Juggernaut

views updated Jun 11 2018

Juggernaut

Nationality/Culture

Hindu

Pronunciation

JUG-er-nawt

Alternate Names

Jagannatha

Appears In

The Vedas

Lineage

Unknown

Character Overview

Juggernaut (Jagannatha) is a form of the Hindu god Vishnu's (pronounced VISH-noo) incarnation, or embodiment, known as Krishna (pronounced KRISH-nuh). Although Juggernaut does not appear in many myths, he is an important part of one of the largest annual festivals in India.

Major Myths

Juggernaut is worshipped at the religious city of Puri (pronounced POOR-ee) in India. A temple to Juggernaut there dates from the 1100s. According to one legend, a priest chose the site for the temple when he saw a crow dive into the nearby Bay of Bengal. Inside the temple is a wooden image of Juggernaut with a black face, large eyes, a wide smile, and no arms or legs. According to myth, Krishna was walking along and overheard a group of cow-herding girls who were talking about how much they loved him. He was so overwhelmed by their talk that his eyes grew huge, his limbs shrank, and his mouth stretched into a gaping smile.

Juggernaut in Context

Juggernaut is a rather minor form of Krishna in Hindu mythology, with very few references or myths. It is interesting to note that the fourteenth-century book The Travels of Sir John Mandeville popularized the notion in Europe that Juggernaut caused such a frenzy among devotees in Puri that they threw themselves under the wheels of his festival cart as human sacrifices. The book is filled with many such dubious claims, and is now viewed largely as a work of fiction. However, this description of Juggernaut was commonly used by European Christians as a way of illustrating the supposed backwardness of Hindus who had not accepted Christianity.

Key Themes and Symbols

Juggernaut is a symbol of happiness and mercy to those familiar with Hindu mythology, and is also associated with Krishna's homecoming to Vrindavan. To others, however, Juggernaut represents something much more sinister and destructive. It is important to note that Hindus do not view Juggernaut as a destructive deity like Shiva , and that this is a misinterpretation by outside observers.

Juggernaut in Art, Literature, and Everyday Life

Several festivals are held at the temple in Puri each year, the most important being the Chariot Festival in midsummer. On this occasion, the image of Juggernaut is placed on an enormous cart—at least forty-five feet tall—built especially for the occasion and pulled through the town by hundreds of people. Early Western visitors reported that worshippers would throw themselves beneath the wheels of the cart to be crushed as a sacrifice to Juggernaut. Later anthropologists have questioned these accounts, but acknowledge that the huge, unwieldy vehicles have caused death either due to accidents or carelessness. This gave rise to the English word “juggernaut,” meaning a person or power that crushes anything in its path.

Read, Write, Think, Discuss

Early descriptions of Juggernaut by European writers seem largely unconnected to the true nature of the god in Hindu mythology. This often happens when an outside observer describes elements of a culture with which they are not familiar. This inevitably causes bias, or an opinion of the culture's worth based on the observer's own beliefs. Do you think it is possible for someone to observe another culture and describe it without exhibiting some level of bias? Why or why not?

SEE ALSO Hinduism and Mythology; Krishna

Juggernaut

views updated May 23 2018

Juggernaut

Juggernaut (Jagannatha), a form of the Hindu god Vishnu's incarnation Krishna, is worshiped at the religious city of Puri in India. A temple to Juggernaut there dates from the a.d. 1100s. According to one legend, a priest chose the site for the temple when he saw a crow dive into the nearby Bay of Bengal. Inside the temple is a horrifying wooden image of Juggernaut with a black face and a gaping mouth as red as blood.

incarnation appearance of a god, spirit, or soul in earthly form

Several festivals are held at the temple each year, the most important being the Chariot Festival in midsummer. On this occasion, the image of Juggernaut is placed on a 60-foot-high cart and pulled through the town by hundreds of people. Occasionally worshipers have thrown themselves beneath the wheels of the cart to be crushed as a sacrifice to Jagannatha. This practice gave rise to the English word juggernaut, meaning a person or power that crushes anything in its path.

See also Hinduism and Mythology; Krishna.

Juggernaut

views updated May 23 2018

Juggernaut in Hinduism, the form of Krishna worshipped in Puri, Orissa, where in the annual festival his image is dragged through the streets on a heavy chariot; devotees are said formerly to have thrown themselves under its wheels.

The word juggernaut, meaning a large heavy vehicle, comes in extended usage from this.

The name comes via Hindi from Sanskrit Jagannātha ‘Lord of the World’.

juggernaut

views updated May 09 2018

juggernaut (Jagganath) Form of the Hindu god Krishna, worshipped in Puri, e India. At an annual festival, statues of the god, his brother and sister are pulled around the town on heavy carts. The term has come to mean any large, heavy vehicle.

juggernaut

views updated Jun 27 2018

juggernaut (J-) title of Krishna, avatar of Vishnu; idol of this carried in an enormous car, under which (it was once said) devotees threw themselves. XVII; also fig.—Hindi Jagannath—Skr. Jagannātha-, f. jāgat- world + nāthá- lord, protector.

Juggernaut

views updated May 23 2018

Juggernaut (name of Hindu god): see JAGANNĀTHA.