Author Michelle Moran on Janam Kundlis and Giveaway!!!!!
Scandalous Women is pleased to have a guest post by author Michelle Moran. Her new book The Rebel Queen about Queen Lakshmi—India’s Joan of Arc—who against all odds
defied the mighty British invasion to defend her beloved kingdom, will be published March 3rd.
With
every book I write, I discover something about the culture I’m researching
which completely blows me away, often because it’s so unusual and something
I’ve never encountered before. In the case of my book, REBEL QUEEN, set in
India during the British invasion, the concept of Janam Kundlis struck a chord
with me, particularly since Janam Kundlis very nearly played a role in my own
life and my marriage to my husband, who is Indian.
Also
known as an astrological chart, a Janam Kundli is made by a priest for each
child in India. No one is sure when the concept of a Janam Kundli came to be,
but as Vedic astrology is several thousand years old, it’s not surprising that
my protagonist’s Janam Kundli would have looked similar to my husband’s, even
though they were born more than a hundred years apart. A person’s Janam Kundli
includes the details of their birth–time, date, planetary alignments. It also
includes other things which aren’t so common in the West, such as that person’s
probable future career and who they were in their most recent past life (in my
husband’s case, a yogi!).
Reading
a person’s natal chart is serious business. Once a person’s Janam Kundli is
created, they will keep that document with them for life, producing it when
it’s time for marriage. Even today, Janam Kundlis are used to make prospective
matches between brides and grooms throughout India, where the majority of
marriages are arranged. And woe betide anyone whose Janam Kundli declares them
to be a manglik, or a bad-luck person. If that’s the case, as it was for the
famous Bollywood actress and former Miss World Aishwarya
Rai, one of two options are available. You can either marry another
manglik, thus canceling out your bad-luck status, or you can hire a priest to
conduct a variety of ceremonies that will make it possible to marry someone who
isn’t a manglik like yourself. This last option, however, is only available if
the non-manglik person’s family finds the risk acceptable. In Aishwarya Rai’s case, her in-laws obviously felt the
“risk” was worth it, and in 2007 she married a tree before she married
her husband, thereby canceling out her bad-luck in this way.
Why
a tree? Well, this was something I very nearly discovered myself when my own
Janam Kundli was made. Apparently, like Aishwarya
Rai, I too am probably a manglik, meaning marriage for me would most likely end
in the divorce or death of my spouse. I say probably
because my Janam Kundli was done online. The effect, however, was very
nearly the same. Major discussions took place as to whether I would need to
marry a tree before the wedding could proceed, or whether my Janam Kundli
should be discounted since I am not, after all, Indian, and my Janam Kundli
hadn’t “officially” been made by a priest.
In the end, it was decided that my husband should take the
risk and go for it. I never had to marry a tree or even choose among a variety
of clay urns for my groom. Either option, apparently, is acceptable, as it’s
believed that a person’s manglik dosh can be canceled out if the manglik
person’s bad luck is spent on the first marriage. Thus, the bride first marries
a clay urn or a tree, then either breaks the clay urn or chops down her
tree-husband in order to become a “widow” (in some places, the tree is allowed
to survive). After this, the second marriage is ready to proceed without a
hitch.
There are varying interpretations of this ceremony, and even
though it didn’t end up affecting me, a person’s Janam Kundli can alter their
destiny, just as I describe in the beginning of REBEL QUEEN. It’s cultural gems
like these which make researching historical fiction such a pleasure, and it’s
these type of details which I try to include in each of my books. As a writer,
my hope is that they pique the reader’s interest along the way, and as a
reader, they are the sort of facts which help ground me in another place and
time.
Thank you Michelle! Scandalous Women will be giving away a copy of Michelle's new book to one lucky winner along with these lovely bangles.
- To enter, please leave a comment below and include your email address (only comments with email addresses will be entered in the giveaway).
- If you are not a follower and become one, you get an extra entry
- If you tweet about the giveaway, you get an extra entry.
- If you like my Scandalous Women Facebook page, you get an extra entry.
Good luck!
- If you tweet about the giveaway, you get an extra entry.
- If you like my Scandalous Women Facebook page, you get an extra entry.
Good luck!
- Giveaway ends on February 12th.
Comments
thank you for the giveaway!!
cyn209 at juno dot com
cyn209 at juno dot com
cyn209 at juno dot com
danamiller3@yahoo.com
I can't facebook/twitter/anything fun from work, but I'll try to remember to do it later!
heatheranne99 at gmail dot com
dez3b(at)yahoo(dot)come
e-mail-SatoriCmaylo@gmail.com
jennyfermeier@gmail.com
nurse_mommy(at)live(dot)com
nurse_mommy(at)live(dot)com
https://twitter.com/sgrant2005/status/565552896654069760
nurse_mommy(at)live(dot)com
nurse_mommy(at)live(dot)com