Ganges River While all
rivers in Hinduism are sacred, the
Ganges River (Ganga) is particularly revered. In the
Vedic myths, the
goddess Ganga descended upon the earth to purify and prepare the dead. The Ganges in
India is seen as the physical embodiment of this goddess. Since the river waters are regarded as both inherently pure themselves and as having major
purificatory qualities, people come to bathe in them, drink from them, leave offerings for them, and give their physical remains to them. The Ganges is said to purify the soul of negative
karma, corporeal
sins, and even impurities from
previous lives. At sunrise along the Ganges,
pilgrims descend the
ghat steps to drink of the waters, bathe themselves in the waters and perform
ablutions where they submerge their entire bodies. These practitioners desire to imbibe and surround themselves with the Ganges’s waters so that they can be purified. Hindu conceptualizations of the sacred are fluid and renewable. Purity and pollution exist upon a continuum where most entities, including people, can become sacred and then become stagnated and full of sin once again. Performing these rituals is also an act to become closer to the
Hindu deities, and ultimately the
Divine. The Ganges is one of the most highly favored sites for
funerary rituals in India. It is presumed that if a deceased person is cleansed by the Ganges, it will help liberate their
soul, or expedite the number of lives they need to achieve this. In the traditional funerary ceremony, a dead person is placed upon a
funeral pyre until the body becomes
cremated, then the ashes are sent upon the river. Many Hindus go to great lengths to purify themselves one last time before death. When this is not possible, family members will actually mail the ashes to a
priest so that he can perform the ceremony of entering the waters.
Manu, the mythic law giver, gave directives and prohibitions regarding the river: “impure objects like urine, feces, spit; or anything which has these elements, blood, or poison should not be cast into the water”. Few or none of these directives hold forth along most places down the Ganges today. As the Ganges River remains interwoven into daily existence, Hindus are vulnerable to
urban contamination. == Lakes and underground water ==