The
innermost narrative kernel of the Mahabharata tells
the story of two sets of paternal first cousins--the
five sons of the deceased king Pandu [pronounced
PAAN-doo] (the five Pandavas [said as PAAN-da-va-s]) and
the one hundred sons of blind King Dhritarashtra [Dhri-ta-RAASH-tra]
(the 100 hundred Dhartarashtras [Dhaar-ta-RAASH-tras])--who
became bitter rivals, and opposed each other in war for
possession of the ancestral Bharata [BHAR-a-ta] kingdom
with its capital in the "City of the
Elephant," Hastinapura [HAAS-ti-na-pu-ra], on the
Ganga river in north central India. What is dramatically
interesting within this simple opposition is the large
number of individual agendas the many characters pursue,
and the numerous personal conflicts, ethical puzzles,
subplots, and plot twists that give the story a
strikingly powerful development.
The five
sons of Pandu were actually fathered by five Gods (sex
was mortally dangerous for Pandu, because of a curse)
and these heroes were assisted throughout the story by
various Gods, seers, and brahmins, including the seer
Krishna Dvaipayana Vyasa [VYAA-sa] (who later became the
author of the epic poem telling the whole of this
story), who was also their actual grandfather (he had
engendered Pandu and the blind Dhrtarastra upon their
nominal father's widows in order to preserve the
lineage). The one hundred Dhartarashtras, on the other
hand, had a grotesque, demonic birth, and are said more
than once in the text to be human incarnations of the
demons who are the perpetual enemies of the Gods. The
most dramatic figure of the entire Mahabharata, however,
is Krishna Vasudeva [Vaa-su-DAY-va], who was the supreme
God Vishnu himself, descended to earth in human form to
rescue Law, Good Deeds, Right, and Virtue (all of these
words refer to different aspects of "dharma").
Krishna Vasudeva was the cousin of both parties, but he
was a friend and advisor to the Pandavas, became the
brother-in-law of Arjuna [AR-ju-na] Pandava, and served
as Arjuna's mentor and charioteer in the great war.
Krishna Vasudeva is portrayed several times as eager to
see the purgative war occur, and in many ways the
Pandavas were his human instruments for fulfilling that
end.
The
Dhartarashtra party behaved viciously and brutally
toward the Pandavas in many ways, from the time of their
early youth onward. Their malice displayed itself most
dramatically when they took advantage of the eldest
Pandava, Yudhishthira [Yu-DHISH-thir-a] (who had by now
become the universal ruler of the land) in a game of
dice: The Dhartarashtras 'won' all his brothers,
himself, and even the Pandavas' common wife Draupadi [DRAO-pa-dee]
(who was an incarnation of the richness and productivity
of the Goddess "Earthly-and-Royal Splendor,"
Shri [Shree]); they humiliated all the Pandavas and
physically abused Draupadi; they drove the Pandava party
into the wilderness for twelve years, and the twelve
years had to be followed by the Pandavas' living
somewhere in society, in disguise, without being
discovered for one more year.
The
Pandavas fulfilled their part of that bargain, but the
villainous leader of the Dhartarashtra party, Duryodhana
[Dur-YODH-ana], was unwilling to restore the Pandavas to
their half of the kingdom when the thirteen years had
expired. Both sides then called upon their many allies
and two large armies arrayed themselves on 'Kuru's
Field' (Kuru was one of the eponymous ancestors of the
clan), eleven divisions in the army of Duryodhana
against seven divisions for Yudhishthira. Much of the
action in the Mahabharata is accompanied by
discussion and debate among various interested parties,
and the most famous sermon of all time, Krishna
Vasudeva's ethical lecture and demonstration of his
divinity to his charge Arjuna (the justly famous Bhagavad
Gita [BHU-gu-vud GEE-ta]) occurred in the Mahabharata
just prior to the commencement of the hostilities of the
war. Several of the important ethical and theological
themes of the Mahabharata are tied together in
this sermon, and this "Song of the Blessed
One" has exerted much the same sort of powerful and
far-reaching influence in Indian Civilization that the
New Testament has in Christendom. The Pandavas won the
eighteen day battle, but it was a victory that deeply
troubled all except those who were able to understand
things on the divine level (chiefly Krishna, Vyasa, and
Bhishma [BHEESH-ma], the Bharata patriarch who was
emblematic of the virtues of the era now passing away).
The Pandavas' five sons by Draupadi, as well as
Bhimasena [BHEE-ma-SAY-na] Pandava's and Arjuna
Pandava's two sons by two other mothers (respectively,
the young warriors Ghatotkaca [Ghat-OT-ka-cha] and
Abhimanyu [A-bhi-MUN-you ("mun" rhymes with
"nun")]), were all tragic victims in the war.
Worse perhaps, the Pandava victory was won by the
Pandavas slaying, in succession, four men who were
quasi-fathers to them: Bhishma, their teacher Drona [DROE-na],
Karna [KAR-na] (who was, though none of the Pandavas
knew it, the first born, pre-marital, son of their
mother), and their maternal uncle Shalya (all four of
these men were, in succession, 'supreme commander' of
Duryodhana's army during the war). Equally troubling was
the fact that the killing of the first three of these
'fathers,' and of some other enemy warriors as well, was
accomplished only through 'crooked stratagems' (jihmopayas),
most of which were suggested by Krishna Vasudeva as
absolutely required by the circumstances.
The
ethical gaps were not resolved to anyone's satisfaction
on the surface of the narrative and the aftermath of the
war was dominated by a sense of horror and malaise.
Yudhishthira alone was terribly troubled, but his sense
of the war's wrongfulness persisted to the end of the
text, in spite of the fact that everyone else, from his
wife to Krishna Vasudeva, told him the war was right and
good; in spite of the fact that the dying patriarch
Bhishma lectured him at length on all aspects of the
Good Law (the Duties and Responsibilities of Kings,
which have rightful violence at their center; the
ambiguities of Righteousness in abnormal circumstances;
and the absolute perspective of a beatitude that
ultimately transcends the oppositions of good versus
bad, right versus wrong, pleasant versus unpleasant,
etc.); in spite of the fact that he performed a grand
Horse Sacrifice as expiation for the putative wrong of
the war. These debates and instructions and the account
of this Horse Sacrifice are told at some length after
the massive and grotesque narrative of the battle; they
form a deliberate tale of pacification (prashamana,
shanti) that aims to neutralize the inevitable
miasma of the war.
In the
years that follow the war Dhritarashtra and his queen
Gandhari [Gaan-DHAAR-ee], and Kunti [Koon-tee], the
mother of the Pandavas, lived a life of asceticism in a
forest retreat and died with yogic calm in a forest
fire. Krishna Vasudeva and his always unruly clan
slaughtered each other in a drunken brawl thirty-six
years after the war, and Krishna's soul dissolved back
into the Supreme God Vishnu (Krishna had been born when
a part of Vishnu took birth in the womb of Krishna's
mother). When they learned of this, the Pandavas
believed it time for them to leave this world too and
they embarked upon the 'Great Journey,' which involved
walking north toward the polar mountain, that is toward
the heavenly worlds, until one's body dropped dead. One
by one Draupadi and the younger Pandavas died along the
way until Yudhishthira was left alone with a dog that
had followed him all the way. Yudhishthira made it to
the gate of heaven and there refused the order to drive
the dog back, at which point the dog was revealed to be
an incarnate form of the God Dharma (the God who was
Yudhishthira's actual, physical father), who was there
to test Yudhishthira's virtue. Once in heaven
Yudhishthira faced one final test of his virtue: He saw
only the Dhartarashtras in heaven, and he was told that
his brothers were in hell. He insisted on joining his
brothers in hell, if that be the case! It was then
revealed that they were really in heaven, that this
illusion had been one final test for him. So ends the Mahabharata!