Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Bhagavatha Vahini, Chapter 10 - The Krishna Mystery

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Source: http://www.vahini.org/bhagavata/chapter10.html

 

Bhagavatha Vahini

The story of God and his DevoteesWritten by Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai BabaDownload this Vahini

 

Chapter 10

The Krishna Mystery

Bhima managed to muster up some courage. He said, "Brother! Grant me leave and I

shall proceed to Dwaraka in an instant and return quick bringing full

information of all that has happened to remove your fear." Even while Bhima was

praying on bended knees for permission, the sun set and the lamps started

emitting feeble light, from every place.

Meanwhile, a guard from the main entrance rushed in, announcing that Arjuna had

come and that he was approaching the Royal apartment. Every one rose as if they

had suddenly come to life, they hurried forward to meet Arjuna, thirsty for news

from Dwaraka. Arjuna came in, depressed and despondent, devoid of any sign of

joy, without looking the brothers in the face, he rolled over the feet of

Dharmaraja.

Dharmaraja noticed the signs which confirmed his fear and became eager to

inquire further. He asked about the welfare of friends and kinsmen at Dwaraka.

Arjuna could not rise or turn his head. The brothers saw the feet of Dharmaraja

streaming with the tears shed by him and were shocked into immobility.

Dharmaraja lost all hold on his mind. He tried to lift Arjuna, shaking him by

the shoulders, he shouted in agony into his ear, "Brother! What has happened?

What has happened? What has happened to the Yadavas? Tell us about that. Our

hearts are about to burst. Save us from terrible anguish."

But, Arjuna did not reply. He could not rise or even spell out words. Dharmaraja

however, continued raining questions on him, inquiring about the welfare of the

Yadavas and others, mentioning them by name and asking about each one

separately. Arjuna did not react even to this desperate fusillade. He showed no

response. He did not raise his face and look on his brother's.

"You need not tell us the rest, but, this you must tell us, what has Vasudeva

directed you to tell us, what is his message to us, tell us that" Dharmaraja

appealed. Arjuna could not bear it any longer. The grief that he had held back

so long gushed out in full flood. "We have Vasudeva [Krishna] no more. 0, we

are orphaned. We could not keep Him, we have no more luck", He said and fell on

his face, sobbing on the floor.

 

(See also Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 1, Chapter 14: The disappearance of Lord Krishna)

Sahadeva grasped the situation and its possibilities and he closed all doors

that led into the Hall, he engaged himself in attempting to soothe the

distress.

"Alas, that we lived to hear this, what a fate! 0, Destiny, how could you treat

the world so cruelly?" the brothers lamented together. "Lord, why have you

deserted the Pandavas thus? Why this breach of trust? We have survived to hear

this news, this is the result of the accumulation of sin during many

generations", they asked and asserted. Each one was submerged in his own grief,

in his own despair. The Hall was filled with gloomy silence.

It was Dharmaraja who braved it first. Wiping the tears that filled his eyes, he

questioned Arjuna in pathetic tones. "Have you news of the condition of the

Parents, and of Nanda and Yasoda and of the other Yadavas? Tell us about them.

They must be broken with the grief of separation from the Lord. When we too

have been reduced to this helpless depth, what can we say of them? They must be

sunk in unfathomable despair. How can they keep body and breath together? Why

refer to individuals? The entire city of Dwaraka must have sunk in the sea of

inconsolable grief."

Dharmaraja was sobbing with sorrow as he pictured to himself those scenes.

Seeing him in this condition, Arjuna said, "Brother! The people of Dwaraka are

far more lucky than ourselves. We are the least fortunate. We are the only

hardened beings that have withstood the shock of the news of the departure of

Vasudeva [Krishna] from this world. The rest left the world even before news

came of His departure."

At this Dharmaraja exclaimed, "Hari, Hari, O God! What is it you said now? What

is this catastrophe? I do not understand anything ..... Did the sea rise and

engulf Dwaraka? Or, did any wild barbarian horde invade and overwhelm the city

and slaughter the population? Arjuna, tell us what happened. Put an end to our

frightful surmises, which raise up awful pictures." Dharmaraja held the hand of

Arjuna and turned his face up in an attempt to make him answer his queries.

Arjuna said, "No, no sea got furious and swallowed Dwaraka, no ruler led his

army against that city. Wickedness and vileness grew madly wild among the

Yadavas themselves and excited their strife and hate to such an extent that

they slaughtered each other with their own weapons." Dharmaraja asked him,

"Arjuna, there must be some overpowering Force that urged the Yadava clan,

young and old, to sacrifice themselves in this holocaust. No effect can happen

without a cause, isn't it"? and, waited to listen to the details of what had

actually led to the slaughter.

Arjuna paused a little to overcome the grief surging within him and then, he

began his account of the events. The other three brothers drew near and heard

the tragic tale. "I learnt that day that not even the tiniest event can happen

unless willed by Vasudeva [Krishna]. I got fully convinced of this. He is the

Suthradhari, the holder of the strings that move the puppets and make them act

their roles, but, He seats Himself among the spectators and pretends He is

unaware of the plot or story or cast. The characters cannot deviate a dot from

His directions, His will guides and determines every single movement and

gesture. The varying emotions and events on the stage by which the drama

unrolls itself affect the hearts of those who witness the play, but, they do

not cause a ruffle in the heart of the Suthradhari.

He decides what this person should say or that person should do and He prompts

in them the appropriate words and deeds. And, the consequence of the karma

performed and inherited by each individual from previous lives also adds its

quota to this destiny. The Yadavas who are our own kith and kin were spiritual

personages, full of devotion to God as you all know well. Perhaps, some day,

some sage had cast a curse on them, or else some day some dire sin was

committed by them.... For, how else can we explain this sudden upset in their

history, this unexpected tragedy?

They performed a magnificent Sacrifice (Yajna) at Prabhasakshethra; for seven

full days, the Yajna was celebrated in unprecedented pomp and style. The

Valedictory Offering in the Sacred Fire was poured in true Vedic grandeur in

the presence of Lord Krishna Himself, the participants and priests performed

later the Ceremonial Bath in holy waters; the Brahmins then received their

share of the Yajna Offerings and distributed it to the Yadavas also. Everything

went off, in an atmosphere of perfect calm, contentment, and joy.

Towards noon, Brahmins were served with food. Afterwards, the Yadavas seated

themselves in long lines to partake of the feast. During the feast, as ill-luck

would have it, some of the Yadavas filled themselves with drink and lost

self-control so much that they mistook their own kinsmen as their foes. They

started quarrels which raged into fights of severe fierceness. It must have

been in the plan of God, for however unruly and vile a man might be, he would

not slaughter with his own hands his own children and parents. 0, the horror of

it! In the general melee that ensued, son killed father, father killed son,

brother slew brother, son-in-law killed father-in-law, father-in-law killed

son-in-law, in one insane orgy of blind hate, until there was no one left

alive!" Arjuna could not speak further, he leant against the wall, he held his

head, bursting with pain and grief, between his pressing palms.

Dharmaraja heard this account with anguish and amazement. He placed his hand on

Arjuna's back, and said, "What is this that you are saying? It is an

unbelievable story. Since your tongue will never speak untruth, I am forced to

put faith in its correctness, or else, how can we ever imagine such a sudden

transformation of character and such a lightning massacre? I have never seen or

heard anywhere else such intensity of mutual friendship as marked the Yadava

clan. Besides they do not deviate in the least from the path marked out for

them by Krishna. They will not deflect from it even on the most frantically

furious occasions. That such people should, in the very Presence of Krishna,

regardless of all canons [norms] of good behaviour, beat one another to death

is strange indeed, such a turn of events comes only when the end of the world

is near.

"Well, Arjuna! Could not Krishna stop the fight and advise them to desist? Did

He attempt to bring about some compromise between the factions and send them

back to their places? Krishna is the greatest adept in the arts of war and

peace, is it not? That He did not try to stop this tragedy makes me wonder

more, at this awful tale of destruction."

Dharmaraja was lost in sorrow; he sat with his head resting on his clenched

fist, the hand placed on the knee; his eyes were so full of tears that they

rolled continuously down his cheeks. Arjuna tried to speak some words of

consolation. "Maharaja! you are aware of the Glory and the Grace of Krishna,

but, yet, you ask questions and entertain doubts, whether He did this or that,

what can I say in reply? The fate of the Yadavas is the same as the fate of our

own clan. Weren't we and Kaurava brothers? We had kinsmen who were well-wishers

on both sides and we had this same Shyamasundar in our midst, but, yet, we had

to go through the Kurukshetra battle. Can we not see that this war would not

have happened, had He willed it so? The forty lakhs [Hindi: lakh: one hundred

thousand] of warriors who died on the field of battle would not have been lost

then, isn't it? Did we ever wish to rule over this land after slaughtering all

these? Nothing can ever happen without His

express command. No one can cross His will or act against His command.

This world is the stage on which each one acts the role He has allotted him, on

which each one struts about for the time given by Him and each one has to obey

His instructions without fail or falter. We may think in pride that we have

done this or that by ourselves, but, the truth is, everything happens as He

wills."

When Arjuna concluded, Dharmaraja thought aloud. "Arjuna! Many motives dragged

us into the Mahabharatha War. We tried our best through diplomacy and peaceful

means to regain our kingdom, our status and what was legitimately our due. We

bore patiently many insults and discomfitures. We had to wander in the jungle

as exiles. Through Divine Grace, we escaped many a plot laid to kill us. They

tried arson and poison on us. They heaped public ignominy on our Queen. They

broke our hearts by systematic ill-treatment.

Still, there are but three reasons for the final fight every where: wealth,

dominion, and women. But, take the instance of the Yadavas. They had no such

reason to fall out among themselves in mortal combat. It appears as if destiny

was the only over-powering reason for this cataclysm.

The Yadavas were rolling in plenty. They had no lack of grain or gold. And their

wives? They were models of virtue, faithful and devoted. They never deviated

from the wishes or commands of their husbands. They could not bring insult or

discomfiture to their lords from any quarter. How then could faction and

internecine strife raise their heads so suddenly among them?"

Arjuna replied: "My dear brother! We see the outer circumstances, the processes

which result in the final event and in our ignorance we judge that this set of

causes produced these effects. We guess the nature of emotions and feelings

from what we gauge from events. But circumstances, events, emotions and

feelings are all simply 'instruments' in His hands, serving His will and His

purpose. When the moment comes, He uses them for His plan, and brings about the

fight He has willed. He is the embodiment of Kala or Time. He comes as the

Master of Time and, through some denouement of the plot, He finishes the drama.

That which brought about birth brings about death too. He finds reason for both,

in the same degree. Do we seek to know why there was a birth? Then, why seek to

know why death occurs? It occurred, that is enough. Reason-finding is a

superfluous occupation.

He causes beings to create beings and He causes beings to end beings. Bodies get

born, bodies die, nothing more serious happens at birth or death. This has been

taught us often by Vasudeva. Why then should we doubt or deviate from the

steady courage He has sought to give us?

You might say that it is not just, that He who caused us to be born should be

the person who kills us. Between birth and death, man too has some capacity to

earn punya and papa, merit and demerit and this has some influence on the

course of events. Within these limits, the Lord plays the game of football with

birth and death, and life.

Birth and death are two high cliffs between which the river of life flows. The

force of Atmic Faith (Atmasakthi) is the bridge that spans the chasm and for

those who have developed that force and faith, floods are of no concern. With

Atmasakthi as their safe support, they can reach the other bank, braving all

dangers. 0, King! All this is but a grand puppet-show by that Master-Director.

The Yadavas today, like the Kauravas yesterday, had no individuality of their

own, there is no use blaming either.

Can this material body, composed of the five elements, - earth, water, fire, air

and ether - move or act without His prompting? No. It is His amusement, to cause

one to be born through another and to cause one to die through another. Else,

how can you explain the fact of the snake laying eggs and warming them to bring

out the young and then, eat the very children thus born? Even among them, it

eats up only those whose term is ended, so to say, not every one of the

snakelings. The fish that live in the waters get caught in nets when their term

ends; why, the small fish get eaten by the big ones and they in their turn get

swallowed by even bigger ones. This is His law. The snake eats the frog, the

peacock eats the snake, this is His game. Who can probe into the reasons for

this? The truth is: 'Every single event is the decision of this Balagopala.'

We cannot sense the mystery of His play. We have failed to understand it. There

is no profit in worrying over that failure, now. With that deluding human form,

He moved with us, mixed with us, dined with us, behaved as if He was our kinsman

and well-wisher, our friend and guide, and saved us from many a calamity that

threatened to overwhelm us. He showered His Divine mercy on us and solved for

us the toughest problems that defied solution, in remarkably simple ways.

During all this time that He was near and dear to us, we were carried away by

pride that we had His grace; we did not try to fill ourselves with that Supreme

joy, to dive deep into the flood of His grace. We sought from Him mere external

victory and temporal benefits; we ignored the vast treasure with which we could

have tilled our hearts. We never contemplated on His real reality.

He guarded us as if we five were the five vital airs (Panchaprana) for Him. He

came forward to help us and lead us in every undertaking, however small, and He

fulfilled it for us. Brother! What shall I say? We might be born many times

over, but we can never get again such a friend and kinsman. I have received

from Him love much more intense than that of a mother, a love which no mother

can confer.

On many an occasion He bore the burdens of the Pandavas as His own and to

relieve us of the bother. He used to plan measures within minutes and carry

them on to final success. It is due to the gift of His grace that we Pandavas

have survived in this world to this day.

Why repeat a thousand things separately? Every drop of blood coursing through

these veins is but a drop from the shower of His grace. Every muscle is but a

lump of His Love, every bone and cartilage is but a piece of His mercy. Unable

to understand this secret, we strutted about, boasting "I achieved this", and

"I accomplished this". Now, it has become clear to us that without Him we are

but bags of skin.

Of course, the fate of all men is the same. They forget that the All-ruling

All-knowing Almighty plays with them as puppets; they assume that they are the

actual doers and enjoyers; like me they are plunged in ignorance of the basic

truth. When we who are far-famed heroes and warriors are in this sad plight,

what can we say of ordinary folk who have no chance of awakening into this

Jnana?

For this, the sad experience I had on my way is the "direct proof." Thus said

Arjuna and fell back, leaning against the chair that was behind him, for he

could not bear the separation from his life-long support and guide, Krishna.

Bhajan: Mahâmantra

 

Hotjobs: Enter the "Signing Bonus" Sweepstakes

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...