In Hindu Religious Art and Iconography Why Is the God Krishna Often Depicted With Blue Skin?

Wellness

Tin science explicate blueish skin of Lord Krishna?

Religion interprets blueish skin equally the aura of a spiritual body; science considers information technology a rare genetic disorder

By DTE Staff
Published: Th 25 August 2016

Blue skin is a result of a genetic disorder wherein hemoglobin is unable to release oxygen effectively to body tissues. Credit: Sugato Maltra/Flicker Blue pare is a result of a genetic disorder wherein hemoglobin is unable to release oxygen finer to trunk tissues. Credit: Sugato Maltra/Flicker

The world has depicted Lord Krishna every bit a baby stealing butter and a charming youth holding a flute, with a peacock feather on his head. And in all these depictions, there's one common link: the blueish colour of his skin. The question as to why his peel looked different from ours must accept nudged you? The legends tell us that Lord Krishna had boozer poisoned milk given past a demon when he was a infant and that had caused the bluish tinge in his skin.

The same theory is floated to explain blue pharynx (neelkanth) of Lord Shiva, who is believed to take drunk the poison to save the earth from destruction at the time of Samudra Manthan.

Religious interpretation of bluish

Etymologically speaking, the Sanskrit give-and-take 'Krishna' means black or nighttime. At times, it is also translated every bit "all bonny".  According to Vedas, Lord Krishna is a dark-skinned Dravidian god. Even in traditional patta chitras (cloth art) in Odisha, Lord Krishna and Vishnu are e'er shown having black skin. And so why is Lord Krishna universally depicted as someone with blue skin?

Hindu organized religion believes in symbolisms and the bluish colour is a symbol of the infinite and the immeasurable. According to Swami Chinmayananda, the inspiration behind Chinmaya Mission, whatever is immeasurable tin appear to the mortal center only as blue, just like the clement summer sky appears bluish to the physical middle. Since Lord Krishna is across our perception, it seemed apt to attribute this colour to him.

Blue is the colour of aura

Some are of the opinion that the bluish tinge in Lord Krishna'due south skin is not the colour of the textile torso but the eternal spiritual body of the Lord that emits blueish aureola. Co-ordinate to Bhagavad Gita, the beatific class of Lord Krishna is visible only to pure devotees. He may accept bewildered the non-devotees, simply those who offered pure devotional service to Him had e'er seen Him in his blue blissful form.

The scientific discipline of blue pare

Just in existent life, tin can people actually have that peel color? While James Cameron, in his film Avatar, showed Na'vi having blue skin to imply otherness, there's nothing alien about beingness born with a blue skin.

Blue-tinged skin is the result of methemoglobinemia—a status wherein hemoglobin, the molecule in red claret cells that distribute oxygen to the torso, is unable to release oxygen finer to body tissues.  As the claret doesn't get oxygenated, it makes the skin look bluish, lips regal, and blood chocolate-coloured.

Well-nigh of us have less than ane per cent of methemoglobin. The pare gets the bluish tinge when that level rises to 10-20 per cent.

Famous Fugate family of Kentucky

Six generations of the Fugate family, who lived in the hills of Kentucky from 1800 to 1960, had blue pare. The blueish lineage began in the early on 1800s when Martin Fugate, a French orphan, settled on the banks of the Troublesome Creek. He married a ruby-red-haired American lady who had a very pale complexion. Their genetic chemistry resulted in a mutation and the both unknowingly carried the recessive cistron that resulted in their descendants being born with bluish skin.

Due to intermarriage, the next generations were also born with this rare disorder. However, most of the family members lived into their 80s and 90s with no meaning health bug.

Blue Baby syndrome

Methemoglobinemia may be passed down through families or can be caused past exposure to certain drugs and chemicals. Uranium toxicity because of contaminated water is also believed to have the potential to crusade 'blue baby syndrome'. Indiscriminate apply of chemical fertilizers in Punjab villages saw a surge in blue infant syndrome in 2009. Cases of bluish baby syndrome were reported in villages in Romania and Bulgaria that faced sanitation trouble and high level of nitrates in groundwater.

Hopefully, Lord Krishna wasn't a victim of groundwater contamination.

NEXT STORY

sotofleamint.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/health/did-lord-krishna-really-have-blue-skin--55392

0 Response to "In Hindu Religious Art and Iconography Why Is the God Krishna Often Depicted With Blue Skin?"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel