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The Power of Ma! In Assam, India, there is a temple specifically honoring the “yoni” or vagina of the Goddess Khamakya. Once a year at this temple, the goddess is said to be menstruating. Men and women from around the country stop work and come to the temple to honor her fertility. Flowing deep inside the temple is a stream that turns red at this time of year. People stand in line for days to be able to kneel by this stream and collect the healing water—the menstrual blood of Khamakya. Women often run out of the temple, moved by their contact with the Great Mother goddess, crying and calling out, “Ma, Ma, Ma.”
“Ma, Ma, Ma”… it is a
universal sound that has called for mother for thousands of years. It is a word
that is embedded in our language in the words: Mama, Mammal, Mammary—words related to mothering. It is a sound that often emanates
naturally from a newborn’s voice when calling for mother.
The specific word “mama”––for mother––exists in numerous languages: Russian,
Mayan, Quechuan, Swahili, Albanian, Hungarian, Indonesian, Swahili, Turkish,
Hawaiian, Arizona Hopi, Chickasaw, Chinook, Creek, Koasati. Many other
languages have words related to motherhood with roots in Sanskrit (see list below).
In my work as MotherTouch perinatal massage educator, doula, and rites of passage guide, I remind students and clients of this essential wisdom and reverence for becoming Mother.
Sanskrit, considered to be the “mother of
all languages,” has words for mother that relates to most Indo-European words
for mother. In Sanskrit, mother
is: Maatrih, maatah, maatur, maatrikah.
MOTHER:
Afirkaans: MA,
MOEDER
Latin:
MATER, MATRIX ("origin")
--Czech: MATKA, MATINKA
--Czech: MATKA, MATINKA
--Danish: MOR
--Hungarian: MAMA
--Mayan: MAMAH
--Slovak: MAMINKA, MATKA,
MAMKA
--Swahili: MAMA
--Polish: MATKA
--Quechuan: MAMA
--Spanish: MADRE
--Vietnamese: ME, ME DE
--Vietnamese: ME, ME DE
--Old English: MODOR
--Hopi (Arizona): MAAMA
--Zulu: UMAME
www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definition/english
RELATED WORDS:
--Tolowa (NW California):
ME-DRE, "mother-in-law".
--Western Abenaki (Quebec) MAMAN--"food (baby talk)"
--Western Abenaki (Quebec) MAMAN--"food (baby talk)"
--Turkish MAMA, "(baby)
food". Interestingly, the Turkish words for mother are ANNE or ANA. ???Cf.
Skt. ANNAH, "food"; IS THAT’S SANSKRIT?
--Swahili MAMA MZAZI,
"mother-who-produces-offspring"
--Albanian: MATRICE,
"womb"
--Finnish: EMA"MAA,
"mother-country"
--Spanish: MAMAR--suck, devour food; acquire in infancy"
.--English: MAMMAL,
"breast-feeder".
--Latin: MAMMA, "breast"
--Latin: MAMMA, "breast"
; --Greek: MAMME--
"midwife, grandmother";
--Ancient Greek: MAMMAN-- "cry for food".
--Hawaiian: MAMA, "to chew, but not swallow"(such as mothers pre-masticating food for infants)
--Hawaiian: MAMA, "to chew, but not swallow"(such as mothers pre-masticating food for infants)
Some tribes of people, like the Assam in Africa, call themselves "maharis", or "motherhoods."