Yavakri's penance
The sages Bharadwaj and Raivya were two friends.
They dwelt in the hermitages which were near to each other and took delight in
each other's company. Raivya had two sons Arvavasu and Paravasu and Bharadwaja
had only one son, Yavakri. Raivya and his sons were versed on Vedas and were
extremely learned and erudite. Bharadwaja however was known for his asceticism.
Raivya therefore enjoyed much goodwill and respect while Bharadwaja, on account
of his not being a scholar, did not enjoy that respect. Therefore Bharadwaj's
son, Yavakri was very unhappy and one day he set out to obtain the knowledge of
Vedas by docuting severe penance. He first exposed his body to a flaming fire.
By practising the hardest of austerities, he was atlast able to cause anxiety
among gods and Indra esp. became very anxious, lest he would be losing his
Indrahood to Yavakri. He therefore came to Yavakri and asked him the purpose
behind his rigid vows. Yavakri respectfully bowed to him and replied that he
wanted to have a complete mastery over all Vedas and obtain knowledge so that he
might never be slighted again. Indra said that that was not the proper way of
getting the knowledge of Vedas which can only be obtained from the lips of a
preceptor. Yavakri then once more started his penances and the severity of his
penances once again disturbed Indra. He came to Yavakri and told him that his
purpose of obtaining Vedic knowledge for himself and his father through penances
will never be ssatisfied. So penance was not the proper way. He must go back and
learn Vedas from a preceptor. Yavakri replied that he was determined to learn
Vedas in that way and therefore would resourt to even stronger ascetism by
offering hsi own limbs into fire.
Indra became very concerned and after some
reflections he devised an idea. He assumed the role of a Brahmin and began to
build a dam in that part of Bhagirathi where Yavakri used to go for ablutions.
The Brahmin began to fill Ganga with sands and he threw handful of sand to Ganga
and this attracted the attention of the sage. Yavakri asked him laughing, what
was the Brahmin thinking by trying to fill the river with sand? Indra in the
guise of Brahmin answered that it was very difficult for people to cross
Bhagirathi using a boat. For that purpose he was building a dam to help people
to cross the river. Yavakri laughed aloud and said that it was an impossible
task to fill Ganga by using handful of sands. So the Brahmin as well might leave
it and go home and do something practical instead of attempting the impractical
and impossible. The Brahmin said that if Yavakri could hope to obtain knowledge
of the the Vedas by mere penance then it was possible for filling up Ganga
using such handful of sands. At this Yavakri realized that the Brahmin was none
other than Sankra, the chief of celestials and therefoore told him that even
though it was impractical for him to attain the knowledge of Vedas using
penance, Indra could make it practical by giving boons.
Atlast Indra agreed and gave him the boon that
Vedas will be revealed to him and his father Bharadwaja and his wishes would be
fulfilled. At this Yavakri became very happy and went to his father Bharadwaja
and told him that by Indra's boon Vedas would be revealed to them both.
Bharadwaja however was a wise man and he knew the pitfalls. He therefore warned
his son that having the knowledge would make him proud and pride might result in
destruction. He then narrated a story. In ancient times there was a sage called
Valadhi who was much grief stricken by the death of his child. He therefore
performed severest of penance and obtained a child that would be immortal.
However the gods told him that a mortal's son cannot become immortal just like
that. There must be some riders to the immortality clause. So the sage requested
that the mountains which were nearby should be the instrumental cause, i.e. only
upon the destruction of that mountain his son would die, knowing very well that
it was impossible to destroy the mountain as it had existed for millions of
years. Afterwards a son was born to the sage and he was called Medhavi. The boy
was hot tempered and as he learned the circumstances of his birth he became very
vain and proud and maltreated every sage and doing all sorts of mischiefs.
Atlast he met a muni called Dhannushaksha whom he treated very roughly. The sage
was very powerful and he cursed Medhavi to be reduced to ashes but nothing
happened. Knowing the instrumental cause of the immortality of Medhavi by his
power of Yoga, the sage created huge buffaloes and ordered them to destroy the
mountain that was the cause of Medhavi's immortality. Once that mountain was
destroyed, Medhavi fell down dead. All the sages therefore said that under no
condition can a man overcome what has been ordained by his fate (past karma).
Dhannusaksha destroyed a mountain using buffaloes.
Having told his son this story, Bharadwaja warned
his son that he should not become proud and vain. Otherwise he would be
destroyed. He should never disregard Raivya and his sons as Raivya was short
tempered but very powerful sage and he could curse him. Yavakri assured his
father that he would not do anything to offend Raivya as he had greatest respect
for him. However, such was his nature that soon vanity overtook him and he began
to insult other sages.
One day he went to the hermitage of Raivya and
insulted his daughter in law. When Raivya came to know about this incident he
flared up in anger and uttered mantras by tearing off a matted lock of his hair.
At this sprang up an ogeress exactly resembling his daughter in law. Then he
plucked another matted lock and offered it as another sacrifice with a mantra
and there emerged a terrible demon. Both of them asked Raivya what would they
do. Raivya told them to go and kill Yavakri. The ogeress enchanted Yavakri and
deprived him of his water pot which rendered him an easy target for the demon to
kill. Yavakri ran for his life to find a sacred pool of water where he could
perform ablutions to escape his terrible fate but found none. Atlast he came to
his father's hermitage and tried to enter the room of agnihotra sacrifice but
was prevented from entering by a Sudra. And then the demon hurled a spear and
killed him.
When Bharadwaja returned to his hermitage at the
end of the day he was alarmed to find that the sacrifical fire did not burn so
enthusiastically and also the Sudra did not rejoice upon seeing him. At this, he
asked the Sudra about the facts and soon came to know from him that Raivya's
curse had killed his son. Being mad with grief he cursed Raivya saying that his
eldest son would kill him as he made Bharadwaja suffer on account of the loss of
his only son. Then he realized his folly and lamented that he stooped so low
that he gave way to wrath and cursed his friend. He was miserable on account of
the death of his only son and therefore entered into a blazing fire.
At that time Vrihadyumna, whose priest was Raivya,
commenced a great sacrifice and the two sons of Raivya, Aravavasu and Paravasu
were engaged by the monarch to assist him in performance of the ceremony. Raivya
remained in the hermitage. Paravasu returned to the hermitage at the end of the
day. His father was wrapped in a black deer skin and Paravasu, being sleepy,
thought that it was a dark coloured wild animal, and being afraid of his life,
he killed his father, all the while thinking it to be an animal which might
attack him. After realizing his mistake, he performed the last rites of his
father and returned to the place of sacrifice. He then told his brother to
observe a vow for him to expiate him from the sin of killing his father, a
Brahmin. Arvavasu therefore went back to the hermitage to perform penance to
expiate his brother from the sin and subsequently at the end of the vow,
returned to the sacrifice. Seeing him, Paravasu conceived a devious plan and
told the king that his brother was the real killer of his father and for that
reason had gone for getting rid of the sin and a killer of Brahmin must never
enter the place of sacrifice. The king immediately ordered his men to turn out
Arvavasu and they called him as a slayer of Brahmin. Aravavasu repeatedly said
that it was not he who was the killer but his brother, but nobody paid any heed.
Grief stricken, the sage returned to the woods and performed most severest kind
of penance to please the sun god and the sun and other gods being pleased with
him made him the chief priest of the sacrifice and compelled the king to dismiss
Paravasu. They then granted boons to Arvavasu who asked for the life of his
father Raivya. Then he further prayed that his brother should be absolved from
sin, his father would have no recollection of being killed, and that both
Bharadwaja and Yavakri would come alive. The gods happily bestowed all the boons
and Yavakri and Bharadwaja became alive again. Yavakri on regaining his life
asked the gods including Agni that even though he had succeeded in learning the
Vedas and did severe penances, how could Raivya kill him in that manner. At this
the gods told him that he had learnt the Vedas without any hard work and without
the aid of a preceptor. But Raivya had obtained it the hard way by serving his
preceptor and over a long period of time. That was why he could belittle
Yavakri. No great work can be accomplished using short cuts. One has to work
hard to gain knowledge and that hard earned knowledge only has value.
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