Irakathaswan's Tale: How Kerala's Shadow Puppetry Retells the Birth of Bali and Sugriva
The Ramayana, as narrated across the Indian subcontinent, is
not a single fixed text but a living tradition that has been retold, reshaped,
and reimagined through countless regional performance forms. Among these,
Tholpavakoothu, the traditional shadow puppetry of Kerala performed inside
Bhagavati temples, carries within it stories that diverge in fascinating ways
from the popular Valmiki Ramayana. One such account concerns the birth of Bali
and Sugriva, the vanara brothers who play a pivotal role in Rama's search for
Sita. While it is broadly accepted that their father is Indra and Surya
respectively, Tholpavakoothu offers a distinctive and lesser-known account of
their mother, a vanara named Irakathaswan.
The Story as Told in Tholpavakoothu
According to this tradition, Irakathaswan was a vanara born
to Brahma, a solitary wanderer who leapt from tree to tree across great
stretches of the earth, traversing Bharata Khandam, the Himalayas, Kimpurusha
Khandam, and Harivarsham, before arriving in Ilavrita Khandam. There, near a
sacred pond where Parvati would bathe, Irakathaswan was struck by the clarity
and beauty of the water and felt an irresistible urge to bathe in it.
Unknown to him, Parvati had placed a curse upon the pond,
that any male who entered its waters would emerge transformed into a female.
Undeterred by this hidden danger, Irakathaswan climbed a tree, leapt in, and
upon emerging discovered that he had indeed become a woman. Grief-stricken and
bewildered, the vanara maiden began a journey toward Brahmaloka in search of a
remedy.
Along the way, Indra, beholding her extraordinary beauty,
was overcome with desire, and from this encounter a vanara infant was conceived
upon her tail. As she continued her journey carrying this child, Surya too was
moved by her beauty, and a second infant was conceived, this time upon her neck
(greevam). Reaching Brahmaloka with both children, she poured out her sorrow
before Brahma, who consoled her, declaring that this occurrence was a necessity
ordained for the era of Rama's avatara, and that she must not grieve over it.
Brahma then named the child born of the tail as Bali, and the one born of the
neck as Sugriva, granting them the kingdom of Kishkindha as their domain.
The Key Difference from the Popular Narrative
The Valmiki Ramayana, followed widely across India,
generally identifies the mother of Bali and Sugriva as Riksharajas, a female
vanara, without elaborating extensively on a curse-based transformation
narrative. The Tholpavakoothu version, by contrast, builds an entire
cosmological journey around the mother figure, Irakathaswan, framing her
transformation as the direct consequence of Parvati's curse rather than an
existing feminine identity. This shifts the emphasis from a simple divine birth
to a more elaborate tale of curse, unwitting transgression, divine compassion,
and cosmic necessity, characteristic of oral and performance traditions that
often expand upon sparse scriptural references to serve dramatic and devotional
purposes within temple ritual.
Symbolism and Meaning
The narrative carries rich symbolic layers. The pond of
Parvati represents the unpredictable consequences of divine will, reminding
devotees that even unintentional acts can carry profound spiritual weight.
Irakathaswan's transformation and subsequent motherhood reflect the Hindu
understanding that gender in the divine and semi-divine realms is fluid and
instrumental to a larger cosmic purpose, rather than a fixed, limiting
identity. Brahma's reassurance that her suffering was a necessity for Rama's
avatara reinforces the recurring theme in Hindu thought that individual
hardship often serves a greater dharmic design, one that unfolds across yugas
and is not always immediately comprehensible to those experiencing it.
Importance in Regional Tradition
Tholpavakoothu is performed traditionally over many nights
within temple precincts dedicated to Bhagavati, and its narrations often
include such regional elaborations that are absent from the pan-Indian Valmiki
text. These stories preserve local devotional imagination and demonstrate how
communities across India have engaged creatively and reverently with the
Ramayana, adapting it to local cosmology, temple ritual, and performative
needs, while still upholding the core dharmic framework of Rama's story.
Modern Day Relevance
In contemporary times, such regional retellings hold importance for preserving cultural diversity within Hindu tradition. They remind practitioners and scholars alike that the Ramayana has never been monolithic, but a vast and living ocean of stories. For a modern audience, Irakathaswan's tale also offers an early and striking articulation of gender transformation within sacred narrative, inviting reflection on identity, resilience, and the acceptance of unexpected life circumstances as part of a larger, meaningful journey.