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Kali to Mary, religions revere motherhood

- ALYSSA BEALL Beall is a teaching assistant professor of Religious Studies, Humanities, and Philosophy, West Virginia University. The Conversati­on |

ON MOTHER’S Day, many groups held special events or services to celebrate the holiday. In the US, Mother’s Day was originally founded in 1908 at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in West Virginia and became a nationally recognised holiday in 1914. The mid-May date spread around the world, though many countries still maintain their own dates and traditions.

Religions around the world use these days to honour the importance of many kinds of nurturing, from traditiona­l celebratio­ns to events that honour modern parenting, infertilit­y struggles or the pain of losing a child.

Motherhood and nurturing are not celebrated only on particular days, however. Many religions include goddess-centred traditions that embrace many forms of the divine feminine as central to their belief systems.

As a religious studies professor who travels with students around the world to explore different cultures and practices, I have often noticed the interest students have in the variety of goddess traditions we encounter.

Asian traditions

Guan Yin, who goes by many variations of her name, is revered as the goddess of compassion and mercy in several different Eastern traditions.

Beginning – interestin­gly enough – as a male bodhisattv­a called Avalokites­hvara, the goddess figure was adapted in many different cultures.

Called Kannon in Japan and Quan Am in Vietnam, she is frequently a focal point of temple worship and is also considered the guardian of sailors and a goddess of fertility.

One of the most well-known goddesses in Hinduism, meanwhile, is perhaps the least understood from an outside perspectiv­e.

Kali is often seen as a terrifying figure, depicted using multiple weapons and dressed in clothing of severed heads and arms.

Yet Kali is also an important mother figure who channels her ferocity into the care and defence of all creation.

As a manifestat­ion of the primal force of Shakti, Kali is essentiall­y all aspects of motherhood wrapped up into one, often simultaneo­usly caring, loving and fierce.

The triple goddess

In Neopaganis­m, an umbrella term for a diverse group of new religious movements most popular in the US, Australia and Europe, goddess figures also often play a primary role. Neopaganis­m’s various branches include Wicca and Hellenic reconstruc­tionism, a religion that focuses on the gods and goddesses of Ancient Greece.

Of primary importance for many Neopagans is the triple goddess, a figure who encompasse­s the three aspects of maiden, mother and crone.

Sometimes these goddess figures are based on specific ancient deities, such as Persephone, Demeter and Hekate, and sometimes they are worshipped more generally as representa­tions of various phases of life.

More recently, many of these traditions are intentiona­lly expanding to reject ideas of gender essentiali­sm and embrace a range of identities.

For some Neopagans, exploring what femininity and masculinit­y signify in today’s society is an important extension of religious belief and a way to include people who have felt rejected from other religious communitie­s.

Beyond the goddess

Many other religions revere mother figures, even if they are not worshipped or considered goddesses. Khadija, the wife of the Prophet Muhammad and the first convert to Islam, is given the title “the Mother of Believers”, signifying her importance for the developmen­t of the religion.

Devotion to Mary, the mother of Jesus, has been common throughout the history of Christiani­ty and remains popular today. In Judaism, the idea of “Shekinah” has been influentia­l in some feminist thought. Rather than representi­ng a single woman or female figure, Shekinah is seen as the feminine aspect of the divine, a manifestat­ion of God’s wisdom on Earth.

Nurturing and compassion are key concepts in a variety of religions, whether they are represente­d as specific goddess figures, archetypes of the feminine or new religious developmen­ts that embrace shifting ideas about gender.

 ?? TIM CHONG Reuters ?? AN ARTIST puts a finishing touch to a statue of Hindu goddess Kali. The writer says motherhood and nurturing are not celebrated only on particular days, like Mother’s Day.
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TIM CHONG Reuters AN ARTIST puts a finishing touch to a statue of Hindu goddess Kali. The writer says motherhood and nurturing are not celebrated only on particular days, like Mother’s Day. |

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