|work| — Gurucharitra

This episode has been interpreted by modern scholars (Feldhaus, 1995) as a radical leveling, but within the Gurucharitra , it reinforces guru sovereignty: only the guru can suspend caste, and only the guru’s body—not any social body—is the true locus of purity. Today, the Gurucharitra remains a living scripture. In Maharashtra, Telangana, and Karnataka, tens of thousands of families perform the saptāha annually. The text has also generated a secondary literature: commentaries in Marathi ( Gurucharitra-tātparya-dīpikā ), Kannada, and English; audio recitations by modern gurukṣetras (e.g., Shri Kshetra Ganagapur). Digital platforms now offer synchronized pāṭha apps, demonstrating the text’s resilience.

The Gurucharitra as a Foundational Hagiography: Narrative Theology, Ritual Performance, and the Construction of Guru-Kingship in the Dattatreya Tradition gurucharitra

Chapters 48–51 prescribe the Gurucharitra-pāṭha : a seven-day communal recitation, ideally during the bright fortnight. Each day covers ~7 chapters, followed by pūjā , āratī , and a mahāprasāda (communal meal). The phala-śruti for completion is explicit: “One who completes the saptāha with faith will have Dattatreya’s direct vision.” This episode has been interpreted by modern scholars

Unlike philosophical texts, the Gurucharitra promises material and therapeutic results: exorcism of bhūta-preta (ghosts), healing of infertility, removal of snake curses (Chapter 18). These functions position the text as a cikitsā-śāstra (therapeutic scripture) for householder devotees. 5. Case Study: The Brahmin and the Caṇḍāla (Chapter 27) One paradigmatic episode crystallizes the text’s anti-essentialist soteriology. A Brahmin performs a pilgrimage to Kashi but accidentally steps on a Caṇḍāla (untouchable). The Brahmin falls ill. Nṛsiṃha Sarasvatī visits him and reveals that the Caṇḍāla was in fact the guru in disguise. The lesson: “Jāti nāhī, guṇu nāhī, dhyāna ekacī sācē” (There is no caste, no quality; only meditation on the guru is true). The text has also generated a secondary literature:

The paper introduces the concept of guru-kingship to capture the text’s political theology. Nṛsiṃha Sarasvatī is depicted as a sovereign who wields the rod ( daṇḍa ) of discipline, grants boons, issues edicts ( ājñā ), and even overrides caste law (e.g., elevating a low-caste devotee to Brahminhood). In Chapter 32, the guru instructs a Muslim court official: “The guru’s command is the only dharma.” This sacral sovereignty directly competes with—and supersedes—temporal kingship. 4. Ritual Performance: The Saptāha as Re-Enactment The Gurucharitra is not a text for silent reading. Its performative dimension is encoded in its very composition.

The Gurucharitra (c. 15th–16th century CE) is a Marathi hagiographical compendium detailing the life and miracles of Śrīpāda Śrīvallabha and Śrī Nṛsiṃha Sarasvatī, two early avatars of the deity Dattatreya. This paper argues that the text functions not merely as devotional biography but as a manual for living guru-centric spirituality. Through a literary, theological, and ritual analysis, this study demonstrates how the Gurucharitra constructs the figure of the sadguru (true guru) as the sole arbiter of liberation, delineates a systematic guru-kingship model, and serves as the liturgical backbone for the Guru-caritra-pāṭha (ritual recitation). The paper concludes that the text’s enduring authority in Maharashtra and beyond lies in its dialectical resolution of bhakti (devotion) and śāstra (scriptural law) under the absolute sovereignty of the living guru. 1. Introduction The Gurucharitra (literally “Life Story of the Guru”) occupies a unique position in the landscape of medieval Marathi religious literature. Unlike the Dnyaneshwari (a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita) or the Bhakti-Vijaya , the Gurucharitra is hagiography that functions as scripture. Attributed to the śaiṣya (disciple) Sayam (or Sāyām) Maharaj under the inspiration of the guru Nṛsiṃha Sarasvatī, the text is structured as a dialogue between the sage Siddha (disciple) and his interlocutor, Nāmadharak.

The work narrates the earthly careers of two avatars of Dattatreya—Śrīpāda Śrīvallabha (active in the early 14th century) and his successor, Śrī Nṛsiṃha Sarasvatī (late 14th to early 15th century). While hagiography across religious traditions often emphasizes moral exemplarity, the Gurucharitra is distinctive for its explicit liturgical design: it is meant to be recited in weekly installments ( saptāha ), with each chapter ( adhyāya ) offering specific phala-śruti (fruits of recitation). Composed during the Bahmani Sultanate and the rise of Vijayanagara, the Gurucharitra reflects a period of political fragmentation and religious synthesis. The Dattatreya tradition, which absorbed elements of Nath yoga, Advaita Vedanta, and popular Shaiva-Vaishnava bhakti, found in the Gurucharitra its foundational narrative.