THE MAJESTY AND MYSTERY OF INDIA’S
SACRED BANYAN TREES
MIKE
SHANAHAN ON
9/21/16 Newsweek
Some 550 years ago, so a story goes, the poet-sage Kabir was on
a silt island in India’s Narmada River. He was brushing his teeth
with a twig. When he flung his toothbrush to the ground, up sprang
a gigantic tree whose crown spread so wide it cast shade over a
whole hectare of land. Today, Kabir’s tree is one of the biggest
plants on the planet. Its true story is no less extraordinary than
the myth.
It is a banyan (Ficus
benghalensis), one of hundreds of species of fig trees.
No other plants feature in so rich a mix of folklore and faith
stories as the figs. And none is as awesome to behold as the
banyan. Walk beneath Kabir's tree’s crown and you will see the
illusion of a forest, a tight mass of thousands of trees. But look
closer and you will see that everything is connected. There is just
one tree. The banyan’s Sanskrit names —nyagrodha, ‘the down-grower’
and bahupada, ‘the one with many feet’—
hint at its secrets.
Many years earlier, another tree had occupied the spot where
Kabir’s banyan grows. That tree’s fate shifted when a bird, or
perhaps a bat or monkey, passed by having fed earlier on
ripeFicus
benghalensis figs. The animal pooped
on the tree and condemned it to a slow death by
smothering.
The animal’s droppings delivered a banyan seed to a moist nook.
Within weeks, the fig seed split open. It sent up a firm stalk with
a collar of two tiny green leaves. It sent down tiny roots that
hugged the host tree as they stretched earthwards in search of
soil. In time, these roots would expand and enlace. They would
encase the host tree and erase all trace of
it.
As the banyan grew, its branches also sent out roots. They
dangled like strands of unkempt hair. When they reached the ground,
these roots grew thick and woody and merged to form what looked
like new tree trunks. The massive branches reached ever outwards,
sending down yet more and more prop roots. These pillars formed
increasingly wide circles around the banyan’s core, enclosing it in
nested cloisters.
When British historian Thomas Maurice wrote about Kabir's banyan
in 1794, he said it had more than 350 of these false trunks, each
one thicker than an English oak tree, and another 3000 smaller
stems. He noted that locals said the tree was 3000 years old,
suggesting it existed long before Kabir himself. This raises the
possibility that it was the same banyan Alexander the Great and his
army encountered on the Narmada River when they arrived in India in
326 BCE.
Alexander’s men were certainly the first Europeans known to have
seen a banyan. They were amazed. The vivid descriptions they wrote
down would inform Theophrastus, the father of modern botany, back
home in Greece. But local people saw banyans as much more than
impressive trees. The banyans had long been part of the cultural
fabric. More than a thousand years earlier, the people of the Indus
Valley Civilization adopted a stylized banyan as a symbol in their
script. Later Vedic, Jain and Buddhist and Hindu scriptures and
stories mention banyans often.
To bodies, these trees provided shelter, food and medicines to
treat dozens of disorders. To minds, they formed bridges to the
supernatural. Gods and spirits moved among their leaves and pillar
roots. By 500 BCE, Hindu texts described a cosmic ‘world tree’, a
banyan that grew upside down with its roots in the heavens. Its
trunk and branches reached to Earth to bring blessings to
humankind.
The banyan became a potent symbol of fertility, life and
resurrection. It features in Hindu stories of the universe’s
periodic death and rebirth, when everything that exists dissolves
into a ceaseless sea. One story says an ‘undying’ banyan is the
only thing to survive the deluge. Another says that to ride the
sea’s currents, the god Vishnu assumes the form of a baby, lying on
his back on a raft formed of a banyan leaf. With one breath, the
baby swallows all that surrounds it, taking the turbulent universe
into the safety of his stomach before exhaling it into fresh
existence.
After the British arrived in India, these symbols of life became
agents of death; the British began to use banyans as gallows
to execute rebels who resisted their rule. By the 1850s, there had
been multiple occasions when they hanged over a hundred men to
death from a single banyan. India restored dignity to these trees
when it gained independence and made the banyan its national
tree.
While the British knew these trees by name, Alexander’s army
would not have heard the word banyan. The name only arose more than
a thousand years later when Portuguese visitors to India modified
the Gujarati word vaniyan, meaning merchant. They named
the tree banyan after the traders who set up their stalls in its
shade.
A banyan is a natural meeting place, a vast umbrella of dark
green leathery leaves that blocks out the sun or showers of rain.
These trees form the centerpiece of many villages. Entire cities
have even grown up around these trees. The city of Vadodara in
Gujarat, western India is one example. It is thought to derive its
name from the Sanskrit word vatodar, meaning ‘in the heart of the
banyan tree’. Asia’s oldest stock exchange, the Bombay Stock
Exchange, was also born beneath a banyan in Mumbai where
stockbrokers
In cities today, the banyans are curtailed by construction or
cut down to make way for roads. But if left in peace, there is
little to stop a banyan expanding. The biggest one on record
exceeds even Kabir’s tree. It is said to have begun life in 1434 at
the spot where a woman called Thimmamma died when she threw herself
onto her husband’s funeral pyre. The tree, in Andhra Pradesh, now
covers two hectares. Twenty thousand people can shelter beneath its
crown.
All this from a seed that is just a couple of millimeters in
length. Crack one open with your thumbnail and you won’t find much
inside, yet the genetic material within has the power to create a
tree vast enough to resemble a small forest. Ancient Hindu sages
employed this paradox in a parable, which used the imperceptible
power within a banyan seed as a parallel of Atman, the invisible
essence Hindus say permeates and sustains the universe and all it
contains.
The banyan’s power reaches deep into our world. Like all fig
species, these trees depend on specific wasps to enter their figs
and pollinate the flowers hidden within. A side effect of this
relationship is that banyan figs are available all year round. They
offer a lifeline to birds, fruit bats, monkeys and other creatures,
which in turn disperse the seeds of hundreds of tree species,
planting the forests of the future. The banyans truly are trees of
life.