A Brief View
The
Ramayana is one of the two great Indian epics. The Ramayana tells
about life in India around 1000 BCE and offers models in dharma. The hero, Rama,
lived his whole life by the rules of dharma; in fact, that was why Indian
consider him heroic. When Rama was a young boy, he was the perfect son. Later he
was an ideal husband to his faithful wife, Sita, and a responsible ruler of
Aydohya. "Be as Rama," young Indians have been taught for 2,000 years;
"Be as Sita."
Prince
Rama was the eldest of four sons and was to become king when his father retired
from ruling. His stepmother, however, wanted to see her son Bharata, Rama's
younger brother, become king. Remembering that the king had once promised to
grant her any two wishes she desired, she demanded that Rama be banished and
Bharata be crowned. The king had to keep his word to his wife and ordered Rama's
banishment. Rama accepted the decree unquestioningly. "I gladly obey
father's command," he said to his stepmother. "Why, I would go even if
you ordered it." When
Sita, Rama's wife, heard Rama was to be banished, she begged to accompany him to
his forest retreat. "As shadow to substance, so wife to husband," she
reminded Rama. "Is not the wife's dharma to be at her husband's side? Let
me walk ahead of you so that I may smooth the path for your feet," she
pleaded. Rama agreed, and Rama, Sita and his brother Lakshmana all went to the
forest.
When
Bharata learned what his mother had done, he sought Rama in the forest.
"The eldest must rule," he reminded Rama. "Please come back and
claim your rightful place as king." Rama refused to go against his father's
command, so Bharata took his brother's sandals and said, "I shall place
these sandals on the throne as symbols of your authority. I shall rule only as
regent in your place, and each day I shall put my offerings at the feet of my
Lord. When the fourteen years of banishment are over, I shall joyously return
the kingdom to you." Rama was very impressed with Bharata's selflessness.
As Bharata left, Rama said to him, "I should have known that you would
renounce gladly what most men work lifetimes to learn to give up."
Later
in the story, Ravana, the evil King of Lanka, (what is probably present-day Sri
Lanka) abducted Sita. Rama mustered the aid of a monkey army, built a causeway
across to Lanka, released Sita and brought her safely back to Aydohya. In order
to set a good example, however, Rama demanded that Sita prove her purity before
he could take her back as his wife. Rama, Sita and Bharata are all examples of
persons following their dharma.
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