Overview
This draft has been prepared as a starting point for IndiaWiki editors working on an article about Devi Maa, a term that broadly refers to the Mother Goddess in Hindu religious and cultural traditions. The expression "Devi Maa" is used across the Indian subcontinent, in diaspora communities, and within several regional and sectarian contexts to address the divine feminine principle in her many forms. Because the term is generic and umbrella-like, editors are advised to clarify, early in the final article, the precise scope being addressed: whether the entry treats the theological concept of the Mother Goddess in Hinduism, a specific manifestation (such as Durga, Kali, Lakshmi, Saraswati, Parvati, or regional forms), or a particular temple, festival, or devotional tradition associated with the term.
This draft deliberately avoids asserting dates, scriptural attributions, lineage claims, miracle accounts, demographic figures, or comparative rankings of traditions. Such claims must be sourced to reliable secondary scholarship before inclusion. The sections below provide neutral context, a structural scaffold, and explicit verification checklists so that human editors can convert this into a properly cited encyclopaedic article. Editors should treat every specific factual statement they add as requiring at least one reliable secondary source.
Background
The veneration of a Mother Goddess figure is widely discussed in scholarship on Hindu religious traditions, and the term "Devi" itself simply means "goddess" in Sanskrit, with "Maa" (mother) appended as an affectionate honorific in many Indian languages. The combined expression is therefore used devotionally across linguistic regions, including Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, Punjabi, and others, and is invoked in temples, household shrines, and during festival observances. The concept is associated, in varying ways, with Shakta traditions, with broader Smarta and Vaishnava-Shaiva contexts that include goddess worship, and with numerous folk and regional traditions across India and Nepal.
Because "Devi Maa" is not the proper name of a single, narrowly defined subject, an encyclopaedic entry will need to make careful editorial choices about scope. Editors may decide to treat the article as a redirect, a disambiguation page, or a substantive overview of the Mother Goddess concept in Hinduism with appropriate links to dedicated articles on individual goddesses, sects, temples, and festivals. The background section in the final article should establish this scope clearly and avoid conflating distinct theological streams or regional traditions.
Significance
The Mother Goddess concept holds a notable place in the religious, cultural, artistic, and social life of many communities in South Asia. Devotional practices associated with the divine feminine include temple worship, pilgrimage, fasting, recitation of hymns, festival processions, household rituals, and seasonal observances. In broader cultural terms, references to Devi Maa appear in classical and folk literature, in the performing arts, in cinema, and in popular iconography, though specific instances should only be cited from documented sources.
The significance section in the final article should aim to summarise, in a balanced and neutral tone, why the subject is encyclopaedically notable. Editors are encouraged to draw on academic surveys of Hinduism, peer-reviewed studies of goddess traditions, and reputable reference works rather than devotional or promotional material. Care should be taken to represent the perspectives of multiple traditions without privileging any single sectarian viewpoint, and to distinguish between scholarly description and devotional belief. Where contested interpretations exist, the article should attribute them to their proponents rather than presenting them as settled fact.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following checklist identifies areas where unsupported claims commonly appear in drafts on this subject. Each item should be confirmed against reliable secondary sources before inclusion in the published article:
- Scope and definition: Confirm whether the article treats a concept, a specific deity, a temple, or a tradition. Avoid conflating these.
- Scriptural references: Any citation of texts such as the Devi Mahatmya, Devi Bhagavata Purana, Lalita Sahasranama, Tantras, or Vedic hymns must be supported by recognised translations or scholarly commentary, with verifiable text references.
- Iconography: Descriptions of attributes, mounts (vahana), weapons, and postures vary by manifestation and region. Each description should be tied to a named form and a cited source.
- Festivals: References to Navaratri, Durga Puja, Diwali (in connection with Lakshmi), Vasant Panchami, or regional festivals should be sourced and should not assume uniform observance across communities.
- Regional traditions: Bengali, Assamese, Tamil, Kannada, Malayali, Marathi, Gujarati, Himalayan, and other regional traditions of goddess worship differ; avoid generalisations.
- Temples and pilgrimage sites: Specific shrines such as Shakti Pithas should not be enumerated without reliable sourcing for each entry.
- Historical dating: Do not assign dates to texts, temples, or traditions without academic support; scholarly estimates often vary.
- Demographics: Avoid statistics about the number of devotees, temples, or festivals unless drawn from a credible survey.
- Comparative claims: Statements such as "the most widely worshipped" or "the oldest" require strong sourcing and are often disputed.
- Modern and diaspora practice: Claims about contemporary observance abroad should be sourced from reputable journalism or scholarship, not promotional material.
- Miracle accounts and devotional anecdotes: These should be attributed as belief, not stated as fact.
- Political and social commentary: Any link drawn between goddess worship and contemporary politics, gender discourse, or social movements must be carefully attributed.
Suggested structure for the final article
Editors may consider organising the published article along the following lines, adapting the structure to the scope finally chosen:
- Lead section: A concise summary defining the term, identifying the scope of the article, and noting major traditions in which the Mother Goddess is venerated.
- Etymology and terminology: Discussion of the Sanskrit term "Devi" and the honorific "Maa," with notes on regional linguistic variants.
- Historical and textual background: Sourced overview of the development of goddess worship in Hindu traditions, with appropriate attribution to scholars.
- Major manifestations: Brief, neutrally worded summaries of principal forms, each linking to a dedicated article where one exists.
- Iconography and symbolism: Description grounded in cited art-historical and religious-studies literature.
- Worship and ritual practice: Festivals, temple rituals, household devotion, and regional variations.
- Cultural representation: Treatment in literature, music, dance, visual art, and modern media, with sourced examples.
- Scholarly perspectives: Summary of academic interpretations, including any significant debates, attributed to named scholars.
- See also, References, Further reading, and External links.
This structure should help maintain neutrality and ensure that the article remains an encyclopaedic overview rather than a devotional essay.
Editorial notes
This draft is intended solely for internal editorial development and is not suitable for public publication in its present form. Reviewers are requested to bear the following points in mind while revising:
- Maintain a neutral, descriptive tone throughout. Devotional language, honorifics beyond first mention, and promotional phrasing should be avoided in the encyclopaedic text.
- Verify every factual claim against reliable secondary sources. Primary scriptural references should be supplemented by scholarly commentary.
- Where traditions disagree, present multiple viewpoints with attribution rather than choosing between them.
- Be cautious with images and iconographic descriptions; ensure that any uploaded media has appropriate licensing and accurate captions.
- Consider whether the article should be a standalone overview, a disambiguation page, or a redirect to an existing entry such as the article on Devi or on the Mother Goddess in Hinduism. This decision should be made early, in consultation with other editors.
- Flag unresolved questions in the talk page rather than introducing speculative content into the article body.
- Indian English spelling and usage should be retained throughout.
References
References to be supplied by editors during revision. Suggested categories of sources include: peer-reviewed academic monographs and journal articles on Hindu goddess traditions; recognised reference works on Hinduism and Indian religions; reputable English-language and Indian-language news organisations for contemporary cultural coverage; published translations of relevant texts with scholarly apparatus; and museum or institutional catalogues for iconographic detail. Devotional pamphlets, self-published websites, and promotional material from temples or organisations should be avoided as primary citations, although they may occasionally be used to illustrate a community's own self-description if clearly attributed. Each factual statement in the final article should carry an inline citation, and the reference list should be formatted in accordance with IndiaWiki's house style.