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Krishna, Champion of the Oppressed
(From the Hindus)
When, if ever, is it right to go to war?
ACCORDING TO A HINDU STORY, long ago there came a time when
the people became jealous and deceitful, and the leaders oppressive. Priests
became insincere and some stole the gifts brought to the gods. Kings were
tyrannical. Tribes and nations were continually warring one against another.
Then Brahman, the Eternal One, decided to give mankind a special helper,
a human Savior who would live among men and protect and guide them and
teach them the way to live. And so it happened that one day a divine child
was born. At his birth, angels appeared, singing praises. They bowed down
before him and named him Krishna, the Savior of Mankind, the incarnation
of the Eternal Brahman.
Now Krishna of course was a human being as well as a god. He was born
in India where at that time everyone belonged to a "caste."
His was the Warrior caste, which meant that his dharma or destiny
must be fulfilled in war and struggle.
But as a child Krishna did not seem to be a warlike person. He lived happily
with other children, wandering with them over the fields and woods, and
helping to tend the cows. He learned to play the flute, and often played
it while his young friends danced together. A strong boy, he soon became
a favorite among his friends, perhaps because he always seemed to use
his strength to protect the weak. Many tales have been told of Krishna's
gallant and miraculous deeds during his youth. Always these were done
in order to protect some innocent sufferer, or to save some person or
animal in trouble.
As Krishna grew older, he left his happy life as a cowherd, became a student
of the sacred books, and gave himself to a life of simple living and fasting.
His teacher was amazed at his brilliance and devotion.
After finishing his studies, Krishna became the champion of one tribe
or another which had been unjustly treated. Always his championship was
of the weak against the strong and the evil. If happiness were to be spread
among all the people, cruelty had to be destroyed even if war must be
waged to achieve this. Thus Krishna, born into the Warrior caste, was
true to his dharma.
As the years passed, the warring groups in India grew stronger and larger
and the battles became fiercer until India became divided into two warring
nations. One nation was ruled by the evil king, Duryodhana; the other,
by the good king, Yudisthira, long remembered for his justice and good-will.
Finally, the selfish and ambitious King Duryodhana banished the good King
Yudisthira and his people into exile and refused to allow even five villages
to be shared with them.
After Yudisthira had tried unsuccessfully for thirteen years to settle
the matter without a major battle, preparations were begun for an all-out
war between the armies of the two kings. Both sides came to Krishna asking
for his help. Duryodhana, the evil king, asked Krishna for armies. Arjuna,
the brother of the good King Yudisthira, asked not for armies but for
Krishna alone, saying "Friendship is the strongest weapon in the
world. I want you for my charioteer." Both kings were granted their
wishes, and Duryodhana chuckled at Arjuna's foolishness.
Not long after, in the red dawning of the morning, the two great armies
faced each other on the sandy plains of Kurukshetra. The evil king was
in his chariot at the head of one great army, now even larger than before.
Arjuna, brother of the good king, was in his chariot at the head of the
other army. But with Arjuna stood the god Krishna as charioteer.
Arjuna looked about and his heart grew faint, for he saw the faces of
fathers and grandfathers, teachers, uncles, sons, brothers, grandsons,
and friends. He spoke despairingly to Krishna:
"O Krishna, Krishnal Now that I look on all my own kins-n;en, arrayed
for battle, my limbs have become weak, my mouth, is parching, my body
trembles, my hair stands upright, my skin seems to be burning! My bow
slips from my hand and my brain is whirling round and round. What can
I hope for from this killing of kinsmen? What do I want with victory and
empire?"
"Krishna, hearing the prayers of all men,
Tell me how we can hope to be happy
Slaying the sons of Dritarashtra?"
Evil they may be, worst of the wicked,
Yet if we kill them, our sin is greater.
* * * * * * * * * * *
"What is the crime I am planning, O Krishna?
Murder most hateful, murder of brothers!
Am I indeed so greedy for greatness?
Rather let the evil children come with their weapons
Against me in battle!
I shall not struggle, I shall not strike them.
Now let them kill me, that will be better."
Having spoken so feelingly, Arjuna threw aside his arrows and his bow.
He stood as if already mortally wounded, his heart torn with sorrow.
Krishna was silent for a while. Arjuna tried once more to speak. 'Which
is worst," he cried out again, "to win this war, or to lose
it? I scarcely know. My mind gropes about in dark-ness. I cannot see where
my duty lies. Krishna, I beg you to tell me frankly and clearly what I
ought to do. I am your disciple. I have put myself into your hands. Show
me the way."
Krishna then answered: "Your words are wise, Arjuna, but your sorrow
is for nothing. The truly wise person mourns neither for the living nor
for the dead. Bodies are said to die, but THAT which possesses the body
is eternal. It cannot be limited or destroyed. The real life within each
one cannot be wounded by weapons, nor burned by fire, nor dried by the
wind, nor wet by water. It is deathless and birth-less. It is indestructible.
Therefore, never mourn for anyone.
"And besides, Arjuna, you were' born in the warring caste. Fighting
to protect, fighting to save others from oppression, is your duty. If
you turn aside from this righteous way, you will be a sinner.
"Die, Arjuna, and you win Nirvana. Conquer and you enjoy the earth.
Stand up now, and resolve to fight. Realize that pleasure and pain, gain
and loss, victory and defeat are one and the same; then go into battle."
So Arjuna, the disciple of Krishna, rose and obeyed. A conch was blown
and the blare of a thousand conches responded. Arrows shot through the
air like meteors; the sun itself was shrouded in the dust of the battle.
Horses leaped; men ran at each other with swords. Hundreds, even thou-sands,
were wounded or slain.
With each new dawn, the battle was begun afresh, day after day for eighteen
days. Finally, the evil King Duryodhana was slain, and Arjuna and Yudisthira
were the victors.
In the early dawn after the battle, the plain was grim with the bloody
burden of thousands of dead. It was a weary sight for miles around. Weeping
wives searched for the bodies of their lost husbands. Mothers mourned
over their dead sons. An old grandmother sat on the ground and wept. UO
shame on prowess" she cried. "Shame on courage! Shame on war
that leaves weeping women to bear the burden of grief"
In spite of all this, because of the terrible war and the courageous victory
of Arjuna, there was finally peace in the land. Yudisthira was crowned
king of both nations. He reigned as undisputed ruler of all India for
thirty-six years and in his time there was justice throughout the kingdom.
The people saw in Yudisthira the ideals which Lord Krishna had taught
them to attain.
"He did not hate any living creature.
He was friendly and compassionate to all,
He freed himself of the delusion of "Me" and "Mine,"
He accepted pleasure and pain with tranquility,
He was forgiving, ever contented, self-controlled,
He was neither vain nor anxious about the result of his actions."
(Based on extracts from an unpublished manuscript, "India's
Story of Krishna," by Sophia Lyon Fahs. This was based in turn on
Bhagavad-Gita: The Song of God, translated by Swami Prabhavananda and
Christopher Isherwood (Hollywood, California: Vedanta Society of Southern
California, latest edition 1972). Extracts are quoted with the permission
of the Vedanta Society of Southern California.)
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