Namaste!
Forests have been an integral part of our epics,
Ramayana and Mahabharata. In Mahabharata, the Pandavas spend almost half their lifetime leading
simple lives in forests, either by choice or due to the circumstances.
After a curse, King Pandu renounced the throne and
handed it to Dhritarastra. He left Hastinapura with his wives Kunti and Madri
and traveled through mountains and forests to settle near the Satasringa
mountains (a range with a hundred peaks). There, he performed penance for many
years. The Pandava brothers were born in this region and grew up there until
Pandu’s death. They trained under Suka (son of King Saryati), who was doing
tapasya in the same area.
Arjuna was fourteen when Pandu died, and Madri chose
to join him, leaving Kunti to care for the five brothers. The rishis decided to
take Kunti and the Pandavas to Hastinapura since it was their rightful home.
This led to insecurity and jealousy in Dhuryodhana, who thought he was the only
heir to the entire kingdom.
A few years later, Dhuryodhana planned to kill the Pandavas by burning them in the House of Lac in Varanavata (this was some years after he fed poison to Bhima, bundled up his unconscious body, and drowned it in Ganga with Karna's help). The Pandavas escaped thanks to Vidura’s alertness (who also knew about the other attempts on the Pandavas' lives and the 'accidental' death of a charioteer).
They spent the next few months living in a
forest. Here, Bhima killed the cannibal demon Hidimba. He also married the
demon’s twin sister, Hidimba/ Hidimbi, who professed her love for him. The duo
had a son, Ghatotkacha (more details in the later post).
The Pandavas and Kunti traveled across a few
villages and were still in disguise during the temporary stay in Pnachala
kingdom and the wedding to Draupadi, the princess of Panchala.
Again a few years later, Yudhistira lost
Indraprastha and all his wealth to Shakuni in the dice game. This time, the
five Pandava brothers and Draupadi shift to the Kamakya forest for their
twelve-year exile (plus a year in disguise).
They don’t stay in the same place, though. The four
Pandavas and Draupadi go on thirta yatra (pilgrimage) during the five years
Arjuna spent in heaven with Indra. Later, they stay in a few more forests and
return to Kamakya forest toward the end of exile.
Vanaprastha is considered the third stage of one’s
life, where we renounce worldly relationships and materialistic desires to lead
simple lives and spend the remaining time in meditation. Satyavati and her
daughters-in-law (Ambika and Ambalika), Dhritarastra, Gandhari, Kunti, Vidura,
Sanjaya, Rukmini Satyabhama, etc., followed the same when the end was near. The
last stage is Sanyasa.
This forest lover couldn’t find a better topic for
the alphabet!
Hop over here to get a super short summary of the story of the Pandavas.
I’m participating in #BlogchatterA2Z.
The AI images are made on Bing.
I've never heard of this story before, so thank you for sharing! I love forests, too, both in real life and when reading fiction. They can be used to instill anxiety or to calm the mind, to generate fear or joy. It's wonderful!
ReplyDeleteThank you and welcome, Torie. :) Yes, forests can be calming and frightening. That's why I love them!
DeleteAah, to imagine how forested the Subcontinent must have been back in those days!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! It would have been so wonderful!
DeleteOfcourse, F had to be forests. :D Love it, babe. Reminds me, when is your book releasing?
ReplyDeleteThank you, sweets. :D Mostly in June.
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