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Every morning in Ujjain, the Bhasma Aarti marks the start of the day at Mahakaleshwar.

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00:00This is Ujjain's Mahakalishwa Temple, one of the 12 Jyotirlingas, and the only place
00:09where Lord Shiva is worshipped with sacred ash.
00:14Why ash?
00:15There's an old tale in one of the regional retellings of the Shiv Puran.
00:19The story is about a forest monk named Pranad who became so pure through penance that he
00:24no longer bled blood but sap.
00:27He was a complete vegetarian who would only feed on fruits and plants that the animals
00:31would get him.
00:32Eventually, he is said to have gone to Lulu, believing he had transcended death itself.
00:36Along came Shiva disguised as an old man.
00:39He listened, smiled and cut his finger.
00:42What came out was ash, a reminder that no matter how pure, everything ends in ash.
00:48That ash became Shiva's truth and his adornment.
00:51Now Bhasma Aarti draws from this very idea that Shiva, the destroyer, the timeless one,
00:57must be greeted not with garlands but with what remains after everything else is gone.
01:02The tradition goes back over a thousand years to the Paramara dynasty of the 9th century.
01:07You must have heard of Raja Bhoj.
01:09This dynasty is said to have reached its peak under Raja Bhoj.
01:11Ujjain, then known as Avantika, was the Paramara capital and a centre of Shaivism and Tantric traditions.
01:17By the 12th century, poets like Balal Sena described Bhasma Aarti as the most potent expression
01:22of surrender, where all that remained of identity, power or body was ash.
01:28When the temple was destroyed by Ildutmish's forces in 1235 CE, the Aarti stopped.
01:34But in the 18th century, Rani Ahilyabhai Holkar rebuilt the shrine, reinstating old rituals.
01:39The Sindhya rulers supported their daily performance and Tantric Shaiva priests preserved the method.
01:44Today, the ritual has strict rules.
01:46It must happen before dawn.
01:48The Lingam is bathed, dressed in cloth and then anointed with ash.
01:52Only male devotees in traditional attire, a dhoti worn without upper garments, are allowed
01:56inside during the ceremony.
01:58Ancient ash is no longer used and has been replaced with ritual bhasan, made from cow dung, ghee
02:03and herbs.
02:04But the intention remains to offer to Shiva what we all eventually become.
02:08Ash is what humbles the path, what silences the noise, what reminds us that nothing, not
02:12even this moment, is permanent.
02:15For more no-fluff explainers like this, subscribe to more, share this with your friends and we'll
02:19see you in the next one.
02:20I'm Anish Adhikari, thank you for watching The Culture Project.
02:28Bye.
02:29Bye.

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