Basaveshwara or Basavanna, of Karnataka, was a saint, a poet and an ardent social reformer. He is among the great spiritual teachers of India.
Basavanna was born in a high-placed Brahmin family in Bijapur District of Karnataka around the year A.D. 1131. His poetry to Shiva as “lord of the meeting rivers” earned him a place at the front rank of Kannada and Bhakti literature bhakti. He composed several hundred vacanas, which are Kannada devotional writings that are supposed to be sung. Vacana literally means prose. He is considered to be a master of vacanas.
He established a socioreligious academy called Anubhava-Mantapa. It was an open forum for spiritual discussions. It attracted hundreds of saints and spiritual aspirants from all over the country.
Basava opposed caste & jati distinctions, child marriage and ill treatment of widows. In these areas, he anticipated the Hindu social reform movements of the 19th century by several centuries.
Source and Picture Credit: Basaveshwara, Sahitya Akademi.
Basaveshwara or Basavanna, of Karnataka, was a saint, a poet and an ardent social reformer. He is among the great spiritual teachers of India.
Basavanna was born in a high-placed Brahmin family in Bijapur District of Karnataka around the year A.D. 1131. His poetry to Shiva as “lord of the meeting rivers” earned him a place at the front rank of Kannada and Bhakti literature bhakti. He composed several hundred vacanas, which are Kannada devotional writings that are supposed to be sung. Vacana literally means prose. He is considered to be a master of vacanas.
He established a socioreligious academy called Anubhava-Mantapa. It was an open forum for spiritual discussions. It attracted hundreds of saints and spiritual aspirants from all over the country.
Basava opposed caste & jati distinctions, child marriage and ill treatment of widows. In these areas, he anticipated the Hindu social reform movements of the 19th century by several centuries.
Source and Picture Credit: Basaveshwara, Sahitya Akademi.