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The Mahabharata — The Greatest Sanskrit Epic of Ancient India

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发表于 2026-4-26 00:07:29 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
The Mahabharata — The Greatest Sanskrit Epic of Ancient India

Today we are going to talk about an extraordinary epic with an astonishing scale. Its Chinese translation contains as many as four million words.
It was not written on parchment by a single author. Instead, it was gradually formed through oral transmission by countless bards over a period of 800 years. This is The Mahabharata, known as the "soul of India".
Regarded as India’s "Fifth Veda", this sacred scripture is far more than a magnificent war story. It is like an ancient Indian encyclopedia written in stories.
From creation myths to state laws, from ethics to love fables, it contains everything. Today, let’s open this ancient door and explore the wisdom hidden in this three-thousand-year-old family drama.

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 楼主| 发表于 2026-4-26 00:18:19 | 显示全部楼层
How Did This Epic Become So Massive?

Before diving into the story, let’s look at some key facts about this epic:
(1) Creation Period: from around the 4th century BCE to the 4th century CE, spanning 800 years.
(2) Length: about 80,000 verses in the modern critical edition, totaling 160,000 lines.
(3) Chinese Translation: The complete Chinese version published in 2005 has about 4 million words, a great project completed by Chinese scholars over 17 years.
(4) Historical Status: In Indian tradition, it is honored as the "Fifth Veda", a sacred religious text.

Unlike epics written by a single author, The Mahabharata is a collection of collective folk memory. Generations of bards called Sutas sang these stories in courts and markets, continuously adding new myths, philosophical ideas and moral fables.

This special formation made its structure like a growing living body. Main stories contain sub-stories, and dialogues lead to new conversations. It is estimated that 300 to 400 narrators appear in the whole poem. This layered structure is the secret of its inclusiveness and lasting vitality.
 楼主| 发表于 2026-4-26 00:30:30 | 显示全部楼层
Main Plot: A Family Civil War That Shook the World

Beyond numerous sub-stories, the main plot is a classic tragedy of royal power struggle. It centers on two branches of the Bharata royal family:

- The Pandavas: five virtuous princes led by Yudhishthira, Bhima and Arjuna, representing justice and duty.

- The Kauravas: one hundred princes led by the greedy and cunning Duryodhana, whose ambition for the throne started the war.

The conflict turned from childhood rivalry into an unavoidable disaster. The key turning point was a fatal dice game.

Duryodhana tricked Yudhishthira into gambling. Yudhishthira lost his kingdom, his brothers, and finally his wife Draupadi, who was publicly humiliated. The Pandavas were then forced into exile in the forest for thirteen years.

When they returned, the Pandavas asked for only a small part of the kingdom, but were firmly refused. Peace talks broke down completely. All kingdoms and gods in India took sides, and an eighteen-day destructive war broke out on Kurukshetra.

The war was so brutal that both sides were almost destroyed. Although the Pandavas won, they lost all their relatives. The victory tasted like ashes. The epic deeply expresses its greatest compassion: in extreme violent conflict, there is no real winner.

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 楼主| 发表于 2026-4-26 00:37:12 | 显示全部楼层
Highlights 1 – Drona’s Oath and Betrayal

If the main story is the backbone, the numerous sub-stories taking up nearly half the book are its rich flesh and blood, full of fantastic imagination and profound philosophy.
Drona’s Oath and Betrayal: A Moral Fable of an Era
Drona was the martial arts teacher of all princes. Born poor, he was once insulted by his old friend who became a king. He studied hard and promised his master never to teach martial arts to the Kshatriya warrior class.
However, for living and revenge, he broke his promise and taught both the Pandavas and Kauravas. Later, he ordered his students to capture the king as tuition to take revenge.
Drona’s story shows the moral dilemma of the epic: he was a teacher of knowledge but also a promise-breaker. His personal tragedy reflects the moral decline of the whole era.


Highlights 2 – The Golden Mongoose

The Golden Mongoose: The Strongest Criticism of Formalism
When the Pandavas held a grand horse sacrifice with many animals killed, a mongoose with half golden fur appeared and mocked: “The merit of your grand ceremony is not even equal to a handful of barley.”
It told a story: a poor Brahmin gave all his four handfuls of barley with pure kindness to a stranger, who was the god of justice. This sincere devotion moved the gods and sent the family to heaven.
The mongoose ate the leftover barley and turned half its body golden. Later it tasted many luxurious sacrifices but could not change the other half, because those sacrifices lacked true piety.
This fable sharply criticizes religious rituals that only focus on form, emphasizing that inner justice is far more important than external extravagance.

Highlights 3 – The Bhagavad Gita

The Bhagavad Gita: Sacred Philosophy on the Battlefield
As the Kurukshetra War was about to begin, Arjuna fell into deep hesitation. Facing his grandfather, teachers and cousins on the opposite side, he could not fight against his own relatives.
Then his close friend Krishna, the human incarnation of the supreme god, taught him 700 verses of wisdom—the famous Bhagavad Gita, the most important philosophical poem in India.
Krishna systematically explained dharma (duty), soul, action and liberation. He taught the idea of acting without attachment: focus on the action itself rather than the result, perform natural duty without being bound by personal feelings. This idea influenced countless people, including Mahatma Gandhi.

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 楼主| 发表于 2026-4-26 00:40:22 | 显示全部楼层
Praises from Great Thinkers

The charm of this epic has crossed time and impressed many great thinkers.

Goethe praised Indian literature including The Mahabharata: “What more excellent thing could we wish to know… who would not keep it in their soul.”

German scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt commented deeply: “The Mahabharata is perhaps the deepest and noblest thing the world has revealed.”

These praises show a common truth: The Mahabharata explores eternal human topics, not just stories of a certain time and place.

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 楼主| 发表于 2026-4-26 00:43:14 | 显示全部楼层
Inspiration for Modern People

Why do we still need to read The Mahabharata today? Because the questions it raises still touch us deeply:
1. How to choose when family bonds conflict with justice?
2. How much weight should a promise hold in front of interests?
3.What is true dedication: grand ceremonies or sincere faith?
4.How to live in a world full of conflicts?

The Bhagavad Gita’s idea of “perform your duty and accept the result calmly” provides ancient but powerful wisdom for anxious modern people.

The Mahabharata does not give simple black-and-white answers. Like a vast ocean, it contains complex human nature, moral conflicts and profound philosophy. It tells us that life itself is a kind of Kurukshetra, full of difficult choices.

Wisdom lies in pursuing justice even in dark times, staying away from empty vanity, and cherishing the pure gold inside the heart.

At the end of the long epic, the final lesson is: the greatest war is within the heart, and the final victory is understanding and compassion.



References

Text references: Online blogger resources, Baidu Baike, Doubao AI, World Civilization academic materials
Image sources: Public-domain classical art and manuscripts from Wikimedia Commons

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