Skip to main content

Posts

Featured

How the Mahabharata's "Righteous" Victory Was Built on Sacred Cruelty

A Study of Structural Violence, Imperial Logic, and the Cost of Dharma in the World's Greatest Epic The Mahabharata is not a simple tale of good defeating evil. Rather, it is a messy, uncomfortable, and deeply human epic that presents a "flawed vs. even more flawed" exploration of Dharma. This article synthesizes discussions on how the "righteous" Pandavas and their mentors systematically exploited marginalized figures—Eklavya, Karna, Ghatotkach, Hidimba, Uloopi, and Iravan—as functional assets rather than human equals. The epic reveals how Varnashrama Dharma (duty to social hierarchy) consistently overrode Sadharana Dharma (universal morality). Through comparisons to colonial expansion, modern geopolitical "realism," and empire-building across civilizations, the Mahabharata emerges as both a potential manual for rationalizing "sacred cruelty" and a devastating warning about the hollow nature of victories built on structural exclusion. The ...

Latest Posts

Parashurama: The Axe That Never Stops Falling

The Skull-Studded Canopy: Auditing Shah Jahan’s Schizoid Superpower

The Window That Closed and the Door That Opened