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Krishna

 

Krishna


Krishna

Krishna, is often depicted under the features of a young man, blue black complexion, bejewelled and playing flute surrounded with gopis. In Mahabharata, he taught Bhagavad-Gita, one of the main texts of the Indian Thought.

Devaki engendered Krishna without being fertilized by his husband. Krishna was the eighth child of the family. Though, before his birth, his uncle Kamsa, a cruel king, was predicted that the eighth child of his sister would kill him. So, he had his nephews killed. In order to vanish from his uncle’s will, Krishna was swapped at his birth, with a shepherd’s son.

To save him from the slaughter, Krishna was laid down, in a floaty basket and let adrift on the Yamunâ river. Yamunâ waters divided to afford the way to Krishna and his father.

As soon as he was seven years old, Krishna enjoyed women’s pleasant company. From all the surrounding countryside, the gopis shepherdesses ran to his palate, to visit Krishna and to round dance for him, singing “Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna”. A thousand would have been his lovers but Radha would be his favourite.

Krishna is a Prince, Vishnu‘s embodiment. For Hindus, dream and reality sometimes merge. A dream can be construed as a true experience.  Krishna dreamed a giant witch named Putana was sent by his uncle to kill him, the boobs coated with poison. While suckling, he killed her inhaling her life, she collapsed inanimate, her eyes became pits and her tits changed into hills.

Talented flute player, he invented the Rasa dance, divine union between the gopis and him. His comrade Arjuna had scruples when he had to go to war. Krishna forced him to do his duty. He achieved to gain the throne despoiled by Kamsa.

The continuation of the story in Sri Krishna and His Gospel. This book is published by S. Ram Bharati Editions.

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