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Chapter 2

    They say the heavens opened the night I was


    born. The rain fell in sheets, a downpour of


    unforeseen proportions.


    I was born at midnight, and my birth was to


    turn into one of the most incredible tales of


    human history. I was born in a dungeon to


    the sister of a king. I was born in a hell hole,


    like the child of a criminal, a convict. They


    say the guards fell into the deepest of sleep


    so I could be transported to safety. As a


    child, I found the story of my birth


    fascinating. It fed my sense of godhood.


    Imagine hearing that the very cosmos itself


    conspired to put more than a hundred guards


    to sleep at the same time so that one of the


    greatest extraditions known in human history


    could be carried out. The story does not end


    with me being whisked out of those


    dungeons; it carries on, talking of how the


    raging Yamuna River needed to be crossed


    on a stormy night. A river my biological


    father simply walked across, carrying me in


    his arms, raised above his head even whilst


    the waters of the Yamuna rose, dangerously


    so, just to be able to touch my toe.


    I come from a land whose greatest treasure is


    the stories we have. These stories are born


    from the wombs of the earth, the rivers that


    flow across snow-clad mountains and nearly


    barren peaks, fertile fields, barren lands, and


    all sorts of terrains, some rich, verdant,


    abundant, others stark, deserted, and plain.


    The River Yamuna was a goddess who


    craved the touch of her God. A god who


    found merriment and amusement in being


    born again and again in different forms,


    different shapes. A god who laughed, even as


    he was carried above a man''s head,


    struggling to cross a raging river, in the


    darkest part of the night. A god who decided


    that he might as well just dangle his feet a


    little lower and dip them in the waters of the


    Yamuna in case his so-called father might


    drown. The details of how this entire


    enterprise was brought about are not the


    point. The point is the elements of nature


    sensed the God in me and desperately tried to


    take me in their embrace.


    In some versions of the story, there is further


    fantastical detail where a five-headed


    mammoth snake, a king cobra, shelters me


    with his hood spread out as my father carries


    me to safety.


    When I first heard these stories, I was still


    young, and I let the storytellers weave their


    intricate plots. These stories sounded better


    than what I had heard from my biological


    father when I met him in Mathura.


    My father, Vasudeva, was a Vrishni prince


    and the true heir of the throne of Mathura.


    The Vrishni were an ancient race that


    descended from Yayati. The Vrishni traced


    their roots to Yadu and were known as the


    Yadavas. Yadu was the son of King Yayati,


    the son who refused to give up his youth for


    his father and was cursed. But I digress; this


    is not that story. This is the story of Vasudev


    and Devaki. The already married Vasudev


    agreed to marry the sister of a king, hoping


    to better his place in the world of kings and


    queens. Kansa was a usurper who had


    defeated Vasudev''s father, King Ugrasen,


    and proclaimed himself the King of Mathura.


    As the son of the defeated King, Vasudev


    was left with few options but to look for


    alliances that would help him regain his


    position in society. King Kansa wanted his


    sister to marry Vasudev so that he could keep


    any possible future rebellions under control.


    Vasudev was of the Yadava clan, a Vrishni


    hero, and it would be imprudent and unwise


    of Kans to have him killed. So, it made


    political sense to make an alliance, and what


    could be a stronger connection than a


    marriage with his sister.


    Unfortunately, the best-laid plans of mice


    and men often go awry (a poet will say this


    some thousand years later). A roadside


    fortune teller with a grudge against the royal


    clan decided to shout out just when the bride


    and groom were about to be driven back to


    the prince''s palace by King Kansa himself, a


    portent of things to come. The beauty of a


    fortune well-told lies in the listener''s state of


    mind. King Kansa was an intelligent, logical


    man on most days. But he had been drinking


    in the evening, in the revelry of the marriage


    party; he must have got carried away. He


    drank a little too much in the night,


    overheard a few courtiers talking about the


    groom and how the prince had made this


    marital alliance to be able to reclaim his


    birthright to Mathura when the moment came


    and what with one thought leading to


    another, King Kansa found himself in an


    irritable, annoyed mood which he tried to


    hide from his sister Devaki, whom if truth be


    told he was not fond of. She had grown up


    into an overly religious young girl and had


    developed a habit of moralizing over the


    silliest things.


    The fortune teller predicted a future where


    the sister''s eighth child would grow up to kill


    King Kansa, and as these dark words hit his


    ears, something inside the King snapped. He


    ordered his guards to chain the newly


    wedded pair and proclaimed all the unborn


    children of his sister traitors to the royal


    kingdom of Mathura.


    And so, the words of a random fortune teller


    altered the destiny of three people. My


    mother, my father, and my uncle Kansa. I


    speak myopically when I say three people. It


    also affected Baba, Ma, Radha, and me and


    maybe future generations to come. This was


    not the first time such a thing occurred. We


    hear tales of Lord Rama abandoning his wife


    Sita on hearing a washerman cast doubt on


    her virtue. Men have always been led astray


    by idle chatter. It has happened before; it


    happens now; it will happen again. We don''t


    learn. We don''t change.


    Baba was a friend of my father''s from when


    they were little boys, still unlettered in the


    ways of our world. As they grew up, he


    Did you know this text is from a different site? Read the official version to support the creator.became my biological father''s go-to person.


    Baba was the one person who my father


    could trust implicitly. So, when I was


    smuggled out from the dungeons of Kans''s


    palace, my father decided that he would take


    me to Baba, knowing Baba would watch out


    for me and love me like a son. But before all


    that, how did they manage to do the


    impossible.


    When my biological parents, Prince Vasudev


    and Princess Devaki, were taken prisoners


    and sent to the Mathura Prison cells, the


    guards were a little uncertain and unsure of


    how exactly they were supposed to treat the


    King''s sister who had done no wrong. Prince


    Vasudev was a Vrishni Hero, and quite a few


    guards belonged to the Vrishni community.


    They found it unnerving to treat the man they


    looked up to like a petty criminal. However,


    as the days went by, the erratic behaviour of


    King Kans ensured that most of the guards


    felt sympathetic towards Devaki and


    Vasudev. Days turned into months, months


    into years. Six times my mother conceived,


    six times she miscarried. Vasudev, my


    father, had married Lady Rohini before he


    set his eyes on my mother, Devaki. Upon


    hearing of her husband''s imprisonment, Lady


    Rohini had been begging King Kansa to


    allow her to meet Vasudev. Her pleas fell on


    deaf ears. Finally, however, the head of the


    prison guards, who was a Vrishni decided to


    help the devasted grieving woman. He asked


    her to come an hour before midnight, and he


    would ensure a meeting with Vasudev. It so


    happened that the meeting that occurred


    ended up being of a conjugal nature. The on-


    duty guards had decided to take a smoke


    break, maybe out of respect or boredom, we


    do not know. But that one visit resulted in


    the birth of my stepbrother nine months later.


    My mother, Devaki, too conceived once


    again. She remained despondent, depressed,


    in a state of constant fear, sure that this time


    too, she might not be blessed with a child.


    Either way, she felt no happiness, no sense of


    excitement that most mothers naturally feel


    when they are to bring forth a new being into


    this world. The headiness that comes from


    having the power to create another entity was


    lost to Devaki, who was living the worst


    nightmare imaginable. If she had the baby, it


    would be murdered without having


    experienced the joys of life. She thought of


    the baby as ''it''; she dared not even


    contemplate gender. She couldn''t bear to


    think that far into the future.


    I was born on the eighth night of the Krishna


    Paksh in the month of Bhadrapada. Till I


    arrived, no one was entirely sure whether I


    would survive the birth or live to see the


    morning. But my father Vasudev had many


    loyal followers among the guards. They had


    been plotting for many days, deliberating on


    the best possible way to take the true heir to


    the throne of Mathura to safety. The same


    chief of guards who played such an


    instrumental part in the birth of my brother


    Balram helped the ex-Prince carry his son


    out of the prison cell to his friend and aide,


    Nand, the head of the Gopa tribe. Even as


    Devki, the mother who carried me in her,


    who was living in the prison cells of a palace


    where her brother was King, lay on the


    raised stone slab of the cell, a frail shell of


    woman, exhausted from the pain of


    childbirth, heartbroken at the thought of what


    was to come she lay on the stone slab, drifted


    into the oblivion of unconsciousness.


    Questions were later asked of my father,


    Vasudev, why he brought forth children who


    may never have seen the world. What kind of


    base, insensitivity compelled him to


    procreate within those prison walls? A mere


    expression of his manhood? What was the


    great Vrishni hero Vasudev thinking? I


    know. He was a warrior, a prince, craving


    revenge. He wanted to be able to ensure that


    if there were a chance the doom of King


    Kans was to occur by the hands of his


    progeny, Vasudev would ensure he had as


    many as a man and a woman together could.


    Vasudev believed in prophecies, omens,


    Karma, as did most people in those times.


    Most people still do. They may pretend to


    believe in logic, in science, in what they can


    see, hear, or touch, but there are moments


    where they will stumble, falter, fall, and hold


    on to whichever idea will help them pick


    themselves up move on. This is the nature of


    men and women, it has always been so, and


    so it will always remain.


    Kans had ordered the chief of guards to


    inform him as soon as the impending birth


    took place. However, the prison guards were


    instructed by the chief to wait till morning if


    the delivery of the child happened at night. It


    would give the mother a few moments with


    her newborn and who could dare grudge the


    poor distraught soul that. And so, when I


    decided to arrive late in the night, no guard


    rushed to inform the King.


    They should have. I was born in the fourth


    term of the constellation of Rohini; the stars


    foretold that I would be dangerous for my


    maternal uncle. My uncle ended up dying by


    my hand.


    Vasudev, my father, carried me out of those


    dungeons, the prison walls that had held my


    parents captive, helped by the chief of


    guards. The chief of guards had handed an


    extract of Ashwagandha to the cook who


    prepared the nightly kadha for on-duty


    guards. The guards were supposed to take the


    drink to ensure they stayed awake, alert, but


    the Ashwagandha concoction put them in a


    state of deep slumber.


    Divinity does not work in mysterious ways.


    It simply finds a being who can and will


    help. The rest is just creativity. The creativity


    of the narrators, the storytellers who will


    make the tale fascinating by little


    embellishments of words, with hyperboles.


    Vasudev had decided that the safest place to


    keep me would be with Baba, his friend in


    Nandgaon. A few days earlier, a message


    had already been sent through a man loyal to


    the same chief of guards.


    My father wanted to take me to Baba,


    himself, maybe some deep-seated need to


    have some more time with his son in his


    arms did not allow him to hand me over to


    some trusted soldier.


    And so, on that dark, stormy night, my father


    took me to Nandgaon, a village some forty-


    five kilometres outside of Mathura. The


    journey would take more than 9 hours by


    foot, and Vasudev needed to be back before


    morning, so he borrowed a horse and rode as


    fast as he could until he reached the Yamuna.


    However, the horse was terrified of entering


    the raging river. So, my father Vasudev


    decided to cross it himself on foot and


    walked an hour more before he reached


    where Baba was waiting for him with a


    bundle that looked suspiciously like a


    swaddled baby.


    Babies were exchanged. Words were said.


    Tears flowed. Sometimes, for the greater


    good, sacrifices are made. One of the most


    extraordinary sacrifices in human history


    was made that night, near a tiny village to the


    west of the Great Yamuna River. It was Baba


    who made that sacrifice.
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