The
Bhagavad Gita, the greatest devotional book of Hinduism, has long been
recognized as one of the world’s spiritual classics and a guide to all
on the path of Truth. It is sometimes known as the Song of the Lord or
the Gospel of the Lord Shri Krishna.
According
to Western scholarship, it was composed later than the Vedas and the
Upanishads – probably between the fifth and second centuries before
Christ. It is a fragment, part of the sixth book of the epic poem The
Mahabaratha.
The Mahabaratha
tells of the Pandavas, Prince Arjuna and his four brothers, growing up
in north India at the court of their uncle, the blind King
Dhritarashtra, after the death of their father, the previous ruler.
There is always great rivalry between the Pandavas or sons of Pandu and
the Kauravas, the one hundred sons of Dhritarashtra. Eventually the old
king gives his nephews some land of their own but his eldest son,
Duryodhana, defeats Yudhisthira, the eldest Pandava, by cheating at
dice, and forces him and his brothers to surrender their land and go
into exile for thirteen years. On their return, the old king is unable
to persuade his son Duryodhana to restore their heritage and, in spite
of efforts at reconciliation by Sanjaya, Dhritarashtra’s charioteer; by
Bheeshma, his wise counsellor; and even by the Lord Krishna himself, war
cannot be averted. The rival hosts face each other on the field of
Kurukshetra. It is at this point that The Bhagavad Gita begins.
When
Prince Arjuna surveys the battlefield, he is overwhelmed with sorrow at
the futility of war. The teachings of The Bhagavad Gita are spoken by
the divine Lord Krishna,who is acting as the prince’s charioteer. They
are overheard by Sanjaya and reported back to King Dhritarashtra. When
Krishna has finished speaking to Arjuna, the two armies engage. The
battle lasts eighteen days and by the end of it nearly all of the
warriors on both sides are dead save Krishna and the five sons of Pandu.
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