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Hindu Article- Loyalty to Dharma

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Loyalty to Dharma

 

It is disheartening at times to see the irony of virtuous people

wedded to Dharma suffering while those who violate laws prospering.

It is necessary to look up to role models during such life situations

without compromising on the standards one has set for oneself. It is

essential also to remember that human life is a mixed blessing, as

one has to experience both joys and sorrows according to one's Karma.

Yudhishthira's life is a case in point.

 

The vicissitudes that the Pandavas faced in their lives were many and

they were able to overcome them by Lord Krishna's singular grace and

Yudhishthira's uncompromising allegiance to Dharma.

 

During their long years of exile in the forest there were several

instances when this eldest of the Pandavas blamed himself for the

suffering that all of them had to undergo, particularly Draupadi.

During such moments of self-reproach it was the sages whom they met

who comforted him by relating the lives of other kings who had

endured greater hardships.

 

There were many encounters, which tested his fidelity to Dharma. One

such was when his father Yamadharma came in the guise of a Yaksha to

see for him-self Yudhisthira's commitment to righteousness. The other

Pandavas had fallen dead one by one when they disregarded the

Yaksha's instruction to answer his questions before quenching their

thirst in the lake he was guarding. Though beside himself with grief

to see all his valiant brothers lying dead without any trace of

fight, Yudhishthira when accosted by the Yaksha patiently answered

all the questions he put to him. This interlude, which is known

as "Yaksha prasna", is a digest on Dharma and considered as a classic

in this genre.

 

Among their exchanges this is a pointer to man's existential

dilemma: "What is the most wonderful thing in the world?" The Pandava

replied, "Day after day there enter into the `temple of death'

countless lives. Looking at this spectacle, the rest of them, those

who remain, believe themselves to be permanent, immortal. Can

anything be more wonderful than this?" the Yaksha brought back to

life all his brothers when Yudhishthira refused to swerve from Dharma

even in matter of life and death.

 

 

copy right: The Hindu-Daily

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