DR SUNIL SHARMA
ON
ON
P C K Prem’s latest offering
on the epic Mahabharata
on the epic Mahabharata
Selected tales from
the Mahabharata by the famous writer PCK Prem leave you with a sense of the
sublime!
Carefully chosen,
compiled and edited by the well-respected senior author take a look at the
ageless epic and its continued relevance to us---and the rest of the world
undergoing strife and violence in various hot spots.
The book is a treasure
trove of wisdom and philosophical thought.
The Mahabharata is an
action plan, a code of conduct, a repository of morality and ethics for an
entire community, nation and epoch and due to its enduring profundity of
message of staying righteous in the face of evil, pure and wicked, the
narrative remains a deathless text that resonates with every age and audience.
All epics are like
that only. They are the fountainheads of knowledge; kind of blue-print of
conduct on the terrestrial plane that can lead to glimpses of the spiritual
realms.
Prem’s thoughtful
collection in English makes it eminently readable experience for the seekers of
truth and dharma in these turbulent times.
It speaks directly
to heart.
This sublime generated
by a careful reading of the heritage document of the Indians and much admired
by the rest of the world for its powerful narration.
The sacred and
profane; divine and earthly; superhuman and human; transcendental and
transitory interface in the rich texture of the multilayered story produced by
a starry age when the gods had not yet departed from the face of the earth and
humans, if they wished and practiced a given code and right path, could still
converse with the desired deities. Barriers were not there for this type of
dialogue.
The tales evoke that primeval
sense of awe, wonderment, marvellous, purity.
It is like
experiencing the magic of the universe for the first time.
You remain enraptured!
Everything appears
fresh and enchanting!
Two different worlds
collide here in the simple act of reading a liberating text.
Morning dew drops,
glittering little diamonds, on tender grass, under a baby sun spreading a
golden hue across the azure sky and a risen earth can produce a deep sense of
sublimity in the harried urban viewers and can lead to internal wellness and
harmony, provided you are ready to contemplate and appreciate the beauty
contained in the mundane.
Identically, certain
permanent tales, re-visited, can inspire a similar mood of tranquility and
centeredness in the reader seeking answers to some durable ancient riddles
confronting post-modern angst and alienation; riddles that have to be solved
individually by each soul in this journey terrestrial in order to live
fulfilled lives. Moral questions form the core of such recurring inquiries. If
solved satisfactorily, the ensuing enlightenment equips humans to face the
daunting tasks and existential challenges with poise, strength and resolution.
On the battlefield of Kurukshetra, we all have our agonizing moments of doubts
and uncertainties, the Arjun-dilemmas, and a true seeker, with due humility,
tends to navigate those treacherous minefields successfully, under the benign
guidance of a divine figure, a Godhood, like the blue-God, the fascinating
flute-playing Krishna, both a warrior-king and accomplished artiste in his
earthly avatar.
Each one of the alert,
spiritual and evolved beings (atmans) carries within traces of divinity. We are
both the fabled Arjuna and divine Krishna, as they reside within us like the
fragrance contained in a flower. Human soul is part of divine consciousness and
therefore, capable of realizing nobility and goodness through right conduct in
life. This ancient conception of the complex relationship between human nature
and nature is very unique and acts as a guiding set of principles, now lost in
current age of consumerism. The Gita enunciates this condition eminently well
for us.
It is full of deep insights. It is both
epistemological and ontological. The truth-seeker has to face some critical
moments before undertaking a momentous action affecting the destiny of a
nation, community or individual life. With the provisional grace of the Lord,
the right seeker, a righteous pursuer/quester, is gently
guided onto the moral path of bounden duty, whatever be the consequences then
of such actions, epochal or small in nature.
The moments of doubts
and sometimes of inner paralysis resulting out of a profound sense of
pessimism, a sense of over-riding futility (all actions are futile), if not
rightly channeled, can lead to sudden abandonment of the goal by the committed
but conscientious doer. A doer--- under certain circumstances---who easily gets
disillusioned on life’s Kurukshetra and desires to turn back on action and the
consequences thereof, sometimes fatal and eventually catastrophic for entire
dynasties and nations.
At such profound
moments of moral crisis---a state of dulled inertia--- enlightenment is most
seriously and sincerely sought by a brave warrior only, a warrior unlike
others, a warrior no longer interested in kingdom or property that is likely to
be achieved after a severe bloodbath and mayhem. Such a noble warrior wants to
renounce the bloody war and retreat---for the general welfare of the community
caught in the crossfire of two warring armies and factions and thus, by
voluntary withdrawal and surrender, wishes to save the lives of the innocent
citizens.
At such great crises,
appears an extraordinary teller of deathless tales and gives gyaana pure
to the willing seeker of ancient riddles and moral dilemmas haunting his sole
conscience. Such guide, narrator, can be divine in origin and return the
battle-weary warrior to the righteous path of action, a path that illuminates
our inner dark pathways and nods us to take up weapons adequate to annihilate
evil incarnates and such inimical forces for the general welfare of humanity.
This restoring of a
missing moral compass in a strife-torn world of double standards, deceptions,
treacheries and a total lack of morality in the blind pursuit of wealth and
power, can be most enabling tool of victory over such multiplying cynical
forces out to destroy goodness itself and stamp out any residual nobility in
the human soul and discourse through repulsive and cowardly actions by the
power-seekers of every/any age.
This task of returning
our lost or dimmed sense of ethics is done by a divine source generally
unaffected by the common erosion of finer values in a decadent society and if
attuned to it, we get re-born on the critical battlefield of life.
This is how Arjuna got
morally resurrected on that crucial moment on the battlefield of Kurukshetra
and re-born, vowed to annihilate forces of evil.
He did. And faced the exhausting consequences
of such an inevitable 18-day-long decimating war.
The rest is history.
Or cultural history, an enduring legacy that still dazzles.
It is called the Mahabharata.
There are very few
stories that can awaken you, revive a dead conscience and exhort a passive soul
to become active, a right doer of right actions in the face of total
annihilation or such looming threat thereof.
Such scenario can be
terribly terrifying for the one who contemplates the absurdity of it all.
The way out is a call,
a divine wake-up call, and, the rest is sometimes a painful dark journey that
has to be performed, despite the odds, and heavy price entailed.
Stories rooted in an
ethics or high morality become real treasures that can never be exhausted,
dwindled or depleted by any marauding army.
It shines like
diamonds in the open, attracting a willing passer-by to stop and examine. Such
stories can be told only in certain early ages---and can be subsequently
re-told in succeeding ages.
That epic age produced
first the Ramayana and later, the Mahabharata.
The post-modern age is
fit for the revisions, re-tellings and most important, re-interpretations.
Such sweeping
narratives contain abbreviated worlds within them---entire ways of life,
integrated and full. They serve as the beacons or lighthouses for us stranded
in our own sinking ships off the coast on stormy nights, giving us hope.
They guide us back to
terra firma---and safety and survival in a hostile environment.
Modern stories tell
truths but partial truths; these old stories tell complex truths and complete
truths that liberate.
They are sublime,
therefore very rewarding experience/s.
They are like the
dewdrops encountered on a mildly wintry morning on an open plain outside
smog-filled city and become a route to re-connect with pristine nature; a rare
sublimity natural. They quickly felicitate a deep communion with creator, the
loving God contained in each dancing blade of tender modest grass and brown
branch of a rugged tree and a gentle river flowing in the heart of the plain.
Great stories provide us with moral vision, a
code of right conduct, a moral inner compass. Despite their strangeness, they
give us delight and are truly magical in nature and effect on our psyche.
The great stories are
both old and new and we find ourselves re-echoed/re-confirmed/re-affirmed in
them. The ageless narratives are sublime and enlightening; ancient and
contemporary.
These selected tales
from the longest epic in the world, the Mahabharata---curated lovingly by the
versatile P.C.K. Prem Katoch and published by Cyberwit---create a wonderful and
vibrant canvas for us all. These are tales that explore the marvelous---a style
that is a forerunner of the magic realism of the 20th-century---within
everyday realty. They are fresh-faced meditations on the very nature of
reality, existence, living and death, meaning of love and honour, statecraft,
power and class-divisions. Prem Katoch is a great and highly-learned
multi-lingual scholar and poet-fictionist of first order and hugely respected
for his works on poetics and aesthetics.
The retired IAS (Indian Administrative
Service) officer does what very few university dons can do---to patiently
collect, translate, edit and explain stories set forth in extremely readable
style for us; a heritage-text that needs to be re-assimilated, pondered and
internalized again by global consumers, if such a critical species overspending,
over-consuming and over-indulging, wants to remain sane and human in a most
depressing, degrading and post-human age whose only god is mammon and sole
reason to exist is hedonism, pure and uninterrupted.
These tales in
excellent English will change their world-view and replenish our corroded
selves, making them re-connect with the splendors of a morally-rich past.
They will help us get
resurrected morally and ethically.
The select tales are transformative---as all
great narratives are meant to be by definition and goal.
One thing is
guaranteed: You will not remain same, after reading them here.
The collection will
bring in inner/outer transformations---the real job of good stories, be it Ved
Vyasa or Homer or Hesiod.
In the great
Mahabharata, grand narrative is the chief protagonist.
It is about fallible
heroes and destroying of evil through a bloody war, and of clans and empires.
It is also about the
futility of war and finding redemption.
Ultimately it is a
cautionary tale about the inevitability of your actions and reactions triggered
off the former; the tragic results of bigotry and deceptions and the need to
remain fixed on the right path, be whatever temptations.
Every being is a sum
total of their actions in life.
During crises, God is
there provided we recognize Him and believe in Him.
It is a battle between
faith and cynicism and of our inner demons as well.
The literary/cultural
initiative by Prem Katoch is praiseworthy.
It is a revelatory
exercise for us, the interested readers. Epics are not mere story-arcs. They
are more than that.
In fact, epics and
their re-tellings, engender fresh epistemes.
They bring new
perspectives and enlighten us.
For that alone, Prem
Katoch needs to be warmly complimented. He has done a superlative job. He is re-negotiating
terms of contemporary engagements with grim realities and conducting us back to
our lost sense of ethics through this great literary project.
Happy encounter with
the wealth of your past!
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