With the
passage of time and changing values, we have always interpreted historical
events in different light. When there are very motivated forces and no
resistance from the original thinkers and with sepoys ploughing their way into
the minds of the masses, fundamental shifts occur. This is exactly what has
been happening in India. Throughout many millennia, certain characters have
shaped the civilization. Bhagwan Rama is a great example. From the ideal
Maryada Purushottama, HE has been under assault by atheists, missionary zealots
and crass politicians, not to forget highly motivated western indologists who
want to twist everything through their perverted prism either to achieve some
social engineering on their terms or exhibiting a weird sense of prevarication.
To thwart these forces, the only defense, Sanatana Dharmists have is to get
connected to the itihasas and puranas. In
Subtle Dharma behind Vaali vadam, we saw in detail with the evidence from within
Valmiki Ramayana, how these false stories fall flat.
The Background of the
case:
Ekalavya has been a similar story. He is one of the side
characters that appear in the Mahabharata. Traditionally given as an example of
obedience to a Guru, today he has been projected as an unfortunate lower caste
being taken advantage of and worse still a plethora of organizations use his
name and story to peddle their deception. In this article, we will attempt to
demolish these fabricated, bigoted, twisted interpretations and shine light
using the original text and context. It is noteworthy to see the contrast in Ekal Foundation.
Rajiv Malhotra, a keen intellectual scholar, has
always been at the forefront in challenging both the motivated western
indologists and their motives and also the tamasic Indians who either are busy
getting converted into Sepoys or indifferent to all these forces at best.
Through his though provoking books – Breaking India, Being Different and Indra’s Net he has alerted the masses of these forces.
Only when one reads and understands The Battle for Sanskrit and reflects upon these forces, its’
vice grip and long reach, it becomes obvious.
To make the
case very evident, let us begin with some deliberate transformations of
Ekalavya. I came across this article written by a westernized Indian with very
poor to non-existent understanding of Itihasas – Ekalavya : A progressive Reading – by Sunita Viswanath. The worst part of the article was
the author claimed to use her Brahmin birth to condemn the way in which texts
are interpreted. She goes on to claim
“Hindu scriptures, like all religious texts, can be
interpreted to support whatever worldview one chooses. The fact that they are
constantly retold shows that Hindus have a time-honored tradition of scriptural
debate and reinterpretation. All religions are constantly evolving, and it is
up to us to reimagine texts and
traditions so they are relevant to our time.”
The irony is she and others need not
reimagine. All they need to do is correctly understand. No Hindu scripture
talks of discrimination and especially due to their birth. In Varnas – a journey to its roots, we studied about Varnas in detail. The ancient
Indian society always had given more credibility to the present actions,
attitude over the past. Even in karma theory, as outlined in detail in our
deliberation on free will vs fate, we saw how Sanchita karma or present action triumphs the prarabhda.
In her book,
Srimad Bhagavatam, Geeta Kasturi narrates her misunderstood version of Mahabharata
with her strong prejudiced opinion. What makes this irritating is, the author
uses her pedigree to peddle her opinion. We are concerned only about the
Ekalavya episode as given in the hyperlink. In many cases, these self styled
experts either use their misinterpretations or ignorance to shove wrong ideas
about their own roots.
To top this,
we have popular mass appeal holders who make a living by distorting these hoary
scriptures with such aesthetics like Devadutt Pattanaik, that the negative is
barely noticed by the masses as none of them have read it in the first
instance. The account of Ekalavya as narrated in Indian Mythology – Tales, Symbols and Rituals from the Heart of the
Subcontinent may
appear very appealing. Yet it is the author’s myth that is diffused right
through, be it gently masking the facts or reinterpreting it with the author’s
strong prejudice and training from his teacher Wendy Doninger. To get an insight of this highly prejudiced
scholar, read these links – History
of Ekalavya and Response
by Wendy.
Hence Rajiv
Malhotra’s definition of Sepoys can be replaced with the pictures of such
people. The sepoys operate under various monikers – activists, progressive
people, liberals, Dalit leaders, Christian missionaries, atheists, minority
appeasing politicians and the like. This army usually doesn’t generate the seed
thoughts. It is usually left to the motivated western indologists. The irony
and pain gets exaggerated when many donors financing such missions under the
charade of aiding correct interpretation of Indian scriptures are many wealthy
Indian donors.
As observed
at one end of the spectrum are folks who write with no proper understanding
like above and the other end, there are so many websites, story sites in the
name of propagating fables and mythologies of the world, give their cooked up versions of Ekalavya. But the best part is when the forces vie for spotlight by
using Ekalavya as a dalit hero to spearhead a movement.
The website quotes Dalit writer Shashikant Hingonekar,
“If you had kept your thumb, history would have happened somewhat differently. But you gave your thumb and history also became theirs. Ekalavya, since that day they have not even given you a glance. Forgive me, Ekalavya, I won’t be fooled now by their sweet words. My thumb will never be broken.”
Storytime:
In order to study these current
exploitations through deliberate misinterpretations, we must study the truth. One
must go to the original Mahabharata and acquaint oneself with the correct
version. For the real scholarly oriented, I encourage them to study the
Sanskrit version of Mahabharata. A better representation of this text, after
reconciling the differences found across the subcontinent is available thanks
to the Critical Edition from Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute (BORI). For a respectable English
translation let us dive into the chapter at AncientVoice, though I would highly encourage not sticking with the
English translations.
Let us also set some ground rules.
Always stick to Vyasa Mahabharata. There are numerous versions ranging from
Devadutt Pattanaik’s flavor to Sarala Mahabharata in Oriya and many more. Subjective
interpretation, regional affinities, temporal distortions and for more recent
authors, personal bias, all play a vital a huge part in the twists in the
narration. For Mahabharata, portions of the stories are correlated with both
Bhagavatam of Vyasa and Harivamsa, depending on the focus of the text. These
are the accepted as authentic traditional sources to augment the upakathas’
validity. We will for instance glean more about the genealogy of Ekalavya in
Harivamsa than in Mahabharata where he features.
The following is a composite of what
we know about Ekalavya from Mahabharata(Udyog Parva, Chapter 48) and Harivamsa.
Vyatraj Hiranyadhanus had a son Ekalavya and as nishadas, who were primarily
hunters lived in the forests, away from the then civilization. As Drona
instructed the Kuru princes, per Bhishma’s request, his fame attracted many
other princes who wanted to tap into his inexhaustible source of dhanurvidya. Ekalavya approached him as
well. Upon understanding his genealogy,
attitude and aptitude, Drona declined to take Ekalavya as his pupil, NOT BASED
ON HIS CASTE. Not giving up Ekalavya then proceeds to make a clay statue of
Drona and treats him as his guru. Due to his definiteness of his purpose and
his extreme devotion to his mental guru, all the skills of archery came
naturally to him which he honed it with lots of practice.
One day, the Kauravas and Pandavas
were on a hunting expedition, along with their royal servants and dogs. A dog
found the matted hair, filthy looking Ekalavya and started barking at him.
Ekalavya sent seven arrows at the dog’s mouth in rapid succession before it
could close it. This feat attracted the Pandavas who were eager to know about
this skilled archer. Upon learning from Ekalavya’s mouth that Drona was his
guru, they hurried to inform and parry more questions to Drona.
Arjuna (one who is wrongly misinterpreted
as a jealous character) approached Drona in privacy to clarify a doubt. Drona
upto this point never shied from his pride in having created Arjuna as a
supreme warrior. He had announced on numerous occasions that Arjuna was his
best disciple. Arjuna saw a challenge to this statement. Drona pondered about
this anomaly. They went to Ekalavya, who treated Drona with utmost respect. An
eager Ekalavya was informed by Drona that if he were his preceptor, then his
fee was overdue. Drona responded that if Ekalavya was really intent on a
preceptor fee, then his due will be his right thumb.
These cruel words were met with cheer
and unafflicted heart and Ekalavya cut his right thumb as an offering to Drona.
Ekalavya found that despite this massive loss, he had not lost his ability to
shoot arrows, but had most certainly lost his agility. Arjuna’s fever now left
him. Usually this is wrongly mentioned
as his fever of jealousy, but it was his fever that a Guru’s words must not go
false, which was at the root of his fever.
Ekalavya went on to become an ardent
follower of the Magadha King, Jarasandha. Jarasandha was allied to Kamsa as his
daughters were married to Kamsa. Jarasandha had a blinding enmity with Krishna
and attacked Mathura repeatedly. Krishna eliminated him with a clever scheme by
deploying Bhima against him. Following this, Ekalavya is supposed to have
participated in numerous wars against Krishna. A few even wrongly portray him
to be reincarnated as Drishtadhyumna, the nemesis of Drona. This is highly
wrong if one were to merely study Mahabharata. But his death is confirmed by
Krishna on the eve of Ghatotkacha’s death. Krishna informed Arjuna that
Jarasandha, Shishupala and Ekalavya were all eliminated by HIM so that their
hands will not strengthen the already numerically superior adharmic Kaurava
forces. Krishna mentions that a rock hurled by him ended Ekalavya’s life.
The case on Drona
- Rejected Ekalavya due to his caste.
- Was cruel in asking his thumb.
- Was over protective of Arjuna, also favored him too much.
- Was unfair and mean to Ekalavya.
Collapse of the false case
Caste based rejection: Drona was famed for not only his
mastery of weapons but also for his roots as a vedic scholar. He was well aware
of the polity of Bharat at that time. This was a time when powerful kings like
Jarasandha were still ruling. We can be certain that Kamsa was already
eliminated. The Kurus, who ruled around Hastinapur were confronting strong
challenges both frontally and through alliances against them. Hiranyadhanus was
a vassal of Jarasandha. We see the evidence of this by Ekalavya’s future role
before and after the passing away of Jarasandha. Ekalavya inherits a strong
anti Krishna position, due to his asuric background.
Though it
will be a stretch to expect Drona be aware of these future incidents, one can
definitely conclude that Drona weighed in Ekalavya’s political leanings, which
was very inimical to the Kurus, and by being a natural hunter, his grasp over
archery was much superior. Being loyal to the Kurus, Drona definitely did not
want to create a super powerful enemy. Drona’s weakness has been his loyalty to
his masters, we see this by his role in the Mahabharata war. Here we see the
same instincts at display when he rejected Ekalavya as a student.
The clear evidence of this is in the sloka
न स
तं
प्रतिजग्राह
नैषादिरिति
चिन्तयन्
| शिष्यं
धनुषि
धर्मज्ञस्तेषामेवान्ववेक्षया
As one who is clearly aware of dharma, he declined to
accept Ekalavya.
So where is the
idiotic, motivated and disillusioned allegation of Caste-based rejection?
The Breaking
India forces coupled by supremely ignorant interpreters who choose to neither
read the original or ignore it, go on this campaign rampage, taking full
advantage of the declining awareness of the original scriptural understanding
by the masses.
निषाद
– Nishad argument – The
first fallacy in the Breaking India forces is to keep parroting that poor
Ekalavya was a different caste and hence discriminated. A mere internal cross
reference to the most celebrated upakatha in the vana parva reveals Nala, a
great Nishada king who marries Damayanti, a kshatriya princess from Vidarba. This caste non sense situation, exacerbated by today’s politicians for
votebanks and ignorant people are anachronistically applied to a society many
millennia away which displayed maturity far beyond our understanding. These
mischievous efforts for misinterpreting these scriptures fall flat if we choose
to read our scriptures in Sanskrit or listen to traditional sources of
interpretation.
Nishada
identity goes back even further with the very beginning of Ramayana where a
Nishada analogy is given of entire Rama avatar and by the fact Rama made the
Nishada Guha his fifth brother. These clearly reveal the flaws in the mischief
makers motivated arguments.
It may be
noted even Drona, Parasurama, Vidura and many others never went by their birth
labels. It was solely their thought process and actions that defined them. So
we can safely conclude the modern caste arguments are highly out of place.
Unfair and mean to
Ekalavya argument:
This one is
more subtle to understand and hence requires a clearer understanding. Let us
approach by simple logic. All great gurus have pushed the limits of their
disciples by putting them to task. In Qualities of a good student, we learnt about Aruni’s display of character even when such
a literal interpretation of Guru’s words was not intended. Though Sandhipani
did not request Krishna any Gurudakshina, Krishna took his Guru pathni’s words
seriously to revive a lost child. Drona himself sought Drupada’s defeat by
Kauravas and later by Pandavas. Did he not risk their lives? Was it fair? Yes
it was. Only when pushed to the limits a student’s character gets truly
revealed. So in that sense, Ekalavya’s thumb showcased his splendid character
though Drona did not hesitate to don that role. We will see later why he took
such a role.
Drona merely
asked his right thumb, as he was fully aware of Ekalavya’s potential to use the
left arm, a skill which Arjuna also mastered. As a great master, he was also
aware of the ability to use a bow without the thumb, which Ekalavya mastered
later. Drona did not take away his
entire hand, as it would have deprived his livelihood. That would have been a
stroke of meanness.
Now let us
look at from another angle. Drona had denied this powerful skillset, not mere
archery which even hunters are cognizant of, but the subtleties associated with
it to Ekalavya. Mahabharata merely mentions that by his devotion and practice
Ekalavya raised his standards. Let us discard the argument that Ekalavya, being
a hunter shadowed and learnt these skills. But Ekalavya wholeheartedly accepts
Drona as his sole guru and attributes everything to him. If I set up a secret nuclear lab in the country, without any
permission, will I be liable to be prosecuted? Can I claim persecution when
caught?
Another
aspect is the vindication of Drona’s fears. Drona had assessed that Ekalavya
was not good in following Dharma, leave alone upholding it. Ekalavya uses
excessive force on a poor barking dog by shooting seven arrows in rapid
succession. This becomes a platform to display his prowess and skill. We see in
several later episodes how Arjuna rushes to the aid of the helpless, a critical
role to be played by a person with such a skill set. Ekalavya, being a hunter,
never had such an aptitude or thirst for dharma. He was merely hankering after a skill set. Possessing such a skill set without character was a grave danger to
the society. (For more on Kshatriyata, the character needed). So Drona
used the perceived Guru position to protect the society. Drona did not hide
behind an ego, feeling hubristic that even his statue could teach and create an
archer on par with Arjuna or higher. He was always aware of the
responsibilities given to him as a guru, as a warrior, as a dharmic person.
Fairness
evaluation must be done within the bounds of the society and rules back then,
not by twisting it and even more horribly applying today’s standards or our
ignorance. Hence we can safely dismiss the unfair or mean charge.
Favoritism for Arjuna:
This is
perhaps the most ridiculous of all charges. It is well known fact that Drona
was proud of creating Arjuna, but he will be the first to admit that Arjuna
earned every single stripe. Arjuna was devoted to his Guru, a fact that stumps
this intelligent warrior till Krishna fixes this malady through Bhagavad Gita.
Krishna had to use strategy to remove Bhishma and Drona, rather than relying on
Arjuna’s power alone. Arjuna’s wrath on Drishtadhyumna for killing Drona had to
be shielded by Krishna.
Ashwattama,
the son of Drona, was dearer to Drona than his own life. That is evident when
he is shocked amidst the carnage he was wrecking on Day 15 of Mahabharata war.
Even to his own son, Drona did not teach all the weapons. He taught how to
handle, recall and reuse the BrahmaSiras weapon to Arjuna and to the pestering
Aswattama he merely dispensed how to use it once. Drona was fully aware of his
responsibilities and he did not let petty things like favoritism to cloud his
actions. We see another example when he asks Kripi, his wife, never to feed
Arjuna in the darkness, for he was afraid of Arjuna’s intellect would discover
the ability to shoot in the dark. Though he did not create impediments to the
student’s progress, he did not aid them either.
We can safely dismiss the favoritism
charge as it is baseless.
Verdict – Drona is NOT Guilty in this case:
After having
demolished and pulverized all the allegations against Drona, in the case of
Ekalavya, we are still left with the mystery of the agent behind Drona’s move.
Thankfully we have Krishna’s admission. On day fourteen of the war, after
Ghatotkacha’s death, when the entire Pandava side was mourning, Arjuna is
confronted by a gleeful Krishna. Krishna revealed the reason for his joy was
the sole weapon that could have killed Arjuna, the Vasava Shakti weapon of
Indra in possession of Karna was directed against Ghatotkacha instead of
Arjuna. Arjuna is even in greater shock when Krishna revealed that HE would
have been forced to kill Ghatotkacha had he survived the war, because of his
asuric nature. Krishna said one of the key reasons behind his avatar was to
reduce the overpopulation by adharmic masses, protect dharma and eliminate
asuras.
Krishna’s
explanation continues when HE revealed that for the protection of Arjuna and
Pandavas, HE had eliminated Jarasandha, Shishupala and Ekalavya prior to the
Mahabharata war. Krishna said these evil warriors were so powerful that when
combined with the might of the Kauravas, it would have meant an impossible
hurdle for Arjuna, which was already studded with formidable warriors in
Bhishma, Drona and Karna. Krishna explained that he used Bhima’s strength to
counter Jarasandha, but it was successful only due to his revealing the secret
of Jarasandha’s birth. Krishna accelerated Shishupala’s death by appealing to
the bloated ego to commit more sins. It must be noted that Shishupala was
Krishna’s first cousin.
In case of
Ekalavya, as we observed, he enters the service of Jarasandha after the episode
of losing his thumb. He remains steadfast on Jarasandha’s side. After
Jarasandha’s death, he is again featured in the Rukmini escape episode with
Krishna. He joins Shishupala, Bhishmaka (Rukimni’s father) and Rukmi (Rukmini’s
brother) in attempting to stop Krishna. He meets his death when Krishna hurled
a rock at his head. Krishna revealed
that he was not only the actual cause of his death, but it was his guidance
that motivated Drona to have clarity to seek Ekalavya’s thumb to give him a set
back from committing more adharma. In that sense, not only was Krishna
protecting the society, but also Ekalavya, as he curbed his potential to do more
harm. If at all, we have to blame someone for the loss of Ekalavya’s thumb, it
will be Krishna. But understanding Krishna and his ways needs a more subtle
mind and a different article.
VERDICT: DRONA is EXONERATED from
all these malicious, fictitious allegations in the case of Ekalavya.
It is a fact
that most of the warriors of either side were trained directly by Drona or
indirectly. This goes on to highlight the primacy of Drona’s role in the
Mahabharata. It would be a fallacy to assume that Dronacharya is without flaws.
Being a human, he has his own share. But at least we have a choice not to
wrongly foist these false allegations upon him and trying to mar the sheen of
such a stellar character.
Lessons from Ekalavya
episode:
- Partial obedience to a Guru is as bad as no obedience. Ekalavya did not get the intended message of Drona.
- Acquiring any skillset must be preceded by acquiring the right mindset, a clear understanding of Dharma.
- Be wary of your company (even internal) as it is a gauge to show your samskaric outlook. Ekalavya’s future companions were the strong clues behind his motives. Introspect more often.
- Reading the original scriptures and understanding with traditional scholars is paramount to counter the false propaganda of mischievous forces.
Om Tat Sat
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