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Balakanda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of Ramayana describing Rama's childhood
Balakanda
Vishvamitra asks Dasharatha for help
Information
ReligionHinduism
LanguageSanskrit
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Bala Kanda (Sanskrit:बालकाण्ड;IAST:bālakāṇḍa',lit.'Incident of childhood') is the first Book of theValmikiRamayana. TheBala Kanda, in part—if not in its entirety—is generally regarded as aninterpolation to the original epic.[1][2]

Structure

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The book consists of seventy-sixsargas (sometimes translated aschapters or "cantos") of Sanskrit verse.

Synopsis

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The Bāla Kāṇḍa begins with the sage Vālmīki asking Nārada if there is a righteous man still left in the world, to which Nārada replies that such a man is Rāma. After seeing two birds being shot, Vālmīki creates a new form of meter calledśloka, and then is granted the ability to compose an epic poem about Rāma. He teaches his poem to the boys Lava and Kuśa, who recite it throughout the land and eventually at the court of king Rāma, which then begins the main narrative.

Pictorial depiction of the birth of the four sons ofDasharatha.

The king ofKosala, Daśaratha, lives inAyodhyā, a utopian city, however he has no son. He and his court resolve to bring the sageR̥śyaśr̥ṅga in order to grant him sons. After the performance of anAśvamedha (Horse Sacrifice), R̥śyaśr̥ṅga performs a Putrīyā Iṣṭi for the attainment of sons. Meanwhile the gods have petitioned toBrahmā andViṣṇu about Rāvaṇa, arākṣasa who has been oppressingrṣis,yakṣas,gandharvas,asuras, andbrāhmaṇas. Due to a boon from Brahmā,Rāvaṇa is invincible to all beings except humans, so Viṣṇu decides to be born as the sons of Daśaratha. Back at the sacrifice outside Ayodhyā, a being emerges from the sacrificial fire carrying a celestial porridge. The being tells Daśaratha to distribute the porridge amongst his wives in order to bear sons. At the same time, Brahmā orders the gods to father monkey-sons who will assist Rāma later in the epic to defeat Rāvaṇa. After distributing the porridge, Daśaratha's wivesKausalyā,Kaikeyī, andSumitrā bear Rāma,Bharata, and the twinsLakṣmaṇa andŚatrughna respectively. Years later, the sageViśvāmitra arrives in Ayodhyā.[3]

Rāma killing Tāṭaka from 17th century royal Mewar manuscript


Viśvāmitra requests Daśaratha to lend him his eldest (but still adolescent) son Rāma to slay the rākṣasasMārīca andSubāhu, who are disrupting Viśvāmitra's sacrifice. Daśaratha, who is initially reluctant to part with his dearest son, is eventually convinced to send Rāma with Viśvāmitra, along with Lakṣmaṇa. Eventually they reach a terrible, wild forest inhabited byTāṭakā. Tāṭakā, as Viśvāmitra explains, is a yakṣa woman who gave birth to the rākṣasa Mārīca, and was herself cursed to become a rakṣasa. Rāma kills her with a single shot from his bow, and in reward Viśvāmitra bestows on him numerous divine weapons. The party eventually reaches Viśvāmitra's ashram, where Rāma defeats Mārīca and kills Subāhu while Viśvāmitra completes his sacrifice.[3]

The group, successful in their objective, then decide to go to attend kingJanaka's sacrifice in the kingdom ofMithilā. There the seers at the ashram say that Janaka has a bow that no one has been able to string. Throughout the entire journey from Ayodhyā to the ashram to Mithilā, Viśvāmitra recounts the lore of the landscape the party travels through, as well as expounding on the deeds of the ancestors of Viśvāmitra and Rāma, respectively.[3]

Once the group reaches Mithilā, a minister in Janaka’s court narrates the life of Viśvāmitra, and his journey from king to brahman-seer (“brahmarṣi”). Janaka recounts the history of the famed bow, and informs them that whoever strings the bow will win the hand of his daughterSītā, whom he had found in the earth when plowing a field. Rāma then proceeds to not only string the bow, but snap it in the process. Rāma then marries Sītā, with the rest of his brothers marrying Sītā’s sister and cousins. On the way back from Mithilā to Ayodhyā, the procession encountersRāma Jāmadagnya, who challenges Rāma to lift another bow and engage him in single combat. Rāma Dāśarathi seizes the bow and tells him that he will not kill him, and Rāma Jāmadagnya, now humbled, retreats. The book ends when the group returns to Ayodhyā and a scene is set for an idyllic married life.[3]

References

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  1. ^Goldman, Robert P. (1984).The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India. Vol. I: Bālakāṇḍa. Princeton University Press. p. 60.
  2. ^Majumdar, R. C. (1956).The Cultural Heritage of India.The Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture. p. 43.The first and the last Book of the Ramayana are later additions… The reference to the Greeks, Parthians, and Sakas shows that these Books cannot be earlier than the second century B.C.
  3. ^abcdGoldman, Robert P. (1984).The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India. Vol. I: Bālakāṇḍa. Princeton University Press.

External links

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