Did Mahabharat inspire to solve Terrorism in Myanmar?

The Buddhist monk in Myanmar did not take any weapon in his own hands but successfully led the fight to save Dharma, which resembles much of Mahabharat

The Buddhist monk in Myanmar did not take any weapon in his own hands but successfully led the fight to save Dharma, which resembles much of Mahabharat
The Buddhist monk in Myanmar did not take any weapon in his own hands but successfully led the fight to save Dharma, which resembles much of Mahabharat

Buddhist fight against terrorism resembles that of Pandavas fight in Mahabharat

There’s a sad joke on the plight of Rohingyas who are declared security threats by their own country Myanmar and Bangladesh. It goes like this – when the UN asked Aung San Suu Kyi, if she has to say anything in her defence of the gross violations of human rights, she replied “No, I am from Miya-Mar”. The joke is not in a good taste for the vast majority of peaceful Rohingyas. However, experts argue that all infiltrators who risk their lives by crossing an armed border are proven security threats as you can’t expect them to follow local laws and police forces in routine life. They cite the example of Europe already facing the music of random acts of Jihad violence.

I wondered if violence has any historical back-up as a solution to terrorism. In a recent conversation with one of my Afghani friends, I coincidentally weaved up an uncanny resemblance of the Buddhist fight against terror with that of Pandavas fight in Mahabharat. Let’s dissect this odd analogy with few questions from the talk:

Dhritarashtra was an epitome of secularism, blind by birth to all the groups and especially towards the evil acts his non-minority beneficiaries do.

  1. Where did Gandhari come from & what was her life like?

She came from Gandahar in Afghanistan. Learned Vidur advised on infanticide of her radical son for the greater good of the society. She goes on to produce 101 children. She chooses to be blind and is unable to control her radical sons and help the innocent Pandavas. She is powerless to reform the radical ideology guiding her sons and hence she earns all the bad names for her sons’ terror acts. Despite being a good person and having a moral understanding of what is right and what is wrong, her silence and inaction proved very costly to the family and the nation. In the end, she curses Krishna who led the cause, and fights for establishing Dharma instead of taming her sons.

2. Who came with Gandhari? What was his role?

Shakuni came with her and citing victimhood, he took up the task of indoctrination of hate by the blanket separation between Kauravas and Pandavas from an early age in the name of training, nurturing, and educating them. Violence is the obvious outcome when you instill a limited political identity on a young mind, refusing to accept the existence of others. He had excessive control over the radical sons of Gandhari. All the acts of terror were planned at his venue and as per his inputs. He plotted to snatch Pandavas’ fair share of property by violent acts, persecuting them and cunningly reminding the victims that they are not supposed to do any Adharma at any instance continued to exploit them at every opportunity. He presided over ousting the Pandavas also from the last share of land parcel given to them for survival. He planned and presided over the molestation of Draupadi too. He delayed war to the point when Kauravas reach a comfortable majority in numbers.

3. What role did Dhritarashtra play?

Dhritarashtra was an epitome of secularism, blind by birth to all the groups and especially towards the evil acts his non-minority beneficiaries do. It was his secularism and under his watch, that Dharma of the Pandavas suffered. He was unable to do justice as he was bought by the vote-bank blackmail of Shakuni. Through him, all the riches-wealth creation of the Pandavas drained to the radical Kauravas like an open case of loot. As I say, the evil is not in the crown, it is in the greed for the crown. His injustice to Pandavas went on unchecked to an irreversible point. His radical sons kept on milking his secularism till the end. At every point, he denied genuine rights and claims of the Pandavas and continuously persecuted them in their own country. In his watch and under the watch of his entire governance structure, the radical sons had a free pass to molest Pandavas’ wife.

4. How did Lord Krishna lead the Fight on Terror?

Lord Krishna explained the less-numbered Pandavas that they have to fight against terrorism. He prepared them to fight against their own brothers because they were evil. Despite being a warrior, God never used any weapon in the war himself. The way he led the war, shows it was a mix of mentoring strategy, tactical cheating, and a real fight.

The Buddhist monk Ashin Wirathu in Myanmar did not take any weapon in his own hands but successfully led the fight to save Dharma. The culture perpetrating terror and human rights abuses on others was ousted. This shows that the war against terror was led by a spiritual guru who understood his responsibility of being a civilizational guru too. So, it is not the government’s job alone. People’s participation matters too. And for that, our gurus will have to understand that they will not be able to do their individual spirituality if there is no civilization in the first place.

At the end of our talk, my Afghani friend had a tinge of hope in his voice. He exclaimed ‘we love Bharat and we will do a Mahabharat on Taliban.’

Note:
1. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of PGurus.

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Author, Speaker & Observer of Geo-economics. Known for Geo-political projections on Twitter. Past Academic & Research Associate of IIM Ahmedabad.
Ankit Shah
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3 COMMENTS

  1. A contrasting fact of our history should not fail to engage our attention here, as follows and as an illustration:

    1. ‘Buddhism’s fight against Islamic terrorism resembles that of Pandavas’: Buddhism in Bharat served as a doormat to Islamists’ entry into the very land of its origin, chiefly due to its primordial antagonism to Sanatana Dharma. It is, in fact, said to have accorded traitorous reception to the Islamists , headed by its own monks leading its own majority (Buddhist) folks, and often against its own unstable and unpopular Sanatani monarchs. Almost the whole of North West Bharat, as it was at that time, was immediately engulfed in the militant flame and fury of Islamic barbarism, and literally its entire civilization, gutted.

    2. ‘Where did Gandhari come from & what was her life like?… Shakuni came with her and citing victimhood, he took up the task of indoctrination of hate’: Significantly, Kaikeyi (in Ramayana) happened to be from the same Gandahar region. And it is more certain that Buddhism led to its own extinction in Bharat by offering itself as the sacrificial goat to the invading Islamic barbarians, rather than being vanquished by Sanatanis.

    3. ‘when the UN asked Aung San Suu Kyi, if she has to say anything in her defence of the gross violations of human rights, she replied “No, I am from Miya-Mar”’: Atleast, Buddhism has awakened at last to its surrounding reality and smelled the coffee, finding no roses. At this juncture, however, Sri Lanka has to be credited with snuffing the crypto(& whatever)-Christian LTTE out and prempting the formation of a separate, Dravidian-Christian, Tamilnadu-Eelam nation.

    4. ‘In the end, she curses Krishna who led the cause, and fights for establishing Dharma instead of taming her sons’: In the end, letting ‘she curses Krishna’ agree in tense with ‘fights for establishing Dharma’ tends to lead to the meaning mishap ‘(it is) she (who) fights for establishing Dharma’. And poor Krishna, ‘who led the cause, and’ must have “fought” ‘for establishing Dharma’, is left in limbo in this mishap of meaning.

  2. “So, it is not the government’s job alone. People’s participation matters too. And for that, our gurus will have to understand that they will not be able to do their individual spirituality if there is no civilization in the first place.”

    That’s the best summary I have ever seen. We all need to do our part and stop relying on the government of India. This is a global fight.

    And the fight is now against intellectual terrorism.

    We need to monitor these south Asian programs and their events and take them head on. University of Washington south Asian center will host a seminar next week on oct 29 about south Asians and the black lives matter movement. Looking at the panelists, it looks like it will be another on of those events.

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