Last month, on March 23rd, a male Aldabra Giant Tortoise by the name of "Adwaitya" died at the Alipore zoo in Calcutta....
Last month, on March 23rd, a male Aldabra Giant Tortoise by the name of
"Adwaitya" died at the Alipore zoo in Calcutta. Press reports --
The
Telegraph (Calcutta), BBC News, CNN,
New York Times, NDTV [New Delhi
TV],
The Times (London), among many others -- render "Adwaitya", a
form of the Sanskrit
advaita, a word of vast import to describe the
philosophical outlook that is known as non-dualism, as "the one and only",
and if it is true that "Adwaitya" was 255 years old when he died, one can
understand why he should have been so named. The oldest documented living animal
is a Galapagos tortoise, 176 years old, at a zoo near Brisbane in Australia.
Some 80 years older than his nearest rival, who was taken from Isla Santa Cruz
by Darwin himself, Adwaitya, should his exact age be verified by carbon dating,
would have had an extraordinary innings.
There is perhaps something in the history of these ancient and gigantic
creatures that also ties them to larger-than-life figures. Adwaitya became known
as "Clive's pet", and in reading his obituary one might have been reading
about the death of Clive himself. Said to have been one of four tortoises gifted
to Robert Clive, whose triumph at arms at Plassey in eastern India in 1757 is
conventionally thought to have gained Britain its jewel in the crown, Adwaitya
was transferred to the Calcutta zoo in 1875 and remained there for the rest of
his life. That innocuous phrase, "rest of his life", means much more than it
might ordinarily, since Adwaitya would have witnessed the birth of the Indian
National Congress (1885), the mass resistance to British rule known as the
Swadeshi Movement (1903-08), and the dismantling of the empire that, shall we
say, Clive built. Adwaitya was, then, not a very loyal pet, calmly outliving his
master and his master's creation. Perhaps Adwaitya knew all along that the sun
would set on the British empire, and that he would be there to see the sun go
down. Luckily, Adwaitya did not see the sun go down on the human race, which
from time to time seems bent on a course of self-destruction.
Advaita's adherents, from the venerable Shankaracharya (c. 780-820 AD) to
the twentieth century advaitin, Ramana Maharshi (1789-1950), otherwise
known as the Sage of Arunachala after the sacred hill in the vicinity of his
ashram, have always claimed that advaita is, in a manner of speaking, the
eternal truth, since advaita teaches that the goal of life is to attain
self-realization. That supreme awareness comes about when one is able to
distinguish the real from the illusory and achieve emancipation from
ego-illusion. Clive joined in the plunder of Bengal, but when he was put on
trial in Britain on charges of corruption and bribery, he described how the
riches of Bengal had been laid at his feet and yet he had exercised some
restraint. 'Here I stand, My Lords,' Clive reminded the jurors, 'astonished
at my own moderation'. Clive lived only to the age of 49 and reportedly died
an opium addict. Of Adwaitya, say the zookeepers, let it be known that he
sustained himself on a diet of wheat bran, carrots, lettuce, soaked gram, grass,
and salt. Not only did Adwaitya know of the inestimable benefits conferred by a
vegetarian diet, which some scientists now assure us is more friendly to the
earth, he was evidently intoxicated enough by life to scarcely be in need of any
external stimulants. The Pioneer [Delhi], in an article on 6 May 2005,
nearly a year before the tortoise's death, reported that Adwaitya had not seen
a doctor for 29 years.
Philosophical matters apart, Adwaitya's longevity and forbearance might
explain why the tortoise occupies such an honorable place in Indian mythology
and story-telling traditions. Most Hindus are likely to associate the tortoise
with Vishnu's second of ten incarnations (avatars). As "kurma", or the
tortoise, Vishnu descended upon the earth to recover precious items that had
been lost in the deluge and had settled at the bottom of the ocean. There is
another story about the tortoise. In the beginning, everywhere was water; there
was nothing to eat. Prajapati, the Creator, became anxious about the fate of his
children, and was advised that the earth lay trapped under the water. Once he
had rescued the earth goddess (Bhoodevi), he placed her on the back of the
tortoise. Thus, as Akupara, the tortoise carries the entire world on its back.
The nineteenth century Indian mystic, Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa, put even a
greater burden on this slow-moving animal. People who had attained self-control,
and in particular mastery over their sense-organs, were likened to the tortoise.
Through the uncommon subdual of the sense organs, Ramakrishna discoursed at
gatherings (which drew restless young men to him, among them the future Swami
Vivekananda), anger, lust and other sentiments, which are destructive of
equanimity, are put in abeyance. 'Such a man', says the Gospel of Sri
Ramakrishna, 'behaves like a tortoise, which, once it has tucked in its
limbs, never puts them out. You cannot make the tortoise put its limbs out
again, though you chop it to pieces with an axe' (p. 179). Ramakrishna found
in the tortoise a remarkable illustration of the steadfastness with which God's
true devotee goes about her business: even while she moves in the water, her
thoughts are always on the bank where her eggs are lying.
Many will read in the story of Adwaitya, "Clive's pet", the tale of the
tortoise and the hare writ large. Eternal tales will surely continue to come
down to us in new incarnations. What other point is there to Vishnu's avatars?
We might even be tempted into seeing in Adwaitya's story a parable for our
times as the lumbering giants of Asia, the Aldabra and Galapagos tortoises of
our times, India and China, make their way past the hares that had all but won
the race. But one thing is certain: long after the history of the British empire
will have disappeared, the mythical world of tortoises (and hares) will continue
to endure.