Chapter 1
Context and Conflict
Before we approach the Bhagavad Gita, we need to have a contextual  framework for the way it fits into the Mahabharata, of which it's a  part. The Mahabharata is one of the two great Indian epics (the  Ramayana being the other). The Mahabharata is a huge book-a typical  edition runs to nearly six thousand pages. It is said to be the  longest literary work in the world; it is seven times the length of  The Iliad and The Odyssey combined, and the only unabridged English  edition runs to twelve volumes. It's thought to have been written  somewhere between 500 and 200 b.c., and it covers a distant period of  Indian history: tradition places the battle of Kurukshetra in 3102  b.c., although historians say it was probably more like 1400 b.c.  when the events that inspired the Mahabharata took place.
At one level, the Mahabharata is an historical study of a kingdom;  but at another level, it is an extraordinary symbological study of  all human interactions, of all human emotions and motivations. It's  like an incredible psychology book cast in the form of a drama, and  it's written from a very conscious point of view, which means that  although it can be read just for its romantic, melodramatic story  line, it can also be read to uncover its deeper symbolism. And right  in the middle of the Mahabharata, on the eve of the climactic battle  between the kingdom's two warring families, comes the dialogue  between Krishna and Arjuna that's called the Bhagavad Gita, or "the  Song of God."
The story of the Mahabharata concerns the kingdom of Bharat, in  northern India. The king of Bharat had two sons, Dhritarashtra and  Pandu. Dhritarashtra was the elder brother, and ordinarily would have  been next in line to inherit the throne after their father died; but  he had been born blind, and the traditions of the time didn't allow  for a blind king, so Pandu became the king instead, and ruled the  kingdom.
Now, what it is that Dhritarashtra's blindness represents in the  story is something that has been expounded upon with great relish by  countless Hindu pundits over the centuries. Some say his blindness  represents his attachment to his son, Duryodhana, which makes him  blind to the dharma, blind to truth or to higher wisdom. Some say the  blindness represents the nature of the human condition, which is  blind because it lacks the higher intellect. The symbolism is very  rich.
Pandu, the younger brother, the king, had two wives-Kunti and  Madri-and he had five children by them. Of these five children (and  these turn out to be the good guys, by the way-the Pandavas),  Yuddhisthira was the eldest. Yuddhisthira was virtually the  embodiment of dharma, although he did have one minor failing, which  was that he gambled-he liked to play dice-and that, we will see, is  what ultimately leads us to the predicament we find ourselves in at  Kurukshetra. Bhima, Pandu's second son, was very strong and rather  reckless. Arjuna, the third, was pure, noble, chivalrous, and heroic;  he turns out to be our hero in the Gita. And there were two younger  sons, twins by Madri.
Dhritarashtra-the elder, blind brother-had a hundred children, all by  one wife. (I know a hundred children-but we're just going to have to  allow for these strange things in the Mahabharata. We make room for  them in the Old Testament, with 120-year-old men having scores of  children. So let's just assume that things are different in different  times.) Dhritarashtra's wife, Gandhari, was incredibly devoted to  him. She was so devoted that since he couldn't see, she kept her own  eyes bandaged throughout her entire married life, because she said  that it would be unseemly for her to see when her husband was blind.  That's devoted!
Well, a few years into his reign, Pandu accidentally killed a  Brahmin. Killing a Brahmin, even by accident, is a very bad thing to  do, so to atone for it, Pandu retired to the forest to do tapasya  (penances), leaving the kingdom in the care of Dhritarashtra. After  some years, while he was still away in the forest, Pandu died as the  result of a curse, and Dhritarashtra just went on ruling Bharat.
As the children grew up, Duryodhana, Dhritarashtra's eldest son, grew  more and more jealous of Yuddhisthira, the eldest son of Pandu. You  can see that the laws of succession would be a little hazy in this  situation, but it looked as though Yuddhisthira, as the eldest Pandu  son, was going to be the one to inherit the kingdom whenever  Dhritarashtra died-and Duryodhana wanted it for himself. He pulled  every dirty trick in the books to try to get it; the Mahabharata  devotes hundreds of pages to descriptions of all the ways Duryodhana  went about scheming to get rid of the Pandavas, so he could take over  the kingdom. Finally, Duryodhana held a huge celebration, and invited  all the Pandavas to attend. He had a magnificent palace built to  house them, but he had it made of some very flammable material, and  during the night, when he expected all the Pandavas to be asleep  inside, he set the building afire. Luckily, the Pandavas had been  forewarned by a loyal servant, and so they-the five boys and their  mother-had escaped through an underground passage and gone off into  the jungle, into hiding.
Now, just to give you a little more of the flavor of this story:  While they were in hiding, living in a cave in the jungle, the  Pandava boys heard that there was to be a swayamvara, a  husband-selecting ceremony, for Draupadi, the beautiful daughter of a  very high king, to find a suitable mate for her. All the princes  would be there, of course, because they all wanted to marry this  rich, beautiful lady.
At the gathering, a number of tasks were set for the would-be  suitors: stringing a magical bow, shooting a target by looking at its  reflection in a pool of water, feats like that. All the princes  tried, and all the princes failed. Then this poor young Brahmin  priest came along, and he easily accomplished all the tasks, one  after the other. That was Arjuna in drag, of course. So Arjuna won  Draupadi's hand, and he and his brothers took her and headed back to  their cave in the jungle.
As they approached the cave where they were living, the boys yelled  out to Kunti, their mother, Come out, Ma! See what we have brought  today!
Kunti was in the cave and couldn't see her sons, but she called out,  Whatever it be, share it equally among all of you. That's a good  thing for a mother to say to her five children-usually! But this time  it meant that all five brothers ended up being the husbands of  Draupadi-she had five husbands by the mother's "boon."
Well, after some years in hiding, the Pandavas made their way back to  the kingdom of Bharat, and Dhritarashtra (who wasn't a bad guy,  really-it was his son who was out of control) insisted that  Duryodhana give them a piece of land to rule. Duryodhana, as you'd  expect, picked out the worst piece of land in the kingdom to give to  the Pandavas; it had nothing going for it. But in spite of that,  Yuddhisthira and his brothers made a go of it, and created a very  good kingdom, prosperous and well ruled. That just made Duryodhana  more jealous than ever, of course; he grew insanely jealous, and all  he could think about was plotting against the Pandavas.
Duryodhana remembered that Yuddhishthira, the oldest Pandava brother,  really liked playing dice, so he challenged Yuddhisthira to a dice  game, and got a crooked dice player to play opposite him. The two of  them played out their dice game, and in the course of it  Yuddhishthira lost everything: He lost his kingdom, he forfeited his  brothers into servitude, he sold Draupadi down the river-everything  he had, went.
Duryodhana was ecstatic! He was so haughty about what he'd done that  he had Draupadi brought in, planning to strip her naked in front of  the court, to shame her. But when he went to pull off her sari, he  found that no matter how many saris he pulled away, there was always  one more underneath. He had piles of saris everywhere, but Draupadi  was still clothed, because she was protected by the purity of the  dharma. (And, of course, Krishna, whom the Pandavas had met while  they were off in hiding, was helping secretly, on the side.)
When Dhritarashtra heard about the episode with Draupadi, he was so  embarrassed by his son's behavior that he offered Draupadi three  boons. She said, Well, for the first one, let my husbands go free,  and for the second, give them back their weapons. And that's enough-I  won't even need the third boon. They'll be able to take care of  things from there."
Well, Dhritarashtra kept his promise and freed the Pandavas; but as  soon as the brothers were free, Duryodhana sucked Yuddhisthira into  another dice game. (Yuddhisthira just never seems to learn, does he?)  In this dice game, the losers (who, of course, turned out to be  Yuddhisthira and his four brothers) had to go off and live in the  jungle for twelve years. And then, in the thirteenth year, it got  even worse: They had to hide out for that whole year, because if they  were found by Duryodhana during the thirteenth year, they'd have to  do still another twelve years in the jungle. But if they made it  through all that, Duryodhana promised that at the end of their exile  they'd get their kingdom back.
So back they went to the jungle. They did their twelve years, and in  the thirteenth year, in order to hide out, they became servants to a  king in a neighboring kingdom. Duryodhana tried everything to find  them, but he couldn't. At the end of the thirteenth year, they came  back to Bharat and presented themselves before Duryodhana and said,  "OK, we did it. Now we want our kingdom."
Duryodhana said, Tough. I'm keeping it. He said, I wouldn't even give  you enough land to carry on the tip of a needle.
Now that is the background to the situation in which we find  ourselves at the time when the events in the Bhagavad Gita are about  to take place. That is, Duryodhana has finally pushed the Pandavas  too far, and they have no choice now but to fight. Injustice has  taken over their kingdom. Arjuna and his brothers have been cheated  and lied to; truth has been trampled on. The dharma has to reassert  itself-the good guys have to make a statement. War is their only  recourse.
At this point in the story, an interesting event takes place: Arjuna  and Duryodhana both go to Krishna, who happens to be God in an  avataric form, and they both ask him for his help. In a kind of  Solomon-like decision, Krishna says to them, "OK, here are your  options: One of you can have all of my weapons and all of my armies...and the other one can have me, but without any armies or  weapons." Arjuna immediately says, "Well, I want you-forget about the  armies." His mind was turned toward God, and so he said, "All I want  is God on my side."
Well, Duryodhana was very pleased with that! He, being the worldly,  adharmic fellow, said, "That's perfect! I'm very happy. I get all the  arms and all the might." So now the bad guys have this huge army,  while the good guys have a much smaller force. And Krishna, although  he's God, is only the charioteer for Arjuna-he's not even carrying a  bow.
At this point, let me introduce you to a little more of Krishna's  story, so we can see how he came to this moment on the battlefield.  Krishna was the child of Vasudev and Devaki, and Devaki had a very  mean brother named Kamsa. Kamsa was so mean that he put his own  father in jail, just in order to take over the kingdom.
But mean though he was, Kamsa had a soft spot in his heart for his  sister Devaki. So when she married Vasudev, Kamsa threw a big  celebration for her, with a great feast, and afterward announced that  he would drive the chariot himself to take the couple to their new  home. While they were on their way there, however, a great voice  suddenly spoke from the sky and said to Kamsa, "Beware! The eighth  child of this couple will kill you."
Well, that, of course, freaked the brother completely! He was about  to kill Devaki and Vasudev right on the spot, but they begged for  their lives, and he finally relented. He said, OK, I won't kill you.  But you'll have to agree to live in jail for the rest of your lives,  and to give me all your children as soon as they're born.
What could they do? They agreed.
So Devaki and Vasudev were imprisoned, and their first seven children  were taken away the minute they were born. The first six were killed  by Kamsa; the seventh has a complicated story of his own, which we  won't go into here.
When the time came for the eighth birth, Kamsa was especially wary.  He put extra guards on duty at the prison, and he locked Vasudev and  Devaki in chains. But as the time of the birth approached, the guards  began to feel very sleepy, and they all dozed off. And then the baby  was born. As he came out of the womb, the baby (who, of course, was  Krishna) said, "Take me to Gokul, to Nanda's house, and there you  will find a girl-child. Substitute me for that baby girl."
Vasudev said, "How can I take you to Gokul? The doors are locked, and  I'm in chains." At that point, Vasudev's chains dropped away and the  prison door flew open. Well, Vasudev felt that was a pretty clear  message, so he took baby Krishna to Gokul and brought the baby girl  back in his place. The guards woke up and saw the baby, and went to  tell Kamsa. The wicked brother came to the cell, and thinking that  the little girl was his sister's child, he grabbed the baby by her  feet, planning to throw her to the floor. But as he touched her feet,  she flew out of his hands and up into the sky. As she was going, she  called back, "I would have killed you, but you touched my feet; and  even though you did that intending to kill me, I will treat it as  though you were honoring me and let you go this time." Then she  disappeared up into heaven.								
									 Copyright © 2004 by Ram Dass. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.