History: The secret life of the peepal
I keep looking at the design on a shallow bowl, perhaps 20cm across, which looks like an inverted heart, its surface slatted with diagonal lines. Right at the back of the British Museum there are a tiny number of artefacts from the western subcontinent — a few Indus seals, some jewellery, a few very early terracotta mother goddess figurines, and a terracotta elephant. But somehow, my eyes are glued to the Baloch bowl, from the Sohr Damb site, near present-day Khuzdar, dated from 3000 BCE.
The design is not a heart, as I first think, but the peepal leaf, so predominant in the Indus Valley civilisation, and associated much later with Buddhism. Yet — on the basis of five generations per century — the bowl was made 250 generations ago, over 120 generations before the pressure and violence of the Persian Achaemenids on the west and the Brahman Aryan priests on the north of the subcontinent provoked the resistance of the Buddha.
It is now known that the well-known Baloch site of Mehrgarh, close to Sibi, was the precursor to the Indus Valley civilisation. The late Ahmad Hasan Dani, professor emeritus of archaeology at Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, has said that the discoveries at Mehrgarh changed the whole idea of the Indus civilisation. At Mehrgarh “we have the whole sequence, right from the beginning, of settled village life”. It is also quite likely that the nomads and settler-farmers at Mehrgahr were Brahui, whose language has undeniable Dravidian links. But this peepal designed bowl shows that it was a united culture further south into Balochistan too.
The motif of the leaf appeared in subcontinental art over 5,000 years ago, but became a form of political resistance with the Persian invasion of Sindh in the sixth century BCE and with the northern Aryan priests at the same time
The peepal has the distinction of being the earliest tree depicted in art in the subcontinent, and it was always used extensively in medicine for healing. Its bark also produces tannin that is used for treating hides. The heart-shaped leaves of the peepal were used to heal wounds. The tree has a fruit, purple when ripe.
Millennia after the Indus Valley civilisation, the fruit was used to explain religious and spiritual matters in the Upanishads. The fruit is like the body at the meeting point with the natural world; the seed is the soul which is inside, hidden, and carries the possibility for new life.
Amongst the pre-Aryan people of the Indus Valley there was a tradition of wandering holy men. They were later quantified by Buddhism into two groups — the forest-dwelling Samanas (wandering holy men) and the physician Samanas, who were more connected with urban areas. The forest dwellers lived ascetically, but the physicians, surely making use of the peepal’s medicinal powers, were involved with people. They were healers but also welcomed amongst the people for their association with fertility rituals.