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Chapter Eight Bhaktapur's Pantheon
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Bhaila Dya: (Bhairava)

Bhaila Dya:, "Bhaila God," the Newar version of the Hindu deity Bhairava (see fig. 16), is a divinity, or group of divinities, whose images, supremely dramatic in some of their anthropomorphic representations, are widely represented in Newar communities. In the Puranas[*] Bhairava is sometimes a son of Siva and Parvati, sometimes an emanation emitted by Siva when infuriated. The Newar's Bhairava is associated with this emanation. In his anthropomorphic form he is represented with fangs, bulging eyes, dark blue or black coloring, carrying destructive weapons in his many arms, and wearing garlands of shrunken decapitated heads or skulls. He is thus an iconographic male equivalent of the Kali or, for Bhaktapur, Mahakali aspect of Devi. Bhaila Dya: is also present in a vague nonanthropomorphic form. Here he is a spirit-like creature who is located at or below the surface of the ground—in the cremation grounds or within the city in association with certain powerful natural stones. Finally he is theoretically related to the genesis and classification


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Figure 16.
An image of the dangerous deity Bhairava in front of the city's main
Bhairava temple.


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of the other dangerous male deities who are in certain contexts considered as "kinds" of Bhaila Dya:s.

The anthropomorphic Bhairava has two main presences in Bhaktapur, Akasa (Sanskrit akasa ) "Sky," Bhaila Dya: and as the Bhairava of the Nine Durgas cycle. The Akasa Bhaila Dya: is housed in one of Bhaktapur's major temple structures located in Ta:marhi Square, a square located on the axis that divides the upper half of the city from the lower half, and which is one of the ritual centers of the city. This is the center that becomes the pivot of the drama of the division and reunification of the city during the spring solar New Year festival, Biska: (chap. 14). Akasa Bhairava and his consort, the dangerous goddess Bhadrakali[*] , are one of the symbolic foci of the dramatic sequence of the festival that dramatizes in their separation and coupling—in concert with a variety of other vivid symbolic enactments—the conflict and unification of the divisions of the city. The Akasa Bhaila Dya: temple has several representations of Bhairava. In front of the temple, in a recess on its front wall, is a small frightening figure (see fig. 16), sometimes given the name of Kala Bhairava or Kala Bhaila Dya: (because, in one explanation, "even Kala, the Lord of Death trembles before him" [Sahai 1975, 119]). Within the temple are images used in the festival procession, and the major fixed temple image, which is a head without a body. This image is related through various legends (chap. 14) to a headless image of the god in Benares (Varanasi) in India.[52]

Akasa Bhaila Dya:'s vehicle is Beta Dya: (from the Sanskrit Vetala). In those Puranic[*] accounts where Bhairava is the son of Siva and Parvati, Vetala is Bhairava's brother (O'Flaherty 1973, 69, 106), but in Bhaktapur he approximates more the South Asian idea of Vetala as "a class of demons, ghouls or vampires who frequent burial grounds, and are said to re-animate the dead" (Stutley and Stutley 1977, 331), a conception that is related to Bhairava's attributes as a stone god (below). Beta Dya: himself is conceived as a sort of agent for Bhaila Dya: in the exercise of his powers. Like many other deities in Bhaktapur, Akasa Bhairava is balanced by another deity. In this case it is the goddess "Bhagavati" in the nearby Nyatapwa(n)la[*] temple as we have discussed above. In the account of the building of the temple and the installation of "a Bhairava for the protection of the country, and the removal of sin and distress from the people" it was the Bhairava itself that gave people trouble (which is a general potential of the dangerous gods), and it was necessary to balance him with a complementary dangerous goddess. This conception of the goddess of the Nyatapwa(n)la[*] temple as calming the


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dangerous Bhairava is still the popular explanation in Bhaktapur for the juxtaposition of the two temples.

The anthropomorphic Bhaila Dya: has a second dramatic presence in Bhaktapur's civic symbolism and ritual in the Nine Durgas sequence (chap. 15). Here he is represented in his fully powerful and frightening form, as a mask that is the symmetrical complement of the mask of the sequence's most frightening goddess, Mahakali (see color illustrations). Among the group of divinities who make up the Nine Durgas group, Bhairava and Mahakali have the predominant roles. In some of their performances he is the most prominent character, particularly in his presiding over certain animal sacrifices. In the most important of their performances, however, the calendrically determined sequential twa : performances, Bhairava is peripheral to Mahakali. There is also in the Nine Durgas troupe of divinities a god form called "Seto Bhaila Dya:," the white Bhairava, who is in his relation to the female deities of the group a clown-like, ineffectual figure. In his iconographic representation the mask of this Seto Bhaila Dya: is a transformation of Siva, who is also represented as a mask in the performance (see color illustrations). He reflects Siva's ineffectiveness in relation to the Saktis, who have become independent dangerous goddesses.

Bhairava as a vague demonic spirit inhabits the cremation grounds. He is found sometimes located in buried stones under the cremation pyres and is the focus of some Tantric pujas , and in popular assumption, at least, of pujas by spirit doctors, Tantric magicians, and witches. This sort of Bhairava is also thought to be the power in certain stones that "protect" the areas in which they are located. He is related both to ghosts and spirits and to the divinities of such stones, and we will return to him and some of the details of his cremation ground and stone habitations in a later section. Gutschow and his associates have reported eight Bhairava shrines in the city that appear on some paintings as part of a set of mandalic[*] circles in Bhaktapur's city space (Kö1ver 1976, 69-71; Gutshow and Kö1ver 1975, 21f.; Auer and Gutschow n.d., 38). These are all natural stones. The same set is represented by anthropomorphic statues within the Taleju temple complex. These Bhairavas are considered as consorts of a corresponding set of goddesses.[53] They have no meaning for public urban symbolic enactment, and little for contemporary Tantric esoteric religion.

The other dangerous male gods of Bhaktapur are vaguely related to Bhaila Dya:. Nasa Dya: is said by some to be an emanation of Bhaila Dya:, and Bhisi(n) Dya:, with his human attributes, to be a sort of ava-


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tar of Bhaila Dya:. In spite of such ideas, however, they are treated for the most part as independent divinities.[54]

Bhairava/Bhaila Dya: encompasses a fairly diffuse class of beings in comparison with the elaborately formulated relations among the dangerous goddesses. There are fewer forms, and many of them are quite vague, which, as we will argue, give those aspects of Bhairava some of their semantic force. While the frightening form of the Goddess, most clearly exemplified by Mahakali, is only one of the forms of the Dangerous Goddess, Bhairava exists only in his frightening form and is in many ways a lesser figure than the Dangerous Goddess. She may be the supreme deity, whereas he never is. Furthermore, his theoretical relation to Siva is even more vague than the relation of the Dangerous Goddess to Siva, for even if in many contexts she has separated herself from Siva, in Tantric theory and practice the relation of Siva and the Goddess as Sakti are obsessively investigated and enacted. And, finally, while the Goddess as Bhagavati is a usual member of collections of household gods, Bhairava is only very rarely included, and that only by upper-status households who have special Tantric initiations and, therefore, powers. These asymmetries are significant.


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