May 10, 2007
Fascinating similarity between Krishna and Jesus
I was reading this news report on an archaeologist discovering King Herod's tomb and decided to find out more about King Herod.
It turns out that he is most remembered notorious for ordering the killing of every single male child under two years of age in Bethlehem after he was told that the King of Jews would be born there. Joseph and Mary, parents of Jesus (who was considered to be born as the King of Jews) fled to Egypt to escape persecution.
The first thing this reminded me of was Kamsa's actions after the prophecy that the 8th child of Vasudeva and Devaki would kill him. He killed the first six children born to Vasudeva & Devaki before Balarama was transported into Rohini's womb and Vasudeva took Krishna to Vrindavan to escape Kamsa's fury.
The other similarity is that Jesus is known as the Good Shepherd but Krishna is never referreed to as the Good Cowherd!
Labels: christianity, hinduism, krishna, mythology
Posted @ 9:32 PM
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March 12, 2007
Rama was a 'Madrasi'!
A little more than a month ago, I wondered about why the Ramayana and Mahabharata had dark skinned heroes. Sandeep wrote a lovely follow-up post where he said colour was not important in ancient Indian thought.
I read an interesting news item today in 'The Hindu' where a historian, Suvira Jaiswal, was quoted as saying that Rama seemed to be a Dravidian creation and over a period of time, the concept/persona travelled up towards northern India and became well established there.
This is very interesting, because one of my conjectures was that it was possible that the authors of the two epics based their characters on some super archers in south India.
Labels: epics, hindu, mahabharatha, mythology, ramayana
Posted @ 5:18 PM
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January 28, 2007
Heroes in the epics
I have no idea why this thought suddenly came to mind today.
In the Ramayana and the Mahabharatha, the heroes, the ace archers, are invariably dark skinned: Rama, Arjuna and Krishna in particular. Karna can be seen as an exception. In any case, he wasn't one of the protagonists. I found this to be too much of a coincidence.
I'm making one assumption here - that the Aryan invasion theory is right, and that the Dravidians were a bunch of dark-skinned folks unlike the fair-skinned Aryans who came from Caucasia, and the Aryans pushed the Dravidians further down south.
I believe that the Ramayana and the Mahabharatha were nothing more than fantastic stories, the Mahabharatha in particular being a superbly complex story. They aren't for real. If someone (Valmiki or Vyasa, to give them names) did write these stories, why'd he/she pick dark skinned characters as the heroes? During their wanderings, did they come across supreme bowmen from parts of southern India and they just had to incorporate them as heroes in the stories that they were weaving?
Let's take a counter-view. Assuming that the two epics were in fact actual events which were chronicled by Valmiki and Vyasa, the whopping majority of the characters involved in the epics were Kshatriyas and the events predominantly occured north of the Vindhyas (peninsular India makes very few appearances in the Mahabharatha and would perhaps not even have featured in the Ramayana had Ravana's base been in modern-day Bangladesh).
This makes it even tougher to explain how dark-skinned chaps became heroes in the epics since most folks in northern/western India were fair skinned. The likes of Krishna, Arjuna and Rama are exceptions. Then again, maybe their skin was just a shade darker than the others and poetic license was liberally used to make them blue/blue-black in colour! But, if they were exceptions, isn't it still too much of a coincidence that all three major protagonists were dark coloured?
Your thoughts?
Labels: epics, hindu, mahabharatha, mythology, ramayana
Posted @ 10:17 PM
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