Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 2 | Page 100

96 Popular Culture Review in the history of India, higher castes worshipped the saint-philosophers from lower castes and sought their guidance and advice on spiritual matters. Popular Indian culture also found its ascendancy and non-Brahmins saw their power nse. Saint-Philosophers and Their Role The term “saint-philosopher” applies to those Hindu and Muslim soulseekers who moved away from the orthodoxy of their respective religions and tried to guide the masses to their social and spiritual destinations through simpler, unconventional methods. The stream of such saint-philosophers from about the third century A.D. onward has been continuous, and the tradition continues to the present time. Examples of the saint-philosophers were Kabir, Rahim, Surdas, Tulsidas, Nanak, Valmiki, Ravidas, Dadu, Tukaram, and Mirabai, from the north part of India; and Tyagaraja, Krishnamacharya, Vemana, Pothana, Haridasa, Purandaradasa, Kanakadasa, and Bilwamangal, from the southern part of India. Most saint-philosophers were ordinary people from lower castes, who wrote mystical poetry and conveyed their messages to ordinary people in vernacular languages. People could easily understand the message and act accordingly. The songs and poems of the saint-philosophers were full of devotion and sung by the masses with great enthusiasm all the time. Most saint-philosophers were married, had children, and followed a vocation or craft for their livelihood. They taught lessons by their own example and advised a direct communion with God through the help of a guru or spiritual mentor. The impacts of these saint-philosophers on popular Indian culture and on the society as a whole have been many. Some of these impacts are: 1) lesser entrenchment of the caste, gender, social position, and power barriers in the society; 2) lesser importance of ritualism, formalism, orthodoxy, and blind faith in the popular tradition; 3) easier and more personable ways to pursue social and spiritual goals and soul-liberation; 4) lesser power of Brahmins and more egal