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Sadhu_The Great Renouncer

Sadhus are an enigma to me, living the mystery of ancient questions that have no answers. Tricksters, derelicts, madmen, charlatans, wanderers, mystics and yogis, their boldly painted bodies confront us with essential questions at the heart of existence. I found them wandering through crowded polluted urban centers begging, to villages and what is left of forest and mountain pilgrimage trails. Like walking mysteries of the human soul, for me, sadhus provoke the question, who am I? What do I need, what really is important, and the more ancient pre-settled desire to wander in search of god. Most importantly, they remind us that the answer for all things only lies within our own elusive hearts. In my adopted home of Kathmandu, some sadhus survive primarily off alms made from allowing tourists to photograph them. They are a spectacle and love to play their assigned role in the illusion or drama of society. Their masks are thickly painted on their naked bodies. Sadhus have formally abandoned conventional time; their world is dense with its own complex politics, social hierarchy, taboos and customs, often making access challenging. Volatile and unpredictable, spontaneous photography of sadhus can actually be dangerous. You can easily be trampled or attacked if you immerse yourself in a naga baba procession after a mass Khumba Mela bathing. Or, without permission from a Mahant to work inside an Akhara, be accused of being a spy and have to answer to a Sadhu tribunal. Thereπs no such thing as achieving photographic acceptance within the Sadhu mandala. For me, photographing at ritual time is always the most dynamic and fluid. Once rappoire has been established, a camera is tolerated, often with a sense of lila, or maya, play and illusion. It took repeated visits over many seasons and melas, to occasionally reach this level. My initial inexplicable attraction to the Sadhu world was mostly visual. As a photographer, I loved how they allowed their bodies to become symbols of the sacred- from walking around naked to remind us of our naked selves, to wearing ash to remind us what are bodies become, to dreadlocks to remind us of our natural wild natures devoid of social convention. Their bodies were texts, which spoke volumes regarding sacred symbolism. A sadhuπs body is a map of the Hindu universe, for the body is a microcosm of the cosmos. Like a canvas, the colour and painted symbols aid in purification, inspire, and remind of the timeless divine beyond body and form. The body is used to tell stories. As the sadhus works towards an egoless state, he becomes the very symbols heπs painted ãwhether it be Shiva, Vishnu, or Rama, the colors refer to esoteric inner visions and possible alchemical states of consciousness. The real goal of a Sadhu is to achieve an attitude of non-attachment and transcendence of the physical body. As a photographer, I sometimes like to hide behind my lens, become invisible. Yet for sadhus, it is their very outlandish visibility, the powerful symbols of the divine they paint on their bodies, which help them not to become invisible, but to transcend self. Disturbing, annoying, inspiring, exasperating, irrational, wise and powerful, photographing sadhus is like photographing a living question that people have forgotten to ask. - Thomas L. Kelly

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About

Born in Santa Fe, New Mexico and Educated at Loyola University of Chicago and Rome, Thomas L. Kelly first came to Nepal in 1978 as a USA Peace Corps Volunteer, and has since worked as a photo-activist, documenting the struggles of marginalized people and disappearing cultural traditions all over the world. Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation he has been recording the lives of sex workers and the traditions of prostitution across South Asia. Thomas has worked extensively for UNICEF, Save the Children Fund (USA), Aga Khan Foundation, Institute of Child Health (ICH), U.K., Department for International Development, (DFID), U.K. on the subject of child prostitution, trafficking, Safer Motherhood/Saving Newborn Lives, Conflict and Resolution, Vaccine Cold Chain, Water and Sanitation and numerous other subjects. His editorial work has appeared in publications worldwide, including, the New York Times, Time, Newsweek, Natural History, USA, Smithsonian,, USA, Archeology Magazine, USA, Aramco, Yoga Journal, Mother Jones, The Sunday Telegraph, U,K., The Observer, U.K.,Le Figaro, Paris Stern, Germany and Geo. From 1990-1991 he was the Corporate photographer for The Body Shop Int., UK specializing in producing and documenting the Press Campaigns of the Company.

Apart from photography, he has produced and directed films and videos on prostitution, violence against women, and esoteric ethnic practices, among other subjects for Discovery Communications, USA, National Geographic, and the BBC. He has researched and photographed the books: Sacred Landscape-Pilgrimage in Tibet: In Search of the Lost Kingdom of Bon, (Abbeville Press, N.Y., N.Y.,) Fallen Angels: Sex Workers of South Asia, Himalayan Mysteries, (Roli Books Int. Lustre Press, New Delhi, India,) Buddhism on the path to Nirvana, Brijbasi Press, New Delhi, India, Tibet: Reflections from the Wheel of Life; The Hidden Himalayas; Kathmandu: City on the Edge of the World, (Abbeville Press, New York, N.Y.), Millennium: Tribal Wisdom and the Modern World, Viking Penguin,, N.Y., N.Y.

Thomas is currently the AV Technical Advisor for The Youth Expression Project, YEP, a program to help young people (ages 15-23) to identify and voice their concerns about parental and societal values, HIV/AIDS, drug abuse, unwanted pregnancy, and sexual abuse. This project is about aiding them to understand their problems, concerns, hopes, fears, frustrations, and learning how to use media (writing, photography, video) to express those concerns on a public platform. Their media outputs will be directed to parents, teachers and the general public. A South Asian YEP traveling exhibit was presented in October 2006.

E-mail address:Thomas Kelly<tkelly@photo.wlink.com.np>
Tele# 9851026738, 977-1-4438883, 4431954
P.O.Box 1406
Kathmandu, Nepal
www:ThomasKellyPhotos.com
www:WildearthJourneys.com

Thomas L. Kelly's current location:
Kathmanu , Nepal

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