The King of Dance  -  Shiva Nataraja


Shiva Nataraja - The king of dance
Shiva Nataraja - The king of dance

Musée Guimet Paris, epoch Chola, from the 11th century (bronze)

 

Hinduism is characterized by sensory joy gods. Probably the best known one of the Gods in Hinduism's is Shiva. And Shiva is a master of the dance!

Again and again Shiva is shown with four hands and two legs - laughing and dancing on the back of the demon of ignorance, Apasmâra. By ignorance the person loses  balance and consciousness; Shiva defeats with his dance the demon of illusion, of unrest, and thus the cause of suffering.

To us Christians strikes that ethical, moral and also dogmatic concepts like crime and punishment, good and evil, grace and salvation those are alien to Hinduism.

 

Shiva Nataraja - dancing

Elegance from another perspective
 

Shiva destroys in his dance the ignorance and relieves the suffering. At the same time he generates and creates life. With his dance he holds the world wheel and life wheel in swing and and keeps people’s hearts warm thanks to his fire.

Like in other myths the God of the life is also the God oft the death, the new creation through the destruction of the ancients.

Shiva dances in every human heart, in the centre of the universe - that is the sacred space of the heart. His dance literally means "heartbeat": it is the rhythmic envelope, each new shock, which replaces the old.
Birth and life thus from the destruction, the secret of life.

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Far Eastern religions Shiva, Ganesha, Gautama Buddha: Far Eastern religions inspire many people in the west;

it is the the mostly widespread mission movement in Europe above all for youngsters and graduates.

 

The additions to the image of the dancing Shiva Nataraja are always the same, as in an icon. His head is adorned with symbolic adjuncts from which stands out a crescent moon.

His hair and body are decorated with queues and animal skins from animals he has beaten. Hands and feet are decorated with tinkling bells, so it appears as a dance for eyes and ears. In the upper right hand he holds and hits a hand drum in the shape of an hourglass which sets the tone and the rhythm of the universe and the time (creation in the rhytm of the heartbeat - the aim of meditation). In his left hand, however, he is holding a freshly cut from the stone fire which translates to a whole wheel of fire, a reference to the destruction and world fire.

The lower left indicates the left foot and the dance of the life, the lower right hand indicates the dance position of fearlessness and protection.

What remains to be said is that everybody is free in Hinduism, as he interprets divine representations or forms himself further. This results in an incredible but also incalculable wealth of shapes and colors, in music and movement.

 


My advice: Read again the description of this picture work - and leave then yourself meditative to he dance, to the rhythm of God in your breathing and pulse rate, in day and night, year after year - the dance is one and the same for the whole world at all times!

It personally works the best to the rhythm of the breath - from first breath to the last exhale - the rhythm of the tambourine, the hourglass of God ...
 

 

 

Short description of Shiva Nataraja
 

Shiva is also a big dancer. He is called King of the Dance (Nataraja), but his dance is not dalliance, but an act of creation - he creates and destroys the world at the same time in this cosmic dance.

The Nataraja's portrait shows Shiva with four hands and two legs in a standing dance position.


He holds a drum in the upper right hand and fire in his left. The lower right hand is in the position of protection (also fearlessness). The left hand points to the upraised left foot. His left foot stands on the demon "illusion".

Usually this presentation is surrounded by a circle of fire. Shiva dances every evening to relieve the suffering of people and animals. Shiva dances in every human heart!

Shivas dance symbolizes a ceaseless process of creation, preservation and destruction.

The drum represents the creation tone  (rhythm) and the fire symbolizes the flames destroying the world at the end of time. His other two hands, grant the blessing, reliefs and protection, contact the followers and encourage them to seek shelter at the feet of Shiva.

The demon, on who Shiva stands, symbolises  the ignorance that causes the loss of our balance and our consciousness. Shiva's dance leads to a heaven of bliss in which dissolves the ego. In his ,,Tandava„ dance, Shiva destroys the demon of the ignorance and cheers to the followers who dedicate themselves to him completely.

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