In ritual, the
barsom bundle is either held in the left hand, or placed across a pair of metallic stands about 20 cm in height, with one stand at each end of the bundle. These stands have a crescent-shaped brace at the top, so (also) preventing the rods from rolling off. The crescent shape gives them their name,
mah-rui, literally "moon-faced."
Dadestan-i Denig 48.17 states the stands must be of metal. A
barsom has no immediate practical purpose. At Zoroastrian ritual it represents plant creation, accompanying the other symbolic tokens that represent other facets of creation, and each of which then also represent the presence of an
Amesha Spenta at the ritual. In the case of the
barsom, it is
Ameretat "immortality." The crescent-shaped brace of the
barsom stand is likewise identified with vegetation:
mah, the moon, is in Zoroastrian scripture and tradition the cosmogonical protector of plants and encourages their growth. "The object of holding the barsom and repeating prayers is to praise the Creator for the support accorded by nature and for the gift of the produce of the earth, which supplies the means of existence to the human and the animal world. The object of selecting the
barsom from the twigs of a tree is to take it as a representative of the whole vegetable kingdom, for which benedictions and thanks to the Creator are offered, and there is further proof to show that the performance of the
barsom ritual is intended to express gratitude to the Creator for His boundless gifts." The
barsom is also held by a priest during the abbreviated
Yasna recitation before meals. An episode of the
Shahnameh recalls that when
Yazdegerd III (the last Sassanid emperor, but like his forefathers, also a priest) was in hiding, his request for a
barsom gave him away to the enemy. In Zoroastrian tradition, the second chapter of the
Yasna liturgy is named the
Barsom Yasht. As a part of the liturgy, it is not however part of the
Yasht collection. In the Avesta categorization of Kellens,
Yasna 2 – the
Barsom Yasht – complements the other 7 of the first 8
Yasna chapters, the purpose of the 8-chapter set being an invitation of the divinities to the ceremony. After
Yasna 1's initial invitation of
Ahura Mazda, the
Amesha Spentas and the remaining
yazatas, the
baresman and libation are presented to them in
Yasna 2. == See also ==