BALARAMA, the illustrious brother
of Krishna, visited the Pandavas, in their
encampment. As Halayudha (plough bearer), clad in blue silk, entered
majestically like a lion. Yudhishthira, Krishna
and others gave the broadshouldered warrior a glad welcome. Bowing to Drupada
and Virata, the visitor seated himself beside Dharmaputra. "I have come to
Kurukshetra," said he, "learning that the descendants of Bharata have
let themselves be overwhelmed by greed, anger and hatred and that the peace
talks have broken down and that war has been declared."
Overcome by emotion, he paused
for a while and then continued: "Dharmaputra, dreadful destruction is
ahead. The earth is going to is a bloody morass strewn with mangled bodies! It
is an evil destiny that has maddened the kshatriya world to foregather here to
meet its doom. Often have I told Krishna,
'Duryodhana is the same to us as the Pandavas. We may not take sides in their
foolish quarrels.' He would not listen to me. His great affection for
Dhananjaya has misled Krishna and he is with
you in this war which I see he has approved. How can Krishna
and I be in opposite camps? For Bhima and Duryodhana, both of them my pupils, I
have equal regard and love. How then can I support one against the other? Nor
can I bear to see the Kauravas destroyed. I will therefore have nothing to do
with this war, this conflagration that will consume everything. This tragedy
has made me lose all interest in the world and so I shall wander among holy
places." Having thus spoken against the calamitous war, Krishna's
brother left the place, his heart laden with sorrow and his mind seeking
consolation in God.
This episode of Balarama’s,
keeping out of the Mahabharata war is illustrative of the perplexing situations
in which good and honest men often find themselves. Compelled to choose between
two equally justifiable, but contrary, courses of action, the unhappy
individual is caught on the horns of a dilemma. It is only honest men that find
themselves in this predicament. The dishonest ones of the earth have no such
problems, guided as they are solely by their own attachments and desires, that
is, by self-interest.
Modern critics and expositors sometimes forget this underlying basic factor and seek to weigh all in the same scales, which is quite wrong. We may profit by the way in which, in the Ramayana, Dasaratha, Kumbhakarna, Maricha, Bharata and Lakshmana reacted to the difficulties with which each of them was faced. Likewise, Balarama's neutrality in the Mahabharata war has a lesson. Only two princes kept out of that war. One was Balarama and the other was Rukma, the ruler of Bhojakata. The story of Rukma, whose younger sister Rukmini married Krishna, is told in the next chapter.
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