A Study of the Universal Human Themes, Moral Architecture, and Living Presence of Valmiki's Epic Across Millennia
Abstract: The Ramayana is, by any measure, one of the
most widely known narratives in human history. It has been told and retold
across more than two thousand years, in more than three hundred distinct
versions, in dozens of languages, across the entire breadth of South and
Southeast Asia and beyond. It has been adapted for theatre, puppet performance,
dance, painting, film, television, and digital media. Every generation has
found in it a story it needed, and no generation has found it merely
historical, merely ancient, merely about someone else's world. This article
explores why the Ramayana persists with this quality of immediate relevance
across such enormous spans of time and cultural distance: what specific
features of its narrative, its characters, and its moral architecture produce
the experience of recognition that readers and listeners in every generation
seem to share, and what the tradition itself says about the nature of the text
that makes this persistence not accidental but inherent.
Keywords: Ramayana, timelessness, Valmiki, universal
themes, moral architecture, dharma, human condition, epic tradition, Sanatana
Dharma, cultural transmission, relevance
Introduction
There are old things and there are things that do not
age. Old things become artifacts: interesting, perhaps beautiful, but no longer
speaking to the present in any immediate sense. Things that do not age continue
to be experienced as present even when they are ancient, continue to generate
new interpretations, new arguments, new creative responses, because they are
somehow always still about now. The Ramayana belongs to the second category,
and this is worth trying to understand, because belonging to it is unusual
enough to demand explanation.
The text was composed, in some form close to what we
have, sometime between the fifth century BCE and the first century CE. The
world it describes is materially unrecognisable to any modern reader. Its
cosmology is pre-scientific. Its social structures are hierarchical in ways
that contemporary life has largely abandoned. Its political organisation is
monarchical. Its understanding of gender and family is shaped by assumptions
that many people today find at best foreign and at worst troubling. And yet
people across every generation, every culture, every educational and social
background who encounter the Ramayana with genuine attention report an experience
of recognition: these people feel real, these situations feel familiar, this
story is, somehow, about something in my own experience.
Understanding why this is the case is not merely an
academic exercise. It is an attempt to identify what the Ramayana actually is
at its deepest level, what kind of thing it is that it can survive two thousand
years of change and still speak.
The Characters Are Recognisably
Human
The most immediate explanation for the Ramayana's
timelessness is the most obvious one: its characters feel real. Not as
historical figures about whom we have documented evidence, but as psychological
realities, as recognisable patterns of human experience that generate the
feeling of having met these people before, or of being them.
Arjuna in the Bhagavad Gita is sometimes described as
the universal human being in the moment of his greatest confusion. Rama in the
Ramayana is something different but equally universal: the person who is
trying, with complete sincerity and considerable success, to do the right thing
and is discovering what doing the right thing costs. Everyone who has ever
tried to live rightly knows something of Rama's situation. The cost of
integrity is recognisable across any cultural distance. Dasharatha's grief, the
grief of the parent who has lost a beloved child through the working out of
their own choices, is recognisable across any cultural distance. Bharata's
outrage and helplessness when he returns home to find his mother has destroyed
everything, is recognisable. Sita's refusal to be defined by what happened to
her, is recognisable.
रामः स्थापयितुं कीर्तिं
त्रिलोक्याम् इह
चागतः। सर्वेषामेव
लोकानां धर्ममेव
विवर्धयन्॥
Ramah sthapayitum kirtim tri-lokyam
iha cagatah, Sarvesham eva lokanam dharmam eva vivardhayan.
(Rama has come into this world to
establish his fame in all three worlds, ever increasing dharma for all beings.)
Valmiki Ramayana, Bala Kanda, 15.27
The fame Rama establishes is not the fame of the
conqueror. It is the fame of the person whose life demonstrated what the living
of dharma actually looks like. Every generation that encounters this
demonstration recognises something in it, because the attempt to live rightly,
the cost of that attempt, and the question of whether it was worth the cost are
permanent features of human experience. They do not go away when the social
context changes.
The Moral Tensions Are Never
Resolved Cheaply
The second major reason for the Ramayana's durability
is that it never offers easy answers to the moral questions it raises. The
tension between dharma and personal happiness is not resolved by showing that
they always align in the end. They do not, in the Ramayana. The tension between
the obligations of different relationships, between the son's obligation to the
father and the king's obligation to his people, between the husband's
obligation to his wife and the king's obligation to his subjects, these
tensions are not resolved. They are held, painfully, and the characters must
navigate them without the text providing convenient resolution.
This honesty is what keeps the Ramayana from becoming
merely didactic. If the text simply said that dharma always produces happiness,
it would be false, and every reader who has lived long enough would know it is
false. By showing that dharma sometimes produces suffering, that the right
choice is sometimes the painful one, that genuine moral seriousness is
genuinely costly, the text remains true to experience. And fidelity to
experience is the only thing that can produce the feeling of recognition that makes
a story timeless.
नायमात्मा बलहीनेन
लभ्यः।
Nayam atma balahinena labhyah.
(This self cannot be attained by
one who is without strength.)
Mundaka Upanishad, 3.2.4
Strength, in the context of the Ramayana's moral
vision, is precisely the capacity to face the full cost of righteous conduct
without flinching and without compromising. This kind of strength is not
physical. It is the strength of an inner life that has been developed to the
point where it can hold to what it values even when holding to it hurts. Every
generation produces people who want this kind of strength and who look to
stories of people who had it for models and encouragement. The Ramayana will
always be such a story.
The Diversity of the Tradition's
Responses
A third indication of the Ramayana's timelessness is
what has been done with it. The fact that the text has generated more than
three hundred distinct versions, across languages and cultures and centuries,
is not merely evidence of its popularity. It is evidence of its fecundity: the
text is generative enough to allow every teller to find in it a version of the
story they need to tell for their own people in their own time. The Tamil Kamba
Ramayana, the Bengali Krittibasi Ramayana, the Oriya Bilanka Ramayana, the Thai
Ramakien, the Javanese Kakawin Ramayana, the Lao Phra Lak Phra Lam: each of
these is the Ramayana and each of them is significantly different from the
others. The capacity to generate this diversity without losing the identity
that makes it recognisably the same story is the mark of a narrative with
genuine depth.
रामायणमिदं कृत्स्नं
श्रुत्वा सरहस्यं
वादिनः। आयुष्यं
पुण्यमायुष्यं धन्यं
श्रेयस्करं परम्॥
Ramayanamidam kritsnam shrutva
sarahasyam vadinah, Ayushyam punyam ayushyam dhanyam shreyaskaram param.
(Having heard this entire Ramayana
along with its inner meaning, the wise acquire longevity, merit, wealth,
blessedness, and the highest good.)
Valmiki Ramayana, Yuddha Kanda,
128.121
Sarahasyam: along with its inner meaning. The Ramayana
has a surface meaning and a depth meaning, and the depth meaning is the source
of what Valmiki is promising here: not merely entertainment but transformation.
The story is not just about Rama and Sita and Ravana in a specific time and
place. It is about the encounter between dharma and adharma that is permanently
occurring in every human life and in every human community. Whoever enters that
encounter with genuine attention finds that the story has been waiting for
them.
What the Tradition Says About
Itself
Valmiki himself offers, in the Bala Kanda's prologue,
an account of what kind of text he is composing that is worth taking seriously.
He is writing, he says, not merely a story but an itihasa, literally 'thus it
was', a text that participates in the living transmission of the tradition's
understanding of dharma. The Ramayana is not presented as fiction. It is not
presented as merely historical. It is presented as a living transmission, a
text whose engagement with the questions of dharma, righteousness, and human
conduct is ongoing rather than completed.
This is the tradition's own explanation for why the
text does not age: it is not about a particular time but about the permanent
conditions of the human situation, and it is crafted by a poet of sufficient
genius that the permanent conditions are presented through particular
characters and situations that make them immediately vivid and recognisable.
The particularity is the vehicle for the universality. The story of Rama and
Sita is the vehicle for the story of every person who has ever tried to live
rightly in a world that does not always cooperate with that attempt.
Conclusion
The Ramayana is timeless for the same reasons that all
genuinely great literature is timeless: it is honest, it is deep, its
characters are recognisably human, and its moral questions are the permanent
questions that every generation must face in its own way. The specific social
arrangements of the world it describes belong to a particular time and place.
The human experiences it narrates belong to no particular time and every
particular place.
Every generation that reads the Ramayana carefully
finds something in it that it needed to find. Not because the text provides
easy answers, but because it demonstrates, with incomparable clarity and power,
what the questions actually are and what the attempt to live by genuine answers
to them looks like in a human life. That demonstration does not go out of date.
It cannot, because the questions do not go out of date. And the story that most
honestly engages with the permanent questions is the story that will be most
alive in every generation that has the courage to engage with them honestly in
return.
यावत् स्थास्यन्ति गिरयः
सरितश्च महीतले।
तावद् रामायणकथा
लोकेषु प्रचरिष्यति॥
Yavat sthasyanti girayah saritash
ca mahitale, Tavad Ramayanaकatha lokeshu pracarishtati.
(As long as the mountains stand and
the rivers flow on the earth, so long will the story of the Ramayana move
through the world.)
Valmiki Ramayana, Bala Kanda, 2.36
Valmiki's own declaration is unambiguous. The story
will move through the world as long as the world itself continues. Not as an
artifact, not as a museum piece, not as a text to be studied from a comfortable
critical distance, but as a moving presence in human life, a story that walks
alongside those who are trying to understand their own experience of dharma,
duty, sacrifice, love, and the cost of integrity. It will continue to move
because the human need for exactly this kind of story does not diminish, and
the human experience of exactly this kind of challenge does not end. The
Ramayana will be timeless for as long as the human being remains what it is: a
creature trying, imperfectly and expensively, to live rightly in a world whose
demands do not simplify themselves for the convenience of those trying to meet
them.
References and Suggested Reading
Valmiki Ramayana, Bala Kanda (Prologue) and Yuddha
Kanda (Conclusion)
Tulsidas, Ramcharitmanas (Preface, Bala Kanda)
A.K. Ramanujan, 'Three Hundred Ramayanas' in Many
Ramayanas (1991)
Sheldon Pollock, The Language of the Gods in the World
of Men (2006)
R.K. Narayan, The Ramayana: A Shortened Modern Prose
Version (1972)
Devdutt Pattanaik, My Hanuman Chalisa (2017)
Philip Lutgendorf, The Life of a Text: Performing the
Ramcaritmanas of Tulsidas (1991)