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Be the new Bhishma, Drona, Karna, Arjuna

Hindu warriors can save Hindus only

“Shapadapi” and “Sharadapi” – power of knowledge and knowledge of power – its cultivation happened to be the greatest manifestation of Hindu Dharma in ancient world. Time has changed from bad to worst and now all these remain in words but not in deeds in any case.

In the absence of which, Hindus are turning into better slaves to Islamic iconoclasts marauding the whole of India for more than a millennium at a stretch. What has made Hindus sunk? Doesn’t one feel strange if he reckons Bhisma, Karna or Arjuna as ancestors of contemporary Hindus? Persons who were known for their valor and military prowess are being succeeded by descendants – coward, frivolous and escapists in every capacity.

Modern Hindus prefer to camouflage their inability, cowardice to preserve Dharma and their coreligionists by adhering to the gospel of non-violence – a creed that has failed outrageously to save Hindus. Even if the same people remain prepared to outdo their competitors mercilessly (and ready to kill even) in their own professional spheres, they fail to save their kith and kin along with posterity from the Islamists forever and a day.

Hindus do not have the simplest idea that their excellence and also future are ruined always by the Muslim radicals if they fail to offer vigorous resistance. Hindus have been going on thus for centuries and unfortunately, do not appear to rectify their mistakes yet. They do not care to take lessons from history or go through the pages demonstrating how great Hindu centers of learning like Takshashila, Nalanda along with myriad others, prosperous Hindu empires and business centers like Vijayanagara and numerous others were despoiled and turned into mere ashes by the same Islamists.

None knows when Hindus will regain their valor, martial past and rise as a truly independent race once again. It is the call of the day; so what is expected of Hindus that they have got to become newest incarnations of Bhishma, Drona, Karna or Arjuna.                   

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Be the new Bhishma, Drona, Karna, Arjuna


Hindu warriors can save Hindus only

Karna

Karna was a great warrior, in many ways greater than Arjuna. They may have been equal as archers, but physically, Karna was by far the stronger of the two. And even in sticking to one’s principles, Karna appeared more steadfast compared with Arjuna. But in Karna’s life there was one fatal flaw. He made his friendship and loyalty to Duryodhan higher than anything else, even higher than right and wrong, and even higher than God. While loyalty is a great value, in such cases when it overrides one’s sense of dharma and even the direct calling of the Divine in the form of Shri Krishna, such loyalty leads one to a tragic end.

Karna used all his strength to serve his friend Duryodhan, without even one selfish thought for himself. However, his loyalty was so blind that he would even follow his friend when he was doing something totally wrong, selfish and harmful to others. Karna knew what he was doing was wrong and paid the price for it.

Bhishma

Bhishma was another person who never performed a selfish action in his whole life. He was mighty, learned and respected. But he too ended up fighting on the side of adharma, and came to a tragic end. He was actually an impediment to the establishment of a righteous kingdom. Why? Because he put his personal oath on a pedestal and made it the focus and obsession of his life.

That oath was that he would unquestioningly follow and do the bidding of whoever was the king of Hastinapur (Delhi). This vow, he would never break as long as he lived, even when it involved fighting his own beloved nephews who he knew had done nothing wrong.

Sticking to a vow is important, especially today when people make promises and break them the very next day. But the Mahabharata demonstrates that if attachment to a personal vow becomes an insurmountable impediment that prevents one from doing what is clearly the right, and ends up making a person serve evil, such a vow should be discarded and set aside.

Bhishma put his personal vow above anything else, even when that vow became an instrument of evil. He disregarded Krishna’s advice, which was that to drop the vow for the greater good.


Drona

Drona was an employee of the king of Hastinapur, who happened to be Dhitirashtra, the father of Duryodhana. He was employed to teach all the princes of that kingdom in the art of warfare and statecraft, and was considered the very greatest teacher of the era. For his services, he was remunerated handsomely. Before he got this job, he was very poor and therefore was very grateful to the King for employing him.

When Duryodhan was doing wrong, Drona was fully aware of it. On some occasions he even tried to stop Duryodhan, at which Duryodhan would say: “Do not bite the hand that feeds you.”

When the battle finally dawned, Drona fought on Duryodhan’s behalf and was eventually slain in a scheme engineered by Krishna. Drona, despite being an outstanding warrior, and well versed in morality, put his loyalty towards his employer before the more important and fundamental question of dharma.

Arjuna

Arjuna was a great man. Yet he had weaknesses that were actually absent in Karna, Bhishma and Drona. He was in some ways foolhardy, saying and doing several stupid things that could have landed his brothers and himself in serious trouble.

For example, at one point, Arjuna had made a vow that he would take the life of anybody who insulted his ‘Gandiva bow’, which he was exceedingly proud of. During the Mahabharata war, it happened to be Arjuna’s eldest brother and leader, Yuddhistir, who dealt the fatal insult.


Arjuna drew his sword and was about to kill his own brother, and was restrained only by Krishna’s presence. Instead of killing Yuddhistir, Arjuna instead insulted him in public. But then, Arjuna felt bad for insulting such a virtuous person as Yuddhistir, and said that he would commit suicide as there was no point even being alive after doing something so vile as insulting his own brother in public! Once again, it was only Krishna’s presence which restrained Arjuna. Krishna eventually talked Arjuna out of suicide, but Arjuna was sad that he had not kept his own word,and felt very bad. Krishna gave Arjuna a loophole. According to dharma, praising yourself in public is a sin that is as bad as one’s own death. So Krishna said to Arjuna that just praise yourself in public, and your vow will be fulfilled. And thus were the lives of both Arjuna and Yuddhistir saved!

Yet despite this foolhardy streak in his character, Arjuna is the one who is etched upon the heart of humanity as the ideal to which to aspire.

This story illustrates that while Arjuna was far from perfect, he had one overriding quality which sets him above and apart from the others. To Arjuna, it was Krishna’s words that were absolute. He would follow Krishna’s words even at the expense of other principles or promises that he held dear. Therefore he had the grace and favour of Krishna’s guidance throughout his life.

Therefore, Arjuna’s fate was to be the hero of the era, and the instrument of God in being the restorer of dharma to society, rather than a tragic figure who ended up wasting their huge life potential in fighting on behalf of a fake cause. Arjuna put Krishna as his highest guide and ideal, and despite his faults, stands out as the most successful and glorious of the four.
Sources: Excerpts from

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