Lahore,
India
Burak
sat on his rocking chair in the guest house apartment with visual tool on his
wrist and audio device in his ears. As he clicked the play button on his book,
he heard the sound, “Please close your eyes for the text. You can open your
eyes and the text would be paused to restart at the same point when you play
again. In case you want to start from the beginning or another page, just say
scroll back or scroll forth. Happy reading.”
As
he closed his eyes visual images started forming about the text as his imagination
fed the visual tool sensors. It started.
“It
is a prehistoric text of the subcontinent of India - A text on its rulers, a
text of war and a text of peace.”
Images
rose in Burak’s mind about huge buildings, wars, brown kings and cities and
villages of old. There was tumult and excitement. The book continued, as did vivid image in
Burak’smind.
“When
they first wrote it, writing was an art confined only to the Brahmins- elegant
and intellectual caste of the Indians. They wrote it with peacock’s feather.
The dark and effulgent Krisna Dwaipayana
,the one who was born on an island in the dark coloured Yamuna; who is also
called Vyasa because he divided the eternal
knowledge into various subjects so that it is intelligible by the human
minds; wrote this text. No, they say the elephant headed immortal – Ganesha,
who is the son of Shiva –the lord of demigods wrote it as Vyasa narrated it, on
a condition that when his pen stops he would write no more – and when he
stopped, the epic became the largest poem ever written on the earth. It claims
that what is here could be found elsewhere, but what is not here is nowhere to
be found. This is the history of Prehistoric India, the story of the line of
Bharata. It’s called the Mahabharata – The great scions of Bharata.
Burak
opened his eyes. The images vanished. He hadn’t asked for the subcontinental
history. He called on Mujeeb. “I think we’ve picked up the wrong book
Mr.Mujeeb. Its about prehistoric India.
Looks like fables, where there are strange beings.”
Mujeeb
gave a short laugh. “Well, Burak. I told you that this is a conditioning text.
You need to read this before anything else Be patient and read as I say. I
know what I have given you to read.
We’ll discuss about it tomorrow.”
Burak
closed his eyes and started with the text again. He slowly got absorbed in the
text as it entered his mind in viid imagination till he heard in his mind the
sound of azaan – the call for prayer.
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