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Chandala’s daughter, Arundhati

Updated on: 12 April,2026 12:08 PM IST  |  Mumbai
Devdutt Pattanaik |

Akshamala proves no ordinary woman. Through her austerity and fidelity, she is said to stop the sun itself with her spiritual power.

Chandala’s daughter, Arundhati

Illustration/Devdutt Pattanaik

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Devdutt PattanaikArundhati is remembered today as the ideal wife, the tiny star beside Vasistha in the Saptarshi constellation, shown to every new bride as a model of fidelity. But beneath this polished image lies a far more unsettling story. Some traditions insist that before she became the revered Arundhati, she was Akshamala, a Chandala daughter.

In the Skanda Purana, a terrible famine breaks out. Hungry sages wander in search of food and arrive at the house of a Chandala who has wisely stored grain. In times of comfort, such sages would never accept food from a Chandala. Now, driven by hunger, they praise him. The Chandala agrees to feed them on one condition. The greatest among them must marry his daughter, Akshamala. The sages hesitate. After deliberation, they persuade Vasistha to accept the proposal, invoking the principle of emergency ethics. Vasistha marries the Chandala girl.


Akshamala proves no ordinary woman. Through her austerity and fidelity, she is said to stop the sun itself with her spiritual power. Because she halted the solar orb, she became known as Arundhati. From that moment, she is transformed from a low-born girl to a woman worshipped by gods and demons alike.



This tension between birth and virtue is not limited to one text. The Manusmriti uses Akshamala as an example while discussing how a wife absorbs the qualities of her husband. Just as fresh river water becomes salty when it merges with the sea, so too a woman acquires the status of her spouse. Though born low, Akshamala becomes honored because she is joined to Vasistha.

The Buddhist poet Asvaghosha, in the Buddhacarita, lists Vasistha’s union with a Matangi named Akshamala as an example of desire crossing caste lines. Here the tone is ironic, even critical. The story becomes evidence not of purity, but of human weakness. The same woman can thus appear either as a symbol of spiritual ascent or as a reminder of social transgression.

Other Puranic traditions attempt to overwrite this memory. Some make Arundhati the daughter of Daksha. Others call her the child of Kardama and Devahuti. In yet another telling, she is linked to Prajapati. These genealogies lift her firmly into Brahminical respectability. The Chandala origin fades.

Yet the older discomfort lingers in symbol. In the night sky, Arundhati is the faint star Alcor beside the brighter Mizar, identified with Vasistha. She is small, almost invisible. One must first identify the prominent stars of the Saptarshi and only then, with effort, perceive her. Commentators speak of this as a teaching device: one learns to see the subtle through the obvious. But the faintness can also be read as memory. She stands beside the sage, yet never fully merges with him.

Even her story contains moments of doubt. In one tale, she briefly suspects Vasistha and her complexion turns smoky, like a dimmed star. In another, when Agni desires the wives of the sages, the goddess Svaha can imitate every wife except Arundhati. Her austerity makes her impenetrable.

Thus Arundhati embodies a paradox. She is both Chandala daughter and daughter of Prajapati. She is both marginal and central, barely visible yet ritually indispensable. When a bride is shown that faint star, she is not only being taught loyalty. She is also witnessing a quiet myth about the instability of caste, the power of tapas, and the uneasy negotiation between birth and worth.

The author writes and lectures on the relevance of mythology in modern times. Reach him at devdutt.pattanaik@mid-day.com

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