7
Nigambodh
Ghat, Delhi , India
“Oh! I love this smell of burning
flesh.” The ascetic said, breathing a long deep breath.
He had long and flowing white hair
- matted, oily and rough - falling down to his waist. His beard flew sideways
in flowing wind. Flashes of lightening reflected in his eyeballs and lit his
face momentarily – accentuating the wrinkles on his forehead. White ash was
smeared all over his body.
“Alas, I would have to part with
it.” He had a scornful expression on his face as if someone had done some wrong
to him.
His disciples gathered around him.
With their hands folded and heads bent down, they listened to him intently.
“I get the signals of change!
Smell the flesh.” He said inhaling again. “It rots as it burns. Even the Agni
(fire) is unable to contain the rot. When the purifier ceases to purify, it
means that it’s the time for change. I feel that others might have sensed it
too. They would have started as well. At the end of the era, there would be a
meeting amidst destruction in the HimavntMountains of the north. The seven
sages would be there and thousands of ascetics. Kripacharya, Parashurama and
Lord Hanuman himself shall be there. The meeting shall be chaired by Lord
Bharadvaja – the Brihaspatya – the son of none other than Brihaspati: master of
the demigods. There we shall get the clarity on what’s coming.”
He repeated the old verses:
Yada
yada hi dharmasya, glanir’bhavati’bharata.
Abhyut’thanam
hi dharmasya, tvad’atmanam srujamyaham
Paritranaya
sadhunam, Vinashaya ch’dushkritam
Dharma’sansthapanarthaya,
sambhavami yuge yuge.
Whenever, on the earth the
righteousness is shamed – in order to raise the righteousness, I incarnate
myself. In order to save the ascetics and destroy the evil – in order to
re-establish the cosmic order, I come age after age.
“We are in the darkest age, my
pupils. The transition of the order is about to begin. Something new will come
out of the dust of the old order, as it was the last time:
Senyur’ubhyor’madhye
…in
midst of the armies and in midst of the ages…
The darkness shall soon pass.”
He turned around and walked to the
banks of the turbulent Yamuna.
“How much for an upstream ride on
the flooding Yamuna?” he asked the lone rower. He was denied the ride.
“How much for a lost boat?” He
asked. The rower smiled.
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