Bhakti-Sufi Traditions — Changes in Religious Beliefs
"Don't go to the temple to pray, said the Bhakti saints. Find God in your HEART."
1. Chapter Overview
Between the 8th and 18th centuries, India witnessed a RELIGIOUS TRANSFORMATION. The BHAKTI MOVEMENT (devotional theism centred on personal love of a deity) and SUFI TRADITIONS (Islamic mysticism seeking union with God) emerged as powerful alternatives to ritualistic, priest-dominated religion. Both emphasised: DIRECT, PERSONAL connection with the divine. Both CRITIQUED orthodoxy. Both created LITERATURE of extraordinary beauty. And both attracted followers across CASTE and CLASS lines.
2. The Bhakti Movement — Early Phase (South India)
The Alvars and Nayanars (c. 6th–9th centuries, Tamil Nadu)
- ALVARS: Devotees of VISHNU. Composed hymns in TAMIL (not Sanskrit). Travelled from temple to temple, singing.
- NAYANARS: Devotees of SHIVA. Also Tamil. Also travelling, singing saints.
- KEY FEATURES: (a) PERSONAL DEVOTION (bhakti) to a chosen deity (ishtadevata), (b) COMPOSED IN THE LOCAL LANGUAGE (Tamil — not Sanskrit, the language of Brahmanas), (c) OPEN TO ALL CASTES — including 'untouchable' saints (Nandanar — a Pulaiya, an 'untouchable' who became a Nayanar saint), (d) INCLUDED WOMEN saints (Andal — the only female Alvar. Her poems to Vishnu are among the most passionate in the tradition.)
The Compilation of Hymns
- The hymns of the Alvars were compiled as the NALAYIRA DIVYAPRABANDHAM ('Four Thousand Divine Compositions') — described as the 'Tamil Veda.' 'The bhakti tradition claimed that devotion in Tamil was equal to the Vedas in Sanskrit.'
BHAKTI vs VEDIC RELIGION
| Aspect | Vedic Religion | Bhakti |
|---|---|---|
| Language | Sanskrit (elite) | Tamil / vernacular (everyone) |
| Access | Through Brahmana priests | DIRECT personal devotion |
| Deity | Multiple Vedic gods (Indra, Agni) | Personal god (Vishnu or Shiva) as supreme being |
| Caste | Brahmana-dominated | Open to all, including 'untouchables' |
| Rituals | Sacrifice (yajna) | Singing, dancing, ecstatic devotion |
3. The Virashaiva / Lingayat Movement (12th Century, Karnataka)
- Led by BASAVANNA (a minister in the Kalachuri kingdom). His followers: VIRASHAIVAS or LINGAYATS (worshippers of Shiva in the form of the linga).
- RADICAL CHALLENGE TO CASTE: 'The Virashaivas rejected caste. They rejected the Vedas. They rejected the authority of Brahmanas.'
- VACHANAS: Short, free-verse sayings in Kannada — expressing intense personal devotion. Composed by men AND women, high caste AND low caste.
4. The Bhakti Movement — North India (c. 14th–17th centuries)
The 'Nirguna' vs 'Saguna' Distinction
| Nirguna Bhakti | Saguna Bhakti | |
|---|---|---|
| Concept of God | Formless (NIRGUNA), without attributes, abstract. The divine is EVERYWHERE and NOWHERE — beyond human form. | God WITH FORM (SAGUNA), with attributes. Incarnations: Rama, Krishna. Personal, lovable, relatable. |
| Examples | Kabir, Guru Nanak, Dadu Dayal | Mirabai (Krishna), Tulsidas (Rama), Surdas (Krishna) |
Kabir (c. 15th Century, Varanasi)
- 'Neither a Hindu nor a Muslim.' Rejected BOTH Brahmanical Hinduism AND orthodox Islam.
- Critiqued: IDOL WORSHIP, PILGRIMAGE, CASTE, and EMPTY RITUALS of both religions.
- 'Pothi padhi padhi jag mua, pandit bhaya na koi' (Reading books, everyone died; no one became a pandit) — book-knowledge without EXPERIENCE is worthless.
- His followers: KABIRPANTHIS — after his death, both Hindus and Muslims claimed his body. Legend: his body turned into FLOWERS.
Guru Nanak (1469–1539) — The Founder of Sikhism
- Born in Punjab. 'There is no Hindu. There is no Muslim.' — His first public statement.
- Three principles: (1) Kirat karo (earn your living honestly), (2) Nam japo (remember God's name), (3) Vand chhako (share with others).
- The LANGAR (community kitchen) — everyone, regardless of caste, eats together. A REVOLUTIONARY rejection of caste.
- The GURU GRANTH SAHIB: The Sikh scripture — compiled by the fifth Guru (Arjan Dev). Contains hymns of the Gurus AND of Bhakti and Sufi saints (Kabir, Namdev, Baba Farid). 'The Guru Granth Sahib is a testament to the interconnectedness of the Bhakti and Sufi traditions.'
Mirabai (c. 16th Century, Rajasthan)
- Rajput princess. Devotee of KRISHNA (Saguna Bhakti).
- Defied: family, husband, royalty — 'I have found a husband who will never die' (she married KRISHNA, not a mortal man).
- Composed BHAJANS in Rajasthani and Braj. Her poems are among the most passionate declarations of love for God in world literature.
- 'She transgressed every boundary — caste, gender, family. For her, there was only KRISHNA.'
5. Sufi Traditions — Islamic Mysticism in India
What Is Sufism?
- The MYSTICAL dimension of Islam — seeking DIRECT, PERSONAL experience of God (ALLAH)
- The goal: FANA (annihilation of the self in God). The heart must be PURIFIED of everything except God.
- Like Bhakti: emphasised LOVE over law, EXPERIENCE over ritual, and the POSSIBILITY that God could be reached by ANY sincere seeker — regardless of social status.
Sufi Orders (Silsilahs) in India
| Order | Key Figure in India |
|---|---|
| Chishti | Khwaja Muinuddin Chishti (Ajmer), Baba Farid, Nizamuddin Auliya (Delhi) |
| Suhrawardi | Bahauddin Zakariya |
| Naqshbandi | Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi |
| Qadiri | Miyan Mir |
The Chishti Silsilah — The Most 'Indian' of Sufi Orders
- OPEN TO ALL — Hindus, Muslims, rich, poor, women
- LANGAR (community kitchen) — food for ALL, regardless of religion or caste
- ZIKR: Repetition of God's names. SAMA: Musical assemblies (qawwali) — 'listening to music as a path to God.' This was CONTROVERSIAL — some orthodox ulema condemned music. The Chishtis defended it.
- Khanqah: The Sufi lodge — a place where the pir (master) lived with his disciples. Open to ALL. Sick people came for healing. The poor came for food. Pilgrims came for blessings.
Nizamuddin Auliya (1238–1325) — The Beloved of Delhi
- The most famous Chishti saint of India. His dargah in Delhi remains a place of pilgrimage for Hindus AND Muslims.
- His teaching: 'God is found in SERVICE TO HUMANITY — not in fasting, not in prayer, not in ritual.' 'Nizamuddin preferred feeding the hungry to praying all night.'
Sufis and the State
- The Chishtis MAINtained distance from the state. 'Nizamuddin refused to meet the Sultan — even when summoned. "My door is open. Let him come if he wishes."'
- OTHER orders (Suhrawardis) accepted state positions. The Naqshbandis were CRITICAL of what they saw as 'un-Islamic' practices that had crept into Sufism and popular Islam.
6. Common Ground — Bhakti and Sufi
| Shared Feature | Bhakti | Sufi |
|---|---|---|
| Personal, direct connection with God | Ishtadevata (chosen deity) | Ishq (love for Allah), fana (annihilation) |
| Rejection of empty ritual | 'Temple-going, idol worship without love = useless' (Kabir) | 'Prayer without love of God = empty' (Sufis) |
| Open to all castes/creeds | Alvars, Nayanars, Kabir, Nanak | Chishti langar, Nizamuddin Auliya |
| Vernacular literature | Tamil, Kannada, Hindi, Marathi, Punjabi | Hindavi (proto-Urdu), Persian mixed with local languages |
| Music and ecstasy | Bhajans, kirtans | Sama (qawwali) |
7. Exam Focus
- Alvars and Nayanars — early Tamil Bhakti, anti-caste, women saints (Andal)
- Virashaivas / Lingayats — Basavanna, vachanas, rejection of caste and Vedas
- Nirguna vs Saguna — Kabir (Nirguna), Mirabai (Saguna), Guru Nanak
- Kabir — critique of orthodoxy, synthesis
- Guru Nanak — Sikhism, langar, equality
- Chishti Sufis — khanqah, sama, langar, Nizamuddin Auliya, distance from state
- Shared features of Bhakti and Sufi traditions
8. Conclusion
The Bhakti and Sufi movements were REVOLUTIONS OF THE HEART:
- BHAKTI: From the Alvars of Tamil country to Kabir in Varanasi to Guru Nanak in Punjab — a tradition that said: GOD IS FOR EVERYONE. Caste is irrelevant. Language is no barrier. Love is the ONLY requirement.
- SUFI: From Muinuddin Chishti in Ajmer to Nizamuddin Auliya in Delhi — a tradition that said: feed the hungry, open your doors to all, find God through LOVE and SERVICE — not through ritual.
- TOGETHER: They created a SYNCRETIC, PLURALIST religious culture that remains alive in India today — in the qawwalis at Nizamuddin's dargah, in the bhajans sung in temples, in the langars of gurudwaras.
'Kabir said: "I am neither in the temple nor in the mosque." God, for the Bhakti and Sufi saints, lived in the HUMAN HEART. And anyone — anyone — could find Him there.'
