Friday, February 3, 2017

Altar of Fire


Published on Apr 9, 2016
This film records a 12 day ritual performed by Mambudiri Brahmins in Kerala, southwest India, in April 1975. This event was possibly the last performance of the Agnicayana, a Vedic ritual of sacrifice dating back 3,000 years and probably the oldest surviving human ritual. Long considered extinct and never witnessed by outsiders, the ceremonies require the participation of seventeen priests, involve libations of Soma juice and oblations of other substances, all preceded by several months of preparation and rehearsals. They include the construction, from a thousand bricks, of a fire altar in the shape of a bird. Around 1500 B.C., nomads who spoke an Indo-European language entered India and evolved a complex ritual involving the cults of fire and Soma, a hallucinogenic plant that grew in the Western Himalayas. Their Vedic language developed into Sanskrit, the classical language of Indian civilization.



2 comments:

  1. Very cool video, shows the devotion to religion that different cultures have. It also shows the conservatism that people of India have in relation to the Sacred Rituals of their religion. The Hindu religion is very ancient and the people of India have managed to preserve it.

    Paul Martinez
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  2. This video was very interesting and shows how devoted individuals are to their religion. Devotion is a form of sacrifice that is given until your God to show dedication, purity, and religious freedom.

    PID: 5822108

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