms herself into a heroine,
adding even more to the honor of her husband's family.
However, it is also interesting examinating the aspect of guilt: does
the widow feel guilty for her husband's early deceasing? Her Sati then
would be also standing in a tradition where suicide was offered to a
favored few to save one's face. Hara-Kiri in traditional Japanese society
is an example therefore, as it was seen as the appropriate moral course
of action for a person who otherwise faced the loss of his honor.
On the other hand the practice of Sati must also be seen under the sociological
aspects mentioned earlier, where young widows not just presented a danger
to moral stability but were also an additional burden to the family.
Because they were not supposed to work outside their homes (which would
dishonor the family) they had no means of earning their living. So Sati
also shows similarities to suicides as self-regulatory mechanism among
pre-industrial peoples where members of society who could no longer contribute
to their own subsistence committed self-murder for the welfare of the
group. Traditionally these were the elderly; if a young woman acts the
same way within her social context it just shows as how little her worth
for the group is considered.
Why I choose Sati
What interests me about Sati is that it is in a
way a point of culmination; for me it is metaphor for a society,
that gives no worth to a woman as an individual, but rather sees
her as a man's extension or possession, who's right to live vanishes
with the man's passing away. Because the ritual of Sati it is
of such cruel and horrendous nature, I choose it as the highest
and most symbolic climax of this attitude towards women.
We may easily fall into the attitude of seeing Sati as a exotic however
atrocious ritual of a remote society that has nothing to do with us and
our culture. But, understanding it as an icon, for me it symbolizes concepts
of honor and guilt as well as attitudes towards women that very well
exist within our own, including western, industrialized societies.
What is the basic idea of Sati other than a woman defining herself (or
rather being defined) exclusively through her relationship to her husband,
while forgetting about herself as an individual human being? From this
point of view it is a cruel logic that as soon as the husband's life
is over, her own life must be over as well, and thus creating the urge
to follow him onto the pyre, again adding to his honor.
While this final step is not taken in Western societies, very many women
adopt attitudes of a striking similarity to their Indian sisters regarding
their own perception as individuals; they sacrifice their life and individuality
on the altar of marriage and a husband's career and family and while
negating professional success define they themselves to a huge extent
through their husband.
And a last questions arise for me: to what extent does the practice of
Sati involve the free decision of a free individual? To what extent can
an individual ever be free when it is born into a rigid society with
rigid attitudes and behavioral codexes? Any individual always stands
before the decision to either obey to these codexes and thus loose individual
freedom, or to rebel against them and leave the group and the protection
it may offer.
A woman committing her Sati, thus obeying the group's codex of honor
and moral clearly made a decision against personal freedom and for her
integration into this very group. However, death is always the big liberator;
in stepping over the line (between life and death) voluntarily, she takes
the only route towards freedom that has remained for her. Sati thus is
truly a point of culmination; in the moment of deepest incarceration
into a traditional society's most oppressing moral codexes a door to
total liberation is opened.
Paintings on Sati
Both works completed at the present moment have
two titles each (double titles). See above.
(i) Karin Ulrike Soika. On Feminine
Solidarity. 2001
(ii) Rigveda: oldest scriptures of Hinduism and the most ancient religious
texts in an Indo-European language. The earliest is the Rig-Veda (rig
= stanza of praise), a collection of 1,028 hymns. (The Columbia Encyclopedia,
Sixth Edition. 2001)
(iii) Kushans: Kushan dynasty, one of the five tribes of the Yüeh-chih
who had divided (1st cent. B.C.) Bactria among them. Early Kushan kings
had extended their dominion into N India. (The Columbia Encyclopedia,
Sixth Edition. 2001)
(iv) Rajputs: [Sanskrit = son of a king] dominant people of Rajputana,
an historic region now almost coextensive with the state of Rajasthan,
NW India. The Rajputs are mainly Hindus (although there are some Muslim
Rajputs) of the warrior caste; traditionally they have put great value
on etiquette and the military virtues and take great pride in their ancestry.
(The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001)
(v) Ed Viswanathan. Suttee has nothing to dow ith Hinduism!. Mandir Manthan
Bulletin Board. 1998 http://www.hindunet.org/wwwboard/mandir_manthan/messages/381.html
(vi) The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
http://www.bartleby.com/65/su/suttee.html
(vii) The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
http://www.bartleby.com/65/su/suicide.html
(viii) Davidson, Hilda Roderick. The Road to Hel: A Study of the Conception
of the Dead in Old Norse Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press
1943. reprint Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. 1968, 1977. ISBN 0-8371-0070-4.
http://members.tripod.com/larsdottir/vikfuneral.html
Complementary Links
"On Fenimine Solidarity"
Karin Ulrike Soika, 2001
http://www.soika.com/links/archiv/texte/01e_schwertschei.htm
"Ohne Ehemann kein Recht auf Leben" - Artikel von
Tina Groll
gesche.online, Bremische Zentralstelle für die Verwirklichung der Gleichberechtigung
der Frau (ZGF), 2006 (German only)
http://www.gesche.bremen.de/sixcms/detail.php?id=50079
"Die Sati ist ein Extrembeispiel für die Unterdrückung
der Frau!"
Interview von Tina Groll mit Karin U. Soika
gesche.online, Bremische Zentralstelle für die Verwirklichung der Gleichberechtigung
der Frau (ZGF), 2006 (German only)
http://www.gesche.bremen.de/sixcms/detail.php?id=50454 |