Note: One has to re-discover Krishna and his key. We need to join the
dots and solve the many puzzles - ancient and modern, that dot 'The Krishna Key' -
so as to figure out the elusive key and emerge slightly more knowledgeable and possibly a wee bit enlightened - in the process.
This one is a cerebral knowledge-hunt, a wondrous jigsaw
puzzle and a crossword - that we have never attempted before.
To unlock it, we must invoke Krishna in our
mind's eye; Krishna's advice should be our guidance. Remember, that the journey is more important than the destination ... just as our business is with the action only,
never with its fruits.
A fairly taut and gripping tale, 'The Krishna Key' does
manage to hold your interest until the very end, without much ado. Ashwin
Sanghi has impressed yet again, and I am curious to know what his next
offering will be about. However, my advice is that one should not read this
book as an out-and-out thriller; it is clearly not meant to be that way, do
look for the many symbolism and undercurrents though.
The book jacket cover is a clear winner; the shadow of the
lock falls on "Krishna" while the light through the door panels gives the lock
itself a cloak of suspense. It is intriguing and makes one want to play the
guessing game. It conveys a message of its own. What do you think it is?
'The Krishna Key' is in gold-hued letters; Krishna as we
all know is "Peetamber" - draped in the colour gold. It is also another
name for Shri Vishnu - the preserving or the balancing force behind the cosmos,
whose 'avatar' (manifestation) is Shri Krishna. "Peet" is golden-yellow and
"amber" is sky. Hence, Peetamber also indicates the brilliant and
glittering sky as well as enlightenment (i.e. an illumined mind).
Ashwin Sanghi appears in white, the colour of the
serene full moon. Dark blue skies and a glowing moon exude peace and serenity.
Shri Krishna is much admired for his radiance, calm and serene disposition even
in the face of adversity. He is without ego (ahamkara). One needs to let go of
ego, in order to attain illumined knowledge, as depicted by the story of
Krishna stealing the clothes of the Gopis and hiding it. It is NOT literal, but allegorical.
The Krishna Key is not a slim volume; it
contains 464 pages (excluding the references and acknowledgement bit.) Yet, it
is a surprisingly breezy read, one that will greatly appeal to the
fiction-loving epicurean, due to its eclectic mix. Come to think of it, this
book will appeal to any connoisseur of the printed word. One gets to savour a healthy
dose of thrills, history, chase, mind games, a glimpse into our ancient past,
rituals, society and clans of yore; Vedic science, architecture, planetary positions, symbolism, sub-plots and a bit of romance, all of which culminates in making
it quite a page-turner, while also ensuring that our knowledge travels
northward. The romance bit though is a tad underdone and therefore appears
somewhat abrupt. Which means, Ashwin is unlikely to pen a full-blown romantic
novel anytime soon :-)
'The Krishna Key' begins with a map and a hymn (from the
Rig Ved) and runs through 108 chapters in all; each of which is preceded by a
paragraph from the Mahabharata, narrated in the first person by Krishna
himself. This number, 108, is very significant; both Vishnu and Krishna have
108 names and so does Ma Durga (the manifestation of Shakti, the
feminine force behind the cosmos.) However, the number 108 has many more
layers, all of which the author explains in a manner that can be easily understood
by even a layperson. Hence the overall narrative is not at a frenetic pace.
The Mahabharata as we all know, is a veritable
treasure-trove. Apart from its poetic qualities, it is a comprehensive
representation of ancient India. Because of its significance, while it is also
known as the Fifth Veda, it is at once equivalent to all the Vedas. To
my mind, it is also the comprehensive itihasa (history) of the Dvapar Yuga
- the 3rd era. It is in fact human history in its entirety. What is
not within it is to be found nowhere else. And all that is elsewhere is here.
It is timeless. Hence preceding each chapter by a paragraph from the Mahabharata
(and that too narrated in the first person by Krishna himself) - is very
significant indeed, quite a masterstroke.
We travel along with the cast of characters to the
submerged ruins of Dwarka, the sand-washed ruins of Kalibangan (the largest
excavation site in Rajasthan), the once-magnificent Somnath, the now placid
Kurukshetra, the storied Mathura; then to the even more storied Vrindavan and a
beautifully carved temple destroyed by Aurangzeb ... among other places of
course. The three-headed seal with motifs of a bull, unicorn and goat engraved
in an anticlockwise direction (on the face of the seal) clearly piqued the
interest of the history buff in me, especially in light of the Ekashringa
(literally: the one-horned) mentioned in the Mahabharata. We get glimpses into
some passages from the Harivamsa too; and they unequivocally inform us
that land was reclaimed from the ocean in order to construct Dwarka (Dwaravati
- the city of many doors.) In ancient texts, even science was conveyed in
magical terms. A complex task of engineering - land reclamation - has been
described as praying to the ocean to yield twelve yojanas of land !!
Verdict: Frankly, I am amazed at the
amount of research that has gone into this book. Sanghi's take on Vishnu and
Shiv is ingenious. But I'm very impressed by his explanation of what is now known
as the 'Shiv-ling'. Here is a lesson for us all - to observe and
not merely see.
As they say, the journey is important, not the
destination. And this journey is clearly an enriching one, since as companions
one gets to have: the Surya Siddhanta and (the ancient Greek historian
and diplomat) Megasthenes' works that talk about Methora, Sourasenoi and Heracles
(who, according to Megasthenes, was held in high esteem by
the Sourasenoi); Krishna's beloved golden city of Dwarka, the sacred
river Sarasvati (part of the saptasindhu and which was very much
a living river during Shri Krishna's time), the evolved Sarasvati
civilization, the ruins of Mohenjo-daro, the Devas, the Asuras, the Ahuras and Sumeria. The primeval sound AUM and 786, Durga and Ilah, as well as the curiosity-inducing gothic font. A black stone that lies further westward, Agreshwar, Tejo Mahalay and Arjumand Banu Begum alias Mumtaz-ul-Zamani's tomb. The intricately carved doors of Somnath were carried away by Ghazni to be later fixed on his own tomb, who would have guessed why?! The
wondrous significance of the numbers 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 18, 894, 1008, 10008 and the sacred symbol "Swastika";
the pentagon and the six-pointed star, jyamiti and geometry; Pythagoras
theorem, decimal system, the concept of zero and infinity, and even the binary
system - so very common in modern computers now. Vedic mathematics is very
fascinating indeed.
Most of us are unaware of the Baudhayana
Sulbasutra - a manual of ancient Vedic geometry. And few may have heard of
the stepped pyramid - the great flat-topped Mastaba of Djoser - a
precursor to later pyramids. So the fact that the Baudhayana Sulbasutra
describes in precise detail the building of a Smashaanachitha - a
funeral altar; or that the Mastaba of Djoser, built around 2700 BCE, is
an inverted Vedic funeral altar down to the very last detail, may come as a
proverbial bolt from the blue. But then, one only needs to take a closer look
at what is universally known as the Sphinx: a figure with the face of a
man and the body of a lion. In short: a lion-man. Now, is the lion a creature
of the desert? No. But are we strangers to the concept of the lion-man?
If you were surprised to learn that the French
philosopher Voltaire had vehemently declared, "Pythagoras went to the Ganges to
learn geometry," do also remember that a certain Steve Jobs too had been a regular
visitor to this great land and spent much time on the banks of this great river
- seeking inspiration, by his own admission.
And just in case you are astounded by the remarkable
similarity between what J. Robert Oppenheimer ("the father of the atomic bomb")
said - after the first such bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, "I am become death, the
destroyer of the worlds," and a line from the Srimad Bhagavad Gita that
says, "I am become Time to end the world, set on my course to destroy the
universe"; please do remember that the great Albert Einstein also paid his obeisance
to this timeless treasury of knowledge. So, where do you think he got the idea
for his seminal equation?
As we know, the soul (aatman) is energy. And this is
what Shri Krishna said about the aatman:
'Na jãyate mriyate vã
kadãchinnãyam bhootvã bhavitã vã na bhooyaha,
ajo nityaha shãshvato'yam purãno
na hanyate hanyamãne shareere.'
[Translated: 'the aatma is never born
nor does it die. Similarly, it is not re-created to come into existence. Since,
the aatma is not born, is eternal and imperishable, it has existed since
time eternal and does not die even though the body dies.' - Srimad Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 2 Verse - 20]
As Arjuna stood in the battlefield of Kurukshetra,
he was overcome with feelings of weakness and confusion - since he faced the
prospect of killing his own kith and kin. Shri Krishna, who was his charioteer
in the battlefield, sought to allay his fears by teaching him about the
distinction between the physical body (which is impermanent) and the soul or aatman
(which is permanent):
'vāsānsi jīrNāni yathā vihāya navāni grihNāti
naro.aparāNi.
tathā śarīrāNi vihāya jīrNānyanyāni sanyāti navāni
dehī.'
[Translated: "Just as a human being puts on new
garments, casting off old and worn-out ones, the soul similarly takes up
residence within new material bodies, giving up the old and infirm ones." - Srimad Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2 Verse - 22]
Now, look at what the "First Law of
Thermodynamics" has to say: 'Energy can be changed from one form to another, but it cannot be created or
destroyed. The total amount of energy and matter in the Universe remains
constant, merely changing from one form to another.' The First Law of
Thermodynamics (Conservation) states that energy is always conserved; it cannot
be created or destroyed. In essence, energy can be converted from one form into
another.
So? [Yet, there seem to be no respite from THE best
fiction of all times - the Aryan Invasion Theory! :-)]
And despite the idol of Shiv in his Nataraj
form having been duly installed within the premises of the research centre that recently witnessed much hoopla
over the discovery of the elusive G particle, there has been no let up in
the various narratives directed at 'idol worship' - which has swamped us for a few centuries
now. :D
To my mind, humans, in the Dwapur Yuga and before, would have
been very different from the ones in the current Kali Yuga, in all respects - in appearance,
height, strength, longevity, calibre and in intellect too. We moderns - enslaved by our arrogance and
a linear view of history - have failed to acknowledge all that.
I do not want to accumulate any more bad karma
by playing spoilsport. I will not reveal and discuss any more than I have
already done. Do get hold of the book and read all you can, but do not forget
to simultaneously unlock the doors and windows of your heart, mind and soul.
This is not a one-time read and will be amongst Sanghi's best works.
Rating: I am going with a 4/5. The production value of the book is good, editing errors are
very few, and I'm sure they will be taken care of in the next print-run. The book
jacket cover is very attractive and instantly catches the eye.
My humble two pence worth:
It is best that we do
not take our ancient texts including the Mahabharata at face value. They
are immense repositories of knowledge no doubt, but just as the sacred river Ganga
has become heavily polluted over time, can we say with certainty that our ancient
texts - a veritable treasure-trove of knowledge (but which has, unfortunately,
now come to be labeled as 'scriptures') have escaped a similar fate?
Here's why. I simply cannot believe that a woman
like Kunti would 'abandon' her child, 'so as to avoid shame,
since Karana was born out of wedlock'.
Kunti had four sons (including Karana) and
none of them were sired by Pandu, her supposedly 'lawfully wedded
husband'. (In fact, this 'lawfully wedded husband' bit somehow seems like a
term that folks who came to this great land on glorified boats used and still
do.)
Pandu, though a king, is a minor character. It is
Kunti that wields a lot of influence; she is a strategist, negotiator and
administrator of the highest order. We have completely overlooked the fact that
Vedic marriages were of many types, and Swayamvara was just one of them.
Any emotional and physical intimacy between a male and a female has been
considered to be as good as a marital union - Gandharva Vivaha. In this
form of vivaha, couples marry with mutual consent, even though they may not have
the consent/blessings of their families; there are no rituals involved. However, the
stress has always been on the consent of the female.
Therefore, undoubtedly, Kunti had four husbands. And
so, when modern 'scholars' and their medieval counterparts talk about Pandu
being her 'lawfully wedded husband' or address/depict her as a 'widow' (after
Pandu's demise) - they cannot be more wrong! Being a 'widow' or virginity for that matter, has never been an issue. Even in the Treta Yuga - the 2nd era (the one preceding Dvapar Yuga) one finds Mandodari (Raavan's wife) marrying Vibhishana, Raavan's younger brother, after Raavan's demise. Therefore, Kunti clearly did not 'abandon' Karana 'for fear of being shamed'. I would like to believe that Karana was
perhaps lost or kidnapped and subsequently found by the childless couple,
Adhirath and Radha, who then brought him up as their own. [Adhirath was king
Santanu's sarathi or charioteer. A "Suta" is one who is the offspring of
mixed parentage, more precisely that of a Kshatriya-Brahmin parentage.]
We somehow tend to forget that Maharshi Vedavyas
himself was the product of a Gandharva Vivaha - one between the revered
Sage, Maharshi Parāśara and a fisherwoman (matsya-kanya) Satyavati. Satyavati
later married the kshatriya king of Hastinapura, Maharaja Santanu - on
the condition that their son would ascend the throne. Santanu, despite being a
king, deferred to Satyavati's wish, while his son and Crown Prince (the Ganga-putra; the future Bheeshma) - Yuvaraja Devavrata - too stepped aside in order to make way
for Satyavati and Santanu's sons, Chitrāngad and Vichitravirya.
Shri Krishna is also called 'Giridhari' (literally:
he who lifted a hill) and large parts of the population believe that he lifted
up a whole mountain on his little finger!! But it is clearly a metaphor - a
testimony to his intelligence, perception and planning - even as a young boy,
besides alluding to the accomplishment of Herculean tasks. [Here is a minor
riddle for you; food for thought, if you may: Heracles and Hercules; Megathenes' Methora, Sourasenoi and Heracles, manu-smriti and manu-script. What do you make of them?]
I could go on and on and on. Moral of the
story: It's in our best interest to cleanse our treasure-trove of
ancient knowledge as well as our itihasa (history; especially our ancient history) of all the unwanted aspects (including
humongous quantities of myth) that has seeped in and crept in over time. Illumined knowledge has been with us always, a gift from our ancients ... yet we refuse to drink from it.
Parting shot: Bhagavan Shri Krishna (who
hailed from the kshatriya Chandravanshi or the moon-worshiping Yadava
clan) is the celebrated Soldier-Statesman who strove to re-establish dharma
- by fighting all forms of adharma (wicked and malicious people, as well
as injustice and profanity in all its forms.) He restored order and balance in
society, and is therefore regarded as the 8th avatar of Shri
Vishnu - the preserving/balancing force behind the cosmos. Bhagavan Shri
Ram (the celebrated kshatriya Warrior-Saint of the Suryavanshi or
the sun-worshiping Ikshvaku clan) preceded him as the 7th avatar.
The 9th avatar of Shri Vishnu, the one that after-ceded Bhagavan
Shri Krishna, was none other than the great Sage-Prince Siddhartha,
later Bhagavan Shri Gautam Buddh (of the kshatriya Suryavanshi
Sakya clan.)
We know that Krishna ultimately freed his clans and indeed
the country as a whole - of the spectre of the all-constricting Magadhan
python. But this was not the end of the latter. The python re-appeared after a period
of time - much like the Raktabeej that our ancients warned us about, in
the 4th and current era - the Kali Yug. This time, an austere Brahmin,
who I regard as the Shri Krishna of Kali Yug, rose to the challenge and
vanquished it. Looks like, the Magadhan python keeps rearing its ugly head
periodically.
Later, the same austere Brahmin along with his protégé, also danced atop the white Macedonian python when it showed up at the gates of ancient India (Bharatvarsha).
The 10th avatar is popularly known
as Kalki and he is yet to appear. Kalki - literally means 'the destroyer
of evil'. However, there is no concept of 'evil' in the Vedas or in the
philosophy of life rooted in the Vedic wisdom (Sanaatan Dharm). Sanaatan = timeless and Dharm = path or 'the way of life'. The
soul after departing the mortal body does not 'rest in peace' as is
popularly believed by some sections of society. There is this concept of
Charaiveti - to keep going, in some other form, based on one's Karm
(actions committed in that life) - as per the principles of 'Karm Yog'.
A great soul will be reborn to carry on the good work, in whichever
capacity; but every soul (irrespective of its accumulated Karm phal, the fruits of its Karm
- in the previous birth) will be reborn accordingly, and get an
opportunity to redeem itself. The soul has no gender, only the outer
covering - the mortal body - takes the shape of a human (a man, a woman, a tritiya prakriti - the 3rd gender) or an animal, a plant, a bird, an insect, a reptile and so on and so forth.
Also, the 'Dasavatara'
- the 10-incarnations/manifestations of Shri Vishnu could not have been predicted.
'Coz the first 4 avatars most certainly preceded the appearance of
humans on earth. The Dasavatara is as follows: 1. Matsya avatar
(fish) 2. Kurma avatar (tortoise) 3. Varaha avatar (wild boar) 4.
Narasimha avatar (lion-man) 5. Vamana avatar (dwarf or small-sized
humans) 6. Parasurama 7. Rama 8. Balarama 9.
Krishna and 10. Buddh. And that takes the count to 10. If Kalki were to be
added, the count goes up to 11, and then it can no longer be called the 'Dasavatara',
right? Umm, I did read somewhere that before the 12th century AD,
there is no mention of Kalki. So, is Kalki a later-day addition? And if
yes, then by whom and why?
That is the question. Was it to indicate the signs
of the times; that the world, rather creation per se, will be threatened by the
activities of a group of humans? What do you think? And what in your opinion
was the 'Dasavatara' essentially meant to symbolize?
Also, we tend to think of Kali Yug as 'the
dark age of the demon Kali'. But there is no such thing as a demon - in
our culture; this word has made its appearance in our collective vocabulary
thanks to the translations of our ancient texts - by aliens. Therefore, we can safely
conclude that things have been lost and/or distorted in translation. You see, Kali
also means a "bud," and a bud is beautiful to behold. It slowly opens
and then gradually metamorphoses into a lovely flower, right? And after a
certain lapse of time, this beautiful flower starts to wither away. That's the
law of nature. But the key as to when the current Kali Yug should begin
to wither away is in our hands - based on our actions, our Karm Yog, remember?
Bhagavan Shri Krishna's immortal words from
the Srimad Bhagavad-Gita (Chapter 2 Verse - 47):
"karmaNi eva adhikaaraste maa phaleshu kadaachana,
maa karma phala hetuH bhuH maa sanghaH astu akarmaNi"
Meaning: "Thy business is with the action only,
never with its fruits; so let not the fruits of action be thy motive, nor be
thou to inaction attached."
Therefore, in any given situation, we must make a
conscious decision and do our best to uphold it; remaining inactive or being a fence-sitter
is NOT an option ... if we want to prevent the kali from withering away, that
is.
II Jai Shri
Krishn II
Details of the Book: The Krishna Key/
Author: Ashwin Sanghi/ Publisher: Westland/ Binding: Paperback/ Publishing
Date: 2012/ Genre: Thriller/ ISBN-10: 978-93-81626-68-9/ ISBN-13:
9789381626689/ Pages: 475/ Price: Rs.250 (Rs. 175 @ Flipkart.)
The book trailer is brilliantly done: Link.
Ameya Naik and Kushal Gopalka have impressed once again. Their earlier effort
in Chankaya's Chant was mind-blowing: Link.
Picture: The book jacket cover of 'The
Krishna Key'. Courtesy: link.