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Tuesday 16 April 2013

CHAPTER 49 ENCOUNTER WITH ARJUNA


In those days, Arjuna was looking for a suitable place in the Himalayas for his long meditation, which was not for liberation, not for peace, but was to attain the Pashupat weapon. It was so powerful that all alone it was enough to destroy not only the planet Earth, but the entire solar system. He was preparing for the great war of Mahabharata.
On his way to Pashupatinatha he saw a handsome ascetic on the bank of the river Who was constantly chanting the Holy Name of Sri Ram. Arjuna was impressed by His personality and inquired politely about Him. When he learned that He was the famous, the great Hanumanji, naturally he became eager to know and learn many things.
"Revered Sir, I have heard the Ramayanam from great rishis many times and one thing that I can't understand is why Sri Ram went to so much trouble to construct a bridge. I believe He was the great archer. Why couldn't He make a bridge of arrows?"
"To make an eight hundred mile bridge of arrows was not impossible," Hanumanji said. He discovered a touch of vanity in Arjuna's statement but He politely replied, "But so many Vanaras like Me were to go across the ocean, and it is a fact that an arrow bridge cannot hold much weight."
"I guess not," Arjuna said.
"Forget the ocean," Hanumanji said. "Here is a mountain lake. The arrow bridge constructed even on this lake cannot bear My weight."
"What is the value of such an arrow bridge if it breaks down under the tossing and jumping of the Vanaras?" Arjuna challenged, and began a constant release of arrows and he really constructed a wonderfully strong bridge of arrows within a few minutes.
He turned to Hanumanji and said,
"You can test it by jumping, tossing and playing on it as much as You wish."
"If it breaks down simply by My stepping upon it, then what?" Hanumanji asked.
"It cannot be," Arjuna replied in a confident tone.
"Suppose it does happen? Are you taking full responsibility for My falling down in that lake and getting wet and hurt?" asked Hanumanji.
"If the bridge breaks down under Your weight, I will die entering the burning fire right now," Arjuna vowed.
"If it successfully bears My burden and remains safe, I will sit near the flag of your chariot and help you in the battlefield for your whole life, " Hanumanji vowed.
As soon as Hanumanji put His right foot on the bridge, a part of it broke with a great deafening noise and with the breaking of one single part the whole bridge collapsed in the middle of the lake.
Arjuna became very sad and without saying a single word, he began to pick up fuel to die.
Hanumanji became despondent. He just wanted his ego to be broken down, not his death. But now it was not possible to stop him.
All of a sudden a young swami appeared from the bushes and stood in front of Arjuna.
"Sir, who are you? Why are you picking up the fuels?" He asked. Arjuna described everything to him.
"That's nice. You are a good gentlemen. It is best to always fulfill one's words, but may I ask you one thing? Who was the witness to this incident? What is the proof that this gentleman (pointing towards Hanumanji) has not played any tricks? Without a witness, any discussion cannot be concluded into a decision."
In an authoritative tone he ordered Arjuna to reconstruct the bridge.
"Now if it breaks by His climbing and jumping upon it, then I will tell you who wins the bet." The strange swami looked at Hanumanji.
"I have no objection," said Hanumanji.
Arjuna took up his bow and began a constant shower of arrows and constructed a strong bridge within a few minutes.
Arjuna could have made the bridge stronger, but he did not do so because he had no enthusiasm since he had seen the fallen condition of the last one. He had no hope. But still the bridge was very strong. As far as any fast train or bus is concerned it was durable enough to last for hundreds of years.
But for Hanumanji, it was like a toy. Just standing on the earth, He put His right foot on the bridge and pressed it with His toe. The bridge remained unbroken. He was surprised and put His full weight on His foot which was on the bridge. Even then the bridge remained safe. Then He pressed it with His knees and hands and nothing happened.
He was about to jump up and down, but before He did, He peeped underneath the bridge. "Oh, Lord Krishna!"
Lord Krishna Himself was supporting it and saving it from collapsing as the previous one had. "My Lord," Hanumanji cried. The swami turned into Lord Krishna and embraced Hanumanji.
"Arjuna, your friend has helped you and I am defeated!" Hanumanji embraced Arjuna and said,
"Blessed are you, Arjuna, whose life Krishna values so highly. I promise I will always be present by your flag. Nobody will be able to cut it down, and when your chariot enters the war I will always be at your disposal."
Thirteen years later, when the Pandavas boarded their chariots, Arjuna painted on his flag a picture of Hanumanji, and His constant presence was always experienced.
In the battlefield of Kurukshetra, in the Inter-continental war, when Lord Krishna became the charioteer of Arjuna, he suggested to Hanumanji,
"Please remember that this is the Copper Age and not the Silver Age. It is not the time for You to show Your great power. The capacities and strength of people have reduced with the human values. Even if You just roar in Your natural loudness as You did in Ram-Ravana war, all the soldiers will fall flat on the earth and their hearts will be torn asunder. Therefore, just keep sitting quietly."
There are many incidents in the Mahabharatam where Arjuna is being helped by the silent presence of Hanumanji.

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