Encyclopedia of Hinduism

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pancha makara
In Hindu TANTRISM of the “left-handed” sort, the
pancha makara or “Five M’s” (SANSKRIT words
that begin with that letter), sometimes called the
“five forbidden things (pancha tattva),” are the
elements in a special esoteric ceremony. They
are mamsa (meat, usually beef), matsya (fish),
madya (wine), mudra (parched grain), and mai-
thuna (sexual intercourse.) These five elements
are meant to involve the participants (there may
be one or more pairs in a tantric ritual circle) in
forbidden actions that aid in realizing the divin-
ity of mundane existence. By taking “forbidden”
elements, they are confronted with the fact that
even those things beyond the pale in human terms
partake in the truth of the divinity, usually charac-
terized as the goddess.
Beef is forbidden to all caste Hindus. It is
highly polluting, and eating it is condemned by
society. Fish is also not taken by most BRAHMINS
and is believed to have aphrodisiac qualities.
Parched grain also is known to stimulate sexual
appetite and therefore is not considered desirable.
Alcohol is probably the foremost of Brahmini-
cal prohibitions. In the DHARMASHASTRA of MANU
drinking liquor is equated with killing a Brahmin.
Sexuality outside marriage is looked upon as a

negative thing. The female sexual partner in tant-
ric sexuality is preferably of very low caste and not
the male partner’s wife.

Further reading: Agehananda Bharati, The Tantric
Tradition (New York: Grove Press, 1975); N. N. Bhat-
tacharyya, History of the Tantric Religion: A Historical,
Ritualistic and Philosophical Study (Delhi: Manohar,
1982); Sanjukta Gupta, Dirk Jan Hoens, and Teun Gou-
driaan, Hindu Tantrism (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1979).

Pancharatra
The Pancharatra (pancha, five; ratra, nights) sect
was one of the early traditions that developed into
VAISHNAVISM, the worship of VISHNU. It probably
dates to the last centuries before the Common
Era. The name may derive from the SHATAPATHA
BRAHMANA XIII.6, where the god Narayana, the
primordial and all-encompassing divinity, per-
forms a special “five nights” sacrifice in order
to transcend and encompass all beings. In later
Vaishnavism Narayana became the name of the
highest divinity; he was said to transcend BRAHMA,
SHIVA, and even VISHNU.
In the Pancharatra system, creation emerges
through vyuhas (arrangements) of the manifesta-

P

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