The Warrior, the Monk, and the Malang: The Naked Ascetics of South Asia
Anthropology Meets Ritual Nudity Hello, everyone. Today, we are going to peel back the layers—quite literally—of a phenomenon that has fascinated, baffled, and often scandalized observers for centuries: ritual nudity in South Asian asceticism. Now, when I say "naked ascetics," what’s the first image that pops into your head? Perhaps you think of a chaotic scene at the Kumbh Mela, or maybe a solitary figure in a forest. For a long time, colonial observers and "orientalist" scholars looked at these practitioners through a lens of exoticization, seeing only "wildness" or "eccentricity". But if we look closer, we find something far more profound. This isn't just about a lack of clothes; it is a complex symbolic system embedded in deep theological and social structures. We’re going to explore three distinct traditions today: the Hindu Naga Sadhus, the Jain Digambaras, and the Sufi-influenced Malangs. While they all practice some form of na...