1.1.1 Narasimha
Hiranyaksha had a brother named
Hiranyakashipu. Hiranyakashipu was furious to learn that his brother had been
killed and the resolved to kill Vishnu. But this could not be done unless h e
himself became powerful land invincible. Hiranyakashipu, therefore, began to
pray to Brahma through difficult meditation. Brahma was pleased at these
prayers and offered to grant a boon.
“I want to be invincible,” said
Hiranyakashipu. “Please grant me the boon that I may not be killed by night or
day; that I may not be killed by man or beast; and that I may not be killed in
the sky, the water or the earth.”
Brahma granted the desired boon. And
Hiranyakashipu was happy. He thought that he had taken care of all possible
eventualities. And since he had become so powerful, he conquered all the three
worlds and kicked the gods out to heaven.
Hiranyakashipu had a son named
Prahlada. You no doubt remember that Hiranyakashipu had resolved to kill
Vishnu. But strangely enough, Prahlada became devoted to Vishnu. Hiranyakashipu
tried to persuade his son. That did not work. He tried to kill his son. That
too did not work since each time, Vishnu intervened to save Prahlada.
Meanwhile, the gods had been driven off
from heaven. They had also been deprived of their shares in yajanas by
Hiranyakashipu. These shares now went only to the asura king. In desperation,
they went and prayed to Vishnu and Vishnu promised them that he would find a
solution.
One day, Hiranyakashipu called Prahlada
to him. “How is it that you escaped each time I tried to kill you?”, he asked.
“Because Vishnu saved me,” replied
Prahlada. “Vishnu is everywhere.”
“What do you mean everywhere?”,
retorted Hiranyakashipu. He pointed to a crystal pillar inside the palace and
asked, “Is Vishnu inside this pillar as well?”
“Yes,” replied Prahlada.
“Very well then. I am going to kick the
pillar,” said Hiranyakashipu.
When Hiranyakashipu kicked the pillar,
it broke into two. And from inside the pillar, Vishnu emerged in his form of
half-man and half-lion. He caught hold of Hiranyakashipu and placed the demon
across his thighs. And with his claws, he tore apart the demon’s chest and so
killed him. Brahma’s boon had been that Hiranyakashipu would not be killed by
man or beast. But then narasimha was neither man nor beast it was half-man and
half-beast. The boon had said that the asura would not be killed in the sky,
the water or the earth. But Hiranyakashipu was killed on Vishnu’s thighs, which
were not the sky. The water or the earth. And finally, the noon had promised
that Hiranyakashipu would not be killed by night or day. Since the incident
took place in the evening, it was not night or day.
After Hiranyakashipu died, the gods
were restored to their rightful places. Vishnu's made Prahlada the king of the
asuras.
1.1.2 Vamana
Prahlada’s grandson was Vali and Vali
became very powerful. When he was the king of the asuras, there was a war
between the devas and the asuras. The gods were defeated and were driven off
from svarga. As always, the gods fled to Vishnu and began to pray to him to
save them. Vishnu assured the gods that he would do something about Vali.
Accordingly, Vishnu was born as the son
of Aditi and Kashyapa. The son was a dwarf.
King Vali had arranged for a huge
sacrifice and had announced that, on the occasion of the sacrifice, he would
not refuse anyone a boon. The dwarf arrived at this sacrifice and began to
recite the Veda’s. Vali was so pleased at this that he offered the dwarf a bon.
Vali’s guru(teacher) was Shukracharya and Shukracharya thought that there was
something fishy about the way the dwarf had arrived. So he tried to restrain
Vali.
“No,” said Vali. “I have offered a boon
and I shall stick to my word.” What boon do you desire? I will give whatever
you want.”
Before a boon was actually granted, a
small rite had to be performed with holy water. Shukracharya was still trying
to do his best to prevent the boon from being given. So he entered the vessel
in which the holy water was kept to seal the mouth of the vessel and prevent
the water from being taken out. To get at the holy water, the vessel was
pierced with a straw. This straw also pierced one of Shukracharya’s eyes. Ever
since that day, the preceptor of the demons has been one eyed.
“Give me as much of land as may be
covered in three of my steps,” said the dwarf. “I need this as dakshina (fee)
for my guru.”
Vali agreed. But the dwarf adopted a
gigantic form. With one step he covered bhuloka. With another step he covered
bhuvarloka. And with the last step he covered svarloka. The three worlds were
thus lost to Vali and Vishnu returned them to Indra. Vali had no option but to
go down to the underworld (patala). But so pleased was Vishnu at Vali’s
generosity that he granted the asura the boon that he would bear the title of
Indra in the future.
1.1.3 Parashurama
The kshatriyas were the second of the
four classes. It was their job to wear arms and protect the world. And rule.
The brahmanas were the first of the four classes. It was their job to pray,
study the sacred texts and perform religious rites. But the kshatriyas became
very insolent and began to oppress the world and the brahmanas. Vishnu was then
born as the son of the sage Jamadagni and his wife Renuka. Since this was the
line of the sage Bhrigu, Parashurama was also called Bhargava. Parashurama’s
mission was to protect the brahmanas and teach a lesson to the kshatriyas.
There was a king named Kartavirya who
had received all sorts of boons from the sage Dattatreya. Thanks to these
boons, Kartavirya had a thousand arms and conquered and ruled over the entire
world.
One day, Kartavirya went on a hunt to
the forest. He was very tired after the hunt and was invited by the sage
Jamadagni had a kamadhenu cow. This meant that the cow produced whatever its
owner desired. Jamadagni used the kamadhenu to treat Kartavirya and all his
soldiers to a sumptuous feast.
Kartavirya was so enamoured of the
kamadhenu that he asked the sage to give it to him. But Jamadagni refused.
Kartavirya then abducted the cow by force and a war started between Kartavirya
and Parashurama. In this war, Parashurama cut off Kartavirya’s head with his
axe (parashu) and brought the kamadhenu back to the hermitage.
After some time, Parashurama was away
when Kartavirya’s sons arrived at the ashrama and killed Jamadagni. On the death
of his father, Parashurama’s anger was aroused. He killed all he kshatriyas in
the world twenty-one times. On the plains of Kurukshetra, he built five wells
which were filled with the blood of kshatriyas. Eventually, Parashurama handed
over the world to Kashyapa and went and lived on Mount Mahendra.
1.1.4 Rama
Brahma came out of Vishnu’s navel.
Brahma’s son was Marichi’s son Kashyapa, Kashyapa’s son Surya, Surya’s son
Vaivasvata Manu, Manu’s son Ikshvaku, Ikskhvakku’s son Kakutstha, Kakutstha’s
son Raghu, Raghu’s son Aja, Aja’s son Dasharatha, Dasharatha’s sons were Rama,
Bharata, Lakshmana and Shatrughna. Since Rama was descended from Kakutstha and
Raghu, he was also called Kakutstha and Raghava. Since his father’s name was
Dasharatha, he was also called Dasharathi. Rama’s story belongs to the solar
line (surya vansha), since one of his ancestors was Surya.
Vishnu himself wished to destroy Ravana
and the other rakshasas (demons). He therefore divided himself into four parts
and was born as Rams, Bharata, Lakshmana and Shatrughna. Rama was Koushalya’s
son, Bharata Kaikeyi’s. Lakshmana and Shartrughna were the sons of Sumitra.
The sage Vishvamitra came to Dasharatha
and pleaded for Rama’s help in defeating the rakshasas who were disturbing his
yajanas. Rama killed these demons and Vishvamitra was so pleased that he taught
Rama the use of all divine weapons. Rama broke a bow of Shiv’s that had been in
the possession of the king of Mithila, Janaka. This was the task that had been
appointed for marrying Sita, Janaka’s daughter. Rama married Sita, Lakshmana
married urmila, Bharata married Mandavi and Shatrughna married Shrutakirti. On
the way back to Ayodhya, Rama also beat Parashurama in a duel.
Dasharatha resolved that Rama should be
made yuvaraja, that is, the heir apparent to the kingdom.
But Kaikeyi had a servant named
Manthara who plotted otherwise. When he was young, Rama had pulled at
Manthara’s feet and ever since that day, Manthara had not been kindly towards
Rama. She reminded Kaikeyi of the two; boons that had been promised to her by
King Dasharatha. Years ago, the gods had been fighting with the demon Shambara
and had asked Dasharatha for his help. In fighting with Shambara, Dasharatha
had been injured. He had been nursed back to health by Kaikeyi. Dasharatha had
promised two boons to Kaikeyi as a reward and Manthara’s suggestion was that
Kaikeyi should now ask for these two boons. By the first boon Rama would be
banished to the forest for fourteen years and by the second boon Bharata would
become yuvaraja.
Kaikeyi listened to Manthara. At
Manthara’s instance, she asked for these two boons. Dasharatha was very angry,
but Rama insisted that he would indeed go to the forest for fourteen years.
Rama, Lakshmana and Sita first went to the banks of the river Tamasa. From
there they went to the kingdom of Guha, the king of the hunters (nishadas).
They crossed the river Jahnavi and arrived in Prayaga, where the sage
Bharadvaja had his hermitage. Their final destination was the mountain range of
Chitrakuta, on the banks of the river Mandakini.
Meanwhile, back home in Ayodhaya, King
Dasharatha who could not bear to be parted from Rama, died. Bharata and
Shatrughna had gone on a visit to their uncle’s house and were recalled. But
Bharatha refused to be king. He went to the forest to try and persuade Rama to
return, but Rama insisted that he would not return before the fourteen years
were over. So Bharata brought back Rama’s sandals. He placed these sandals on
the throne as a token of Rama’s kingship. And he began to rule the kingdom in
Rama’s name from Nandigrama, rather than from Ayodhya.
Rama, Lakshmana and Sita then went to
the forest that is known as the Dandaka forest, dandakaranya. This forest was
on the banks of the river Godavari and there was a beautiful lgrove inside the
forest known as Panchavati. They built a hut there and resolved to live there.
There was a rakshasa woman named
Shurpanakha. She happened to come to the place where Rama Lakshmana and Sita
had built their hut. Shurpanakha liked Rama so much that she wanted to marry
Rama and eat up Lakshmana and Sita. But Lakshmana cut off Shurpanakha’s nose
and ears with his sword.
Shurpanakha fled to brother Khara and
demanded revenge. Khara and fourteen thousand other demons (rakshasas) attacked
Rama, but they were all killed by Rama. Shurpanakha then went to her other
brother Ravana, the king of Lanka.
Ravana asked the rakshasa Maricha to
adopt the form of a golden deer and roam around in front of Rama’s hut. Sita
was so charmed by the deer that she asked Rama to capture it for her. Rama was
long in returning and Lakshmana went to look for him. Taking advantage of Rama
and Lakshmana’s absence, Ravana kidnapped Sita. Jatayu, the king of the birds,
did try to stop Ravana, but he met his death at Ravana’s hands.
Rama and Lakshmana were greatly
distressed to find Sita missing and they looked for her everywhere. Rama made
friends with the monkey Sugriva. He killed Sugriva’s brother Bali and made
Sugriva the king of monkeys. The monkeys were sent off in all the four
directions to look for Sita.
The monkeys who had gone towards the
south learnt that Sita was in Lanka, across the ocean. One of these monkeys was
Hanumana. Hanumana leapt over the ocean and arrived in Lanka. He discovered the
lonesome Sita in a grove of ashoka trees, the ashokavana. Hanumana introduced
himself and assured Sita that he would soon be back with Rama. Hanumana caused
some general havoc in Lanka and was captured by Meghnada or Indrajit, Ravana’s
son. Ravana ordered that Hanumana’s tail should be set on fire. But Hanumana
used his burning tail to set fire to all the houses of Lanka. He then returned
to Rama with the news that Sita had been found.
Rama, Lakshmana and the army of monkeys
arrived at the shores of the ocean. There they built a bridge over the ocean so
that they could cross over into Lanka. There was a terrible war in which Rama
killed the giant Kumbhakarna, Ravana’s brother. Lakshmana killed Indrajit. Rama
killed Ravana with a powerful divine weapon, the brahmastra.
The fourteen years were by now over and
Rama, Lakshmana and Sita returned to Ayodhya. There Rama was crowned king and
he treated his subjects as his own sons. He punished the wicked and followed
the path of dharma. During Rama’s rule there was no shortage of foodgrains
anywhere and the people were righteous. No one died an untimely death.
On Rama’s instructions, Shatrughna
killed the asura Lavana and built the city of Mathura in the place where
Lavana’s kingdom had been. Bharata was sent by Rama to kill a wicked gandharva,
a singer of heaven named Shailusha, who lived on the banks of the river Indus
with his sons. Bharata killed them and built two cities there, Takshashila and
Pushkaravati. In Takshashila Bharata established his son Ataksha as king and in
Pushkaravati he made his son pushkara the king. Rama and Sita had two sons
named Kusha and Lava. Rama ruled for eleven thousand years before he died.
This is the story of the Ramayana as
recounted in the Agni Purana. It was written by the sage Valmiki after he had
heard the story from the sage Narada.
Rama was the seventh avatara of Vishnu,
Krishna was the eighth.
1.2 Harivamsha and Mahabharat
This Chapter contains 2 Sections.
1.2.1 The Harivamsha
As you have already been told, Brahma
emerged from Vishnu’s navel. Brahma’s son was Atri, Atri’s son Soma, Soma’s son
Pururava, Pururava’s son Ayu, Ayu’s son Nahusha and Nahushja’s son Yayati.
Yayati had two wives, Devayani and Sharmishtha. Devayani had two sons, Yadu and
Turvusu. And Sharmishtha had three sons, Druhya, Anu and Puru. The descendants
of Yadu were known as the Yadavas.
Vasudeva was a Yadava. His wife was
Devaki. Vishnu was born as sthe son of Vasudeva and Devaki in order to remove
the wicked from the world. The seventh son of Vasudeva and Devaki was Baladeva.
And the eight son was Krishna himself. Krishna was born in the month of Bhadra
in the thick of the night. Scared that the wicked Kakmsa might kill the newly
born child, Vasudeva left him with Yashoda, the wife of Nanda.
Nanda was the king of the cowherds and
he brought up Baladeva and Krishna. Kamsa sent a rakshasa woman named Putana to
kill Krishna but Krishna killed her instead. In Vrindavana, Krishna subdued the
terrible snake known as Kaliya. He killed several other rakshasas named
Arishta, Vrishabha, Keshi, Dhenuka and Gardhabha and made the country safe from
the attacksof these demons. He also stopped the worship of Indra. This led to a
fight between Indra and Krishna, Indra tried to destroy the inhabitants of
Gokula by sending down torrents of rain. But Krishna held aloft the mountain
Govardhana and saved the inhabitants of Gokula.
Kamsa’s capital was in Mathura,
Baladeva and Krishna went there. Kamsa let loose a mad elephant named
Kuvalayapida on Krishna. But Krishna killed Kuvalayapida. Baladeva and Krishna
also killed two strong wrestlers, Chanura and Mushtika, whom Kamsa had
instructed to kill Baladeva and Krishna. Finally, Krishna killed Kamsa and made
Ugrasena the king.
Kamsa was Jarasandha’s son-in-law and
Jarasandha became furious when he learnt of Kamsa’s death. He attacked the
Yadavas and laid siege to the city of Mathura. After a prolonged war, Krishna
managed to defeat Jarasandha. Krishna also defeated another evil king named
Poundraka. On Krishna’s instructions, the Yadavas built the beautiful city of
Dvaraka or Dvaravati. The Yadavas began to live in Dvaraka.
There was an asura named Naraka who was
killed by Krishna. Naraka had imprisoned sixteen thousand daughters of the
devas, gandharvas and yakshas (guards of Heaven’s treasury). These women were
freed by Krishna and Krishna married all of them. Amongst Krishna’s other
exploits were defeating the daitya Panchajana, killing Kalayavna, seizing the
parijata tree from Indra and bringing back to life the sage Sandipani’s dead
son.
Krishna had several sons. Shamba was
born of Krishna’s wife Jambavati and Pradyumna was born of Krishna’s wife
Rukmini. As soon as Pradyumna was born, he was abducted by the asura Shambara.
Shambara threw the baby into the sea, but a fish swallowed the baby. A
fisherman caught the fish and brought it to Shambara’s house. When the fish’s
stomach was cut open, the baby came out. There was a woman named Mayavati who
lived in Shambara’s house and Shambara handed over baby Pradyumna to Mayavati
so that he might be brought up well. When he grew up, Pradyumna killed Shambara
and married Mayavati. They returned to dvaraka and Krishna was very happy to
see his lost son.
Pradyumma and Mayavati had a son named
Aniruddha. Aniruddha secretly married Usha, the daughter of King Vana, Vana himself
being the son of Vali. Vana’s capital was in a city named Shonitapura. Vana had
pleased Shiva through hard and difficult tapasya, so that sometimes he was
called the son of Shiva. Vana loved to fight and he had wanted a boon from
Shiva that he might get the chance to fight with someone who was his equal in
battle. A flag with a peacock on it used to fly from the ramparts of Vana’s
palace. Shiva told him the day this flag fell down. Vana’s desire for with an
equal would be satisfied.
With the help of a friend of Usha’s,
Anuruddha and Usha used to meet secretly in Vana’s palace. Vana’s guards
informed him about this and there was a fierce battle between Vana and
Aniruddha At the same time, the flag with the peacock on it fell down. Krishna
got to know from Narada about the fight between Vana and Aniruddha and he,
Baladeva and Pradyumna arrived in Vana’s capital. Shiva came to fight on Vana’s
side, accompanied by Nandi and Skanda or Kartikeya. But after a duel that
lasted for a long time, Krishna triumphed over these enemies. Krishna’s arrows
also cut off the thousand arms that Vana had. But at Shiva’s request, Krishna
spared Vana’s life and gave two arms with which to make do.
All of these stories about Krishna are
related in detail in the Harivamsha. The Agni Purana merely gives a brief
summary of the Harivamsha. But stories about Krishna, the eight avatara of
Vishnu, also crop up in the Mahabharata. The Agni Purana, therefore, next
summarises the Mahabharata.
1.2.2 The Mahabharat
The Pandavas were merely a pretext.
Krishna used the Pandavas to rid the world of evil men.
You have already learnt that one of
Yayati’s sons was Puru. In Puru’s line were born Bharata and Kuru. One of
Kuru’s descendants was the king Shantanu. Shantanu married Ganga and Bhishma
was born from this marriage.
But Shantanu also married Satyavati and
had two more sons, Chitrangada and Vichitravirya. Bhishma never married.
Chitrangada died young. When Vichitravirya grew up, Bhishma defeated the king
of Kashi and brought two of the king’s daughters, Ambika and Ambalika, as
brides for Vichitravirya. Vichitravirya as also quite young when he died of
tuberculosis.
Since Vichitravirya had left no
children, Vyasadeva was brought to Hastinapura. Vyasadeva and Ambalika had a
son named Dhritarashtra and Vyasadeva and Ambalika had a son named Pandu.
Dhritarashtra married Gandhari and they had a hundred sons, of whom the most
important was Duryodhana. Pandu had two wives, Kunti and Madri. Kunti’s sons
were Yudhishthira, Bhima and Arjuna and Madri’s sons were Nakula and Sahadeva.
But Yudhishthira was really the son of the god Dharma and not Pandu’s son.
Similarly, Bhima was the son of the god Pavana, Arjuna the son of Indra and
Nakula and Sahadeva the sons of the two Ashvinis. Earlier, Kunti had a son
named Karna from the sun-god.
This was before she had god married to
Pandu. Karna became a friend of Duryodhana’s. Because of a curse imposed on him
by a sage, Pandu died in the forest.
Duryodhana tried his best to kill the
Pandavas. He set fire to a house of lac (jatugriha) in which Kunti and the five
Pandavas were staying. But the Pandavas were saved and fled to a city named
Ekachakra. There they lived, disguised as brahmanas. In Ekachakra, they
destroyed a rakshasa named Vaka. They then won the hand of the daughter of the
king of Panchala. Her name was Droupadi and all five Pandava brothers married
her. When Duryodhana learnt that the Pandavas were alive, he handed over half
the kingdom to them.
Meanwhile, the forest Khandava had to
be burnt and Krishna and Arjuna did this together. Krishna had befriended
Arjuna. When Arjuna successfully defeated the god Agni at the burning of the
Khandava forest, Agni gave him several divine weapons. Arjuna had also obtained
divine weapons from his guru Dronacharya.
On the Pandava side, Yudhishthira had
become king. The Pandavas organised a rajasuya yajna (royal sacrifice) in which
they conquered several kingdoms and accumulated lot of wealth. This made
Duryodhana envious.
He arranged a game of dice (aksha)
between Yudhishthira and Duryodhana’s uncle Shakuni. Shakuni did not play
fairly and Yudhishthira lost the game. As penalty for the loss, the Pandavas
were to spend twelve years in the forest and one additional year without being
detected. Droupadi went with them to the forest, as did the Pandava’s priest,
Dhoumya.
After the twelve years were over, the
Pandavas came to the kingdom of King Virata where they proposed to spend the
additional year that had to be spent in disguises. Yudhishthira pretended to be
a brahmana, Bhima a cook, Arjuna a dancer, Nakula and Sahadeva stable-hands.
Droupadi became the queen’s maid. The queen’s brother Kichaka tried to molest
Droupadi, but was killed by Bhima. When the year was over, the Kauravas
attacked King Virata to rob him of his cattle. But Arjuna defeated all the
Kauravas and saved Virata’s cattle After this success, the identity of the
Pandavas could no longer be kept a secret. But thankfully, the one year during
which identities had to be kept a secret, was over.
King Virata’s daughter Uttara was
married to Abhimanyu, Arjuna’s son. Abhimanyu’s mother was Subhadra, whom
Arjuna had married. Subhadra also happened to be Krishna’s sister.
The Pandavas now demanded their
rightful share of the kingdom, but Duryodhana refused. A war was imminent. A
huge battalion of soldiers was known as an akshouhini. Duryodhana collected
eleven akshouhinis for the war and Yudhishthira collected seven. Krishna was
sent as a messenger to Duryodhana to try and preserve the peace. Krishna told
Duryodhana that the Pandavas would be satisfied with a mere five villages.
Duryodhana refused to give them even this without a fight.
So the armies gathered for a war on the
plains of Kurukshetra. Noticing that elders and relatives like Bhishma and
Dronacharya were fighting on the side of the Kaurvas, Arjuna was reluctant to
fight. But Krishna gave Arjuna lessons which have come down to us as the Gita.
He taught there was no reason for sorrow if Bhishma or Dronacharya died, that
was only a death of their physical bodies. The true identity of a person was
his atman (soul) which never died, but passed from one body to another. True
bliss was obtained when the atman united with the brahman (divine essence) or
paramatman (supreme soul). This was always the goal of a yogi, that is, a
person who sought union with god.
Thus instructed by Krishna, Arjuna
started to fight. With the help of Shikhandi, he defeated Bhishma. This
happened on the tenth day of the fighting. Bhishma did not however die. He had
earlier received the boon that he would only die when he actually wished to do
so. For many days, he lay there in the battlefield on a bed of arrows. After
Bhishma’s defeat, Dronacharya became the general on the Pandava side.
Dronaharya killed Virata, Drupada and several other kings and soldiers on the
Pandava side. Dhrishtadyumna also killed many Kaurava soldiers. On the
fifteenth day of the fighting, a rumour gained currency that Ashvatthama,
Dronacharya’s son, had been killed. Dronacharya abandoned his weapons on
hearing this bad news and Dhrishtadyumna faced no problems in killing him.
Karna now became the Kaurava general and lasted for two and a half days before
he was killed by Arjuna. Shalya was the last Kaurava general. He fought for
only half a day and was killed by Yudhishthira.
Bhima and Duryodhana fought the last
duel of the war with maces. Bhima broke Duryodhana’s thighs and killed him.
Ashvatthama had been fuming ever since his father Dronacharya had been killed
by unfair means. In the dead of the night, he entered the Pandava camp where he
killed Dhrishtadyumna and the five sons of Droupadi. Droupadi was disconsolate
and demanded revenge. Arjuna and Ashvatthama let loose divine weapons at each
other. Since this might destroy the world, they were asked to withdraw these
weapons. Arjuna could withdraw his weapon, but Ashvatthama could not.
Ashvatthama’s weapon killed the baby that was in Uttara’s womb, but when the
dead baby was born, Krishna brought it back to life. This baby was Parikshita.
Many kings and soldiers died in the
course of the Kurukshetra war. The only ones left alive were Kritvarma,
Kripacharya and Ashvatthama on the Kaurava side and Pandava side. After the war
was over, Bhishma taught Yudhishthira the duties of king. It was only after
this that he died.
As a king, Yudhishthira performed many
yajnas and gave a lot of to brahmanas. When Yudhishthira learnt that the Yadvas
had been destroyed, he no longer wished to rule. He handed over the kingdom to
Parikshita and the Pandavas left on a pilgrimage, in the course of which they
died.
It was Krishna who had used the
Pandavas as a tool to rid the world of evil kings and establish the good ones.
Realising that the Yadavas were also evil, Krishna also ensured that the
Yadavas would be destroyed. He then gave up his life at the place of pilgrimage
that is known as Prabhasa. After Krishna died, the city of Dvarka was swallowed
up by the sea.
This was the story of the eighth
avatara of Vishnu.
1.3 Buddha/Kalki and Creation
This Chapter contains 2 Sections.
1.3.1 Buddha and Kalki
The ninth avatara of Vishnu was Buddha
and the tenth will be Kalki.
Many years ago, there was a war between
the devas and the asuras in which the demons managed to defeat the gods. The
gods went running to Vishnu for protection and Vishnu told them that Mayamoha
would be born as Buddha, the son of Shuddhodana. Such were the illusions that
Buddha created, that the asuras left the path indicated by the Vedas and became
Buddhists. These dastardly creatures performed ceremonies that were a sure ticket
to naraka. Towards the end of the Kali era, all people will be dastardly. They
will oppose the Vedas, become robbers and will be concerned only with wealth.
The disbelievers will then become kings and these kings will also be cannibals.
Much later, Kalki will be born on earth
as the son of Vishnuyasha. He will take up arms to destroy these disbelievers.
Kalki’s priest will be the sage Yajnavalkya. The norms of he four classes
(varna) and the four stages of life (ashrama) will be established yet again. People
will honour the sacred texts and become righteous. It will then be time for the
dawn of a new satya yuga, a fresh period of righteousness.
In every cycle (kalpa) and in every era
(manvantara) Vishnu is thus born in various forms. It is a sacred duty to
listen to the stories of the ten avataras. The listener attains his desires and
goes to heaven.
1.3.2 Creation
Agni next told Vashishtha the history
of creation.
Vishnu is the Lord of creation,
preservation and destruction. Before creation, it was only the brahman that was
everywhere. There was no day, night or sky.
First Vishnu created the waters. And in
the waters he sowed the seeds of brahmanda. the great egg. From this seed there
developed a golden egg which began to float on the waters. From the egg Brahma
created himself. Since he created himself (svayam sambhuta), Brahma is also
known as Svayambhu. Having created himself, Brahma stayed inside the egg for an
entire year. And at the end of the year, he split the egg into two. One part of
the egg formed the heaven, the other the earth. And in between the two parts of
the egg, Brahma created the sky.
Brahma next established the earth on
the waters and made the ten directions. He created time, lightning, thunder,
clouds, rain bows, words and anger. To ensure that yajnas could be performed,
texts of the Rig Veda, the Yajur Veda and the Sama Veda emerged from his body.
Holy people use the Vedas to perform Ceremonies meant for the gods.
From the powers of his mind, Brahma
created seven sons. Their names were Marichi, Atri, Angira, Pulastya, Pulaha
Kratu and Vashishtha.
Prithu is recognised as the first king
Prithu was descended from Dhruva. And Prithu’s father Vena was also a king. But
Vena was an evil king; he was simply not interested in protecting his subjects.
The sages therefore killed Vena with a straw and after Vena had died, they
began to knead the dead body’s right hand and it was thus that Prithu emerged.
He wore armour and carried bow and arrows when he was born. He ruled well, as
per the dictates of dharma. He looked upon all his subjects as his own sons.
From Prithu the earth came to be known as prithivi.
1.4 Temples, Holy Places and Astrology
This Chapter contains 4 Sections.
1.4.1 How to Pray, How to Build Temples and Deities
The Agni purana next has several
chapters on how to pray and on how to build temples and idols. The Techniques
of praying to Vishnu , Shiva, Surya and the other gods and goddesses are
described, including the special mantras (incantations)that must be used so as
to please specific gods and there are prescribed forms for such bathing as
well.
A Person who builds temples is blessed.
Even if one merely thinks of building temples, the sins of a hundred lives are
forgiven. A builder of a single temple goes to heaven (svarga). A builder of five
to shivaloka, a builder of eight vishnuloka and a builder of sixteen temples is
freed from the shackles of being born again and again. What is the point of
earning money if one does not build temples? Money is also meant to be donated
as alms to brahmanas, but the punya or merit earned from building a temple is
greater than the punya earned from donating alms. The merit earned by builder
of temples is greatest for a golden temple, lesser for a stone temple, still
lesser for a wooden temple and least from earthen Temple.
More punya is acquired from building an
idol than from building a temple. Idols of gods and goddesses should always be
set up so that they face the city; they should not face away from the city. The
easy is for Brahma’s. Vishnu idol can be setup anywhere at all.
Different idols of Vishnu must have
different forms. Consider, for example, idols or images of the ten incarnations
of Vishnu. The matsya (fish) avatara must naturally look like a fish and the
kurma (turtle) avatara must look like a turtle. But the varaha (boar) avatara
will four arms like a man and will hold a gada (mace), a padma (lotus flower),
a shankha (conch shell) and a chakra (bladed discuss) in these four arms. The
narasimha avatara should have two arms holding a chakra and a gada and should
wear a garland. The vamana (dwarf) avatara should hold an umbrella and a stick
in his two hands. Parashurama will have four hands with a bow. arrows, a sword
and an axe in these hands. Rama’s image can have either two arms or four. If
there are four arms, the four hands will hold a bow, arrows, a conch shell and
a chakra. Balarama’s image may also have either four arms or two. If there are
two arms, the four arms the hands will hold a plough, a conch shell, a club and
a chakra. Buddha’s image should have a calm appearance. It should be seated on
a lotus. The ears should be elongated Kalka’s image is that of a brahmana,
seated on a horse and holding a bow and arrows, a conch shell, a sword and a
chakra.
Krishna’s image may be either two-armed
or four-armed. Three of the four arms will hold a gada, a chakra and a shankha.
The fourth palm will be opened out in the act of granting a boon. On either
side of Krishna’s image, there will be images of Brahma and Shiva. Brahma has
four faces and four arms and the image should have a pronounced rides a swan .
On either side of Brahma’s image, there will be images of Sarasvati and
Savitri.
Vishnu’s image has eight arms. Seven of
the arms hold a sword, a mace, arrow, a bow, a shield, a chakra and a conch
shell. The eighth palm is spread out as if Vishnu is granting a boon. Vishnu
should be shown riding on Garuda. Garuda will also have eight arms. To the
right of Vishnu’s image, there should be images of Lakshmi and Sarasvati,
Lakshmi holding a lotus and Sarasvati holding a veena (a musical instrument).
There has also got to be and image of Vishnu exhibiting his universal form
(vishvarupa). The Vishavrupa image has four heads and twenty arms.
Chandi’s image has twenty arms. The ten
arms on the right hold a spear, a sword, a shakti (a small spear), a chakra, a
pasha (noose), a shield, a drum and any two other weapons. The ten arms on the
left hold snakes a rod, an axe, an amkusha (used for driving elephants), a bow,
a bell, a flag, a mace a mirror and a cub. In front of Chandi’s image there
will be the image of a buffalo with its head cut off. The image of an asura
will be shown emerging from the body of the buffalo. The demon’s hair, eyes and
garland will be red in colour. It will be shown to be vomiting blood and it
will hold weapons in its hand, The demon’s neck will be on the lion and her
left leg will be on the demon’s back Images of Chandi may sometimes also have
ten sixteen or eighteen arms.
Shiva’s image (linga) may be made out
of earth, wood, iron, jewels, gold, silver, copper, bronze or mercury.
1.4.2 Places of Pilgrimage
A visit to a place of pilgrimage
(tirtha) brings the same punya that is obtained from performing a yajna. It is
because people had not gone on pilgrimages or donated gold and cows in their
earlier lives that they were born poor in their next lives.
The best place of pilgrimage is
Pushkara, Brahma, other gods and sages who wish to go to heaven live there. The
best time to go to Pushkara is in the month of Kartika. In Pushkara itself there
are two other places of pilgrimage known as Jambumarga and Tandulikashrama.
It is difficult to go to Pushkara. But
there are several other tirthas as well. One such is Kurukshetra, where Vishnu
and the other gods keep on coming. The river Sarasvati flows near Kurukshetra.
If one bathes in the Sarasvati, one attains brahmaloka.
Any region through which the river
Ganga flows also becomes a tirtha. Even if one sees the Ganga, the punya of per
forming yajnas is attained. A person who bears earth from the bed of the Ganga
on his head is freed of all sins.
Prayaga is another famous place of
pilgrimage. Brahma, Vishnu, Indra and the other gods, gandharvas, apsaras and
the sages are always there in Prayaga. This is because the two holy rivers,
Ganga and Yamuna, come together in Prayaga. There are many tirthas inside
Prayaga itself. The sages have said that, in the month of Magha, if one bathes
for three days in Prayaga, that is better than donating crores and crores of
cows. If one donates alms in Prayaga, one goes to svarga and is born as a king
in one’s next life. If one dies in Prayaga, one goes straight to vishnuloka.
Shiva himself had told Parvati that
Varanasi was a very holy tirtha and that Shiva never left the city. Varanasi is
so named because it is located at the junction of two rivers, Varana and Asi.
Varanasi is also known as Kashi.
The river Narmada is also sacred.
There may be several holy tirthas, but
Gaya is the holiest of them all. A demon named Gayasura once started to perform
and such were the powers of his tapasya that the gods began to suffer. They
went to Vishnu and asked him to save them Vishnu agreed and appeared before
Gayasura. “Accept a boon,” said Vishnu.
“Grant me the boon that I may become
the most sacred of all tirthas,” replied the daitya.
The boon was granted and Gayasura
disappeared. The gods returned to svarga, but felt that the earth seemed to be
deserted now that Gayasura had disappeared. Vishnu then instructed Brahma and
the other gods to perform a sacrifice. He also asked them to go to Gayasura and
ask for his body so that the sacrifice might be performed on it. Gayasura
readily agreed, and as soon as he agreed, his head fell off from the body,
Brahma then proceeded to perform the sacrifice on Gayasura’s headless body. But
as soon as the sacrifice started, the body began to shake. This meant that the
sacrifice could not be properly performed and a solution had to be found. The
solution was that the gods should all enter a stone which would be placed on
Gayasura’s body so that the body would not shake. The sacrifice could then be
performed. Vishnu himself also entered the stone. It is because the gods and
Vishnu are always there in Gaya that Gaya is sacred.
In fact, there is a story behind this
stones as well.
The sage Marichi was Brahma’s son and
had married Dharmavrata. One day, Marichi went to the forest to collect wood
and flowers and returned extremely tired. He called Dharmavrata and said, “I am
very tired. Today you must wash my feet for me.”
Dharmavrata began to wash Marichi’s
feet when Brahma suddenly arrived. Dharmavrata did not know what to do. Should
she finish washing her husband’s feet? Or should she first attend to Brahma,
since Brahma-was Marichi’s father? She decided to attend to Brahma first. At
this Marichi became very angry and cursed Dharmavrata that she would turn into
a stone. Dharmavrata was greatly distressed at being cursed for what she
thought had not been a fault at all. So she performed tapasya for many years.
When Vishnu and the other gods were pleased at Dharmavrata’s meditation, they
appeared and offered to grant her a boon.
Dharmavrata wished that the curse
imposed on her by Marichi might be waived. The gods explained that this was
impossible, since Marichi was a very powerful sage. What they would however, do
was to make Dharmavrata a very holy stone desired even by the gods. The gods
promised to be always inside this stone. It was this stone that was placed on
Gayasura’s body.
Once the sacrifice was over, Gayasura
himself desired a boon from the gods and the gods granted him that Gaya would
become the most sacred of all tirthas. It was in Gaya that the Pandavas had
prayed to Vishnu.
1.4.3 Geography
The world is divided into seven regions
(dvipas). Their names are Jambu, Plaksha, Shalmali, Kusha, Krouncha, Shaka, and
Pushkara. The seven dvipas are surrounded by seven oceans and the names of
these oceans are Lavana, Ikshu, Sura, Sarpih, Dadhi, Dugdha and Jala.
Right in the centre of Jambudvipa is
Mount Meru. Mountains named Himavana, Hemakuta and Nishada are to the south of
Meru and mountains named Nila, shveta and Shringi are to the north of Meru.
Jambudvipa is known by that name as there are a large number of jambu (jamun)
trees in this area. On the top Mount Meru is Brahma’s famous city.
Under the earth is the underworld. This
too, consists of seven regions and their names are Atala, Vitala, Sutala,
Talatala, Mahatala, Rasatsala and Patala. The daityas and the danavas live in
the underworld. Vishnu is also there in the underworld, in his form of the
great snake Shesha. The snake Shesha holds up the earth on its hood.
That part of the sky which is lit up by
sun-rays is known as Nabha. Above the earth is the sun, above the sun the moon,
above the moon the stars, above the stars Mercury, above Mercury Venus, above
Venus Jupiter and above Jupiter the constellation of the Great Bear
(saptarshimandala). Beyond this constellation is the world of Dhruva.
1.4.4 Astrology
The Agni Purana next gives a lot of
information on astrology. It states when marriages should take place and when
they should not. For example, marriages are never to be held in the months of
Chaitra and Pousha or under the signs of Libra or Gemini. If one is going on a
trip, then Friday is the best day to start on. Medicine should not be taken if
one of the nakshatras (stars) Pushya, Hasta, Jyeshtha, Shravana or Ashvini is
not in the sky. If one wishes to have a bath after recovering from an illness,
then Saturday is the best day for such a bath.
The first time a child’s head is shaved
should never be on Tuesday or a Saturday. Ears should be pierced on Wednesday
or Thursday. New clothes should not first be worn on Wednesday, Thursday or
Friday. A new house should not be entered into the months of Chaitra, Jyeshtha,
Bhadra, Ashvina, Pousha or Magha. It is best to reap grain on a Wednesday.
1.5 Manvataras, Varnashrama and Vratas
This Chapter contains 4 Sections.
1.5.1 Manvataras
Each manvantara (era) is rule over by a
Manu.
The first Manu was Svayambhuva.
Shatakratu held the title of Indra during this manvantara.
The second Manu was Svarochisha.
Vipashchita held the title of Indra during this manvantara.
Third Manu was Uttama and Sushanti was
Indra then.
The fourth Manu was tapasa and Shikhi
held the title of Indra then.
The fifth Manu was Raivata and Vitatha
was Indra then.
The title of Indra was held by Manojava
during the sixth manvantara, the Manu being Chakhusha.
Next came Shraddhadeva, the seventh
Manu Purandara being the Indra.
The eighth Manu’s name is Savarni and
the eighth Indra’s Vali. The eighth manvantara has not yet come.
The ninth Manu will be Dakshasavarni
and the ninth Indra wil be Adbhuta.
During the tenth manvantara, the Manu
will be Brahmasavarni and the title of Indra will be held by Shanti.
During the rule of the eleventh Manu Dharmasavarni,
the Indra will be Gana.
The twelfth Manu will be Rudrasavarni
and the twelfth Indra will be Ritadhama.
Rouchya will be the thirteenth Manu and
Divaspati will be the thirteenth Indra.
The fourteenth Manu will be Bhoutya and
the title of Indra will then be held by Shuchi.
During each of Brahma’s days, there are
fourteen such manvantaras. After that comes Brahma’s night, when all these
living beings are destroyed.
1.5.2 Varnashrama Dharma
All the Manus practised the precepts of
dharma (righteousness). This meant non-violence, truthfulness, piety, going on
pilgrimages donating alms, serving devas and brahmanas, tolerance of all
religions and the following of the sacred texts. It also meant the practice of
the system of the four classes (varna) and the four stages in life (ashrama).
The four varnas are brahmanas,
kshatriyas, vaishyas and shudras. Performing sacrifices, donating alms and
studying the Vedas are duties that brahmanas, kshatriyas and vaishyas must
perform. In addition, the kshatriyas must protect the good and punish the evil.
The vaishyas must take care of trade, agriculture and animal husbandry. The
duties of shudras are to serve the brahmanas and artisanship. When brahmanas
take up the upavita, the sacred thread that is the mark of the first three
classes, it is like a second birth for them. So brahmanas are known as
dvijas(born twice).
An anuloma marriage is a marriage where
the husband is from a higher class than the wife. The offspring of such a
marriage belong to the mothers class. A pratiloma marriage is a marriage where
the wife is from a higher class than the husband. Chandalas were born this way
from brahmana women, Sutas from kshatriya women, Devalas from vaishya women,
Pukkashas from kshatriya women and Magadhas from vaishya women. Chandalas are
executioneers, Sutas charioteers, Devalas guards, Pukkashas hunters and
Magadhas bards. Chandalas should live outside the villages and should not touch
those belonging to any other class.
The best name for a brahmana is that
which ends in Sharma. Similarly, the best name for a kshatriya ends in Varma,
for a vaishya in Gupta and for a shudra in Dasa. The sacred thread ceremony is
to be held at the age of eight years for brahmanas, eleven years for kshatriyas
and twelve years for vaishyas. No sacred a thread ceremony should be held
beyond sixteen years of age.
The first stage in life is that of
brahmacharya (studenthood). A student should never eat honey or meat and should
never indulge in singing or dancing. He should completely give up violence and
speaking to women. His duties are to discuss the shastras (holy texts) and
associate with learned men. Apart from that, he will meditate in solitude on
the true nature of the brahman.
The next stage of life is that of
garhasthya (household stage). A brahmana may have four wives, a kshatriya
three, a vaishya two and a shudra only one. The husband and the wife should be
from the same varna.
Marriage across varna
is to be avoided. A woman can marry again provided that her husband has
disappeared, is dead. has become a hermit or is such a sinner that he is
expelled from his own varna.
If her husband dies, a widow is permitted to marry her late husband’s younger
brother.
A householder should get up at dawn and
pray to the gods. He should always bathe in the morning. He should not talk
impolitely. He should not bite his nails. He should not laugh at those who are
inferior. And he should never reside in a place where there is no king, no
doctor or no river. He must not insult his elders. He should never criticise
the Vedas, the shastras, the devas, the sages and the king. And he must never
travel without a light at night.
The third ashrama is vanaprastha
(forest - dwelling stage). Such a person should always sleep on the ground and
wear skins as clothes. He should wear his hair matted and give up the company
of other people. He has to serve gods and guests and live on fruit and roots.
In the final stage of life (sannyasa) a
person becomes a hermit. In this ashrama, a person attains true knowledge and is
completely freed. But he should become a hermit only when he is convinced that
he has completely lost all interest in material pursuits. Such a person is not
affected by birth or death. He realises that the physical body is transient,
that it is of no concern at all. It is the knowledge of the atman (soul) that
is the best form of knowledge. When one gains this knowledge, one realises the
identification of the atman with the brahman, one understands that the brahman
is everywhere.
1.5.3 Sins and their Attonement
If one commits a sin, one has to atone
for it. This is known as prayashchitta. If one does not atone for the sins that
one has committed, it is the king’s duty to punish the sinner.
If one drinks from a well where the
dead body of an animal has been floating, one has to fast for three days. The
worst possible sins are the killing of brahmana, the drinking of wine and
theft. Other sins are criticising the Vedas, the bearing of false witness,
killing a friend, killing a cow, forsaking one’s parents or sons, the selling
of ponds, murder, lying, killing animals and the cutting down of green trees
for fodder.
A killer of a brahmana has to build a
hut in the forest and live there for twelve years. He has to beg for a living
and give up all that he possesses to another brahmana. A killer of cows has to
live on just coarse grain for a month. He has to live with cattle and follow
them around during the day. All his possessions have to be given up to a
brahmana and he has to bathe in cow’s urine for two months.
If a brahmana steals gold, he should go
and report his crime to the king. The king will then hit him with a club and
this will be the brahmana’s prayashchitta.
The sin of killing kshatriya is
one-fourth the sin of killing a brahmana. If one kills a vaishya, the sin is
one-eighth the sin of killing a brahmana. And if one kills a shudra, the sin is
one-sixteenth of the sin of killing a brahmana. Killing a cat, a mongoose, a
frog, a dog, a lizard or a crow is as sinful as killing a shudra.
1.5.4 Vratas
Depending on the tithi (lunar day), the
day of the week, the nakshatras (stars), the month, the season and the position
of the sun, certain specific religious rites and ceremonies have to be
performed. These are known as vratas.
The first day of the lunar fortnight is
known as pratipada. The day of pratipada in the months of Kartika, Ashvina and
Chaitra are Brahma’s tithis. It is then that the worship of Brahma must be
done.
On the second day of the lunar
fortnight (dvitiya), one should eat only flowers and pray to the two Ashvinis.
this makes the supplicant handsome and lucky. Shuklapaksha is that lunar
fortnight in which the moon waxes and Shuklapaksha dvitiya in the month of
Kartika is earmarked for the worship of Yama. If one performs this vrata, one
does not have to go to naraka (hell). This is also the day for praying to
Balarama and Krishna.
It was on the third day of the lunar
fortnight (tritiya), in shuklapaksha and in the month of Chaitra, that Shiva
married Parvati or Gouri. Rites performed on this day are thus known as
gourivrata. Shiva and Parvati have to be given offerings of fruit. The eight
names of Parvati have to be recited. These are Lalita, Vijaya, Bhadra Bhavani,
Kumuda, Shiva, Vasudevi and Gouri.
Chaturthi vrata is performed on the
fourth day of the lunar fortnight, is shuklapaksha and in the month of Magha.
This is the day for worshipping the common gods (gana devata). The offerings on
this occasion are to be wine and fragrant perfumes.
On the fifth day of the lunar
fortnight, one performs panchami vrata. This grants good health and takes care
of bad omens. Particularly auspicious for panchami vrata are the shuklapakshas
in the months of Shravana, Bhadra, Ashvina and Kartika.
On the sixth day of the lunar fortnight
one performs shashthi vrata. One has to live only on fruit and if one performs
this vrata, the fruits of any action that one performs live forever. Shashthi
vrata should be observed especially in the months of Kartika and Bhadra.
Surya is to be worshipped on the
seventh (saptami) day of the lunar fortnight. If saptami vrata is observed in
shuklapaksha, all sorrow disappears. Sins are stoned for and all one’s desires
are attained. Women who have no children can have sons if they observe these
rites.
The eight day of the lunar fortnight
(ashtami) is very significant. Krishna was
born on this tithi in the month of Bhadra when the nakshatra Rohini was in the
sky. Ashtami is therefore auspicious in the month of Bhadra. If one fasts on
that day and prays to Krishna, the sins of
one’s earlier seven lives are atoned for. But this vrata is to be observed in
krishnapaksha and not in shuklapaksha, since Krishna
was born in Krishnapaksha. Together with Krishna,
Rohini and the moon, Devaki, Vasudeva, Yashoda, Nanda and Balarama are also to
be worshipped on the occasion. Since Krishna
took birth (janma) on this ashtami tithi, this particular day is known as
janmashtami.
The eighth day of the lunar fortnight
can be important even if it is not the month of Bhadra. For example, the eighth
day of the lunar fortnight might be a Wednesday (budha vara) in both
shuklapaksha and krishnapaksha. Irrespective of the month, such an ashtami is
important and is known as budhashtami. On that day one has to live only on
molasses and rice and perform the vrata.
There used to be a brahamana named
Dhira whose wife was named Rambha. Dhira’s son was Koushika, his daughter was
Vijaya and Dhira’s bull was named Dhanada. Koushika would go with the other
cowherds to graze the bull. Once when Koushika was having a bath in the river
Bhagirathi and the bull was grazing, some thieves came and stole the bull.
Koushika and his sister Vijaya looked everywhere for it, but could not find it.
In searching for the bull, they came to a lake where some women were bathing in
the course of performing a vrata. Brother and sister were tired and hungry and
they craved for some food. The women agreed to give them food, but only after
Koushika and Vijaya had also performed the budhashtami vrata. And as soon as
Koushika perfomed the ritual, the bull was miraculously returned to him. Such
were the powers of the vrata that Koushika could get his sister Vijaya married
off to Yama and himself became the king of Ayodhya. After their parents Dhira
and Rambha had died, Vijaya discovered that her father and mother were in
naraka. When she asked Yama as to how her parents might be delivered from
naraka, Yama told her that Koushika and Vijaya should perform budhashtami vrata
again. And immediately after they did so, the parents attained svarga.
The ninth day of the lunar fortnight is
navami and navami in shuklapaksha, especially in the month of Ashvina, is
earmarked for the worship of Gouri. An animal has to be sacrificed and offered
to the goddess on this occasion.
The brahmanas become all powerful if
they observe dashami vrata on the tenth day of the lunar fortnight and donate
ten cows. The eleventh day of the lunar fortnight (ekadashi) is for fasting. It
is also the tithi for praying to Vishnu. The observance of ekadashi vrata
grants sons and wealth and atones for one’s sins.
The twelfth day of the lunar fortnight
is dvadashi. Any dvadashi in shuklapaksha is auspicious for worshipping Vishnu.
Duadashi in the month of Bhadra is for praying to cows and calves and in the
month of Chaitra it is for praying to the god of love (Madana). If one observes
dvadashi for an entire year, one never has to go to naraka. An especially good
conjunction is dvadashi in shuklapaksha in the month of Bhadra when the
nakshatra Shravana is in the sky. if one fasts and observes a vrata then, one
earns greater punya than from bathing in the confluence of sacred rivers. If
Budha (Mercury) is also in the sky, the punya is multiplied severalfold.
Trayodashi vrata is on the thirteenth
day of the lunar fortnight and this ritual was first performed by the god of
lover when he wanted to please Shiva. This is the tithi on which Shiva is
worshipped. In the month of Ashvina, Indra is also revered on this tithi. And
in the month of Chaitra, the god of love is worshipped in shuklapaksha on the same
tithi.
The fourteenth day of the lunar
fortnight (chaturdashi) is also earmarked for Shiva, particularly in the month
of Kartika. One fasts and donates to brahmanas and thereby attains svarga. The
chaturdashi in krishnapaksha that comes between the months of Magha and Falguna
is known as Shivaratri. Then one has to fast and stay awake the whole night.
Earlier, there used to be an evil hunter named Sundarasena. But because he
performed a vrata on Shivaratri, all his sins were forgiven.
1.6 Hellish Planets, Charity and Gayatri
This Chapter contains 4 Sections.
1.6.1 Hellish Planets – Narakas (Hells)
If one worships Vishnu with flowers,
one never goes to hell.
There are several such hells. Although
people do not wish to die, they are bound to die once their predestined time
span on earth has been exhausted. One then has to pay for whatever sins one
might have committed. The sinners suffer and those who have performed good
deeds are naturally rewarded. There are in fact two gates that lead into Yama’s
abode. The good are brought by yamadutas (Yama’s servants) through the western
gate and are then taken to svarga. Yama’s servants bring the evil to him
through the southern gate and Yama then despatches them to the various hells.
If one kills a cow, one has to spend
one lakh years in a naraka known as mahavicha. If one kills a brahmana or
steals land, there is a burning naraka named Amakumbha that one goes to. There
one suffers till the day when the world is destroyed. A killer of women,
children or old men stays in Rourava naraka for the span of fourteen
manavantaras. An arsonist is sent to Maharourava and burnt there for an entire
kalpa. A thief goes to Tamisra, were he is continuously pierced with spears by
Yama’s servants for several kalpas. After that, a thief is taken to Mahatamisra
to be bitten by snakes and insects.
If you kill you father or mother, you
will be sent to the hell Asipatravana. There you will be continuously sliced
into pieces with swords. If you burn someone to death, you will go to
Karambhavaluka where you will be placed on burning sands.
A person who eats sweets alone goes to
Kakola and is fed only worms. A person who does not perform yajnas goes to
Kuttala and is fed blood. An oppressor is sent to Tailapaka and is crushed like
an oilseed there. A liar is sent to the naraka named Mahapata. There are
several other narakas for those who encourage inter-class marriages, those who
kill animals, those who cut trees, those who eat too much meat, those who
criticise the Vedas, those who bear also witness and those who criticise their
teachers.
1.6.2 Giving Charity
Giving alms is extremely important as
means for achieving punya. Alms always have to be donated when one goes to
visit a temple or a place of pilgrimage. The giver must always face the east
and the receiver must always face the north when alms are being given. Such
donations have to be made after one has had a bath.
The best objects for donations are
gold, horses, oilseeds, snakes, maids, chariots, trees, houses, daughters and
cows. If one promises to give something but later goes back on one’s promise,
one is sure to be destroyed. It should be remembered that the entire object of
donation alms is lost if one expects gratitude or friendship in return. It is
better to give something to a brother than to a daughter, it is better to give
to a father than to a mother.
The entire concept of donation alms is
different in the four different eras. In satya yuga, the giver went out in
search of recipient to whom he could give something. In treta yuga, the recipient
had to come to the giver’s house before he would be given anything. In dvapara
yuga, the giver never gave anything without being asked for it by the
recipient. And in kali yuga, the giver gives only to those who are servile to
him.
1.6.3 Gayatri Mantra
Gayatri mantra is a very powerful
incantation.
The human body has many veins. Out of
these, ten veins are important and their names are Ida, Pingala, Sushumna,
Gandhari, Hastijihva, Pritha, Yasha, Alambusha, Huha and Shankhini. These veins
bear the breath of life. The breath of life is called prana vayu. Apart from
prana vayu, nine other major breaths course through the human body. Their names
are Apana, Samana, Udana, Vyana, Naga, Kurma, Krikara, Devadatta and
Dhananjaya.
Gayatri is a goddess worshipped even by
Vishnu and Shiva. This goddess is there everywhere, even in every individual’s
heart in the form of a swan. Gayatri mantra is an incantation to the goddess.
If one chants the mantra seven times, one’s sins are forgiven. Chanting it then
times means that one attains svarga. To attain worlds (lokas) which are even
more desirable than svarga, one has to chant gayatri mantra twenty times. If
one chants the mantra a hundred and eight times, one does not have to be born
again. The severest of sins, like killing cows, brahmanas or parents, are
forgiven if one chants the mantra a thousand times. Gayatri mantra has always
to be preceded by the chanting of the sacred syllable Om.
1.6.4 The King
The king’s duties are many. He has to
punish his enemies, ensure the prosperity of his subjects and arrange that his
kingdom is ruled well. He has to protect the sages who perform tapasya inside
the boundaries of his kingdom.
A king should appoint a wise brahmana
as his priest. His ministers should also be wise and his queen should be a
woman who follows the path of dharma. When a king dies, time must not be
wasted. The priest must immediately find an auspicious occasion so that a new
king can be appointed and crowned. A kingdom can never be without a king.
Before the coronation, a prospective
king has to purify himself by rubbing his body with mud. Mud from a mountain
peak is used for the ears, form a Krishna temple for the face, from an Indra
temple for the back, form a palace for the chest, mud raised by an elephant’s
tusks for the right hand, mud raised by a bull’s horns for the left hand, mud
from a yajna for the things and from a cowshed for the feet. After the king has
thus rubbed himself with different forms of mud and purified himself, he is
ready to be anointed. Four types of ministers will appoint him. Brahmana
ministers with golden vessels full of clarified butter will stand of the
eastern side. Kshatriya ministers with silver vessels full of sweet and
thickened milk will stand on the eastern side. Vaishya ministers with copper
vessels full of curds will stand on the western side. And shudra ministers with
earthen vessels full of water will stand on the northern side. The priests will
then use material from all four directions to anoint the king. Water from all
the places of pilgrimage will be poured on the king’s head and throat. There
must be songs and musical instruments must be played.
The king will next pray to Brahma,
Vishnu, Indra and the other gods. He will look at a mirror, some clarified
butter and the various signs of good omen that have been placed all around. The
king will then be crowned and introduced to his ministers, advisers and guards.
The priest will be given cows, goats, buffaloes and houses by the king. He will
also bow before the brahmanas. After all these ceremonies have been completed,
he truly becomes the king. He circles the fire, touches his guru’s feet and
with all his soldiers, goes out on a procession through the streets so that his
subjects can see him. At that time, the king must be seated either on an
elephant or a horse. After the procession is over, the king may return to his
palace.
The king has to appoint many officials.
The general has got to be a brahmana or a kshatriya. The charioteer must know
about horses and elephants, and treasurer must be familiar with different
jewels. There has to be a doctor, a keeper of elephants, a keeper of horses, a
captain for the palace and another captain for looking after the women of the
royal household. Each person must be appointed to the job which suits his
expertise and temperament best.
Anyone thus appointed by a king has to
stick to certain rules. He must always obey the king’s orders and must never do
anything that is contrary to the king’s commands. In public he must always say
pleasant things to the king. If there are any unpleasant utterances to be made,
they have to be made in a private audience with the king. Those who serve the
king must not be thieves, nor must they ever insult the king. They will not
dress like the king, nor will they become too intimate with the king. They must
not divulge royal secrets.
For a fort, the king should choose a
place that cannot readily be attacked by enemies. The king must ensure that the
gods are worshipped, the subjects are protected and the evil are punished. He
should never steal form the temples, instead he should build temples and set up
idols of the gods there. The brahmanas must also be protected and the king has
to make sure that no brahmanas are killed in his kingdom. For a queen, he has
to choose a woman who subscribes to these beliefs.
The king will appoint an official to
look after every ten villages and another official to look after every hundred
villages. Spies must be appointed to find out all that is going no in the
kingdom. The king is entitled to one-sixth of all the punya that accrues in his
kingdom through his subjects. But he is also credited with one-sixth of all the
sins that are committed in his kingdom. The taxes will be levied as per the
dictates of the sacred texts. From whatever is received as taxes, half will go
into the royal treasury and the remaining half will be distributed amongst the
brahmanas. If there is a liar, the king will impose a penalty on him to the
extent of one-eighth of the liar’s total wealth. If the owner of any property
is not known, the king will keep the property is not known, the king will keep
the property is safe custody for a period of three years. Once the owner is
identified within a period of three years, he can claim the property. But
beyond three years, the becomes entitled to the property.
The property rights of any minor orphan
are to be protected by the king. If there is a theft in the kingdom, the king
must immediately replace what has been stolen with wealth taken from his own
royal treasury. If the thief is caught and the stolen goods recovered, they are
used to replenish the treasury. One-twentieth of profits made form trade are to
be paid to the king as taxes. One-fifth or one-sixth of foodgrains are to be
paid as taxes. One day every month, craftsmen will work free of charge for the
king. They will only be gives food from the royal kitchen.
The king has to pay proper attention to
the princes. They have to be taught four types of shastras. The first is dharma
shastra, which teaches what is right and what is wrong. The second is artha
shastra, economics. The third is dhanurveda, the art of fighting. And the last
subject that has to be taught to princes is shilpa, arts and crafts. The king
has to assign bodyguards to take care of the princes. He must ensure that the
princes associate with honourable and learned people and not with undesirable
characters. In instances where the princes do not grow up properly despite the
king’s best efforts, the king is free to keep them imprisoned. But they should
be comfortable in the prison and should not be made to suffer there.
The king should give up hunting,
drinking and the playing of dice. He must not unnecessarily waste time in
travelling around. He must first win over his servants through his behaviour and
then do the same for his subjects. It is only after this has been achieved that
he attains a position to conquer his enemies through the use of arms. Anyone
who brings harm to the kingdom must immediately be killed. If the king delays
in doing that which has to be done, the purpose of the action is completely
lost. Nor must the king inform others in advance about what is going to be
done. No one must get to know about the king’s intended actions. Once the
actions have been completed, the fruits of the actions performed are
information enough for everyone to see. This does not mean that the king will
not consult his ministers. Of course he will, that is why they are ministers.
Before sleeping or eating, the king must check whether the bed or the food is safe.
There were seven techniques that kings
were supposed to use in ruling their kingdoms. These were known as sama, dana,
danda, bheda, maya, upeksha and indrajala. Of these, the first four are the
most famous. Sama means the art of gentle persuasion. Dana means the usage of
donations or money to achieve one’s purpose. Danda is punishment. And bheda is
the art of aggravating dissension amongst parties opposed to each other. Maya
means to use illusions or deceit and upeksha is to deliberately ignore people so
as to achieve one’s purpose. Indrajala literally means jugglery. In this
context, it would mean to perform a balancing act amongst opposing pulls and
opposing parties.
What sort of punishment the king should
mete out is also laid down. If anyone lies and says that his possessions have
been stolen, he is to be fined an amount equal in value to that of the
possessions which have supposedly been stolen. A brahmana who bears false
witness is to be banished from the kingdom. A person who kills cows, elephants,
horses or camels will have a leg or a hand cut off. A thief who steals gold or
silver or an abductor of women will be executed. Execution is also prescribed
in cases of arson and poisoning. A wife who does not obey her husband shall be
torn to death by dogs. A woman who does not obey her husband or brahmanas may
also have her nose, ears or arms chopped off. She will when be set astride a
cow and banished from the kingdom.
1.7 Dreams, Omens and Sri Rama
This Chapter contains 4 Sections.
1.7.1 Dreams
Some dreams are bad omens. In fact,
they are nightmares. Examples are: dreams about grass or trees growing on one’s
body, dreams in which the dreamer is shaven-headed or is wearing shabby clothes
or dreams in which one is falling form above. It is also bad to dream of marriages,
singing, the killing of snakes and the killing of chandalas or animals. If you
dream that you are drinking oil or eating bird meat, that is also a bad omen.
Other examples are: where the dreamer dreams that he is playing with monkeys or
chandalas, when he dreams that devas, brahmanas, the king or the guru is angry
or when he dreams that his house had collapsed.
Remedies have to be found if one dreams
such evil dreams. Brahmanas have to be worshipped, a yajna has to be performed
and the dreamer has to pray to Vishnu, Shiva, Brahma, Ganesha or Surya. Dreams
dreamt in the first quarter of one’s sleep normally come true over the next one
year. Dreams from the second quarter come true over the next six months and
dreams from the third quarter over the next three months. Dreams from the last
quarter come true over the next fortnight and dreams dreamt right at dawn come
true within the next ten days. If one first dreams a good dream and then an
evil one, it is the evil dream the will come true. Therefore, if one dreams a
good dream, one should not sleep anymore. One should immediately arise.
There are many dreams that are good
dreams. For example, dreams that involve mountains, palaces or snakes. Or the
dreamer might dream that he is riding on a horse or a bull. It is also good to
dream of white flowers in the sky or to see trees in a dream. Especially good
dreams are those of the dreamer’s possessing many arms or many heads or of
grass and bushes sprouting form his navel. What if you dream of wearing white
garlands or clothes? That too is good. If you dream of eclipses of the sun, the
moon or the stars, by all means rejoice. And if in a dream you see that you
have caught hold of the enemy’s flag, that surely means that you will triumph
over the enemy. And if you actually dream of defeating the enemy, the
interpretation is clear enough.
Strangely enough, a dream where the
dreamer sees that he is eating rice pudding is a good dream. As is the case
with dreams of drinking wine or blood. Or even of eating wet meat. A clear sky
in a dream is good. Dreaming of milking a cow or a buffalo with one’s own mouth
is also good. The dream continues to be a good one if one dreams of milking a
lioness or a she-elephant thus. Other dreams which have good interpretations are,
for example, dreams of the dreamer’s receiving blessings form devas or
brahmanas or of being anointed with water.
The dreamer who dreams of his
coronation is blessed. And he is doubly blessed if he dreams that his head has
been cut off or that he has died or even that his house has been burnt down.
The relatives of such a dreamer increase in number and he also prospers. It is
good to dream of musical instruments being played. Or of riding a bull or
climbing a tree. Wet clothes, trees laden with fruit and clear blue skies in
dreams are especially good.
1.7.2 Omens and Signs
If one is about to go out of the house,
one should take care of any bad omens that there might be. Such bad omens are
cotton, dried grass, cowdung, coal, molasses, leather, hair, a lunatic, a
chandala, a widow, a dead body, ashes, bones and a broken vessel. If one comes
across these as one is about to leave, one should not start without pacifying
the elements through prayers to Vishnu. The sound of musical instruments is not
an auspicious sound at the beginning of a journey. If the means of transport by
which one is travelling breaks down, that too, is a bad omen. If weapons break,
perhaps you should postpone the journey. The same is the case if an umbrella
held over one’s head happens to fall. If one hits one’s head against the lintel
of the door as one is about too cross the threshold, prayers are again
indicated. And never call back someone who has just left. That is a bad omen
and bodes ill for the success of the journey.
There are good omens for a departure
and if one sees these good omens, the journey is bound to be successful. Good
omens are white flowers, full vessels, meat, distant noises, an old goat, a
cow, a horse, an elephant, fire, gold silver, a sword, an umbrella, fruit,
clarified butter, curds, a conch shell, sugarcane, the sound of thunder,
lightning and a dead body with no one crying over it.
Omens are important even if one is not
going on a journey. A peacock crying on the left means that something is going
to be stolen. If a donkey brays with a broken voice, that is good omen and
something good will happen. If a boar or a buffalo crosses over from the left
to the right, that is a good omen. But if they cross over from the right to the
left, that is a bad omen. One’s desires will be attained if horses, tigers,
lions, cats or donkeys cross over from the right to the left. jackals, moles,
lizards, pigs and cuckoos are good omens or the left and monkeys are good omens
on the right. If a jackal calls once, twice, thrice or four times, that is a
good omen. It is a bad omen if a jackal calls five or six times. It is a very
good omen if a jackal calls seven times.
If crows caw on the left of an army,
the soldiers will not be able to win. If a crow can be seen near the door a
house, this means that there will soon be a guest. A crow looking at the sum
with one eye signifies great danger. A crow covered with mud means the
attainment of one’s desires. A dog barking inside the house leads to the death
of the householders. A person whose left limbs are sniffed by a dog, will
attain riches. If the right limbs are sniffed, there will be danger. A dog
blocking one’s path signifies theft. A dog with a bone or a rope in its mouth
means the loss of property. But it is a good omen to see a dog with meat in its
mouth.
Cows mooing irregularly mean threats to
the master of the house. If this happens at night, there will be a theft or a
death in the house. If the cows have horns that are wet or daubed with mud,
that is a good sign for the householders. A cow that plays with cranes or doves
is bound to die. A cow that licks its feet is also destined to die. If an
elephant strikes its right foot with its left, that is a good sign. Prosperity
comes if an elephant rubs its right tusk with its foot.
There is great danger if an umbrella
falls just as one is about to leave on a trip. Journeys are to be avoided if
the stars are not favourable.
1.7.3 Battle
Once a king decides to go out to
battle, seven days are needed for preliminaries. On the first day, Vishnu, Shiva
and Ganesha have to be worshipped. On the second day the dikpalas (guardians of
all the directions) are worshipped, the Rudras on the third day, the planets
and the stars on the fourth day and the two Ashvinis and the rivers on the
fifth day. On the sixth day, the king has ceremonial bath in honour of the
victory that is to come. And on the seventh day, the king leaves to do battle.
Prior to the marching, the army must
always assemble to the east of the capital city. The start of the march must be
accompanied with the playing of musical instruments. Once the army has begun to
march, it must never look back. After having travelled for a couple of miles,
it must stop to rest any pray to the gods and the brahmanas.
The king must never directly fight.
Because if the king is killed, the battle is lost. The king must be right
behind his army, not too far away from it. An elephant will be guarded by four
chariots, a chariot by four horses and a horse by four infantrymen. The
infantry will also be at the front of army, followed by archers and then by the
horses. The chariots and the elephants come last of all. The cowards in the
army must not be in the front, they must be at the back. The front is for the
brave soldiers. To the extent possible, one should fight with the sun behind
one’s army.
If a soldier dies in the course of
battle, he goes straight to heaven. The blood of brave men wash away all sins.
To be struck with a weapon is better than to perform many sacrifices. A person
who flees form the field of battle performs a sin that is worse than that of
killing a brahmana.
The fight should be between equals.
Those who are running away should not be killed. Nor should spectators and
those who are unarmed be killed. An enemy captured in battle should not be kept
imprisoned. He should be released and treated like a son.
Om Tat Sat
(Continued)
My
humble salutations to Swamyjis, Philosophic scholars , dharmicscriptures dot
org
for the
collection)
0 comments:
Post a Comment