edited-Sanathana-Dharma
SANATHANA DHARMA LIFE
INDEX
2.
SANATHANA
DHARMA IN VEDIC VIEWS on page 6
3.
VEDIC
WAYS OF PURUSHARTHAS on page 9
4.
PURUSHARTHA–The
Blue Print of Practical LIFE on page 12
5.
MOKSHA on page 16
6.
MOKSHA
& SWARGAM : POORTHA & ISHTA on page 19
7.
PARAM
DHAANAM – Best Offering on page 21
8.
RITUALS on page 26
9.
TEMPLE
RITUALS on page 30
10. TEMPLES AND ITS POWER on page 34
11. AGAMA SHASTRA on page 38
12. ENERGY CREATED IN TEMPLES on page 41
13. ENERGY IN HYMNS/ MANTRAS on page 45
14. PRAYERS IN DAILY LIFE on page 48
15. IMPORTANCE OF KARMA (ACTION) on page 52
16. MEDITATION IN ACTION on page 56
17. BHAGAVAD GITA on page 60
18. BRAHMA-VIDYA on page 65
19. YOGA SASTHRAM on page 69
20. UPANISHADS on page 73
21. VEDAS on page 77
22. FOUR VEDAS on page 81
23. UPAVEDA on page 86
24. VEDANGAS on page 91
25. SAMHITAS on page 95
26. BRAHMANAS - Sruti and Ritual Guide on page 100
27. ARANYAKAS on page 104
28. MAHABHARATA – PANCHALI, DICE & EXILE on page 114
29. MAHABHARATHA – WAR on page 118
30. Rivalry PLOT due to DRAUPADI on page 123
31. DIES GAME AND EXILE – DRAUPADI on page 129
32. KURUKSHETRA WAR AND DRAUPADI on page 135
33. GANDHARI– SADDEST & POWERFUL WOMAN on page 141
34. KUNTI : THE PERFECT DEVOTED MOTHER on page 146
35. YUDHISHTHIRA (DHARMARAJA) – Towards War on page 152
36. KURUKSHTHRA WAR and DHARMAPUTHRA on page 157
37. DUDRYODHANA UNDER DHRITHARASHTRA on page 163
38. DURYODHANA’S KURUKSHETRA WAR on page 169
39. WAR - 18th Day : DURYODHANA’s END on page 174
40. ASHWATHAMA - SON OF DRONACHARYA on page 180
41. ASHWATHAMA IN WAR AFTER DRONA on page 187
42. ABHIMANYU on page 191
43. PANDU on page 196
44. SHAKUNI - THE MASTER CONSPIRATOR on page 202
45.
HINDU – Religion
The name ‘Hindu’ was used by Persians
or such people from outside India who for referring the people living near the
river Sindhu (Indus) and its eastwards. Later on, the faith of indigenous
people of the region came to be grossly known as Hinduism, and today
geographical identity is lost, and the religious identity is kept for the word.
The word Religion is from French
(obligation/bond/reverence) and Latin (to bind) and used in Middle English for
‘life under monastic vows’. Today Religion technically refers to a set of hard
and fast rules and regulations established written in a holy book which the
believers must abide by and have a stern faith in it. In Urdu/Farsi
religion is called ‘Mazhab’ but Sanskrit has no word equal to Religion, as in
India we had no religion. Hinduism is not a religion but is a way of life
called Sanathana Dharma followed by the people in this part of the
world, living beside the river Sindhu, from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean.
Himalayam Samarabhya Yavadindu
Sarovaram
Tham Devanirmitham Desam Hindusthanam Prachakshath
Tham Devanirmitham Desam Hindusthanam Prachakshath
SANATHANA DHARMA
Dharma is; righteousness, duty,
morality, holiness, values and virtues; again not well defined. For any
individual, he could have his own dharma along with family dharma, professional
dharma, social (political/friends/community/cast/etc.) dharma, region
(village/town/state/nation/world) dharma and can always have a conflict at
various levels. A dharmic person balances all these dharma’s while giving
priority from individual to global.
Sanathana Dharma has remained for long and is being followed without any stipulated schedules and practices, but it is transferred from generations to generations. The reason being - its life principles were still modern in outlook though were generated millions of years back. Thus, it is called Nithya Noothana (Most Modern) and Chira Purathana (Oldest of the Oldest).
In today’s context of global city life and mixing of different culture across the globe, what we as Indians (the people from this geographical region) can carry and spread to the world across is Sanathana Dharma. It is a code of ethics, a way of living through which one may mingle with people around to be happy - moksha (enlightenment, liberation). It is the world's most ancient culture with ever existing socio, spiritual, and religious tradition of the largest inhabitants. Sanathana Dharma teaches a way of life to love the whole world as our own family (vasudhaiva kutumbakam) with a coherent and rational view of reality.
Sanathana Dharma has remained for long and is being followed without any stipulated schedules and practices, but it is transferred from generations to generations. The reason being - its life principles were still modern in outlook though were generated millions of years back. Thus, it is called Nithya Noothana (Most Modern) and Chira Purathana (Oldest of the Oldest).
In today’s context of global city life and mixing of different culture across the globe, what we as Indians (the people from this geographical region) can carry and spread to the world across is Sanathana Dharma. It is a code of ethics, a way of living through which one may mingle with people around to be happy - moksha (enlightenment, liberation). It is the world's most ancient culture with ever existing socio, spiritual, and religious tradition of the largest inhabitants. Sanathana Dharma teaches a way of life to love the whole world as our own family (vasudhaiva kutumbakam) with a coherent and rational view of reality.
2.
SANATHANA DHARMA IN VEDIC VIEWS
KEYWORDS – Vedic, Sanathana Dharma, Karma, Jnana, Sankalpa, God, Purusharthas
KEYWORDS – Vedic, Sanathana Dharma, Karma, Jnana, Sankalpa, God, Purusharthas
Vedic literature starting from Brahmanas until
Bhagavad Gita, including Upanishads, Aranyakas, Ithihasas, Puranas and all the
studies on these literatures are all dealing with Sanathana Dharma. Hinduism is
almost like a synonym for Sanathana Dharma, the way of life since Vedic time.
To a large extent, it is followed even today.
It explains not just the Eternal Laws which governs the life of a human but also delves with his relationship with the world. Sanathana Dharma is always ready to get redefined based on the demand of activity, place and time and hence it changed over millions of years.
The basic character of Sanathana Dharma is Karma (Action). It is understood that Action comes only from Jnaanam (Knowledge). For example, if someone confuses a rope with a snake, he will not be able to act. As he won’t be able to go forward by thinking it as a snake and might not want to leave the place thinking it as a rope. One must acquire the knowledge to distinguish and thus comes the firm decision making capability.
To proceed not for a short time, but for a long way ahead in life – the path is Dharma (right decision) - acceptable to larger group around us based on culture and the law of land. It all depends on the way people look at it and could interpret it as they wish; thus, Dharma is undefined, so is Sanathana Dharma, a way of life. Thus, it is all SANKALPA (imagination) – similar to the concept of GOD in Hinduism.
Living in harmony and limiting life to its bare minimum is what all the Vedas (Rig – Yajur – Sama) prescribes (Adharva is different in its views). Purusharthas (life requirements for happiness) are dealt with systematically in Vedic lifestyles, which defines Sanathana Dharma pitching to its root. It is one that you need to run a life that will take you to the ultimate happiness, self-actualization, realization, yoga with God – Samadhi, etc. – It enables to Reach THE ULTIMATE in a Spiritual Path.
KEYWORDS –Purusharthas, Vedic, Sanathana Dharma, Kama,
Artha, Dharma, Moksha, Brahmacharyam, Grihasthyam, Vanaprastham, Sanyasam, Four
Stages of LIFE
Purushartha is an objective that deals with ways and feelings which are the results of a human pursuit in a lifespan. Purushartha is based on Sanathana Dharma as it defines the ways of life and is defined in Vedas.
Purushartha is an objective that deals with ways and feelings which are the results of a human pursuit in a lifespan. Purushartha is based on Sanathana Dharma as it defines the ways of life and is defined in Vedas.
Purushartha describes the starting spark of everyone’s life as Desire (KAMA). To satisfy the KAMA one need to get the ways and means; that is ARTHA (WEALTH - it could be economic, power, position, fame, relationship or any such that can support). DHARMA (righteousness, moral values etc. defined by the space and time as per the culture, law of the land and practices as defined by Sanathana Dharma) is what one must follow in KAMA and ARTHA as prescribed by Veda.
Sanathana Dharma says this way of life should be acceptable to the neighbourhood/environment; which means live for others, as all are the sons of the same Brahma, by spreading happiness around. To do this one has to be happy by self, called MOKSHA (attaining this is only possible through liberation and spiritual values).
Generally, these four aspects are said in the order Dharma – Artha – Kama - Moksha. These Purushartha are to be seen and enjoyed in all the FOUR STAGES OF LIFE – Brahmacharyam (Student), Grihastha (House-holder), Vanaprastha (Retirement), and Sanyasa (Renunciation).
During BRAHMACHARYAM strong KAMA (desire) focused for KNOWLEDGE (Jnaanam) is must; so that he can grow to attain ARTHA to be a GRIHASTHA in his next stage of life. Grihastha Dharma is to attain ARTHA to support self and the family and give back to society. During VANAPRASTHA, one has to be in the family to guide the Brahmachari’s and Grihastha’s to follow Dharmic ways. The last stage of life is when the family responsibilities are done and get to into the society - social service by getting rid of all attachments – SANYASA (ultimate Dharma of being human).
4.
PURUSHARTHA – The
Blue Print of Practical LIFE
KEYWORDS –Purusharthas, Kama, Artha, Dharma, Moksha, Satisfaction, Happiness
KEYWORDS –Purusharthas, Kama, Artha, Dharma, Moksha, Satisfaction, Happiness
Purushartha is Kama-Artha-Dharma-Moksha.
KAMA is that desire which makes the world to develop. Each human must be
unsatisfied in life and must be an embodiment of desires. The more the desire
is, the more is the self, family, social and world development. But the desire
must be based on DHARMA. If the desire is undesirable to the family, society or
nature - it is Adharmic and he who is in desire gets himself into a selfish
desire that will bury him in sadness (NO MOKSHA).
Who doesn’t want happiness? But, should it be temporary or permanent happiness? Purushartha gives balanced ways of being happy. KAMA - desire practically means dissatisfaction. Unsatisfied doesn’t mean not happy. One can be unsatisfied and be happy – that is the essence of life and MOKSHA. It is that state of happiness where he always lives in the present and aspires for a better and brighter future – not for the self but for a larger community. Ultimate Desire for a human being as he proceeds for a better life prescribes him to get educated and be creative. A creative happiness-filled balanced-life brings meaning to spiritual development. Physical fitness, Emotional Balance, Intellectual Sharpness, Socially active too; to gain long term happiness.
Who doesn’t want happiness? But, should it be temporary or permanent happiness? Purushartha gives balanced ways of being happy. KAMA - desire practically means dissatisfaction. Unsatisfied doesn’t mean not happy. One can be unsatisfied and be happy – that is the essence of life and MOKSHA. It is that state of happiness where he always lives in the present and aspires for a better and brighter future – not for the self but for a larger community. Ultimate Desire for a human being as he proceeds for a better life prescribes him to get educated and be creative. A creative happiness-filled balanced-life brings meaning to spiritual development. Physical fitness, Emotional Balance, Intellectual Sharpness, Socially active too; to gain long term happiness.
Education and creativity are the blessings of Saraswathi and Brahma. For any KARMA(Action), ARTHA is a must. God of ACTION is VISHNU; thus, got the pair LAKSHMI, the god of ARTHA (WEALTH). MOKSHA is the stage of bliss, the samadhi level and what is needed for anyone at that stage is health, energy. Provided and supported by Sakti (Parvati) and Shiva. Thus, Purusharthas are the inherent values of the Universe working with the help of Trinity.
Assume I want to go for a site-seeing trip. That desire is KAMA for which I must get the ticket and make all the arrangements. That can be a sponsored trip from my relative/friend, my payment from my savings – whatever is the means is the ARTHA. Assume I am not able to arrange these resources and I am to take some wrong ways of making the money needed for the trip, that is ADHARMA. If my means is ADHARMA, even after having everything which can make me enjoy, the inner feeling will be of the guilt and I will not be enjoying it fully. If my ways are Dharmic, I will enjoy in full. That enjoyment is called MOKSHA.
Let LIFE be Live-In-Full-Enjoyment, where soon after doing anything, let the self not tell to yourself; ‘Oh, I should not have done it’ – or for not doing any action; let self not tell yourself; ‘Oh, I should have done it’. RIGHT ACTION (KARMA) at the RIGHT TIME is DHARMIC, that gives MOKSHA as prescribed by PURUSHARTHA.
The blue print is drawn following the footsteps of Srimad Bhagvad Gita (BG) from Chapter 2, Verse 7 (BG – 2/7) where Arjuna’s Kama is on desire and was confused in his Dharma. Lord Krishna leading to Moksha (BG – 18/66-72) through Bhakti and Karma (Artha) through chapters 2nd to 18th for e.g. BG – 8/16, 9/28, 11/55.
KEYWORDS :: Purushartha, Karma,
Artha, Dharma, Moksha, Yoga, Meditation, LIFE
In Hindu
tradition, moksha is the ultimate aim to be attained during a life’s
journey through Dharma, Artha and Kama - called Purushartha. Moksha is a
psychological & emotional stage as understood by Religious Philosophical
discussions related to death.
Moksha in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism discusses on mukti (detachment) from karma (doesn’t mean NO ACTION, but take it easy and be devoted), liberation from Dharma (it is being for Self-Family-Social-Whole World; realizing you are part of the single entity – GOD and again get devoted), emancipation from life (Samsara/Prarabhda is only a temporary stage and all have to go one day, understanding everything is temporary will give a relief), and self-realization, self-actualization, self-knowledge or enlightenment. Happiness / Liberation / Freedom attained in LIFE is practically Moksha. Moksha is also known as Jeevanmukti / vimoksha / vimukti / kaivalya / apavarga / mukti and nirvana. Life’s greatest pursuit is not happiness; LIFE itself is Live In Full Enjoyment.
According to Hinduism, Moksha (Physical – bhautika, Mental – manasika, and Spiritual – adhyatmika) is a result of past karma, own actions and God’s grace. The impediments on Moksha are actions (karma), desires (kama) egoism (aham), ignorance (avidya), impurities (malas), delusion (maya) and attachments (pasas). Many ways of circumventing these impediments are chosen by a variety of practices under Hinduism based on selected paths. These paths are called Yoga Paths. Yoga is the ultimate union in bliss, that is Moksha.
Raja Yoga or Ashtanga/Classical Yoga (BG Chap – 6 verses – 45 & Hathayoga Pradipika Chap 4 Verses – 1 & 7)with eight-limbs; 1. Yama- Morals 2. Niyama- Ethics 3. Asana- Posture 4. Pranayama- Control of the breath 5. Pratyahara- Control of the senses 6. Dharana- Concentration 7. Dhyana- Meditation 8. Samadhi- One-pointed absorption is another strong way to be in Moksha. Samadhi these days are mostly understood as Meditation and a silent inactive state, but in Vedic structure samadhi is Meditative Action.
Bhagavad Gita (BG) prescribes Karma Yoga or the Path of Action, Bhakti Yoga or the Path of Devotion, and Jnana Yoga or the Path of Knowledge. Karma practiced in a yogic style leads to Creative Brahma. Most popular brief – end of all the chapters of BG, as an essence it says–
Upanishatsu Brahmavidyayam
yogasastre Sri Krishnarjuna samvade …..
Thus, ‘Sri Mad
Bhagavad Gita’, leads to MOKSHA Sanyasa Yoga.
6.
KEYWORDS :: Sanathana Dharma, Swarga, Moksha, Ishta, Poortha, Dharma, Karma
Bharatheeya Dharma talks about two activities - Ishta and Poortha; Or to be precise Sanathana Dharma is Ishta-Poortha. Ishta will take people to swarga and poortha can give moksha.
ishtathelabhathe swargam poorthe mokshamavapuyeth
Ishta karma is the activity that one does for the self, salvation, peace, better life, prosperity etc.
agnihothram thapa
sathyam vedaanaam chaanupaalanam
aadithyam vaisyadhevam cha ishta ithyabhitheeyathe
aadithyam vaisyadhevam cha ishta ithyabhitheeyathe
Agnihothra (Fire
Offering), Thapa (Penance), Reading Vedic Texts, Welcoming Guests,
Developmental Activities in Society are all ISHTA Karma.
The Poortha karma is more of a Social Commitment, caring for the Environment, Protecting Earth for Future Generations etc. Service comes under “poorth karma” and it includes digging wells and ponds, feeding the poor, building temples for the spiritual well-being, laying out gardens. Excavating wells and ponds have been mentioned first. Next comes Annapradhanamudhyannam which means Fruit Bearing Trees – Meaning one should plant fruit bearing trees that will serve all animals, flies, birds apart from humans – to get Mokhsa.
vaapee koopa thadakaani dhevathanayathanani cha
anna pradhanamudyannam poortha ithyabhitheeyathe
Swargalokam - heaven is the place of the world after death for the good people and naraka – hell for the bad ones. The swargaloka is not the place of gods. The gandharvas used to be some time at the swarga loka too as guests from their gandhrvaloka.
Moksha (Freedom or Salvation) from the cycle of birth and death is the ultimate goal of Hindu religious life. Moksha is the state of supreme bliss and there is no quest beyond it. Moksha releases from all attachments. It is a state in which the self remains ever in untrammeled freedom and blessedness to be in bliss. The chief purpose of religion is to teach us how this supreme state may be attained.
The mention of feeding and educating are not seen as poortha karma directly, but had given much importance and could be rated as higher than many of the other karma. Thus, reading between the lines and analyzing the relevance in today’s context poor feeding and educating are to be considered as the greatest Dhana Dharma and added into the Poortha Dharma.
7. PARAM DHAANAM – Best Offering
KEYWORDS ::
Dhaanam (offering), Annadhaanam, Vidyadhaanam, Food, Education
Last SUNDAY we
reflected on ISHTA POORTHAM and made it clear that POORTHA karma is important
as it is serving others. Among the Best Service, here we are reflecting on
PARAM DHAANAM – analyzing the merit of Annadhaanam (Offering Food) and
Vidyadhaanam (Educating).
Annadhaana or the gift of food is one kind of service (paropakara). We talk of service to the poor, social service and so on. Today all this is done with much fanfare and publicity. In the past, the needy were served naturally, without making any advertising and was an everyday routine. Earlier before closing the kitchen, mothers were supposed to go to the entry gate and ask loudly “is there any around who require supper?”.
Many slokas indicate the importance of annadhaanam. It says annadhaanam is greater than donating many horses, elephants, gold ornaments, vessels, land, kanyadhanam etc.
Annadhaana or the gift of food is one kind of service (paropakara). We talk of service to the poor, social service and so on. Today all this is done with much fanfare and publicity. In the past, the needy were served naturally, without making any advertising and was an everyday routine. Earlier before closing the kitchen, mothers were supposed to go to the entry gate and ask loudly “is there any around who require supper?”.
Many slokas indicate the importance of annadhaanam. It says annadhaanam is greater than donating many horses, elephants, gold ornaments, vessels, land, kanyadhanam etc.
Gaja turaga
Sahasram Gokulam koti danam
Kanaka Rajatha patram Methini sagarantham
Upaya kula vishuttam Koti kanya pradanam
Nahi nahi bahu danam Annadanam samanam
Kanaka Rajatha patram Methini sagarantham
Upaya kula vishuttam Koti kanya pradanam
Nahi nahi bahu danam Annadanam samanam
Feeding is a good
philanthropic activity. But educating is much higher. The food will get
digested soon. Education will remain for the whole life.
अन्नदानं महादानं विद्यादानमतः परम् ।
अन्नेन क्षणिका तृप्तिः यावज्जीवञ्च विद्यया ॥
अन्नेन क्षणिका तृप्तिः यावज्जीवञ्च विद्यया ॥
This probably was
the source for the saying 'Give a man a fish, you feed him once. Teach him how
to fish and you feed him for life'.
With the
education, we purify our intelligence, with meditation we purify our mind, with
shlokas or poetry we purify our speech, by exerting ourselves in the service of
others one must purify the physic or body; that is why the DasaMahaVidya is
prescribing Dasami / Navarathri (10 days / 9 nights) rituals. The Tenth Day
(Dasami) is for Saraswati with Education and Learning, everyone at home sits
together to demonstrate their learning.
Rituals has been so mechanical these days in the religious activity. Many of the offerings are done without even knowing the meaning. The word ‘ritual’ itself became a synonym for anything we do with out proper understanding. Thus giving knowledge and gaining knowledge (VIDYADAANAM) is the best offering that will be leading to best RITUAL.
Rituals has been so mechanical these days in the religious activity. Many of the offerings are done without even knowing the meaning. The word ‘ritual’ itself became a synonym for anything we do with out proper understanding. Thus giving knowledge and gaining knowledge (VIDYADAANAM) is the best offering that will be leading to best RITUAL.
Slokas are
referenced from Subhashita Ratnakara
KEYWORDS ::
Rituals, Ishta Poortha, Offering, Dhyaanam, Yoga, Pooja, Kriya, Temple
Rituals when we say, it is Pooja that comes to everyone’s mind. Pooja is the Offering for/to God. Having reflected upon Best offering to mankind as Vidya-dhaanam (Education). Rituals are also called Service/Dhaanam. Thus, rituals are the thanksgiving service offered to God, by which one gets into the Dharana level among the Ashtanga Yoga (Yama, Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dharana, Dhyana, Samadhi). After Dharana one can get to the Dhyana and then may attain Samadhi (Meditation).
We reflected earlier on ISHTA POORTHA as SANATHANA DHARMA. In ISHTA Karma Agnihothram is most important which is Ritualistic thanksgiving to SUN, the prime GOD. Here a part of His (SUN) blessings – a bit of rice and ghee – is offered back to him saying it is all due to him (SOORYAYA SWAHA, SOORYAYA IDAM NAMAMA).
agnihothram thapa
sathyam vedaanaam chaanupaalanam
aadithyam vaisyadhevam cha ishta ithyabhitheeyathe
aadithyam vaisyadhevam cha ishta ithyabhitheeyathe
All VAIDIKA ACHARA (offering to fire) with SWAHA (let sun eat this) offering HAVIS (material) is a major ritual at home and temples too. But mostly in Temples, PAURANIKA ARADHANA on VIGRAHA (Deity) is what is followed. Vaidika is more Veda mantra oriented, where self and the universe is part of the ritual, while Temple / Pauranika / Kshethra Aradhana are more of a public and utility oriented ritual.
While rituals conducted by the priest for the society, the dharana is that the rituals are done by Him, due to Him, for Him as explained in the following slokas:
कायेन वाचा मनसेन्द्रियैर्वा बुद्ध्यात्मना वा प्रकृतेः स्वभावात्
kayena vacha manasendriayirva bhudhyathmana va prakruthe swabhavath
करोमि यद्यत्सकलं परस्मै गुरुवरायेति समर्पयामि
karomi yadhyathsakalam parasmai gururvarayethi samarpayami
kayena vacha manasendriayirva bhudhyathmana va prakruthe swabhavath
करोमि यद्यत्सकलं परस्मै गुरुवरायेति समर्पयामि
karomi yadhyathsakalam parasmai gururvarayethi samarpayami
Meaning:: All these rituals I am into with my Body, Speech, Mind or Sense Organs, using my Intellect, Feelings of Heart or (unconsciously) through the natural tendencies of my Mind, I do all for others (i.e. without the sense of attachment to the results), and I Surrender them to YOU Supreme Guru (MOSTLY for the GOD/GODDESSES that you are keeping in SANKALPA).
While and when all the rituals are done as POOJA with manthra and the activity of offering (KRIYA) with full BHAKTI (devotion) there could be errors in the rituals; here it says it is all DUE TO HIM (THE GOD Thyself).
मन्त्रहीनं क्रियाहीनं भक्तिहीनं जनार्दन
यत्पूजितं मया देव परिपूर्णं तदस्तु मे
manthraheenam kriyaheenam bhaktiheenam janardhana
manthraheenam kriyaheenam bhaktiheenam janardhana
yath-poojitham
maya deva paripoornam thadasthu me
This sloka unambiguously says Rituals are Godly affairs and needs to be done with utmost SRADDHA (concentration) and BHAVA (understanding the inner meaning).
Unfortunate that these days Rituals became a synonym for anything that one does casually without attention. Most of the Rituals done in the temples too are without this Sraddha (concentration).
KEYWORDS ::
Temple Rituals, Offering, Agama Shastra, Anushtana, Achara
We reflected on
the rituals as Dharana done in full SRADDHA (concentration) and BHAVA
(understanding the inner meaning). Temple rituals are only intact in India
whereas places like ancient Egypt, where all such rituals once were highly
active, has lost and forgotten all its richness in heritage.
Hindu Temples in and outside India still keep and continue rituals which are older than the oldest that exists in this world. Hindu temples are mushrooming all over the world, numbering in hundreds of thousands in structures like luxurious and rich palaces, rustic abandoned warehouses, simple halls with just a picture of God or granite stone in a jungle or roadside.
Hindu Temples in and outside India still keep and continue rituals which are older than the oldest that exists in this world. Hindu temples are mushrooming all over the world, numbering in hundreds of thousands in structures like luxurious and rich palaces, rustic abandoned warehouses, simple halls with just a picture of God or granite stone in a jungle or roadside.
To participate in the temple rituals, one should dress modestly, respect the priests and other visitors, refrain from gossip and worldly talk to enjoy a spiritual time. The Hindu worship service follows certain procedures- rituals called puja, literally adoration with mantras (verses/hymns) and hand gestures (mudras), ringing bell etc. These procedures are mostly based on Vedas which are modified to fit in the temple as described under Agama Shastra. There are special occasions like yearly mega festivals (like Utsavam etc) where specific procedures are followed apart from the daily temple rituals.
Following are the steps followed in the daily Temple Rituals as prescribed in the Agama Shastra
1. The Priest should purify himself
2. Sanctify the place of worship
3. Spiritualize the precious substances to offer
the Deity like - water, uncooked rice, holy ash, sandalwood paste, Kumkum and
the lamp to be lighted
4. Light the lamp
5. Invites God/Goddesses to come and dwell in the
lamp/deity/image
6. A ritualistic bath, called abhishekam, in which
water, sesame oil, turmeric, saffron, milk, yogurt, ghee, honey, lime juice,
vibhuti, sandalwood paste, panchamritam (a mixture of five fruits), coconut
water and rosewater, is given for the Deity
7. Deity is dressed in new clothes and beautifully
decorated with flowers, etc.
8. Incense, oil lamps and food will be offered
9. The Priest offers flowers while chanting 108
names of the God and devotees may also sing bhajans to please the God
10.
At the highest
point of the puja, a large lamp is waved before the Diety and bells are rung
loudly as God sends His power through the holy image of Himself that is
absorbed by the water, food, flower, ashes (vibhoothi)
11.
When the lamp is
lowered, everyone prostrates to the Divine.
12.
The lamp is then
carried out to bless the worshipers, who often leave a donation on the tray (or
later in the temple offering box).
13.
Finally, depending
on the tradition, sacraments such as sacred ash, blessed water, sandalwood
paste, kumkum, fruits, sweets and flowers are passed out to bless everyone who
is present. These include a portion of the offerings--flowers, cooked food and
more--brought by devotees.
14.
Devotees may then
sit in meditation, relaxing in the blessings invoked by the puja.
15.
Make God to sleep,
devotees may sing devotional songs during this time.
What we described here as the ritual is called ANUSHTANA and varied versions of this may be in practice at different places with variations acceptable to the locals which are called ACHARAS.
KEYWORDS :: Temple, Construction,
Installation, Daily Care, Devotees, Power
After seeing Temple
Rituals, as a continuation, here the reflection is on the Power of Temples
since the Rituals are for maintaining the power in Temples. According to
Hinduism, temple is not just a prayer hall, it is the Source of Energy. God’s
presence is felt in the temples. Pooja Rituals are for producing energy in the
temples.
Installation – The chief priest (thanthri - is the custodian of the God/Goddess) will be associated with the temple since the time of installation. All the power of the temple depends on various aspects like aitheehiya (the story behind the installation), power of the rituals, the people involved in installation and materials used etc. To demonstrate the power of temples, we take the examples of famous temples installed by Rama, Parasurama, Kuleepani Maharshi et. al. As said in the below sloka – a person’s Archana (proper offerings) turns a Shila (stone) into Shankara (God) and any wrongdoings will turn Shankara into a Shila.
अर्चकस्य प्रभावेन शिला भवति शङ्करः ।
आभिरूप्याच्च मूर्तीनां देवः सान्निध्यमृच्छति ॥
archakasya prabhAvena shilA bhavati shangkaraH |
AbhirUpyAchcha mUrtInAM
आभिरूप्याच्च मूर्तीनां देवः सान्निध्यमृच्छति ॥
archakasya prabhAvena shilA bhavati shangkaraH |
AbhirUpyAchcha mUrtInAM
devaH
sAnnidhyamRuchChati ||
Temples may have only thousands of years story, but rituals and Achara – anushtana (explained in earlier Sunday Reflections) have hundreds of thousands of years of heritage but might have undergone changes over time depending on local situations. Yagna / Yaga was the first concept from where Temples came into existence.
Most of the temples today are not powerful from the time of its inception but became famous and got the power by and from the people visiting the temple. The power of the temples depend on the activities and number of devotees visiting the temple.
The Bimba (deity) in the temple is made of any of these items - Mud, Wood, Stone, Granite, Mix of Metals (Panchaloha) etc. The construction process starts at the Garbha Gruha (Sanctum Sanctorum) as it is believed to be the Naval place of the God during his lying down position, wherein the front and back entry gates will be the head and leg of the God respectively.
The architecture of the temple is defined based on the main deity and the area around. The location and the structure of the temple including the entry is decided by the local story and is in-line with the Agama Shastra specifications. Yantra, Mantra, and Thantra are the pillars of powers. Yantras are the geometric figures that are used to conserve energy. Mantras are the hymns with power in it. Thantras are the ritualistic actions of the priest.
KEYWORDS
:: Temple, Construction, Agama Shastra, Energy Preserve, Distribution
Shastra in Indian
tradition means that which is useful for human beings (lokaanam upakaraya). The
system of the temple and the social gathering with religious practices are
around for many years as people found them useful and thus temples played a
significant role in making a better life for people.
Sthapathya Veda has two parts – Vastu and Agama Shastra. Temples are constructed as per Agama Shastra and houses are constructed as per Vastu.
Sthapathya Veda has two parts – Vastu and Agama Shastra. Temples are constructed as per Agama Shastra and houses are constructed as per Vastu.
Agama means tradition or "that which has come down" from generations; it also means the energy that came down from God to us. Agama Shastra is a combination of cosmology, epistemology, philosophy, texts on meditation and practices, yoga, mantras, deity worship etc. and Sthapathy is a person who can design the temple to pass on these energies to devotees effectively. Thus, in order to build a temple as a first step, a Sthapathy will be consulted to design the temple understanding the local needs. Brahmarishi Mamuni Mayan (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamuni_Mayan) is one of the Guru (Master architect) who developed this science during ancient times and authored MAYAMATHAM.
Basic Principle states that the energy generated through Yanthra, Manthra, Thanthra and all rituals in the temple will be densified, preserved and distributed to the visitors because of the temple design based on Agama. As per Agama Shastra temples are of different styles for - Shaivism (Shiva), Vaishnavism (Vishnu), Shaktism (Devi), Ganapathya (Ganesha) and Soura (Sun God).
Depending on the God, no of sub-deities, size of the idols, direction, sanctum, number of visitors expected, special religious functions etc., the layout and construction will be planned. All the cosmic powers and pancha bhootha (5 basic elements – earth, water, air, fire, space) are unified to energize the temple. The Kshethra meaning temple is also understood as the body of God.
The temple satisfies the Indriyas (Sensory organs) of the devotees. This is where the Agama Shastra plays an important role. Thus it is vital for the temple to be located in a place where it is having a good support of the electromagnetic energy all around. As the energy gets densified inside the sanctum sanctorum with all the rituals, once the doors are open the energy from the sanctum gets injected into the devotees.
The science of temple, installation, energy creation, and reaching up to devotees is described under “Thanthra Samuchayam”.
-- More from DrTPS at (www.drtps-shiksha.in) -- INDEX
Keywords:: Temple,
Bimba, Energy, Creation, Preservation, Distribution, Circumambulation
Devotees visit Temples in order to revitalize
themselves with the positive Energy in Temple. Along with the Creation of such
energy, Preservation and Distribution are equally important. Thus, the
structure and Maintenance of the Temple and Procedures followed in the Temple
are of great relevance. Energy doesn’t depend on the facility and size of the
Temple but is based on the ambience and vibrations created by the devotees.
Some of the factors of energy creation are:
1.
Place (Location),
Direction and Structure (Agama) of the Temple.
2.
Maintenance of
Cleanliness like - Pujari’s Sapta Sudhi (7 cleanliness procedures for the
Priest), Devotees’ Sareera Sudhi (Cleanliness of the Body), etc.
3.
It is always said
outer pradakshina (circumambulation) is three times better than the inner
pradakshina. Many texts prescribe certain number of pradakshina based on God.
Example: ekam vinayake kuriyal (one circumambulation for Ganapathi). For
pradakshina the rule is :: padal padanugatham gache (walk slow with one foot
after the other) / karau chalana vivarjithau (without moving hands – better to
be in NAMASTE mode/fold hands keeping close to chest) / vachasthuthi hrudi
dhyanam (slow lip movement with prayers in full devotion) / evam kuriyal
pradakshinam (this is the rule for the circumambulation).
4.
The entry into
Sanctum sanctorum (Garbhagriha) where Bimba (Deity/idol) is placed is
generally only for the Pujari. One could stand on the pathway on both sides and
look ahead to see the Bimba to be in Dhyana (silence).
5.
Energy is created
inside the Sanctum Sanctorum through all the rituals of chanting of mantras
(hymns) with mudras (specific hand posters), offering of flowers, sanctified
water, flames of light (deepam), incense (dhoopam) etc. This energy is created
and conserved around the special material used for the Bimba and through the
rituals.
All the
decorations and eye catching views in the temples including colorful flowers,
pleasing music like the chanting and vadya (instrumental music) including the
conch, tasty prasada, sandalwood paste / vibhoothi / Kumkum that are applied
especially at the ajna chakra (between the eyebrow and nose joint) etc., are
for the wholistic panchendriya (all sensory organs) satisfaction to energize
the devotee.
Apart from serving
as the place for devotion, temples should also serve as the place for
socialization and as a center for art, culture & heritage. Temples
belong to the devotees and as more number of devotees participate in learning
and teaching activities in the temple, the upliftment of the customs and
rituals (achara and anushtana) will get enriched and spread to the next
generation.
This reflection
that we had on Energy Created in Temples will lead us to wonder how these
systems are transferred through generations over thousands of years through
Manthras.
KEYWORDS
:: Hymns, Mantras, Energy, Meaning, Chanting Style, Esoteric
Sound is sacred and powerful which connects us,
heals us and expands our hearts. A mantra is a series of words chanted in a
religious tradition to invoke spiritual qualities. Mantra chanting is an
ancient key that unlocks and opens us up to mysterious sounds in another
level reaching to the entire universe and has the transformative power. Mantra
effects and affects all the fivefold levels - Physical, Emotional,
Intellectual, Social and Spiritual.
Three main types of mantras are - Beeja (seed),
Saguna (With Shape), and Nirguna (without Shape).
Beeja mantras correlate the God/Goddess with
all the chakras. Saguna mantras invoke the God/Goddess as an individual
person in Shape/Form. Nirguna mantras originate from the Vedic texts with
no deities or personalized aspects of God in a specific form or meaning to
them.
The power of mantras is directly proportional
to the number of times they are repeated and this is called mantra Siddhi. The
practice of repeated chanting of a mantra silently or aloud - sitting in a
comfortable position, with closed eyes - is considered as the easiest form
of meditation. Paying careful attention to the speed and rhythm of your
chanting, pronouncing correctly, knowing the esoteric meaning of the mantra
will make the mind focused on letting the thoughts flow. Some people use a
Mala (a string of beads) to count a series of 108 repetitions of the mantra.
There are esoteric moola mantras for every
deity in a temple. The chanting of the first mantra – “Agamarthanthu Devaanam,
Gamanaartham thu Rakshasam” (meaning let Godly energy get in and let Demonic
energy get out) has the power to change the energy and it happens only when the
priest is able to invoke it. The priest gains that ability from his daily
rituals like Sapta-Sudhi (7 cleanliness process) which is by the
mantra - Prana-pana vyano dhana samana me sudhyantham… and Gayatri mantra.
We reflected on the mantras and Hymns and it is
for Energy in Temples and Special Pujas etc.
KEYWORDS :: Hymn, Mantra, Stothra, Bhajan, Prayer, Chanting,
Worship, Hindu Home
Energy in Mantras in Temples and drawn
a parallel to Prayers in Daily Life at Homes. Heart of Hinduism is in the Homes
of Hindus. Prayer is the Life of Hinduism. Prayers are the asset that
traditions from the past transferred to us and we are responsible to pass it on
to the next generation. There are uncountable prayers for God & Goddesses
apart from hymns / mantras / sookthas / suthras / anushtups / chanda etc.
in the Vedic Texts. We shall now see only the Daily Prayers and reserve our
discussions on scriptures one by one in other heading.
Hinduism doesn’t prescribe a style of
Prarthana (Prayer / worship) to individuals at home. It is all the tradition
and culture imbibed from past or picked up from relatives or friends and at
times is prescribed by their mentors / Guru. Some worship their kula (family)
deva(God) or an Ishta (favorite) deva at home.
One can follow a scaled version of the
temple Puja (worship process) by chanting the mantras like Saptha Suddhi in the
morning or evening after bath. Children will learn through the practice being
followed at home and no special training is generally done on this. The
sequence during the puja could be Gayatri Mantra, Shanthi mantra, Ganesha
Vandanam followed by offerings and sthuthi (praising); all these are to be done
through japa (prayers).
A puja thali (plate) consists of a
lamp, Haldi, Kumkum, Sweetmeats or fruits, Water, Bell, incense and Perfume
sticks. All these ingredients are offered with specific mantra / Aarti.
Food(Naivedhyam) is offered to God/Goddess. This will be continued with the
japa (prayers in silence) or Bhajan (group singing).
After the puja is done, Kumkum /
Vibhoothi (Sacred Ash) is put on the forehead and Prasadam (Naivedhyam) is
consumed with appropriate Prayers like (brahmarpanam …). Then an athma
pradakshina is done with chanting kani-yani-cha-papani… followed by sashtanga
pranamam by laying on the floor stretching folded hands towards the puja place.
May read more at
All these activities have a scientific
/ philosophical / spiritual meaning which one has to learn. Could read
We reflected by discussing the Bhakti
(devotion) path to attain the blessings of God. The other major path as per
Hindu Philosophy is Gnana (Wisdom path).
KEYWORDS
:: Karma, Yogam, Margam, Action, Intention, Timeline, Meditative Action
Having reflected
on Jnana-Margam (path of Knowledge), now we shall discuss Karma Yogam -
Importance of Action. Karma Yogam is to purify the thoughts/mind. Karma Yogam
prescribes dharma in work as a Godly action with Awareness, Detachment, Joy,
Compassion, and Love; benefit for the self is unimportant in comparison to the
larger good.
The word Karma is derived from the
Sanskrit word “Kri” meaning to do. Any action that we do and its aftereffects
are called Karma. Our Karma determines what we deserve and what we can
assimilate. With regard to Karma-Yoga, the Gita mentions it as the science of
doing work with cleverness. According to Gita when one knows how to work,
he/she can obtain the greatest results. A man works with various motives -
people work for fame, money, power, satisfaction, etc. [KARMA YOGA by Swamy
Vivekananda].
Action is done with two intentions -
Sakama and Nishkama. Sakama Karma is done with a selfish motive. There is no
yogam for sakama karma as it is a bondage and creates egoism, hatred and
jealousy. Nishkama Karma breaks the bondage of karma and hence is a selfless
action. Forgiveness, helping, compassionate behaviour of humanity are the
examples of selfless action leading to renunciation, which further purifies the
mind.
Based on the timeline, Karma is
categorized into Sanchita - Prarabdha - Agami Karmas; which are based on the
actions we had performed in the past, performing now & the result of the
actions we will perform in the future. Sanchita karma is an accumulated
work of the past. Prarabdha is the karma (performed action) is responsible for
the present condition of a person, as a debt of our past karma. Agami means
forthcoming, which can be modified according to the actions that we are into at
this moment. The Law of Karma states that what we do in the past
defines our present and our present will govern the future.
It is not what we do that matters,
but how we do is important too which is explained through this famous
Story of the Three Brick Masons. When the masons were asked what they were
doing - the first one answered, “I’m building a wall”, the second one replied,
“I’m working in order to earn money for my family”. But, the third man
enthusiastically said, “I’m building a cathedral!”
There is a joy in acting (serving)
naturally out of enthusiasm and generosity without anxieties, fears, and
expectations. None in this world, when they are in jagrath (not in sleep) can
avoid Karma; wanted or not, consciously or unconsciously all of us are into
action.
When we add the word Yogam, it
means an action performed with meditative awareness. So, Karma
Yogam is actually the yoga of Dynamic Meditation or Meditation in Action.
KEYWORDS :: Karma Yoga, Meditation, Samadhi, Action, Passion,
Rashtra Dharma, Jnana, Bhakti
We reflected on the Importance of
Karma, Karma Yoga with full awareness of the chosen destination and path as
prescribed by scriptures, following Dharma Sastra through the Jnana-Marga in
Devotion (Bhakti) is called Mediation in Action / Meditative Action or Dynamic
Meditation.
Conceptually Meditation is Samadhi and
practically it is Dharana as people practice Guided Meditation, that too for a
specific interval of time in groups etc.
As per Ashtanga Yoga - yama
(non-violence, ethical restraints or abstentions), niyama (self-discipline,
lifestyle observances), asana (Physical yoga – body making flexible, postures),
pranayama (breath practice, breath control), prathyahara (withdrawal of the
senses / sensory perception), dharana (concentrating on one, focused), dhyana
(devotion / meditation), and samadhi (merge into self, absorption into the
Divine) are the progressive steps for meditation.
For a passionate driver, driving
becomes a meditative action, as it becomes so casual that all the responses
during driving becomes very natural without any stress. If you ask the same
driver to sit at a place with closed eyes, (s)he might not be able to do so as
(s)he thinks that closing eyes and sitting at one place is a waste of time and
unproductive. Hence, meditation is an individual inner feeling to be in bliss.
Same is the case with anyone who is
passionate in reading, music, cooking, walking, lecturing, doing worship,
bhajan etc. But each of us have to choose the work that is passionate for us as
it gives us no stress and becomes casual and soothing and helps in making our
life blissful.
Not many are gifted with a profession
which could also be a passion. But assume you are skillful and are also devoted
fully in that, then you are sure to enjoy. This implies that the karma for
which you have enough jnana and you submit to it with full bhakti, is called
Meditation in Action. Thus, Jnana-Yoga and Bhakti-Yoga mixed with the action
will lead you into Karma-Yoga which is Meditation in Action.
The question arises whether is it
possible to make many / most of the activities in your life as meditative, if
the answer is yes then you are in bliss. Else, for the time being when one is
in that action, he is happy and rest of the time becomes suffering. To avoid
this, one must not work to live but live to work, work for the betterment of
self, family and the people around.
Meditative action is not just one
action in meditation, but all that actions we are into must be made meditative
and enjoyable experience to give a meaning to your life. Any job when added to
skill/knowledge and done with devotion benefitting the people around us will
reap the fruits which you can enjoy through the feelings of others is the
credit in LIFE. When the benefit is for
the nation you are into Rashtra Dharma.
KEYWORDS :: Bhagavad Gita, Krishna, Arjuna, Kurukshethra War,
Mahabharatha, Yoga, Upanishad
Mediation in Action / Meditative Action or Dynamic
Meditation and concluded by quoting Bhagavad Gita is a handbook
for meditative action as prescribed by Krishna to Arjuna. Bhagavad
Gita is composed of 700 slokas, split into 18 chapters by commentators for easy
understanding.
The first chapter - Arjuna Vishadha Yoga explains about
the war field: Duryodhana preparing for the battle while Arjuna – the
distressed disciple explains his desire to quit the war to his master Krishna.
Second Chapter - Sankya (number) Yoga, sam (good) khya (declared) is the best
communication of Yoga. Chapter 3 - Karma Yoga talks about the nature of
the action and how one has to approach. Chapter 4 Jnana Karma Sanyasa Yoga
deals with Arjuna's questions on the detachment of Action from the result.
Chapter 5 - Karma Sanyasa Yoga talks about Action without bondage.
In Chapter 6 - Dhyana Yoga, Krishna explains Dhyana to
Samadhi as parallel to Patanjali's Yoga Sastra. Chapter 7 - Jnana Vignana Yoga
gives the distinction of External and the internal phenomenon as Prakruti and
Purusha. Chapter 8 - Akshara Brahma Yoga is to elaborate on Krishna’s cosmic
existence. Chapter 9 - Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga explains the existence and
beyond. By the end of Chapter 10 - Vibhoothi Yoga, Arjuna attains realization
and wanted to see God in His form. In Chapter 11 - Viswarupa Darsana Yoga,
Krishna blesses Arjuna by providing his cosmic appearance.
Chapter 12, Bhakti Yoga is on devotion. In Chapter 13 -
Kshethra Kshethrajna Vibhaga Yoga, the field and consciousness are explained in
detail. Chapter 14 - Gunathraya Vibhaga Yoga discusses Satwa, Rajas and Thamas.
Chapter 15 -Purushothama Yoga talks about the nature of human existence and how
to identify the self. Chapter 16 - Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga is to point
out the human potential to choose divine or Demonic nature. Chapter 17,
Sradhathraya Vibhaga Yoga talks about three fold characterization on thoughts
and believes on actions.
Chapter 18 - Moksha Sanyasa Yoga summarizes the various
kinds of spiritual paths to follow attain Moksha, the ultimate goal of a human.
By the end of this chapter after clearing the doubts, Arjuna thanks Krishna and
promises to obey Krishna and be in Action to fight the war.
First Sloka in Bhagavad Gita starts with a question by
Drutharashtra (BG-1-1) “O Sanjay, after gathering on the holy field of
Kurukshetra, and desiring to fight, what did my sons and the sons of Pandu do?”
धृतराष्ट्र उवाच |
धर्मक्षेत्रे कुरुक्षेत्रे समवेता युयुत्सवः |
मामकाः पाण्डवाश्चैव किमकुर्वत सञ्जय ||BG-1-1||
dhṛitarāśhtra uvācha
dharma-kṣhetre kuru-kṣhetre samavetā yuyutsavaḥ
māmakāḥ pāṇḍavāśhchaiva kimakurvata sañjaya
for which Sanjaya answers in the last sloka (BG-18-78)
“Wherever there is Shree Krishna, the Lord of all Yoga, and wherever there is
Arjun, the supreme archer, there will also certainly be unending opulence,
victory, prosperity, and righteousness. Of this, I am certain.”
यत्र योगेश्वर: कृष्णो यत्र पार्थो धनुर्धर: |
तत्र श्रीर्विजयो भूतिध्रुवा नीतिर्मतिर्मम || BG-18-78||
yatra yogeśhvaraḥ kṛiṣhṇo yatra pārtho dhanur-dharaḥ
tatra śhrīr vijayo bhūtir dhruvā nītir matir mama
Through Karma-Jnana-Bhakti-Raja-Sanyasa Yoga; any
confused individual gets clarity on his own duty and understands that his
actions should lead to a social benefit which is the core of Bhagavad Gita
which is the essence of Upanishads, Brahma Vidya and Yoga Sasthra.
KEYWORDS:: Bhagavad Gita, Brahma Vidya
Bhagavad Gita is
majorly Brahma Vidya, and here we shall reflect on Brahma Vidya.
ॐ तत्सदिति श्रीमद्भगवद्गीतासूपनिषत्सु
om tat sat iti srimad bhagavadgeetaasu upanishatsu
ब्रह्मविद्यायां योगशास्त्रे श्रीकृष्णार्जुनसंवादे
brahma vidyaayaam yogashaastre sri krishnaarjuna samvaade
Vid ("to
know") is the root for Vidya (Knowledge) as per the Vedas. The
ultimate Vidya to KNOW THE SELF is Brahma Vidya. Brahma Vidya
is the spiritual knowledge of divine faith/God/existence/absolute truth itself.
In the Puranas, this is divided into two branches - one dealing with the Vedic
mantras called para vidya or former knowledge and the other dealing
with the study of the Upanishads called the apara vidya or latter knowledge.
Both para and apara vidya constitute brahma vidya.
Brahman is the
absolute Reality, pure Consciousness. According to ADVAITA VEDANTA philosophy,
Brahman is the Absolute non-dual reality, and its essential nature is
existence, consciousness, and bliss. Self and Brahman is one; the difference or
duality between Brahman and the Self is a mere illusion.
These days Brahma
Vidya is seen as the spiritual path for seekers of ultimate reality,
explaining the logic behind experiential and experimental sciences. According
to Hindu philosophy Brahma is imperishable. For the imperishable to exist, a
perishable object is to be Mundakopanishad says – Brahma vidya is the Sarva
Vidyam Pratishtam, the foundation of all kinds of Knowledge. The Indriyas,
the base of knowledge is from these sense organs of perception, thought,
imagination, which are all managed by the Brahma. Learning and gaining this in
all that we do is called Brahma Vidya.
Infinite things
around this world are reduced into 5 senses and then is preserved as impression
implying that the world is only an impression. That impression in us is
understood by the Brahma residing in the center of our heart-cave, shining in
the form of the Self with immediacy as 'I'.
हृदयकुहर मध्ये केवलं ब्रह्ममात्रम्।
hṛdayakuhara madhye kevalaṃ brahmamātram।
Brahmavidya
Upanishad is one of twenty Yoga Upanishads in the four Vedas.
The Brahmavidya Upanishad has 110 verses. The key issues dealt with in the
scripture are Brahmavidya– the knowledge
of Brahman, the character of
Brahman, the Om symbol and
an individual’s nature of self-consciousness, human attachments and freedom
therefrom.
Bhagavad Gita is
the essence of Upanishads, Brahma Vidya and Yoga Sasthra, having seen Brahma
Vidya now, next we shall reflect on Yoga Sasthram.
Gita is the essence of Upanishads,
Brahma Vidya and Yoga Sasthram; having briefed Brahma Vidya, now we shall
reflect on Yoga Sasthram.
Yoga is known to the world as
Yogasana (physical exercise) and breathing practice; a bit deeper will be
Ashtanga Yoga explaining eight steps (yama, niyama, asana, pranayama,
prathyahara, dharana, Dhyana, samadhi).
But in the Spiritual terminology,
Yoga is Union / Contact / Reaching etc.; thus, it is realizing God. Mainly,
Karma Yoga - Yoga of work and renunciation, Jnana Yoga - Yoga of knowledge,
Bhakti Yoga - Yoga of devotional service, are explained in Bhagavad Gita.
Sasthram means that is experiential
and/or experimental and what is useful for the world. In the whole of the
Bhagavad Gita, the word Yoga (including yoga and yukta) is appearing 155 times
in various discussions. Undoubtedly Gita is the most used and discussed book in
the world.
Yoga is the Sastra of uniting individual self with
cosmic consciousness, here the dvaita is the base. Advaita Vedanta and Yoga are
the two largest surviving schools of Hindu traditions. In principle, they are
same but differ in concepts. Advaita Vedanta uses Patanjali's yoga practices
and lessons from Upanishads for the self-realization/salvation.
The methods of Yoga Sastra according to Yoga
Darshana of Patanjali is that binding (bandha) of jiva (atma/self/soul) is
due to intellect (buddhi). Jiva is beyond all these but cannot exist without
all these - body (sareera), senses (indriya), mind (manas), intellect (buddhi),
memory (chitha) and ego (ahankara). The self-conscious state is being with that
cosmic Being by dissolving the physical and mental consciousness; which is
the path (ways) through Yoga Sastra.
योगश्चित्तवृत्तिनिरोधः
(yogaś citta-vṛtti-nirodhaḥ)
[Yoga Sutras 1.2]
Swami Vivekananda translates
the sutra as "Yoga is restraining the mind-stuff (Chitha) from taking
various forms (Vruthis). Yoga in India has a meditative and spiritual
core.
Yoga is mentioned in
the Rigveda, but most likely developed further around the sixth and
fifth centuries BCE, references are seen in Upanishads. "When the
five senses, along with the mind, remain still and the intellect is not active,
that is known as the highest state. They consider yoga to be firm restraint of
the senses. Then one becomes un-distracted for yoga”, says Katha Upanishad.
Bhagavad Gita (BG) deals with Yoga all through and defines "Yoga to be
equanimity" (BG:2-48); "Yoga is skill in action" (BG:2-50);
"Know that which is called yoga to be separation from contact with
suffering" (BG:6-23).
As we have reflected on Brahma
Vidya and now on Yoga Sasthram, let us next read on Upanishads.
KEYWORDS:: Upanishad, Brahman, Atman, Vidya, Avidya, Karma,
Moksha, Samsara, Rebirth
After Brahma Vidya and Yoga
Sasthra, now we shall reflect on Upanishads.
Upanishad Upa- (near), ni- (down), shad
(to sit): it translates to sitting near the guru. In olden days the students
used to clarify their doubts from their teacher after formal learning
from Vedas; thus Upanishads are Vedantas (the end of Knowledge). Though Hindu
tradition says Upanishads are as old as Vedas, it is believed that various
seers and sages compiled Upanishads between 800-500 BCE, the Upanishads are a
culmination and completion of an earlier body of Hindu sacred texts called the
Vedas. The Teachings of the Upanishads has Six Key Concepts - Brahman, Atman,
Avidya, Karma, Moksha, and Samsara.
Brahman - The Upanishads emphasize
the impermanence of the empirical world, physical reality as we experience it
through our senses and it takes us to learn the imperishable - Maya – to the
Ultimate Cosmic Reality too. Brahman alone is Real, unchanging and permanent;
everything else is Illusion. The distinction between Maya and Brahman allows
Upanishadic thinkers to affirm the unity or oneness of all things. Brahman is
SatChitAnanda; “being” (sat), “consciousness” (chit), and “bliss”
(ananda). Brahman is a state in which subject-object duality ceases to
exist; it is not-this, it is not-that (neti, neti). [Brhad-aranyaka Upanishad,
II, 3, 6].
Atman is the True Self; the
individual personality, soul, or self (jiva) belongs to the realm of Maya. The
jiva is conditioned by Atman. Atman is timeless, spaceless, unchanging pure
consciousness, only temporarily manifested as jiva in Maya. The Upanishads
teach the existence of a true Self called Atman. The Atman is to the jiva is
like what the space around a jar is to the space within the jar. Space within
the jar is space bounded and limited by the edges of the jar. So the jiva is
Atman bounded and limited by individuality.
Tat Tvam Asi (Atman is Brahman) Chandogya
Upanishad says that there is a common consciousness between Atman and Brahman.
Avidya and vidya is a perspective
characterized by ignorance (avidya) of the true nature of reality and the self.
A rope may appear to be a snake, this is appearance only, grounded in avidya
till one gets Vidya to experience a Snake.
Samsara, Karma and Moksha can be seen as egocentric
desires as Samsara creates actions (Karma) in the physical forms or vehicles
for atman. Upanishadic teachings are for the Reincarnation or Rebirth (Humans
live multiple embodied lives, experiencing a cyclical process of birth, death,
and rebirth called samsara). Lack of satisfaction in life - is associated with
material forms of existence. Rebirth is governed by karma, as per the law of
cosmic justice, the moral quality of the action. Rebirth is not desirable. It
implies that a person is still trapped in ignorance about the nature of
reality. Suffering, associated with material existence, has not yet been
transcended.
Suffering is transcended only by
release from samsara and absorption into Brahman, the one ultimate reality.
This is a state of knowledge, enlightenment, or absolute consciousness in which
the true nature of reality (Brahman) and the true self (Atman) is perceived. It
is also a state of freedom (moksha). The only thing that can be free is that
which has no desire, there is nothing left to suffer. The ultimate goal is
not to be reborn, the goal is to obtain moksha and be free from desire and the
cycle of death and rebirth.
KEYWORDS:: Vedas, Apaurusheya, Sruti, Smriti, Vedism,
Hinduism, Rites, Sacrifies, Panchabhoothas
After Upanishads,
now we shall reflect on Vedas.
Vid means to know.
Veda means knowledge, Vedas are the oldest scriptures of Hinduism. Veda is
apaurusheya (impersonal, authorless). Vedas are called Maṛai or Vaymoli in
parts of South India, particularly in Tamil. Marai literally means hidden (a secret,
mystery). The Vedas are a large body of knowledge / spiritual texts
(not religious) composed in Vedic Sanskrit. The Vedas are the oldest
written text on our planet. They date back to the beginning of Indian
civilization and are the earliest literary records of the whole Aryan race.
They are supposed to have been passed through oral tradition (Sruti) for over
100,000 years. Other Hindu texts usually attributed to an author though might
have been written by many and are called Smriti (that which is remembered).
Vedas are considered revelations seen
by ancient sages after intense meditation, and are the texts that
have been more carefully preserved since ancient times, may be available to us
in written form between 4000-6000 years ago. Religious study groups and
researchers called the religion of the ancient Indo-European-speaking
people who entered India about 1500 BCE as Vedic religion / Vedism.
Vedic materials are the texts known as the Vedas, which were composed and
handed down orally over a period of about 10 centuries, from about 1500 to
500 BCE. This Vedic religious activity in the Bharatheeya tradition is
what is shaped as Hinduism in India. The earliest Vedic religious beliefs
had a mix of Indo-European-Iranians systems. It is hard to know when Vedism
eventually gave way to classical Hinduism. Vedic schools from the 5th
century BCE onwards turned more into Hindu character.
Vedism is a system connected with the
natural phenomena, thus is a polytheistic religion involving
the worship of numerous male and female divinities as representatives
of natural forces. Vedic ceremonies are
the ritualistic sacrificial rites performed by offering havis
(sanctified materials) to a sacred fire, which itself was deified
as Agni and which carried the oblations to the Gods. Agni and Soma
were at the same time material elements of the ritual offering: Agni was
considered as the fire of the sun; Soma was the deified aspect of the liquid
poured in the oblation. Another great deity was Varuna, who was the upholder
of the cosmic and moral laws. Vedism had many other deities, among
whom were Gods, Goddesses, Demigods and Demons.
Every sacrifice
was performed on behalf of an individual, the patron or yajamana
(“sacrificer”), who bore the expenses. All the rites are related to
Panchabhoothas (primary forces - Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Space). The
domestic rites were observed by the householder himself or with the help of a
single priest and were performed over the domestic hearth fire. It is daily or
monthly, and others accompanied a particular event, such as the samskaras,
sacraments marking each stage of life, from conception to death.
After reflecting
on Vedas in general and more on Vedism, next we shall see Four Vedas.
KEYWORDS:: Vedas, Rig, Sama, Yejur, Adharva
Following an
Introduction on Vedas, now we shall reflect on Four Vedas.
The Vedas are divided
into four groups - Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda and Atharvaveda; these are
the oldest four collections (Samhitas).
The Rig-Veda Samhita
- is Verses of Rishis or visionaries written in a sense of
intimate communion of adoration to the nature; The Rigvedic deities
and the elements. It has 1,028 hymns and 10,600 verses, organized into ten
books (mandalas) by Sages and poets from different priestly groups compiled
between 2000 – 900 BCE around Punjab (Sapta Sindhu), India.
Rigveda also contains
variety of subjects varying from procedure of wedding to the folly of gambling.
Two-thirds of Rigveda is about Gods Agni (Fire) and Indra (Ruler of the Gods).
Other Rigvedic Gods include Rudra, the two Ashvins, Savitar and Surya, Varuna,
the Maruts and the Ribhus. Elements like divine creeper, the Soma, whose juice
was an energizer and animals like horses, some rivers, and even some implements
(like mortar and pestle) were deified. People in the times of the Rigveda had a
settled home, definite mode of life, developed social customs, political
organizations, and even arts and amusements.
The Yajur-Veda ("Veda of
sacrificial formulas") consists of short prose passages concerned with
rituals, mostly archaic prose mantras and also part of verses borrowed from the
Rig-Veda. Yajur Veda is a practical text, each mantra with an action in
sacrifice, offering in Agni (Fire) including the Soma offering. There are two
Yajur Vedas; Sukla and Krishna. Shukla (White) Yajur-Veda contains only
the verses and sayings necessary for the sacrifice, while explanations exist in
a separate Brahmana work. Krishna (Black) Yajur-veda, has explanations in the
work itself, often immediately following the verses which explains rituals and
matters of phonology and accent.
The Sama-Veda is the
metrical hymn "Veda of chants", “song of praise” or "Knowledge
of melodies". It has 1875 verses in 1549 stanzas, taken entirely
(except 78) from the Rig-Veda. The udgat ("singer"
priest) in rituals (ud-gai) sings the chant hymns from the Sama-Veda
(similar to a cantor). The styles of chanting are important for the liturgical
use of the verses. The hymns were to be sung according to certain fixed
melodies; musical ragas, specifically indicated melodies using the seven svaras
(notes) – Samagana.
According to
Patanjali, Sama Veda had 1000 recensions (Shakhas); but at present there are
only three available –
(1) Kauthuma (2) Jaiminiya (3) Ranayaniya. Samhita of
Kauthumas, consists of two parts, Archika (offering) and gana (song). The
Archika is also separated in two – Purva-Archika (First Adoratona) and
Uttar-Archika (Later Adoration). Here verses are sung for the three Gods Agni
(Fire), Indra (King of Gods) and Soma (Energizing Herb). [http://vedicheritage.gov.in/samhitas/samaveda-samhitas/]
Atharvaveda - Veda of the Wise and
the Old - is a later compilation that includes incantations and
magic spells. It is also called Atharva-Angirasa, associated with the name
of the ancient poet Atharvan (The Wise Old One) and with a rishi, Angiras.
Atharvaveda reveals a more primitive culture than the Rigveda. The custom is to
enumerate Yajurveda and Samaveda after the Rigveda, and mention Atharvaveda
last. Atharvaveda contains about 6 thousand verses forming 731 poems and a
small portion in prose. About one seventh of the Atharvaveda text is common to
the Rigveda.
Atharvaveda contains
first class poetry coming from visionary poets, much of it being glorification of
the curative powers of herbs and waters. Many poems relate to diseases like
cough and jaundice, to male and female demons that cause diseases, to
sweet-smelling herbs and magic amulets, which drive diseases away. There are
poems relating to sins and their atonement, errors in performing rituals and
their expiatory acts, political and philosophical issues, and a wonderful hymn
to Prithvi or Mother Earth. [https://www.tokenrock.com/explain-vedas-165.html]
After our reflection on the four Vedas, let's discuss here on
the Upaveda.
UPAVEDA (supplementary
knowledge/wisdom) is a Vedic school (Shakha) to Veda. Four
types that are usually specified are: Ayurveda (medicine), Gandharvaveda (music
and dancing), Dhanurveda (martial arts, ‘archery’), and Sthapatyaveda
(architecture) or, alternatively, Silpasastra. Upavedas are
applied knowledge, and are specific applications of Vedic teachings.
AYURVEDA
Ayurveda (knowledge of life) is an Upaveda
(supplementary) associated with the Atharva Veda, and mythologically derived
from the Gods. It has historical roots in the lost past and is still in
practice with increasing importance. Contribution of Sushruta (6th Century
BC) and Charaka (3rd Century BC ). The traditional Hindu system of
medicine, which is based on the idea of balance in bodily systems, uses diet,
herbal treatment, and yogic breathing.
The aim of Ayurveda is the attainment
of Moksha or liberation as a healthy body is the basic
requirement for the attainment of Purushaarthas. Ayurveda is a guide to keep
the body and mind fit to attain the Purushaarthas. Ayurveda is used to cure
diseases caused by the imbalance of the three doshas : vatha
(rheumatic) , pitha (obesity related) and kapha (respiratory troubles).
GANDHARVA VEDA
Gandharvaveda is the study of aesthetics and it
speaks of all art-forms
like music, dance, poetry, sculpture etc. Gandharva
Veda has its root in all the four Vedas - Rig
Veda, Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda. Gandharva
means skilled singer or master of music. Gandharva is not just the
science of Music, but the Vedic science on the influence of sound and
music in all, including the body and soul of the yogi. Ayurveda uses
Gandharva Veda to promote physical and mental health.
DHANURVEDA
Dhanurveda is the science of warfare and
archery, traditionally regarded as an Upaveda attached to the Yajur
Veda, and attributed either to Bhrugu or Visvamitra. More widely, the knowledge
of martial arts, specifically the bow. A section of the Agni Purana (8th -10th Century
AD) dealing with warfare and combat techniques from it are used in 15th –
16th century during Mughal Emperor Akbar.
STHAPATYAVEDA
Sthapatyaveda, also called Shilpa Veda, is
the Upaveda (supplementary branch) of Atharva Veda relates
with Engineering and Architecture. Sthapatya means establishing, Sthapatyaveda
deals with establishing a relationship between the dweller, dwelling
and cosmos. Sthapatyaveda deals with planning, designing, and construction of
temples, houses, villages, and cities. Vaastu Shastra, the Indian science of
Architecture, has its origin in Sthapatyaveda. Ancient civilizations around the
world were influenced by this architecture, remnants of which still exist.
Shri Vishvakarma (builder of the Universe) is
the source of the knowledge contained in the Sthapatyaveda. The universe is
created with the very same principles that he passed to Rishis and Maharishis
thousands of years ago to utilize in designing homes, cities and countries
helping us to improve our life and growth.
All people are influenced by the building in
which they reside, work and worship. According to the design
of a structure, one feels either comfort or discomfort. Building
designed in accordance with laws of nature will produce a sense of bliss, calmness
and fulfillment. In incorrectly designed structures one feels anxious,
stressful and despondent. Poorly designed structures produce sickness and
depression.
Having discussed different branches of Upaveda,
let us delve into the ways and the philosophy of practicing by understanding
Vedangas next.
Vedangas, limbs of
Veda; are six in number and are to be reflected along with Vedas. Just like the
limbs of the body, they perform various supportive and augmenting functions in
the study, preservation and protection of the Vedas and the Vedic traditions.
The six Vedangas are Shiksha (Phonetics), Niruktam (Explanation), Kalpam
(Ritual Canon), Jyothisham (Astrology), Chandas (Vedic meter), and Vyakaranam
(Grammar). All these are additional chapters in the Vedas; disciplines
associated with the study and understanding of the Vedas.
They represent the organs of the Veda Purusha.
Paniniya Shiksha (41-42) narrates two verses on the importance of the Vedangas
which describe Veda as a Purusha having six limbs as six Vedangas. Shiksha and
Chandas are aids for pronouncing and reciting Vedic mantras correctly,
Vyakaranam and Niruktam are for understanding their meaning, and Jyotisham and
Kalpam provide appropriate times and methods for performing the Vedic
sacrificial rites and rituals.
The Vedangas played an important role in
maintaining the purity and integrity of the Vedic tradition. For centuries they
taught and continue to teach Vedic students how to recite the Vedic hymns,
understand their meaning and perform the various rituals and ceremonies
strictly according to the established procedures. The Vedangas greatly help us
in proper understanding and application of the Vedas.
The Vedangas likely developed towards the end
of the Vedic period. Individually, these auxiliary disciplines of study are
traceable to the 1st to 5th - century BCE. However, it is
unclear when and where a list of six Vedangas were first conceptualized.
The Vedangas developed as ancillary studies
for the Vedas, were sciences that focused on helping understand and interpret
the Vedas that had been composed many centuries earlier. The insights into
meters, structure of sound and language, grammar, linguistic analysis and other
subjects influenced post-Vedic studies, arts, culture and various schools
of Hindu philosophy. The Kalpa
Vedanga studies, for example, gave rise to the Dharma-sutras, which later
expanded into Dharma-shastras.
Let us learn in brief, each of the six
Vedangas:
1. SHIKSHA: phonetics, phonology, pronunciation.
This auxiliary discipline has focused on the letters of the Sanskrit alphabet,
accent, quantity, stress, melody and rules of euphonic combination of words
during a Vedic recitation.
2. NIRUKTAM: etymology, explanation of
words, particularly those that are archaic and have ancient uses with unclear
meaning. This auxiliary discipline has focused on linguistic analysis to
help establish the proper meaning of the words, given the context they are used
in.
3. KALPAM: ritual instructions.
This field focused on standardizing procedures for Vedic rituals, rites of
passage rituals associated with major life events such as birth, wedding
and death in family, as well as discussing the personal conduct and proper
duties of an individual in different stages of his life.
4. JYOTISHAM: Auspicious
time for rituals, astrology and astronomy. This auxiliary Vedic discipline
focused on time keeping.
5. CHANDAS: prosody. This
auxiliary discipline has focused on the poetic meters, including those based on
fixed number of syllables per verse, and those based on fixed number of morae per verse.
6. VYAKARANAM: grammar and
linguistic analysis. This auxiliary discipline has focused on the rules of
grammar and linguistic analysis to establish the exact form of words and sentences
to properly express ideas.
The Veda is organized into four divisions. The Rig
Veda, Sama Veda, Yajur Veda, and Atharva Veda. Samhita is the first
and customarily of the main part of the Veda. Samhita is not a teaching; it is
a collection of mantras associated with a Rishi, and a Devata. And it is
designed to produce a certain effect or give access to a certain kind of supra
natural force; which is the core of Vedas.
Each of the Veda there are recensions / variations or
Shakhas / parts; with slightly different collection of mantras / texts /
traditions. Each Veda (recension therefore) has four parts (popularly believed by scholars
like Shankaracharya)
· the Samhitas (Mantra Samhita - meaning
collection of Mantras) – Only mantras and benedictions
· the Aranyakas (text on rituals,
ceremonies, sacrifices and symbolic-sacrifices) - Philosophical speculation about
reality. Somewhat like metaphysics, but tending to Adhyatma
· the Brahmanas (commentaries
on rituals, ceremonies and sacrifices) - literature investigating in principle the rituals
included in the tradition.
· the Upanishads (text
discussing meditation, philosophy and spiritual knowledge) - A more focused
investigation into the very essence of the Aranyaka.
Vedas consists of Mantra Samhitas only, which believed to
be Apourusheya - not of human origin but divine creation. Brahmanas and
Aranyakas are basically the same and Upanishads are written by sages (ancient
scholars) as interpretation of Vedas.
The Samhitas are sometimes identified as karma-khanda (action/ritual-related
section), while the Upanishads are identified as jnana-khanda (ज्ञान खण्ड, knowledge/spirituality-related section).
The Aranyakas and Brahmanas are variously classified,
sometimes as the ceremonial karma-khanda, other times (or parts of
them) as the jnana-khanda.
The Vedic Samhitas were chanted during
ceremonies and rituals, and parts of it remain the oldest living part
of Hindu tradition.
Samhita means "put together / joined / union /
collection", and "a methodically rule-based combination of text
or verses". Samhita is the most ancient among Vedic Texts consisting of mantras, hymns,
prayers, litanies and benedictions – sacred sounds with or
without literal meaning, as well as panegyrics,
prayers, litanies and benedictions petitioning nature or
Vedic deities.
Vedic Samhita refer to mathematically precise metrical
archaic text of each of the Vedas (Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda and
Atharvaveda).
RIGVEDA SAMHITA
The whole of the Rigveda-Samhita is in the form of verses, known
as Rik. ‘Rik’ is the name given to those Mantras which are meant for the praise
of the deities. Thus, the collection (Samhita) of Riks is known as
Rigveda-Samhita. The Rigveda Samhita contains about 10552 Mantras, classified
into ten books called Mandalas.
YAJURVEDA SAMHITA
Yajurveda-Samhitas are the prayer-books for the Adhvaryu priest;
for the purposes of sacrificial rituals. His works vary from the selection of a
plot of land for the sacrificial altar down to offering oblations to the sacred
fires.
SAMAVEDA SAMHITA
The Samaveda Samhita is an independent collection
(Samhita), yet it has taken many verses, a large number indeed, from the
Samhita of Rigveda. Samaveda-Samhita is the songbook of the Udgata priest
(singers during the Sacrifice, Yaga/Yajna).
ADHARVANAVEDA SAMHITA
The Atharvaveda Samhita contains hymns many of which were
charms, magic spells and incantations meant to be pronounced by the person who
seeks some benefit, or more often by a sorcerer who would say it on his or her
behalf. The most frequent goal of these hymns charms and spells were long
life of a loved one or recovery from some illness. In these cases, the affected
would be given substances such as a plant (leaf, seed, root) and an amulet.
The Brahmanas are the
commentaries on the hymns of the four Vedas. They are a layer or category
of Vedic Sanskrit texts embedded within each Veda, and form a part of
the Hindu Sruti literature. They are primarily a digest
incorporating myths, legends, the explanation of Vedic rituals and in some
cases speculations about natural phenomena or philosophy.
The Brahmanas are
particularly noted for their instructions on the proper performance of rituals,
as well as explain the original symbolic meanings - translated to words and
ritualistic actions in the main text. Brahmanas lack a homogeneous
structure across the different Vedas, with some containing chapters that
constitute Aranyakas or Upanishads in their own right.
Each Vedic shakha (school)
has its own Brahmana. Brahmana texts existed in ancient India, but
most of them are lost now. A total of 19 Brahmanas are existing at least
in their entirety basically because these texts were orally taught for
generations without documentation. Four Vedas, Brahmanas, Aranyakas and early
Upanishads were documented in pre-Buddhist times (ca. 600 BCE). Brahmanas could
be dated to about 900 BCE.
Mythology and
Rituals
The Brahmanas layer of
Vedic literature contain the exposition of the Vedic rites and
rituals. For example, the first chapter of the Chandogya Brahmana, one of
the oldest Brahmanas, includes eight suktas (hymns) for the
ceremony of marriage and rituals at the birth of a child. The first hymn
is a recitation that accompanies offering a Yajna oblation to
deity Agni (fire) on the occasion of a marriage, and the hymn
prays for prosperity of the couple getting married. The second hymn wishes
for their long life, kind relatives, and a numerous progeny. The third
hymn is a mutual marriage pledge, between the bride and groom, by which the two
bind themselves to each other, as follows (Chāndogya Brāhmaṇa, Chapter 1).
यदेतद्धृदयं तव तदस्तु हृदयं मम ।
यदिदं हृदयं मम तदस्तु हृदयं तव ॥
That heart of thine shall be mine,
and this heart of mine shall be thine.
The next two hymns of the first chapter
of the Chandogya Brahmana invoke deities Agni (fire), Vayu
(air), Kandramas (moon), and Surya (sun) to bless the couple and
ensure healthful progeny. The sixth through last hymn of the first chapter
in Chandogya Brahmana are not marriage-related, but related to hymns that go
with ritual celebrations on the birth of a child.
The Brahmanas are particularly noted
for their instructions on the proper performance of rituals, as well as
explanation of the symbolic importance of sacred words and ritualistic actions
in the main text. These instructions insist on exact pronunciation (accent), chhandas (meters),
precise pitch, with coordinated movement of hand and fingers – that is, perfect
delivery. Satapatha Brahamana, for example, states that verbal perfection
made a mantra infallible, while one mistake made it powerless. Scholars suggest
that this orthological perfection preserved Vedas in an age when
writing technology was not in vogue, and the voluminous collection of Vedic
knowledge were taught to and memorized by dedicated students through Svādhyāya, then
remembered and verbally transmitted from one generation to the next.
The Aranyakas ("Forest
Books") discuss rites deemed not suitable for the village (thus the name
"forest"); it constitutes the philosophy behind ritual sacrifice
texted in the Vedas. The major contents of the Aranyakas are theosophy
(Brahmavidya), meditation (Upasana) and knowledge of breath (Pranavidya). They
describe the secret meaning of the sacrifice and the concept of Brahma as well.
The creation of the universe, the power of the Almighty, Om, the soul and the
cycle of birth and death are explained in Brihadaranyaka in a simple manner. In
the Aranyakas we find certain important geographical, historical, social and
cultural points also. All this makes their study more significant.
The Brahmanas advocating
Yajna and other rituals are prescribed only for those who live in homes
and lead the life of house-holders (Grihastha). But it has to be understood
that Vedic rituals are intended to confer not only material benefits but also
mental purity by constant discipline. Aranyakas containing
explanations of the rituals and allegorical speculations thereon are meant
for non-materialistic seekers. This may be the reason why these texts were
propounded by the Rishis who resided in the forests and thought upon the
secrets of the Yajnas. Aranyakas describe the actions of life and also
acquisition of knowledge. These works form the basis of
the Rahasya or secrets discussed in the Upanishads, therefore,
another name of the Aranyakas was ‘Rahasya‘ as well. This name is mentioned in
the Gopatha Brahmana and Manusmriti.
Aranyakas is to bridge the gap between
the ritualistic Brahmanas and the more philosophical Upanishads. Aranyakas
are non-homogeneous in content and structure. In the immense Vedic
literature, there is no absolute universally true distinction
between Aranyakas and Brahmanas, as some Upanishads are
incorporated inside a few Aranyakas. Aranyakas, along
with Brahmanas, represent the emerging transitions in later Vedic
religious practices. The transition completes with the blossoming of
ancient Indian philosophy from external sacrificial rituals to internalized
philosophical treatise of Upanishads.
Aranyakas describe and discuss
rituals from various perspectives, but some include philosophical speculations.
For example, the Katha Aranyaka discusses rituals connected with
the Pravargya (ceremony introductory to the Agnishtoma (Soma sacrifice – devotion /
worship / offering; to any ritual done in front of a sacred
fire, often with chanting mantras), at which fresh milk is poured into a
heated vessel called mahavira or gharma and offered to
the Ashvins (twin Vedic gods of medicine. They are also
described as divine twin horsemen in the Rigveda. They are
the sons of Surya (in his form as Vivasvant) and his
wife Saranyu, a goddess of the clouds)). The Aitareya Aranyaka
includes explanation of the Mahavrata ritual from ritualisitic to symbolic
meta-ritualistic points of view.
The Aranyakas are associated with, and
named for, individual Vedic shakhas.
· Rigveda
o Aitareya Aranyaka belongs to
the Aitareya Shakha of Rigveda
o Kaushitaki Aranyaka
belongs to the Kaushitaki and Shankhayana Shakhas of Rigveda
· Yajurveda
o Taittiriya Aranyaka
belongs to the Taittiriya Shakha of the Krishna Yajurveda
o Maitrayaniya Aranyaka
belongs to the Maitrayaniya Shakha of the Krishna Yajurveda
o Brihad Aranyaka in the Madhyandina and
the Kanva versions of the Shukla Yajurveda. The Madhyandina version has 9
sections, of which the last 6 are the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.
· Samaveda
o Talavakara Aranyaka or Jaiminiya
Upanishad Brahmana belongs to the Talavakara or Jaiminiya Shakha of
the Samaveda
o Aranyaka Samhita is not a typical Aranyaka
text: rather the Purvarchika of the Samaveda Samhitas has a section of mantras,
called the 'Aranyaka Samhita', on which the Aranyagana Samans are sung.
The Atharvaveda has no surviving
Aranyaka, though the Gopatha Brahmana is regarded as its Aranyaka, a remnant of
a larger, lost Atharva (Paippalada) Brahmana.
The Mahabharata is an Ithihasa
wherein Vyasa, the story-teller himself has a role. The story is of cousins -
Pandavas and Kauravas, in the Kurukshetra War for the
throne of Hasthinapura. Dictated by Vyasa and written by Ganesha. With
100,000 verses, it is the longest epic poem ever written. It was composed in
the 4th century BCE or earlier. The Bhagavad Gita within
Mahabharata is one of the most important texts not only of the Indian
literature but also of the World literature.
Shantanu, the king of Hastinapur, was married
to River Ganges, had a son Devavrata who was supposed to be Shantanu's heir.
But, Shantanu fell in love with Satyavati and her father in order to agree for
the marriage insisted the king that Satyavati's son and descendants would
inherit the throne, Shantanu declined to do so.
Devavrata, after knowing about this, vowed to renounce the throne and to
remain celibate throughout his life (thus known as Bheeshma) and asked
Satyavati for his father. Pleased Shantanu granted Bheeshma the boon to select
the time of his own death.
Vichitravirya, son of Shantanu and Satyavati
was enthroned. Bheeshma abducted the three princesses of a neighboring kingdom
and brought them over to Hastinapur to be wedded to Vichitravirya. The eldest
of these princesses declared that she was in love with someone else, so she was
let go; the two other princesses were married to Vichitravirya, who died soon
after, childless.
Satyavati summoned her son (born to the great
sage Parashara before her marriage to Shantanu) Vyasa to impregnate the two
queens. By the Niyog custom, the two queens each had a son of Vyasa:
to the elder queen - Dhritarashtra, and to the younger – pale son Pandu. To a
maid of these queens was born a son of Vyasa - Vidura. Bheeshma brought up
these three boys with great care and made them great : Dhritarashtra - the
strongest of all princes in the country, Pandu - extremely skilled in warfare
and archery, and Vidura – expert in all the branches of learning, politics, and
statesmanship.
Since Dhritarashtra was blind, Pandu was
crowned. Bheeshma negotiated Dhritarashtra's marriage with Gandhari, and
Pandu's with Kunti and Madri. Pandu was a great king, but left the kingdom to
elder brother to look after the state affairs, and retired to the forests with
his two wives for some time. A few years later Kunti returned with her five
little boys, after the death of Pandu and Madri. The five boys were the
sons of Pandu, born to his two wives through the Niyog custom from
Gods: the eldest was born of Dharma, the second of Vayu, the third
of Indra, and the youngest - twins - of the Ashvins. In the
meanwhile, Dhritarashtra and Gandhari too had 100 sons and one daughter.
All of the 105 princes were entrusted to the
care of a teacher Kripa. Drona's school at Hastinapur also had Karna, of the
Suta clan. It was here that hostilities developed between the sons of
Dhritarashtra (Kauravas) and the sons of Pandu (Pandavas). Duryodhana and Bheem
had a fight, Karna - uninvited as he was not a Kuru prince - challenged Arjuna,
was insulted on account of his non-royal birth, and was crowned king of a
vassal state by Duryodhana. Questions began to be raised about Dhritarashtra
occupying the throne, since he was supposed to be holding the crown for king
Pandu. To keep peace in the realm, Dhritarashtra declared the eldest Pandava,
Yudhishthira, as the crown prince and heir apparent.
Yudhishthira's rising popularity with the
citizens was extremely distasteful to Duryodhana. He plotted to get rid of the
Pandavas. This he did by making his father send the Pandavas and Kunti off to a
nearby town on the pretext of a fair; the stay in that town was built by an agent
of Duryodhana; the palace was made entirely of inflammable materials since the
plan was to burn down the palace. The Pandavas, however, were alerted of this
fact by their other uncle, Vidura, and had a counter plan ready; they dug an
escape tunnel underneath their chambers and escaped.
This is how the Mahabharata PLOT was created.
Pandavas and Kunti went into hiding, moving
from one place to another and passing themselves off as a poor brahmin family.
During these wanderings, Bheem killed two demons, married a demoness, and had a
demon child called Ghatotkach. They also went for a swayamvaram (a
ceremony to choose a suitor by the Princess) at Panchal to see the festivities.
The princess Draupadi, born of fire, was famed for her beauty and every prince
from every country for miles around had come to the swayamvaram, to win
the task: a long pole on the ground had a circular contraption spinning disc
with a fish to arrow looking down into this water-mirror. One by one, the kings and princes tried to
shoot the fish, and failed; neither could lift the bow; nor could string it.
The Kauravas and Karna were also present; Karna picked up the bow and strung it
in a moment, but was prevented from taking aim when Draupadi declared she would
not marry anyone from the Suta clan. After every one of the royals had failed,
Arjuna, the third Pandava, affixed all of the five arrows to it, shot, and
pierced the fish's eye with all of the five arrows in a single attempt. Arjuna
had won Draupadi's hand.
The Pandava brothers, still as poor brahmins,
took Draupadi back to the hut they were staying; as reached they called for
Kunti, "Ma, Ma, come and see what we've brought back today." Kunti,
said, "Whatever it is, share it among yourselves". That is how
Draupadi became Panchali. Meanwhile, Draupadi's twin Dhrishtadyumna, following
them secretly. He is a cousin brother to Krishna and Balarama of the Yadava
clan (They were related to the Pandavas - their father was Kunti's brother -
but they had never met before.) Vyasa also arrived at the scene at this point.
After the wedding ceremonies at Panchal, the
Hastinapur palace invited the Pandavas and their bride back; Dhritarashtra
partitioned the kingdom, giving them a huge tract of barren land which soon
Pandavas transformed into a paradise. Yudhishthira was crowned there, and he
performed a sacrifice that involved all of the kings of the land to accept -
either voluntarily or by force - his suzerainty. The new kingdom,
Indraprastha, prospered.
The prosperity of Indraprastha and the power of
the Pandavas was irritating Duryodhana. He invited Yudhisthira to a dice game
and got his uncle, Shakuni, to play for him. Shakuni was an accomplished
player; Yudhishthira step by step lost his entire wealth, his kingdom, his
brothers, himself, and Panchali. Panchali was dragged into the dice hall and
was insulted. Seeing this Bheema vowed to kill each and every Kauravas.
Dhritarashtra intervened and unwillingly gave the kingdom and their freedom
back to the Pandavas and Panchali; and set them off to Indraprastha. Duryodhana
again invited Yudhishthira to another dice game; the condition was that the
loser would go on a 12-year exile followed by a year of life incognito. If they
were discovered during this incognito period to repeat the 12+1 cycle again. In
the dice game Yudhishthira lost again.
Pandavas left mother Kunti behind at
Hastinapur, in Vidura's place. They lived in forests and visited holy spots;
Arjuna went to heavens and learned the techniques of several divine weapons
from the Gods, he also learnt how to sing and dance from the gandharvas. After
12 years, during incognito they lived in the Virat kingdom; Yudhishthira as king's counsellor, Bheema in
the royal kitchens, Arjuna as teacher to sing and dance, the twin-brothers to
keep horses, and Panchali as maid to the queen. At the end of the incognito -
the Pandavas revealed themselves. The Virat king was overwhelmed; his daughter
Uttara got married to Arjuna's son Abhimanyu.
At the wedding ceremony of Arjuna
with Uttara at Virat, a large number of Pandava allies gathered to draw out a
war strategy. Emissaries were sent to the Kauravas to demand the return of
Indraprastha, the land granted by Dhritarashtra, and developed by the Pandavas,
but lost to the Kauravas during a dice game. The attempt to settle the issue
peacefully was a failure, even though Krishna, an avatar of Vishnu and a
maternal cousin of the Pandavas, went on the mission by himself. Duryodhana
refused to give away as much land as was covered by the point of a needle, let
alone the five villages proposed by the peace
missions. The Kauravas also
gathered their allies around them, and even broke away a key Pandava ally - the
maternal uncle of the Pandava twins - by trickery.
The Kurukshetra War broke out.
Scholars are divided in their opinion as to when this war took place, and even
the historicity of this war is a subject of much debate. In any case, according
to the Mahabharata, the Kurukshetra War lasted for 18 days, during which
most of the characters in the epic were killed. Arguably the most famous
episode in the epic, the Bhagavat Gita , occurs here, just before the
fighting begins.
Just before the war bugle was
sounded, Arjuna saw arrayed before him his relatives: his great-grandfather
Bheeshma who had practically brought him up, his teachers Kripa and Drona, his
brothers the Kauravas, and, for a moment, his resolution wavered. Krishna, the
warrior par excellence, had given up arms for this war and had elected to
be Arjuna's charioteer. Arjuna requested Krishna to take him back as he can not
kill these people; my father, my brothers, my teachers, my uncles, my sons. He
said he has no desire on kingdom and kingship at the cost of many dear lives.
Krishna gave his philosophical discourse - the Bhagavad Gita explaining
the impermanence of Kshathriya (Kingly) life, and the importance of fulfilling
one’s duty, and keeping on the path of righteousness which made Arjuna to pick
up his bow to fight.
The battle was for 18 days. The
army had 18 akshauhinis, 7 on the Panadava side and 11 on the Kaurava
(1 akshauhini = 21,870 chariots + 21,870 elephants + 65,610 horses +
109,350 soldiers on foot). At the end of the war, the Pandavas emerge
victorious, though the losses on both sides are almost total. Among those left
lives were Duryodhana and all of the Kauravas, all of the menfolk of Draupadi's
family, including all of her sons by the Pandavas. Karna was revealed to be a
son of Kunti, before her marriage to Pandu, and thus, the eldest Pandava and
the rightful heir to the throne. The grand old man Bheeshma lost life. Their teacher
Drona was dead, also all kinsfolk related to them either by blood or by marriage.
In about 18 days, the entire country lost almost three generations of its men.
It was a war not seen on a scale before, it was the Great Indian war, the Maha-Bharat
war.
The war, however, is not the end of
the epic. After the war, Yudhishthira became king of Hastinapur and
Indraprastha. The Pandavas ruled for 36 years, after which they abdicated in
favour of Abhimanyu's son, Parikshit. The Pandavas and Draupadi proceeded on
foot to the Himalayas, intending to live out their last days climbing the slopes
heavenwards. One by one, they fell on this last journey and their spirits
ascended to the heavens.
Years later, Parikshit's son
Janmejaya, a great-grandson of Arjuna, succeeded his father as king. He held a
big snake sacrifice, at which this entire story was recited for the first time
by Vaishampayan, a disciple of Vyasa. Since that time, this story
has been retold countless times,
expanded upon, and retold again.
The Mahabharata remains
popular to this day in India. It has been adapted and recast in
contemporary mode in several films and plays. Children continue to be named
after the characters in the epic. The Bhagvad Gita is one of the
holiest of Hindu scriptures. Beyond India,
the Mahabharata story is popular in south-east Asia in cultures that
were influenced by Hinduism such as Indonesia and Malaysia.
Logically if it is to think why and for whom Mahabharata
started, many can be named; most prominent among them is Draupadi.
Draupadi is the daughter of King Drupada (Yajnasena) of the
Panchala (Bareilly region) kingdom; hence she
was named as Draupadi (Drupadakanya) and Panchali. According to the
Mahabharata, she took birth from the sacred fire (Yajna), so she is also called
as Yagnaseni. Draupadi is referred to by
multiple names in the Mahabharata. She took birth as a maiden and never
went through the stages of childhood; Draupadi’s mission and Drupada’s intent
is Mahabharata.
Drupada(son of King Prishata) and Drona (who later was the Guru for Pandavas and kauravas and
fought for Dhuryodhana) studied together under the tutelage of Rishi Bharadwaja, Drona's father. They become great
friends and Drupada assures Drona that once he becomes king, he will share half
of his kingdom with Drona. When Drupada got kingship after the death of
Prishata, Drona lived a life of poverty. Drona approached Drupada for help but
he refused to acknowledge friendship and shuns Drona, calling him a beggar.
Drona is later employed by Bhishma to train the Kuru princes. After the military education of the Kauravas and the Pandavas ends, as his gurudakshina as requested by Drona, Arjuna defeated Drupada and
subsequently took half his kingdom. To avenge this, Drupada performed Putrakameshti yajna; from the sacrificial fire, Draupadi emerged
as a beautiful dark-skinned young woman (who would enter the Kuru family and
divide it) after her sibling Dhrishtadyumna (who would kill Drona).
King Drupada arranges a swayamvara for his
daughter Draupadi. To win Draupadi's hand, the king's invitees, all of
them royalty themselves, must string an enormous bow and shoot five arrows
simultaneously through a revolving ring onto the eye of a revolving fish. All
the kings fail to even string the bow; when Karna is about to
succeed, he was stopped by Draupadi, who refuses to marry the son of a
charioteer. The five sons of the late King
Pandu of Hastinapur are present at the swayamvara, dressed as
holy men. As the other attendees, including the Kauravas, protest at a Brahmin
winning the competition and attack, Arjuna and Bhima protect Draupadi and are able to retreat. When
Draupadi arrives with the five Pandavas to meet Kunti, they inform her that Arjuna won alms, to which Kunti
says, "Share the alms equally". This motherly command leads the five
brothers to become the five husbands of Draupadi.
Polyandry is justified here as in her previous
birth, Draupadi did “Ghora- Thapasya” (hard penance) and invoked Eswara (God
Shiva). She asked for a husband with 14 qualities (the main 5 are Moral values,
physical strength, skilled, handsome and intelligent). Shiva said all these
qualities cannot co-exist in one man and he can’t bless. There was protest from
many including Drupa and Pandavas. But Vyasa and Krishna played their role to
convince all.
Earlier Upon the news of Pandavas'
death at Varnavrat, the title of crown prince had fallen
to Duryodhana. Upon
revealing that they are alive Dhritharashtra invites the Pandavas to Hastinapur and proposes
that the kingdom be divided. The Pandavas are assigned the
wasteland Khandavaprastha, referred to as unclaimed desert. With the
help of Krishna, Pandavas rebuilt
Khandavaprastha into the glorious Indraprastha. The crown jewel
of the kingdom was built at the Khandava forest,
where Draupadi resided in the "Palace of Illusions". Yudhishthira
performed the Rajasuya Yagna with
Draupadi by his side; the Pandavas gained lordship over many regions.
A lesser known fact is Draupadi's role
as an Empress. Trained in economy, she took upon the responsibility of looking
after the treasury of the Empire and ran a citizen liaison.
Duryodhana and his entourage were
exploring the keep during their visit to Yudhishthira's Rajasuya Yagna. While
touring the grounds, an unsuspecting Duryodhana fell prey to one of the many
illusions that could be seen all around the palace. When he stepped on the
apparently solid part of the courtyard, there was a splash and Duryodhana found
himself waist deep in water, drenched from head to foot by the hidden pool. The
myth is, Draupadi and her maids saw this from the balcony with amusement, and
joked Andhasya Putra Andhaha meaning 'a blind man's son is blind'.
Insult suffered by Duryodhana is often
considered to mark a definitive moment in the story of Mahabharata. It is
one of the driving reasons for the dies Game, Exile and that ultimately led to
the Kurukshetra War.
Duryodhana together with his brothers,
Karna and Shakuni conspired to call the Pandavas at Hastinapur and win their
kingdoms in a game of gambling. Shakuni, the gambler, winning by unfair means
played against Yudhishthira and won at the gambling table what was impossible
to win at the battlefield.
As the game proceeds, Yudhishthira
loses everything at first. In the second round, Yudhishthira's brother Nakula
was at stake, and Yudhishthira loses him. Yudhisthtira subsequently gambles
away Sahdeva, Arjuna and Bheema. Finally, Yudhishthira puts himself at stake,
and loses again. For Duryodhana, the humiliation of the Pandavas was not
complete. He prods Yudhishthira that he has not lost everything yet;
Yudhishthira still has Draupadi with him and if he wishes he can win everything
back by putting Draupadi at stake. Inebriated by the game, Yudhishthira, to the
horror of everybody present, puts Draupadi up as a bet for the next round.
Playing the next round, Shakuni wins. Draupadi was horrified after hearing that
she was staked in the game and now is a slave for Duryodhana. Draupadi
questions Yudhishthira's right on her as he had lost himself first and she was
still the queen. Duryodhana, angry with Draupadi's questions, commands his
younger brother Dushasana to bring her
into the court, forcefully if he must.
Dushasana drags Draupadi to the court
by the hair. Seeing this, Bheema pledges to cut off Dushasana's hands, as they
touched Draupadi's hair. Now in an emotional appeal to the elders present in
the forum, Draupadi repeatedly questions the legality of the right of
Yudhishthira to place her at stake.
In order to provoke the Pandavas
further, Duryodhana bares and pats his thigh looking into Draupadi's eyes,
implying that she should sit on his thigh. The enraged Bhima vows in front of the entire
assembly that he would break Duryodhana's thigh, or else accept being
Duryodhana's slave for seven lifetimes.
Karna calls Draupadi
"unchaste" for being the wedded wife of five men, adding that
dragging her to court is not surprising act whether she be attired or naked. He
orders Dushasana to remove the garments of Draupadi. Arjun tries to help
Draupadi but Yudhishtira forbids him. Arjun vows to kill Karna for insulting
his wife
After her husband’s fail to assist her,
Draupadi prays to Krishna to protect
her. Dushasana attempts to
disrobe her, but she is miraculously protected by Krishna, and Dushasana finds
that as he continues to unwrap the layers of her sari, the amount of fabric covering her
never lessens. Dushasana is eventually reduces to exhaustion, as the awed court
observes that Draupadi is still chastely dressed. At this point, a furious
Bhima vows to drink the blood from Dushasana's chest, at the pain of not seeing
his ancestors/entering heaven. This vow unsettles the entire court.
The only Kauravas who object
to the disrobing of Draupadi in the court are Vikarna and Vidura. Queen
mother Gandhari enters the
scene and counsels Dhritarashtra to undo her sons' misdeeds. Fearing the
ill-omens, Dhritarashtra intervenes and grants Draupadi a boon, gives them back
their wealth, and grants them permission to go home.
Amused by the sudden turn of events,
Karna remarks that they "have never heard of such an act, performed
by any of the women noted in this world for their beauty." He taunts the
Pandavas by praising their wife, as she had rescued them "like a boat
from their ocean of distress"
Having restored their pride and wealth,
the Pandavas and Draupadi leave for Indraprastha. Shakuni, Karna and Duryodhana
later convince Dhritarashtra to invite Pandavas for a new game of dice, with
modified rules, in which the loser would be given an exile of 12 years followed
by a year of Agnathavasa, meaning "living in incognito". Yudhishtira
yet again accepts the invitation and loses and goes on an exile with his
brothers and wife Draupadi.
While the Pandavas in exile
were in the Kamyaka forest, they often went hunting, leaving Draupadi
alone. At this time Jayadratha, the son of Vriddhakshatra and
the husband of Duryodhana's sister Dussala, passed
through Kamyaka forest on the way to Salwa Desa. Jayadratha met
Draupadi and then started beseeching her to go away with him and desert her
husbands, forced her onto his chariot. Pandavas caught and shaved Jayadratha's
head at five places in order to publicly humiliate him and sent him back.
While on the last one year of Ajnana
vasa (stay hiding); one day Kichaka, and the commander of
king Virata's forces,
requested her hand in marriage. Draupadi refused him. Many attempts to disturb
was ended in Draupadi’s curse Kichaka with death by her husband's hand. Later
Kichaka trapped by Draupadi to come to the dancing hall at night were Bhima (in
the guise of Draupadi), fights with Kichaka and kills him.
Students of Drona, when trained had
only one role; defeat his enemy Drupada. Thus, Drupada got defeated and half of
the kingdom was got under Drona. Now it is Drupada’s turn to fight back Drona
and his students. They can only be won when they are divided. Drupada needs a
trump card here. Hence, Draupadi was born. Her mission was to create jealousy
among the first cousins, the Kauravas and the Pandavas, which will make her a
cause for war through humiliation and will make the brothers kill other
brothers. Drupada’s classical example of Divide and Conquer can only be
achieved by a woman whose beauty has no match on this planet.
The plot of the swayamvara hiding
Arjuna’s identity, though Arjuna knew that Drupada whom he defeated is the
father of Draupadi, got her married. The dice game and the plot created for the
war is to make Bheema’s pledge to kill Kauravas. Thus, Kurukshetra war is a
requirement of Drupada through Draupadi.
During the war, Draupadi stays at
Ekachakra with other women. On the 16th day, Bhima kills Dushasana, drinking his
blood and fulfilling his oath to Draupadi.
There is a popular myth often depicted
in well-known adaptations of Mahabharata. It says that, Draupadi washed her
hair with her brother-in-law Dushasana's blood, as a mark of her vengeance
against the abuse she had suffered at the dice-game. Though an extremely
powerful and symbolic theme, this incident does not appear in Vyasa's Sanskrit
Mahabharata.
Ashwathama, in order to avenge his
father's as well as other Kuru warriors' deceitful killing by
the Pandavas, attacks during
his surprise raid on Pandavas camp at night with Kripacharya and Kritavarma.
Aswathama killed Shikhandi, Dhrishtadyumna and Upapandavas (Draupadi had
five sons, one son each from the Pandava brothers. They were known as Upapandavas; Prativindhya,
Sutasoma, Shrutakarma, Satanika, and Shrutasena. None of the Draupadi's
children survive the end of the epic.)
In the morning, Yudhishthira hears the
news and asks Nakula to bring
Draupadi from Matsya kingdom. Draupadi vows that if the Pandavas do
not kill Ashwathama, she would fast to death. The Pandavas find Ashwathama
at Vyasa's hut. Arjuna and
Ashwathama end up firing the Brahmashirsha
astra at each other. Vyasa intervenes and asks the two
warriors to withdraw the destructive weapon. Not endowed with the knowledge to
do so, Ashwathama instead redirects the weapon to Uttara's womb,
killing the Pandavas' only heir (Parikshit, who was again revived by Krishna).
Krishna curses him for this act. As a punishment, Ashwathama was asked by Vyasa
to surrender the gem on his forehead to Pandavas.
After the cremation was done
Yudhishtira was crowned as the king of Hastinapur and he in consultation with
Dhrithrashtra was running the Kingdom and is loved by all people. When
Yudhishtira became the king of Hastinapura, Draupadi again became
the queen.
Later Dhrithrashtra and Gandhari made
their mind to retire to woods to do penance. After pacifying by Vyasa, Vidura,
Yudhishtira was ready to let them retire. After performing due rituals when
they were ready to leave for the woods then Vidura and Sanjaya also wanted to
accompany them and seeing all this Kunti also accompanied them to woods.
Thus, Draupadi became the senior queen
at Hastinapura.
After Lord Krishna ascended to
Vaikhunta-loka; Pandavs after the advice of Veda Vyasa left their Kingdom in
the hands of Parikshit and left for the Himalayas. When they were travelling to
Himalayas a Dog accompanied them throughout their journey.
When her husbands retired from the
world and went on their journey towards the Himalayas and heaven,
Draupadi accompanied them, and was the first to fall on the journey. When Bhima asked Yudhishthira why Draupadi
had fallen, Yudhishthira replied, "O best of men, though we were all equal
unto her she had great partiality for Dhananjaya. She obtains the
fruit of that conduct today, O best of men."
The Draupadi Amman sect (or
Draupadi devotional sect) is a tradition that binds together a community of
people in worshipping Draupadi Amman as a village goddess with unique
rituals and mythologies. The sect believes that Draupadi is the incarnation of
goddess Kali. Fire walking or theemithi is a popular ritual
enacted at Draupadi Amman temples. At the ancient religious festival of
Bangalore named Karaga, Draupadi is worshipped as an incarnation
of Adishakti and Parvati in a nine-day event.
There are over 400 temples dedicated to
Draupadi in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil
Nadu, Karnataka and other countries like Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritius, South
Africa. In these regions, Draupadi is worshipped mainly by people of
the Vanniyar caste. There are a few processions and festivals
which are conducted for about 3 weeks a year. The most famous festival is in
the village Durgasamudram, Tirupati of Chittoor district.
Gandhari is a less sung heroine of
Mahabharata. She was brave and powerful with deep traits of dharma and adharma
(for the better). She tried guiding Duryodhana through righteousness and was
sad on failing in it.
Gandhari was a beautiful princess
of Gandhar (Qandahar - a small kingdom with region spanning
northwestern Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan) ruled by King Subala who
was the contemporary of Bhishma half-brothers, Chaitrangad and Vichitravirya.
Gandhari had obtained a boon of 100 sons from Lord Shiva and Bhishma knew this.
Bhishma was looking for suitable wives
for his nephews - Dhritarashtra and Pandu (and Vidura too). Bhishma felt that
Gandhari would be an ideal wife for Dhritarashtra, the eldest (blind by birth)
prince. As he was blind, Pandu became the ruler and hence Gandhari couldn't
become the queen.
Gandhari faced a difficult life. When
she heard that she was to be married off to a blind prince, she chose to
blindfold herself for the rest of her life. There are many opinions on this.
Some (majority) say that this was the epitome of her sacrifice and she thus
qualified herself to be an ultimate pati-vrata (a devout wife) and then sat in
the ranks of Savitri, Sita, Damayanti, etc. Modern thinkers say that this was
her snub to the society for not having given her the choice - a swayamvaram
style.
Folklore says that this marriage was
brought out of force by a show of strength. This "bulldozing" caused
Shakuni, the brother of Gandhari, to flare up in anger, but could do nothing.
Folklore also says that he swore eternal vengeance on the Kurus and made
it his lifelong purpose. Movies and films (as well as many books) liked this
drama angle and happily adopted the myth.
Gandhari bore a hundred sons,
(collectively known as the Kauravas), and one daughter Dhushala who married
Jayadratha.
After Pandu’s death, Dhritharashtra was
ruling and hence Gandhari became the queen. She was always considerate to
Pandavas and was always upholding Dharma.
That is why though Gandhari's sons were
portrayed as villains, the Mahabharata attributes high moral standards to
Gandhari. She repeatedly exhorted her sons to follow dharma and make peace with
the Pandavas. Gandhari was especially close to Kunti who respected her like an
elder sister.
Gandhari made a single exception to her
blindfolded state, when she removed her blindfold to see Duryodhana rendering
his entire body except his loins invulnerable to any foe. This was however to
prove fruitless as Bhima smashed Duryodhana's thighs in their decisive
encounter on the eighteenth day of the Kurukshetra battle, a move both
literally and figuratively below the belt.
The Kauravas, principally Duryodhana
and Dhushasana, were the villains of the Mahabharata, and were all killed in
their war against their cousins, the Pandavas, at Kurukshetra.
Gandhari was also devout; an ardent
worshipper of Lord Shiva. Gandhari's sacrifice of her eyesight and her austere
life was to grant her great spiritual power. Gandhari's anguish in the loss of
her hundred sons resulted in her cursing Krishna in effect ensuring the
destruction of the Yadavas. It is also said that through a small gap in the
napkin in which her eyes were blindfolded, her gaze fell on Yudhisthira's toe.
The toe was charred black due to her wrath and power.
Krishna came and hugged her. She wept.
And she felt Draupadi weeping next to her. Both were being hugged by Krishna,
the mother of villains and the mother of heroes, both being comforted by him
who they say is God. He said nothing. He allowed Gandhari to vent out her venom
and he accepted the curse quietly – no retaliatory curse. Yes, his children
would die as Gandhari had deemed fit and so would he. Let his clan suffer so
that the spiral of vendetta does not continue. It must end sometime. And if
this demands the sacrifice of his clan, then let it be so.
Gandhari ended her life with her
husband and her sister-in-law Kunti in the Himalayas, where they died in a
forest fire.
In Mahabharata, Kunti was
the daughter of Shurasena, and foster daughter of his
cousin Kuntibhoja. She was married to King Pandu of Hastinapur and was the
mother of Karna and the three of the Pandavas - Yudhishtira, Bhima,
Arjuna. She was the paternal aunt of Krishna, Balarama, and Subhadra.
She was a beautiful and intelligent lady. She is often regarded as one of the
protagonists of the Mahabharata.
Kunti's story is
also told within Srimad Bhagavatam, wherein she speaks on the philosophy of
devotion of Krishna, known as Bhakti yoga. Kunti is thus held as a figure of
great importance within many Hindu traditions and especially with worshippers
of Krishna (Vaishnavas).
Her father was Surasena of the Yadu clan, and
she was named Pritha (Pŗtha). She was thus the sister of Vasudeva,
father of Krishna. She was given in adoption to the childless King Kuntibhoja,
after which she came to be known as Kunti. After her arrival, King Kuntibhoja
was blessed with children. He considered her his lucky charm and took care of
her until her marriage.
When she was young, rishi Durvasa told her a
mantra with which Kunti could summon any deva and have a child by him without a
pregnancy. When Kunti asked why he gave her this mantra, he told her that it
would be useful to her later in life.
Kunti could not believe the mantra, so she
tried to use it. The God Surya, appeared. She asked him to go back, but Surya
said he was compelled to fulfill the mantra before returning. Kunti then
abandoned the child in a basket on a river. This child was later found and
adopted by a chariot driver and his wife, and was named Karna. He went on to
become an important character in the Mahabharata. The ambiguous emotions Karna
felt about his birth mother play an important role in the Mahabharata.
Kuntibhoja organized Kunti's swayamvara.
Kunti chose King Pandu of Hastinapur, and this made her the
Queen of Hastinapur.
Soon after, during his mission to expand his
empire, Pandu married Madri, a princess of Madra in order to
secure the vassalage of Madra. Madri was of the view that Kunti was
inferior by birth to her because Yadavas were cattle herders while Madri was a
princess. Kunti was disturbed by her husband's act, but eventually reconciled
with him.
Pandu, while hunting in a forest, mistakenly
shot and killed Rishi Kindama and his wife as they had taken the form
of deer to mate. The dying sage placed a curse on Pandu since he had
not only killed them in the midst of lovemaking but was not remorseful for his
action. King Pandu argued with sage Kindama by misquoting sage Agastya's
ruling on the right of Kshatriyas on hunting. Sage Kindama then decided to
curse him to die if he ever should become intimate with his wife. Pandu
renounced the kingdom and went into exile with Kunti and Madri. He met some
sages and asked them a way for the heaven and salvation. They said, without
children, one can never aspire for heaven. When Pandu expressed to Kunti his
despair at the prospect of dying childless, she mentioned the boon granted to
her. He advised her to beget children by suitable, illustrious men.
She used it three times, first receiving a son,
Yudishtira, from the god Yama, then Bhima from the god Vayu, and thirdly
Arjuna, from the god Indra.
Kunti's character within the Mahabharata is
accorded much respect within the Hindu tradition. Her activities were that of a
very pious and loyal wife and of a person with a great deal of self-control.
Kunti was given a special boon which enabled her to bear the sons of great
celestial devas as many times as she wished. However Kunti did not misuse her
boon, limiting herself to three sons only.
And when requested by Pandu, she shared this
special mantra with Madri, Pandu's other wife. Madri bore twin sons, Nakula and
Sahadeva, from the twin Gods the Asvins. The five together are known as the
Pandavas.
One day, Pandu, forgetting his curse, attempted
to make love with his wife Madri. But, as a result of Kindama's curse, he died.
Madri committed sati as she was the cause of his death. Kunti was
left helpless in the forest with her children.
After the death of Pandu and Madri, Kunti took
care of all five Pandava children taking them back to Hastinapur. As the
rivalry culminated between Pandavas and Kauravas, she decided to go back to
Kuntibhoja. But her attempt was stopped by Bhishma.
After the great battle and in her old age, she
goes into exile to the forest, with her brothers-in-law Dhritarashtra and
Vidura, and Dhritarashtra's wife Gandhari, where they die together in a forest
fire.
In Mahabharata, Yudhishthira(Dharmaputhra)
was the eldest son of King Pandu and Queen Kunti. He was the king of
Hastinapura and Indraprastha was the principal protagonist of the Kurukshetra
War.
Pandu, due to a curse, was unable to
father children and asked his wife, Queen Kunti to invoke the wish granted to
her by Rishi Dhurvasa in order to give birth to children. Urged by Pandu, Kunti
gave birth to Yudhishthira by invoking the Lord of Righteousness, Dharma.
Yudhishthira's four younger brothers were Bhima, (born by invoking Vayu);
Arjuna, (born by invoking Indra); and the twins Nakula and Sahadeva, (born by
invoking the Ashwini Gods). As Karna, the son of Kunti was born before her
marriage by invocation of Surya, Yudhishthira was considered as the eldest.
Yudhishthira's dharma was markedly distinct from that of other righteous kings.
He married Draupadi along with his four brothers, the dharma that modifies
itself to suit the times.
Yudhishthira was trained in religion,
science, administration and military arts by the Kuru preceptors Kripa and
Drona. He was a master of the spear weapon, and a maharatha, capable of
combating 10,000 opponents all together at a time. Yudhishthira's true prowess
was shown in his unflinching adherence to satya (truth) and dharma
(righteousness), which were more precious to him than any royal ambitions,
material pursuits and family relations.
Being Pandu's eldest son, Yudhishthira
was the rightful heir to the throne. However, this claim was contested by the
Dhritarashtra's son, Duryodhana. Yudhishthira is also known as Bharata
(Descendent of the line of Bharata) and Ajatashatru (One without Enemies).
Yudhishthira rescued Bhima from Yama,
and all of his four brothers from death by exemplifying not only his immense
knowledge of dharma but also his very own way of understanding the finer
implications of dharma, as judged by Yama, who was testing him in the guise of
a Crane and a Yaksha.
Yudhishthira learned dice play from Narada
Muni and assumed the guise of a brahmin courtier and dice player in the Matsya
Rajya of king Virata. Yudhishthira was unable to refuse when Duryodhana's
maternal uncle Shakuni, challenged him to a game of dice. Thanks to Shakuni's
cheating, Yudhishthira lost each throw, eventually gambling away his kingdom,
his wealth, his brothers and finally his wife. Owing to the protests of Vidura,
Bhishma and Drona, Dhritarashtra returned all these losses. However, Shakuni
challenged Yudhishthira one more time, and Yudhishthira once more lost. This
time, he, his brothers and his wife were forced to discharge the debt by
spending thirteen years in exile, with the condition of anonymity in the last
year, in the forest before they could reclaim their kingdom.
When the period of exile was completed,
Duryodhana and Shakuni nevertheless refused to return Yudhishthira's kingdom.
Yudhishthira made numerous diplomatic efforts to retrieve his kingdom
peacefully; all failed. To go to war to reclaim his birthright would mean fighting
and killing his own relatives, an idea that appalled Yudhishthira. But Krishna,
Yudhishthira's most trusted advisor (whom he recognized as the Avatar of
Vishnu, the Supreme God), pointed out that Yudhishthira's claim was righteous,
and the deeds of Duryodhana were evil. If all peace efforts failed, war was
therefore a most righteous course.
Thus, Yudhishthira agreed for the
Kurukshetra war.
There are many passages in the
Mahabharata in which you will see Yudhisthira arguing against fighting a bloody
war for the sake of a kingdom, but Krishna justifies the war as moral and as
the unavoidable duty of all moral warriors.
Yudhisthira and his brothers were
favored by the Kuru elders like Bhishma, Vidura, Kripa and Drona over
Duryodhana and his brothers, the Kauravas, due to their devotion to their
elders, pious habits and great aptitude in religion and military skills, and
for having the necessary qualifications for the greatest of the kshatriya
order.
In the war, the Kuru commander Drona
was killing thousands of Pandava
warriors. Krishna hatched a plan to tell Drona that his son Ashwathama had
died, so that the invincible and destructive Kuru commander would give up his
arms and thus could be killed. The plan was set in motion when Bhima killed an
elephant named Ashwathama, and loudly proclaimed that Ashwathama was dead.
Drona, knowing that only Yudhisthira, with his firm adherence to the truth,
could tell him for sure if his son had died, approached Yudhisthira for
confirmation. Yudhisthira told him: "Ashwathama has died". However
Yudhisthira could not make himself tell a lie, despite the fact that if Drona
continued to fight, the Pandavas and the cause of dharma itself would have lost
and he added: "naro va kunjaro va" which means he is not sure whether
elephant or man had died. Krishna knew that Yudhisthira would be unable to lie,
and had all the warriors beat war-drums and cymbals to make as much noise as
possible. The words "naro va kunjaro va" were lost in the tumult and
the ruse worked. Drona was disheartened, and laid down his weapons. He was then
killed by Dhristadyumna.
After the war of Kurukshetra,
Yudhisthira performed the funeral rites of all his people including Karna. He
was deeply hurt that many of his men were killed. His mother Kunti came and
said she tried to inform Karna of his relationship with Yudhisthira and
persuade him to give up his enmity. Even the Sun god also spoke to Karna but
because of his friendship with Duryodhana, he did not change his position.
Kunti revealed that Karna was her son, and one of them.
Upon the onset of the Kali yuga and the
death of Krishna, Yudhisthira and his brothers retired, leaving the throne to
their only descendant to survive the war of Kurukshetra, Arjuna's grandson
Parikshit. Giving up all their belongings and ties, the Pandavas made their
final journey to pilgrimage in the Himalayas.
While climbing the peaks, one by one
Draupadi and each Pandava in reverse order of age fell to their deaths, dragged
down by the weight of their guilt of few, but real sins. But Yudhisthira
reached the mountain peak, because he was unblemished by sin or untruth. On the
mountain peak, Indra, King of Gods, arrived to take Yudhisthira to heaven in
his Golden Chariot. As Yudhisthira was about to step into the Chariot, told him
to leave behind his companion dog, an unholy creature not worthy of heaven.
Yudhisthira stepped back, refusing to leave behind the creature who he had
taken under his protection. Indra wondered at him - "You can leave your
brothers behind, not arranging proper cremations for them and you refuse to
leave behind a stray dog!"
Yudhisthira replied, "Draupadi and
my brothers have left me, not me [them]." And he refused to go to heaven
without the dog. At that moment the dog changed into the God Dharma, his
father, who was testing him and he had passed with distinction.
Yudhisthira was carried away on Indra's
chariot. On reaching Heaven he did not find either his virtuous brothers or his
wife Draupadi. Instead he saw Duryodhana and his evil allies. The Gods told him
that his brothers were in Naraka (hell) atoning their little sins, while
Duryodhana was in heaven since he died at the blessed place of Kurukshetra.
Yudhisthira loyally went to Naraka
(hell) to meet his brothers, but the sights and sounds of gore and blood
horrified him. Tempted to flee, he mastered himself and remained on hearing the
voice of his beloved brothers and Draupadi calling out to him, asking him to
stay with them in their misery. Yudhisthira decided to remain, ordering the
Divine charioteer to return preferring to live in hell with good people than in
a heaven of evil ones. At that moment the scene changed. This was yet another
illusion to test him on the one hand, and on other hand to enable him to atone
for his sin of using deceit to kill Drona. Indra and Krishna appeared before
him and told him that his brothers were already in Heaven, along with his
enemies, for earthly virtues and vices don't hold true in heavenly realms.
Krishna yet again hailed Yudhisthira for his dharma, and bowed to him, in the
final defining moment of the epic where divinity bowed down to humanity.
Blind King Dhritarashtra of Hasthinapura and
and his wife Queen Gandhari from Gandhar got hundred children which is
more magical than the Pandava story of Kunti. Gandhari's pregnancy
continued for an unusually long period of time, she beat her womb in
frustration. This caused a hardened mass of grey-coloured flesh to issue from
her womb. She implored Vyasa, the great sage who had blessed her as
"shatha putra praptirasthu" ("blessed with a hundred
sons"), to redeem his words. Vyasa divided the ball of flesh into one
hundred and one equal pieces, and put them in pots of ghee, which were
sealed and buried into the earth for two years. At the end of the second year,
the first pot was opened, and Duryodhana emerged. Followed by other brothers
and a sister of Duryodhana. Duryodhana (Dur = Extremely hard +
Yodhana = Yudh/Fight), the one with whom the fight is extremely hard.
Duryodhana's hatred for the Pandavas stems from his
sincere belief that he being the son of the eldest brother and the
then king is the heir apparent to the throne of Hastinapura. Because
of his blindness, his father had to renounce the throne in favor of the younger
brother, Pandu. Duryodhana deeply believed that what was rightfully his
was being given away to his older cousin Yudhishthira. He also felt that
the Pandavas were sons of Kunti and (devas/deities), not of Pandu. He
never believed that their divine origin alone proved their superiority, on many
occasions questioning their merits, and always calling them the 'Kaunteya'
(sons of Kunti).
Duryodhana participated in a plot by
Shakuni to burn the Pandavas in a house of wax at Varnavata; however, they
managed to escape the trap having been warned by Vidura. After the
Pandavas reveal that they have survived the wax
house, Bhishma suggests that the kingdom be divided in order to ease
the obvious tension. Yudhishthira is given half the kingdom and made
king of Khandavprastha, so as to avoid a clash with the Kaurava princes
over the whole Kuru Kingdom. Duryodhana bacame the crown prince
of Hastinapura, and owing to the age and blindness of his father, he accumulates
much control and influence, managing the state affairs himself with a group of
his advisers that include his uncle Shakuni, brother Dushasana,
Bhishma, Vidura, and Karna.
Duryodhana remains jealous of Yudhishthira, especially
after the Pandavas along with Krishna transform Khandavaprastha
to Indraprastha. Moreover, Yudhishthira performs the Rajasuya
Yagna and gains the authority over several other kingdoms; Indraprastha's
prosperity and fame appear to exceed Hastinapura's.
Raging in jealousy by the prosperity and fame of
Indraprashta, and being humiliated by the Pandavas Duryodhana wishes to throw
down the Pandavas. To support his will, Shakuni devises a scheme to rob
Yudhishthira of his kingdom and wealth by defeating him in a game of dice,
which Shakuni cannot lose due to his superior skill over Yudhishthira's
ineptitude and addiction to the game of dice.
Unable to resist the challenge, Yudhishthira gambles
away his entire kingdom, his wealth, his four brothers and even his wife, in a
series of gambits to retrieve one by staking another. Duryodhana encourages his
brother Dushasana to drag Draupadi into the court. As she is Duryodhana's
property after Yudhishthira gambled everything away to him, Duryodhana tells
Draupadi to sit on his left thigh, showing and patting it to insult her for
revenge. He also instructs Dushasana to disrobe her, however, she is saved by
Krishna.
As an enraged Draupadi is about to curse the Kuru
clan, Gandhari intervenes. Fearing retribution by the Pandavas, their
allies, and history, Dhritarashtra and Gandhari reverse all of
Yudhishthira's losses. But then (either through Duryodhana forcing his father
to command the Pandavas to play again, or through Shakuni's vicious tricks) the
game is repeated. For this game of dice Shakuni sets the condition that upon
losing, Yudhishthira and his brothers must spend thirteen years in exile in the
forest before they may reclaim their kingdom. The thirteenth year must be
passed incognito, or else the term of exile would be repeated. The Pandavas
lose and begin their exile.
At the end of the exile term, Duryodhana refuses to
return Yudhishthira's kingdom, despite the counsel
of Bhishma, Dronacharya, and Vidura. In a final attempt at
securing peace, Krishna returns with the Pandavas' final
proposal: the Pandavas would give up all claims
to Indraprastha and Hastinapura in exchange for five
villages. Scoffing, Duryodhana says he will not even give a needlepoint of land
to the Pandavas. Egged on by Krishna, Duryodhana attempts to arrest him.
Krishna reveals his Vishvarupa form. The
entire Kaurava court, except for Bhishma, Drona, Vidura, and
Dhritarashtra (who was granted divine vision in order to see that by supporting
his son, he was going against God), is temporarily blinded by the form.
Duryodhana, being vastly egoistic (in some versions of the story an
outright atheist), brushes off the incident, not convinced of Krishna's
divinity, and believing that strength of arms, not philosophy, would win
him a war.
Gandhari always kept asking her son to take the right
path and Duryodhana kept answering “Mother, I know what is right and I am not
able to follow; I know what is wrong and I kept following that. As my desire is
what leads me and I am not able to control it.”
Being the first born son of the blind
king, he was the crown prince of Kuru Kingdom and its
capital Hastinapura along with his cousin Yudhishtra who
was older than him. Karna was Duryodhana's closest
friend. Unlike Bhima, who overly relied on his strength to defeat
opponents, Duryodhana used his greater skill in wielding the mace to defeat
opponents. This extreme proficiency in mace fighting is what allowed him to go
toe-to-toe with the former, possibly even defeating him, had the former not
resorted to unfair practices. He was also an extremely courageous warrior and
he was said to be a just ruler.
Duryodhana's greed and arrogance, were
the two qualities said to have lead to his downfall in the Mahabharata,
mentored by his maternal uncle Shakuni who masterminded most of Duryodhana's
plots to humiliate and kill the Pandavas.
As plan started for the War, Duryodhana
gathered support from all corners and made a large army. Bhishma, Drona, Karna,
Kripa, Ashwatthama, Shrutyudha et. al. are forced to fight for Duryodhana due
to their previous commitments.
On Shakuni’s advise Duryodhana
went for Krishna's help. When Duryodhana reached Dwaraka Krishna was
sleeping; he waited at the head of Krishna's bed. Arjuna too arrived
with the same goal and waited at the foot. When Krishna wakes up, both
Duryodhana and Arjuna appeal for his alliance. Krishna offers a choice of
himself, completely unarmed, or the entire Vrishini army. Duryodhana
wanted the chance first as he arrived first, Krishna says that because he saw
Arjuna first and because Arjuna is younger, that Arjuna gets first choice.
Duryodhana was worried but got overjoyed when Arjuna selected Krishna and left
the whole Vrishini army. Duryodhana returns to Hastinapura with
the Vrishini army on which Shakuni was unhappy as he knows Krishna is
worth many armies by himself.
Duryodhana also manages to win the army
of Shalya, the maternal uncle of the Pandavas. Duryodhana intercepts
Shalya's army as it comes to Kurukshetra and offers hospitality;
Shalya accepts thinking Yudhishthira had made the offer. After Shalya
has enjoyed Duryodhana's comforts, Duryodhana reveals the duplicity and
indicates that Shalya is now indebted to him. He uses this indebtedness to
extract Shalya's army and support. Duryodhana wanted Shalya mainly so
that Karna would have an equivalent charioteer to Arjuna's
Krishna.
In the war, Duryodhana repeatedly eggs
on the invincible Bhishma and Drona to forward his cause,
even though his main hope is Karna. He desires to appoint Karna as
his commander-in-chief;
however, Karna and Shakuni point out that his already
reluctant allies would much rather fight under Bhishma, an older, experienced, god-born, kshatriya than
fight under a suta-putra. Reluctantly, Duryodhana appoints Bhishma as the
commander in chief. When Bhishma falls to Arjuna, Duryodhana appoints Drona as
commander-in-chief and orders him to capture Yudhishthira to win the war. On
the thirteenth day of battle, his heir Lakshmana is killed by
Arjuna's son, Abhimanyu, who proceeds to try and arrest Duryodhana.
Duryodhana orders his soldiers to brutally kill Abhimanyu, even if though it
takes unethical means to finish him off.
Duryodhana is repeatedly frustrated, as
the Pandavas succeed in downing Drona, and is emotionally distraught when, on
the 14th day, Arjuna, enraged by Abhimanyu's death, tears through
the Kaurava army and slays Duryodhana's
brother-in-law Jayadratha. Throughout the war, Bhima is steadily slaying
Duryodhana's brothers, increasing his misery and bringing him closer to a
defeat.
Duryodhana's hopes are finally
shattered when Karna was fallen by the strategy of Lord
Krishna and Arjuna. It is said that Duryodhana never shed a single
tear for any of his real brothers except Dushasana who were killed in the
battlefield, but when his beloved friend Karna was slain, he was inconsolable.
Duryodhana appoints Shalya as the next commander-in-chief.
When Karna's identity was revealed to
him, Duryodhana's love for Karna only grows and it is said to be he, and not
the Pandavas, who performs Karna's last rites. Krishna confirms that he has the
highest right over Karna, as they loved and supported each other truly.
On the final day of Kurukshetra war,
Duryodhana takes out his anger by smashing open Chekitana's head.
Chekitana was from Dwarka, capital of Yadavas with
the Pandavas who saved Nakula from the clutches
of Duryodhana on the fifteenth day of Kurukshetra War. As Shalya is
killed by Yudhishthira, Duryodhana's army-once eleven akshauhinis strong-breaks,
and the army is essentially routed.
Having lost his horse, Duryodhana
leaves the battlefield. He cools his body by entering a lake, with all the hope
of winning lost. Yet, he prepares for his final battle; for a death befitting a
warrior on the battlefield and hoping to reunite with his friends and relatives
in the afterlife. He re-emerges from the lake
after Ashwatthama and Kripa counsel him to face his destiny
with courage. In some versions of the story, after Karna's death, Duryodhana
doesn't even join his army and instead heads immediately to the lake.
On the eighteenth day of the war, with
his army reduced to himself, Ashwatthama, Kripa and Kritvarma, Duryodhana goes
to meditate in a lake. When Pandavas and Krishna met him, Duryodhana tells them
that he wants to gift the kingdom to them, and retire to the
forest. Yudhishthira balks at the offer, telling him that Hastinapur is not
Duryodhana's to gift. Instead, he offers that Duryodhana may pick any of the
Pandava brothers to fight against one-to-one with a weapon of his choice, with
the winner of the conflict the victor of the war.
Despite his proposed advantage over
Yudhishthira, Arjuna, Nakula, or Sahadeva with
the gada, Duryodhana picks
his nemesis Bhima. Despite Bhima's
physical advantage, Duryodhana had the better technique due to his devotion to
his craft. After a long and brutal battle between the two disciples of
Balarama, Duryodhana begins to exhaust Bhima, and nearly makes Bhima faint.
At this point, Krishna, observing the
fight, calls out to Bhima and signals him by repeatedly clapping his own thigh
with his hand. As intended, Bhima was reminded of an oath he had
taken after the game of dice to crush Duryodhana's thighs. Bhima
victoriously attacks Duryodhana with his mace and strikes his thigh, mortally
wounding Duryodhana. After having his face insultingly kicked by Bhima,
Duryodhana bemoans that he was slain by unfair means, given that it was illegal
to attack below the waist in a mace fight.
Infuriated at the
violation, Balarama, the brother of Lord Krishna, raises his weapon to
attack. Lord Krishna consoles Balarama, by reminding him of Duryodhana's evil
deeds, and reprimands him for trying to influence a war he refused to
participate in.
Lying defeated, Duryodhana boasts to
the Pandavas about how he will die a glorious death, about how he got to enjoy
Hastinapur while the Pandavas were in exile, and about how he would now spend
the afterlife in the company of his friends and relatives. He again eviscerates
the Pandavas for all their chicanery during the war and decries their legacy.
Venerating his own character, Duryodhana proclaims he will die happily.
Much to the Pandavas' dismay, Krishna
confirms that through his powers of illusion and artifice, he was able to
enervate and weaken champions such as Bhishma, Karna, and Duryodhana,
confirming that Duryodhana's side was clearly stronger and that such tricks
were necessary to ensure the Pandavas' victory. The Pandavas, weeping, bemoan
their own actions and trickery, while the Gods shower flowers on a dying
Duryodhana, full of glory.
When the coast is
clear, Ashwatthama, Kripacharya, and Kritvarma, having witnessed
the fight and not wanting to interrupt so as to rob Duryodhana of
his honor, come to Duryodhana's broken body. Duryodhana commands them to
take revenge on the Pandavas, and to specifically kill all the pandava brothers
and Panchala. Using the blood from his body, Duryodhana appoints Ashwatthama as
the army's supreme commander.
Already angry at the deceitful killing
of his father Drona, Ashwatthama ambushes the Pandava camp at
night. After destroying the entire Pandava camp, Ashwatthama proceeds towards
Duryodhana.
According to the Mahabharata, after
entering the Swarga (heaven) with a human body on Indra's invitation,
Yudhishthira witnessed that Duryodhana "was seated on a
beautiful throne and he was shone with the splendor of the sun and
around him stood in attendance the goddess of heroism and
other entities of righteousness". Yudhishthira found this
insufferable and reminded the dwellers of Swarga about his sinful deeds.
Following that, Narada smiled
at Yudhishthira and explained that Duryodhana had suffered for his sins, and
that ultimately, Duryodhana was a warrior who had defended
his dharma and fought bravely and valiantly, having been a great
ruler, a true friend, and a terrible foe.
Ashwathama, born to Drona, the Guru of
the Pandavas, and Kripi (Sister of Kripacharya, The Kulaguru - Chief priest of
Hastinapur), is a Chiranjeevi, an immortal being (believed to be a living
survivor of the Kurukshetra War). Ashwathama is one of the seven
"Chiranjeevi" among Rishyashringa, Kripacharya, Galav, Shatanand,
Kaashyapa, and Parashurama. Ashwathama is one of Saptarishis of
the next (8th) Manvantara. Ashwathama is so special due to a very
strong lineage of Saptarishis both on the Paternal and Maternal side.
Ashwathama’s father was Guru Drona who
is the son of Great Sage Bharadhwaja. (Bharadhwaja is one of the Saptarishi’s
of our current Manvantara). Bharadhwaja himself was the grandson of Great Sage
Angirasa (Angirasa is quoted to be Saptarishi of first Manvantara).
Ashwathama's mother is Kripi, who is
the daughter of Rishi Shardwan. Rishi Shardwan was the son of Gautama
Maharishi. (Gautam Maharishi is Saptarishi of this Manvantara)
Some other important facts to consider
about him are, both his parents were different, as they were not born out of
the human womb. Guru Drona was born in a vessel made of leaves and hence the
name Drona. Similarly, Kripi is born out of the Vitality of Sage Shardwan. Guru
Drona meditated and did severe penance to Lord Shiva to have a son who should
be an avatar of Lord Shiva himself. Hence, Ashwathama is considered as 12th
Rudra by many as he is an Amsha of Shiva joined with Yama and Kama - three
devas merged together.
When Ashwathama was born he made a loud
cry like Indra’s horses, he was named Ashwathama by an akashvani (voice from
space). He was born with a gemstone on his head, which gives him power over all
living beings lower than humans; it protects him from hunger, thirst, and
fatigue. Guru Drona and Kripi loved their son very much and Ashwathama also had
a tremendous love for his parents.
Though an expert in warfare,
Dronacharya lived a simple life of a Brahmin, with little money or
property. As a result, Ashwathama has a difficult childhood, with his family
unable to even afford milk. Young Ashwathama was so clever that he understood
the predicament of his parents and prayed to Lord Shiva for milk. Lord Shiva
was so happy with Ashwathama’s prayer that he provided with milk that dripped
on the Shiva linga (Statue) in the cave where they lived. (This temple is
called Tapkeshwar Temple located near Dehradun.)
Wanting to provide a better life for
his family, Drona goes to the Panchal Kingdom to seek aid from his former
classmate and friend, Drupada. However, Drupada rebukes the friendship,
claiming a king and a beggar cannot be friends.
After this incident, and seeing the
plight of Drona, Kripacharya invites Drona to Hastinapur. There,
he comes upon the attention of his co-disciple Bhishma. Thus, Dronacharya
becomes the guru of both Pandavas and Kauravas in
Hastinapur. Ashwathama is trained in the art of warfare along with them.
After Pandavas defeated the king of
Panchal and offered the throne as guru-dakshina, Drona gave the rulership of
Northern Panchala kingdom to his son Ashwathama and (Fee for the Teacher)
stayed at Hastinapura the capital of Kuru Kingdom. Ashwathama always sided with
Kauravas as Duyodhana was his friend. He supported them in each blameworthy
act. As Drona loved his son, he also sided Kauravas in the great war. Ashwathama
supported Kauravas in reprehensible act towards Draupadi. Thus, He presented
himself as a disgraceful leader who was confused and full of greed.
Since Hastinapura, ruled by King
Dhritarashtra, offered Dronacharya the privilege of teaching the Kuru princes,
both Dronacharya and Ashwathama are loyal to Hastinapur and fought for the
Kauravas in the Kurukshetra war. Before Dronacharya's death, Ashwathama visits
his father, desiring a blessing of victory that he is denied. Drona advises
Ashwathama to win the war using his own strength and not through a blessing.
The sixth day was marked by a
prodigious slaughter. Drona caused an immeasurable loss of life on
the Pandava side. The formations of both the armies were broken.
However, Bhima managed to penetrate the Kaurava formation and
attack Duryodhana. Duryodhana was defeated but was rescued by others. The
Upapandavas (sons of Draupadi) fought with Ashwathama and destroyed his
chariot. The day's battle ended with the defeat of the Kauravas.
On the 10th day of the
war, after Bhishma falls, Drona is named the supreme
commander of the armies. He promises Duryodhana that he will
capture Yudhishthira, but then he repeatedly fails to do so. Duryodhana
taunts and insults him, which greatly angers Ashwathama, causing friction
between Ashwathama and Duryodhana.
On 15th day, After
King Drupada and King Virata were slain
by Drona, Bhima and Dhrishtadyumna fought him on the
fifteenth day. Because Drona was very powerful and invincible, having the
irresistible Brahmanda astra, Krishna hinted to Yudhishthira that Drona
would give up his arms if his son Ashwathama were dead. Bhima proceeded to kill
an elephant named Ashwathama and loudly proclaimed that Ashwathama was dead.
Drona approached Yudhishthira to seek the truth of his son's death.
Yudhishthira proclaimed Ashwathama Hatahath, Naro Va Kunjaro Va, implying
Ashwathama had died but he was not sure whether it was Drona's son or an
elephant, the latter part of his proclamation (Naro va Kunjaro va) was drowned out
by the sound of a conch blown by Krishna intentionally. Prior to this incident,
the chariot of Yudhishthira, proclaimed as Dharma Raja (King of
Righteousness), hovered a few inches off the ground. After the event, the
chariot landed on the ground as he lied.
Drona was disheartened and laid down
his weapons. He was then killed by Dhrishtadyumna to avenge his
father's death and satisfy his vow.
After learning of the deceptive way his father
(Dronacharya) was killed, Ashwathama was filled with wrath and invokes the
celestial weapon called the Narayanastra, against the Pandavas.
When the weapon is invoked, violent winds begin to blow,
peals of thunder are heard, and an arrow appears for every Pandava soldier.
This puts fear into the Pandava army, but Krishna, while stopping the troops, advises that the army lay
down all its weapons and surrender to the weapon. As he is the part of
Narayana, he knows about the weapon, as the weapon only targets an armed person
while ignores unarmed ones. After getting their soldiers to disarm
(including Bhima with some difficulty), the astra
passes by harmlessly.
Along with Kripa and Kritavarma, Ashwathama plans
to attack the Pandavas camp at night. Ashwathama first kicks and
awakens Dhrishtadyumna, the commander of the Pandava army and the killer
of his father. Ashwathama strangles the half-awaken Dhrishtadyumna by
choking him to death. Ashwathama proceeds with butchering the remaining
warriors, including Shikhandi, Yudhamanyu, Uttamaujas, and many other
prominent warriors of the Pandava army; many texts put an emphasis on his
exploits against those from Panchal. He also kills Draupadi’s
children in their sleep. Even as some soldiers tried to fight back,
Ashwathama remained unharmed due to his abilities as one of the
eleven Rudras. Those who try to flee from Ashwathama's wrath were hacked
down by Kripacharya and Kritavarma at the camp's entrances.
After the slaughter, the three warriors went to find
Duryodhana. They found Duryodhana already dead and, they performed the
cremation rites by mourning.
The Pandavas and Krishna who were
away during night returned to their camp the next day morning. Hearing the news
of these events, Yudhishthira faints and the Pandavas become
inconsolable. Bhima angrily rushes to kill Drona's son. The Pandavas, along
with Krishna, went to save Bhima. They found him at
sage Vyasa's ashram near the bank of Bhageeratha.
While fighting with Arjuna, both used Brahmastra, the
most dreadful weapon for maximum destruction. All the sages and Lord Brahma,
the Lord of creation appeared to both and advised them to withdraw their
weapons because their collision would cause univeral destruction. Ashwathama
was given the option of deviating his weapon towards and uninhabited place, so
that the weapon could explode resulting in no harm. Because of his barbarous
thoughts, Ashwathama instead directed the weapon towards the womb of the
pregnant Uttara, who was the wife of Abhimanyu. Krishna himself saved the child
within the womb who became the great Parikshita in the future.
Ashwathama was arrested and brought to Draupadi by Arjuna.
The angered Pandavas want to kill Ashwathama, but Sage Vyasa stopped them to do
this. As a punishment, Ashwathama was asked by Vyasa to surrender the gem on
his forehead to Pandavas. Krishna then cursed Ashwathama that he will
roam in the jungle with blood and puss oozing out of his wounds and cry for
death for 3000 years.
Abhimanyu was the re-incarnation of a son of the
Moon-God Chandra. When Chandra was asked to let his son incarnate himself
on earth, he made a pact that his son will only remain on earth for 16 years,
as he could not bear to be separated from him any longer than that. So, Chandra's
son was born as the 5th and youngest son of Arjuna. His biological mother
was Subhadra and surrogate mother was Pragati.
All five Pandavas have children with Draupadi, and also
with other wives; but Abhimanyu, the son of Arjuna and Subhadra is the greatest
hero of Mahabharata. Draupadi once said that if the Pandavas are not willing to
wage war, then her sons led by Abhimanyu will attack and get justice for her.
Subhadra while she was pregnant with Abhimanyu, sat
beside Arjuna for most of his discussions on art of archery and war. Abhimanyu
mastered the art of archery and war in the womb and became a great warrior by
the time he was born. When Arjuna was in the middle of explaining how to break
the whirlpool battle formation (the Chakra-Vyuha), Krishna interrupted Arjuna,
thus, Abhimanyu learnt only how to break and get into the formation, and not
how to break out.
Abhimanyu was two years old when Pandavas went for
thirteen year exile; after failing in gamble game with Kauravas. Abhimanyu was
fifteen when they returned.
Abhimanyu during childhood was in Dwaraka with his
uncles Krishna and Balarama. He found his pair in Balarama’s daughter, Vatsala
(Sasirekha). Balarama wanted Vatsala to marry Duryodhana’s son, Laxman.
Abhimanyu requested Krishna’s help; he advised Abhimanyu to take the help of
Ghatotkacha (Rakshasa - Bhima’s son with Hidimbi). Ghatotkacha took Abhimanyu
and Vatsala out of Dwaraka and got them secretly married in the forest.
Ghatotkacha then used magic powers to take the form of Vatsala and presented
himself in the wedding with Laxman. On holding the hand Ghatotkacha squeezed
Laxman’s hand so hard that he fainted. When Duryodhana realized this he was
reminded of Subhadra marrying Arjuna instead of him. These events added
Duryodhana’s hatred for the Pandavas.
Arjuna after returning from exile got a second wife for
his son (princess Uttara, daughter of Virata of Matsya Kingdom; was offered to
marry Arjuna but Arjuna took her as his daughter-in-law).
Pandavas were prepared for the war against the Kauravas,
who refused to return the Pandava's kingdom. Abhimanyu was sixteen with two
wives when Kurukshetra war was announced. Abhimanyu’s second wife, Uttara, was
already pregnant with Parikshit, the only descendent of the Pandavas who would
survive the war.
On the 13th day of the war, Drona attacked the Pandava
army with the dreaded Chakra-vyuha formation. The only warrior who could
shatter this formation was Arjuna but Krishna had taken Arjuna to the far side
of the battlefield to destroy the dreaded chariot-warriors, the Samsaptakas.
The whirlpool soon surrounded the Pandavas. Yudhishthira was desperate. “Can no
one break this formation?” he asked. Abhimanyu then revealed that he knew how
to break into the formation, an act that would allow the Pandava army to
escape. ABHIMANYU enters chakravyuha saying that “If I came back then today
will be the end of Kurukshetra war and victory for Pandavas and if I don't then
it will be proud to my father that his son died in a war after doing some impossible
things”. Bhima and Yudhishthira were. behind Abhimanyu but Jayadratha stopped
them and thus Abhimanyu alone entered Vyuha and defeated all around as a real
hero.
Karna broke his bow and chariot and then Drona, Kripa,
Karna, Ashwathama, and the king of the Kosalas, and Kritavarman, these six
chariot -warriors surrounded Abhimanyu. Having surrounded that child all those
great chariot -warriors–too many for him although he was contending to the
utmost of his power, deprived him of his chariot. The Pandavas trapped outside
could only hear his cries as he was hacked to death. The last blow was struck
by Dusshasana’s son. But before dying, Abhimanyu managed to kill him too.
Thus, the Abhimanyu's story ended.
Pandu (popularly known as the father of the
Pandavas) is the son of Vichitravirya (younger son of queen Satyavati and
king Shantanu) and his second wife, Ambalika. King Shantanu of
Hastinapura married Satyavati and had two children: Chitrangada and
Vichitravirya. Chitrangada died young in a war, so his younger brother
Vichitravirya became king.
Bhishma, Shantanu’s son from Ganga,
abducted the Kasi princesses Amba, Ambika, and Ambalika from their Swayamvara
to marry Vichitravirya. Amba refused to marry Vichitravirya, but Ambika and
Ambalika married Vichitravirya.
After Vichitravirya's death from a
dangerous disease, his mother Satyavati sent for her first born, Rishi
Veda Vyasa.
Satyavati convinced her son Vyasa to
bestow motherhood upon Ambika and Ambalika. Ambika first came to Vyasa.
When Vyasa shined a light on her face, she shut her eyes tight. This resulted
in her having the blind son, Dhritharashtra. Ambalika went next. When Vyas
shone a light on her, she went pale with fear. This caused her to have the pale
son, Pandu. Satyavati got even more worried. Dhritharashtra, the rightful heir
of Vichitravirya, was blind. A blind king couldn’t rule Hastinapura. She told
Vyasa to grant another son to Ambika. Ambika didn’t want to go because she was
scared of Vyasa’s look and the light he had put on her. She sent her
maidservant, Parishrami to Vyasa. Parishrami wasn’t scared and was granted a
healthy normal child. Parishrami named him Vidura.
When the three brothers grew up, one of
them had to become king. Though Dhritharashtra would be king as he was the
eldest, Vidura objected, saying he was blind. So, it was decided that Pandu
would be the king of Kuru and will rule the kingdom. Pandu was educated in
the fields of archery, politics, administration, and religion by
Bhishma and proved excellent as archer. Pandu conquered the
territories of Dasarnas, Kashi, Anga, Vango, Kalinga, Magadha etc. and thus
re-established their superiority over all the kings.
Pandu went to the Swayamvara of Kunti,
the adopted daughter of Kuntibhoja and Kuntirashtra. At the Swayamvara, he won
Kunti’s hand. He returned to Hastinapura and established Kunti as his queen.
Bhishma brought Madri, the daughter of king Artyana on Madra and sister of
Shalya, to Hastinapura to marry Pandu. Pandu was enchanted by her beauty and
the two married.
While hunting in a forest, Pandu shot two
deer(who were engaged in a sexual intercourse), later realized that the
two deer were Kindama rishi and his wife. Kindama rishi cursed Pandu that
whenever he engages in intercourse with any women, he will die.
Pandu and his two wives with some
attendants went to live in a forest retreat on the southern slopes of the
Himalayas. Pandu sent away his attendants and decided to go to the mountains
with his wives.
When the news of the pregnancy of
Gandhari (wife of Dhritharashtra) reached Pandu and his wives, Pandu spoke to
Kunti to invoke the boon given by Durvasa to get a child from any God.
He wanted to have a child who had the
qualities of righteousness, justice, truth, and sincerity and would never
commit a crime. He also knew that his child would have rights over the throne
of Hastinapur, as he would be the first-born prince of the next generation. He
told Kunti to invoke Yama, also called Dharma raja, who was the God of truth
and righteousness.
Kunti then invoked Yama, who appeared
there instantly. When the child was born, a voice from the sky said that the
boy shall be named Yudhishthira and will become a great emperor. Kunti after
Yudhishthira (by Lord Yama) got Bhima (by Lord Vayu) and Arjuna (by Lord
Indra).
Kunti also passed her boon to Madri, on the
advice of Pandu. Madri bore Nakula and Sahadeva twins from t the Gods - Ashwini
Kumar twins. Thus, the Pandavas of Pandu were born. They grew up in the
Satasringa valley. As foretold, their skills were amazing. They were respectful
to their parents and were always in reverence to the sages.
Once, Pandu was walking alongside the
river with Madri. It was spring, so the ground was covered with flowers. Madri
reached into the river to pluck a flower. At that moment, Pandu couldn’t resist
the beauty of Madri. He forgot about his curse and had sexual intercourse with
her. Madri tried to stop him, but couldn’t. The curse took its toll immediately
and Pandu collapsed dead. Madri screamed. Kunti and the Pandavas arrived there
immediately. Kunti was angry and scolded Madri, but calmed down later. Madri
jumped into the fire of Pandu's funeral pyre and died. Kunti and the Pandavas
then went to Hastinapura, guided by the sages. Kunti wanted the Pandavas to
have the protection of Bhishma and Dhritharashtra.
Shakuni (prince of the Gandhara Kingdom, which is in present-day
Kandahar in Afghanistan) was the son of Subala, who was the father-in-law
of Dhritharashtra. Shakuni, Gandhari’s brother (Duryodhana's maternal
uncle), was extremely intelligent and was credited as the mastermind behind the
Kurukshetra War. He was the greatest illusionist after Lord Krishna. Shakuni
was greatly devoted to Lord Shiva.
There are many reasons for Shakuni to have enemity with Bheeshma
and Kuru family due to his father’s unhappiness because of marriage of Gandhari
(Gandhari was very close to Shakuni). His entire mission was to take
revenge for several unjust events that took place in his life or the life of
his near and dear ones.
It is believed that he used the thigh bones and backbone of his
father's body to create the dice, using which he was able to defeat the
Pandavas in the elaborate Game of Dice that followed in the years ahead. This
set of dice is said have magical abilities, as his father's soul resided within
them. They would help him win all the games of dice he ever played during his
lifetime.
Shakuni was the guardian of all the hundred Kaurava sons. He
moved closely with all of them, showing special attention and affection towards
Duryodhana. With the passage of time, he became their trusted confidante. He
used this trust to instill hate and wicked thoughts about the Pandavas in all
of them. He knew that the Kauravas would not stand a chance against their
mighty cousins, the Pandavas. Yet, he spurred them on to fight the latter –
this brought the eventual downfall of the Kauravas.
Strangely, Shakuni was well aware, in a corner of his heart,
that he would never be able to fight and win against Krishna and that the
Kauravas would eventually have to accept defeat. But his hatred for
Dhritharashtra and the Pandavas too was so great, that it overrode anything and
everything else.
Poisoning Bheema's Food, Planning the Lakshagraha (Palace of
Wax), Playing the Game of Dice, forcing Draupadi, were all Shakuni’s play.
During the war, Shakuni plotted with Duryodhana to kill Abhimanyu, the young
and valiant son of Arjuna and Subhadra.
After the way Shakuni and the Kauravas had insulted the Pandavas
in the Game of Dice episode, the latter swore to kill them all. They were
especially particular about killing Shakuni, who they considered the main
villain behind the unfortunate turn of events.
Accordingly, they were looking for just one opportunity to kill
Shakuni. The latter, however, managed to outsmart them each time and managed to
slip away, in order to avoid being slain by them. He survived till the very
last day of the war. He had seen the mighty Bheeshma falling on his Sharshaiya
(bed of arrows) and then breathing his last; Drona's death; Karna getting
killed unjustly, while trying to pry out the wheel of his chariot, which
had stuck in a rut; Dusshasana being mutilated and killed; and all Kauravas
being slain mercilessly – all expect one, namely, Duryodhana. He knew that
Shalya's death was impending and that the great warrior could fall at any time.
He then realized that his time was running out as well. He knew in his heart
that Duryodhana would fall too, and that he would probably not be alive to see
it happen. However, Shakuni was at peace in a sense, knowing that he had
fulfilled the mission he had worked so hard at, all these years – of taking
revenge on the Kuru Dynasty; of destroying each and every one belonging to that
mighty empire.
On the penultimate day, that is, on the eighteenth day of the
Kurukshetra war, Sahadeva faced Shakuni on the battlefield. Being the wisest of
the Pandavas, Sahadeva knew exactly what the latter's motive was, and the
actual reason why he waged war against the Pandavas – in order to seek revenge.
Sahadeva asked Shakuni to stop fighting, since he had already achieved what he
wanted to. He asked him to go back to his kingdom, Gandhara, and rule, instead
of participating in this meaningless violence and killing.
In that moment, Shakuni felt deep remorse and a genuine
repentance for all that had transpired in the recent past. He suddenly felt
like opening out to this young man standing in front of him – to talk to him,
like an elder does to a younger member in a family. He recounted to Sahadeva
all his childhood events; how his whole family had been tortured at the hands
of Dhritharashtra; and how his sister had suffered marrying a blind King. He
admitted to having poisoned Bheema; planning the Lakshagraha incident; chalking
out a strategy to kill Abhimanyu and so on. He also confessed to all the other
crimes he had committed in his lifetime and told the young man that he could no
more bear to live on; carrying this load of remorse and guilt for all the evil
deeds he had done.
Shakuni finally revealed his good side – something that no one
ever imagined existed! He told Sahadeva that the only thing left for him to do
would be to sacrifice his life on this very battlefield. He further stated that
it would be an honor for him to shed his mortal coil in a battlefield as great
as Kurukshetra; in a place where such great Maharathis (mighty warriors) had
fought and been martyred.
Once he had finished saying all that he had to, Shakuni started
attacking Sahadeva with arrows. He knew he had to die and so, was spurring on
the latter to kill him. After a brief fight, Sahadeva cut off his head. That
marked the end of evil – the slaying of Shakuni.
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