Saturday, November 17, 2012

Why Bhima is the real hero of the Mahabharata - part 2

"Chhota Bheem"
Image courtesy: birthdaybless.com
Recently, I heard more than one kid that I ran into singing the "chhota bheem.. chhota bheem" title song from a cartoon of the same name on the Pogo channel in India. The show is not related to this post, but it was amusing to see its popularity with the kids of this generation.

I read an interesting article here about Bhima and wanted to paraphrase some of it here.

Verse 1-10 of the Bhagavad Gita describes Bhima as the strongest of all warriors on either side of the Mahabharata war. Mind you, this is the Lord's own words.


"aparyaaptam tadasmaakam balam bhiishmaabhirakshitam;
paryaaptam tvidam eteshhaam balam bhiimaabhirakshitam"

Here's a list of his accomplishments which completes shadows everybody else's:
  1. Bhima kills each and every one of the 100 kauravas, none excluded. 
    • In fact, before killing Dusshashasana on the battlefield, Bhima calls out to the rest of the Kaurava army to see if anybody wanted to stop him from proceeding. Warriors including Karna stay silent, perhaps due to fear of Bhima in general, and awareness of Bhima's pledge during Draupadi's humiliation of personally killing and drinking Dusshashana's blood.  
    • When Bhima indeed rips Dusshashana open and drinks his blood Karna is described in the Mahabharata as swooning at the sight, and the rest of the Kaurava army scattering in fright.
  2. When discussing whether to fight a war or not (after Duryodhana refuses even 5 villages to the Pandavas), Krishna tells the Pandavas and Bhima that Bhima was the one on whom most of the burden of the war would fall to. Arjuna and the rest were only nice-to-have warriors in the war. 
  3. Bhima kills every other major villain in the course of events leading up to the Mahabharata, being used as Krishna's hero of choice - to rid the world of Jarasandha, for example. Jarasandha, in fact, mocks Arjuna (the other available fighter) as being an insult if he were chosen to fight him. He declares Bhima as the only warrior fit to fight him. Not muchkingd credence should be given to Jarasandha's words, of course. For, he also declares Krishna a coward. (Krishna moves his entire kingdom from Mathura to Dwaraka to avoid unnecessary bloodshed with the frequent battles with Jarasandha.) 
  4. During Draupadi's humiliation in the Kaurava court, Bhima's patience is not to be mistaken for being merely obedience to his elder brother, Yudhishtira. His confidence in Krishna saving her from complete humiliation is all that we can infer. Bhima is also the only one that vows to rout the entire Kaurava clan, including his pledge for Dusshasana in particular.
  5. On Arjuna being the person who strung the bow and won the Draupadi swayamvara, this article describes the story of the events leading up to the swayamvara. Veda Vyasa visits the Pandavas prior to the swayamvara and tells them that they were all going to marry Draupadi. So, Arjuna is chosen consciously to be the one that contests on their behalf. The article goes into why Bhima was not chosen to be the suitor at the swayamvara, with an interesting connection to Shikhandi and a curse on the garland that Draupadi was going to use for the winner of the swayamvara. In short, the wearer of the "Amba-Shikhandi-Draupadi" garland was destined to kill Bhishma, which Bhima was not going to do, as Bhishma was a Vishnu bhakta. 
    • I'm not entirely sure I agree with the article's argument. Krishna advises Arjuna to kill everyone on the enemy side since they represented evil. If that applied to Arjuna, it must apply to Bhima as well, Vishnu bhakta or not. There were several not-fully-evil players on the Kaurava side, including Drona, for example. Still, an interesting thought, and perhaps there's more to the reasoning due to Bhima 's (Vayu's) standing in the Dwaita school of thought.
When looking at the events in the Mahabharata in greater detail, every key accomplishment of the Pandavas comes down to Bhima, no doubt the real hero of the Mahabharata.

3 comments:

  1. And Bheema was a good husband to Draupadi. Among the Pandava's, maybe even the best.

    Yudhistra gambled her away. During their time in exhile, they were disguised as courtiers and Kichaka tried to molest Draupadi in front of his eyes. When she asked him to do something about it, he asked her to live with it because otherwise, they would be discovered. Bheema was the one who ripped him to shreds.

    When Draupadi, was forced to become a servant, when they were is disguise, it was Bheema who cried for her.

    When Draupadi was disrobed in court, all other Pandava's were silent, but it Bheema who was fuming with anger and vowed tear open his thighs for her insult.

    In the end, when Yudhistra brought the question of whether they should even wage war against the Kauravas. (Even after Draupadi's insult- he asked this question). But Bheema stood firm and wanted vengeance for his wife.

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