Little Krishna
Krishna was born as the
8th child of Devaki, sister of the cruel demon king Kamsa. The sage
Narada had predicted that Kamsa would be killed by his nephew, so the
king killed Devaki´s first six children. The 7th, Balarama escaped and the 8th, Krishna, was secretly exchanged for a cowherds daughter.
The demon king Kansa
send many demons to kill Krishna, but all were defeated. Among them were
the whrilwind demon Trinavata, Vatasura disguised as a calf, the
enormous crane Bakasura, Aghasura the demon snake and the monstrous
horse Keshisura. Lord Krishna also mastered the five-headed demon snake
Kaliya, to stop it from poisoning the holy river Yamuna and send it back
to the ocean. He jumped on the snake from a big Kadamba tree and then
defeated him by dancing on his heads.
Krishna was brought up
in a cowherds family and loved to play the flute to entertain the other
cowherds, the milkmaids, and the cows. As a child, Krishna had great
love for his foster-mother Yashoda and their relationship stands as a
great exemple for the love between a mother and her child. Krishna also
became very famous for teasing the milkmaids of Vrindavan as well as
Yashoda. He and his friends would steal milk and butter, let the cows go
free at milking time, hide the clothes of bathing girls or even break
the water pots the milkmaids were carrying on their heads. Little
Krishna was not just teasing purely for the fun of it. He wanted to
destroy the ignorance of his devotees, teaching them not to be attached
to matter and forms and only focus on him.
As such, Lord Krishna is the
deity of Hasya or Humour and a messenger of peace.
Krishna, Radha and Leela
Radha and Krishna are the divine couple that rules love, romance and the aesthetic sense. Radha was foremost among the milkmaids of Vrindavan, as the incarnation of Lakshmi, Vishnu's spouse and Krishna's obvious favorite.
Love and devotion may
also find beautiful expression in the relationship between lovers. In
India, women often see their husbands as Krishna, while men see their
wives as Radha, the beloved. When men become gods and women goddesses,
then we do not see the imperfections, and see only perfection, divinity.
Surrender and serving each other are the keys to any good relationship,
which becomes a rehearsal of surrender to the universe and the divine.
While Krishna's love was
truly universal, Radha sometimes expressed feelings of jealousy. Like
it is shown in the painting here, one day Radha became jealous of Lord
Krishna' flute, because it was allowed to touch his lips and because he
would breath his prana into it. Thus she took it from Krishna and then
did not want to return it. Some thus see the relationship between
Krishna and Radha as the love between god and man, between self and ego.
One moonlit night,
Krishna multiplied his body into many to dance with all the milkmaids
and fulfill their desire for union with him. The love between Krishna
and the milkmaids represents the divine play (Leela) between reality
(consciousness) and illusion (form), purusha (soul) and prakriti
(primordial nature), divinity and humanity. The maidens dance around
Krishna as electrons dance around the nucleus of every atom, and as body
molecules and energies dance around the soul of every being.
Lord Krishna was only
eight years old when he left Vrindavan and and his beloved Radha to
study in the ashram of the saint Sandeepani. Therefore, everything that
happened between Krishna and Radha or Krishna and the milkmaids took
place when they were children. They were all very conscious of being
incarnations of divine beings and saints. Whatever happened between them
can only have been very romantic and spiritual. A lot of it was
child-play.
Krishna and Bhakti in the Mahabharata
After Krishna killed Kansa, he became king. In the great Mahabharata epic, Krishna spoke memorable words on the essence of Bhakti Yoga
or the yoga of pure spiritual devotion. During the battle of
Kurukshetra, Lord Krishna revealed to Arjuna the essence of Bhakti Yoga,
of love for God which is love. This revelation is found in the famous
Hindu scripture called the Bhagavad Gita. The Deity is the beloved and
the devotee is the lover. When the Bhakta is blessed by divine grace he
feels undivided union and non-dual consciousness.
Bhakti
Yoga is regarded as the most direct method to merge in cosmic
consciousness. Food, sex, sleep, attachments, responsibilities - all are
no longer important in Bhakti Yoga : only worship is. Paintings and
sculptures of deities are an essential part of the Hindu worship known
as Puja. In temples or home shrines, one finds images of many gods and
goddesses that are worshipped on a daily basis, decorated with flowers
and offered food and incense, such as this Krishna statue.
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