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Land of the Bharatas 
Sandhya Jain
15 Aug 2009

[In recent times, there has been much churning in society about the nature of Indian nationalism and the Indian state. Central to this debate is the status of the Hindu people, their religion and culture, in their natal land. Beginning with the repugnant colonial Aryan Invasion Theory to the Partition of 1947, but by no means ending with that traumatic vivisection, the Hindu people have been prey to a host of Western academic assaults, ably assisted by a category of foot soldiers labelled as Useful Indian Idiots, which seek to confuse the Hindu Mind about the deep significance of this land and civilisation and the tremendous responsibility its people bear to uphold their spiritual lineage and cultural heritage. On the occasion of the painful and humiliating Partition, we revisit some well known aspects of our Eternal Tradition – Editor]
  

Bharatavarsha is encompassed from north to south by Sagarmatha, forehead of the ocean, a beautiful epithet for the tallest Himalayan peak, and Hind Mahasagar, the Indian Ocean. Famed as a divine creation, it is the bhumi of the Bharatas, hallowed by its sacred geography and the great souls who have guided her spiritual ascent and steered her civilisational destiny.


Bharatavarsha literally means the continent (‘varsha’, Sanskrit) that is dedicated (‘rata’) to light, wisdom (‘bha’).[1] Our Vedic Rishis devoted themselves to the quest for the eternal truth and ultimate reality, kevala jñana, satchidananda.


The Bharatas were a venerable and ancient tribe mentioned in the Rg. Veda, particularly in Mandala 3 of Bharata Rishi Vishvamitra. Mandala 7 says the Bharatas were on the victorious side in the Battle of the Ten Kings.


There were three personifications of ‘Bharata’ in Hindu tradition, one each in the first three yugas, or time cycles. Together they are regarded as the epitome of the civilisational values of the Sanatana Dharma.


Bharata of the Satayuga
 

The first Bharata was born in the Satyuga as the son of Rshabdeva, first among recognized ancient sages. The Jaina community traces its spiritual lineage from Rshabhdeva, designated as the first Tirthankara; he is also known as Adinath, and synonymous with Siva, the foremost yogi of the Hindu tradition. 
 

Jinasena’s Adipurana says three great events occurred simultaneously in Jaina history: Rsabhdeva attained enlightenment and became the first Jina; the cakra (wheel) appeared in the armoury of his son Bharata and proclaimed him a cakravartin (emperor); and a son was born to Bharata, ensuring continuation of the Iksvaku dynasty founded by Rsabhdeva.


Elaborating the multiple rebirths of father and son in the bhogabhumi (world of enjoyment) where salvation is not possible, the Adipurana explains their evolution to karmabhumi (world of karma) where the law of retribution operates and men follow different occupations (karman). Rsabhdeva created the Ksatriya, Vaisya, and Sudra castes; Bharata later created Brahmanas and appointed kings.


The duty of the Cakravartin is total conquest of all the directions (digvijaya) by means of superior moral and political powers, to unite the country under a single moral kingdom and prevent anarchy. Readers will note that the Cakravartin is not merely an ideal ruler, but a powerful ancient political concept, inspired by a vision of the Hindu bhumi as a unity which was not belied by the presence of multiple centres of political power. That is why civilisational values permeated the whole land and gave the tradition its abiding continuity.


As first cakravartin, Bharata fasted, meditated, performed puja and followed the cakra symbolizing his kingship as it moved of its own accord to various parts of the country. He paused to perform pradaksina in Saurastra, where the Jina Aristanemi (cousin of Sri Krishna) would be born, all the while circling Ayodhya, centre of Aryavarta (land of the Arya, noble ones).


Bharata thus subjugated rival kings and punished those who taxed their subjects excessively. His digvijaya was accomplished without violence, through innate capability, on account of punya (merit) acquired in previous lives through practice of Jaina precepts. He exemplified the virtues of compassion (daya), divine-wisdom (brahma jñana) and penance (tapas). 


Bharata of the Tretayuga


The second Bharata was born in the Tretayuga as the son of King Dasaratha of Ayodhya, and younger brother of Sri Rama. He embodied the virtues of love (prema), devotion (bhakti), and brotherhood (bandhutva). 


The story of the Ramayana is well known, but briefly, Keikeyi, the second wife of King Dasaratha, schemes to have the heir apparent, Sri Rama, sent into exile for fourteen years, and her own son, Bharata, appointed crown prince in his place. Rama, accompanied by his brother Lakshman, and wife Sita, departs immediately and the grief-stricken Dasaratha passes away soon afterwards.


Bharata, then on a visit to his maternal grandfather’s kingdom in Gandhara, returns only to learn of his father’s tragic demise and brother’s unfair exile. Tortured further by the thought that he could be considered complicit in this palace conspiracy, he decides – unswervingly - not to accept the throne. He then leads the people to the forest to persuade Rama to return. This political renunciation of a kingdom won illegitimately is a unique Hindu ethic.


Bharata is regarded as the symbol of dharma and idealism, second only to Sri Rama. To this day, he is revered for his adherence to family values, truth, righteousness, filial love and duty.


When Sri Rama refused to return to Ayodhya as rightful king, Bharata, at the intervention of Sita’s father, King Janaka, accepted the onerous duty of facilitating Rama to live righteously, i.e., in exile for fourteen years. He vowed to immolate himself if Rama did not return immediately at the end of the exile period and ascend his throne. Agreeing to govern Ayodhya only as regent, he placed Sri Rama’s sandals at the foot of the royal throne as the symbol of His kingship.


Bharata of the Dwaparyuga


The third Bharata was born in the Dwaparyuga as the son of Shakuntala and King Dushyant. Their story is part of the Mahabharata narrative, but it was Kalidasa who immortalized their love in Abhigyan Shakuntalam.


Shakuntala was the daughter of Rishi Vishvamitra and the apsara Menaka, who was sent by Indra to distract the sage. Menaka returned to heaven, and her daughter was raised in the hermitage of Rishi Kanva.


King Dushyant was the youngest son of King Puru, who had sacrificed his youth for his father, King Yayati. He founded the Paurava dynasty. Dushyant was hunting in the forest when, following a wounded deer into the hermitage of Rishi Kanva, he found Shakuntala nursing the animal. He fell in love and they married secretly in the Gandharva style, being their own witnesses.


The king gave her a ring as token of his love and to establish her identity as his wife. Sadly, Shakuntala lost the ring and the king refused to accept her; she retired to the forest and gave birth to Bharata, who grew up so bold and fearless that he played with lions. Some years later, the ring was found and Dushyant brought Shakuntala and Bharat to Pratishthan, where Bharata later became king.


Bharata is regarded as the greatest king of India, who lent his name to the country. He had nine sons, but deemed none of them fit to succeed him, and hence adopted a capable child as future ruler. Bharata personified the values of service (seva), valour (shaurya), and charity (dana). 


Eternal values, eternal tradition


Thus the three Bharatas (two kings, one prince) seamlessly united the Satayuga, Tretayuga and Dwaparayuga and the land itself in political and cultural unity. They exemplified three ideals each that permeated Hindu civilisation and form its core values to this day. Rsabhdeva’s son Bharata gave us daya, Brahma- jñana and tapas; Dasaratha’s son Bharata gave us prema, bhakti, and bandhutva; and Dushyanta-Shakuntala’s son Bharata gave us seva, shaurya and dana.


Their sterling qualities raised a landmass to divine bhumi - Bharat Mata, mother of the Bharata people. This explains the Hindu anguish and anger over M.F. Husain’s exceedingly vulgar imagery of the Eternal Mother.


Hindus impart these nine values to every generation. The jeneu ceremony marking the transition from childhood to youth revolves around this value system. The youth bestowed the sacred thread takes nine vows; each vow is represented as a knot that binds the three separate strands of the jeneu.


The jeneu was therefore a great privilege, bestowed upon conscious Hindus. Today Hindu gurus are extending its reach to all sections of society, shattering mindsets and barriers, and raising the whole population to higher awareness about the responsibilities of religion and culture.


Useful Idiots


All this should nail the lie – peddled incessantly by Western Abrahamic so-called scholars and a modern ‘caste’ designated by some as Useful Indian Idiots – that India was not a nation until the British made it so; that Hindu dharma is not a religion but an assorted collection of ‘cults’ (whatever that means) and beliefs of folk origin (whatever that means – who’s going to ask, anyway?).


We have only to look at ourselves as our Vedic Rishis and Gurus did – as children of the Himalayas, the Ganga, Yamuna, Narmada, Krishna, Godavari, down to Kanyakumari. According to the distinguished scholar, Prof. Lokesh Chandra, the eternal significance of Adi Sankara is that in establishing Mathams in the four corners of India, he also established the sacred geography of the four directions and united the country in common pilgrimage and cohesive culture at a time of grave danger.


As we look back, some things startle the mind. The ancient seers travelled extraordinary distances, covering every nook and corner of the country and every community howsoever remote, and uniting them in a complex religious and cultural matrix that endures to this day.


But more extraordinary is the fact that the ancient world seems to have had singular communicative skills. In the absence of what is called a common language (read English), a villager from Kerala could traverse the land and dominate the civilisation for over a thousand years, Marathi poets from the Deccan could settle in Punjab, a Guru from Punjab could reach Karnataka and Patna, one born in Gujarat could dominate north India. No one felt alien, or homeless, or misunderstood.


This is surely one of the most enduring mysteries of the Sanatana Dharma.


1] I owe some of these insights to my discussions with Bharat Bhushan Padmadeo; see also 
http://www.vijayvaani.com/FrmPublicDisplayArticle.aspx?id=274
 

The author is Editor,
www.vijayvaani.com

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  User Comments:
 
  The story of the three Bharatas is informative and beautiful. To read this on independence day made me realize that the origins of this nation go back a long way away. It is a great responsibility to protect this Hindu nation. Thank you for giving us back our history as a story. It made my day.  
  Bhavatharini  
  15 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Now this is scholarship. Sandhyaji has just proved what I have always believed - that the best history is written by non-historians and outside of academe.  
  Radha Rajan  
  15 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Dr. Radha Rajan made the most brilliant and till now unheard of point in 'Academe as Battleground' that nationalism is linked only to the religion of the people and that the religion of that people must belong to the soil. Dr. Rajan made the claim that all nationalism is related to the soil or territory. In this wonderful column Sandhyaji has linked our nation to our nation's history which is actually religion. Sandhyaji has indicated that our history is also religious tradition. This is the most important point that "Land of the Bharatas" is making. The Hindu nation belongs to the Hindus and Hindu religion. Every other identity is only a product of hopeful imagination.  
  Raghuraman Srinivas  
  16 Aug 2009  
   
 
  It is a great feeling to read a wonderful article like this, that too on the sacred day of Ekathasi after performing the puja. Let us pray that the "useful Indian idiots" realise the sanctity and significance of this great land of Bharatas at the earliest and work towards the unison and progress of the Bharatiya community.  
  B R Haran  
  16 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Immensely Informative Article. August 15 always makes me sad. What's there to celebrate after vivisection of our Holy Motherland -Bharatavarsha. Im one of the persons, who is not reconciled to partition. I want my country's territories back. Yudh hi Sahi. Radha Rajan Ji is Right. Best history is written by non-historians and outside of academe. Like her (RR) you too have liberated history from planted surreptitious stories. My friends accuse me of belonging to "Radha Rajan & Sandhya Jain School of Thought". Well, Could be True.  
  Kuna Mohanty  
  16 Aug 2009  
   
 
  The article is perfect and establishes a serious point confirming the unity of India. The divide and rule policy of the British is the cause of disunity in our part of the world. It is this brainwashing that we need to correct. If I may add, the Himalayas from the west was the mother of India nurturing its civilisation and in the east it nurtured the Chinese civilisation. The whole of Asia has one mother - the Himalayas. That is to me is the unity of Asia and to this motherland Sri Lanka, Japan, the island nations are joined by an umbilical cord. It is the Asian Era now and let us hope we will not partake in the Anglo American plots which will destroy Asia.  
  Janaka  
  16 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Dear all, I am no 'Dr.'. I have only a graduate degree in English Literature and a post graduate diploma in Russian.  
  Radha Rajan  
  16 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Query Bharata Muni of Natyashsstra treatise, where does this great Rishi come in ?  
  gajanan  
  17 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Bharata Muni was a sage who wrote the treatise, Natya Shastra, India’s main and ancient theory of Sanskrit drama. It defines the rules of writing and performing music, dance and theatre, that is, the rules of STAGE-CRAFT. “Land of the Bharatas” is concerned with STATE-CRAFT. Regards.  
  Sandhya Jain  
  17 Aug 2009  
   
 
  So whether it was stage or state , it is Bharata always. Thnaks for the information , Sandhyaji.  
  gajanan  
  17 Aug 2009  
   
 
  Sandhyaji - DHANYAVAAD for tracing this wonderful history of the OUR GREAT BHARAT .Your article has been written so simply and with such felicity and beauty! The ITHIHAS of THE LAND OF THE BHARATAS is something so great and beyond comprehension. What a nation we have been born into - this is PUNYABHOOMI and may BHARAT ONCE AGAIN REALISE THE TRUTH AND WISDOM OF OUR GREAT RISHIS AND MUNIS !We are indeed blessed! While reading your article - my heart and soul were so to say weeping with ecstasy and enveloped in an inexplicable wave of sadness - as to what we were and as to what we have been reduced to! Yet we believe in SATHYAMEVA JAYATHE - and TRUTH can never be suppressed. More and more people are getting to know the TRUTH and may the SHAKTHI of Ishwar penetrate each and every corner of BHARATVARSHA and reveal the TRUTHS OF SANATANA DHARMA for the GREAT AWAKENING. Our foremost DHARMA IS TO PROTECT OUR HINDU DHARMA. With more strength and courage to you for 'vijayavaani' and may you live long and keep well! SHUBHA-CHINTANAM  
  Vijaya Chandramouli  
  18 Aug 2009  
   
 
  A great article but I feel a greater void seeing how easily the greatest heritage is being discarded by the Kali yug desendents of Bhartas, for cheap western trinklets and trashy culture. Sad  
  SJBS Hans  
  18 Aug 2009  
   
 
  A wonderful, uplifting panorama. A pity that many modern historians will say that this is mostly legend and a "grand narrative" built for political purposes. We live in the age of deconstruction when ancient knowledge has been systematically discredited. This age will pass too, though and people are hungry for Satyam Shivan Sundaram.  
  CCG  
  18 Aug 2009  
   
 
  I am so grateful to Sandhyaji for writing about "land of Bharatas." I feel finally people of dharma are waking up. While the corruption and the attack from the leftists and the p-secularists seem to have weakened the nation, I feel it is only temporary. This information age is a blessing for India, as we can listen and read to the voices such as Sandhyaji. For long our colonized minds did not know where to turn to and we listened to few corrupt leaders who were creating chaos in the land of sanatana dharma. Things are changing. I see the way Hindus are using every form of information channels to fight back the wrong stereo-type. We have people like Rajiv Malhotra in the US who are taking on the biased academicians like Witzel and Doniger and countering their misinformation in the name of academic scholarship. Before the advent of information age, we were forced to accept (without having a way to fight back) whatever spit-out by these pseudo-scholars from powerful institutions. And, then our own Indian chelas (mostly from JNU) shamelessly stood behind their western masters. I am glad Hindus are raising their voice and trying to regain their true and legitimate history. I think only the spiritual richness of India--veda, vedanta and yoga--can rebuild this fragmented world, primarily disintegrated by the dogma and exclusive theolgies of Abrahamic faiths, the violence and materialism of communism...It is time for Bharatavarsha to march forward and realize "vasudhaiva Kutumbakam."  
  PR  
  21 Aug 2009  
   
 
  I came across this website by accident, very interesting article. As PR says,"Things are changing ,I see the way Hindus are using every form of information channels to fight back the wrong stereo-type." To day we have the means to communicate with one another no matter which part of the world you are in. We still have a long way to go to educate our youth about our culture and the ancient History. But don't forget that there are elements of Hindu society who will be difficult to convince about the true Bharat's History. log on www.thereligionofpeace.com  
  surjit  
  01 Sep 2009  
   

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