LORD KRISHNA THE PRINCE
Posted by Unknown
On his return to Mathura as a
young man, Krishna overthrew and killed his maternal uncle, Kansa, after
quelling several assassination attempts from Kansa's followers. He reinstated
Kansa's father, Ugrasena, as the
king of the Yadavas and became a leading prince at the court. During this period, he became a friend
of Arjuna and the other Pandava princes of the Kuru kingdom, who were his cousins.
Later, he took his Yadava subjects to the city of Dwaraka (in modern Gujarat) and established his own
kingdom there.
Krishna
married Rukmini, the Vidarbha princess, by abducting her, at her
request, from her proposed wedding with Shishupala.
He married eight queens—collectively called the Ashtabharya—including Rukmini, Satyabhama, Jambavati, Kalindi, Mitravinda, Nagnajiti, Bhadra and Lakshmana. Krishna subsequently married 16,000 or 16,100 maidens who were held captive by the demon Narakasura, to save their honour. Krishna
killed the demon and released them all. According to social custom of the time,
all of the captive women were degraded, and would be unable to marry, as they
had been under the Narakasura's control. However Krishna married them to
reinstate their status in the society. This symbolic wedding with 16,100
abandoned daughters was more of a mass women rehabilitation. In Vaishnava traditions, Krishna's
wives are forms of the goddess Lakshmi— consort of Vishnu, or special souls who attained this qualification after
many lifetimes of austerity,
while his two queens, Rukmani and Satyabhama, are expansions of Lakshmi.
When
Yudhisthira was assuming the title of emperor, he had invited all the great
kings to the ceremony and while paying his respects to them, he started with
Krishna because he considered Krishna to be the greatest of them all. While it
was a unanimous feeling amongst most present at the ceremony that Krishna
should get the first honours, his cousin Shishupala felt otherwise and started berating
Krishna. Due to a vow given to Shishupal's mother, Krishna forgave a hundred
verbal abuses by Shishupal, and upon the one hundred and first, he assumed his
Virat (universal) form and killed Shishupal with his Chakra. The blind king Dhritarashtra also obtained divine vision to be able
to see this form of Krishna during the time when Duryodana tried to capture
Krishna when he came as a peace bearer before the great Mahabharat War.
Essentially, Shishupala and Dantavakra were both re-incarnations of Vishnu's
gate-keepers Jaya and Vijaya, who
were cursed to be born on Earth, to be delivered by the Vishnu back to Vaikuntha.
0 comments: