Prahlad's teachings against the practice of 'SATI'

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Posted: 13 years ago
#1

Hey Guys,

So today, my family just finished Narasimha Avatar from BRC's Vishnu Puraan, and a scene I actually liked from the show was Prahlad's teachings against the practice of 'SATI'.👏
In the scene, Maharani Kayadu was getting ready to immolate herself on her husband's pyre when Prahlad asked her why she was doing it. When she answered that she was carrying out the duty of a wife, Prahlad asked her what happened to the duty of a mother? He then went on to explain how a woman was not just a wife. She was also a mother, daughter, daughter-in-law, and sister, so if Kayadu ended her life by immolating herself on the pyre of her dead husband, who no longer needed her, what would happen to those living who actually did need her, like himself? He further preached that when an individual dies, their soul no longer belongs to that body and that the bond we have with the body is also gone, so to kill one self for that body is meaningless. Prahlad's final argument was that SATI is equal to suicide, and that Vishnu himself or any of the other Gods never condone such a sin, either from man or woman, so Sati is not a right practice and doing it is no noble deed, but a sin since a woman would have failed in her duties of a mother and all other relationships (like serving her in-laws and parents) and further committed the crime of taking away her life, which no one has the right to do except God.
I don't know whether this scene actually happened in any of our scriptures, but I felt that it was really well done and teaches a great lesson to those people in India who still fill that SATI is a noble practice for a woman after the death of her husband. It is true that suicide is a great sin, and Sati is nothing different from suicide (or it could be murder when the woman is forced into it), so God can never forgive the individual who does Sati or who forces a woman to do Sati.
What do you guys think of this scene? I never expected it from Narasimha Avatar of all stories but it was well done.

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ShivangBuch thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#2
It is indeed very nice and true teaching. But I prefer serials like Balika Badhu or Tarak Mehta ka Oolta Chashma (actual fictions) to give contemporary social messages rather than mytho shows. Mytho shows should stick to social messages naturally coming out of them like in Ramayan Ayodhya Kand. But epic events twisted to teach modern day lessons is not very convincing for me. By showing it through the characters of Ram or Krishna or Bhishma through their words, you are authenticating as if your argument is also correct (and not just your objective) where as this is still worthy of appreciation (only logically not always convincing) since the intention is noble (consequential ethics). IMO Mytho shows should stick to logically explain how the things were justified in Dwapar or Treta or even if not justified, it can be left open to debate (I mean what they want to convey can still be conveyed without the one sided way of showing only their way of explanation or logic is correct using a very major character of the epic) rather than creating an artificial event. I thought Kayadhu died before the death of Hiranyakashyapu as shown in movie Haridarshan. Isn't it? Or the movie is wrong?

Well what I mean to say can be better conveyed through some of the examples of teachings of BRC MB twisted from actual MB e.g. Subhadra haran was forced and not at the will of Subhadra and Krishna had his own logic behind it which was equally justifiable then. Then final preaching of Bhishma against the partition of nation to be like partition of mother. Here I liked Vrish's argument in one of the threads that if Hastinapur partition was wrong, Ram also did that wrong by dividing Kosala between his two sons Lav and Kush. Then Ram pressing Sita's legs also looks very ordinary, cheap and unwanted. Man-Woman equality can still be shown with better dignity of Ram's character of Treta scenario or the same scene and message can be given through some other fictional show and fictional characters.
Edited by ShivangBuch - 13 years ago
RamKiSeeta thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#3

Originally posted by: ShivangBuch

It is indeed very nice and true teaching. But I prefer serials like Balika Badhu or Tarak Mehta ka Oolta Chashma (actual fictions) to give contemporary social messages rather than mytho shows. Yes, I agree with you, but something like the practice of SATI I believe is not really a contemporary social message, because we haven't had many instances of it in our mythos either. The only one I know is of Madri immolating herself on Pandu's pyre, but neither Kaushalya, Sumitra, or Kaikeyi did that for Dashrath, so I do not think it was considered a virtuous practice even then. After all, even Ram and Krishna preached that suicide is a sin, and SATI is nothing more than suicide. Mytho shows should stick to social messages naturally coming out of them like in Ramayan Ayodhya Kand. But epic events twisted to teach modern day lessons is not very convincing for me. By showing it through the characters of Ram or Krishna or Bhishma through their words, you are authenticating as if your argument is also correct (and not just your objective) where as this is still worthy of appreciation (only logically not always convincing) since the intention is noble (consequential ethics). IMO Mytho shows should stick to logically explain how the things were justified in Dwapar or Treta or even if not justified, it can be left open to debate (I mean what they want to convey can still be conveyed without the one sided way of showing only their way of explanation or logic is correct using a very major character of the epic) rather than creating an artificial event. I thought Kayadhu died before the death of Hiranyakashyapu as shown in movie Haridarshan. Isn't it? Or the movie is wrong? I don't know anything about Kayadu actually...in all the movies I've seen, she has never played an important role in Narasimha Avatar other than being the mother of Prahlad...BRC's Vishnu Puraan gave her a lot of importance, far more than necessary, so I am bound to think they made up a lot of events in the story since it lasted for about 15-20 episodes...far more than necessary to show Narasimha Avatar.


Well what I mean to say can be better conveyed through some of the examples of teachings of BRC MB twisted from actual MB e.g. Subhadra haran was forced and not at the will of Subhadra and Krishna had his own logic behind it which was equally justifiable then. Then final preaching of Bhishma against the partition of nation to be like partition of mother. Here I liked Vrish's argument in one of the threads that if Hastinapur partition was wrong, Ram also did that wrong by dividing Kosala between his two sons Lav and Kush. Then Ram pressing Sita's legs also looks very ordinary, cheap and unwanted. I don't think that scene looks very cheap, as Ram was equally an ideal husband as Sita was an ideal wife, and when a husband sees that his wife is tired, to make her feel more comfortable is not wrong, and it's not really a contemporary social message either. I'm sure men in the other yugas were not cold hearted. They also cared for their wifes, so that scene from ASR did not bother me, but the scene that did was the lesson Ram gave in the end of the portrait scene when he advocates against men remarrying. I understand that the CVs were further clarifying his eka patnivrat vow, but in that scene Ram's message against remarriage seemed a bit out of place and unnecessary, so I understand what you mean when you say that some contemporary social messages seem out of place in a mytho (though having just one wife is not really contemporary since Ram was an eka patnivrat), but to make them acceptable to today's audience who will not want to watch Ramayan or Mahabharat if Ram or Krishna are not shown as caring, loving husbands who treat their wives with equality, I believe the social messages could be written better in a more believable manner that doesn't seem out of place in a story that is supposed to take place in the treta yug or dwapar yug. Man-Woman equality can still be shown with better dignity of Ram's character of Treta scenario or the same scene and message can be given through some other fictional show and fictional characters. Yes, I agree that Ram and Krishna's characters can be shown with better dignity in some scenes, but to see them portrayed through fictional characters does not have the same effect, because audience wants to see the Gods preach about equality, not the common public. When God says man and woman are equal, it holds more weight than if a fictional character says it, know what I mean? So I'm not against the new mythos having contemporary social messages that teach today's youth the morals that are necessary to survive in today's society, but they should be done in a dignified, believable manner, without any added melodrama.

ShivangBuch thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#4
Edited by ShivangBuch - 13 years ago
RamKiSeeta thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#5

Originally posted by: ShivangBuch



Agree with you about your interpretation of Sati, so not replying to it in particular, as there's nothing for me to disagree on.😊


Well I knew that the scene must not have bothered you and others but personally I don't agree with you here. Cheap word was may be exaggerated but the unwanted word was not inappropriate. To be an ideal husband, one doesn't need to show that one can press the legs of wife who is younger than you by 9 years. Yes, I'm not saying it's needed, and neither do I think the scene was implying that it's needed, but it's simply that if a husband does press his wife's feet, it's not degrading his dignity or self-respect. Also, if you remember the scene, Ram actually did not press Sita's feet. He was about to but Sita stopped him. She pressed his feet instead and told him that it's a wife's duty to press her husband's feet, and Ram asked her that if a husband wishes to comfort his wife in the same way, is it wrong? So Ram wrong was not really advocating husbands pressing their wives' feet and saying loving husbands should, but he was making a point that it's not wrong if they do, which I do agree with personally. I know out of love one can press the legs of even own youngers and children. But still Ram was a loving protector husband (more like a father than a friend). This scene was not required in the sense that Ram was Maryada Purushottam and his action was required to be shown according to the customs of that time. He could comfort his wife by putting his hands on her head. That would have been sufficient to show his Vatsalya (like that of a father) and remove the tiredness of Sita like he did with Sugreev giving him touch healing. Can you imagine Ram pressing legs of Lakshman, Bharat, Hanuman or Sugreev? They would simply die of shyness. Can you imagine Ram pressing legs of Sita in front of Rajmatas or even Lakshman? I don't think we can compare younger brothers or devoteers' status to a wife's, because scriptures describe wife as the Ardhaangini of a husband, and they do say wife and husband are equal, so though husbands serving wife is still not a normal practice even now let alone back then, pressing her legs from time to time is not such a huge deal. Even if he could do it in lonely place like it is shown, it is an artificially created event and dialog, is I guess not the wrong assumption of mine 99.99%. And Lakshman was there around them only in Aranya Kand. I am sorry but the definition of love and care can't be that narrow that if one doesn't respond to wife's service (according to the age and customary norms and natural role of husband that of protector being male) in the same language/manner, the husband is not cold hearted. I am sure even his promise to a 9 year old innocent girl on Suhaag raat night was out of caring Vatsalya as the person on the receiving end was still a little girl. That depends on which source one is following...others say Sita was 14 and Ram was 16, whereas others say Sita was actually a year older. I follow that Sita was 14, because the time between Ram being born and Janak finding Sita could not have been that long. Father's vatsalya is not in pressing legs but in petting the head softly and gently. I've never considered Ram and Sita's relationship to be that of father and daughter's, no matter how young Sita was, lol. That's just plain weird.😕😆 It's ok if they still show this with Krishna because Krishna was multidimensional in relationships and playful and never bothered about social boundaries against relation of love. Having said that, Ram playing and loving within maryada wouldn't reduce his love for his wife. I know that scene was created to neutralize people's anger on Ramji coming later in Uttar kand, but to go further with this scene then, they should have also shown then that Ram himself went and dropped Sita to Valmiki Aashram with great care. Arun Govil's caring scenes are on the contrary more appropriate and lovable within Treta maryada and look even more sweet. However, one can have one's own innocent image of Ramji. One is free to see own God in one's own imagination. If you wrote the same scene as fanfiction, I would have loved it and appreciated it. But we can claim that it's AS's interpretation of Ram's character, can't we? Just like I may be writing a scene like this, a serial based on Ramayan also makes up some fictional scenes to portray their interpretation of Ramji according to the time and society. All serials do that. Even RS did that...instead of showing Valmiki's Uttar Kand, he showed Ram unable to make a decision about Sita's vanvaas and Sita having to take it up herself. Though AS also used this plot, it originally came from RS and some people do have a problem with it (both from RSR and ASR) because it portrayed Ram as weak and indecisive. RSji said in one of his discourses that he did not show some scenes in Ramayan because of public unrest at that time, like Valmiki's version of Sita's Agni Pariksha (which portrays Ram a lot harsher than RCM) and Sulochana immolating herself. Likewise, though I do not agree with all the RamSita scenes ASR showed (like the portrait one I mentioned before), most of them were fine and catered to the audience today. But in the serial, it authenticates and twists Ram's actual character and age difference Age difference is debatable like I said, because different sources say different things. and Treta scenario. That looks very unconvincing and odd. I would love to see Sumit Arora (Gomukh) pressing legs of Debina (Mayuri) living in Chidiyaghar out of innocent love because that goes very well along with the innocence of the character and the time and family customs of the time. Nice example😆😆😆 But that doesn't go well with Ramji particularly after already watching it very sweetly & sufficiently portrayed in the older version within limits. Had Ramji been shown pressing Sita's feet in the same way Gaumukh pressed Mayuri's feet, even I would have cringed, but in the scene, he was touching Sita's knee and he did not even get to press it because Sita stopped him, so the authenticity of Ramji's character was still retained there, as well as Sita's since her character would never have let Ramji massage her.


But what is man-woman equality? Woman taking the role of protecting the husband against the attack of another woman and man leaving the home of own parents and going to wife's parents' house? Should mythos have a dialog from Ram to Janak - O father in law, I don't mind leaving Ayodhya and staying with you if my parents allow me to do so because I consider man-woman are equal. Sita also can come to forest with me because she also should learn the art of archery and help me to kill the demons because I believe that man-woman are equal. Is this the definition of Man-Woman equality? I define man and woman equality as both the husband and wife acknowledging that the other is not lesser than them and is their better half. I feel that it falls on the husband and wife to decide what each other will do, and as long as neither insults the other considers themselves greater (some women are guilty of this as well as men), then their relationship is an equal one. Ram and Sita mutually acknowledged each other's greatness, and though they behaved accordingly to the customs of Treta Yuga, one simple scene with Ram attempting to press Sita's knee does not degrade his character, especially since the same serial had at least 10 scenes with Sita pressing Ram's feet, one with her washing them with her hair too. That anybody can do any job of each other in general and not in exceptional case? There is specific order set and natural duties are defined for each order in an appropriate functional manner. That doesn't mean anyone's status is inferior to the other. Hanuman serving Ram out of love doesn't make him inferior in status because Lord is also the servant of his devotees. And husband should press the legs is not the message required to be given because wives also don't press the legs of husbands of modern times.😆 That was not the message of the scene. Like I mentioned, Sita pressed Ram's feet at least 10-15 times in ASR and I remember that some modern people had a problem with one of the scenes where Sita washed Ram's feet and dried them with her hair, because they claimed it implied that women are servants to their husbands (in opposition, that was my favorite RamSita scene from the serial😆), so AS I think wanted to neutralize all those scenes with showing Ramji equally caring to his wife in just one scene. I know you think it is not necessary for a husband to press his wife's legs to do that, but in my opinion it's not wrong either. It's not the same as Sita picking up weapons and fighting with Ramji, or Ramji actually touching Sita's feet like she did, because that really was not an acceptable custom back then, whereas nowhere did it say that if a wife was in pain, husbands should not reduce it. Simpling placing a hand on her head is not enough, because that implies more of a father-child relationship which is more suitable between Ram and his brothers or Ram and his devotees than Ram and Sita. So eras change, norms and customs also automatically change. Sorry if it is getting very serious but I am actually having fun with this debate right now although I know that I am going to be villain for many members of the forum over here.🤣 Lol, I'm also having fun, as the mytho forum seemed so dead lately.😆😆😆 It's a good thing I created a topic which caught your attention.😉 The following scene of Vishnu Puraan after that Kayadu incident would annoy you further, lol. Should I clarify? Let me be very clear that I am not the supporter of wife pressing legs of husband in Kaliyug.🤣 I personally don't mind either, lol. If my husband is having body aches, I will be happy to massage him and get rid of his pain, and if I feel the same, I would wish for him to do it as well.

Well here is the link I found of Wikipedia. However, I wanted to find the names of famous Satis. Thanks! Will check it.😃

Edited by JanakiRaghunath - 13 years ago
ShivangBuch thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#6
Edited by ShivangBuch - 13 years ago
RamKiSeeta thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#7
I'm just replying separately since all those colors are confusing me.😆

I do agree with what you're saying, and I definitely acknowledge that romance is not the only element in Ram-Sita or Radha-Krishna relationship, but I still categorize those relationships differently from Ram-Lakshman or Ram-Hanuman, simply because one treats their brother or friend differently from their wife or husband...one relationship is not greater than the other, and Ram gave importance to all the relationships in his life, but he also treated his wife different from his brother, his brother different from his father or mother, etc. While it is true that Ram and Krishna are incarnations of Vishnu, they were human incarnations and therefore felt human emotions while on Earth. I think of Vishnu differently from Ram, because Ram felt all the human emotions as per his avatar whereas Vishnu is beyond comprehension and he doesn't feel emotions like a human. So while I also give equal importance to the devotion between Ram and Sita, Radha Krishna just as much as romantic love, I feel that Ram's devotion to Sita portrayed through his attempting to massage her legs is not against the customs of Treta Yug.

Also, Ram did not stick to all customs, especially those which were wrong. He ate the berries of Shabari though she belonged to the lower class, whereas others avoided her and even insulted her. The customs of Treta Yug were to elevate the higher classes and stay away from the lower classes, and Ram showed everyone how wrong that was by giving respect to Shabari. So if it was a custom of Treta Yug to say that husbands should never massage their wives even when they are in pain, I don't think Ram would have agreed with it, so that scene from ASR is not unbelievable to me.

Moreover, I don't think any of us will ever know what the customs of Treta Yug or Dwapar Yug really were, except for the major ones written in the scriptures, so when it comes to things like, did husbands ever press their wives' legs or backs when they were in pain, it is such a small thing that we won't really know, so as long as the characters of Ram and Krishna are kept intact when showing such scenes, I wouldn't make deal out of it. I know you consider that to be out of the character of Ram in that scene from ASR, but I didn't so in this we should just agree to disagree.😊😆

Btw, you mentioned about Lakshman being in pain and Ram putting his hand on his head...if Lakshman ever was in pain, I think Ram would do anything to make him feel better, same with Hanuman, Bharat, Sugreev, or his other devotees and brothers. Ram was not that high and mighty to expect others to serve him and not return the service when his devotees are in pain. Just like he ate the half-bitten fruits of Shabari, I feel that Ram would not have hesitated to serve any of his brothers, friends, and devotees if they were in pain and came to him for comfort. Putting his hand on his devotees' head is more to assuage mental pain, not really physical...if his devotees were in physical pain, I believe that the Ramji I believe in and pray to would have served them like a devotee himself. That's how I define the statement 'God is a servant of his devotees'.

It's true that God's touch is enough to rid people of both mental and physical pain, but taking it in the sense that Ram was born a human and kept within the limitations of a human life, he would not have performed miracles like Krishna by touching people's heads and ridding them of physical pain. At least, this is what I believe.😊
RamKiSeeta thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#8
I'm enjoying this debate with you, Shivang Anna, it's been too long.🤗
ShivangBuch thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#9

Originally posted by: JanakiRaghunath

I'm just replying separately since all those colors are confusing me.😆

I do agree with what you're saying, and I definitely acknowledge that romance is not the only element in Ram-Sita or Radha-Krishna relationship, but I still categorize those relationships differently from Ram-Lakshman or Ram-Hanuman, simply because one treats their brother or friend differently from their wife or husband...one relationship is not greater than the other, and Ram gave importance to all the relationships in his life, but he also treated his wife different from his brother, his brother different from his father or mother, etc. While it is true that Ram and Krishna are incarnations of Vishnu, they were human incarnations and therefore felt human emotions while on Earth. I think of Vishnu differently from Ram, because Ram felt all the human emotions as per his avatar whereas Vishnu is beyond comprehension and he doesn't feel emotions like a human. So while I also give equal importance to the devotion between Ram and Sita, Radha Krishna just as much as romantic love, I feel that Ram's devotion to Sita portrayed through his attempting to massage her legs is not against the customs of Treta Yug.

Also, Ram did not stick to all customs, especially those which were wrong. He ate the berries of Shabari though she belonged to the lower class, whereas others avoided her and even insulted her. The customs of Treta Yug were to elevate the higher classes and stay away from the lower classes, and Ram showed everyone how wrong that was by giving respect to Shabari. So if it was a custom of Treta Yug to say that husbands should never massage their wives even when they are in pain, I don't think Ram would have agreed with it, so that scene from ASR is not unbelievable to me.

Moreover, I don't think any of us will ever know what the customs of Treta Yug or Dwapar Yug really were, except for the major ones written in the scriptures, so when it comes to things like, did husbands ever press their wives' legs or backs when they were in pain, it is such a small thing that we won't really know, so as long as the characters of Ram and Krishna are kept intact when showing such scenes, I wouldn't make deal out of it. I know you consider that to be out of the character of Ram in that scene from ASR, but I didn't so in this we should just agree to disagree.😊😆

Btw, you mentioned about Lakshman being in pain and Ram putting his hand on his head...if Lakshman ever was in pain, I think Ram would do anything to make him feel better, same with Hanuman, Bharat, Sugreev, or his other devotees and brothers. Ram was not that high and mighty to expect others to serve him and not return the service when his devotees are in pain. Just like he ate the half-bitten fruits of Shabari, I feel that Ram would not have hesitated to serve any of his brothers, friends, and devotees if they were in pain and came to him for comfort. Putting his hand on his devotees' head is more to assuage mental pain, not really physical...if his devotees were in physical pain, I believe that the Ramji I believe in and pray to would have served them like a devotee himself. That's how I define the statement 'God is a servant of his devotees'.

It's true that God's touch is enough to rid people of both mental and physical pain, but taking it in the sense that Ram was born a human and kept within the limitations of a human life, he would not have performed miracles like Krishna by touching people's heads and ridding them of physical pain. At least, this is what I believe.😊

Definitely agree to disagree. That scene is just silly and unwanted for me and will remain silly howsoever rigid you may be despite my arguing attempts😆. I will be equally rigid.😆 And Ram would have been ready to massage the legs of Lakshman or Hanuman even. 100% agree. But he wouldn't have done it probably because he wouldn't have made their devotees feel ashamed. Fine enough that Ram didn't actually do it here also and just offered to do it. But still it looked too much artificial and fictitious that's it. And Treta customs we can't know but we know about orthodox families where husband-wife maintain maryada in the presence of elders. That can very much be connected with old eras easily. It is very much evident from Ram's behaviour in Pushpvatika and in Swayamvar. Very controlled. And there is nothing right or wrong about this custom. It has its own sweetness. Probably when alone, their freedom can be different which is shown in the scene but still it doesn't seem to be real. Let's see what others opine. Semanti has read the entire epic from 3 sources. Let's see how she sees to this. And of course Ram was human so what? Why can't he heal through physical touch? Even people today can do it through that therapy. Ram was master of it with born natural gift due to his divine origin which he was also being modest about. Ahalya and Sugreev are the classic examples and so as the monkey army after war. He just had to touch to remove all the pains and show all the care and love. And love can be communicated through the eyes even. Even that action of attempt of massaging the feet was enough. No such debate between Ram-Sita in the form of dialog was required. Lola's favourite scene of Vasudev comforting Devaki is the classic example of it. And Ram treated all relations with equality I feel. For him all were his sakhas. Dashrath also, Sita also and Hanuman also. Just that other person had different bhav and he had to respond accordingly like in that scene he was stopped by Sita and like Hanuman says "Let me be at your feet only O master." In short gesture of Ram is all fine. But the following dialog and debate looks ordinary as if we are not watching a mytho but a social drama. At that place and from those characters, it doesn't look as natural and relevant as Dashrath-Kaushalya or Dashrath-Janak discussions about how daughter in law should be treated in the husband's house.

Definitely enjoying. Me too.😃 🤗 But missing you on personal chat. We just can't manage at the same time.
Edited by ShivangBuch - 13 years ago
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Posted: 13 years ago
#10
^^ Yup, agree with you on most of those points. About knowing treta yug customs through orthodox families, I agree and disagree, because the history of India shows us how we've adopted the customs of the persians through the mughal rulers who ruled India for so long and forced their practices on the common public. Many of the customs and traditions people have adopted now are not originally there in the Hindu scriptures, because they came from other groups around the world...not only the Mughals but also the British and other foreign groups who ruled India after the Rajput Kings. So I don't think all the customs of the orthodox families were originally there in the dwapar yuga and treta yuga, which is why I'm saying we'll never really know 100% what the customs were during the yugas before kali yuga. In fact, we don't even know the customs of the earlier kali yuga, which was actually very similar to the end of the dwapar yuga.
And I agree that Ram putting his hand on his devotees' heads must have a heeling effect as he still is God though an avatar, but just that the other services he could have offered would have been equally sweet and loving. I just don't think he'd have limited his love to his family, friends, and devotees to just one gesture.
Anyway, we'll just have to agree to disagree on that scene as we could go on forever debating it.😆

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