c ''
class="Unicode" style="white-space:normal; text-decoration: none">kí? nunám asmân k??avad árati? kím u dhurtír am?ta mártyasya''
We have drunk Soma and become immortal; we have attained the light, the Gods discovered.
Now what may foeman's malice do to harm us? What, O Immortal, mortal man's deception?
The Ninth
Mandala of the
Rigveda is known as the
Soma Mandala
. It consists entirely of hymns addressed to
Soma Pavamana
("purified Soma"). The drink Soma was kept and distributed by the
Gandharvas. The Rigveda associates the
Sushoma,
Arjikiya and other regions with Soma (e.g. 8.7.29; 8.64.10-11).
Sharyanavat was possibly the name of a pond or lake on the banks of which Soma could be found.
The plant is described as growing in the mountains (
giristha
, cf.
Orestes), with long stalks, and of yellow or tawny (
hari
) colour. The drink is prepared by priests pounding the stalks with stones, an occupation that creates
tapas (literally "heat"). The juice so gathered is mixed with other ingredients (including milk) before it is drunk.
Growing far away, in the mountains, Soma had to be purchased from travelling traders. The plant supposedly grew in the
Hindukush and thus it had to be imported to the
Punjab region. Later, knowledge of the plant was lost altogether, and Indian ritual reflects this, in expiatory prayers apologizing to the gods for the use of a substitute plant (e.g.
rhubarb) because Soma had become unavailable.
In Hinduism
In
Hindu art, the god Soma was depicted as a bull or bird, and sometimes as an embryo, but rarely as an adult human. In
Hinduism, the god Soma evolved into a
lunar deity. The
moon is the cup from which the gods drink Soma, and so Soma became identified with the moon god
Chandra. A waxing moon meant Soma was recreating himself, ready to be drunk again. Alternatively, Soma's twenty-seven wives were the star goddesses, the
Nakshatras - daughters of the cosmic progenitor
Daksha - who told their father that he paid too much attention to just one of them,
Rohini. Daksha subsequently cursed Soma to wither and die, but the wives intervened and the death became periodic and temporary, and is symbolized by the waxing and waning of the moon.
Monday is called
Somvar
in
Sanskrit and Sanskritic languages, such as
Hindi and
Gujarati, and alludes to the importance of this god in Hindu spirituality.
The
Sushruta Samhita localizes the best Soma in the upper
Indus and
Kashmir region.
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Avestan Haoma
The continuing of
Haoma
in
Zoroastrianism may be glimpsed from the
Avesta (particularly in the
Hom Yast
, Yasna 9.11), and
Avestan language *hauma
also survived as
middle Persian hom
. The plant
Haoma
yielded the essential ingredient for the ritual drink,
parahaoma
.
In the
Hom yašt
of the
Avesta, the
Yazata
(divine) Haoma appears to Zoroaster "at the time of pressing" (
havani ratu
) in the form of a beautiful man. Yasna 9.1 and 9.2 exhort him to gather and press Haoma plants. Haoma's epitheta include "the Golden-Green One" (
zairi-
, Sanskrit
hari-
), "righteous" (
ašavan-
), "furthering righteousness" (
aša-vazah-
), and "of good wisdom" (
hu.xratu-
, Sanskrit
sukratu-
).
In Yasna 9.22, Haoma grants "speed and strength to warriors, excellent and righteous sons to those giving birth, spiritual power and knowledge to those who apply themselves to the study of the nasks". As the religion's chief cult divinity he came to be perceived as its divine priest. In Yasna 9.26,
Ahura Mazda is said to have invested him with the sacred girdle, and in Yasna 10.89, to have installed Haoma as the "swiftly sacrificing
zaotar
" (Sanskrit
hotar
) for himself and the
Amesha Spenta. Haoma services were celebrated until the 1960s in a strongly conservative village near
Yazd.
Candidates for the Soma plant
There has been much speculation as to the original
Proto-Indo-Iranian Sauma
plant. It was generally assumed to be
hallucinogenic, based on RV 8.48 cited above. But note that this is the
only
evidence of hallucinogenic properties, in a book full of hymns to Soma. The typical description of Soma is associated with excitation and
tapas
. Soma is associated with the warrior-god Indra, and appears to have been drunk before battle. For these reasons, there are energizing plants as well as hallucinogenic plants among the candidates that have been suggested, including
honey [2], and
fly agaric (
Amanita muscaria
) which was widely used as a brew of sorts among
Siberian shamans for its hallucinogenic and entheogenic properties. Several texts like the
Atharvaveda extol the medicinal properties of Soma and he is regarded as the king of medicinal herbs (and also of the
Brahmana class).
Since the late 1700s, when
Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron and others made portions of the Avesta available to Western scholars, several scholars have sought a representative botanical equivalent of the
haoma
as described in the texts and as used in living Zoroastrian practice. Most of the proposals concentrated on either linguistic evidence or comparative pharmacology or reflected ritual use. Rarely were all three considered together, which usually resulted in such proposals being quickly rejected.
In the late 19th century, the highly conservative Zoroastrians of
Yazd (Iran) were found to use
Ephedra (
genus
Ephedra), which was locally known as
hum
or
homa
and which they exported to the Indian Zoroastrians. (Aitchison, 1888) The plant, as Falk also established, requires a cool and dry climate. Later, it was discovered that a number of
Iranian languages and Persian dialects have
hom
or similar terms as the local name for some variant of Ephedra.
There are numerous mountain regions in the northwest Indian subcontinent which have cool and dry conditions where soma plant can grow. In later vedic texts the mention of best soma plant coming from kashmir has been mentioned. This is also supported by the presence of high concentration of vedic Brahmans in Kashmir up to the present day who setteled there in ancient times because of the easy availability of soma plant.
From the late 1960s onwards, several studies attempted to establish
soma
as a
psychoactive substance. A number of proposals were made, including an important one in 1968 by
R. Gordon Wasson, an amateur mycologist, who asserted that
soma
was an inebriant, and suggested fly-agaric mushroom,
Amanita muscaria
, as the likely candidate. Wasson and his co-author, Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty, drew parallels between Vedic descriptions and reports of Siberian uses of the fly-agaric in
shamanic ritual. ()
In Western culture
In Western culture Soma often refers to some form of intoxicating drug. In
Aldous Huxley's
dystopian novel
Brave New World
,
Soma is a popular dream-inducing drug. It provides an easy escape from the hassles of daily life and is employed by the government as a method of control through pleasure. It is ubiquitous and ordinary among the culture of the novel and everyone is shown to use it at some point, in various situations: sex, relaxation, concentration, confidence. It is seemingly a single-chemical combination of many of today's drugs' effects, giving its users the full hedonistic spectrum depending on dosage.
Soma is the central theme of the poem
The Brewing of the Soma
by the American Quaker poet,
John Whittier (1807-1892) from which the well-known Christian hymn "
Dear Lord and Father of Mankind" is derived. Whittier here portrays the drinking of soma as distracting the mind from the proper worship of God.
In the book
Junkie, author
William S. Burroughs refers to soma as a non-addictive, high-quality form of opium said to exist in ancient India. He hypothesizes that, were such a drug to exist, drug dealers would be quick to seize on the opportunity and
cut the drug until it became generic "junk."
The Strokes, an inde rock band, have a song called 'soma.' The opening lyrics begin with "Soma, is what they will take when hard times open their eyes, saw things in a new way, high stakes for a few names, racing against sunbeams, losing against their dreams, in your eyes."
References
- ''Sushruta Samhita'': 537-538, SS.CS. 29.28-31.
- Hermann Oldenberg, ''The Religion of the Veda''
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